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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13711 ***
+
+INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MISCELLANY
+
+Of Literature, Art, and Science.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Vol. I. NEW YORK, AUGUST 12, 1850. No. 7.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+WOMEN AND LITERATURE IN FRANCE.
+
+From a sprightly letter from Paris to the _Cologne Gazette_, we
+translate for _The International_ the following account of the
+position of women in the French Republic, together with the
+accompanying gossip concerning sundry ladies whose names have long
+been quite prominently before the public:
+
+"It is curious that the idea of the emancipation of women should have
+originated in France, for there is no country in Europe where the
+sex have so little reason to complain of their position as in this,
+especially at Paris. Leaving out of view a certain paragraph of the
+_Code Civile_--and that is nothing but a sentence in a law-book--and
+looking closely into the features of women's life, we see that they
+are not only queens who reign, but also ministers who govern.
+
+"In France women are engaged in a large proportion of civil
+employments, and may without hesitation devote themselves to art and
+science. It is indeed astonishing to behold the interest with which
+the beautiful sex here enter upon all branches of art and knowledge.
+
+"The ateliers of the painters number quite as many female as male
+students, and there are apparently more women than men who copy the
+pictures in the Louvre. Nothing is more pleasing than to see these
+gentle creatures, with their easels, sitting before a colossal Rubens
+or a Madonna of Raphael. No difficulty alarms them, and prudery is not
+allowed to give a voice in their choice of subjects.
+
+"I have never yet attended a lecture, by either of the professors
+here, but I have found some seats occupied by ladies. Even the
+lectures of Michel Chevalier and Blanqui do not keep back the
+eagerness of the charming Parisians in pursuit of science. That
+Michelet and Edgar Quinet have numerous female disciples is
+accordingly not difficult to believe.
+
+"Go to a public session of the Academy, and you find the '_cercle_'
+filled almost exclusively by ladies, and these laurel-crowned heads
+have the delight of seeing their immortal works applauded by the
+clapping of tenderest hands. In truth, the French savan is uncommonly
+clear in the most abstract things; but it would be an interesting
+question, whether the necessity of being not alone easily intelligible
+but agreeable to the capacity of comprehension possessed by the
+unschooled mind of woman, has not largely contributed to the facility
+and charm which is peculiar to French scientific literature. Read
+for example the discourse on Cabanis, pronounced by Mignet at the
+last session. It would be impossible to write more charmingly, more
+elegantly, more attractively, even upon a subject within the range
+of the fine arts. The works, and especially the historical works, of
+the French, are universally diffused. Popular histories, so-called
+editions for the people, are here entirely unknown; everything that
+is published is in a popular edition, and if as great and various care
+were taken for the education of the people as in Germany, France would
+in this respect be the first country in the world.
+
+"With the increasing influence of monarchical ideas in certain
+circles, the women seem to be returning to the traditions of monarchy,
+and are throwing themselves into the business of making memoirs.
+Hardly have George Sand's Confessions been announced, and already new
+enterprises in the same line are set on foot. The European dancer,
+who is perhaps more famous for making others dance to her music,
+and who has enjoyed a monopoly of cultivated scandal, Lola Montes,
+also intends to publish her memoirs. They will of course contain
+an interesting fragment of German federal politics, and form a
+contribution to German revolutionary literature. Lola herself is still
+too beautiful to devote her own time to the writing. Accordingly, she
+has resorted to the pen of M. Balzac. If Madame Balzac has nothing to
+say against the necessary intimacy with the dangerous Spanish or Irish
+or whatever woman--for Lola Montes is a second Homer--the reading
+world may anticipate an interesting, chapter of life. No writer is
+better fitted for such a work than so profound a man of the world, and
+so keen a painter of character, as Balzac.
+
+"The well-known actress, Mlle. Georges, who was in her prime during
+the most remarkable epoch of the century, and was in relations
+with the most prominent persons of the Empire, is also preparing a
+narrative of her richly varied experiences. Perhaps these attractive
+examples may induce Madame Girardin also to bestow her memoirs upon
+us, and so the process can be repeated infinitely."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+AUTHORS AND BOOKS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Parke Godwin has just given to the public, through Mr. Putnam, a new
+edition of the translation made by himself and some literary friends,
+of Goethe's "Autobiography, or Truth and Poetry from My Life." In his
+new preface Mr. Godwin exposes one of the most scandalous pieces of
+literary imposition that we have ever read of. This translation, with
+a few verbal alterations which mar its beauty and lessen its fidelity,
+has been reprinted in "Bohn's Standard Library," in London, as an
+original English version, in the making of which "the American was of
+_occasional use_," &c. Mr. Godwin is one of our best German scholars,
+and his discourse last winter on the character and genius of Goethe,
+illustrated his thorough appreciation of the Shakspeare of the
+Continent, and that affectionate sympathy which is so necessary to
+the task of turning an author from one language into another. There
+are very few books in modern literature more attractive or more
+instructive to educated men than this Autobiography of Goethe, for
+which we are indebted to him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+John Randolph is the best subject for a biography, that our political
+experience has yet furnished. Who that remembers the long and slender
+man of iron, with his scarcely human scorn of nearly all things
+beyond his "old Dominion," and his withering wit, never restrained
+by any pity, and his passion for destroying all fabrics of policy or
+reputation of which he was not himself the architect, but will read
+with anticipations of keen interest the announcement of a life of
+the eccentric yet great Virginian! Such a work, by the Hon. Hugh
+A. Garland, is in the press of the Appletons. We know little of Mr.
+Garland's capacities in this way, but if his book prove not the most
+attractive in the historical literature of the year, the fault will
+not be in its subject.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Scottish Booksellers have instituted a society for professional
+objects under the title of the "Edinburgh Booksellers' Union." In
+addition to business purposes, they propose to collect and preserve
+books and pamphlets written by or relating to booksellers, printers,
+engravers, or members of collateral professions,--rare editions of
+other works--and generally articles connected with parties belonging
+to the above professions, whether literary, professional, or personal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+D'Israeli abandons himself now-a-days entirely to politics. "The
+forehead high, and gleaming eye, and lip awry, of Benjamin D'Israeli,"
+sung once by _Fraser_ are no longer seen before the title-pages of
+"Wondrous Tales," but only before the Speaker. It is much referred to,
+that in the recent parliamentary commemoration of Sir Robert Peel,
+the Hebrew commoner kept silence; his long war of bitter sarcasm and
+reproach on the defunct statesman was too freshly remembered. Peel
+rarely exerted himself to more advantage than in his replies, to
+D'Israeli, all noticeable for subdued disdain, conscious patriotism,
+and argumentative completeness. For injustice experienced through
+life, the meritorious dead are in a measure revenged by the
+feelings of their accusers or detractors, when the latter retain the
+sensibility which the grave usually excites, and especially amid such
+a chorus of applause from all parties, and a whole people, as we have
+now in England for Sir Robert Peel--the only man in the Empire, except
+Wellington, who had a strictly personal authority.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Dickson, recently of the Medical Department of the New York
+University, and whose ill-health induced the resignation of the chair
+he held there, has returned to Charleston, and we observe that his
+professional and other friends in that city greeted him with a public
+dinner, on the 9th ult. Dr. Dickson we believe is one of the most
+classically elegant writers upon medical science in the United States.
+He ranks with Chapman and Oliver Wendell Holmes in the grace of
+his periods as well as in the thoroughness of his learning and the
+exactness and acuteness of his logic. Like Holmes, too, he is a poet,
+and, generally, a very accomplished _litterateur_. We regret the loss
+that New York sustains in his removal, but congratulate Charleston
+upon the recovery of one of the best known and most loved attractions
+of her society.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. John R. Bartlett's boundary commission will soon be upon the
+field of its activity. We were pleased to see that Mr. Davis, of
+Massachusetts, a few days ago presented in the Senate petitions
+from Edward Everett, Jared Sparks, and others, and from the American
+Academy of Arts and Sciences, at Boston, to the effect that it would
+be of great public utility to attach to the boundary commission to
+run the line between the United States and Mexico, a small corps of
+persons well qualified to make researches in the various departments
+of science.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+William C. Richards, the very clever and accomplished editor of the
+_Southern Literary Gazette_ was the author of "Two Country Sonnets,"
+contributed to a recent number of _The International_, which we
+inadvertently credited to his brother, T. Addison Richards the
+well-known and much esteemed landscape painter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MAJOR POUSSIN, so well-known for his long residence in this country
+as an officer of engineers, and, more recently, as Minister of the
+French republic,--which, intelligent men have no need to be assured,
+he represented with uniform wisdom and manliness,--is now engaged
+at Paris upon a new edition of his important book, _The Power and
+Prospects of the United States_. We perceive that he has lately
+published in the Republican journal _Le Credit_, a translation of the
+American instructions to Mr. Mann, respecting Hungary. In his preface
+to this document, Major Poussin pays the warmest compliments to the
+feelings, measures and policy of our administration, with which he
+contrasts, at the same time, those of the French Government. He
+hopes a great deal for the Democratic cause in Europe from the _moral
+influences_ of the United States.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DR. JOHN W. FRANCIS, one of the most excellent men, as well as one of
+the best physicians of New York, has received from Trinity College,
+Hartford, the degree of Doctor of Laws. We praise the authorities of
+Trinity for this judicious bestowal of its honors. Francis's career
+of professional usefulness and variously successful intellectual
+activity, are deserving such academical recognition. His genial love
+of learning, large intelligence, ready appreciation of individual
+merit, and that genuine love of country which has led him to the
+carefullest and most comprehensive study of our general and particular
+annals, and to the frequentest displays of the sources of its enduring
+grandeur, constitute in him a character eminently entitled to our
+affectionate admiration.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE POEMS OF GRAY, in an edition of singular typographical and
+pictorial beauty, are to be issued as one of the autumn gift-books
+by Henry C. Baird, of Philadelphia. They are to be edited by the
+tasteful and judicious critic, Professor Henry Reed, of the University
+of Pennsylvania, to whom we were indebted for the best edition of
+Wordsworth that appeared during the life of that poet. We have looked
+over Professor Reed's life of Gray, and have seen proofs of the
+admirable engravings with which the work will be embellished. It will
+be dedicated to our American Moxon, JAMES T. FIELDS, as a souvenir.
+we presume, of a visit to the grave of the bard, which the two young
+booksellers made together during a recent tour in Europe. Mr. Baird
+and Mr. Fields are of the small company of publishers, who, if it
+please them, can write their own books. They have both given pleasant
+evidence of abilities in this way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BURNS.--It appears from the Scotch papers that the house in
+Burns-street, Dumfries, in which the bard of "Tam o'Shanter" and his
+wife "bonnie Jean," lived and died, is about to come into the market
+by way of public auction.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"EUROPE, PAST AND PRESENT:" A comprehensive manual of European
+Geography and History, derived from official and authentic sources,
+and comprising not only an accurate geographical and statistical
+description, but also a faithful and interesting history of all
+European States; to which is appended a copious and carefully arranged
+index, by Francis H. Ungewitter, LL.D.,--is a volume of some six
+hundred pages, just published by Mr. Putnam. It has been prepared
+with much well-directed labor, and will be found a valuable and
+comprehensive manual of reference upon all questions relating to the
+history, geographical position, and general statistics of the several
+States of Europe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+M. LIBRI, of whose conviction at Paris (_par contumace_, that is,
+in default of appearance), of stealing books from public libraries,
+we have given some account in _The International_, is warmly and it
+appears to us successfully defended in the Athenæum, in which it is
+alleged that there was not a particle of legal evidence against him.
+M. Libri is, and was at the time of the appearance of the accusation
+against him, a political exile in England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MAJOR RAWLINSON, F.R.S., has published a "Commentary on the Cuneiform
+Inscriptions of Babylon and Assyria," including readings of the
+inscriptions on the Nimroud Obelisk, discovered by Mr. Layard, and a
+brief notice of the ancient kings of Nineveh and Babylon. It was read
+before the Royal Asiatic Society.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REV. DR. WISEMAN, author of the admirable work on the Connection
+between Science and Religion, is to proceed to Rome toward the close
+of the present month to receive the hat of a cardinal. It is many
+years since any English Roman Catholic, resident in England, attained
+this honor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY has published several interesting volumes,
+of which the most important are those of Judge Burnett. An address, by
+William D. Gallagher, its President, on the History and Resources of
+the West and Northwest, has just been issued: and it has nearly ready
+for publication a volume of Mr. Hildreth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE IMPERIAL LIBRARY AT VIENNA has been enriched by a very old Greek
+manuscript on the Advent of Christ, composed by a bishop of the second
+century, named Clement. This manuscript was discovered a short time
+since by M. Waldeck, the philologist, at Constantinople.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. KEIGHTLEY's "History of Greece" has been translated into modern
+Greek and published at Athens.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GUIZOT's book on Democracy, has been prohibited in Austria, through
+General Haynau's influence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WORDSWORTH'S POSTHUMOUS POEM, "The Prelude," is in the press of the
+Appletons, by whose courtesy we are enabled to present the readers
+of _The International_ with the fourth canto of it, before its
+publication in England. The poem is a sort of autobiography in blank
+verse, marked by all the characteristics of the poet--his original
+vein of thought; his majestic, but sometimes diffuse, style of
+speculation; his large sympathies with humanity, from its proudest
+to its humblest forms. It will be read with great avidity by his
+admirers--and there are few at this day who do not belong to that
+class--as affording them a deeper insight into the mind of Wordsworth
+than any of his other works. It is divided into several books, named
+from the different situations or stages of the author's life, or the
+subjects which at any period particularly engaged his attention. We
+believe it will be more generally read than any poem of equal length
+that has issued from the press in this age.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Miss COOPER's "RURAL HOURS"[1] is everywhere commended as one of
+the most charming pictures that have ever appeared of country life.
+The books of the Howitts, delineating the same class of subjects
+in England and Germany, are not to be compared to Miss Cooper's for
+delicate painting or grace and correctness of diction. The Evening
+Post observes:
+
+ "This is one of the most delightful books we have lately
+ taken up. It is a journal of daily observations made by an
+ intelligent and highly educated lady, residing in a most
+ beautiful part of the country, commencing with the spring of
+ 1848, and closing with the end of the winter of 1849. They
+ almost wholly concern the occupations and objects of country
+ life, and it is almost enough to make one in love with such a
+ life to read its history so charmingly narrated. Every day has
+ its little record in this volume,--the record of some rural
+ employment, some note on the climate, some observation
+ in natural history, or occasionally some trait of rural
+ manners. The arrival and departure of the birds of passage
+ is chronicled, the different stages of vegetation are noted,
+ atmospheric changes and phenomena are described, and the
+ various living inhabitants of the field and forest are made
+ to furnish matter of entertainment for the reader. All this
+ is done with great variety and exactness of knowledge, and
+ without any parade of science. Descriptions of rural holidays
+ and rural amusements are thrown in occasionally, to give a
+ living interest to a picture which would otherwise become
+ monotonous from its uniform quiet. The work is written in
+ easy and flexible English, with occasional felicities of
+ expression. It is ascribed, as we believe we have informed our
+ readers, to a daughter of J. Fenimore Cooper. Our country is
+ full of most interesting materials for a work of this sort;
+ but we confess we hardly expected, at the present time, to see
+ them collected and arranged by so skillful a hand."
+
+[Footnote 1: RURAL HOURS: by a Lady, George P. Putnam, 155 Broadway.
+1850.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE REV. SYDNEY SMITH's "Sketches of Modern Philosophy," remarks the
+Tribune, "consist of a course of popular lectures on the subject,
+delivered in the Royal Institution of London in the years 1804-5-6.
+As a contribution to the science of which they profess to treat, their
+claims to respect are very moderate. Indeed, no one would ridicule any
+pretensions of that kind with more zeal than the author himself. The
+manuscripts were left in an imperfect state, Sydney Smith probably
+supposing that no call would ever be made for their publication.
+They were written merely for popular effect, to be spoken before
+a miscellaneous audience, in which any abstract topics of moral
+philosophy would be the last to awaken an interest. The title of
+the book is accordingly a misnomer. It would lead no one to suspect
+the rich and diversified character of its contents. They present no
+ambitious attempts at metaphysical disquisition. They are free from
+dry technicalities of ethical speculation. They have no specimens of
+logical hair-splitting, no pedantic array of barren definitions, no
+subtle distinctions proceeding from an ingenious fancy, and without
+any foundation in nature. On the contrary, we find in this volume a
+series of lively, off-hand, dashing comments on men and manners, often
+running into broad humor, and always marked with the pungent common
+sense that never forsook the facetious divine. His remarks on the
+conduct of the understanding, on literary habits, on the use and value
+of books, and other themes of a similar character, are for the most
+part instructive and practical as well as piquant, and on the whole,
+the admirers of Sydney Smith will have no reason to regret the
+publication of the volume."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[FROM THE LONDON TIMES.]
+
+BIOGRAPHY OF SIR ROBERT PEEL.
+
+In the following brief narrative of the principal facts in the life of
+the great statesman who has just been snatched from among us, we must
+disclaim all intention of dealing with his biography in any searching
+or ambitious spirit. The national loss is so great, the bereavement
+is so sudden, that we cannot sit down calmly either to eulogize or
+arraign the memory of the deceased. We cannot forget that it was not
+a week ago we were occupied in recording and commenting upon his last
+eloquent address to that assembly which had so often listened with
+breathless attention to his statesmanlike expositions of policy. We
+could do little else when the mournful intelligence reached us that
+Sir Robert Peel was no more, than pen a few expressions of sorrow
+and respect. Even now the following imperfect record of facts must
+be accepted as a poor substitute for the biography of that great
+Englishman whose loss will be felt almost as a private bereavement by
+every family throughout the British Empire:--
+
+Sir Robert Peel was in the 63d year of his age, having been born near
+Bury, in Lancashire, on the 5th of February, 1788. His father was a
+manufacturer on a grand scale, and a man of much natural ability, and
+of almost unequaled opulence. Full of a desire to render his son and
+probable successor worthy of the influence and the vast wealth which
+he had to bestow, the first Sir Robert Peel took the utmost pains
+personally with the early training of the future prime minister. He
+retained his son under his own immediate superintendence until he
+arrived at a sufficient age to be sent to Harrow. Lord Byron, his
+contemporary at Harrow, was a better declaimer and a more amusing
+actor, but in sound learning and laborious application to school
+duties young Peel had no equal. He had scarcely completed his 16th
+year when he left Harrow and became a gentleman commoner of Christ
+Church, Oxford, where he took the degree of A.B., in 1808, with
+unprecedented distinction.
+
+The year 1809 saw him attain his majority, and take his seat in the
+House of Commons as a member for Cashel, in Tipperary.
+
+The first Sir Robert Peel had long been a member of the House of
+Commons, and the early efforts of his son in that assembly were
+regarded with considerable interest, not only on account of his
+University reputation, but also because he was the son of such a
+father. He did not, however, begin public life by staking his fame on
+the results of one elaborate oration; on the contrary, he rose now and
+then on comparatively unimportant occasions; made a few brief modest
+remarks, stated a fact or two, explained a difficulty when he happened
+to understand the matter in hand better than others, and then sat down
+without taxing too severely the patience or good nature of an auditory
+accustomed to great performances. Still in the second year of his
+parliamentary course he ventured to make a set speech, when, at the
+commencement of the session of 1810, he seconded the address in
+reply to the King's speech. Thenceforward for nineteen years a more
+highflying Tory than Mr. Peel was not to be found within the walls of
+parliament. Lord Eldon applauded him as a young and valiant champion
+of those abuses in the state which were then fondly called "the
+institutions of the country." Lord Sidmouth regarded him as the
+rightful political heir, and even the Duke of Cumberland patronized
+Mr. Peel. He further became the favorite _eleve_ of Mr. Perceval, the
+first lord of the treasury, and entered office as under-secretary
+for the home department. He continued in the home department for two
+years, not often speaking in parliament, but rather qualifying himself
+for those prodigious labors in debate, in council, and in office,
+which it has since been his lot to encounter and perform.
+
+In May, 1812, Mr. Perceval fell by the hand of an assassin, and the
+composition of the ministry necessarily underwent a great change. The
+result, so far as Mr. Peel was concerned, was, that he was appointed
+Chief Secretary to the Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland. Mr. Peel had only
+reached his 26th year when, in the month of September, 1812, the
+duties of that anxious and laborious position were entrusted to his
+hands. The legislative union was then but lately consummated, and the
+demand for Catholic emancipation had given rise to an agitation of
+only very recent date. But, in proportion to its novelty, so was its
+vigor. Mr. Peel was, therefore, as the representative of the old tory
+Protestant school, called upon to encounter a storm of unpopularity,
+such as not even an Irish secretary has ever been exposed to. The
+late Mr. O'Connell in various forms poured upon Mr. Peel a torrent
+of invective which went beyond even his extraordinary performances
+in the science of scolding. At length he received from Mr. Peel a
+hostile message. Negotiations went on for three or four days, when
+Mr. O'Connell was taken into custody and bound over to keep the peace
+toward all his fellow-subjects in Ireland. Mr. Peel and his friend
+immediately went to England, and subsequently proceeded to the
+continent. Mr. O'Connell followed them to London, but the police were
+active enough to bring him before the chief justice, when he entered
+into recognizances to keep the peace toward all his majesty's
+subjects; and so ended one of the few personal squabbles in which Mr.
+Peel had ever been engaged. For six years he held the office of chief
+secretary to the lord-lieutenant, at a time when the government was
+conducted upon what might be called "anti-conciliation principles."
+The opposite course was commenced by Mr. Peel's immediate successor,
+Mr. Charles Grant, now Lord Glenelg.
+
+That a chief secretary so circumstanced, struggling to sustain extreme
+Orangeism in its dying agonies, should have been called upon to
+encounter great toil and anxiety is a truth too obvious to need
+illustration. That in these straits Mr. Peel acquitted himself with
+infinite address was as readily acknowledged at that time as it has
+ever been even in the zenith of his fame. He held office in that
+country under three successive viceroys, the Duke of Richmond, Earl
+Whitworth, and Earl Talbot, all of whom have long since passed away
+from this life, their names and their deeds long forgotten. But the
+history of their chief secretary happens not to have been composed
+of such perishable materials, and we now approach one of the most
+memorable passages of his eventful career. He was chairman of the
+great bullion committee; but before he engaged in that stupendous task
+he had resigned the chief secretaryship of Ireland. As a consequence
+of the report of that committee, he took charge of and introduced the
+bill for authorizing a return to cash payments which bears his name,
+and which measure received the sanction of parliament in the year
+1819. That measure brought upon Mr. Peel no slight or temporary odium.
+The first Sir Robert Peel was then alive, and altogether differed from
+his son as to the tendency of his measure. It was roundly asserted at
+the time, and very faintly denied, that it rendered that gentleman a
+more wealthy man, by something like half a million sterling, than he
+had previously been. The deceased statesman, however, must, in common
+justice, be acquitted of any sinister purpose.
+
+This narrative now reaches the year 1820, when we have to relate the
+only domestic event in the history of Sir Robert Peel which requires
+notice. On the 8th of June, being then in the 33d year of his age,
+he married Julia, daughter of General Sir John Floyd, who had then
+attained the age of 25.
+
+Two years afterward there was a lull in public affairs, which gave
+somewhat the appearance of tranquillity. Lord Sidmouth was growing
+old, he thought that his system was successful, and that at length he
+might find repose. He considered it then consistent with his public
+duty to consign to younger and stronger hands the seals of the home
+department. He accepted a seat in the cabinet without office, and
+continued to give his support to Lord Liverpool, his ancient political
+chief. In permitting his mantle to fall upon Mr. Peel, he thought he
+was assisting to invest with authority one whose views and policy were
+as narrow as his own, and whose practise in carrying them out would
+be not less rigid and uncompromising. But, like many others, he lived
+long enough to be grievously disappointed by the subsequent career of
+him whom the liberal party have since called "the great minister of
+progress," and whom their opponents have not scrupled to designate
+by appellations not to be repeated in these hours of sorrow and
+bereavement. On the 17th of January, 1822, Mr. Peel was installed at
+the head of the home department, where he remained undisturbed till
+the political demise of Lord Liverpool in the spring of 1827. The most
+distinguished man that has filled the chair of the House of Commons
+in the present century was Charles Abbott, afterward Lord Colchester.
+In the summer of 1817 he had completed sixteen years of hard service
+in that eminent office, and he had represented the University for
+eleven years. His valuable labors having been rewarded with a pension
+and a peerage, he took his seat, full of years and honors, among
+the hereditary legislators of the land, and left a vacancy in the
+representation of his _alma mater_, which Mr. Peel above all living
+men was deemed the most fitting person to occupy. At that time he was
+an intense tory--or as the Irish called him, an Orange Protestant
+of the deepest dye--one prepared to make any sacrifice for the
+maintenance of church and state as established by the revolution of
+1688. Who, therefore, so fit as he to represent the loyalty, learning,
+and orthodoxy of Oxford? To have done so had been the object of Mr.
+Canning's young ambition: but in 1817 he could not be so ungrateful to
+Liverpool as to reject its representation even for the early object
+of his parliamentary affections. Mr. Peel, therefore, was returned
+without opposition, for that constituency which many consider the most
+important in the land--with which he remained on the best possible
+terms for twelve years. The question of the repeal of the penal
+laws affecting the Roman Catholics, which severed so many political
+connections, was, however, destined to separate Mr. Peel from Oxford.
+In 1828 rumors of the coming change were rife, and many expedients
+were devised to extract his opinions on the Catholic question. But
+with the reserve which ever marked his character, left all curiosity
+at fault. At last, the necessities of the government rendered further
+concealment impossible, and out came the truth that he was no longer
+an Orangeman. The ardent friends who had frequently supported
+his Oxford elections, and the hot partisans who shouted "Peel and
+Protestantism," at the Brunswick Clubs, reviled him for his defection
+in no measured terms. On the 4th of February, 1829, he addressed a
+letter to the vice-chancellor of Oxford, stating, in many well-turned
+phrases, that the Catholic question must forthwith be adjusted, under
+advice in which he concurred; and that, therefore, he considered
+himself bound to resign that trust which the University had during so
+many years confided to his hands. His resignation was accepted; but as
+the avowed purpose of that important step was to give his constituents
+an opportunity of pronouncing an opinion upon a change of policy,
+he merely accepted the Chiltern Hundreds with the intention of
+immediately becoming a candidate for that seat in parliament which he
+had just vacated. At this election Mr. Peel was opposed by Sir Robert
+Inglis, who was elected by 755 to 609. Mr. Peel was, therefore,
+obliged to cast himself on the favor of Sir Manasseh Lopez, who
+returned him for Westbury, in Wiltshire, which constituency he
+continued to represent two years, until at the general election in
+1830 he was chosen for Tamworth, in the representation for which he
+continued for twenty years.
+
+The main features of his official life still remain to be noticed.
+With the exception of Lord Palmerston, no statesman of modern times
+has spent so many years in the civil service of the crown. If no
+account be taken of the short time he was engaged upon the bullion
+committee in effecting the change in the currency, and in opposing for
+a few months the ministries of Mr. Canning and Lord Goderich, it may
+be stated that from 1810 to 1830 he formed part of the government, and
+presided over it as a first minister in 1834-5, as well as from 1841
+to 1846 inclusive. During the time that he held the office of home
+secretary under Lord Liverpool he effected many important changes
+in the administration of domestic affairs, and many legislative
+improvements of a practical and comprehensive character. But his fame
+as member of parliament was principally sustained at this period of
+his life by the extensive and admirable alterations which he effected
+in the criminal law. Romilly and Mackintosh had preceded him in the
+great work of reforming and humanizing the code of England. For his
+hand, however, was reserved the introduction of ameliorations which
+they had long toiled and struggled for in vain. The ministry through
+whose influence he was enabled to carry these reforms lost its chief
+in Lord Liverpool during the early part of the year 1827. When Mr.
+Canning undertook to form a government, Mr. Peel, the late Lord Eldon,
+the Duke of Wellington, and other eminent tories of that day, threw up
+office, and are said to have persecuted Mr. Canning with a degree of
+rancor far outstripping the legitimate bounds of political hostility.
+Lord George Bentinck said "they hounded to the death my illustrious
+relative"; and the ardor of his subsequent opposition to Sir Robert
+Peel evidently derived its intensity from a long cherished sense of
+the injuries supposed to have been inflicted upon Mr. Canning. It
+is the opinion of men not ill informed respecting the sentiments of
+Canning, that he considered Peel as his true political successor--as a
+statesman competent to the task of working out that large and liberal
+policy which he fondly hoped the tories might, however tardily,
+be induced to sanction. At all events, he is believed not to have
+entertained toward Mr. Peel any personal hostility, and to have stated
+during his short-lived tenure of office that that gentleman was the
+only member of his party who had not treated him with ingratitude and
+unkindness.
+
+In January, 1828, the Wellington ministry took office and held it till
+November, 1830. Mr. Peel's reputation suffered during this period
+very rude shocks. He gave up, as already stated, his anti-Catholic
+principles, lost the force of twenty years' consistency, and under
+unheard-of disadvantages introduced the very measure he had spent so
+many years in opposing. The debates on Catholic emancipation, which
+preceded the great reform question, constitute a period in his life,
+which, twenty years ago, every one would have considered its chief
+and prominent feature. There can be no doubt that the course he then
+adopted demanded greater moral courage than at any previous period
+of his life he had been called upon to exercise. He believed himself
+incontestibly in the right; he believed, with the Duke of Wellington,
+that the danger of civil war was imminent, and that such an event
+was immeasurably a greater evil than surrendering the constitution
+of 1688. But he was called upon to snap asunder a parliamentary
+connection of twelve years with a great university, in which the most
+interesting period of his youth had been passed; to encounter the
+reproaches of adherents whom he had often led in well-fought contests
+against the advocates of what was termed "civil and religious
+liberty;" to tell the world that the character of public men for
+consistency, however precious, is not to be directly opposed to
+the common weal; and to communicate to many the novel as well as
+unpalatable truth that what they deemed "principle" must give way to
+what he called "expediency."
+
+When he ceased to be a minister of the crown, that general movement
+throughout Europe which succeeded the deposition of the elder branch
+of the Bourbons rendered parliamentary reform as unavoidable as two
+years previously Catholic emancipation had been. He opposed this
+change, no doubt with increased knowledge and matured talents, but
+with impaired influence and few parliamentary followers. The history
+of the reform debates will show that Sir Robert Peel made many
+admirable speeches, which served to raise his reputation, but never
+for a moment turned the tide of fortune against his adversaries, and
+in the first session of the first reformed parliament he found himself
+at the head of a party that in numbers little exceeded one hundred. As
+soon as it was practicable he rallied his broken forces; either he or
+some of his political friends gave them the name of "Conservatives,"
+and it required but a short interval of reflection and observation
+to prove to his sagacious intellect that the period of reaction was
+at hand. Every engine of party organization was put into vigorous
+activity, and before the summer of 1834 reached its close he was at
+the head of a compact, powerful, and well-disciplined opposition. Such
+a high impression of their vigor and efficiency had King William IV
+received, that when, in November, Lord Althorp became a peer, and the
+whigs therefore lost their leader to the House of Commons, his Majesty
+sent in Italy to summon Sir Robert Peel to his councils, with a view
+to the immediate formation of a conservative ministry. He accepted
+this responsibility, though he thought the King had mistaken the
+condition of the country and the chances of success which had awaited
+his political friends. A new House of Commons was instantly called,
+and for nearly three months Sir Robert Peel maintained a struggle
+against the most formidable opposition that for nearly a century any
+minister had been called to encounter. At no time did his command of
+temper, his almost exhaustless resources of information, his vigorous
+and comprehensive intellect appear to create such astonishment or draw
+forth such unbounded admiration as in the early part of 1835. But,
+after a well-fought contest he retired once more into the opposition
+till the close of the second Melbourne Administration in 1841. It
+was in April, 1835, that Lord Melbourne was restored to power, but
+the continued enjoyment of office did not much promote the political
+interests of his party, and from various causes the power of the
+whigs began to decline. The commencement of a new reign gave them some
+popularity, but in the new House of Commons, elected in consequence
+of that event, the conservative party were evidently gaining strength;
+still, after the failure of 1834-5, it was no easy task to dislodge an
+existing ministry, and at the same time to be prepared with a cabinet
+and a party competent to succeed them. Sir Robert Peel, therefore,
+with characteristic caution, "bided his time", conducting the business
+of opposition throughout the whole of this period with an ability and
+success of which history affords few examples. He had accepted the
+Reform Bill as the established law of England, and as the system upon
+which the country was thenceforward to be governed. He was willing
+to carry it out in its true spirit, but he would proceed no further.
+He marshaled his opposition upon the principle of resistance to any
+further organic changes, and he enlisted the majority of the peers
+and nearly the whole of the country gentlemen of England in support
+of the great principle of protection to British industry. The little
+maneuvres and small political intrigues of the period are almost
+forgotten, and the remembrance of them is scarcely worthy of revival.
+It may, however, be mentioned, that in 1839 ministers, being left in
+a minority, resigned, and Sir Robert Peel, when sent for by the Queen,
+demanded that certain ladies in the household of her majesty,--the
+near relatives of eminent whig politicians,--should be removed
+from the personal service of the sovereign. As this was refused,
+he abandoned for the time any attempt to form a government, and his
+opponents remained in office till September, 1841. It was then Sir
+Robert Peel became the first lord of the treasury, and the Duke of
+Wellington, without office, accepted a seat in the cabinet, taking
+the management of the House of Lords. His ministry was formed on
+protectionist principles, but the close of its career was marked by
+the adoption of free trade doctrines differing in the widest and most
+liberal sense. Sir Robert Peel's sense of public duty impelled him
+once more to incur the odium and obliquy which attended a fundamental
+change of policy, and a repudiation of the political partizans
+by whose ardent support a minister may have attained office and
+authority. It was his fate to encounter more than any man ever did,
+that hostility which such conduct, however necessary, never fails
+to produce. This great change in our commercial policy, however
+unavoidable, must be regarded as the proximate cause of his final
+expulsion from office in July, 1846. His administration, however, had
+been signalized by several measures of great political importance.
+Among the earliest and most prominent of these were his financial
+plans, the striking feature of which was an income-tax; greatly
+extolled for the exemption it afforded from other burdens pressing
+more severely on industry, but loudly condemned for its irregular and
+unequal operation, a vice which has since rendered its contemplated
+increase impossible.
+
+Of the ministerial life of Sir Robert Peel little more remains to be
+related except that which properly belongs rather to the history of
+the country than to his individual biography. But it would be unjust
+to the memory of one of the most sagacious statesman that England ever
+produced to deny that his latest renunciation of political principles
+required but two short years to attest the vital necessity of that
+unqualified surrender. If the corn laws had been in existence at the
+period when the political system of the continent was shaken to its
+centre and dynasties crumbled into dust, a question would have been
+left in the hands of the democratic party of England, the force of
+which neither skill nor influence could then have evaded. Instead
+of broken friendships, shattered reputations for consistency, or
+diminished rents, the whole realm of England might have borne a
+fearful share in that storm of wreck and revolution which had its
+crisis in the 10th of April, 1848.
+
+In the course of his long and eventful life many honors were conferred
+upon Sir Robert Peel. Wherever he went, and almost at all times,
+he attracted universal attention, and was always received with the
+highest consideration. At the close of 1836 the University of Glasgow
+elected him Lord Rector, and the conservatives of that city, in
+January, 1837, invited him to a banquet at which three thousand
+gentlemen assembled to do honor to their great political chief. But
+this was only one among many occasions on which he was "the great
+guest." Perhaps the most remarkable of these banquets was that given
+to him in 1835 at Merchant Tailors' Hall by three hundred members of
+the House of Commons. Many other circumstances might be related to
+illustrate the high position which Sir Robert Peel occupied. Anecdotes
+innumerable might be recorded to show the extraordinary influence in
+Parliament which made him "the great commoner" of the age; for Sir
+Robert Peel was not only a skillful and adroit debater, but by many
+degrees the most able and one of the most eloquent men in either house
+of parliament. Nothing could be more stately or imposing than the
+long array of sounding periods in which he expounded his doctrines,
+assailed his political adversaries, or vindicated his own policy. But
+when the whole land laments his loss, when England mourns the untimely
+fate of one of her noblest sons, the task of critical disquisition
+upon literary attainments or public oratory possesses little
+attraction. It may be left for calmer moments, and a more distant
+time, to investigate with unforgiving justice the sources of his
+errors, or to estimate the precise value of services which the
+public is now disposed to regard with no other feelings than those of
+unmingled gratitude.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+FROM THE ART-JOURNAL.
+
+MEMORIES OF MISS JANE PORTER.
+
+BY MRS. S.C. HALL.
+
+The frequent observation of foreigners is, that in England we have
+few "celebrated women." Perhaps they mean that we have few who are
+"notorious;" but let us admit that in either case they are right; and
+may we not express our belief in its being better for women and for
+the community that such is the case. "Celebrity" rarely adds to the
+happiness of a woman, and almost as rarely increases her usefulness.
+The time and attention required to attain "celebrity," must, except
+under very peculiar circumstances, interfere with the faithful
+discharge of those feminine duties upon which the well-doing of
+society depends, and which shed so pure a halo around our English
+homes. Within these "homes" our heroes, statesmen, philosophers, men
+of letters, men of genius, receive their first impressions, and the
+_impetus_ to a faithful discharge of their after callings as Christian
+subjects of the State.
+
+There are few of such men who do not trace back their resolution,
+their patriotism, their wisdom, their learning--the nourishment of
+all their higher aspirations--to a wise, hopeful, loving-hearted
+and faith-inspired Mother; one who believed in a son's destiny to be
+great; it may be, impelled to such belief rather by instinct than by
+reason: who cherished (we can find no better word) the "Hero-feeling"
+of devotion to what was right; though it might have been unworldly;
+and whose deep heart welled up perpetual love and patience toward the
+overboiling faults and frequent stumblings of a hot youth, which she
+felt would mellow into a fruitful manhood.
+
+The strength and glory of England are in the keeping of the wives
+and mothers of its men; and when we are questioned touching our
+"celebrated women", we may in general terms refer to those who have
+watched over, moulded, and inspired our "celebrated men".
+
+Happy is the country where the laws of God and Nature are held in
+reverence--where each sex fulfills its peculiar duties, and renders
+its sphere a sanctuary! And surely such harmony is blessed by the
+Almighty--for while other nations writhe in anarchy and poverty, our
+own spreads wide her arms to receive all who seek protection or need
+repose.
+
+But if we have few "celebrated" women, few who, impelled either by
+circumstances or the irrepressible restlessness of genius, go forth
+amid the pitfalls of publicity, and battle with the world, either as
+poets, or dramatists, or moralists, or mere tale-tellers in simple
+prose--or, more dangerous still, "hold the mirror up to nature" on
+the stage that mimics life--if we have but few, we have, and have
+had _some_, of whom we are justly proud; women of such well-balanced
+minds, that toil they ever so laboriously in their public and perilous
+paths, their domestic and social duties have been fulfilled with as
+diligent and faithful love as though the world had never been purified
+and enriched by the treasures of their feminine wisdom; yet this
+does not shake our belief, that despite the spotless and well-earned
+reputations they enjoyed, the homage they received, (and it has its
+charm,) and even the blessed consciousness of having contributed to
+the healthful recreation, the improved morality, the diffusion of the
+best sort of knowledge--the _woman_ would have been happier had she
+continued enshrined in the privacy of domestic love and domestic duty.
+She may not think this at the commencement of her career; and at its
+termination, if she has lived sufficiently long to have descended,
+even gracefully, from her pedestal, she may often recall the homage of
+the _past_ to make up for its lack in the _present_. But so perfectly
+is woman constituted for the cares, the affections, the duties--the
+blessed duties of un-public life--that if she give nature way it will
+whisper to her a text, that "celebrity never added to the happiness of
+a true woman". She must look for her happiness to HOME. We would have
+young women ponder over this, and watch carefully, ere the veil is
+lifted, and the hard cruel eye of public criticism fixed upon them.
+No profession is pastime; still less so now than ever, when so many
+people are "clever", though so few are great. We would pray those
+especially who direct their thoughts to literature, to think of what
+they have to say, and why they wish to say it; and above all, to weigh
+what they may expect from a capricious public, against the blessed
+shelter and pure harmonies of private life.
+
+But we have had some--and still have some--"celebrated" women, of whom
+we have said "we may be justly proud". We have done pilgrimage to the
+shrine of Lady Rachel Russell, who was so thoroughly "domestic", that
+the Corinthian beauty of her character would never have been matter
+of history, but for the wickedness of a bad king. We have recorded
+the hours spent with Hannah More; the happy days passed with, and the
+years invigorated by, the advice and influence of Maria Edgworth. We
+might recall the stern and faithful puritanism of Maria Jane Jewsbury,
+and the Old World devotion of the true and high-souled daughter of
+Israel--Grace Aguilar. The mellow tones of Felicia Hemans' poetry
+lingers still among all who appreciate the holy sympathies of religion
+and virtue. We could dwell long and profitably on the enduring
+patience and lifelong labor of Barbara Hofland, and steep a diamond in
+tears to record the memories of L.E.L. We could,--alas! alas! barely
+five and twenty years' acquaintance with literature and its ornaments,
+and the brilliant catalogue is but a _Memento Mori_. Perhaps of all
+this list, Maria Edgworth's life was the happiest: simply because she
+was the most retired, the least exposed to the gaze and observation of
+the world, the most occupied by loving duties toward the most united
+circle of old and young we ever saw assembled in one happy home.
+
+The very young have never, perhaps, read one of the tales of a lady
+whose reputation as a novelist was in its zenith when Walter Scott
+published his first novel. We desire to place a chaplet upon the grave
+of a woman once "celebrated" all over the known world, yet who drew
+all her happiness from the lovingness of home and friends, while her
+life was as pure as her renown was extensive.
+
+In our own childhood romance-reading was prohibited, but earnest
+entreaty procured an exception in favor of the "Scottish Chiefs". It
+was the bright summer, and we read it by moonlight, only disturbed
+by the murmur of the distant ocean. We read it, crouched in the deep
+recess of the nursery-window; we read it until moonlight and morning
+met, and the breakfast-bell ringing out into the soft air from the
+old gable, found us at the end of the fourth volume. Dear old times!
+when it would have been deemed little less than sacrilege to crush a
+respectable romance into a shilling volume, and our mammas considered
+_only_ a five-volume story curtailed of its just proportions.
+
+Sir William Wallace has never lost his heroic ascendancy over us,
+and we have steadily resisted every temptation to open the "popular
+edition" of the long-loved romance, lest what people will call "the
+improved state of the human mind", might displace the sweet memory of
+the mingled admiration and indignation that chased each other, while
+we read and wept, without ever questioning the truth of the absorbing
+narrative.
+
+Yet the "Scottish Chiefs" scarcely achieved the popularity of
+"Thaddeus of Warsaw"--the first romance originated by the active
+brain and singularly constructive power of Jane Porter--produced at an
+almost girlish age.
+
+The hero of "Thaddeus of Warsaw" was really Kosciuszko, the beloved
+pupil of George Washington, the grandest and purest patriot the modern
+world has known. The enthusiastic girl was moved to its composition by
+the stirring times in which she lived, and a personal observation
+of and acquaintance with some of those brave men whose struggles for
+liberty only ceased with their exile or their existence.
+
+Miss Porter placed her standard of excellence on high ground, and--all
+gentle-spirited as was her nature--it was firm and unflinching toward
+what she believed the right and true. We must not therefore judge
+her by the depressed state of "feeling" in these times, when its
+demonstration is looked upon as artificial or affected. Toward the
+termination of the last, and the commencement of the present century,
+the world was roused into an interest and enthusiasm, which now we
+can scarcely appreciate or account for; the sympathies of England were
+awakened by the terrible revolutions of France and the desolation of
+Poland; as a principle, we hated Napoleon, though he had neither act
+nor part in the doings of the democrats; and the sea-songs of Dibdin,
+which our youth _now_ would call uncouth and ungraceful rhymes, were
+key-notes to public feeling; the English of that time were thoroughly
+"awake"--the British Lion had not slumbered through a thirty years'
+peace. We were a nation of soldiers, and sailors, and patriots;
+not of mingled cotton-spinners, and railway speculators, and angry
+protectionists. We do not say which state of things is best or worst,
+we desire merely to account for what may be called the taste for
+_heroic_ literature at that time, and the taste for--we really hardly
+know what to call it--literature of the present, made up, as it
+too generally is, of shreds and patches--bits of gold and bits of
+tinsel--things written in a hurry, to be read in a hurry, and never
+thought of afterward--suggestive rather than reflective, at the best:
+and we must plead guilty to a too great proneness to underrate what
+our fathers probably overrated.
+
+At all events we must bear in mind, while reading or thinking over
+Miss Porter's novels, that in her day, even the exaggeration
+of enthusiasm was considered good tone and good taste. How this
+enthusiasm was _fostered_, not subdued, can be gathered by the
+author's ingenious preface to the, we believe, tenth edition of
+"Thaddeus of Warsaw."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+This story brought her abundant honors, and rendered her society,
+as well as the society of her sister and brother, sought for by all
+who aimed at a reputation for taste and talent. Mrs. Porter, on her
+husband's death, (he was the younger son of a well-connected Irish
+family, born in Ireland, in or near Coleraine, we believe, and a major
+in the Enniskillen Dragoons,) sought a residence for her family in
+Edinburgh, where education and good society are attainable to persons
+of moderate fortunes, if they are "well-born;" but the extraordinary
+artistic skill of her son Robert required a wider field, and she
+brought her children to London sooner than she had intended, that his
+promising talents might be cultivated. We believe the greater part
+of "Thaddeus of Warsaw" was written in London, either in St. Martin's
+Lane, Newport Street, or Gerard Street, Soho, (for in these three
+streets the family lived after their arrival in the metropolis);
+though, as soon as Robert Ker Porter's abilities floated him on the
+stream, his mother and sisters retired, in the brightness of their
+fame and beauty, to the village of Thames Ditton, a residence they
+loved to speak of as their "home." The actual labor of "Thaddeus"--her
+first novel--must have been considerable: for testimony was frequently
+borne to the fidelity of its localities, and Poles refused to believe
+the author had not visited Poland; indeed, she had a happy power in
+describing localities. It was on the publication of Miss Porter's two
+first works in the German language that their author was honored by
+being made a Lady of the Chapter of St. Joachim, and received the
+gold cross of the order from Wurtemberg; but "The Scottish Chiefs" was
+never so popular on the Continent as "Thaddeus of Warsaw", although
+Napoleon honored it with an interdict, to prevent its circulation in
+France. If Jane Porter owed her Polish inspirations so peculiarly
+to the tone of the times in which she lived, she traces back, in
+her introduction to the latest edition of "The Scottish Chiefs." her
+enthusiasm in the cause of Sir William Wallace to the influence an
+old "Scotch wife's" tales and ballads produced upon her mind while in
+early childhood. She wandered amid what she describes as "beautiful
+green banks," which rose in natural terraces behind her mothers house,
+and where a cow and a few sheep occasionally fed. This house stood
+alone, at the head of a little square, near the high school; the
+distinguished Lord Elchies formerly lived in the house, which was very
+ancient, and from those green banks it commanded a fine view of the
+Firth of Forth. While gathering "_gowans_" or other wild-flowers for
+her infant sister, (whom she loved more dearly than her life, during
+the years they lived in most tender and affectionate companionship),
+she frequently encountered this aged woman, with her knitting in her
+hand; and she would speak to the eager and intelligent child of the
+blessed quiet of the land, where the cattle were browsing without fear
+of an enemy; and then she would talk of the awful times of the brave
+Sir William Wallace, when he fought for Scotland, "against a cruel
+tyrant; like unto them whom Abraham overcame when he recovered Lot,
+with all his herds and flocks, from the proud foray of the robber
+kings of the South," who, she never failed to add, "were all rightly
+punished for oppressing the stranger in a foreign land! for the Lord
+careth for the stranger." Miss Porter says that this woman never
+omitted mingling pious allusions with her narrative. "Yet she was a
+person of low degree, dressed in a coarse woollen gown, and a plain
+_Mutch_ cap, clasped under the chin with a silver brooch, which her
+father had worn at the battle of Culloden." Of course she filled with
+tales of Sir William Wallace and the Bruce the listening ears of the
+lovely Saxon child, who treasured them in her heart and brain, until
+they fructified in after years into "The Scottish Chiefs." To these
+two were added "The Pastor's Fireside," and a number of other tales
+and romances. She contributed to several annuals and magazines, and
+always took pains to keep up the reputation she had won, achieving
+a large share of the popularity, to which, as an author, she never
+looked for happiness. No one could be more alive to praise or more
+grateful for attention, but the heart of a genuine, pure, loving
+woman, beat within Jane Porter's bosom, and she was never drawn out of
+her domestic circle by the flattery that has spoiled so many, men as
+well as women. Her mind was admirably balanced by her home affections,
+which remained unsullied and unshaken to the end of her days. She
+had, in common with her three brothers and her charming sister, the
+advantage of a wise and loving mother--a woman pious without cant, and
+worldly-wise without being worldly. Mrs. Porter was born at Durham,
+and when very young bestowed her hand and heart on Major Porter.
+An old friend of the family assures us that two or three of their
+children were born in Ireland, and that certainly Jane was amongst the
+number. Although she left Ireland when in early youth, perhaps almost
+an infant, she certainly must be considered Irish, as her father was
+so both by birth and descent, and esteemed during his brief life as a
+brave and generous gentleman. He died young, leaving his lovely widow
+in straitened circumstances, having only her widow's pension to depend
+on. The eldest son--afterward Colonel Porter--was sent to school by
+his grandfather.
+
+We have glanced briefly at Sir Robert Ker Porter's wonderful
+talents, and Anna Maria, when in her twelfth year, rushed, as
+Jane acknowledged, "prematurely into print." Of Anna Maria we knew
+personally but very little, enough however to recall with a pleasant
+memory her readiness in conversation and her bland and cheerful
+manners. No two sisters could have been more different in bearing and
+appearance; Maria was a delicate blonde, with a _riant_ face, and
+an animated manner--we had said almost _peculiarly Irish_--rushing
+at conclusions, where her more thoughtful and careful sister paused
+to consider and calculate. The beauty of Jane was statuesque, her
+deportment serious yet cheerful, a seriousness quite as natural as
+her younger sister's gaiety; they both labored diligently, but Anna
+Maria's labor was sport when compared to her eldest sister's careful
+toil; Jane's mind was of a more lofty order, she was intense, and felt
+more than she said, while Anna Maria often said more than she felt;
+they were a delightful contrast, and yet the harmony between them was
+complete; and one of the happiest days we ever spent, while trembling
+on the threshold of literature, was with them at their pretty
+road-side cottage in the village of Esher before the death of their
+venerable and dearly beloved mother, whose rectitude and prudence had
+both guided and sheltered their youth, and who lived to reap with
+them the harvest of their industry and exertion. We remember the drive
+there, and the anxiety as to how those very "clever ladies" would
+look, and what they would say; we talked over the various letters
+we had received from Jane, and thought of the cordial invitation to
+their cottage--their "mother's cottage"--as they always called it. We
+remember the old white friendly spaniel who looked at us with blinking
+eyes, and preceded us up stairs; we remember the formal old-fashioned
+courtesy of the venerable old lady, who was then nearly eighty--the
+blue ribands and good-natured frankness of Anna Maria, and the noble
+courtesy of Jane, who received visitors as if she granted an audience;
+this manner was natural to her; it was only the manner of one whose
+thoughts have dwelt more upon heroic deeds, and lived more with heroes
+than with actual living men and women; the effect of this, however,
+soon passed away, but not so the fascination which was in all she
+said and did. Her voice was soft and musical, and her conversation
+addressed to one person rather than to the company at large, while
+Maria talked rapidly to every one, or _for_ every one who chose to
+listen. How happily the hours passed!--we were shown some of those
+extraordinary drawings of Sir Robert, who gained an artists reputation
+before he was twenty, and attracted the attention of West and Shee[2]
+in his mere boyhood. We heard all the interesting particulars of his
+panoramic picture of the Storming of Seringapatam, which, the first
+of its class, was known half over the world. We must not, however,
+be misunderstood--there was neither personal nor family egotism in
+the Porters; they invariably spoke of each other with the tenderest
+affection--but unless the conversation was _forced_ by their
+friends--they never mentioned their own, or each other's works, while
+they were most ready to praise what was excellent in the works of
+others; they spoke with pleasure of their sojourns in London; while
+their mother said, it was much wiser and better for young ladies
+who were not rich, to live quietly in the country, and escape the
+temptations of luxury and display. At that time the "young ladies"
+seemed to us certainly _not_ young: that was about two-and-twenty
+years ago, and Jane Porter was seventy-five when she died. They talked
+much of their previous dwelling at Thames Ditton, of the pleasant
+neighborhood they enjoyed there, though their mother's health and
+their own had much improved since their residence on Esher hill;
+their little garden was bounded at the back by the beautiful park of
+Claremont, and the front of the house overlooked the leading roads,
+broken as they are by the village green, and some noble elms. The view
+is crowned by the high trees of Esher Place; opening from the village
+on that side of the brow of the hill. Jane pointed out the _locale_
+of the proud Cardinal Wolsey's domain, inhabited during the days: of
+his power over Henry VIII., and in their cloudy evening, when that
+capricious monarch's favor changed to bitterest hate. It was the very
+spot to foster her high romance, while she could at the same time
+enjoy the sweets of that domestic converse she loved best of all.
+We were prevented by the occupations and heart-beatings of our own
+literary labors from repeating this visit; and in 1831, four years
+after these well-remembered hours, the venerable mother of a family
+so distinguished in literature and art, rendering their names known
+and honored wherever art and letters flourish, was called HOME. The
+sisters, who had resided ten years at Esher, left it, intending to
+sojourn for a time with their second brother, Doctor Porter, (who
+commenced his career as a surgeon in the navy) in Bristol; but within
+a year the youngest, the light-spirited, bright-hearted Anna Maria
+died; her sister was dreadfully shaken by her loss, and the letters
+we received from her after this bereavement, though containing the
+outpourings of a sorrowing spirit, were full of the certainty of
+that re-union hereafter which became the hope of her life. She soon
+resigned her cottage home at Esher, and found the affectionate welcome
+she so well deserved in many homes, where friends vied with each
+other to fill the void in her sensitive heart. She was of too wise
+a nature, and too sympathizing a habit, to shut out new interests
+and affections, but her _old ones_ never withered, nor were they
+ever replaced; were the love of such a sister-friend--the watchful
+tenderness and uncompromising love of a mother--ever "replaced," to a
+lonely sister _or_ a bereaved daughter! Miss Porters pen had been laid
+aside for some time, when suddenly she came before the world as the
+editor of "Sir Edward Seward's Narrative", and set people hunting over
+old atlases to find out the island where he resided. The whole was
+a clever fiction; yet Miss Porter never confided its authorship, we
+believe, beyond her family circle; perhaps the correspondence and
+documents, which are in the hands of one of her kindest friends (her
+executor), Mr. Shepherd, may throw some light upon a subject which the
+"Quarterly" honored by an article. We think the editor certainly used
+her pen as well as her judgment in the work, and we have imagined that
+it might have been written by the family circle, more in sport than in
+earnest, and then produced to serve a double purpose.
+
+[Footnote 2: In his early days the President of the Royal Academy
+painted a very striking portrait of Jane Porter, as "Miranda,"
+and Harlowe painted her in the canoness dress of the order of St.
+Joachim.]
+
+After her sister's death Miss Jane Porter was afflicted with so
+severe an illness, that we, in common with her other friends, thought
+it impossible she could carry out her plan of journeying to St.
+Petersburgh to visit her brother, Sir Robert Ker Porter, who had
+been long united to a Russian princess, and was then a widower; her
+strength was fearfully reduced; her once round figure become almost
+spectral, and little beyond the placid and dignified expression of
+her noble countenance remained to tell of her former beauty; but her
+resolve was taken; she wished, she said, to see once more her youngest
+and most beloved brother, so distinguished in several careers, almost
+deemed incompatible,--as a painter, an author, a soldier, and a
+diplomatist, and nothing could turn her from her purpose: she reached
+St. Petersburgh in safety, and with apparently improved health, found
+her brother as much courted and beloved there as in his own land,
+and his daughter married to a Russian of high distinction. Sir Robert
+longed to return to England. He did not complain of any illness, and
+everything was arranged for their departure; his final visits were
+paid, all but one to the Emperor, who had ever treated him as a
+friend; the day before his intended journey he went to the palace, was
+graciously received, and then drove home, but when the servant opened
+the carriage-door at his own residence he was dead! One sorrow after
+another pressed heavily upon her; yet she was still the same sweet,
+gentle, holy-minded woman she had ever been, bending with Christian
+faith to the will of the Almighty,--"biding her time".
+
+How differently would she have "watched and waited" had she been
+tainted by vanity, or fixed her soul on the mere triumphs of "literary
+reputation". While firm to her own creed, she fully enjoyed the
+success of those who scramble up--where she bore the standard to the
+heights of Parnassus; she was never more happy than when introducing
+some literary "Tyro" to those who could aid or advise a future career.
+We can speak from experience of the warm interest she took in the
+Hospital for the cure of Consumption, and the Governesses' Benevolent
+Institution; during the progress of the latter, her health was
+painfully feeble, yet she used her personal influence for its success,
+and worked with her own hands for its bazaars. She was ever aiding
+those who could not aid themselves; and all her thoughts, words, and
+deeds, were evidence of her clear, powerful mind and kindly loving
+heart; her appearance in the London _coteries_ was always hailed with
+interest and pleasure; to the young she was especially affectionate;
+but it was in the quiet mornings, or in the long twilight evenings
+of summer, when visiting her cherished friends at Shirley Park, in
+Kensington Square, or wherever she might be located for the time--it
+was then that her former spirit revived, and she poured forth anecdote
+and illustration, and the store of many years' observation, filtered
+by experience and purified by that delightful faith to which she
+held,--that "all things work together for good to them that love the
+Lord". She held this in practice, even more than in theory; you saw
+her chastened yet hopeful spirit beaming forth from her gentle eyes,
+and her sweet smile can never be forgotten. The last time we saw her,
+was about two years ago--in Bristol--at her brother's, Dr. Porter's,
+house in Portland Square: then she could hardly stand without
+assistance, yet she never complained of her own suffering or
+feebleness, all her anxiety was about the brother--then dangerously
+ill, and now the last of "his race." Major Porter, it will be
+remembered, left five children, and these have left only one
+descendant--the daughter of Sir Robert Ker Porter and the Russian
+Princess whom he married, a young Russian lady, whose present name we
+do not even know.
+
+We did not think at our last leave-taking that Miss Porter's fragile
+frame could have so long withstood the Power that takes away all we
+hold most dear; but her spirit was at length summoned, after a few
+days' total insensibility, on the 24th of May.
+
+We were haunted by the idea that the pretty cottage at Esher, where
+we spent those happy hours, had been treated even as "Mrs. Porter's
+Arcadia" at Thames Ditton--now altogether removed; and it was with a
+melancholy pleasure we found it the other morning in nothing changed;
+and it was almost impossible to believe that so many years had passed
+since our last visit. While Mr. Fairholt was sketching the cottage, we
+knocked at the door, and were kindly permitted by two gentle sisters,
+who now inhabit it, to enter the little drawing-room and walk round
+the garden: except that the drawing-room has been re-papered and
+painted, and that there were no drawings and no flowers the room was
+not in the least altered; yet to us it seemed like a sepulcher, and we
+rejoiced to breathe the sweet air of the little garden, and listen to
+a nightingale, whose melancholy cadence harmonized with our feelings.
+
+"Whenever you are at Esher," said the devoted daughter, the last
+time we conversed with her, "do visit my mother's tomb." We did so.
+A cypress flourishes at the head of the grave; and the following
+touching inscription is carved on the stone:--
+
+ Here sleeps in Jesus a Christian widow, JANE PORTER. Obiit
+ June 18th, 1831, ætat. 86; the beloved mother of W. Porter,
+ M.D., of Sir Robert Ker Porter, and of Jane and Anna Maria
+ Porter, who mourn in hope, humbly trusting to be born again
+ with her unto the blessed kingdom of their Lord and Savior.
+ Respect her grave, for she ministered to the poor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+RECENT DEATHS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. KIRBY, THE ENTOMOLOGIST.
+
+The Rev. William Kirby, Rector of Barham, Suffolk, who died on the 4th
+ult. in the ninety-first year of his age, with his faculties little
+impaired, ranked as the father of Entomology in England; and to the
+successful results of his labors may he chiefly attributed the advance
+which has been made in this over other kindred departments of natural
+history. His reputation is based not so much on the discoveries made
+by him in the science as on the manner of its teaching. No man ever
+approached the study of the works of nature with a purer or more
+earnest zeal. His interpretation of the distinguishing characters of
+insects for the purposes of classification has excited the warmest
+approval of entomologists at home and abroad; while his agreeable
+narrative of their wonderful transformations and habits, teeming with
+analyses and anecdote, has a charm for almost every kind of reader.
+
+Mr. Kirby's first work of particular note was the "Monographia Apum
+Angliæ", in two volumes published half a century ago at Ipswich; to
+which town he was much endeared, and in whose Museum, as President,
+under the friendly auspices of its Secretary, Mr. George Ransome, he
+took a lively interest. His admirable work on the Wild Bees of Great
+Britain was composed from materials collected almost entirely by
+himself,--and most of the plates were of his etching. Entomology was
+at that time a comparatively new science in this country, and it is an
+honorable proof of the correctness of the author's views that they are
+still acknowledged to be genuine.
+
+His further progress in entomology is abundantly marked by various
+papers in the "Transactions of the Linnæan Society",--by the
+entomological portion of the Bridgewater Treatise "On the History,
+Habits, and Instincts of Animals,"--and by his descriptions, occupying
+a quarto volume, of the insects of Sir John Richardson's "Fauna
+Boreali-Americana." The name of Kirby will, however, be chiefly
+remembered for the "Introduction on Entomology" written by him in
+conjunction with Mr. Spence. In this work a vast amount of material,
+acquired after many years' unremitting observation of the insect
+world, is mingled together by two different but congenial minds in
+the pleasant form of familiar letters. The charm, based on substantial
+knowledge of the subject, which these letters impart, has caused
+them to be studied with an interest never before excited by any work
+on natural history,--and they have served for the model of many an
+interesting and instructive volume. Whether William Kirby or William
+Spence had the more meritorious share in the composition of these
+Letters, has never been ascertained; for each, in the plenitude of his
+esteem and love for the other, renounced all claim, in favor of his
+coadjutor, to whatever portion of the matter might be most valued.
+
+In addition to the honor of being President of the Museum of his
+county town--in which there is an admirable portrait of him--Mr. Kirby
+was Honorary President of the Entomological Society of London, Fellow
+of the Royal, Linnæan, Geological, and Zoological Societies of the
+same city, and corresponding member of several foreign societies.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The death of REV. DR. GRAY, Professor of Oriental Languages in the
+University of Glasgow, is reported in the Scotch papers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE FINE ARTS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One of the favorite painters of Paris is Ingres, renowned especially
+for the beauty of his designs from the human figure, and the sweetness
+of his coloring. Eight years ago he was commissioned by M. de Luynes,
+who then wore the title of Duke--which, it must be said, he is
+still called by, though the Republic frowns on such aristocratic
+distinctions--to paint two historical pictures in fresco, for a
+country-house near Paris. The subjects were left to the choice of
+the artist, who was to have 100,000 francs (or £20,000) for the two
+pictures, one quarter of which was paid him in advance. During these
+eight years Mr. Ingres has begun various designs, and done his best
+to satisfy himself in the planning and execution of the pictures; but
+in vain did he blot out one design and labor long and earnestly upon
+another--success still fled from his pencil. At last, after eight
+years' fruitless exertion, he despaired, and going to M. de Luynes,
+told him that he could not make the pictures. At the same time he
+offered to return the £5,000; but M. de Luynes, one of the most
+munificent gentlemen in France, refused to receive it. Madame Ingres,
+however, arranged the difficulty. She remembered that during these
+eight years her kitchen had been regularly supplied with vegetables
+from M. de Luynes' garden, and these she insisted on paying for. "Very
+well," said M. de Luynes, "if you will have it so, my gardener shall
+bring you his bill." Accordingly, not long after, the gardener brought
+a bill for twenty-five francs. "My friend," said Madame Ingres to him,
+"you are mistaken in the amount: this is very natural, considering the
+length of the time. I have a better memory: your master will find in
+this envelope the exact sum." When M. de Luynes opened the envelope,
+he found in it bills for twenty thousand francs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LESTER, BRADY & DAVIGNON's "_Gallery of Illustrious Americans_," is
+very favorably noticed generally by the foreign critics. _The Art
+Journal_ says of it: "This work is, as its title imports, of a
+strictly national character, consisting of portraits and biographical
+sketches of twenty-four of the most eminent of the citizens of the
+Republic, since the death of Washington; beautifully lithographed from
+daguerreotypes. Each number is devoted to a portrait and memoir, the
+first being that of General Taylor (eleventh President of the United
+States), the second, of John C. Calhoun. Certainly, we have never seen
+more truthful copies of nature than these portraits; they carry in
+them an indelible stamp of all that earnestness and power for which
+our trans-Atlantic brethren have become famous, and are such heads as
+Lavater would have delighted to look upon. They are, truly, speaking
+likenesses, and impress all who see them with the certainty of their
+accuracy, so self-evident is their character. We are always rejoiced
+to notice a great nation doing honor to its great men; it is a noble
+duty which when properly done honors all concerned therewith. We see
+no reason to doubt that America may in this instance rank with the
+greatest."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DR. WAAGEN, so well known for his writings on Art, is at present in
+England for the purpose of adding to his knowledge of the private
+collection of pictures there, but principally to make himself
+acquainted with ancient illuminated manuscripts in several British
+collections.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A MONUMENT IN HONOR OF COWPER, THE POET, is proposed to be erected in
+Westminster Abbey, from a design by Marshall, the Sculptor, exhibited
+at the Royal Academy in 1849.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SUMMER VACATION.
+
+THE FOURTH BOOK OF WORDSWORTH'S UNPUBLISHED POEM.[3]
+
+
+ Bright was the summer's noon when quickening steps
+ Followed each other till a dreary moor
+ Was crossed, a bare ridge clomb, upon whose top
+ Standing alone, as from a rampart's edge,
+ I overlooked the bed of Windermere,
+ Like a vast river, stretching in the sun.
+ With exultation at my feet I saw
+ Lake, islands, promontories, gleaming bays,
+ A universe of Nature's fairest forms
+ Proudly revealed with instantaneous burst,
+ Magnificent, and beautiful, and gay.
+ I bounded down the hill shouting amain
+ For the old Ferryman; to the shout the rocks
+ Replied, and when the Charon of the flood
+ Had stayed his oars, and touched the jutting pier,
+ I did not step into the well-known boat
+ Without a cordial greeting. Thence with speed
+ Up the familiar hill I took my way
+ Toward that sweet Valley where I had been reared;
+ 'Twas but a shore hour's walk, ere veering round
+ I saw the snow-white church upon her hill
+ Sit like a throned Lady, sending out
+ A gracious look all over her domain.
+ You azure smoke betrays the lurking town;
+ With eager footsteps I advance and reach
+ The cottage threshold where my journey closed.
+ Glad welcome had I, with some tear, perhaps,
+ From my old Dame, so kind and motherly,
+ While she perused me with a parent's pride.
+ The thoughts of gratitude shall fall like dew
+ Upon thy grave, good creature! While my heart
+ Can beat never will I forget they name.
+ Heaven's blessing be upon thee where thou liest
+ After thy innocent and busy stir
+ In narrow cares, thy little daily growth
+ Of calm enjoyments, after eighty years,
+ And more than eighty, of untroubled life,
+ Childless, yet by the strangers to thy blood
+ Honored with little less than filial love.
+ What joy was mine to see thee once again,
+ Thee and they dwelling, and a crowd of things
+ About its narrow precincts all beloved,
+ And many of them seeming yet my own!
+ Why should I speak of what a thousand hearts
+ Have felt, and every man alive can guess?
+ The rooms, the court, the garden were not left
+ Long unsaluted, nor the sunny seat
+ Round the stone table under the dark pine,
+ Friendly to studious or to festive hours;
+ Nor that unruly child of mountain birth,
+ The famous brook, who, soon as he was boxed
+ Within our garden, found himself at once,
+ As if by trick insidious and unkind,
+ Stripped of his voice and left to dimple down
+ (Without an effort and without a will)
+ A channel paved by man's officious care.
+ I looked at him and smiled, and smiled again,
+ And in the press of twenty thousand thought,
+ "Ha," quoth I, "pretty prisoner, are you there!"
+ Well might sarcastic Fancy then have whispered,
+ "An emblem here behold of they own life;
+ In its late course of even days with all
+ Their smooth enthralment;" but the heart was full,
+ Too full for that reproach. My aged Dame
+ Walked proudly at my side: she guided me;
+ I willing, nay--nay, wishing to be led.
+ --The face of every neighbor whom I met
+ Was like a volume to me; some were hailed
+ Upon the road, some busy at their work,
+ Unceremonious greetings interchanged
+ With half the length of a long field between.
+ Among my schoolfellows I scattered round
+ Like recognitions, but with some constraint
+ Attended, doubtless, with a little pride,
+ But with more shame, for my habiliments,
+ The transformation wrought by gay attire.
+ Not less delighted did I take my place
+ At our domestic table: and, dear Friend!
+ In this endeavor simply to relate
+ A Poet's history, may I leave untold
+ The thankfulness with which I laid me down
+ In my accustomed bed, more welcome now
+ Perhaps than if it had been more desired
+ Or been more often thought of with regret;
+ That lowly bed whence I had heard the wind
+ Roar and the rain beat hard, where I so oft
+ Had lain awake on summer nights to watch
+ The moon in splendor couched among the leaves
+ Of a tall ash, that near our cottage stood;
+ Had watched her with fixed eyes while to and fro
+ In the dark summit of the waving tree
+ She rocked with every impulse of the breeze.
+ Among the favorites whom it pleased me well
+ To see again, was one by ancient right
+ Our inmate, a rough terrier of the hills;
+ By birth and call of nature pre-ordained
+ To hunt the badger and unearth the fox
+ Among the impervious crags, but having been
+ From youth our own adopted, he had passed
+ Into a gentler service. And when first
+ The boyish spirit flagged, and day by day
+ Along my veins I kindled with the stir,
+ The fermentation, and the vernal heat
+ Of poesy, affecting private shades
+ Like a sick Lover, then this dog was used
+ To watch me, an attendant and a friend,
+ Obsequious to my steps early and late,
+ Though often of such dilatory walk
+ Tired, and uneasy at the halts I made.
+ A hundred times when, roving high and low,
+ I have been harassed with the toil of verse,
+ Much pains and little progress, and at once
+ Some lovely Image in the song rose up
+ Full-formed, like Venus rising from the sea;
+ Then have I darted forward to let loose
+ My hand upon his back with stormy joy,
+ Caressing him again and yet again.
+ And when at evening on the public way
+ I sauntered, like a river murmuring
+ And talking to itself when all things else
+ Are still, the creature trotted on before;
+ Such was his custom; but whene'er he met
+ A passenger approaching, he would turn
+ To give me timely notice, and straightway,
+ Grateful for that admonishment, I hushed
+ My voice, composed my gait, and, with the air
+ And mein of one whose thoughts are free, advanced
+ To give and take a greeting that might save
+ My name from piteous rumors, such as wait
+ On men suspected to be crazed in brain.
+ Those walks well worth to be prized and loved--
+ Regretted!--that word, too, was on my tongue,
+ But they were richly laden with all good,
+ And cannot be remembered but with thanks
+ And gratitude, and perfect joy of heart--
+ Those walks in all their freshness now came back
+ Like a returning Spring. When first I made
+ Once more the circuit of our little lake,
+ If ever happiness hath lodged with man,
+ That day consummate happiness was mine,
+ Wide-spreading, steady, calm, contemplative.
+ The sun was set, or setting, when I left
+ Our cottage door, and evening soon brought on
+ A sober hour, not winning or serene,
+ For cold and raw the air was, and untuned;
+ But as a face we love is sweetest then
+ When sorrow damps it, or, whatever look
+ It chance to wear, is sweetest if the heart
+ Have fullness in herself; even so with me
+ It fared that evening. Gently did my soul
+ Put off her veil, and, self-transmuted, stood
+ Naked, as in the presence of her God.
+ While on I walked, a comfort seemed to touch
+ A heart that had not been disconsolate:
+ Strength came where weakness was not known to be,
+ At least not felt; and restoration came
+ Like an intruder knocking at the door
+ Of unacknowledged weariness. I took
+ The balance, and with firm hand weighted myself.
+ --Of that external scene which round me lay,
+ Little, in this abstraction, did I see;
+ Remembered less; but I had inward hopes
+ And swellings of the spirit, was rapt and soothed,
+ Conversed with promises, had glimmering views
+ How life pervades the undecaying mind;
+ How the immortal soul with God-like power
+ Informs, creates, and thaws the deepest sleep
+ That time can lay upon her; how on earth,
+ Man, if he do but live within the light
+ Of high endeavors, daily spreads abroad
+ His being armed with strength that cannot fail
+ Nor was there want of milder thoughts, of love
+ Of innocence, and holiday repose;
+ And more than pastoral quiet, 'mid the stir
+ Of boldest projects, and a peaceful end
+ At last, or glorious, by endurance won.
+ Thus musing, in a wood I sat me down
+ Alone, continuing there to muse: the slopes
+ And heights meanwhile were slowly overspread
+ With darkness, and before a rippling breeze
+ The long lake lengthened out its hoary line,
+ And in the sheltered coppice where I sat,
+ Around me from among the hazel leaves,
+ Now here, now there, moved by the straggling wind,
+ Came ever and anon a breath-like sound,
+ Quick as the pantings of the faithful dog,
+ The off and on companion of my work;
+ And such, at times, believing them to be,
+ I turned my head to look if he were there;
+ Then into solemn thought I passed once more.
+ A freshness also found I at this time
+ In human Life, the daily life of those
+ Whose occupations really I loved;
+ The peaceful scene oft filled me with surprise,
+ Changed like a garden in the heat of spring
+ After an eight days' absence. For (to omit
+ The things which were the same and yet appeared
+ Far otherwise) amid this rural solitude.
+ A narrow Vale where each was known to all,
+ 'Twas not indifferent to a youthful mind
+ To mark some sheltering bower or sunny nook,
+ Where an old man had used to sit alone,
+ Now vacant; pale-faced babes whom I had left
+ In arms, now rosy prattlers at the feet
+ Of a pleased grandame tottering up and down;
+ And growing girls whose beauty, filched away
+ With all its pleasant promises, was gone
+ To deck some slighted playmate's homely cheek.
+ Yes, I had something of a subtler sense,
+ And often looking round was moved to smiles
+ Such as a delicate work of humor breeds;
+ I read, without design, the opinions, thoughts,
+ Of those plain-living people now observed
+ With clearer knowledge; with another eye
+ I saw the quiet woodman in the woods,
+ The shepherd roam the hills. With new delight,
+ This chiefly, did I note my gray-haired Dame;
+ Saw her go forth to church or other work
+ Of state, equipped in monumental trim;
+ Short velvet cloak, (her bonnet of the like,)
+ A mantle such as Spanish Cavaliers
+ Wore in old time. Her smooth domestic life,
+ Affectionate without disquietude,
+ Her talk, her business, pleased me; and no less
+ Her clear though sallow stream of piety
+ That ran on Sabbath days a fresher course;
+ With thoughts unfelt till now I saw her read
+ Her Bible on hot Sunday afternoons,
+ And loved the book, when she had dropped asleep
+ And made of it a pillow for her head.
+ Nor less do I remember to have felt,
+ Distinctly manifested at this time,
+ A human-heartedness about my love
+ For objects hitherto the absolute wealth
+ Of my own private being and no more:
+ Which I had loved even as a blessed spirit
+ Or Angel, if he were to dwell on earth,
+ Might love in individual happiness.
+ But now there opened on me other thoughts
+ Of change, congratulation or regret,
+ A pensive feeling! It spread far and wide;
+ The trees, the mountains shared it, and the brooks,
+ The stars of heaven, now seen in their old haunts--
+ White Sirius glittering o'er the southern crags,
+ Orion with his belt, and those fair Seven,
+ Acquaintances of every little child,
+ And Jupiter, my own beloved star!
+ Whatever shadings of mortality,
+ Whatever imports from the world of death
+ Had come among these objects heretofore,
+ Were, in the main, of mood less tender: strong,
+ Deep, gloomy were they, and severe: the scatterings
+ Of awe or tremulous dread, that had given way
+ In latter youth to yearnings of a love
+ Enthusiastic, to delight and hope.
+ As one who hangs down-bending from the side
+ Of a slow-moving boat, upon the breast
+ Of a still water, solacing himself
+ With such discoveries as his eye can make
+ Beneath him in the bottom of the deep,
+ Sees many beauteous sights--weeds, fishes, flowers,
+ Grots, pebbles, roots of trees, and fancies more,
+ Yet often is perplexed and cannot part
+ The shadow from the substance, rocks and sky
+ Mountains and clouds, reflected in the depth
+ Of the clear flood, from things which there abide
+ In their true dwelling; now is crossed by gleam
+ Of his own image, by a sunbeam now,
+ And wavering motions sent he knows not whence,
+ Impediments that make his task more sweet;
+ Such pleasant office have we long pursued
+ Incumbent o'er the surface of past time
+ With like success, nor often have appeared
+ Shapes fairer or less doubtfully discerned
+ Than those to which the Tale, indulgent Friend!
+ Would now direct thy notice. Yet in spite
+ Of pleasure won, and knowledge not withheld,
+ There was an inner falling off--I loved,
+ Loved deeply all that had been loved before
+ More deeply even than ever: but a swarm
+ Of heady schemes jostling each other, gawds,
+ And feast and dance, and public revelry,
+ And sports and games (too grateful in themselves,
+ Yet in themselves less grateful, I believe,
+ Than as they were a badge glossy and fresh
+ Of manliness and freedom) all conspired
+ To lure my mind from firm habitual quest
+ Of feeding pleasures, to depress the zeal
+ And damp those yearnings which had once been mine--
+ A wild, unworldly-minded youth, given up
+ To his own eager thoughts. It would demand
+ Some skill, and longer time than may be spared,
+ To paint these vanities, and how they wrought
+ In haunts where they, till now, had been unknown.
+ It seemed the very garments that they wore
+ Preyed on my strength, and stopped the quiet stream
+ Of self-forgetfulness.
+ Yes, that heartless chase
+ Of trivial pleasures was a poor exchange
+ For books and nature at that early age.
+ 'Tis true, some casual knowledge might be gained
+ Of character or life; but at that time,
+ Of manners put to school I took small note,
+ And all my deeper passions lay elsewhere.
+ Far better had it been to exalt the mind
+ By solitary study, to uphold
+ Intense desire through meditative peace;
+ And yet, for chastisement of these regrets,
+ The memory of one particular hour
+ Doth here rise up against me. 'Mid a throng
+ Of maids and youths, old men, and matrons staid,
+ A medley of all tempers, I had passed
+ The night in dancing, gayety, and mirth,
+ With din of instruments and shuffling feet,
+ And glancing forms, and tapers glittering,
+ And unaimed prattle flying up and down;
+ Spirits upon the stretch, and here and there
+ Slight shocks of young love-liking interspersed,
+ Whose transient pleasure mounted to the head,
+ And tingled through the veins. Ere we retired
+ The cock had crowed, and now the eastern sky
+ Was kindling, not unseen, from humble copse
+ And open field, through which the pathway wound,
+ And homeward led my steps. Magnificent
+ The morning rose, in memorable pomp,
+ Glorious as e'er I had beheld--in front,
+ The sea lay laughing at a distance; near,
+ The solid mountains shone, bright as the clouds,
+ Grain-tinctured, drenched in Empyrean light;
+ And in the meadows and the lower grounds
+ Was all the sweetness of a common dawn--
+ Dews, vapors, and the melody of birds,
+ And laborers going forth to till the fields.
+ Ah! need I say, dear Friend! that to the brim
+ My heart was full; I made no vows, but vows
+ Were then made for me; bond unknown to me
+ Was given, that I should be, else sinning greatly,
+ A dedicated Spirit. On I walked
+ In thankful blessedness, which yet survives.
+ Strange rendezvous! My mind was at that time
+ A parti-colored show of grave and gay,
+ Solid and light, short-sighted and profound;
+ Of inconsiderate habits and sedate,
+ Consorting in one mansion unreproved.
+ The worth I knew of powers that I possessed,
+ Though slighted and too oft misused. Besides,
+ That summer, swarming as it did with thoughts
+ Transient and idle, lacked not intervals
+ When Folly from the frown of fleeting Time
+ Shrunk, and the mind experienced in herself
+ Conformity as just as that of old
+ To the end and written spirit of God's works,
+ Whether held forth in Nature or in Man,
+ Through pregnant vision, separate or conjoined.
+ When from our better selves we have too long
+ Been parted by the hurrying world, and droop,
+ Sick of its business, of its pleasure tired,
+ How gracious, how benign, is Solitude;
+ How potent a mere image of her sway;
+ Most potent when impressed upon the mind
+ With an appropriate human centre--hermit,
+ Deep in the bosom of the wilderness;
+ Votary (in vast cathedral, where no foot
+ Is treading, where no other face is seen)
+ Kneeling at prayers; or watchman on the top
+ Of lighthouse, beaten by Atlantic waves;
+ Or as the soul of that great Power is met
+ Sometimes embodied on a public road,
+ When, for the night deserted, it assumes
+ A character of quiet more profound
+ Than pathless wastes.
+ Once, when those summer months,
+ Where flown, and autumn brought its annual show
+ Of oars with oars contending, sails with sails,
+ Upon Windander's spacious breast, it chanced
+ That--after I had left a flower-decked room
+ (Whose in-door pastime, lighted up, survived
+ To a late hour), and spirits overwrought
+ Were making night do penance for a day
+ Spent in a round of strenuous idleness--
+ My homeward course led up a long ascent,
+ Where the road's watery surface, to the top
+ Of that sharp rising, glittered to the moon
+ And bore the semblance of another stream
+ Stealing with silent lapse to join the brook
+ That murmured in the vale. All else was still;
+ No living thing appeared in earth or air,
+ And, save the flowing water's peaceful voice,
+ Sound there was none--but, lo! an uncouth shape,
+ Shown by a sudden turning of the road,
+ So near that, slipping back into the shade
+ Of a thick hawthorn, I could mark him well,
+ Myself unseen. He was of stature tall,
+ A span above man's common measure, tall,
+ Stiff, land, and upright; a more meager man
+ Was never seen before by night or day.
+ Long were his arms, pallid his hands; his mouth
+ Looked ghastly in the moonlight: from behind,
+ A mile-stone propped him; I could also ken
+ That he was clothed in military garb.
+ Though faded, yet entire. Companionless,
+ No dog attending, by no staff sustained,
+ He stood, and in his very dress appeared
+ A desolation, a simplicity,
+ To which the trappings of a gaudy world
+ Make a strange back-ground. From his lips, ere long,
+ Issued low muttered sounds, as if of pain
+ Or some uneasy thought; yet still his form
+ Kept the same awful steadiness--at his feet
+ His shadow lay, and moved not. From self-blame
+ Not wholly free, I watched him thus; at length
+ Subduing my heart's specious cowardice,
+ I left the shady nook where I had stood
+ And hailed him. Slowly from his resting-place
+ He rose, and with a lean and wasted arm
+ In measured gesture lifted to his head
+ Returned my salutation; then resumed
+ His station as before: and when I asked
+ His history, the veteran, in reply,
+ Was neither slow nor eager; but, unmoved,
+ And with a quiet, uncomplaining voice,
+ A stately air of mild indifference,
+ He told in few plain words a soldier's tale--
+ That in the Tropic Islands he had served,
+ Whence he had landed scarcely three weeks past;
+ That on his landing he had been dismissed,
+ And now was traveling toward his native home.
+ This heard, I said, in pity, "Come with me."
+ He stooped, and straightway from the ground took up,
+ An oaken staff by me yet unobserved--
+ A staff which must have dropt from his slack hand
+ And lay till now neglected in the grass.
+ Though weak his step and cautious, he appeared
+ To travel without pain, and I beheld,
+ With an astonishment but ill-suppressed,
+ His ghostly figure moving at my side;
+ Nor could I, while we journeyed thus, forbear
+ To turn from present hardships to the past,
+ And speak of war, battle, and pestilence,
+ Sprinkling this talk with questions, better spared.
+ On what he might himself have seen or felt
+ He all the while was in demeanor calm.
+ Concise in answer: solemn and sublime
+ He might have seen, but that in all he said
+ There was a strange half-absence, as of one
+ Knowing too well the importance of his theme
+ But feeling it no longer. Our discourse
+ Soon ended, and together on we passed
+ In silence through a wood gloomy and still.
+ Up-turning, then, along an open field,
+ We reached a cottage. At the door I knocked.
+ And earnestly to charitable care
+ Commended him as a poor friendless man,
+ Belated and by sickness overcome.
+ Assured that now the traveler would repose
+ In comfort, I entreated that henceforth
+ He would not linger in the public ways,
+ But ask for timely furtherance and help
+ Such as his state required. At this reproof,
+ With the same ghastly mildness in his look,
+ He said, "My trust is in the God of Heaven,
+ And in the eye of him who passes me!"
+ The cottage door was speedily unbarred,
+ And now the soldier touched his hat once more
+ With his lean hand, and in a faltering voice,
+ Whose tone bespake reviving interests
+ Till then unfelt, he thanked me; I returned
+ The farewell blessing of the patient man,
+ And so we parted. Back I cast a look,
+ And lingered near the door a little space,
+ Then sought with quiet heart my distant home.
+
+[Footnote 3: In the press of Appleton & Co.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE IVORY MINE:
+
+A TALE OF THE FROZEN SEA.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VI.--THE IVORY MINE.
+
+The end of so perilous and novel a journey, which must necessarily,
+under the most favorable circumstances, have produced more honor
+than profit, was attained; and yet the success of the adventure was
+doubtful. The season was still too cold for any search for fossil
+ivory, and the first serious duty was the erection of a winter
+residence. Fortunately there was an ample supply of logs of wood, some
+half-rotten, some green, lying under the snow on the shores of the bay
+into which the river poured, and which had been deposited there by
+the currents and waves. A regular pile, too, was found, which had been
+laid up by some of the provident natives of New Siberia, who, like
+the Esquimaux, live in the snow. Under this was a large supply of
+frozen fish, which was taken without ceremony, the party being near
+starvation. Of course Sakalar and Ivan intended replacing the hoard,
+if possible, in the short summer.
+
+Wood was made the groundwork of the winter hut which was to be
+erected, but snow and ice formed by far the larger portion of the
+building materials. So hard and compact did the whole mass become when
+finished, and lined with bear-skins and other furs, that a huge lamp
+sufficed for warmth during the day and night, and the cooking was
+done in a small shed by the side. The dogs were now set to shift for
+themselves as to cover, and were soon buried in the snow. They were
+placed on short allowance, now they had no work to do, for no one yet
+knew what were the resources of this wild place.
+
+As soon as the more immediate duties connected with a camp had been
+completed, the whole party occupied themselves with preparing traps
+for foxes, and in other hunting details. A hole was broken in the
+ice in the bay, and this the Kolimsk men watched with assiduity for
+seals. One or two rewarded their efforts, but no fish were taken.
+Sakalar and Ivan, after a day or two of repose, started with some
+carefully-selected dogs in search of game, and soon found that the
+great white bear took up his quarters even in that northern latitude.
+They succeeded in killing several, which the dogs dragged home.
+
+About ten days after their arrival in the great island, Sakalar, who
+was always the first to be moving, roused his comrades round him just
+as a party of a dozen strange men appeared in the distance. They were
+short, stout fellows, with long lances in their hands, and by their
+dress very much resembled the Esquimaux. Their attitude was menacing
+in the extreme, and by the advice of Sakalar, a general volley was
+fired over their heads. The invaders halted, looked confusedly around,
+and then ran away. Firearms retained. therefore, all their pristine
+qualities with these savages.
+
+"They will return," said Sakalar, moodily; "they did the same when
+I was here before, and then came back and killed my friend at night.
+Sakalar escaped."
+
+Counsel was now held, and it was determined, after due deliberation,
+that strict watch should be kept at all hours, while much was
+necessarily trusted to the dogs. All day one of the party was on the
+lookout, while at night the hut had its entrance well barred. Several
+days, however, were thus passed without molestation, and then Sakalar
+took the Kolimsk men out to hunt, and left Ivan and Kolina together.
+The young man had learned the value of his half-savage friend: her
+devotion to her father and the party generally was unbounded. She
+murmured neither at privations nor at sufferings, and kept up the
+courage of Ivan by painting in glowing terms all his brilliant future.
+She seemed to have laid aside her personal feelings, and to look on
+him only as one doing battle with fortune in the hope of earning the
+hand of the rich widow of Yakoutsk. But Ivan was much disposed to
+gloomy fits; he supposed himself forgotten, and slighted, and looked
+on the time of his probation as interminable. It was in this mood that
+one day he was roused from his fit by a challenge from Kolina to go
+and see if the seals had come up to breathe at the hole which every
+morning was freshly broken in the ice. Ivan assented, and away they
+went gaily down to the bay. No seals were there, and after a short
+stay they returned toward the hut, recalled by the distant howling
+of the dogs. But as they came near, they could see no sign of men or
+animals, though the sensible brutes still whined under the shelter
+of their snow-heaps. Ivan, much surprised, raised the curtain of the
+door, his gun in hand, expecting to find that some animal was inside.
+The lamp was out, and the hut in total darkness. Before Ivan could
+recover his upright position, four men leaped on him, and he was a
+prisoner.
+
+Kolina drew back, and cocked her gun; but the natives, satisfied
+with their present prey, formed round Ivan in a compact body, tied
+his hands, and bade him walk. Their looks were sufficiently wild
+and menacing to make him move, especially as he recognized them
+as belonging to the warlike party of the Tchouktchas--a tribe of
+Siberians who wander about the Polar Seas in search of game, who cross
+Behring's Straits in skin-boats, and who probably are the only persons
+who by their temporary sojourn in New Siberia, have caused some to
+suppose it inhabited. Kolina stood uncertain what to do, but in a few
+minutes she roused four of the dogs, and followed. Ivan bawled to her
+to go back, but the girl paid no attention to his request, determined,
+as it seemed, to know his fate.
+
+The savages hurried Ivan along as rapidly as they could; and soon
+entered a deep and narrow ravine, which about the middle parted into
+two. The narrowest path was selected, and the dwelling of the natives
+soon reached. It was a cavern, the narrow entrance of which they
+crawled through; Ivan followed the leader, and soon found himself in
+a large and wonderful cave. It was by nature divided into several
+compartments, and contained a party of twenty men, as many or more
+women, and numerous children. It was warmed in two ways--by wood-fires
+and grease-lamps, and by a bubbling semi-sulphurous spring, that
+rushed up through a narrow hole, and then fell away into a deep well,
+that carried its warm waters to mingle with the icy sea. The acrid
+smoke escaped by holes in the roof. Ivan, his arms and legs bound, was
+thrust into a separate compartment filled with furs, and formed by a
+projection of the rock and the skin-boats which this primitive race
+employed to cross the most stormy seas. He was almost stunned; he lay
+for a while without thought or motion. Gradually he recovered, and
+gazed around; all was night, save above, where by a narrow orifice
+he saw the smoke which hung in clouds around the roof escaping.
+He expected death. He knew the savage race he was among, who hated
+interference with their hunting-grounds, and whose fish he and his
+party had taken. What, therefore, was his surprise, when from the
+summit of the roof, he heard a gentle voice whispering in soft accents
+his own name. His ears must, he thought, deceive him. The hubbub close
+at hand was terrible. A dispute was going on. Men, women. and children
+all joined, and yet he had heard the word "Ivan." "Kolina," he
+replied, in equally low but clear tones. As he spoke a knife rolled
+near him. But he could not touch it. Then a dark form filled the
+orifice about a dozen feet above his head, and something moved down
+among projecting stones, and then Kolina stood by him. In an instant
+Ivan was free, and an axe in his hand. The exit was before them. Steps
+were cut in the rock, to ascend to the upper entrance, near which Ivan
+had been placed without fear, because tied. But a rush was heard, and
+the friends had only time to throw themselves deeper into the cave,
+when four men rushed in, knife in hand, to immolate the victim. Such
+had been the decision come to after the debate.
+
+The lamps revealed the escape of the fugitive. A wild cry drew all the
+men together, and then up they scampered along the rugged projections,
+and the barking of the dogs as they fled showed that they were in hot
+and eager chase. Ivan and Kolina lost no time. They advanced boldly,
+knife and hatchet in hand, sprang amid the terrified women, darted
+across their horrid cavern, and before one of them had recovered from
+her fright, were in the open air. On they ran in the gloom for some
+distance, when they suddenly heard muttering voices. Down they sank
+behind the first large stone, concealing themselves as well as they
+could in the snow. The party moved slowly on toward them.
+
+"I can trace their tracks still," said Sakalar, in a low deep tone.
+"On, while they are alive, or at least for vengeance!"
+
+"Friends!" cried Ivan.
+
+"Father!" said Kolina, and in an instant the whole party were united.
+Five words were enough to determine Sakalar. The whole body rushed
+back, entered the cavern, and found themselves masters of it without
+a struggle. The women and children attempted no resistance. As soon
+as they were placed in a corner, under the guard of the Kolimsk men,
+a council was held. Sakalar, as the most experienced, decided what
+was to be done. He knew the value of threats: one of the women was
+released, and bade go tell the men what had occurred. She was to add
+the offer of a treaty of peace, to which, if both parties agreed,
+the women were to be given up on the one side, and the hut and its
+contents on the other. But the victors announced their intention
+of taking four of the best-looking boys as hostages, to be returned
+whenever they were convinced of the good faith of the Tchouktchas. The
+envoy soon returned, agreeing to everything. They had not gone near
+the hut, fearing an ambuscade. The four boys were at once selected,
+and the belligerents separated.
+
+Sakalar made the little fellows run before, and thus the hut was
+regained. An inner cabin was erected for the prisoners, and the dogs
+placed over them as spies. But as the boys understood Sakalar to mean
+that the dogs were to eat them if they stirred, they remained still
+enough, and made no attempt to run away.
+
+A hasty meal was now cooked, and after its conclusion Ivan related
+the events of the day, warmly dilating on the devotion and courage of
+Kolina, who, with the keenness of a Yakouta, had found out his prison
+by the smoke, and had seen him on the ground despite the gloom.
+Sakalar then explained how, on his return, he had been terribly
+alarmed, and had followed the trail on the snow. After mutual
+congratulations the whole party went to sleep.
+
+The next morning early, the mothers came humbly with provisions for
+their children. They received some trifling presents and were sent
+away in delight. About midday the whole tribe presented themselves
+unarmed, within a short distance of the hut, and offered a traffic.
+They brought a great quantity of fish, which they wanted to exchange
+for tobacco. Sakalar, who spoke their language freely, first gave them
+a roll, letting them understand it was in payment of the fish taken
+without leave. This at once dissipated all feelings of hostility, and
+solid peace was insured. So satisfied was Sakalar of their sincerity,
+that he at once released the captives.
+
+From that day the two parties were one, and all thoughts of war were
+completely at an end. A vast deal of bloodshed had been prevented by a
+few concessions on both sides. The same result might indeed have been
+come to by killing half of each little tribe, but it is doubtful if
+the peace would have been as satisfactory to the survivors.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VII.--THE SUMMER AND AUTUMN.
+
+Occupied with the chase, with bartering, and with conversing with
+their new friends, the summer gradually came around. The snow melted,
+the hills became a series of cascades, in every direction water
+poured toward the sea. But the hut remained solid and firm, a little
+earth only being cast over the snow. Flocks of ducks and geese soon
+appeared, a slight vegetation was visible, and the sea was in motion.
+But what principally drew all eyes were the vast heaps of fossil ivory
+exposed to view on the banks of the stream, laid bare more and more
+every year by the torrents of spring. A few days sufficed to collect
+a heap greater than they could take away on the sledges in a dozen
+journeys. Ivan gazed at his treasure in mute despair. Were all that
+at Yakoutsk, he was the richest merchant in Siberia; but to take it
+thither seemed impossible. But in stepped the adventurous Tchouktchas.
+They offered, for a stipulated sum in tobacco and other valuables, to
+land a large portion of the ivory at a certain spot on the shores of
+Siberia, by means of their boats. Ivan, though again surprised at the
+daring of these wild men, accepted the proposal, and engaged to give
+them his whole stock. The matter was then settled, and our adventurers
+and their new friends dispersed to their summer avocations.
+
+These consisted in fishing and hunting, and repairing boats and
+sledges. Their canoes were made of skins and whalebone, and bits of
+wood; but they were large, and capable of sustaining great weight.
+They proposed to start as soon as the ice was broken up, and to brave
+all the dangers of so fearful a navigation. They were used to impel
+themselves along in every open space, and to take shelter on icebergs
+from danger. When one of these icy mountains went in the right
+direction, they stuck to it; but at others they paddled away, amid
+dangers of which they seemed wholly unconscious.
+
+A month was taken up in fishing, in drying the fish, or in putting
+it in holes where there was eternal frost. An immense stock was laid
+in: and then one morning the Tchouktchas took their departure, and
+the adventurers remained alone. Their hut was broken up, and all made
+ready for their second journey. The sledges were enlarged, to bear
+the heaviest possible load at starting. A few days' overloading were
+not minded, as the provisions would soon decrease. Still not half so
+much could be taken as they wished, and yet Ivan had nearly a ton of
+ivory, and thirty tons was the greatest produce of any one year in all
+Siberia.
+
+But the sledges were ready long before the sea was so. The interval
+was spent in continued hunting, to prevent any consumption of the
+traveling store. All were heartily tired, long before it was over,
+of a day nearly as long as two English months. Soon the winter set in
+with intense rigor; the sea ceased to toss and heave; the icebergs and
+fields moved more and more slowly; at last ocean and land were blended
+into one--the night of a month came, and the sun was seen no more.
+
+The dogs were now roused up; the sledges harnessed; and the instant
+the sea was firm enough to sustain them, the party started. Sakalar's
+intention was to try forced marches in a straight line. Fortune
+favored them. Not an accident occurred for days. At first they did not
+move exactly in the same direction as when they came, but they soon
+found traces of their previous journey, proving that a plain of ice
+had been forced away at least fifty miles during the thaw.
+
+The road was now again rugged and difficult, firing was getting
+scarce, the dogs were devouring the fish with rapidity, and only one
+half the ocean-journey was over. But on they pushed with desperate
+energy, each eye once more keenly on the look-out for game. Every one
+drove his team in sullen silence, for all were on short allowance, and
+all were hungry. They sat on what was to them more valuable than gold,
+and yet they had not what was necessary for subsistence. The dogs were
+urged every day to the utmost limits of their strength. But so much
+space had been taken up by the ivory, that at last there remained
+neither food nor fuel. None knew at what distance they were from the
+shore, and their position seemed desperate. There were even whispers
+of killing some of the dogs; and Sakalar and Ivan were upbraided for
+the avarice which had brought them to such straits.
+
+"See!" said the old hunter suddenly, with a delighted smile, pointing
+toward the south.
+
+The whole party looked eagerly. A thick column of smoke rose in the
+air at no very considerable distance. This was the signal agreed on
+with the Tchouktchas, who were to camp where there was plenty of wood.
+
+Every hand was raised to urge on the dogs to this point, and at last,
+from the summit of a hill of ice they saw the shore and the blaze of
+the fire. The wind was toward them, and the atmosphere heavy. The dogs
+smelled the distant camp, and darted almost recklessly forward. At
+last they sank near to the Tchouktcha huts, panting and exhausted.
+
+Their allies of the spring were true; they gave them food, of
+which both man and beast ate greedily, and then sought repose. The
+Tchouktchas had then formed their journey with wonderful success and
+rapidity, and had found time to lay in a pretty fair stock of fish.
+This they freely shared with Ivan and his party, and were delighted
+when he abandoned to them all his tobacco and rum, and part of his
+tea.
+
+The Tchouktchas had been four years absent in their wanderings, and
+were eager to get home once more to the land of the reindeer, and to
+their friends. They were perhaps the greatest travelers of a tribe
+noted for its facility of locomotion. And so, with warm expressions
+of esteem and friendship on both sides, the two parties separated--the
+men of the east making their way on foot, toward the Straits of
+Behring.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VIII.--THE VOYAGE HOME.
+
+Under considerable disadvantages did Sakalar, Ivan, and their friends
+prepare for the conclusion of their journey. Their provisions were
+very scanty, and their only hope of replenishing their stores was on
+the banks of the Vchivaya River, which being in some places pretty
+rapid might not be frozen over. Sakalar and his friends determined to
+strike out in a straight line. Part of the ivory had to be concealed
+and abandoned, to be fetched another time; but as their stock of
+provisions was so small, they were able to take the principal part. It
+had been resolved, after some debate, to make in a direct line for the
+Vchivaya river, and thence to Vijnei-Kolimsk. The road was of a most
+difficult, and, in part, unknown character; but it was imperative to
+move in as straight a direction as possible. Time was the great enemy
+they had to contend with, because their provisions were sufficient for
+a limited period only.
+
+The country was at first level enough, and the dogs, after their
+rest, made sufficiently rapid progress. At night they had reached the
+commencement of a hilly region, while in the distance could be seen
+pretty lofty mountains. According to a plan decided on from the first,
+the human members of the party were placed at once on short allowance,
+while the dogs received as much food as could be reasonably given.
+At early dawn the tent was struck, and the dogs were impelled along
+the banks of a small river completely frozen. Indeed, after a short
+distance, it was taken as the smoothest path. But at the end of a
+dozen miles they found themselves in a narrow gorge between two
+hills; at the foot of a once foaming cataract, now hard frozen. It
+was necessary to retreat some miles, and gain the land once more. The
+only path which was now found practicable was along the bottom of some
+pretty steep rocks. But the track got narrower and narrower, until the
+dogs were drawing along the edge of a terrific precipice with not four
+feet of holding. All alighted, and led the dogs, for a false step was
+death. Fortunately the path became no narrower, and in one place it
+widened out and made a sort of hollow. Here a bitter blast, almost
+strong enough to cast them from their feet, checked further progress,
+and on that naked spot, under a projecting mass of stone, without
+fire, did the whole party halt. Men and dogs huddled together for
+warmth, and all dined on raw and frozen fish. A few hours of sleep,
+however, were snatched; and then, as the storm abated, they again
+advanced. The descent was soon reached, and led into a vast plain
+without tree or bush. A range of snow-clad hills lay before them, and
+through a narrow gully between two mountains was the only practicable
+pathway. But all hearts were gladdened by the welcome sight of some
+_argali_, or Siberian sheep, on the slope of a hill. These animals are
+the only winter game, bears, and wolves excepted. Kolina was left with
+the dogs, and the rest started after the animals, which were pawing in
+the snow for some moss or half-frozen herbs. Every caution was used
+to approach them against the wind, and a general volley soon sent them
+scampering away to the mountain-tops, leaving three behind.
+
+But Ivan saw that he had wounded another, and away he went in chase.
+The animal ascended a hill, and then halted. But seeing a man coming
+quickly after him, it turned and fled down the opposite side. Ivan was
+instantly after him. The descent was steep, but the hunter saw only
+the argili, and darted down. He slid rather than ran with fearful
+rapidity, and passed the sheep by, seeking to check himself too late.
+A tremendous gulf was before him, and his eyes caught an instant
+glance of a deep distant valley. Then he saw no more until he found
+himself lying still. He had sunk, on the very brink of the precipice,
+into a deep snow bank formed by some projecting rock, and had only
+thus been saved from instant death. Deeply grateful, Ivan crept
+cautiously up the hill-side, though not without his prize, and
+rejoined his companions.
+
+The road now offered innumerable difficulties, it was rough and
+uneven--now hard, now soft. They made but slow progress for the next
+three days, while their provisions began to draw to an end. They had
+at least a dozen days more before them. All agreed that they were now
+in the very worst difficulty they had been in. That evening they dined
+on the last meal of mutton and fish; they were at the foot of a lofty
+hill, which they determined to ascend while strength was left. The
+dogs were urged up the steep ascent, and after two hours' toil, they
+reached the summit. It was a table-land, bleak and miserable, and the
+wind was too severe to permit camping. On they pushed, and camped a
+little way down its sides.
+
+The next morning the dogs had no food, while the men had nothing but
+large draughts of warm tea. But it was impossible to stop. Away they
+hurried, after deciding that, if nothing turned up the next morning,
+two or three of the dogs must be killed to save the rest. Little was
+the ground they got over, with hungry beasts and starving men, and
+all were glad to halt near a few dried larches. Men and dogs eyed each
+other suspiciously, The animals, sixty-four in number, had they not
+been educated to fear man, would have soon settled the matter. But
+there they lay, panting and faint--to start up suddenly with a fearful
+howl. A bear was on them. Sakalar fired, and then in rushed the dogs,
+savage and fierce. It was worse than useless, it was dangerous, for
+the human beings of the party to seek to share this windfall. It was
+enough that the dogs had found something to appease their hunger.
+
+Sakalar, however, knew that his faint and weary companions could not
+move the next day if tea alone were their sustenance that night. He
+accordingly put in practice one of the devices of his woodcraft. The
+youngest of the larches was cut down, and the coarse outside bark was
+taken off. Then every atom of the soft bark was peeled off the tree,
+and being broken into small pieces, was cast into the boiling pot,
+already full of water. The quantity was great, and made a thick
+substance. Round this the whole party collected, eager for the moment
+when they could fall to. But Sakalar was cool and methodical even in
+that terrible hour. He took a spoon, and quietly skimmed the pot,
+to take away the resin that rose to the surface. Then gradually the
+bark melted away, and presently the pot was filled by a thick paste,
+and looked not unlike glue. All gladly ate, and found it nutritive,
+pleasant, and warm. They felt satisfied when the meal was over, and
+were glad to observe that the dogs returned to the camp completely
+satisfied also, which, under the circumstances, was matter of great
+gratification.
+
+In the morning, after another mess of larch-bark soup, and after a
+little tea, the adventurers again advanced on their journey. They were
+now in an arid, bleak, and terrible plain of vast extent. Not a tree,
+not a shrub, not an elevation was to be seen. Starvation was again
+staring them in the face, and no man knew when this dreadful plain
+would end. That night the whole party cowered in their tent without
+fire, content to chew a few tea-leaves preserved from the last meal.
+Serious thoughts were now entertained of abandoning their wealth in
+that wild region. But as none pressed the matter very hardly, the
+ledges were harnessed again next morning, and the dogs driven on. But
+man and beast were at the last gasp, and not ten miles were traversed
+that day, the end of which brought them to a large river, on the
+borders of which were some trees. Being wide and rapid, it was not
+frozen, and there was still hope, The seine was drawn from a sledge,
+and taken into the water. It was fastened from one side to another of
+a narrow gut, and there left. It was of no avail examining it until
+morning, for the fish only come out at night.
+
+There was not a man of the party who had his exact sense about him,
+while the dogs lay panting on the snow, their tongues hanging out,
+their eyes glaring with almost savage fury. The trees round the bank
+were large and dry, and not one had an atom of soft bark on it. All
+the resource they had was to drink huge draughts of tea, and then
+seek sleep. Sakalar set the example, and the Kolimsk men, to whom such
+scenes were not new, followed his advice; but Ivan walked up and down
+before the tent. A huge fire had been made, which was amply fed by the
+wood of the river bank, and it blazed on high, showing in bold relief
+the features of the scene. Ivan gazed vacantly at everything; but he
+saw not the dark and glancing river--he saw not the bleak plain of
+snow--his eyes looked not on the romantic picture of the tent and its
+bivouac-fire: his thoughts were on one thing alone. He it was who
+had brought them to that pass, and on his head rested all the misery
+endured by man and beast, and, worst of all, by the good and devoted
+Kolina.
+
+There she sat, too, on the ground, wrapped in her warm clothes, her
+eyes, fixed on the crackling logs. Of what was she thinking? Whatever
+occupied her mind, it was soon chased away by the sudden speech
+of Ivan. "Kolina," said he, in a tone which borrowed a little of
+intensity from the state of mind in which hunger had placed all of
+them, "canst thou ever forgive me?"
+
+"What?" replied the young girl softly.
+
+"My having brought you here to die, far away from your native hills?"
+
+"Kolina cares little for herself," said the Yakouta maiden, rising and
+speaking perhaps a little wildly; "let her father escape, and she is
+willing to lie near the tombs of the old people on the borders of the
+icy sea."
+
+"But Ivan had hoped to see for Kolina many bright, happy days; for
+Ivan would have made her father rich, and Kolina would have been the
+richest unmarried girl in the plain of Miouré!"
+
+"And would riches make Kolina happy?" said she sadly.
+
+"Young girl of the Yakouta, hearken to me! Let Ivan live or die this
+hour; Ivan is a fool. He left home and comfort to cross the icy seas
+in search of wealth, and to gain happiness; but if he had only had
+eyes, he would have stopped at Miouré. There he saw a girl, lively as
+the heaven-fire in the north, good, generous, kind; and she was an old
+friend, and might have loved Ivan; but the man of Yakoutsk was blind,
+and told her of his passion for a selfish widow, and the Yakouta
+maiden never thought of Ivan but as a brother!"
+
+"What means Ivan?" asked Kolina, trembling with emotion.
+
+"Ivan has long meant, when he came to the yourte of Sakalar, to lay
+his wealth at his feet, and beg of his old friend to give him his
+child: but Ivan now fears that he may die, and wishes to know what
+would have been the answer of Kolina?"
+
+"But Maria Vorotinska?" urged the girl, who seemed dreaming.
+
+"Has long been forgotten. How could I not love my old playmate and
+friend! Kolina--Kolina, listen to Ivan! Forget his love for the widow
+of Yakoutsk, and Ivan will stay in the plain of Vchivaya and die."
+
+"Kolina is very proud," whispered the girl, sitting down on a log near
+the fire, and speaking in a low tone; "and Kolina thinks yet that the
+friend of her father has forgotten himself. But if he be not wild, if
+the sufferings of the journey have not made him say that which is not,
+Kolina would be very happy."
+
+"Be plain, girl of Miouré--maiden of the Yakouta tribe! and play not
+with the heart of a man. Can Kolina take Ivan as her husband?"
+
+A frank and happy reply gave the Yakoutsk merchant all the
+satisfaction he could wish; and then followed several hours of those
+sweet and delightful explanations which never end between young lovers
+when first they have acknowledged their mutual affection. They had
+hitherto concealed so much, that there was much to tell; and Ivan
+and Kolina, who for nearly three years had lived together, with a bar
+between their deep but concealed affection, seemed to have no end of
+words. Ivan had begun to find his feelings change from the very hour
+Sakalar's daughter volunteered to accompany him, but it was only in
+the cave of New Siberia that his heart had been completely won.
+
+So short, and quiet, and sweet were the hours, that the time of rest
+passed by without the thought of sleep. Suddenly, however, they were
+roused to a sense of their situation, and leaving their wearied and
+exhausted companions still asleep, they moved with doubt and dread to
+the water's side. Life was now doubly dear to both, and their fancy
+painted the coming forth of an empty net as the termination of all
+hope. But the net came heavily and slowly to land. It was full of
+fish. They were on the well-stocked Vchivaya. More than three hundred
+fish, small and great, were drawn on shore; and then they recast the
+net.
+
+"Up, man and beast!" thundered Ivan, as, after selecting two dozen of
+the finest, he abandoned the rest to the dogs.
+
+The animals, faint and weary, greedily seized on the food given them,
+while Sakalar and the Kolimsk men could scarcely believe their senses.
+The hot coals were at once brought into requisition, and the party
+were soon regaling themselves on a splendid meal of tea and broiled
+fish. I should alarm my readers did I record the quantities eaten. An
+hour later, every individual was a changed being, but most of all the
+lovers. Despite their want of rest, they looked fresher than any of
+the party. It was determined to camp at least twenty hours more in
+that spot; and the Kolimsk men declared that the river must be the
+Vchivaya, they could draw the seine all day, for the river was deep,
+its waters warmer than others, and its abundance of fish such as to
+border on the fabulous. They went accordingly down to the side of
+the stream, and then the happy Kolina gave free vent to her joy.
+She burst out into a song of her native land, and gave way to some
+demonstrations of delight, the result of her earlier education, that
+astonished Sakalar. But when he heard that during that dreadful night
+he had found a son, Sakalar himself almost lost his reason. The old
+man loved Ivan almost as much as his own child, and when he saw the
+youth in his yourte on his hunting trips, had formed some project of
+the kind now brought about; but the confessions of Ivan on his last
+visit to Miouré had driven all such thoughts away.
+
+"Art in earnest, Ivan?" said he, after a pause of some duration.
+
+"In earnest!" exclaimed Ivan, laughing; "why, I fancy the young men of
+Miouré will find me so, if they seek to question my right to Kolina!"
+
+Kolina smiled, and looked happy; and the old hunter heartily blessed
+his children, adding that the proudest, dearest hope of his heart was
+now within probable realization.
+
+The predictions of the Kolimsk men were realized. The river gave them
+as much fish as they needed for their journey home; and as now Sakalar
+knew his way, there was little fear for the future. An ample stock was
+piled on the sledges, the dogs had unlimited feeding for two days, and
+then away they sped toward an upper part of the river, which, being
+broad and shallow, was no doubt frozen on the surface. They found it
+as they expected, and even discovered that the river was gradually
+freezing all the way down. But little caring for this now, on they
+went, and after considerable fatigue and some delay, arrived at
+Kolimsk, to the utter astonishment of all the inhabitants, who had
+long given them up for lost.
+
+Great rejoicings took place. The friends of the three Kolimsk men
+gave a grand festival, in which the rum, and tobacco, and tea, which
+had been left at the place for payment for their journey, played
+a conspicuous part. Then, as it was necessary to remain here some
+time, while the ivory was brought from a deposit near the sea,
+Ivan and Kolina were married. Neither of them seemed to credit the
+circumstance, even when fast tied by the Russian church. It had come
+so suddenly, so unexpectedly on both, that their heads could not quite
+make the affair out. But they were married in right down earnest, and
+Kolina was a proud and happy woman. The enormous mass of ivory brought
+to Kolimsk excited the attention of a distinguished exile, who drew
+up a statement in Ivan's name, and prepared it for transmission to the
+White Czar, as the emperor is called in these parts.
+
+When summer came, the young couple, with Sakalar and a caravan of
+merchants, started for Yakoutsk, Ivan being by far the richest and
+most important member of the party. After a single day's halt at
+Miouré, on they went to the town, and made their triumphal entry in
+September. Ivan found Maria Vorotinska a wife and mother, and his
+vanity was not much wounded by the falsehood. The _ci-devant_ widow
+was a little astonished at Ivan's return, and particularly at his
+treasure of ivory: but she received his wife with politeness, a little
+tempered by her sense of her own superiority to a savage, as she
+designated Kolina to her friends in a whisper. But Kolina was so
+gentle, so pretty, so good, so cheerful, so happy, that she found her
+party at once, and the two ladies became rival leaders of the fashion.
+
+This lasted until the next year, when a messenger from the capital
+brought a letter to Ivan from the emperor himself, thanking him for
+his narrative, sending him a rich present, his warm approval, and the
+office of first civil magistrate in the city of Yakoutsk. This turned
+the scales wholly on one side, and Maria bowed low to Kolina. But
+Kolina had no feelings of the parvenu, and she was always a general
+favorite. Ivan accepted with pride his sovereign's favor, and by
+dint of assiduity, soon learned to be a useful magistrate. He always
+remained a good husband, a good father, and a good son, for he made
+the heart of old Sakalar glad. He never regretted his journey: he
+always declared he owed to it wealth and happiness, a high position in
+society, and an admirable wife. Great rejoicings took place many years
+after in Yakoutsk, at the marriage of the son of Maria, united to
+the daughter of Ivan, and from the first unto the last, none of the
+parties concerned ever had reason to mourn over the perilous journey
+in search of the Ivory Mine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For the information of the non-scientific, it may be necessary to
+mention that the ivory alluded to in the preceding tale, is derived
+from the tusks of the mammoth, or fossil elephant of the geologist.
+The remains of this gigantic quadruped are found all over the northern
+hemisphere, from the 40th to the 75th degree of latitude: but most
+abundantly in the region which lies between the mountains of Central
+Asia and the shores and islands of the Frozen Sea. So profusely do
+they exist in this region, that the tusks have for more than a century
+constituted an important article of traffic--furnishing a large
+proportion of the ivory required by the carver and turner. The remains
+lie imbedded in the upper tertiary clays and gravels; and these, by
+exposure to the river-currents, to the waves of the sea, and other
+erosive agencies, are frequently swept away during the thaws of
+summer, leaving tusks and bones in masses, and occasionally even
+entire skeletons, in a wonderful state of preservation. The most
+perfect specimen yet obtained, and from the study of which the
+zoologist has been enabled to arrive at an accurate knowledge of the
+structure and habits of the mammoth, is that discovered by a Tungusian
+fisherman, near the mouth of the river Lena, in the summer of 1799.
+
+Being in the habit of collecting tusks among the debris of the
+gravel-cliffs, (for it is generally at a considerable elevation in the
+cliffs and river banks that the remains occur,) he observed a strange
+shapeless mass projecting from an ice-bank some fifty or sixty feet
+above the river; during next summer's thaw he saw the same object,
+rather more disengaged from amongst the ice; in 1801 he could
+distinctly perceive the tusk and flank of an immense animal; and in
+1803, in consequence of an earlier and more powerful thaw, the huge
+carcase became entirely disengaged, and fell on the sandbank beneath.
+In the spring of the following year the fisherman cut off the tusks,
+which he sold for fifty rubles (£7, 10s.;) and two years afterward,
+our countryman, Mr. Adams, visited the spot, and gives the following
+account of the extraordinary phenomenon:
+
+"At this time I found the mammoth still in the same place, but
+altogether mutilated. The discoverer was contented with his profit
+for the tusks, and the Yakoutski of the neighborhood had cut off
+the flesh, with which they fed their dogs. During the scarcity, wild
+beasts, such as white bears, wolves, wolverines, and foxes, also
+fed upon it, and the traces of their footsteps were seen around. The
+skeleton, almost entirely cleared of its flesh, remained whole, with
+the exception of a foreleg. The head was covered with a dry skin;
+one of the ears, well preserved, was furnished with a tuft of hair.
+All these parts have necessarily been injured in transporting them a
+distance of 7,330 miles, (to the Imperial museum of St. Petersburgh,)
+but the eyes have been preserved, and the pupil of one can still be
+distinguished. The mammoth was a male, with a long mane on the neck.
+The tail and proboscis were not preserved. The skin, of which I
+possess three-fourths, is of a dark-gray color, covered with a reddish
+wool and black hairs: but the dampness of the spot where it had lain
+so long had in some degree destroyed the hair. The entire carcase,
+of which I collected the bones on the spot, was nine feet four inches
+high, and sixteen feet four inches long, without including the tusks,
+which measured nine feet six inches along the curve. The distance from
+the base or root of the tusk to the point is three feet seven inches.
+The two tusks together weighed three hundred and sixty pounds, English
+weight, and the head alone four hundred and fourteen pounds. The skin
+was of such weight that it required ten persons to transport it to
+the shore; and after having cleared the ground, upward of thirty-six
+pounds of hair were collected, which the white bears had trodden while
+devouring the flesh."
+
+Since then, other carcases of elephants have been discovered, in
+a greater or less degree of preservation; as also the remains of
+rhinoceroses, mastodons, and allied pachyderms--the mammoth more
+abundantly in the old world, the mastodon in the new. In every case
+these animals differ from existing species: are of more gigantic
+dimensions; and, judging from their natural coverings of thick-set
+curly-crisped wool and strong hair, upward of a foot in length, were
+fitted to live, if not in a boreal, at least in a coldly-temperate
+region. Indeed, there is proof positive of the then more milder
+climate of these regions in the discovery of pine and birch-trunks
+where no vegetation now flourishes; and further, in the fact that
+fragments of pine-leaves, birch-twigs, and other northern plants, have
+been detected between the grinders and within the stomachs of these
+animals. We have thus evidence, that at the close of the tertiary,
+and shortly after the commencement of the current epoch, the northern
+hemisphere enjoyed a much milder climate; that it was the abode of
+huge pachyderms now extinct; that a different distribution of sea
+and land prevailed; and that on a new distribution or sea and land,
+accompanied also by a different relative level, these animals died
+away, leaving their remains imbedded in the clays, gravels, and other
+alluvial deposits, where, under the antiseptic influence of an almost
+eternal frost, many of them have been preserved as entire as at the
+fatal moment they sank under the rigors of external conditions no
+longer fitted for their existence. It has been attempted by some to
+prove the adaptability of these animals to the present conditions
+of the northern hemisphere; but so untenable in every phase is this
+opinion, that it would be sheer waste of time and space to attempt its
+refutation. That they may have migrated northward and southward with
+the seasons is more than probable, though it has been stated that the
+remains diminish in size the farther north they are found; but that
+numerous herds of such huge animals should have existed in these
+regions at all, and that for thousands of years, presupposes an
+exuberant arboreal vegetation, and the necessary degree of climate for
+its growth and development. It has been mentioned that the mastodon
+and mammoth seem to have attained their meridian toward the close of
+the tertiary epoch, and that a few may have lived even in the current
+era; but it is more probable that the commencement of existing
+conditions was the proximate cause of their extinction, and that not
+a solitary specimen ever lived to be the contemporary of man.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[FROM FRASER'S MAGAZINE.]
+
+ENGLISH HEXAMETERS.
+
+BY WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR.
+
+ Askest thou if in my youth I have mounted, as others have mounted,
+ Galloping Hexameter, Pentameter cantering after,
+ English by dam and by sire; bit, bridle, and saddlery, English;
+ English the girths and the shoes; all English from snaffle to crupper;
+ Everything English around, excepting the tune of the jockey?
+ Latin and Greek, it is true, I have often attach'd to my phaeton
+ Early in life, and sometimes have I ordered them out in its evening,
+ Dusting the linings, and pleas'd to have found them unworn and untarnisht.
+ Idle! but Idleness looks never better than close upon sunset.
+ Seldom my goosequill, of goose from Germany, fatted in England,
+ (Frolicksome though I have been) have I tried on Hexameter, knowing
+ Latin and Greek are alone its languages. We have a measure
+ Fashion'd by Milton's own hand, a fuller, a deeper, a louder.
+ Germans may flounder at will over consonant, vowel, and liquid,
+ Liquid and vowel but one to a dozen of consonants, ending
+ Each with a verb at the tail, tail heavy as African ram's tail,
+ Spenser and Shakspeare had each his own harmony; each an enchanter
+ Wanting no aid from without. _Chevy Chase_ had delighted their fathers,
+ Though of a different strain from the song on the _Wrath of Achilles_.
+ Southey was fain to pour forth his exuberant stream over regions
+ Near and remote: his command was absolute; every subject,
+ Little or great, he controll'd; in language, variety, fancy,
+ Richer than all his compeers and wanton but once in dominion;
+ 'Twas when he left the full well that for ages had run by his homestead,
+ Pushing the brambles aside which encumber'd another up higher,
+ Letting his bucket go down, and hearing it bump in descending,
+ Grating against the loose stones 'til it came but half-full from the bottom.
+ Others abstain'd from the task. Scott wander'd at large over Scotland;
+ Reckless of Roman and Greek, he chanted the _Lay of the Minstrel_
+ Better than ever before any minstrel in chamber had chanted.
+ Never on mountain or wild hath echo so cheerfully sounded,
+ Never did monarch bestow such glorious meeds upon knighthood,
+ Never had monarch the power, liberality, justice, discretion.
+ Byron liked new-papered rooms, and pull'd down old wainscot of cedar;
+ Bright-color'd prints he preferr'd to the graver cartoons of a Raphael,
+ Sailor and Turk (with a sack,) to Eginate and Parthenon marbles,
+ Splendid the palace he rais'd--the gin-palace in Poesy's purlieus;
+ Soft the divan on the sides, with spittoons for the qualmish and queesy.
+ Wordsworth, well pleas'd with himself, cared little for modern or ancient.
+ His was the moor and the tarn, the recess in the mountain, the woodland
+ Scatter'd with trees far and wide, trees never too solemn or lofty,
+ Never entangled with plants overrunning the villager's foot-path.
+ Equable was he and plain, but wandering a little in wisdom,
+ Sometimes flying from blood and sometimes pouring it freely.
+ Yet he was English at heart. If his words were too many; if Fancy's
+ Furniture lookt rather scant in a whitewasht homely apartment;
+ If in his rural designs there is sameness and tameness; if often
+ Feebleness is there for breadth; if his pencil wants rounding and pointing;
+ Few of this age or the last stand out on the like elevation.
+ There is a sheepfold he rais'd which my memory loves to revisit,
+ Sheepfold whose wall shall endure when there is not a stone of the palace.
+ Still there are walking on earth many poets whom ages hereafter
+ Will be more willing to praise than they are to praise one another:
+ Some do I know, but I fear, as is meet, to recount or report them,
+ For, be whatever the name that is foremost, the next will run over,
+ Trampling and rolling in dust his excellent friend the precursor.
+ Peace be with all! but afar be ambition to follow the Roman,
+ Led by the German, uncomb'd, and jigging in dactyl and spondee,
+ Lumbering shapeless jackboots which nothing can polish or supple.
+ Much as old metres delight me, 'tis only where first they were nurtured,
+ In their own clime, their own speech: than pamper them here I would rather
+ Tie up my Pegasus tight to the scanty-fed rack of a sonnet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[FROM HOUSEHOLD WORDS.]
+
+A MIGHTIER HUNTER THAN NIMROD.
+
+A great deal has been said about the prowess of Nimrod, in connection
+with the chase, from the days of him of Babylon to those of the late
+Mr. Apperley of Shropshire; but we question whether, among all the
+sporting characters mentioned in ancient or modern story, there ever
+was so mighty a hunter as the gentleman whose sporting calendar
+now lies before us.[4] The annals of the chase, so far as we are
+acquainted with them, supply no such instances of familiar intimacy
+with lions, elephants, hippopotami, rhinoceroses, serpents,
+crocodiles, and other furious animals, with which the human species
+in general is not very forward in cultivating an acquaintance.
+
+[Footnote 4: A Hunter's Life in South Africa. By R. Gordon Cumming,
+Esq., of Altyre.]
+
+Mr. Cumming had exhausted the deer-forests of his native Scotland;
+he had sighed for the rolling prairies and rocky mountains of the Far
+West, and was tied down to military routine as a mounted rifleman in
+the Cape Colony; when he determined to resign his commission into the
+hands of Government, and himself to the delights of hunting amid the
+untrodden plains and forests of South Africa. Having provided himself
+with wagons to travel and live in, with bullocks to draw them, and
+with a host of attendants; a sufficiency of arms, horses, dogs, and
+ammunition, he set out from Graham's-Town in October, 1843. From that
+period his hunting adventures extended over five years, during which
+time he penetrated from various points and in various directions from
+his starting-place in lat. 33 down to lat. 20, and passed through
+districts upon which no European foot ever before trod; regions where
+the wildest of wild animals abound--nothing less serving Mr. Cumming's
+ardent purpose.
+
+A lion story in the early part of his book will introduce this
+fearless hunter-author to our readers better than the most elaborate
+dissection of his character. He is approaching Colesberg, the
+northernmost military station belonging to the Cape Colony. He is on
+a trusty steed, which he calls also "Colesberg." Two of his attendants
+on horseback are with him. "Suddenly," says the author, "I observed
+a number of vultures seated on the plain about a quarter of a mile
+ahead of us, and close beside them stood a huge lioness, consuming
+a blesblok which she had killed. She was assisted in her repast by
+about a dozen jackals, which were feasting along with her in the most
+friendly and confidential manner. Directing my followers' attention to
+the spot, I remarked, 'I see the lion;' to which they replied, 'Whar?
+whar? Yah! Almagtig! dat is he;' and instantly reining in their steeds
+and wheeling about, they pressed their heels to their horses' sides,
+and were preparing to betake themselves to flight. I asked them what
+they were going to do? To which they answered, 'We have not yet placed
+caps on our rifles.' This was true; but while this short conversation
+was passing, the lioness had observed us. Raising her full round
+face, she overhauled us for a few seconds, and then set off at a smart
+canter toward a range of mountains some miles to the northward; the
+whole troop of jackals also started off in another direction; there
+was therefore no time to think of caps. The first move was to bring
+her to bay, and not a second was to be lost. Spurring my good and
+lively steed, and shouting to my men to follow, I flew across the
+plain, and, being fortunately mounted on Colesberg, the flower of
+my stud, I gained upon her at every stride. This was to me a joyful
+moment, and I at once made up my mind that she or I must die. The
+lioness soon after suddenly pulled up, and sat on her haunches like
+a dog, with her back toward me, not even deigning to look round. She
+then appeared to say to herself, 'Does this fellow know who he is
+after?' Having thus sat for half a minute, as if involved in thought,
+she sprang to her feet, and facing about, stood looking at me for a
+few seconds, moving her tail slowly from side to side, showing her
+teeth and growling fiercely. She next made a short run forward, making
+a loud, rumbling noise like thunder. This she did to intimidate
+me; but finding that I did not flinch an inch, nor seem to heed her
+hostile demonstrations, she quietly stretched out her massive arms,
+and lay down on the grass. My Hottentots now coming up, we all three
+dismounted, and drawing our rifles from their holsters, we looked to
+see if the powder was up in the nipples, and put on our caps. While
+this was doing, the lioness sat up, and showed evident symptoms of
+uneasiness. She looked first at us, and then behind her, as if to see
+if the coast were clear; after which she made a short run toward us,
+uttering her deep-drawn murderous growls. Having secured the three
+horses to one another by their rheims, we led them on as if we
+intended to pass her, in the hope of obtaining a broadside; but this
+she carefully avoided to expose, presenting only her full front. I had
+given Stofolus my Moore rifle, with orders to shoot her if she should
+spring upon me, but on no account to fire before me. Kleinboy was to
+stand ready to hand me my Purdey rifle, in case the two-grooved Dixon
+should not prove sufficient. My men as yet had been steady, but
+they were in a precious stew, their faces having assumed a ghastly
+paleness; and I had a painful feeling that I could place no reliance
+on them. Now, then, for it, neck or nothing! She is within sixty yards
+of us, and she keeps advancing. We turned the horses' tails to her.
+I knelt on one side, and taking a steady aim at her breast, let fly.
+The ball cracked loudly on her tawny hide, and crippled her in the
+shoulder; upon which she charged with an appalling roar, and in
+the twinkling of an eye she was in the midst of us. At this moment
+Stofolus'a rifle exploded in his hand, and Kleinboy, whom I had
+ordered to stand ready by me, danced about like a duck in a gale of
+wind. The lioness sprang upon Colesberg, and fearfully lacerated his
+ribs and haunches with her horrid teeth and claws. The worst wound was
+on his haunch, which exhibited a sickening, yawning gash, more than
+twelve inches long, almost laying bare the very bone. I was very
+cool and steady, and did not feel in the least degree nervous, having
+fortunately great confidence in my own shooting; but I must confess,
+when the whole affair was over, I felt that it was a very awful
+situation, and attended with extreme peril, as I had no friend with
+me on whom I could rely. When the lioness sprang on Colesberg, I
+stood out from the horses, ready with my second barrel for the first
+chance she should give me of a clear shot. This she quickly did; for,
+seemingly satisfied with the revenge she had now taken, she quitted
+Colesberg, and slewing her tail to one side, trotted sulkily past
+within a few paces of me, taking one step to the left. I pitched my
+rifle to my shoulder, and in another second the lioness was stretched
+on the plain a lifeless corpse."
+
+This is, however, but a harmless adventure compared with a subsequent
+escapade--not with one, but with six lions. It was the hunter's habit
+to lay wait near the drinking-places of these animals, concealed in a
+hole dug for the purpose. In such a place on the occasion in question,
+Mr. Cumming--having left one of three rhinoceroses he had previously
+killed as a bait--ensconsed himself. Such a savage festival as that
+which introduced the adventure, has never before, we believe, been
+introduced through the medium of the softest English and the finest
+hot-pressed paper to the notice of the civilized public. "Soon after
+twilight," the author relates, "I went down to my hole with Kleinboy
+and two natives, who lay concealed in another hole, with Wolf and
+Boxer ready to slip, in the event of wounding a lion. On reaching
+the water I looked toward the carcase of the rhinoceros, and, to
+my astonishment, I beheld the ground alive with large creatures,
+as though a troop of zebras were approaching the fountain to drink.
+Kleinboy remarked to me that a troop of zebras were standing on the
+height. I answered, 'Yes,' but I knew very well that zebras would not
+be capering around the carcase of a rhinoceros. I quickly arranged my
+blankets, pillow, and guns in the hole, and then lay down to feast my
+eyes on the interesting sight before me. It was bright moonlight, as
+clear as I need wish, and within one night of being full moon. There
+were six large lions, about twelve or fifteen hyenas, and from twenty
+to thirty jackals, feasting on and around the carcases of the three
+rhinoceroses. The lions feasted peacefully, but the hyenas and jackals
+fought over every mouthful, and chased one another round and round
+the carcases, growling, laughing, screeching, chattering, and howling
+without any intermission. The hyenas did not seem afraid of the lions,
+although they always gave way before them; for I observed that they
+followed them in the most disrespectful manner, and stood laughing,
+one or two on either side, when any lions came after their comrades to
+examine pieces of skin or bones which they were dragging away. I had
+lain watching this banquet for about three hours, in the strong hope
+that, when the lions had feasted, they would come and drink. Two black
+and two white rhinoceroses had made their appearance, but, scared by
+the smell of the blood, they had made off. At length the lions seemed
+satisfied. They all walked about with their heads up, and seemed to
+be thinking about the water; and in two minutes one of them turned his
+face toward me, and came on; he was immediately followed by a second
+lion, and in half a minute by the remaining four. It was a decided
+and general move, they were all coming to drink right bang in my face,
+within fifteen yards of me."
+
+The hunters were presently discovered. "An old lioness, who seemed to
+take the lead, had detected me, and, with her head high and her eyes
+fixed full upon me she was coming slowly round the corner of the
+little vley to cultivate further my acquaintance! This unfortunate
+coincidence put a stop at once to all further contemplation. I
+thought; in my haste, that it was perhaps most prudent to shoot
+this lioness, especially as none of the others had noticed me. I
+accordingly moved my arm and covered her; she saw me move and halted,
+exposing a full broadside. I fired; the ball entered one shoulder, and
+passed out behind the other. She bounded forward with repeated growls,
+and was followed by her five comrades all enveloped in a cloud of
+dust; nor did they atop until they had reached the cover behind
+me, except one old gentleman, who halted and looked back for a few
+seconds, when I fired, but the ball went high. I listened anxiously
+for some sound to denote the approaching end of the lioness; nor
+listened in vain. I heard her growling and stationary, as if dying. In
+one minute her comrades crossed the vley a little below me, and made
+toward the rhinoceros. I then slipped Wolf and Boxer on her scent,
+and, following them into the cover, I found her lying dead."
+
+Mr. Cumming's adventures with elephants are no less thrilling. He had
+selected for the aim of his murderous rifle two huge female elephants
+from a herd. "Two of the troop had walked slowly past at about sixty
+yards, and the one which I had selected was feeding with two others
+on a thorny tree before me. My hand was now as steady as the rock on
+which it rested, so, taking a deliberate aim, I let fly at her head, a
+little behind the eye. She got it hard and sharp, just where I aimed,
+but it did not seem to affect her much. Uttering a loud cry, she
+wheeled about, when I gave her the second ball, close behind the
+shoulder. All the elephants uttered a strange rumbling noise, and made
+off in a line to the northward at a brisk ambling pace, their huge
+fanlike ears flapping in the ratio of their speed. I did not wait to
+load, but ran back to the hillock to obtain a view. On gaining its
+summit, the guides pointed out the elephants; they were standing in
+a grove of shady trees, but the wounded one was some distance behind
+with another elephant, doubtless its particular friend, who was
+endeavoring to assist it. These elephants had probably never before
+heard the report of a gun; and having neither seen nor smelt me, they
+were unaware of the presence of man, and did not seem inclined to go
+any further. Presently my men hove in sight, bringing the dogs; and
+when these came up, I waited some time before commencing the attack,
+that the dogs and horses might recover their wind. We then rode slowly
+toward the elephants, and had advanced within two hundred yards of
+them, when, the ground being open, they observed us, and made off
+in an easterly direction; but the wounded one immediately dropped
+astern, and next moment she was surrounded by the dogs, which, barking
+angrily, seemed to engross her attention. Having placed myself between
+her and the retreating troop, I dismounted to fire, within forty
+yards of her, in open ground. Colesberg was extremely afraid of the
+elephants, and gave me much trouble, jerking my arm when I tried to
+fire. At length I let fly; but, on endeavoring to regain my saddle.
+Colesberg declined to allow me to mount; and when I tried to lead him,
+and run for it, he only backed toward the wounded elephant. At this
+moment I heard another elephant close behind: and on looking about I
+beheld the 'friend,' with uplifted trunk, charging down upon me at top
+speed, shrilly trumpeting, and following an old black pointer named
+Schwart, that was perfectly deaf, and trotted along before the enraged
+elephant quite unaware of what was behind him. I felt certain that
+she would have either me or my horse. I, however, determined not to
+relinquish my steed, but to hold on by the bridle. My men, who of
+course kept at a safe distance, stood aghast with their mouths open,
+and for a few seconds my position was certainly not an enviable
+one. Fortunately, however, the dogs took off the attention of the
+elephants; and, just us they were upon me I managed to spring into the
+saddle, where I was safe. As I turned my back to mount, the elephants
+were so very near, that I really expected to feel one of their
+trunks lay hold of me. I rode up to Kleinboy for my double-barrelled
+two-grooved rifle; he and Isaac were pale and almost speechless with
+fright. Returning to the charge, I was soon once more alongside,
+and, firing from the saddle, I sent another brace of bullets into the
+wounded elephant. Colesberg was extremely unsteady, and destroyed the
+correctness of my aim. The 'friend' now seemed resolved to do some
+mischief, and charged me furiously, pursuing me to a distance of
+several hundred yards. I therefore deemed it proper to give her
+a gentle hint to act less officiously, and so, having loaded, I
+approached within thirty yards, and gave it her sharp, right and left,
+behind the shoulder; upon which she at once made off with drooping
+trunk, evidently with a mortal wound. Two more shots finished her; on
+receiving them she tossed her trunk up and down two or three times,
+and falling on her broadside against a thorny tree, which yielded like
+grass before her enormous weight, she uttered a deep hoarse cry and
+expired."
+
+Mr. Cumming's exploits in the water are no less exciting than his land
+adventures. Here is an account of his victory over a hippopotamus, on
+the banks of the Limpopo river, near the northernmost extremity of his
+journeyings.
+
+"There were four of them, three cows and an old bull; they stood in
+the middle of the river, and though alarmed, did not appear aware of
+the extent of the impending danger. I took the sea-cow next me, and
+with my first ball I gave her a mortal wound, knocking loose a great
+plate on the top of her skull. She at once commenced plunging round
+and round, and then occasionally remained still, sitting for a few
+minutes on the same spot. On hearing the report of my rifle two of
+the others took up stream, and the fourth dashed down the river; they
+trotted along, like oxen, at a smart pace as long as the water was
+shallow. I was now in a state of very great anxiety about my wounded
+sea-cow, for I feared that she would get down into deep water, and
+be lost like the last one; her struggles were still carrying her
+down stream, and the water was becoming deeper. To settle the matter
+I accordingly fired a second shot from the bank, which, entering
+the roof of her skull, passed out through her eye; she then, kept
+continually splashing round and round in a circle in the middle of the
+river. I had great fears of the crocodiles, and I did not know that
+the sea-cow might not attack me. My anxiety to secure her, however,
+overcame all hesitation; so, divesting myself of my leathers, and
+armed with a sharp knife. I dashed into the water, which at first took
+me up to my arm-pits, but in the middle was shallower. As I approached
+Behemoth her eye looked very wicked. I halted for a moment, ready to
+dive under the water if she attacked me, but she was stunned, and did
+not know what she was doing; so, running in upon her, and seizing
+her short tail, I attempted to incline her course to land. It was
+extraordinary what enormous strength she still had in the water. I
+could not guide her in the slightest, and she continued to splash, and
+plunge, and blow, and make her circular course, carrying me along with
+her as if I was a fly on her tail. Finding her tail gave me but a poor
+hold, as the only means of securing my prey, I took out my knife, and
+cutting two deep parallel incisions through the skin on her rump, and
+lifting this skin from the flesh, so that I could get in my two hands,
+I made use of this as a handle; and after some desperate hard work,
+sometimes pushing and sometimes pulling, the sea-cow continuing her
+circular course all the time and I holding on at her rump like grim
+Death, eventually I succeeded in bringing this gigantic and most
+powerful animal to the bank. Here the Bushman, quickly brought me a
+stout buffalo-rheim from my horse's neck, which I passed through the
+opening in the thick skin, and moored Behemoth to a tree. I then took
+my rifle, and sent a ball through the center of her head, and she was
+numbered with the dead." There is nothing in "Waterton's Wanderings,"
+or in the "Adventures of Baron Munchausen" more startling than this
+"Waltz with a Hippopotamus!"
+
+In the all-wise disposition of events, it is perhaps ordained that
+wild animals should be subdued by man to his use at the expense
+of such tortures as those described in the work before us. Mere
+amusement, therefore, is too light a motive for dealing such wounds
+and death Mr. Cumming owns to; but he had other motives,--besides a
+considerable profit he has reaped in trophies, ivory, fur, &c., he has
+made in his book some valuable contributions to the natural history of
+the animals he wounded and slew.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM GRAHAM'S MAGAZINE FOR AUGUST
+
+MANUELA.
+
+A BALLAD OF CALIFORNIA.
+
+BY BAYARD TAYLOR.
+
+ From the doorway, Manuela, in the sheeny April morn,
+ Southward looks, along the valley, over leagues of gleaming corn;
+ Where the mountain's misty rampart like the wall of Eden towers,
+ And the isles of oak are sleeping on a painted sea of flowers.
+ All the air is full of music, for the winter rains are o'er,
+ And the noisy magpies chatter from the budding sycamore;
+ Blithely frisk unnumbered squirrels, over all the grassy slope;
+ Where the airy summits brighten, nimbly leaps the antelope.
+ Gentle eyes of Manuela! tell me wherefore do ye rest
+ On the oaks' enchanted islands and the flowery ocean's breast?
+ Tell me wherefore down the valley, ye have traced the highway's mark
+ Far beyond the belts of timber, to the mountain-shadows dark?
+ Ah, the fragrant bay may blossom, and the sprouting verdure shine
+ With the tears of amber dropping from the tassels of the pine.
+ And the morning's breath of balsam lightly brush her sunny cheek--
+ Little recketh Manuela of the tales of Spring they speak.
+ When the Summer's burning solstice on the mountain-harvests glowed,
+ She had watched a gallant horseman riding down the valley road;
+ Many times she saw him turning, looking back with parting thrills,
+ Till amid her tears she lost him, in the shadow of the hills.
+ Ere the cloudless moons were over, he had passed the Desert's sand.
+ Crossed the rushing Colorada and the dark Apache Land,
+ And his laden mules were driven, when the time of rains began.
+ With the traders of Chihuaha, to the Fair of San Juan.
+ Therefore watches Manuela--therefore lightly doth she start,
+ When the sound of distant footsteps seems the beating of her heart;
+ Not a wind the green oak rustles or the redwood branches stirs,
+ But she hears the silver jingle of his ringing bit and spurs.
+ Often, out the hazy distance, come the horsemen, day by day,
+ But they come not as Bernardo--she can see it, far away;
+ Well she knows the airy gallop of his mettled _alazan_,[5]
+ Light as any antelope upon the Hills of Gavilan.
+ She would know him mid a thousand, by his free and gallant air;
+ By the featly-knit sarape,[6] such as wealthy traders wear;
+ By his broidered calzoneros[7] and his saddle, gaily spread,
+ With its cantle rimmed with silver, and its horn a lion's head.
+ None like he the light riata[8] on the maddened bull can throw;
+ None amid the mountain-canons, track like he the stealthy doe;
+ And at all the Mission festals, few indeed the revelers are
+ Who can dance with him the jota, touch with him the gay guitar.
+ He has said to Manuela, and the echoes linger still
+ In the cloisters of her bosom, with a secret, tender thrill,
+ When the hay again has blossomed, and the valley stands in corn,
+ Shall the bells of Santa Clara usher in the wedding morn.
+ He has pictured the procession, all in holyday attire,
+ And the laugh and look of gladness, when they see the distant spire;
+ Then their love shall kindle newly, and the world be doubly fair,
+ In the cool delicious crystal of the summer morning air.
+ Tender eyes of Manuela! what has dimmed your lustrous beam?
+ 'Tis a tear that falls to glitter on the casket of her dream.
+ Ah, the eye of love must brighten, if its watches would be true,
+ For the star is falsely mirrored in the rose's drop of dew!
+ But her eager eyes rekindle, and her breathless bosom stills,
+ As she sees a horseman moving in the shadow of the hills;
+ Now in love and fond thanksgiving they may loose their pearly tides--
+ 'Tis the alazan that gallops, 'tis Bernardo's self that rides!
+
+[Footnote 5: In California horses are named according to their color.
+An _alazan_ is a sorrel--a color generally preferred, as denoting
+speed and mettle.]
+
+[Footnote 6: The sarape is a knit blanket of many gay colors, worn
+over the shoulders by an opening in the center, through which the head
+is thrust.]
+
+[Footnote 7: Calzoneros are trowsers, generally made of blue cloth
+or velvet, richly embroidered, and worn over an under pair of white
+linen. They are slashed up the outside of each leg, for greater
+convenience in riding, and studded with rows of silver buttons.]
+
+[Footnote 8: The lariat, or riata, as it is indifferently called in
+California and Mexico, is precisely the same as the lasso of South
+America.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM FRASER'S MAGAZINE FOR JULY.
+
+LEDRU ROLLIN.
+
+Ledru Rollin is now in his forty-fourth or forty-fifth year,
+having been born in 1806 or 1807. He is the grandson of the famous
+_Prestidigateur_, or Conjurer Comus, who, about four or five-and-forty
+years ago, was in the acme of his fame. During the Consulate, and a
+considerable portion of the Empire, Comus traveled from one department
+of France to the other, and is even known to have extended his
+journeys beyond the Rhine and the Moselle on one side, and beyond the
+RhĂ´ne and Garonne on the other. Of all the conjurers of his day he was
+the most famous and the most successful, always, of course, excepting
+that Corsican conjurer who ruled for so many years the destinies
+of France. From those who have seen that famous trickster, we
+have learned that the Charleses, the Alexanders, even the Robert
+Houdins, were children compared with the magical wonder-worker of
+the past generation. The fame of Comus was enormous, and his gains
+proportionate; and when he had shuffled off this mortal coil it
+was found he had left to his descendants a very ample--indeed, for
+France, a very large fortune. Of the descendants in a right line, his
+grandson, Ledru Rollin, was his favorite, and to him the old man left
+the bulk of his fortune, which, during the minority of Ledru Rollin,
+grew to a sum amounting to nearly, if not fully, £4,000 per annum.
+
+The scholastic education of the young man who was to inherit this
+considerable fortune, was nearly completed during the reign of
+Louis XVIII., and shortly after Charles X. ascended the throne _il
+commençait à faire sur droit_, as they phrase it in the _pays Latin_.
+Neither during the reign of Louis XVIII., nor indeed now, unless in
+the exact and physical sciences, does Paris afford a very solid and
+substantial education. Though the Roman poets and historians are
+tolerably well studied and taught, yet little attention is paid to
+Greek literature. The physical and exact sciences are unquestionably
+admirably taught at the Polytechnique and other schools; but neither
+at the College of St. Barbe, nor of Henry IV., can a pupil be so well
+grounded in the rudiments and humanities as in our grammar and public
+schools. A studious, pains-taking, and docile youth, will, no doubt,
+learn a great deal, no matter where he has been placed in pupilage;
+but we have heard from a contemporary of M. Rollin, that he was not
+particularly distinguished either for his industry or his docility in
+early life. The earliest days of the reign of Charles X. saw M. Ledru
+Rollin an _étudiant en droit_ in Paris. Though the schools of law
+had been re-established during the Consulate pretty much after the
+fashion in which they existed in the time of Louis the XIV., yet the
+application of the _alumni_ was fitful and desultory, and perhaps
+there were no two classes in France, at the commencement of 1825. who
+were more imbued with the Voltarian philosophy and the doctrines and
+principles of Rousseau, than the _élèves_ of the schools of law and
+medicine.
+
+Under a king so sceptical and voluptuous, so much of a _philosophie_
+and _phyrronéste_, as Louis XVIII., such tendencies were likely to
+spread themselves through all ranks of society--to permeate from
+the very highest to the very lowest classes: and not all the lately
+acquired asceticism of the monarch, his successor, nor all the
+efforts of the Jesuits could restrain or control the tendencies of
+the _étudiants en droit_. What the law-students were antecedently and
+subsequent to 1825, we know from the _Physiologie de l'Homme de Loi_;
+and it is not to be supposed that M. Ledru Rollin, with more ample
+pecuniary means at command, very much differed from his fellows.
+After undergoing a three years' course of study, M. Rollin obtained
+a diploma as a _licencié en droit_, and commenced his career as
+_stagiare_ somewhere about the end of 1826 or the beginning of 1827.
+Toward the close of 1829, or in the first months of 1830, he was, we
+believe, placed on the roll of advocates; so that he was called to
+the bar, or, as they say in France, received an advocate, in his
+twenty-second or twenty-third year.
+
+The first years of an advocate, even in France, are generally passed
+in as enforced an idleness as in England. Clients come not to consult
+the greenhorn of the last term; nor does any _avoué_ among our
+neighbors, any more than any attorney among ourselves, fancy that an
+old head is to be found on young shoulders. The years 1830 and 1831
+were not marked by any oratorical effort of the author of the _Decline
+of England_; nor was it till 1832 that, being then one of the youngest
+of the bar of Paris, he prepared and signed an opinion against the
+placing of Paris in a state of siege consequent on the insurrections
+of June. Two years after he prepared a memoir; or _factum_, on
+the affair of the Rue Transonain, and defended Dupoty, accused
+of _complicité morale_, a monstrous doctrine invented by the
+Attorney-General Hebert. From 1834 to 1841 he appeared as counsel in
+nearly all the cases of _émeute_ or conspiracy where the individuals
+prosecuted were Republicans, or _quasi_-Republicans. Meanwhile, he
+had become the proprietor and _rédacteur en chef_ of the _Reforme_
+newspaper, a political journal of an ultra-Liberal--indeed of a
+Republican--complexion, which was then called of extreme opinions, as
+he had previously been editor of a legal newspaper called _Journal
+du Palais_. _La Reforme_ had been originally conducted by Godefroy
+Cavaignac, the brother of the general, who continued editor till the
+period of the fatal illness which preceded his death. The defense
+of Dupoty, tried and sentenced under the ministry of Thiers to five
+years' imprisonment, as a regicide, because a letter was found open
+in the letter-box of the paper of which he was editor, addressed to
+him by a man said to be implicated in the conspiracy of Quenisset,
+naturally brought M. Rollin into contact with many of the writers in
+_La Reforme_; and these persons, among others Guinard Arago, Etienne
+Arago, and Flocon, induced him to embark some portion of his fortune
+in the paper. From one step he was led on to another, and ultimately
+became one of the chief--indeed, if not the chief proprietor. The
+speculation was far from successful in a pecuniary sense, but M.
+Rollin, in furtherance of his opinions, continued for some years to
+disburse considerable sums in the support of the journal. By this he
+no doubt increased his popularity and his credit with the Republican
+party, but it cannot be denied that he very materially injured his
+private fortune. In the earlier portion of his career, M. Rollin was,
+it is known, not indisposed to seek a seat in the Chamber, under the
+auspices of M. Barrot, but subsequently to his connection with the
+_Reforme_, he had himself become thoroughly known to the extreme party
+in the departments, and on the death of Gamier Pagès the elder, was
+elected in 1841 for Le Mans, in La Sarthe.
+
+In addressing the electors, after his return, M. Rollin delivered
+a speech much more Republican than Monarchical. For this he was
+sentenced to four months' imprisonment, but the sentence was appealed
+against and annulled on a technical ground, and the honorable member
+was ultimately acquitted by the Cour d'Assizes of Angers.
+
+The parliamentary _début_ of M. Rollin took place in 1842. His first
+speech was delivered on the subject of the secret-service money.
+The elocution was easy and flowing, the manner oratorical, the style
+somewhat turgid and bombastic. But in the course of the session M.
+Rollin improved, and his discourse on the modification of the criminal
+law, on other legal subjects, and on railways, were more sober
+specimens of style. In 1843 and 1844 M. Rollin frequently spoke; but
+though his speeches were a good deal talked of outside the walls of
+the Chamber, they produced little effect within it. Nevertheless,
+it was plain to every candid observer that he possessed many of the
+requisites of the orator--a good voice, a copious flow of words,
+considerable energy and enthusiasm, a sanguine temperament and jovial
+and generous disposition. In the sessions of 1845-46, M. Rollin took
+a still more prominent part. His purse, his house in the Rue Tournon,
+his counsels and advice, were all placed at the service of the
+men of the movement; and by the beginning of 1847 he seemed to be
+acknowledged by the extreme party as its most conspicuous and popular
+member. Such indeed was his position when the electoral reform
+banquets, on a large scale, began to take place in the autumn of 1847.
+These banquets, promoted and forwarded by the principal members of the
+opposition to serve the cause of electoral reform, were looked on
+by M. Rollin and his friends in another light. While Odillon Barrot,
+Duvergier d'Haurunne, and others, sought by means of them to produce
+an enlarged constituency, the member for Sarthe looked not merely to
+functional, but to organic reform--not merely to an enlargement of
+the constituency, but to a change in the form of the government. The
+desire of Barrot was _à la vérité à la sincerité des institutions
+conquises en Juillet_ 1830; whereas the desire of Rollin was, _Ă 
+l'amélioration des classes laborieuses_; the one was willing to go
+on with the dynasty of Louis Philippe and the Constitution of July
+improved by diffusion and extension of the franchise, the other
+looked to a democratic and social republic. The result is now known.
+It is not here our purpose to go over the events of the Revolution
+of February 1848, but we may be permitted to observe, that the
+combinations by which that event was effected were ramified and
+extensive, and were long silently and secretly in motion.
+
+The personal history of M. Rollin, since February 1848, is well-known
+and patent to all the world. He was the _ame damnée_ of the
+Provisional Government--the man whose extreme opinions, intemperate
+circulars, and vehement patronage of persons professing the political
+creed of Robespierre--indisposed all moderate men to rally around the
+new system. It was in covering Ledru Rollin with the shield of his
+popularity that Lamartine lost his own, and that he ceased to be the
+political idol of a people of whom he must ever be regarded as one
+of the literary glories and illustrations. On the dissolution of
+the Provisional Government, Ledru Rollin constituted himself one of
+the leaders of the movement party. In ready powers of speech and in
+popularity no man stood higher; but he did not possess the power of
+restraining his followers or of holding them in hand, and the result
+was, that instead of being their leader he became their instrument.
+Fond of applause, ambitious of distinction, timid by nature, destitute
+of pluck, and of that rarer virtue moral courage, Ledru Rollin,
+to avoid the imputation of faint-heartedness, put himself in the
+foreground, but the measures of his followers being ill-taken, the
+plot in which he was mixed up egregiously failed, and he is now in
+consequence an exile in England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GENERAL GARIBALDI.
+
+MR. FILIPANTE gives the following notice of this Italian revolutionary
+leader in a communication to the _Evening Post_. "His exertions in
+behalf of the liberal movement in Italy have been indefatigable. As
+active as he was courageous, he was among the first to take up arms
+against Austrian tyranny, and the last to lay them down. Even when the
+triumvirate at Rome had been overthrown, and the most ardent spirits
+despaired of the republic, Garibaldi and his noble band of soldiers
+refused to yield; they maintained a vigorous resistance to the last,
+and only quitted the ground when the cause was so far gone that their
+own success would have been of no general advantage.
+
+"The General is about forty years of age. He was in early life an
+officer in the Sardinian service, but, engaging in an unsuccessful
+revolt against the government of Charles Albert, he was compelled to
+leave his native land. He fled to Montevideo, where he fought with
+distinction in the wars against Rosas. At the breaking out of the late
+revolution he returned. His military capacities being well known, he
+was entrusted with a command; and throughout the war his services were
+most efficient. He defeated the allied troops of Austria, France,
+and Naples, in several battles; his name, in fact, became a terror,
+and when the republic fell, and he was compelled to retire to the
+Appenines, the invaders felt that his return would be more formidable
+than any other event.
+
+"From Italy he went to Morocco, where he has since lived. But his
+friends, desiring that his great energies should be actively employed,
+have offered him the command of a merchant ship, which he has
+accepted. He will, therefore, hereafter be engaged in the peaceful
+pursuits of commerce, unless his country should again require his
+exertions."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CRIME, IN ENGLAND AND FRANCE.
+
+In recent discussions of the effects of education upon morals, the
+relative conditions of Great Britain and France in this respect
+have often been referred to. The following paragraph shows that the
+statistics in the case have not been well understood:
+
+"In a recent sitting of the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences,
+M. Leon Faucher, the representative, read a paper on the state of
+crime in England; and some of the journals have taken advantage
+of this to institute a comparison with returns of the criminality
+of France, recently published by the Government--the result being
+anything but flattering to England. But M. Faucher, the Academy, the
+newspapers, and almost everybody else in France, seems to be entirely
+ignorant that it is impossible to institute a comparison between the
+amount of crime in England and the amount of crime in France, inasmuch
+as crimes are not the same in both countries. Thus, for example, it
+is a felony in England to steal a pair of shoes, the offender is sent
+before the Court of Assize, and his offense counts in the official
+returns as a "crime;" in France, on the contrary, a petty theft is
+considered a _délit_, or simple offense, is punished by a police
+magistrate, and figures in the returns as an "offense." With
+respect to murders, too, the English have only two general names for
+killing--murder or manslaughter--but the French have nearly a dozen
+categories of killing, of which what the English call murder forms
+only one. It is the same, in short, with almost every species of
+crime."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The International Weekly Miscellany,
+Vol. 1, No. 7, by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13711 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13711 ***</div>
+
+ <h1>INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MISCELLANY<br />
+ Of Literature, Art, and Science.</h1>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <table width="100%"
+ summary="Volume, Number, and Date">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left"><b>Vol. I.</b></td>
+
+ <td align="center"><b>NEW YORK, AUGUST 12,
+ 1850.</b></td>
+
+ <td align="right"><b>No. 7.</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page193"
+ id="page193"></a>[pg 193]</span>
+
+ <h2>WOMEN AND LITERATURE IN FRANCE.</h2>
+
+ <p>From a sprightly letter from Paris to the <i>Cologne
+ Gazette</i>, we translate for <i>The International</i> the
+ following account of the position of women in the French
+ Republic, together with the accompanying gossip concerning
+ sundry ladies whose names have long been quite prominently
+ before the public:</p>
+
+ <p>"It is curious that the idea of the emancipation of women
+ should have originated in France, for there is no country in
+ Europe where the sex have so little reason to complain of their
+ position as in this, especially at Paris. Leaving out of view a
+ certain paragraph of the <i>Code Civile</i>&mdash;and that is
+ nothing but a sentence in a law-book&mdash;and looking closely
+ into the features of women's life, we see that they are not
+ only queens who reign, but also ministers who govern.</p>
+
+ <p>"In France women are engaged in a large proportion of civil
+ employments, and may without hesitation devote themselves to
+ art and science. It is indeed astonishing to behold the
+ interest with which the beautiful sex here enter upon all
+ branches of art and knowledge.</p>
+
+ <p>"The ateliers of the painters number quite as many female as
+ male students, and there are apparently more women than men who
+ copy the pictures in the Louvre. Nothing is more pleasing than
+ to see these gentle creatures, with their easels, sitting
+ before a colossal Rubens or a Madonna of Raphael. No difficulty
+ alarms them, and prudery is not allowed to give a voice in
+ their choice of subjects.</p>
+
+ <p>"I have never yet attended a lecture, by either of the
+ professors here, but I have found some seats occupied by
+ ladies. Even the lectures of Michel Chevalier and Blanqui do
+ not keep back the eagerness of the charming Parisians in
+ pursuit of science. That Michelet and Edgar Quinet have
+ numerous female disciples is accordingly not difficult to
+ believe.</p>
+
+ <p>"Go to a public session of the Academy, and you find the
+ '<i>cercle</i>' filled almost exclusively by ladies, and these
+ laurel-crowned heads have the delight of seeing their immortal
+ works applauded by the clapping of tenderest hands. In truth,
+ the French savan is uncommonly clear in the most abstract
+ things; but it would be an interesting question, whether the
+ necessity of being not alone easily intelligible but agreeable
+ to the capacity of comprehension possessed by the unschooled
+ mind of woman, has not largely contributed to the facility and
+ charm which is peculiar to French scientific literature. Read
+ for example the discourse on Cabanis, pronounced by Mignet at
+ the last session. It would be impossible to write more
+ charmingly, more elegantly, more attractively, even upon a
+ subject within the range of the fine arts. The works, and
+ especially the historical works, of the French, are universally
+ diffused. Popular histories, so-called editions for the people,
+ are here entirely unknown; everything that is published is in a
+ popular edition, and if as great and various care were taken
+ for the education of the people as in Germany, France would in
+ this respect be the first country in the world.</p>
+
+ <p>"With the increasing influence of monarchical ideas in
+ certain circles, the women seem to be returning to the
+ traditions of monarchy, and are throwing themselves into the
+ business of making memoirs. Hardly have George Sand's
+ Confessions been announced, and already new enterprises in the
+ same line are set on foot. The European dancer, who is perhaps
+ more famous for making others dance to her music, and who has
+ enjoyed a monopoly of cultivated scandal, Lola Montes, also
+ intends to publish her memoirs. They will of course contain an
+ interesting fragment of German federal politics, and form a
+ contribution to German revolutionary literature. Lola herself
+ is still too beautiful to devote her own time to the writing.
+ Accordingly, she has resorted to the pen of M. Balzac. If
+ Madame Balzac has nothing to say against the necessary intimacy
+ with the dangerous Spanish or Irish or whatever woman&mdash;for
+ Lola Montes is a second Homer&mdash;the reading world may
+ anticipate an interesting, chapter of life. No writer is better
+ fitted for such a work than so profound a man of the world, and
+ so keen a painter of character, as
+ Balzac.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page194"
+ id="page194"></a>[pg 194]</span>
+
+ <p>"The well-known actress, Mlle. Georges, who was in her prime
+ during the most remarkable epoch of the century, and was in
+ relations with the most prominent persons of the Empire, is
+ also preparing a narrative of her richly varied experiences.
+ Perhaps these attractive examples may induce Madame Girardin
+ also to bestow her memoirs upon us, and so the process can be
+ repeated infinitely."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>Authors and Books.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Parke Godwin has just given to the public, through Mr.
+ Putnam, a new edition of the translation made by himself and
+ some literary friends, of Goethe's "Autobiography, or Truth and
+ Poetry from My Life." In his new preface Mr. Godwin exposes one
+ of the most scandalous pieces of literary imposition that we
+ have ever read of. This translation, with a few verbal
+ alterations which mar its beauty and lessen its fidelity, has
+ been reprinted in "Bohn's Standard Library," in London, as an
+ original English version, in the making of which "the American
+ was of <i>occasional use</i>," &amp;c. Mr. Godwin is one of our
+ best German scholars, and his discourse last winter on the
+ character and genius of Goethe, illustrated his thorough
+ appreciation of the Shakspeare of the Continent, and that
+ affectionate sympathy which is so necessary to the task of
+ turning an author from one language into another. There are
+ very few books in modern literature more attractive or more
+ instructive to educated men than this Autobiography of Goethe,
+ for which we are indebted to him.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>John Randolph is the best subject for a biography, that our
+ political experience has yet furnished. Who that remembers the
+ long and slender man of iron, with his scarcely human scorn of
+ nearly all things beyond his "old Dominion," and his withering
+ wit, never restrained by any pity, and his passion for
+ destroying all fabrics of policy or reputation of which he was
+ not himself the architect, but will read with anticipations of
+ keen interest the announcement of a life of the eccentric yet
+ great Virginian! Such a work, by the Hon. Hugh A. Garland, is
+ in the press of the Appletons. We know little of Mr. Garland's
+ capacities in this way, but if his book prove not the most
+ attractive in the historical literature of the year, the fault
+ will not be in its subject.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The Scottish Booksellers have instituted a society for
+ professional objects under the title of the "Edinburgh
+ Booksellers' Union." In addition to business purposes, they
+ propose to collect and preserve books and pamphlets written by
+ or relating to booksellers, printers, engravers, or members of
+ collateral professions,&mdash;rare editions of other
+ works&mdash;and generally articles connected with parties
+ belonging to the above professions, whether literary,
+ professional, or personal.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>D'Israeli abandons himself now-a-days entirely to politics.
+ "The forehead high, and gleaming eye, and lip awry, of Benjamin
+ D'Israeli," sung once by <i>Fraser</i> are no longer seen
+ before the title-pages of "Wondrous Tales," but only before the
+ Speaker. It is much referred to, that in the recent
+ parliamentary commemoration of Sir Robert Peel, the Hebrew
+ commoner kept silence; his long war of bitter sarcasm and
+ reproach on the defunct statesman was too freshly remembered.
+ Peel rarely exerted himself to more advantage than in his
+ replies, to D'Israeli, all noticeable for subdued disdain,
+ conscious patriotism, and argumentative completeness. For
+ injustice experienced through life, the meritorious dead are in
+ a measure revenged by the feelings of their accusers or
+ detractors, when the latter retain the sensibility which the
+ grave usually excites, and especially amid such a chorus of
+ applause from all parties, and a whole people, as we have now
+ in England for Sir Robert Peel&mdash;the only man in the
+ Empire, except Wellington, who had a strictly personal
+ authority.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Dr. Dickson, recently of the Medical Department of the New
+ York University, and whose ill-health induced the resignation
+ of the chair he held there, has returned to Charleston, and we
+ observe that his professional and other friends in that city
+ greeted him with a public dinner, on the 9th ult. Dr. Dickson
+ we believe is one of the most classically elegant writers upon
+ medical science in the United States. He ranks with Chapman and
+ Oliver Wendell Holmes in the grace of his periods as well as in
+ the thoroughness of his learning and the exactness and
+ acuteness of his logic. Like Holmes, too, he is a poet, and,
+ generally, a very accomplished <i>litterateur</i>. We regret
+ the loss that New York sustains in his removal, but
+ congratulate Charleston upon the recovery of one of the best
+ known and most loved attractions of her society.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Mr. John R. Bartlett's boundary commission will soon be upon
+ the field of its activity. We were pleased to see that Mr.
+ Davis, of Massachusetts, a few days ago presented in the Senate
+ petitions from Edward Everett, Jared Sparks, and others, and
+ from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, at Boston, to
+ the effect that it would be of great public utility to attach
+ to the boundary commission to run the line between the United
+ States and Mexico, a small corps of persons well qualified to
+ make researches in the various departments of science.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>William C. Richards, the very clever and accomplished editor
+ of the <i>Southern Literary Gazette</i> was the author of "Two
+ Country Sonnets," contributed to a recent number of <i>The
+ International</i>, which we inadvertently credited to his
+ brother, T. Addison Richards the well-known and much esteemed
+ landscape painter.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page195"
+ id="page195"></a>[pg 195]</span>
+
+ <p>MAJOR POUSSIN, so well-known for his long residence in this
+ country as an officer of engineers, and, more recently, as
+ Minister of the French republic,&mdash;which, intelligent men
+ have no need to be assured, he represented with uniform wisdom
+ and manliness,&mdash;is now engaged at Paris upon a new edition
+ of his important book, <i>The Power and Prospects of the United
+ States</i>. We perceive that he has lately published in the
+ Republican journal <i>Le Credit</i>, a translation of the
+ American instructions to Mr. Mann, respecting Hungary. In his
+ preface to this document, Major Poussin pays the warmest
+ compliments to the feelings, measures and policy of our
+ administration, with which he contrasts, at the same time,
+ those of the French Government. He hopes a great deal for the
+ Democratic cause in Europe from the <i>moral influences</i> of
+ the United States.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>DR. JOHN W. FRANCIS, one of the most excellent men, as well
+ as one of the best physicians of New York, has received from
+ Trinity College, Hartford, the degree of Doctor of Laws. We
+ praise the authorities of Trinity for this judicious bestowal
+ of its honors. Francis's career of professional usefulness and
+ variously successful intellectual activity, are deserving such
+ academical recognition. His genial love of learning, large
+ intelligence, ready appreciation of individual merit, and that
+ genuine love of country which has led him to the carefullest
+ and most comprehensive study of our general and particular
+ annals, and to the frequentest displays of the sources of its
+ enduring grandeur, constitute in him a character eminently
+ entitled to our affectionate admiration.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE POEMS OF GRAY, in an edition of singular typographical
+ and pictorial beauty, are to be issued as one of the autumn
+ gift-books by Henry C. Baird, of Philadelphia. They are to be
+ edited by the tasteful and judicious critic, Professor Henry
+ Reed, of the University of Pennsylvania, to whom we were
+ indebted for the best edition of Wordsworth that appeared
+ during the life of that poet. We have looked over Professor
+ Reed's life of Gray, and have seen proofs of the admirable
+ engravings with which the work will be embellished. It will be
+ dedicated to our American Moxon, JAMES T. FIELDS, as a
+ souvenir. we presume, of a visit to the grave of the bard,
+ which the two young booksellers made together during a recent
+ tour in Europe. Mr. Baird and Mr. Fields are of the small
+ company of publishers, who, if it please them, can write their
+ own books. They have both given pleasant evidence of abilities
+ in this way.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>BURNS.&mdash;It appears from the Scotch papers that the
+ house in Burns-street, Dumfries, in which the bard of "Tam
+ o'Shanter" and his wife "bonnie Jean," lived and died, is about
+ to come into the market by way of public auction.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>"EUROPE, PAST AND PRESENT:" A comprehensive manual of
+ European Geography and History, derived from official and
+ authentic sources, and comprising not only an accurate
+ geographical and statistical description, but also a faithful
+ and interesting history of all European States; to which is
+ appended a copious and carefully arranged index, by Francis H.
+ Ungewitter, LL.D.,&mdash;is a volume of some six hundred pages,
+ just published by Mr. Putnam. It has been prepared with much
+ well-directed labor, and will be found a valuable and
+ comprehensive manual of reference upon all questions relating
+ to the history, geographical position, and general statistics
+ of the several States of Europe.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>M. LIBRI, of whose conviction at Paris (<i>par
+ contumace</i>, that is, in default of appearance), of stealing
+ books from public libraries, we have given some account in
+ <i>The International</i>, is warmly and it appears to us
+ successfully defended in the Athenæum, in which it is alleged
+ that there was not a particle of legal evidence against him. M.
+ Libri is, and was at the time of the appearance of the
+ accusation against him, a political exile in England.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>MAJOR RAWLINSON, F.R.S., has published a "Commentary on the
+ Cuneiform Inscriptions of Babylon and Assyria," including
+ readings of the inscriptions on the Nimroud Obelisk, discovered
+ by Mr. Layard, and a brief notice of the ancient kings of
+ Nineveh and Babylon. It was read before the Royal Asiatic
+ Society.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>REV. DR. WISEMAN, author of the admirable work on the
+ Connection between Science and Religion, is to proceed to Rome
+ toward the close of the present month to receive the hat of a
+ cardinal. It is many years since any English Roman Catholic,
+ resident in England, attained this honor.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY has published several
+ interesting volumes, of which the most important are those of
+ Judge Burnett. An address, by William D. Gallagher, its
+ President, on the History and Resources of the West and
+ Northwest, has just been issued: and it has nearly ready for
+ publication a volume of Mr. Hildreth.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE IMPERIAL LIBRARY AT VIENNA has been enriched by a very
+ old Greek manuscript on the Advent of Christ, composed by a
+ bishop of the second century, named Clement. This manuscript
+ was discovered a short time since by M. Waldeck, the
+ philologist, at Constantinople.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>MR. KEIGHTLEY's "History of Greece" has been translated into
+ modern Greek and published at Athens.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>GUIZOT's book on Democracy, has been prohibited in Austria,
+ through General Haynau's influence.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page196"
+ id="page196"></a>[pg 196]</span>
+
+ <p>WORDSWORTH'S POSTHUMOUS POEM, "The Prelude," is in the press
+ of the Appletons, by whose courtesy we are enabled to present
+ the readers of <i>The International</i> with the fourth canto
+ of it, before its publication in England. The poem is a sort of
+ autobiography in blank verse, marked by all the characteristics
+ of the poet&mdash;his original vein of thought; his majestic,
+ but sometimes diffuse, style of speculation; his large
+ sympathies with humanity, from its proudest to its humblest
+ forms. It will be read with great avidity by his
+ admirers&mdash;and there are few at this day who do not belong
+ to that class&mdash;as affording them a deeper insight into the
+ mind of Wordsworth than any of his other works. It is divided
+ into several books, named from the different situations or
+ stages of the author's life, or the subjects which at any
+ period particularly engaged his attention. We believe it will
+ be more generally read than any poem of equal length that has
+ issued from the press in this age.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Miss COOPER's "RURAL HOURS"<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ is everywhere commended as one of the most charming pictures
+ that have ever appeared of country life. The books of the
+ Howitts, delineating the same class of subjects in England
+ and Germany, are not to be compared to Miss Cooper's for
+ delicate painting or grace and correctness of diction. The
+ Evening Post observes:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"This is one of the most delightful books we have lately
+ taken up. It is a journal of daily observations made by an
+ intelligent and highly educated lady, residing in a most
+ beautiful part of the country, commencing with the spring
+ of 1848, and closing with the end of the winter of 1849.
+ They almost wholly concern the occupations and objects of
+ country life, and it is almost enough to make one in love
+ with such a life to read its history so charmingly
+ narrated. Every day has its little record in this
+ volume,&mdash;the record of some rural employment, some
+ note on the climate, some observation in natural history,
+ or occasionally some trait of rural manners. The arrival
+ and departure of the birds of passage is chronicled, the
+ different stages of vegetation are noted, atmospheric
+ changes and phenomena are described, and the various living
+ inhabitants of the field and forest are made to furnish
+ matter of entertainment for the reader. All this is done
+ with great variety and exactness of knowledge, and without
+ any parade of science. Descriptions of rural holidays and
+ rural amusements are thrown in occasionally, to give a
+ living interest to a picture which would otherwise become
+ monotonous from its uniform quiet. The work is written in
+ easy and flexible English, with occasional felicities of
+ expression. It is ascribed, as we believe we have informed
+ our readers, to a daughter of J. Fenimore Cooper. Our
+ country is full of most interesting materials for a work of
+ this sort; but we confess we hardly expected, at the
+ present time, to see them collected and arranged by so
+ skillful a hand."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE REV. SYDNEY SMITH's "Sketches of Modern Philosophy,"
+ remarks the Tribune, "consist of a course of popular lectures
+ on the subject, delivered in the Royal Institution of London in
+ the years 1804-5-6. As a contribution to the science of which
+ they profess to treat, their claims to respect are very
+ moderate. Indeed, no one would ridicule any pretensions of that
+ kind with more zeal than the author himself. The manuscripts
+ were left in an imperfect state, Sydney Smith probably
+ supposing that no call would ever be made for their
+ publication. They were written merely for popular effect, to be
+ spoken before a miscellaneous audience, in which any abstract
+ topics of moral philosophy would be the last to awaken an
+ interest. The title of the book is accordingly a misnomer. It
+ would lead no one to suspect the rich and diversified character
+ of its contents. They present no ambitious attempts at
+ metaphysical disquisition. They are free from dry
+ technicalities of ethical speculation. They have no specimens
+ of logical hair-splitting, no pedantic array of barren
+ definitions, no subtle distinctions proceeding from an
+ ingenious fancy, and without any foundation in nature. On the
+ contrary, we find in this volume a series of lively, off-hand,
+ dashing comments on men and manners, often running into broad
+ humor, and always marked with the pungent common sense that
+ never forsook the facetious divine. His remarks on the conduct
+ of the understanding, on literary habits, on the use and value
+ of books, and other themes of a similar character, are for the
+ most part instructive and practical as well as piquant, and on
+ the whole, the admirers of Sydney Smith will have no reason to
+ regret the publication of the volume."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From the London Times.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>BIOGRAPHY OF SIR ROBERT PEEL.</h2>
+
+ <p>In the following brief narrative of the principal facts in
+ the life of the great statesman who has just been snatched from
+ among us, we must disclaim all intention of dealing with his
+ biography in any searching or ambitious spirit. The national
+ loss is so great, the bereavement is so sudden, that we cannot
+ sit down calmly either to eulogize or arraign the memory of the
+ deceased. We cannot forget that it was not a week ago we were
+ occupied in recording and commenting upon his last eloquent
+ address to that assembly which had so often listened with
+ breathless attention to his statesmanlike expositions of
+ policy. We could do little else when the mournful intelligence
+ reached us that Sir Robert Peel was no more, than pen a few
+ expressions of sorrow and respect. Even now the following
+ imperfect record of facts must be accepted as a poor substitute
+ for the biography <span class="pagenum"><a name="page197"
+ id="page197"></a>[pg 197]</span> of that great Englishman
+ whose loss will be felt almost as a private bereavement by
+ every family throughout the British Empire:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Sir Robert Peel was in the 63d year of his age, having been
+ born near Bury, in Lancashire, on the 5th of February, 1788.
+ His father was a manufacturer on a grand scale, and a man of
+ much natural ability, and of almost unequaled opulence. Full of
+ a desire to render his son and probable successor worthy of the
+ influence and the vast wealth which he had to bestow, the first
+ Sir Robert Peel took the utmost pains personally with the early
+ training of the future prime minister. He retained his son
+ under his own immediate superintendence until he arrived at a
+ sufficient age to be sent to Harrow. Lord Byron, his
+ contemporary at Harrow, was a better declaimer and a more
+ amusing actor, but in sound learning and laborious application
+ to school duties young Peel had no equal. He had scarcely
+ completed his 16th year when he left Harrow and became a
+ gentleman commoner of Christ Church, Oxford, where he took the
+ degree of A.B., in 1808, with unprecedented distinction.</p>
+
+ <p>The year 1809 saw him attain his majority, and take his seat
+ in the House of Commons as a member for Cashel, in
+ Tipperary.</p>
+
+ <p>The first Sir Robert Peel had long been a member of the
+ House of Commons, and the early efforts of his son in that
+ assembly were regarded with considerable interest, not only on
+ account of his University reputation, but also because he was
+ the son of such a father. He did not, however, begin public
+ life by staking his fame on the results of one elaborate
+ oration; on the contrary, he rose now and then on comparatively
+ unimportant occasions; made a few brief modest remarks, stated
+ a fact or two, explained a difficulty when he happened to
+ understand the matter in hand better than others, and then sat
+ down without taxing too severely the patience or good nature of
+ an auditory accustomed to great performances. Still in the
+ second year of his parliamentary course he ventured to make a
+ set speech, when, at the commencement of the session of 1810,
+ he seconded the address in reply to the King's speech.
+ Thenceforward for nineteen years a more highflying Tory than
+ Mr. Peel was not to be found within the walls of parliament.
+ Lord Eldon applauded him as a young and valiant champion of
+ those abuses in the state which were then fondly called "the
+ institutions of the country." Lord Sidmouth regarded him as the
+ rightful political heir, and even the Duke of Cumberland
+ patronized Mr. Peel. He further became the favorite
+ <i>eleve</i> of Mr. Perceval, the first lord of the treasury,
+ and entered office as under-secretary for the home department.
+ He continued in the home department for two years, not often
+ speaking in parliament, but rather qualifying himself for those
+ prodigious labors in debate, in council, and in office, which
+ it has since been his lot to encounter and perform.</p>
+
+ <p>In May, 1812, Mr. Perceval fell by the hand of an assassin,
+ and the composition of the ministry necessarily underwent a
+ great change. The result, so far as Mr. Peel was concerned,
+ was, that he was appointed Chief Secretary to the
+ Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland. Mr. Peel had only reached his 26th
+ year when, in the month of September, 1812, the duties of that
+ anxious and laborious position were entrusted to his hands. The
+ legislative union was then but lately consummated, and the
+ demand for Catholic emancipation had given rise to an agitation
+ of only very recent date. But, in proportion to its novelty, so
+ was its vigor. Mr. Peel was, therefore, as the representative
+ of the old tory Protestant school, called upon to encounter a
+ storm of unpopularity, such as not even an Irish secretary has
+ ever been exposed to. The late Mr. O'Connell in various forms
+ poured upon Mr. Peel a torrent of invective which went beyond
+ even his extraordinary performances in the science of scolding.
+ At length he received from Mr. Peel a hostile message.
+ Negotiations went on for three or four days, when Mr. O'Connell
+ was taken into custody and bound over to keep the peace toward
+ all his fellow-subjects in Ireland. Mr. Peel and his friend
+ immediately went to England, and subsequently proceeded to the
+ continent. Mr. O'Connell followed them to London, but the
+ police were active enough to bring him before the chief
+ justice, when he entered into recognizances to keep the peace
+ toward all his majesty's subjects; and so ended one of the few
+ personal squabbles in which Mr. Peel had ever been engaged. For
+ six years he held the office of chief secretary to the
+ lord-lieutenant, at a time when the government was conducted
+ upon what might be called "anti-conciliation principles." The
+ opposite course was commenced by Mr. Peel's immediate
+ successor, Mr. Charles Grant, now Lord Glenelg.</p>
+
+ <p>That a chief secretary so circumstanced, struggling to
+ sustain extreme Orangeism in its dying agonies, should have
+ been called upon to encounter great toil and anxiety is a truth
+ too obvious to need illustration. That in these straits Mr.
+ Peel acquitted himself with infinite address was as readily
+ acknowledged at that time as it has ever been even in the
+ zenith of his fame. He held office in that country under three
+ successive viceroys, the Duke of Richmond, Earl Whitworth, and
+ Earl Talbot, all of whom have long since passed away from this
+ life, their names and their deeds long forgotten. But the
+ history of their chief secretary happens not to have been
+ composed of such perishable materials, and we now approach one
+ of the most memorable passages of his eventful career. He was
+ chairman of the great bullion committee; but before he engaged
+ in that stupendous task he had resigned the chief secretaryship
+ of Ireland. As a consequence of the report of that committee,
+ he took charge of and introduced the bill for authorizing a
+ return to <span class="pagenum"><a name="page198"
+ id="page198"></a>[pg 198]</span> cash payments which bears
+ his name, and which measure received the sanction of
+ parliament in the year 1819. That measure brought upon Mr.
+ Peel no slight or temporary odium. The first Sir Robert Peel
+ was then alive, and altogether differed from his son as to
+ the tendency of his measure. It was roundly asserted at the
+ time, and very faintly denied, that it rendered that
+ gentleman a more wealthy man, by something like half a
+ million sterling, than he had previously been. The deceased
+ statesman, however, must, in common justice, be acquitted of
+ any sinister purpose.</p>
+
+ <p>This narrative now reaches the year 1820, when we have to
+ relate the only domestic event in the history of Sir Robert
+ Peel which requires notice. On the 8th of June, being then in
+ the 33d year of his age, he married Julia, daughter of General
+ Sir John Floyd, who had then attained the age of 25.</p>
+
+ <p>Two years afterward there was a lull in public affairs,
+ which gave somewhat the appearance of tranquillity. Lord
+ Sidmouth was growing old, he thought that his system was
+ successful, and that at length he might find repose. He
+ considered it then consistent with his public duty to consign
+ to younger and stronger hands the seals of the home department.
+ He accepted a seat in the cabinet without office, and continued
+ to give his support to Lord Liverpool, his ancient political
+ chief. In permitting his mantle to fall upon Mr. Peel, he
+ thought he was assisting to invest with authority one whose
+ views and policy were as narrow as his own, and whose practise
+ in carrying them out would be not less rigid and
+ uncompromising. But, like many others, he lived long enough to
+ be grievously disappointed by the subsequent career of him whom
+ the liberal party have since called "the great minister of
+ progress," and whom their opponents have not scrupled to
+ designate by appellations not to be repeated in these hours of
+ sorrow and bereavement. On the 17th of January, 1822, Mr. Peel
+ was installed at the head of the home department, where he
+ remained undisturbed till the political demise of Lord
+ Liverpool in the spring of 1827. The most distinguished man
+ that has filled the chair of the House of Commons in the
+ present century was Charles Abbott, afterward Lord Colchester.
+ In the summer of 1817 he had completed sixteen years of hard
+ service in that eminent office, and he had represented the
+ University for eleven years. His valuable labors having been
+ rewarded with a pension and a peerage, he took his seat, full
+ of years and honors, among the hereditary legislators of the
+ land, and left a vacancy in the representation of his <i>alma
+ mater</i>, which Mr. Peel above all living men was deemed the
+ most fitting person to occupy. At that time he was an intense
+ tory&mdash;or as the Irish called him, an Orange Protestant of
+ the deepest dye&mdash;one prepared to make any sacrifice for
+ the maintenance of church and state as established by the
+ revolution of 1688. Who, therefore, so fit as he to represent
+ the loyalty, learning, and orthodoxy of Oxford? To have done so
+ had been the object of Mr. Canning's young ambition: but in
+ 1817 he could not be so ungrateful to Liverpool as to reject
+ its representation even for the early object of his
+ parliamentary affections. Mr. Peel, therefore, was returned
+ without opposition, for that constituency which many consider
+ the most important in the land&mdash;with which he remained on
+ the best possible terms for twelve years. The question of the
+ repeal of the penal laws affecting the Roman Catholics, which
+ severed so many political connections, was, however, destined
+ to separate Mr. Peel from Oxford. In 1828 rumors of the coming
+ change were rife, and many expedients were devised to extract
+ his opinions on the Catholic question. But with the reserve
+ which ever marked his character, left all curiosity at fault.
+ At last, the necessities of the government rendered further
+ concealment impossible, and out came the truth that he was no
+ longer an Orangeman. The ardent friends who had frequently
+ supported his Oxford elections, and the hot partisans who
+ shouted "Peel and Protestantism," at the Brunswick Clubs,
+ reviled him for his defection in no measured terms. On the 4th
+ of February, 1829, he addressed a letter to the vice-chancellor
+ of Oxford, stating, in many well-turned phrases, that the
+ Catholic question must forthwith be adjusted, under advice in
+ which he concurred; and that, therefore, he considered himself
+ bound to resign that trust which the University had during so
+ many years confided to his hands. His resignation was accepted;
+ but as the avowed purpose of that important step was to give
+ his constituents an opportunity of pronouncing an opinion upon
+ a change of policy, he merely accepted the Chiltern Hundreds
+ with the intention of immediately becoming a candidate for that
+ seat in parliament which he had just vacated. At this election
+ Mr. Peel was opposed by Sir Robert Inglis, who was elected by
+ 755 to 609. Mr. Peel was, therefore, obliged to cast himself on
+ the favor of Sir Manasseh Lopez, who returned him for Westbury,
+ in Wiltshire, which constituency he continued to represent two
+ years, until at the general election in 1830 he was chosen for
+ Tamworth, in the representation for which he continued for
+ twenty years.</p>
+
+ <p>The main features of his official life still remain to be
+ noticed. With the exception of Lord Palmerston, no statesman of
+ modern times has spent so many years in the civil service of
+ the crown. If no account be taken of the short time he was
+ engaged upon the bullion committee in effecting the change in
+ the currency, and in opposing for a few months the ministries
+ of Mr. Canning and Lord Goderich, it may be stated that from
+ 1810 to 1830 he formed part of the government, and presided
+ over it as a first minister in 1834-5, as well as from 1841 to
+ 1846 inclusive. During the time that he held the office of
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page199"
+ id="page199"></a>[pg 199]</span> home secretary under Lord
+ Liverpool he effected many important changes in the
+ administration of domestic affairs, and many legislative
+ improvements of a practical and comprehensive character. But
+ his fame as member of parliament was principally sustained
+ at this period of his life by the extensive and admirable
+ alterations which he effected in the criminal law. Romilly
+ and Mackintosh had preceded him in the great work of
+ reforming and humanizing the code of England. For his hand,
+ however, was reserved the introduction of ameliorations
+ which they had long toiled and struggled for in vain. The
+ ministry through whose influence he was enabled to carry
+ these reforms lost its chief in Lord Liverpool during the
+ early part of the year 1827. When Mr. Canning undertook to
+ form a government, Mr. Peel, the late Lord Eldon, the Duke
+ of Wellington, and other eminent tories of that day, threw
+ up office, and are said to have persecuted Mr. Canning with
+ a degree of rancor far outstripping the legitimate bounds of
+ political hostility. Lord George Bentinck said "they hounded
+ to the death my illustrious relative"; and the ardor of his
+ subsequent opposition to Sir Robert Peel evidently derived
+ its intensity from a long cherished sense of the injuries
+ supposed to have been inflicted upon Mr. Canning. It is the
+ opinion of men not ill informed respecting the sentiments of
+ Canning, that he considered Peel as his true political
+ successor&mdash;as a statesman competent to the task of
+ working out that large and liberal policy which he fondly
+ hoped the tories might, however tardily, be induced to
+ sanction. At all events, he is believed not to have
+ entertained toward Mr. Peel any personal hostility, and to
+ have stated during his short-lived tenure of office that
+ that gentleman was the only member of his party who had not
+ treated him with ingratitude and unkindness.</p>
+
+ <p>In January, 1828, the Wellington ministry took office and
+ held it till November, 1830. Mr. Peel's reputation suffered
+ during this period very rude shocks. He gave up, as already
+ stated, his anti-Catholic principles, lost the force of twenty
+ years' consistency, and under unheard-of disadvantages
+ introduced the very measure he had spent so many years in
+ opposing. The debates on Catholic emancipation, which preceded
+ the great reform question, constitute a period in his life,
+ which, twenty years ago, every one would have considered its
+ chief and prominent feature. There can be no doubt that the
+ course he then adopted demanded greater moral courage than at
+ any previous period of his life he had been called upon to
+ exercise. He believed himself incontestibly in the right; he
+ believed, with the Duke of Wellington, that the danger of civil
+ war was imminent, and that such an event was immeasurably a
+ greater evil than surrendering the constitution of 1688. But he
+ was called upon to snap asunder a parliamentary connection of
+ twelve years with a great university, in which the most
+ interesting period of his youth had been passed; to encounter
+ the reproaches of adherents whom he had often led in
+ well-fought contests against the advocates of what was termed
+ "civil and religious liberty;" to tell the world that the
+ character of public men for consistency, however precious, is
+ not to be directly opposed to the common weal; and to
+ communicate to many the novel as well as unpalatable truth that
+ what they deemed "principle" must give way to what he called
+ "expediency."</p>
+
+ <p>When he ceased to be a minister of the crown, that general
+ movement throughout Europe which succeeded the deposition of
+ the elder branch of the Bourbons rendered parliamentary reform
+ as unavoidable as two years previously Catholic emancipation
+ had been. He opposed this change, no doubt with increased
+ knowledge and matured talents, but with impaired influence and
+ few parliamentary followers. The history of the reform debates
+ will show that Sir Robert Peel made many admirable speeches,
+ which served to raise his reputation, but never for a moment
+ turned the tide of fortune against his adversaries, and in the
+ first session of the first reformed parliament he found himself
+ at the head of a party that in numbers little exceeded one
+ hundred. As soon as it was practicable he rallied his broken
+ forces; either he or some of his political friends gave them
+ the name of "Conservatives," and it required but a short
+ interval of reflection and observation to prove to his
+ sagacious intellect that the period of reaction was at hand.
+ Every engine of party organization was put into vigorous
+ activity, and before the summer of 1834 reached its close he
+ was at the head of a compact, powerful, and well-disciplined
+ opposition. Such a high impression of their vigor and
+ efficiency had King William IV received, that when, in
+ November, Lord Althorp became a peer, and the whigs therefore
+ lost their leader to the House of Commons, his Majesty sent in
+ Italy to summon Sir Robert Peel to his councils, with a view to
+ the immediate formation of a conservative ministry. He accepted
+ this responsibility, though he thought the King had mistaken
+ the condition of the country and the chances of success which
+ had awaited his political friends. A new House of Commons was
+ instantly called, and for nearly three months Sir Robert Peel
+ maintained a struggle against the most formidable opposition
+ that for nearly a century any minister had been called to
+ encounter. At no time did his command of temper, his almost
+ exhaustless resources of information, his vigorous and
+ comprehensive intellect appear to create such astonishment or
+ draw forth such unbounded admiration as in the early part of
+ 1835. But, after a well-fought contest he retired once more
+ into the opposition till the close of the second Melbourne
+ Administration in 1841. It was in April, 1835, that Lord
+ Melbourne was restored to power, but the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page200"
+ id="page200"></a>[pg 200]</span> continued enjoyment of
+ office did not much promote the political interests of his
+ party, and from various causes the power of the whigs began
+ to decline. The commencement of a new reign gave them some
+ popularity, but in the new House of Commons, elected in
+ consequence of that event, the conservative party were
+ evidently gaining strength; still, after the failure of
+ 1834-5, it was no easy task to dislodge an existing
+ ministry, and at the same time to be prepared with a cabinet
+ and a party competent to succeed them. Sir Robert Peel,
+ therefore, with characteristic caution, "bided his time",
+ conducting the business of opposition throughout the whole
+ of this period with an ability and success of which history
+ affords few examples. He had accepted the Reform Bill as the
+ established law of England, and as the system upon which the
+ country was thenceforward to be governed. He was willing to
+ carry it out in its true spirit, but he would proceed no
+ further. He marshaled his opposition upon the principle of
+ resistance to any further organic changes, and he enlisted
+ the majority of the peers and nearly the whole of the
+ country gentlemen of England in support of the great
+ principle of protection to British industry. The little
+ maneuvres and small political intrigues of the period are
+ almost forgotten, and the remembrance of them is scarcely
+ worthy of revival. It may, however, be mentioned, that in
+ 1839 ministers, being left in a minority, resigned, and Sir
+ Robert Peel, when sent for by the Queen, demanded that
+ certain ladies in the household of her majesty,&mdash;the
+ near relatives of eminent whig politicians,&mdash;should be
+ removed from the personal service of the sovereign. As this
+ was refused, he abandoned for the time any attempt to form a
+ government, and his opponents remained in office till
+ September, 1841. It was then Sir Robert Peel became the
+ first lord of the treasury, and the Duke of Wellington,
+ without office, accepted a seat in the cabinet, taking the
+ management of the House of Lords. His ministry was formed on
+ protectionist principles, but the close of its career was
+ marked by the adoption of free trade doctrines differing in
+ the widest and most liberal sense. Sir Robert Peel's sense
+ of public duty impelled him once more to incur the odium and
+ obliquy which attended a fundamental change of policy, and a
+ repudiation of the political partizans by whose ardent
+ support a minister may have attained office and authority.
+ It was his fate to encounter more than any man ever did,
+ that hostility which such conduct, however necessary, never
+ fails to produce. This great change in our commercial
+ policy, however unavoidable, must be regarded as the
+ proximate cause of his final expulsion from office in July,
+ 1846. His administration, however, had been signalized by
+ several measures of great political importance. Among the
+ earliest and most prominent of these were his financial
+ plans, the striking feature of which was an income-tax;
+ greatly extolled for the exemption it afforded from other
+ burdens pressing more severely on industry, but loudly
+ condemned for its irregular and unequal operation, a vice
+ which has since rendered its contemplated increase
+ impossible.</p>
+
+ <p>Of the ministerial life of Sir Robert Peel little more
+ remains to be related except that which properly belongs rather
+ to the history of the country than to his individual biography.
+ But it would be unjust to the memory of one of the most
+ sagacious statesman that England ever produced to deny that his
+ latest renunciation of political principles required but two
+ short years to attest the vital necessity of that unqualified
+ surrender. If the corn laws had been in existence at the period
+ when the political system of the continent was shaken to its
+ centre and dynasties crumbled into dust, a question would have
+ been left in the hands of the democratic party of England, the
+ force of which neither skill nor influence could then have
+ evaded. Instead of broken friendships, shattered reputations
+ for consistency, or diminished rents, the whole realm of
+ England might have borne a fearful share in that storm of wreck
+ and revolution which had its crisis in the 10th of April,
+ 1848.</p>
+
+ <p>In the course of his long and eventful life many honors were
+ conferred upon Sir Robert Peel. Wherever he went, and almost at
+ all times, he attracted universal attention, and was always
+ received with the highest consideration. At the close of 1836
+ the University of Glasgow elected him Lord Rector, and the
+ conservatives of that city, in January, 1837, invited him to a
+ banquet at which three thousand gentlemen assembled to do honor
+ to their great political chief. But this was only one among
+ many occasions on which he was "the great guest." Perhaps the
+ most remarkable of these banquets was that given to him in 1835
+ at Merchant Tailors' Hall by three hundred members of the House
+ of Commons. Many other circumstances might be related to
+ illustrate the high position which Sir Robert Peel occupied.
+ Anecdotes innumerable might be recorded to show the
+ extraordinary influence in Parliament which made him "the great
+ commoner" of the age; for Sir Robert Peel was not only a
+ skillful and adroit debater, but by many degrees the most able
+ and one of the most eloquent men in either house of parliament.
+ Nothing could be more stately or imposing than the long array
+ of sounding periods in which he expounded his doctrines,
+ assailed his political adversaries, or vindicated his own
+ policy. But when the whole land laments his loss, when England
+ mourns the untimely fate of one of her noblest sons, the task
+ of critical disquisition upon literary attainments or public
+ oratory possesses little attraction. It may be left for calmer
+ moments, and a more distant time, to investigate with
+ unforgiving justice the sources of his errors, or to estimate
+ the precise value of services which the public is now disposed
+ to regard with no other feelings than those of unmingled
+ gratitude.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page201"
+ id="page201"></a>[pg 201]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:70%;">
+ <a href="images/209.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/209.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <h4>From the Art-Journal.</h4>
+
+ <h2>MEMORIES OF MISS JANE PORTER.</h2>
+
+ <h4>BY MRS. S.C. HALL.</h4>
+
+ <p>The frequent observation of foreigners is, that in England
+ we have few "celebrated women." Perhaps they mean that we have
+ few who are "notorious;" but let us admit that in either case
+ they are right; and may we not express our belief in its being
+ better for women and for the community that such is the case.
+ "Celebrity" rarely adds to the happiness of a woman, and almost
+ as rarely increases her usefulness. The time and attention
+ required to attain "celebrity," must, except under very
+ peculiar circumstances, interfere with the faithful discharge
+ of those feminine duties upon which the well-doing of society
+ depends, and which shed so pure a halo around our English
+ homes. Within these "homes" our heroes, statesmen,
+ philosophers, men of letters, men of genius, receive their
+ first impressions, and the <i>impetus</i> to a faithful
+ discharge of their after callings as Christian subjects of the
+ State.</p>
+
+ <p>There are few of such men who do not trace back their
+ resolution, their patriotism, their wisdom, their
+ learning&mdash;the nourishment of all their higher
+ aspirations&mdash;to a wise, hopeful, loving-hearted and
+ faith-inspired Mother; one who believed in a son's destiny to
+ be great; it may be, impelled to such belief rather by instinct
+ than by reason: who cherished (we can find no better word) the
+ "Hero-feeling" of devotion to what was right; though it might
+ have been unworldly; and whose deep heart welled up perpetual
+ love and patience toward the overboiling faults and frequent
+ stumblings of a hot youth, which she felt would mellow into a
+ fruitful manhood.</p>
+
+ <p>The strength and glory of England are in the keeping of the
+ wives and mothers of its men; and when we are questioned
+ touching our "celebrated women", we may in general terms refer
+ to those who have watched over, moulded, and inspired our
+ "celebrated men".</p>
+
+ <p>Happy is the country where the laws of God and Nature are
+ held in reverence&mdash;where each sex fulfills its peculiar
+ duties, and renders its sphere a sanctuary! And surely such
+ harmony is blessed by the Almighty&mdash;for while other
+ nations writhe in anarchy and poverty, our own spreads wide her
+ arms to receive all who seek protection or need repose.</p>
+
+ <p>But if we have few "celebrated" women, few who, impelled
+ either by circumstances or the irrepressible restlessness of
+ genius, go forth amid the pitfalls of publicity, and battle
+ with the world, either as poets, or dramatists, or moralists,
+ or mere tale-tellers in simple prose&mdash;or, more dangerous
+ still, "hold the mirror up to nature" on the stage that mimics
+ life&mdash;if we have but few, we have, and have had
+ <i>some</i>, of whom we are justly proud; women of such
+ well-balanced minds, that toil they ever so laboriously in
+ their public and perilous paths, their domestic and social
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page202"
+ id="page202"></a>[pg 202]</span> duties have been fulfilled
+ with as diligent and faithful love as though the world had
+ never been purified and enriched by the treasures of their
+ feminine wisdom; yet this does not shake our belief, that
+ despite the spotless and well-earned reputations they
+ enjoyed, the homage they received, (and it has its charm,)
+ and even the blessed consciousness of having contributed to
+ the healthful recreation, the improved morality, the
+ diffusion of the best sort of knowledge&mdash;the
+ <i>woman</i> would have been happier had she continued
+ enshrined in the privacy of domestic love and domestic duty.
+ She may not think this at the commencement of her career;
+ and at its termination, if she has lived sufficiently long
+ to have descended, even gracefully, from her pedestal, she
+ may often recall the homage of the <i>past</i> to make up
+ for its lack in the <i>present</i>. But so perfectly is
+ woman constituted for the cares, the affections, the
+ duties&mdash;the blessed duties of un-public life&mdash;that
+ if she give nature way it will whisper to her a text, that
+ "celebrity never added to the happiness of a true woman".
+ She must look for her happiness to HOME. We would have young
+ women ponder over this, and watch carefully, ere the veil is
+ lifted, and the hard cruel eye of public criticism fixed
+ upon them. No profession is pastime; still less so now than
+ ever, when so many people are "clever", though so few are
+ great. We would pray those especially who direct their
+ thoughts to literature, to think of what they have to say,
+ and why they wish to say it; and above all, to weigh what
+ they may expect from a capricious public, against the
+ blessed shelter and pure harmonies of private life.</p>
+
+ <p>But we have had some&mdash;and still have
+ some&mdash;"celebrated" women, of whom we have said "we may be
+ justly proud". We have done pilgrimage to the shrine of Lady
+ Rachel Russell, who was so thoroughly "domestic", that the
+ Corinthian beauty of her character would never have been matter
+ of history, but for the wickedness of a bad king. We have
+ recorded the hours spent with Hannah More; the happy days
+ passed with, and the years invigorated by, the advice and
+ influence of Maria Edgworth. We might recall the stern and
+ faithful puritanism of Maria Jane Jewsbury, and the Old World
+ devotion of the true and high-souled daughter of
+ Israel&mdash;Grace Aguilar. The mellow tones of Felicia Hemans'
+ poetry lingers still among all who appreciate the holy
+ sympathies of religion and virtue. We could dwell long and
+ profitably on the enduring patience and lifelong labor of
+ Barbara Hofland, and steep a diamond in tears to record the
+ memories of L.E.L. We could,&mdash;alas! alas! barely five and
+ twenty years' acquaintance with literature and its ornaments,
+ and the brilliant catalogue is but a <i>Memento Mori</i>.
+ Perhaps of all this list, Maria Edgworth's life was the
+ happiest: simply because she was the most retired, the least
+ exposed to the gaze and observation of the world, the most
+ occupied by loving duties toward the most united circle of old
+ and young we ever saw assembled in one happy home.</p>
+
+ <p>The very young have never, perhaps, read one of the tales of
+ a lady whose reputation as a novelist was in its zenith when
+ Walter Scott published his first novel. We desire to place a
+ chaplet upon the grave of a woman once "celebrated" all over
+ the known world, yet who drew all her happiness from the
+ lovingness of home and friends, while her life was as pure as
+ her renown was extensive.</p>
+
+ <p>In our own childhood romance-reading was prohibited, but
+ earnest entreaty procured an exception in favor of the
+ "Scottish Chiefs". It was the bright summer, and we read it by
+ moonlight, only disturbed by the murmur of the distant ocean.
+ We read it, crouched in the deep recess of the nursery-window;
+ we read it until moonlight and morning met, and the
+ breakfast-bell ringing out into the soft air from the old
+ gable, found us at the end of the fourth volume. Dear old
+ times! when it would have been deemed little less than
+ sacrilege to crush a respectable romance into a shilling
+ volume, and our mammas considered <i>only</i> a five-volume
+ story curtailed of its just proportions.</p>
+
+ <p>Sir William Wallace has never lost his heroic ascendancy
+ over us, and we have steadily resisted every temptation to open
+ the "popular edition" of the long-loved romance, lest what
+ people will call "the improved state of the human mind", might
+ displace the sweet memory of the mingled admiration and
+ indignation that chased each other, while we read and wept,
+ without ever questioning the truth of the absorbing
+ narrative.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet the "Scottish Chiefs" scarcely achieved the popularity
+ of "Thaddeus of Warsaw"&mdash;the first romance originated by
+ the active brain and singularly constructive power of Jane
+ Porter&mdash;produced at an almost girlish age.</p>
+
+ <p>The hero of "Thaddeus of Warsaw" was really Kosciuszko, the
+ beloved pupil of George Washington, the grandest and purest
+ patriot the modern world has known. The enthusiastic girl was
+ moved to its composition by the stirring times in which she
+ lived, and a personal observation of and acquaintance with some
+ of those brave men whose struggles for liberty only ceased with
+ their exile or their existence.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Porter placed her standard of excellence on high
+ ground, and&mdash;all gentle-spirited as was her
+ nature&mdash;it was firm and unflinching toward what she
+ believed the right and true. We must not therefore judge her by
+ the depressed state of "feeling" in these times, when its
+ demonstration is looked upon as artificial or affected. Toward
+ the termination of the last, and the commencement of the
+ present century, the world was roused into an interest and
+ enthusiasm, which now we can scarcely appreciate or account
+ for; the sympathies of England were awakened by
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page203"
+ id="page203"></a>[pg 203]</span> the terrible revolutions of
+ France and the desolation of Poland; as a principle, we
+ hated Napoleon, though he had neither act nor part in the
+ doings of the democrats; and the sea-songs of Dibdin, which
+ our youth <i>now</i> would call uncouth and ungraceful
+ rhymes, were key-notes to public feeling; the English of
+ that time were thoroughly "awake"&mdash;the British Lion had
+ not slumbered through a thirty years' peace. We were a
+ nation of soldiers, and sailors, and patriots; not of
+ mingled cotton-spinners, and railway speculators, and angry
+ protectionists. We do not say which state of things is best
+ or worst, we desire merely to account for what may be called
+ the taste for <i>heroic</i> literature at that time, and the
+ taste for&mdash;we really hardly know what to call
+ it&mdash;literature of the present, made up, as it too
+ generally is, of shreds and patches&mdash;bits of gold and
+ bits of tinsel&mdash;things written in a hurry, to be read
+ in a hurry, and never thought of afterward&mdash;suggestive
+ rather than reflective, at the best: and we must plead
+ guilty to a too great proneness to underrate what our
+ fathers probably overrated.</p>
+
+ <p>At all events we must bear in mind, while reading or
+ thinking over Miss Porter's novels, that in her day, even the
+ exaggeration of enthusiasm was considered good tone and good
+ taste. How this enthusiasm was <i>fostered</i>, not subdued,
+ can be gathered by the author's ingenious preface to the, we
+ believe, tenth edition of "Thaddeus of Warsaw."</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:90%;">
+ <a href="images/211.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/211.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>This story brought her abundant honors, and rendered her
+ society, as well as the society of her sister and brother,
+ sought for by all who aimed at a reputation for taste and
+ talent. Mrs. Porter, on her husband's death, (he was the
+ younger son of a well-connected Irish family, born in Ireland,
+ in or near Coleraine, we believe, and a major in the
+ Enniskillen Dragoons,) sought a residence for her family in
+ Edinburgh, where education and good society are attainable to
+ persons of moderate fortunes, if they are "well-born;" but the
+ extraordinary artistic skill of her son Robert required a wider
+ field, and she brought her children to London sooner than she
+ had intended, that his promising talents might be cultivated.
+ We believe the greater part of "Thaddeus of Warsaw" was written
+ in London, either in St. Martin's Lane, Newport Street, or
+ Gerard Street, Soho, (for in these three streets the family
+ lived after their arrival in the metropolis); though, as soon
+ as Robert Ker Porter's abilities floated him on the stream, his
+ mother and sisters retired, in the brightness of their fame and
+ beauty, to the village of Thames Ditton, a residence they loved
+ to speak of as their "home." The actual labor of
+ "Thaddeus"&mdash;her first novel&mdash;must have been
+ considerable: for testimony was frequently borne to the
+ fidelity of its localities, and Poles refused to believe the
+ author had not visited Poland; indeed, she had a happy power in
+ describing localities. It was on the publication of Miss
+ Porter's two first works in the German language that their
+ author was honored by being made a Lady of the Chapter of St.
+ Joachim, and received the gold cross of the order from
+ Wurtemberg; but "The Scottish Chiefs" was never so popular on
+ the Continent as "Thaddeus of Warsaw", although Napoleon
+ honored it with an interdict, to prevent its circulation in
+ France. If Jane Porter owed her Polish inspirations so
+ peculiarly to the tone of the times in which she lived, she
+ traces back, in her introduction to the latest
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page204"
+ id="page204"></a>[pg 204]</span> edition of "The Scottish
+ Chiefs." her enthusiasm in the cause of Sir William Wallace
+ to the influence an old "Scotch wife's" tales and ballads
+ produced upon her mind while in early childhood. She
+ wandered amid what she describes as "beautiful green banks,"
+ which rose in natural terraces behind her mothers house, and
+ where a cow and a few sheep occasionally fed. This house
+ stood alone, at the head of a little square, near the high
+ school; the distinguished Lord Elchies formerly lived in the
+ house, which was very ancient, and from those green banks it
+ commanded a fine view of the Firth of Forth. While gathering
+ "<i>gowans</i>" or other wild-flowers for her infant sister,
+ (whom she loved more dearly than her life, during the years
+ they lived in most tender and affectionate companionship),
+ she frequently encountered this aged woman, with her
+ knitting in her hand; and she would speak to the eager and
+ intelligent child of the blessed quiet of the land, where
+ the cattle were browsing without fear of an enemy; and then
+ she would talk of the awful times of the brave Sir William
+ Wallace, when he fought for Scotland, "against a cruel
+ tyrant; like unto them whom Abraham overcame when he
+ recovered Lot, with all his herds and flocks, from the proud
+ foray of the robber kings of the South," who, she never
+ failed to add, "were all rightly punished for oppressing the
+ stranger in a foreign land! for the Lord careth for the
+ stranger." Miss Porter says that this woman never omitted
+ mingling pious allusions with her narrative. "Yet she was a
+ person of low degree, dressed in a coarse woollen gown, and
+ a plain <i>Mutch</i> cap, clasped under the chin with a
+ silver brooch, which her father had worn at the battle of
+ Culloden." Of course she filled with tales of Sir William
+ Wallace and the Bruce the listening ears of the lovely Saxon
+ child, who treasured them in her heart and brain, until they
+ fructified in after years into "The Scottish Chiefs." To
+ these two were added "The Pastor's Fireside," and a number
+ of other tales and romances. She contributed to several
+ annuals and magazines, and always took pains to keep up the
+ reputation she had won, achieving a large share of the
+ popularity, to which, as an author, she never looked for
+ happiness. No one could be more alive to praise or more
+ grateful for attention, but the heart of a genuine, pure,
+ loving woman, beat within Jane Porter's bosom, and she was
+ never drawn out of her domestic circle by the flattery that
+ has spoiled so many, men as well as women. Her mind was
+ admirably balanced by her home affections, which remained
+ unsullied and unshaken to the end of her days. She had, in
+ common with her three brothers and her charming sister, the
+ advantage of a wise and loving mother&mdash;a woman pious
+ without cant, and worldly-wise without being worldly. Mrs.
+ Porter was born at Durham, and when very young bestowed her
+ hand and heart on Major Porter. An old friend of the family
+ assures us that two or three of their children were born in
+ Ireland, and that certainly Jane was amongst the number.
+ Although she left Ireland when in early youth, perhaps
+ almost an infant, she certainly must be considered Irish, as
+ her father was so both by birth and descent, and esteemed
+ during his brief life as a brave and generous gentleman. He
+ died young, leaving his lovely widow in straitened
+ circumstances, having only her widow's pension to depend on.
+ The eldest son&mdash;afterward Colonel Porter&mdash;was sent
+ to school by his grandfather.</p>
+
+ <p>We have glanced briefly at Sir Robert Ker Porter's wonderful
+ talents, and Anna Maria, when in her twelfth year, rushed, as
+ Jane acknowledged, "prematurely into print." Of Anna Maria we
+ knew personally but very little, enough however to recall with
+ a pleasant memory her readiness in conversation and her bland
+ and cheerful manners. No two sisters could have been more
+ different in bearing and appearance; Maria was a delicate
+ blonde, with a <i>riant</i> face, and an animated
+ manner&mdash;we had said almost <i>peculiarly
+ Irish</i>&mdash;rushing at conclusions, where her more
+ thoughtful and careful sister paused to consider and calculate.
+ The beauty of Jane was statuesque, her deportment serious yet
+ cheerful, a seriousness quite as natural as her younger
+ sister's gaiety; they both labored diligently, but Anna Maria's
+ labor was sport when compared to her eldest sister's careful
+ toil; Jane's mind was of a more lofty order, she was intense,
+ and felt more than she said, while Anna Maria often said more
+ than she felt; they were a delightful contrast, and yet the
+ harmony between them was complete; and one of the happiest days
+ we ever spent, while trembling on the threshold of literature,
+ was with them at their pretty road-side cottage in the village
+ of Esher before the death of their venerable and dearly beloved
+ mother, whose rectitude and prudence had both guided and
+ sheltered their youth, and who lived to reap with them the
+ harvest of their industry and exertion. We remember the drive
+ there, and the anxiety as to how those very "clever ladies"
+ would look, and what they would say; we talked over the various
+ letters we had received from Jane, and thought of the cordial
+ invitation to their cottage&mdash;their "mother's
+ cottage"&mdash;as they always called it. We remember the old
+ white friendly spaniel who looked at us with blinking eyes, and
+ preceded us up stairs; we remember the formal old-fashioned
+ courtesy of the venerable old lady, who was then nearly
+ eighty&mdash;the blue ribands and good-natured frankness of
+ Anna Maria, and the noble courtesy of Jane, who received
+ visitors as if she granted an audience; this manner was natural
+ to her; it was only the manner of one whose thoughts have dwelt
+ more upon heroic deeds, and lived more with heroes than with
+ actual living men and women; the effect of this, however, soon
+ passed away, but not so the fascination which was in all she
+ said and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page205"
+ id="page205"></a>[pg 205]</span> did. Her voice was soft and
+ musical, and her conversation addressed to one person rather
+ than to the company at large, while Maria talked rapidly to
+ every one, or <i>for</i> every one who chose to listen. How
+ happily the hours passed!&mdash;we were shown some of those
+ extraordinary drawings of Sir Robert, who gained an artists
+ reputation before he was twenty, and attracted the attention
+ of West and Shee<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a>
+ in his mere boyhood. We heard all the interesting
+ particulars of his panoramic picture of the Storming of
+ Seringapatam, which, the first of its class, was known half
+ over the world. We must not, however, be
+ misunderstood&mdash;there was neither personal nor family
+ egotism in the Porters; they invariably spoke of each other
+ with the tenderest affection&mdash;but unless the
+ conversation was <i>forced</i> by their friends&mdash;they
+ never mentioned their own, or each other's works, while they
+ were most ready to praise what was excellent in the works of
+ others; they spoke with pleasure of their sojourns in
+ London; while their mother said, it was much wiser and
+ better for young ladies who were not rich, to live quietly
+ in the country, and escape the temptations of luxury and
+ display. At that time the "young ladies" seemed to us
+ certainly <i>not</i> young: that was about two-and-twenty
+ years ago, and Jane Porter was seventy-five when she died.
+ They talked much of their previous dwelling at Thames
+ Ditton, of the pleasant neighborhood they enjoyed there,
+ though their mother's health and their own had much improved
+ since their residence on Esher hill; their little garden was
+ bounded at the back by the beautiful park of Claremont, and
+ the front of the house overlooked the leading roads, broken
+ as they are by the village green, and some noble elms. The
+ view is crowned by the high trees of Esher Place; opening
+ from the village on that side of the brow of the hill. Jane
+ pointed out the <i>locale</i> of the proud Cardinal Wolsey's
+ domain, inhabited during the days: of his power over Henry
+ VIII., and in their cloudy evening, when that capricious
+ monarch's favor changed to bitterest hate. It was the very
+ spot to foster her high romance, while she could at the same
+ time enjoy the sweets of that domestic converse she loved
+ best of all. We were prevented by the occupations and
+ heart-beatings of our own literary labors from repeating
+ this visit; and in 1831, four years after these
+ well-remembered hours, the venerable mother of a family so
+ distinguished in literature and art, rendering their names
+ known and honored wherever art and letters flourish, was
+ called HOME. The sisters, who had resided ten years at
+ Esher, left it, intending to sojourn for a time with their
+ second brother, Doctor Porter, (who commenced his career as
+ a surgeon in the navy) in Bristol; but within a year the
+ youngest, the light-spirited, bright-hearted Anna Maria
+ died; her sister was dreadfully shaken by her loss, and the
+ letters we received from her after this bereavement, though
+ containing the outpourings of a sorrowing spirit, were full
+ of the certainty of that re-union hereafter which became the
+ hope of her life. She soon resigned her cottage home at
+ Esher, and found the affectionate welcome she so well
+ deserved in many homes, where friends vied with each other
+ to fill the void in her sensitive heart. She was of too wise
+ a nature, and too sympathizing a habit, to shut out new
+ interests and affections, but her <i>old ones</i> never
+ withered, nor were they ever replaced; were the love of such
+ a sister-friend&mdash;the watchful tenderness and
+ uncompromising love of a mother&mdash;ever "replaced," to a
+ lonely sister <i>or</i> a bereaved daughter! Miss Porters
+ pen had been laid aside for some time, when suddenly she
+ came before the world as the editor of "Sir Edward Seward's
+ Narrative", and set people hunting over old atlases to find
+ out the island where he resided. The whole was a clever
+ fiction; yet Miss Porter never confided its authorship, we
+ believe, beyond her family circle; perhaps the
+ correspondence and documents, which are in the hands of one
+ of her kindest friends (her executor), Mr. Shepherd, may
+ throw some light upon a subject which the "Quarterly"
+ honored by an article. We think the editor certainly used
+ her pen as well as her judgment in the work, and we have
+ imagined that it might have been written by the family
+ circle, more in sport than in earnest, and then produced to
+ serve a double purpose.</p>
+
+ <p>After her sister's death Miss Jane Porter was afflicted with
+ so severe an illness, that we, in common with her other
+ friends, thought it impossible she could carry out her plan of
+ journeying to St. Petersburgh to visit her brother, Sir Robert
+ Ker Porter, who had been long united to a Russian princess, and
+ was then a widower; her strength was fearfully reduced; her
+ once round figure become almost spectral, and little beyond the
+ placid and dignified expression of her noble countenance
+ remained to tell of her former beauty; but her resolve was
+ taken; she wished, she said, to see once more her youngest and
+ most beloved brother, so distinguished in several careers,
+ almost deemed incompatible,&mdash;as a painter, an author, a
+ soldier, and a diplomatist, and nothing could turn her from her
+ purpose: she reached St. Petersburgh in safety, and with
+ apparently improved health, found her brother as much courted
+ and beloved there as in his own land, and his daughter married
+ to a Russian of high distinction. Sir Robert longed to return
+ to England. He did not complain of any illness, and everything
+ was arranged for their departure; his final visits were paid,
+ all but one to the Emperor, who had ever treated him as a
+ friend; the day before his intended journey he went to the
+ palace, was graciously received, and then drove home, but when
+ the servant opened the carriage-door at his own residence he
+ was dead! One sorrow after another
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page206"
+ id="page206"></a>[pg 206]</span> pressed heavily upon her;
+ yet she was still the same sweet, gentle, holy-minded woman
+ she had ever been, bending with Christian faith to the will
+ of the Almighty,&mdash;"biding her time".</p>
+
+ <p>How differently would she have "watched and waited" had she
+ been tainted by vanity, or fixed her soul on the mere triumphs
+ of "literary reputation". While firm to her own creed, she
+ fully enjoyed the success of those who scramble up&mdash;where
+ she bore the standard to the heights of Parnassus; she was
+ never more happy than when introducing some literary "Tyro" to
+ those who could aid or advise a future career. We can speak
+ from experience of the warm interest she took in the Hospital
+ for the cure of Consumption, and the Governesses' Benevolent
+ Institution; during the progress of the latter, her health was
+ painfully feeble, yet she used her personal influence for its
+ success, and worked with her own hands for its bazaars. She was
+ ever aiding those who could not aid themselves; and all her
+ thoughts, words, and deeds, were evidence of her clear,
+ powerful mind and kindly loving heart; her appearance in the
+ London <i>coteries</i> was always hailed with interest and
+ pleasure; to the young she was especially affectionate; but it
+ was in the quiet mornings, or in the long twilight evenings of
+ summer, when visiting her cherished friends at Shirley Park, in
+ Kensington Square, or wherever she might be located for the
+ time&mdash;it was then that her former spirit revived, and she
+ poured forth anecdote and illustration, and the store of many
+ years' observation, filtered by experience and purified by that
+ delightful faith to which she held,&mdash;that "all things work
+ together for good to them that love the Lord". She held this in
+ practice, even more than in theory; you saw her chastened yet
+ hopeful spirit beaming forth from her gentle eyes, and her
+ sweet smile can never be forgotten. The last time we saw her,
+ was about two years ago&mdash;in Bristol&mdash;at her
+ brother's, Dr. Porter's, house in Portland Square: then she
+ could hardly stand without assistance, yet she never complained
+ of her own suffering or feebleness, all her anxiety was about
+ the brother&mdash;then dangerously ill, and now the last of
+ "his race." Major Porter, it will be remembered, left five
+ children, and these have left only one descendant&mdash;the
+ daughter of Sir Robert Ker Porter and the Russian Princess whom
+ he married, a young Russian lady, whose present name we do not
+ even know.</p>
+
+ <p>We did not think at our last leave-taking that Miss Porter's
+ fragile frame could have so long withstood the Power that takes
+ away all we hold most dear; but her spirit was at length
+ summoned, after a few days' total insensibility, on the 24th of
+ May.</p>
+
+ <p>We were haunted by the idea that the pretty cottage at
+ Esher, where we spent those happy hours, had been treated even
+ as "Mrs. Porter's Arcadia" at Thames Ditton&mdash;now
+ altogether removed; and it was with a melancholy pleasure we
+ found it the other morning in nothing changed; and it was
+ almost impossible to believe that so many years had passed
+ since our last visit. While Mr. Fairholt was sketching the
+ cottage, we knocked at the door, and were kindly permitted by
+ two gentle sisters, who now inhabit it, to enter the little
+ drawing-room and walk round the garden: except that the
+ drawing-room has been re-papered and painted, and that there
+ were no drawings and no flowers the room was not in the least
+ altered; yet to us it seemed like a sepulcher, and we rejoiced
+ to breathe the sweet air of the little garden, and listen to a
+ nightingale, whose melancholy cadence harmonized with our
+ feelings.</p>
+
+ <p>"Whenever you are at Esher," said the devoted daughter, the
+ last time we conversed with her, "do visit my mother's tomb."
+ We did so. A cypress flourishes at the head of the grave; and
+ the following touching inscription is carved on the
+ stone:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>Here sleeps in Jesus a Christian widow, JANE PORTER.
+ Obiit June 18th, 1831, ætat. 86; the beloved mother of W.
+ Porter, M.D., of Sir Robert Ker Porter, and of Jane and
+ Anna Maria Porter, who mourn in hope, humbly trusting to be
+ born again with her unto the blessed kingdom of their Lord
+ and Savior. Respect her grave, for she ministered to the
+ poor.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>Recent Deaths.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h3>MR. KIRBY, THE ENTOMOLOGIST.</h3>
+
+ <p>The Rev. William Kirby, Rector of Barham, Suffolk, who died
+ on the 4th ult. in the ninety-first year of his age, with his
+ faculties little impaired, ranked as the father of Entomology
+ in England; and to the successful results of his labors may he
+ chiefly attributed the advance which has been made in this over
+ other kindred departments of natural history. His reputation is
+ based not so much on the discoveries made by him in the science
+ as on the manner of its teaching. No man ever approached the
+ study of the works of nature with a purer or more earnest zeal.
+ His interpretation of the distinguishing characters of insects
+ for the purposes of classification has excited the warmest
+ approval of entomologists at home and abroad; while his
+ agreeable narrative of their wonderful transformations and
+ habits, teeming with analyses and anecdote, has a charm for
+ almost every kind of reader.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Kirby's first work of particular note was the
+ "Monographia Apum Angliæ", in two volumes published half a
+ century ago at Ipswich; to which town he was much endeared, and
+ in whose Museum, as President, under the friendly auspices of
+ its Secretary, Mr. George Ransome, he took a lively interest.
+ His admirable work on the Wild Bees of Great Britain was
+ composed from materials collected almost entirely by
+ himself,&mdash;and most of the plates were of his etching.
+ Entomology was at that time a comparatively new science in this
+ country, and it is an <span class="pagenum"><a name="page207"
+ id="page207"></a>[pg 207]</span> honorable proof of the
+ correctness of the author's views that they are still
+ acknowledged to be genuine.</p>
+
+ <p>His further progress in entomology is abundantly marked by
+ various papers in the "Transactions of the Linnæan
+ Society",&mdash;by the entomological portion of the Bridgewater
+ Treatise "On the History, Habits, and Instincts of
+ Animals,"&mdash;and by his descriptions, occupying a quarto
+ volume, of the insects of Sir John Richardson's "Fauna
+ Boreali-Americana." The name of Kirby will, however, be chiefly
+ remembered for the "Introduction on Entomology" written by him
+ in conjunction with Mr. Spence. In this work a vast amount of
+ material, acquired after many years' unremitting observation of
+ the insect world, is mingled together by two different but
+ congenial minds in the pleasant form of familiar letters. The
+ charm, based on substantial knowledge of the subject, which
+ these letters impart, has caused them to be studied with an
+ interest never before excited by any work on natural
+ history,&mdash;and they have served for the model of many an
+ interesting and instructive volume. Whether William Kirby or
+ William Spence had the more meritorious share in the
+ composition of these Letters, has never been ascertained; for
+ each, in the plenitude of his esteem and love for the other,
+ renounced all claim, in favor of his coadjutor, to whatever
+ portion of the matter might be most valued.</p>
+
+ <p>In addition to the honor of being President of the Museum of
+ his county town&mdash;in which there is an admirable portrait
+ of him&mdash;Mr. Kirby was Honorary President of the
+ Entomological Society of London, Fellow of the Royal, Linnæan,
+ Geological, and Zoological Societies of the same city, and
+ corresponding member of several foreign societies.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The death of REV. DR. GRAY, Professor of Oriental Languages
+ in the University of Glasgow, is reported in the Scotch
+ papers.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>The Fine Arts.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>One of the favorite painters of Paris is Ingres, renowned
+ especially for the beauty of his designs from the human figure,
+ and the sweetness of his coloring. Eight years ago he was
+ commissioned by M. de Luynes, who then wore the title of
+ Duke&mdash;which, it must be said, he is still called by,
+ though the Republic frowns on such aristocratic
+ distinctions&mdash;to paint two historical pictures in fresco,
+ for a country-house near Paris. The subjects were left to the
+ choice of the artist, who was to have 100,000 francs (or
+ £20,000) for the two pictures, one quarter of which was paid
+ him in advance. During these eight years Mr. Ingres has begun
+ various designs, and done his best to satisfy himself in the
+ planning and execution of the pictures; but in vain did he blot
+ out one design and labor long and earnestly upon
+ another&mdash;success still fled from his pencil. At last,
+ after eight years' fruitless exertion, he despaired, and going
+ to M. de Luynes, told him that he could not make the pictures.
+ At the same time he offered to return the £5,000; but M. de
+ Luynes, one of the most munificent gentlemen in France, refused
+ to receive it. Madame Ingres, however, arranged the difficulty.
+ She remembered that during these eight years her kitchen had
+ been regularly supplied with vegetables from M. de Luynes'
+ garden, and these she insisted on paying for. "Very well," said
+ M. de Luynes, "if you will have it so, my gardener shall bring
+ you his bill." Accordingly, not long after, the gardener
+ brought a bill for twenty-five francs. "My friend," said Madame
+ Ingres to him, "you are mistaken in the amount: this is very
+ natural, considering the length of the time. I have a better
+ memory: your master will find in this envelope the exact sum."
+ When M. de Luynes opened the envelope, he found in it bills for
+ twenty thousand francs.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>LESTER, BRADY &amp; DAVIGNON's "<i>Gallery of Illustrious
+ Americans</i>," is very favorably noticed generally by the
+ foreign critics. <i>The Art Journal</i> says of it: "This work
+ is, as its title imports, of a strictly national character,
+ consisting of portraits and biographical sketches of
+ twenty-four of the most eminent of the citizens of the
+ Republic, since the death of Washington; beautifully
+ lithographed from daguerreotypes. Each number is devoted to a
+ portrait and memoir, the first being that of General Taylor
+ (eleventh President of the United States), the second, of John
+ C. Calhoun. Certainly, we have never seen more truthful copies
+ of nature than these portraits; they carry in them an indelible
+ stamp of all that earnestness and power for which our
+ trans-Atlantic brethren have become famous, and are such heads
+ as Lavater would have delighted to look upon. They are, truly,
+ speaking likenesses, and impress all who see them with the
+ certainty of their accuracy, so self-evident is their
+ character. We are always rejoiced to notice a great nation
+ doing honor to its great men; it is a noble duty which when
+ properly done honors all concerned therewith. We see no reason
+ to doubt that America may in this instance rank with the
+ greatest."</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>DR. WAAGEN, so well known for his writings on Art, is at
+ present in England for the purpose of adding to his knowledge
+ of the private collection of pictures there, but principally to
+ make himself acquainted with ancient illuminated manuscripts in
+ several British collections.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>A MONUMENT IN HONOR OF COWPER, THE POET, is proposed to be
+ erected in Westminster Abbey, from a design by Marshall, the
+ Sculptor, exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1849.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page208"
+ id="page208"></a>[pg 208]</span>
+
+ <h2>SUMMER VACATION.</h2>
+
+ <h4>THE FOURTH BOOK OF WORDSWORTH'S UNPUBLISHED
+ POEM.<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a></h4>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Bright was the summer's noon when quickening
+ steps</p>
+
+ <p>Followed each other till a dreary moor</p>
+
+ <p>Was crossed, a bare ridge clomb, upon whose top</p>
+
+ <p>Standing alone, as from a rampart's edge,</p>
+
+ <p>I overlooked the bed of Windermere,</p>
+
+ <p>Like a vast river, stretching in the sun.</p>
+
+ <p>With exultation at my feet I saw</p>
+
+ <p>Lake, islands, promontories, gleaming bays,</p>
+
+ <p>A universe of Nature's fairest forms</p>
+
+ <p>Proudly revealed with instantaneous burst,</p>
+
+ <p>Magnificent, and beautiful, and gay.</p>
+
+ <p>I bounded down the hill shouting amain</p>
+
+ <p>For the old Ferryman; to the shout the rocks</p>
+
+ <p>Replied, and when the Charon of the flood</p>
+
+ <p>Had stayed his oars, and touched the jutting
+ pier,</p>
+
+ <p>I did not step into the well-known boat</p>
+
+ <p>Without a cordial greeting. Thence with speed</p>
+
+ <p>Up the familiar hill I took my way</p>
+
+ <p>Toward that sweet Valley where I had been
+ reared;</p>
+
+ <p>'Twas but a shore hour's walk, ere veering round</p>
+
+ <p>I saw the snow-white church upon her hill</p>
+
+ <p>Sit like a throned Lady, sending out</p>
+
+ <p>A gracious look all over her domain.</p>
+
+ <p>You azure smoke betrays the lurking town;</p>
+
+ <p>With eager footsteps I advance and reach</p>
+
+ <p>The cottage threshold where my journey closed.</p>
+
+ <p>Glad welcome had I, with some tear, perhaps,</p>
+
+ <p>From my old Dame, so kind and motherly,</p>
+
+ <p>While she perused me with a parent's pride.</p>
+
+ <p>The thoughts of gratitude shall fall like dew</p>
+
+ <p>Upon thy grave, good creature! While my heart</p>
+
+ <p>Can beat never will I forget they name.</p>
+
+ <p>Heaven's blessing be upon thee where thou liest</p>
+
+ <p>After thy innocent and busy stir</p>
+
+ <p>In narrow cares, thy little daily growth</p>
+
+ <p>Of calm enjoyments, after eighty years,</p>
+
+ <p>And more than eighty, of untroubled life,</p>
+
+ <p>Childless, yet by the strangers to thy blood</p>
+
+ <p>Honored with little less than filial love.</p>
+
+ <p>What joy was mine to see thee once again,</p>
+
+ <p>Thee and they dwelling, and a crowd of things</p>
+
+ <p>About its narrow precincts all beloved,</p>
+
+ <p>And many of them seeming yet my own!</p>
+
+ <p>Why should I speak of what a thousand hearts</p>
+
+ <p>Have felt, and every man alive can guess?</p>
+
+ <p>The rooms, the court, the garden were not left</p>
+
+ <p>Long unsaluted, nor the sunny seat</p>
+
+ <p>Round the stone table under the dark pine,</p>
+
+ <p>Friendly to studious or to festive hours;</p>
+
+ <p>Nor that unruly child of mountain birth,</p>
+
+ <p>The famous brook, who, soon as he was boxed</p>
+
+ <p>Within our garden, found himself at once,</p>
+
+ <p>As if by trick insidious and unkind,</p>
+
+ <p>Stripped of his voice and left to dimple down</p>
+
+ <p>(Without an effort and without a will)</p>
+
+ <p>A channel paved by man's officious care.</p>
+
+ <p>I looked at him and smiled, and smiled again,</p>
+
+ <p>And in the press of twenty thousand thought,</p>
+
+ <p>"Ha," quoth I, "pretty prisoner, are you there!"</p>
+
+ <p>Well might sarcastic Fancy then have whispered,</p>
+
+ <p>"An emblem here behold of they own life;</p>
+
+ <p>In its late course of even days with all</p>
+
+ <p>Their smooth enthralment;" but the heart was
+ full,</p>
+
+ <p>Too full for that reproach. My aged Dame</p>
+
+ <p>Walked proudly at my side: she guided me;</p>
+
+ <p>I willing, nay&mdash;nay, wishing to be led.</p>
+
+ <p>&mdash;The face of every neighbor whom I met</p>
+
+ <p>Was like a volume to me; some were hailed</p>
+
+ <p>Upon the road, some busy at their work,</p>
+
+ <p>Unceremonious greetings interchanged</p>
+
+ <p>With half the length of a long field between.</p>
+
+ <p>Among my schoolfellows I scattered round</p>
+
+ <p>Like recognitions, but with some constraint</p>
+
+ <p>Attended, doubtless, with a little pride,</p>
+
+ <p>But with more shame, for my habiliments,</p>
+
+ <p>The transformation wrought by gay attire.</p>
+
+ <p>Not less delighted did I take my place</p>
+
+ <p>At our domestic table: and, dear Friend!</p>
+
+ <p>In this endeavor simply to relate</p>
+
+ <p>A Poet's history, may I leave untold</p>
+
+ <p>The thankfulness with which I laid me down</p>
+
+ <p>In my accustomed bed, more welcome now</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps than if it had been more desired</p>
+
+ <p>Or been more often thought of with regret;</p>
+
+ <p>That lowly bed whence I had heard the wind</p>
+
+ <p>Roar and the rain beat hard, where I so oft</p>
+
+ <p>Had lain awake on summer nights to watch</p>
+
+ <p>The moon in splendor couched among the leaves</p>
+
+ <p>Of a tall ash, that near our cottage stood;</p>
+
+ <p>Had watched her with fixed eyes while to and fro</p>
+
+ <p>In the dark summit of the waving tree</p>
+
+ <p>She rocked with every impulse of the breeze.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Among the favorites whom it pleased me
+ well</p>
+
+ <p>To see again, was one by ancient right</p>
+
+ <p>Our inmate, a rough terrier of the hills;</p>
+
+ <p>By birth and call of nature pre-ordained</p>
+
+ <p>To hunt the badger and unearth the fox</p>
+
+ <p>Among the impervious crags, but having been</p>
+
+ <p>From youth our own adopted, he had passed</p>
+
+ <p>Into a gentler service. And when first</p>
+
+ <p>The boyish spirit flagged, and day by day</p>
+
+ <p>Along my veins I kindled with the stir,</p>
+
+ <p>The fermentation, and the vernal heat</p>
+
+ <p>Of poesy, affecting private shades</p>
+
+ <p>Like a sick Lover, then this dog was used</p>
+
+ <p>To watch me, an attendant and a friend,</p>
+
+ <p>Obsequious to my steps early and late,</p>
+
+ <p>Though often of such dilatory walk</p>
+
+ <p>Tired, and uneasy at the halts I made.</p>
+
+ <p>A hundred times when, roving high and low,</p>
+
+ <p>I have been harassed with the toil of verse,</p>
+
+ <p>Much pains and little progress, and at once</p>
+
+ <p>Some lovely Image in the song rose up</p>
+
+ <p>Full-formed, like Venus rising from the sea;</p>
+
+ <p>Then have I darted forward to let loose</p>
+
+ <p>My hand upon his back with stormy joy,</p>
+
+ <p>Caressing him again and yet again.</p>
+
+ <p>And when at evening on the public way</p>
+
+ <p>I sauntered, like a river murmuring</p>
+
+ <p>And talking to itself when all things else</p>
+
+ <p>Are still, the creature trotted on before;</p>
+
+ <p>Such was his custom; but whene'er he met</p>
+
+ <p>A passenger approaching, he would turn</p>
+
+ <p>To give me timely notice, and straightway,</p>
+
+ <p>Grateful for that admonishment, I hushed</p>
+
+ <p>My voice, composed my gait, and, with the air</p>
+
+ <p>And mein of one whose thoughts are free,
+ advanced</p>
+
+ <p>To give and take a greeting that might save</p>
+
+ <p>My name from piteous rumors, such as wait</p>
+
+ <p>On men suspected to be crazed in brain.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Those walks well worth to be prized and
+ loved&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Regretted!&mdash;that word, too, was on my
+ tongue,</p>
+
+ <p>But they were richly laden with all good,</p>
+
+ <p>And cannot be remembered but with thanks</p>
+
+ <p>And gratitude, and perfect joy of heart&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Those walks in all their freshness now came back</p>
+
+ <p>Like a returning Spring. When first I made</p>
+
+ <p>Once more the circuit of our little lake,</p>
+
+ <p>If ever happiness hath lodged with man,</p>
+
+ <p>That day consummate happiness was mine,</p>
+
+ <p>Wide-spreading, steady, calm, contemplative.</p>
+
+ <p>The sun was set, or setting, when I left</p>
+
+ <p>Our cottage door, and evening soon brought on</p>
+
+ <p>A sober hour, not winning or serene,</p>
+
+ <p>For cold and raw the air was, and untuned;</p>
+
+ <p>But as a face we love is sweetest then</p>
+
+ <p>When sorrow damps it, or, whatever look</p>
+
+ <p>It chance to wear, is sweetest if the heart</p>
+
+ <p>Have fullness in herself; even so with me</p>
+
+ <p>It fared that evening. Gently did my soul</p>
+
+ <p>Put off her veil, and, self-transmuted, stood</p>
+
+ <p>Naked, as in the presence of her God.</p>
+
+ <p>While on I walked, a comfort seemed to touch</p>
+
+ <p>A heart that had not been disconsolate:</p>
+
+ <p>Strength came where weakness was not known to
+ be,</p>
+
+ <p>At least not felt; and restoration came</p>
+
+ <p>Like an intruder knocking at the door</p>
+
+ <p>Of unacknowledged weariness. I took</p>
+
+ <p>The balance, and with firm hand weighted myself.</p>
+
+ <p>&mdash;Of that external scene which round me
+ lay,</p>
+
+ <p>Little, in this abstraction, did I see;</p>
+
+ <p>Remembered less; but I had inward hopes</p>
+
+ <p>And swellings of the spirit, was rapt and
+ soothed,</p>
+
+ <p>Conversed with promises, had glimmering views</p>
+
+ <p>How life pervades the undecaying mind;</p>
+
+ <p>How the immortal soul with God-like power</p>
+
+ <p>Informs, creates, and thaws the deepest sleep</p>
+
+ <p>That time can lay upon her; how on earth,</p>
+
+ <p>Man, if he do but live within the light</p>
+
+ <p>Of high endeavors, daily spreads abroad</p>
+
+ <p>His being armed with strength that cannot fail</p>
+
+ <p>Nor was there want of milder thoughts, of love</p>
+
+ <p>Of innocence, and holiday repose;</p>
+
+ <p>And more than pastoral quiet, 'mid the stir</p>
+
+ <p>Of boldest projects, and a peaceful end</p>
+
+ <p>At last, or glorious, by endurance won.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus musing, in a wood I sat me down</p>
+
+ <p>Alone, continuing there to muse: the slopes</p>
+
+ <p>And heights meanwhile were slowly overspread</p>
+
+ <p>With darkness, and before a rippling
+ breeze</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page209"
+ id="page209"></a>[pg 209]</span>
+
+ <p>The long lake lengthened out its hoary line,</p>
+
+ <p>And in the sheltered coppice where I sat,</p>
+
+ <p>Around me from among the hazel leaves,</p>
+
+ <p>Now here, now there, moved by the straggling
+ wind,</p>
+
+ <p>Came ever and anon a breath-like sound,</p>
+
+ <p>Quick as the pantings of the faithful dog,</p>
+
+ <p>The off and on companion of my work;</p>
+
+ <p>And such, at times, believing them to be,</p>
+
+ <p>I turned my head to look if he were there;</p>
+
+ <p>Then into solemn thought I passed once more.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">A freshness also found I at this time</p>
+
+ <p>In human Life, the daily life of those</p>
+
+ <p>Whose occupations really I loved;</p>
+
+ <p>The peaceful scene oft filled me with surprise,</p>
+
+ <p>Changed like a garden in the heat of spring</p>
+
+ <p>After an eight days' absence. For (to omit</p>
+
+ <p>The things which were the same and yet appeared</p>
+
+ <p>Far otherwise) amid this rural solitude.</p>
+
+ <p>A narrow Vale where each was known to all,</p>
+
+ <p>'Twas not indifferent to a youthful mind</p>
+
+ <p>To mark some sheltering bower or sunny nook,</p>
+
+ <p>Where an old man had used to sit alone,</p>
+
+ <p>Now vacant; pale-faced babes whom I had left</p>
+
+ <p>In arms, now rosy prattlers at the feet</p>
+
+ <p>Of a pleased grandame tottering up and down;</p>
+
+ <p>And growing girls whose beauty, filched away</p>
+
+ <p>With all its pleasant promises, was gone</p>
+
+ <p>To deck some slighted playmate's homely cheek.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Yes, I had something of a subtler
+ sense,</p>
+
+ <p>And often looking round was moved to smiles</p>
+
+ <p>Such as a delicate work of humor breeds;</p>
+
+ <p>I read, without design, the opinions, thoughts,</p>
+
+ <p>Of those plain-living people now observed</p>
+
+ <p>With clearer knowledge; with another eye</p>
+
+ <p>I saw the quiet woodman in the woods,</p>
+
+ <p>The shepherd roam the hills. With new delight,</p>
+
+ <p>This chiefly, did I note my gray-haired Dame;</p>
+
+ <p>Saw her go forth to church or other work</p>
+
+ <p>Of state, equipped in monumental trim;</p>
+
+ <p>Short velvet cloak, (her bonnet of the like,)</p>
+
+ <p>A mantle such as Spanish Cavaliers</p>
+
+ <p>Wore in old time. Her smooth domestic life,</p>
+
+ <p>Affectionate without disquietude,</p>
+
+ <p>Her talk, her business, pleased me; and no less</p>
+
+ <p>Her clear though sallow stream of piety</p>
+
+ <p>That ran on Sabbath days a fresher course;</p>
+
+ <p>With thoughts unfelt till now I saw her read</p>
+
+ <p>Her Bible on hot Sunday afternoons,</p>
+
+ <p>And loved the book, when she had dropped asleep</p>
+
+ <p>And made of it a pillow for her head.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Nor less do I remember to have felt,</p>
+
+ <p>Distinctly manifested at this time,</p>
+
+ <p>A human-heartedness about my love</p>
+
+ <p>For objects hitherto the absolute wealth</p>
+
+ <p>Of my own private being and no more:</p>
+
+ <p>Which I had loved even as a blessed spirit</p>
+
+ <p>Or Angel, if he were to dwell on earth,</p>
+
+ <p>Might love in individual happiness.</p>
+
+ <p>But now there opened on me other thoughts</p>
+
+ <p>Of change, congratulation or regret,</p>
+
+ <p>A pensive feeling! It spread far and wide;</p>
+
+ <p>The trees, the mountains shared it, and the
+ brooks,</p>
+
+ <p>The stars of heaven, now seen in their old
+ haunts&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>White Sirius glittering o'er the southern crags,</p>
+
+ <p>Orion with his belt, and those fair Seven,</p>
+
+ <p>Acquaintances of every little child,</p>
+
+ <p>And Jupiter, my own beloved star!</p>
+
+ <p>Whatever shadings of mortality,</p>
+
+ <p>Whatever imports from the world of death</p>
+
+ <p>Had come among these objects heretofore,</p>
+
+ <p>Were, in the main, of mood less tender: strong,</p>
+
+ <p>Deep, gloomy were they, and severe: the
+ scatterings</p>
+
+ <p>Of awe or tremulous dread, that had given way</p>
+
+ <p>In latter youth to yearnings of a love</p>
+
+ <p>Enthusiastic, to delight and hope.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As one who hangs down-bending from the
+ side</p>
+
+ <p>Of a slow-moving boat, upon the breast</p>
+
+ <p>Of a still water, solacing himself</p>
+
+ <p>With such discoveries as his eye can make</p>
+
+ <p>Beneath him in the bottom of the deep,</p>
+
+ <p>Sees many beauteous sights&mdash;weeds, fishes,
+ flowers,</p>
+
+ <p>Grots, pebbles, roots of trees, and fancies
+ more,</p>
+
+ <p>Yet often is perplexed and cannot part</p>
+
+ <p>The shadow from the substance, rocks and sky</p>
+
+ <p>Mountains and clouds, reflected in the depth</p>
+
+ <p>Of the clear flood, from things which there
+ abide</p>
+
+ <p>In their true dwelling; now is crossed by gleam</p>
+
+ <p>Of his own image, by a sunbeam now,</p>
+
+ <p>And wavering motions sent he knows not whence,</p>
+
+ <p>Impediments that make his task more sweet;</p>
+
+ <p>Such pleasant office have we long pursued</p>
+
+ <p>Incumbent o'er the surface of past time</p>
+
+ <p>With like success, nor often have appeared</p>
+
+ <p>Shapes fairer or less doubtfully discerned</p>
+
+ <p>Than those to which the Tale, indulgent Friend!</p>
+
+ <p>Would now direct thy notice. Yet in spite</p>
+
+ <p>Of pleasure won, and knowledge not withheld,</p>
+
+ <p>There was an inner falling off&mdash;I loved,</p>
+
+ <p>Loved deeply all that had been loved before</p>
+
+ <p>More deeply even than ever: but a swarm</p>
+
+ <p>Of heady schemes jostling each other, gawds,</p>
+
+ <p>And feast and dance, and public revelry,</p>
+
+ <p>And sports and games (too grateful in
+ themselves,</p>
+
+ <p>Yet in themselves less grateful, I believe,</p>
+
+ <p>Than as they were a badge glossy and fresh</p>
+
+ <p>Of manliness and freedom) all conspired</p>
+
+ <p>To lure my mind from firm habitual quest</p>
+
+ <p>Of feeding pleasures, to depress the zeal</p>
+
+ <p>And damp those yearnings which had once been
+ mine&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>A wild, unworldly-minded youth, given up</p>
+
+ <p>To his own eager thoughts. It would demand</p>
+
+ <p>Some skill, and longer time than may be spared,</p>
+
+ <p>To paint these vanities, and how they wrought</p>
+
+ <p>In haunts where they, till now, had been
+ unknown.</p>
+
+ <p>It seemed the very garments that they wore</p>
+
+ <p>Preyed on my strength, and stopped the quiet
+ stream</p>
+
+ <p>Of self-forgetfulness.</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Yes, that heartless chase</p>
+
+ <p>Of trivial pleasures was a poor exchange</p>
+
+ <p>For books and nature at that early age.</p>
+
+ <p>'Tis true, some casual knowledge might be gained</p>
+
+ <p>Of character or life; but at that time,</p>
+
+ <p>Of manners put to school I took small note,</p>
+
+ <p>And all my deeper passions lay elsewhere.</p>
+
+ <p>Far better had it been to exalt the mind</p>
+
+ <p>By solitary study, to uphold</p>
+
+ <p>Intense desire through meditative peace;</p>
+
+ <p>And yet, for chastisement of these regrets,</p>
+
+ <p>The memory of one particular hour</p>
+
+ <p>Doth here rise up against me. 'Mid a throng</p>
+
+ <p>Of maids and youths, old men, and matrons staid,</p>
+
+ <p>A medley of all tempers, I had passed</p>
+
+ <p>The night in dancing, gayety, and mirth,</p>
+
+ <p>With din of instruments and shuffling feet,</p>
+
+ <p>And glancing forms, and tapers glittering,</p>
+
+ <p>And unaimed prattle flying up and down;</p>
+
+ <p>Spirits upon the stretch, and here and there</p>
+
+ <p>Slight shocks of young love-liking interspersed,</p>
+
+ <p>Whose transient pleasure mounted to the head,</p>
+
+ <p>And tingled through the veins. Ere we retired</p>
+
+ <p>The cock had crowed, and now the eastern sky</p>
+
+ <p>Was kindling, not unseen, from humble copse</p>
+
+ <p>And open field, through which the pathway wound,</p>
+
+ <p>And homeward led my steps. Magnificent</p>
+
+ <p>The morning rose, in memorable pomp,</p>
+
+ <p>Glorious as e'er I had beheld&mdash;in front,</p>
+
+ <p>The sea lay laughing at a distance; near,</p>
+
+ <p>The solid mountains shone, bright as the clouds,</p>
+
+ <p>Grain-tinctured, drenched in Empyrean light;</p>
+
+ <p>And in the meadows and the lower grounds</p>
+
+ <p>Was all the sweetness of a common dawn&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Dews, vapors, and the melody of birds,</p>
+
+ <p>And laborers going forth to till the fields.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ah! need I say, dear Friend! that to the
+ brim</p>
+
+ <p>My heart was full; I made no vows, but vows</p>
+
+ <p>Were then made for me; bond unknown to me</p>
+
+ <p>Was given, that I should be, else sinning
+ greatly,</p>
+
+ <p>A dedicated Spirit. On I walked</p>
+
+ <p>In thankful blessedness, which yet survives.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Strange rendezvous! My mind was at that
+ time</p>
+
+ <p>A parti-colored show of grave and gay,</p>
+
+ <p>Solid and light, short-sighted and profound;</p>
+
+ <p>Of inconsiderate habits and sedate,</p>
+
+ <p>Consorting in one mansion unreproved.</p>
+
+ <p>The worth I knew of powers that I possessed,</p>
+
+ <p>Though slighted and too oft misused. Besides,</p>
+
+ <p>That summer, swarming as it did with thoughts</p>
+
+ <p>Transient and idle, lacked not intervals</p>
+
+ <p>When Folly from the frown of fleeting Time</p>
+
+ <p>Shrunk, and the mind experienced in herself</p>
+
+ <p>Conformity as just as that of old</p>
+
+ <p>To the end and written spirit of God's works,</p>
+
+ <p>Whether held forth in Nature or in Man,</p>
+
+ <p>Through pregnant vision, separate or conjoined.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When from our better selves we have too
+ long</p>
+
+ <p>Been parted by the hurrying world, and droop,</p>
+
+ <p>Sick of its business, of its pleasure tired,</p>
+
+ <p>How gracious, how benign, is Solitude;</p>
+
+ <p>How potent a mere image of her sway;</p>
+
+ <p>Most potent when impressed upon the mind</p>
+
+ <p>With an appropriate human centre&mdash;hermit,</p>
+
+ <p>Deep in the bosom of the wilderness;</p>
+
+ <p>Votary (in vast cathedral, where no foot</p>
+
+ <p>Is treading, where no other face is seen)</p>
+
+ <p>Kneeling at prayers; or watchman on the top</p>
+
+ <p>Of lighthouse, beaten by Atlantic waves;</p>
+
+ <p>Or as the soul of that great Power is met</p>
+
+ <p>Sometimes embodied on a public
+ road,</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page210"
+ id="page210"></a>[pg 210]</span>
+
+ <p>When, for the night deserted, it assumes</p>
+
+ <p>A character of quiet more profound</p>
+
+ <p>Than pathless wastes.</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Once, when those summer months,</p>
+
+ <p>Where flown, and autumn brought its annual show</p>
+
+ <p>Of oars with oars contending, sails with sails,</p>
+
+ <p>Upon Windander's spacious breast, it chanced</p>
+
+ <p>That&mdash;after I had left a flower-decked room</p>
+
+ <p>(Whose in-door pastime, lighted up, survived</p>
+
+ <p>To a late hour), and spirits overwrought</p>
+
+ <p>Were making night do penance for a day</p>
+
+ <p>Spent in a round of strenuous idleness&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>My homeward course led up a long ascent,</p>
+
+ <p>Where the road's watery surface, to the top</p>
+
+ <p>Of that sharp rising, glittered to the moon</p>
+
+ <p>And bore the semblance of another stream</p>
+
+ <p>Stealing with silent lapse to join the brook</p>
+
+ <p>That murmured in the vale. All else was still;</p>
+
+ <p>No living thing appeared in earth or air,</p>
+
+ <p>And, save the flowing water's peaceful voice,</p>
+
+ <p>Sound there was none&mdash;but, lo! an uncouth
+ shape,</p>
+
+ <p>Shown by a sudden turning of the road,</p>
+
+ <p>So near that, slipping back into the shade</p>
+
+ <p>Of a thick hawthorn, I could mark him well,</p>
+
+ <p>Myself unseen. He was of stature tall,</p>
+
+ <p>A span above man's common measure, tall,</p>
+
+ <p>Stiff, land, and upright; a more meager man</p>
+
+ <p>Was never seen before by night or day.</p>
+
+ <p>Long were his arms, pallid his hands; his mouth</p>
+
+ <p>Looked ghastly in the moonlight: from behind,</p>
+
+ <p>A mile-stone propped him; I could also ken</p>
+
+ <p>That he was clothed in military garb.</p>
+
+ <p>Though faded, yet entire. Companionless,</p>
+
+ <p>No dog attending, by no staff sustained,</p>
+
+ <p>He stood, and in his very dress appeared</p>
+
+ <p>A desolation, a simplicity,</p>
+
+ <p>To which the trappings of a gaudy world</p>
+
+ <p>Make a strange back-ground. From his lips, ere
+ long,</p>
+
+ <p>Issued low muttered sounds, as if of pain</p>
+
+ <p>Or some uneasy thought; yet still his form</p>
+
+ <p>Kept the same awful steadiness&mdash;at his feet</p>
+
+ <p>His shadow lay, and moved not. From self-blame</p>
+
+ <p>Not wholly free, I watched him thus; at length</p>
+
+ <p>Subduing my heart's specious cowardice,</p>
+
+ <p>I left the shady nook where I had stood</p>
+
+ <p>And hailed him. Slowly from his resting-place</p>
+
+ <p>He rose, and with a lean and wasted arm</p>
+
+ <p>In measured gesture lifted to his head</p>
+
+ <p>Returned my salutation; then resumed</p>
+
+ <p>His station as before: and when I asked</p>
+
+ <p>His history, the veteran, in reply,</p>
+
+ <p>Was neither slow nor eager; but, unmoved,</p>
+
+ <p>And with a quiet, uncomplaining voice,</p>
+
+ <p>A stately air of mild indifference,</p>
+
+ <p>He told in few plain words a soldier's
+ tale&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>That in the Tropic Islands he had served,</p>
+
+ <p>Whence he had landed scarcely three weeks past;</p>
+
+ <p>That on his landing he had been dismissed,</p>
+
+ <p>And now was traveling toward his native home.</p>
+
+ <p>This heard, I said, in pity, "Come with me."</p>
+
+ <p>He stooped, and straightway from the ground took
+ up,</p>
+
+ <p>An oaken staff by me yet unobserved&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>A staff which must have dropt from his slack
+ hand</p>
+
+ <p>And lay till now neglected in the grass.</p>
+
+ <p>Though weak his step and cautious, he appeared</p>
+
+ <p>To travel without pain, and I beheld,</p>
+
+ <p>With an astonishment but ill-suppressed,</p>
+
+ <p>His ghostly figure moving at my side;</p>
+
+ <p>Nor could I, while we journeyed thus, forbear</p>
+
+ <p>To turn from present hardships to the past,</p>
+
+ <p>And speak of war, battle, and pestilence,</p>
+
+ <p>Sprinkling this talk with questions, better
+ spared.</p>
+
+ <p>On what he might himself have seen or felt</p>
+
+ <p>He all the while was in demeanor calm.</p>
+
+ <p>Concise in answer: solemn and sublime</p>
+
+ <p>He might have seen, but that in all he said</p>
+
+ <p>There was a strange half-absence, as of one</p>
+
+ <p>Knowing too well the importance of his theme</p>
+
+ <p>But feeling it no longer. Our discourse</p>
+
+ <p>Soon ended, and together on we passed</p>
+
+ <p>In silence through a wood gloomy and still.</p>
+
+ <p>Up-turning, then, along an open field,</p>
+
+ <p>We reached a cottage. At the door I knocked.</p>
+
+ <p>And earnestly to charitable care</p>
+
+ <p>Commended him as a poor friendless man,</p>
+
+ <p>Belated and by sickness overcome.</p>
+
+ <p>Assured that now the traveler would repose</p>
+
+ <p>In comfort, I entreated that henceforth</p>
+
+ <p>He would not linger in the public ways,</p>
+
+ <p>But ask for timely furtherance and help</p>
+
+ <p>Such as his state required. At this reproof,</p>
+
+ <p>With the same ghastly mildness in his look,</p>
+
+ <p>He said, "My trust is in the God of Heaven,</p>
+
+ <p>And in the eye of him who passes me!"</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The cottage door was speedily
+ unbarred,</p>
+
+ <p>And now the soldier touched his hat once more</p>
+
+ <p>With his lean hand, and in a faltering voice,</p>
+
+ <p>Whose tone bespake reviving interests</p>
+
+ <p>Till then unfelt, he thanked me; I returned</p>
+
+ <p>The farewell blessing of the patient man,</p>
+
+ <p>And so we parted. Back I cast a look,</p>
+
+ <p>And lingered near the door a little space,</p>
+
+ <p>Then sought with quiet heart my distant home.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE IVORY MINE:</h2>
+
+ <h3>A TALE OF THE FROZEN SEA.</h3>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h4>VI.&mdash;THE IVORY MINE.</h4>
+
+ <p>The end of so perilous and novel a journey, which must
+ necessarily, under the most favorable circumstances, have
+ produced more honor than profit, was attained; and yet the
+ success of the adventure was doubtful. The season was still too
+ cold for any search for fossil ivory, and the first serious
+ duty was the erection of a winter residence. Fortunately there
+ was an ample supply of logs of wood, some half-rotten, some
+ green, lying under the snow on the shores of the bay into which
+ the river poured, and which had been deposited there by the
+ currents and waves. A regular pile, too, was found, which had
+ been laid up by some of the provident natives of New Siberia,
+ who, like the Esquimaux, live in the snow. Under this was a
+ large supply of frozen fish, which was taken without ceremony,
+ the party being near starvation. Of course Sakalar and Ivan
+ intended replacing the hoard, if possible, in the short
+ summer.</p>
+
+ <p>Wood was made the groundwork of the winter hut which was to
+ be erected, but snow and ice formed by far the larger portion
+ of the building materials. So hard and compact did the whole
+ mass become when finished, and lined with bear-skins and other
+ furs, that a huge lamp sufficed for warmth during the day and
+ night, and the cooking was done in a small shed by the side.
+ The dogs were now set to shift for themselves as to cover, and
+ were soon buried in the snow. They were placed on short
+ allowance, now they had no work to do, for no one yet knew what
+ were the resources of this wild place.</p>
+
+ <p>As soon as the more immediate duties connected with a camp
+ had been completed, the whole party occupied themselves with
+ preparing traps for foxes, and in other hunting details. A hole
+ was broken in the ice in the bay, and this the Kolimsk men
+ watched with assiduity for seals. One or two rewarded their
+ efforts, but no fish were taken. Sakalar and Ivan, after a day
+ or two of repose, started with some carefully-selected dogs in
+ search of game, and soon found that the great white bear took
+ up his quarters even in that northern latitude. They succeeded
+ in killing several, which the dogs dragged home.</p>
+
+ <p>About ten days after their arrival in the great island,
+ Sakalar, who was always the first to be moving, roused his
+ comrades round him just as a party of a dozen strange men
+ appeared in the distance. They were short, stout fellows, with
+ long lances in their hands, and by their dress very much
+ resembled the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page211"
+ id="page211"></a>[pg 211]</span> Esquimaux. Their attitude
+ was menacing in the extreme, and by the advice of Sakalar, a
+ general volley was fired over their heads. The invaders
+ halted, looked confusedly around, and then ran away.
+ Firearms retained. therefore, all their pristine qualities
+ with these savages.</p>
+
+ <p>"They will return," said Sakalar, moodily; "they did the
+ same when I was here before, and then came back and killed my
+ friend at night. Sakalar escaped."</p>
+
+ <p>Counsel was now held, and it was determined, after due
+ deliberation, that strict watch should be kept at all hours,
+ while much was necessarily trusted to the dogs. All day one of
+ the party was on the lookout, while at night the hut had its
+ entrance well barred. Several days, however, were thus passed
+ without molestation, and then Sakalar took the Kolimsk men out
+ to hunt, and left Ivan and Kolina together. The young man had
+ learned the value of his half-savage friend: her devotion to
+ her father and the party generally was unbounded. She murmured
+ neither at privations nor at sufferings, and kept up the
+ courage of Ivan by painting in glowing terms all his brilliant
+ future. She seemed to have laid aside her personal feelings,
+ and to look on him only as one doing battle with fortune in the
+ hope of earning the hand of the rich widow of Yakoutsk. But
+ Ivan was much disposed to gloomy fits; he supposed himself
+ forgotten, and slighted, and looked on the time of his
+ probation as interminable. It was in this mood that one day he
+ was roused from his fit by a challenge from Kolina to go and
+ see if the seals had come up to breathe at the hole which every
+ morning was freshly broken in the ice. Ivan assented, and away
+ they went gaily down to the bay. No seals were there, and after
+ a short stay they returned toward the hut, recalled by the
+ distant howling of the dogs. But as they came near, they could
+ see no sign of men or animals, though the sensible brutes still
+ whined under the shelter of their snow-heaps. Ivan, much
+ surprised, raised the curtain of the door, his gun in hand,
+ expecting to find that some animal was inside. The lamp was
+ out, and the hut in total darkness. Before Ivan could recover
+ his upright position, four men leaped on him, and he was a
+ prisoner.</p>
+
+ <p>Kolina drew back, and cocked her gun; but the natives,
+ satisfied with their present prey, formed round Ivan in a
+ compact body, tied his hands, and bade him walk. Their looks
+ were sufficiently wild and menacing to make him move,
+ especially as he recognized them as belonging to the warlike
+ party of the Tchouktchas&mdash;a tribe of Siberians who wander
+ about the Polar Seas in search of game, who cross Behring's
+ Straits in skin-boats, and who probably are the only persons
+ who by their temporary sojourn in New Siberia, have caused some
+ to suppose it inhabited. Kolina stood uncertain what to do, but
+ in a few minutes she roused four of the dogs, and followed.
+ Ivan bawled to her to go back, but the girl paid no attention
+ to his request, determined, as it seemed, to know his fate.</p>
+
+ <p>The savages hurried Ivan along as rapidly as they could; and
+ soon entered a deep and narrow ravine, which about the middle
+ parted into two. The narrowest path was selected, and the
+ dwelling of the natives soon reached. It was a cavern, the
+ narrow entrance of which they crawled through; Ivan followed
+ the leader, and soon found himself in a large and wonderful
+ cave. It was by nature divided into several compartments, and
+ contained a party of twenty men, as many or more women, and
+ numerous children. It was warmed in two ways&mdash;by
+ wood-fires and grease-lamps, and by a bubbling semi-sulphurous
+ spring, that rushed up through a narrow hole, and then fell
+ away into a deep well, that carried its warm waters to mingle
+ with the icy sea. The acrid smoke escaped by holes in the roof.
+ Ivan, his arms and legs bound, was thrust into a separate
+ compartment filled with furs, and formed by a projection of the
+ rock and the skin-boats which this primitive race employed to
+ cross the most stormy seas. He was almost stunned; he lay for a
+ while without thought or motion. Gradually he recovered, and
+ gazed around; all was night, save above, where by a narrow
+ orifice he saw the smoke which hung in clouds around the roof
+ escaping. He expected death. He knew the savage race he was
+ among, who hated interference with their hunting-grounds, and
+ whose fish he and his party had taken. What, therefore, was his
+ surprise, when from the summit of the roof, he heard a gentle
+ voice whispering in soft accents his own name. His ears must,
+ he thought, deceive him. The hubbub close at hand was terrible.
+ A dispute was going on. Men, women. and children all joined,
+ and yet he had heard the word "Ivan." "Kolina," he replied, in
+ equally low but clear tones. As he spoke a knife rolled near
+ him. But he could not touch it. Then a dark form filled the
+ orifice about a dozen feet above his head, and something moved
+ down among projecting stones, and then Kolina stood by him. In
+ an instant Ivan was free, and an axe in his hand. The exit was
+ before them. Steps were cut in the rock, to ascend to the upper
+ entrance, near which Ivan had been placed without fear, because
+ tied. But a rush was heard, and the friends had only time to
+ throw themselves deeper into the cave, when four men rushed in,
+ knife in hand, to immolate the victim. Such had been the
+ decision come to after the debate.</p>
+
+ <p>The lamps revealed the escape of the fugitive. A wild cry
+ drew all the men together, and then up they scampered along the
+ rugged projections, and the barking of the dogs as they fled
+ showed that they were in hot and eager chase. Ivan and Kolina
+ lost no time. They advanced boldly, knife and hatchet in
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page212"
+ id="page212"></a>[pg 212]</span> hand, sprang amid the
+ terrified women, darted across their horrid cavern, and
+ before one of them had recovered from her fright, were in
+ the open air. On they ran in the gloom for some distance,
+ when they suddenly heard muttering voices. Down they sank
+ behind the first large stone, concealing themselves as well
+ as they could in the snow. The party moved slowly on toward
+ them.</p>
+
+ <p>"I can trace their tracks still," said Sakalar, in a low
+ deep tone. "On, while they are alive, or at least for
+ vengeance!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Friends!" cried Ivan.</p>
+
+ <p>"Father!" said Kolina, and in an instant the whole party
+ were united. Five words were enough to determine Sakalar. The
+ whole body rushed back, entered the cavern, and found
+ themselves masters of it without a struggle. The women and
+ children attempted no resistance. As soon as they were placed
+ in a corner, under the guard of the Kolimsk men, a council was
+ held. Sakalar, as the most experienced, decided what was to be
+ done. He knew the value of threats: one of the women was
+ released, and bade go tell the men what had occurred. She was
+ to add the offer of a treaty of peace, to which, if both
+ parties agreed, the women were to be given up on the one side,
+ and the hut and its contents on the other. But the victors
+ announced their intention of taking four of the best-looking
+ boys as hostages, to be returned whenever they were convinced
+ of the good faith of the Tchouktchas. The envoy soon returned,
+ agreeing to everything. They had not gone near the hut, fearing
+ an ambuscade. The four boys were at once selected, and the
+ belligerents separated.</p>
+
+ <p>Sakalar made the little fellows run before, and thus the hut
+ was regained. An inner cabin was erected for the prisoners, and
+ the dogs placed over them as spies. But as the boys understood
+ Sakalar to mean that the dogs were to eat them if they stirred,
+ they remained still enough, and made no attempt to run
+ away.</p>
+
+ <p>A hasty meal was now cooked, and after its conclusion Ivan
+ related the events of the day, warmly dilating on the devotion
+ and courage of Kolina, who, with the keenness of a Yakouta, had
+ found out his prison by the smoke, and had seen him on the
+ ground despite the gloom. Sakalar then explained how, on his
+ return, he had been terribly alarmed, and had followed the
+ trail on the snow. After mutual congratulations the whole party
+ went to sleep.</p>
+
+ <p>The next morning early, the mothers came humbly with
+ provisions for their children. They received some trifling
+ presents and were sent away in delight. About midday the whole
+ tribe presented themselves unarmed, within a short distance of
+ the hut, and offered a traffic. They brought a great quantity
+ of fish, which they wanted to exchange for tobacco. Sakalar,
+ who spoke their language freely, first gave them a roll,
+ letting them understand it was in payment of the fish taken
+ without leave. This at once dissipated all feelings of
+ hostility, and solid peace was insured. So satisfied was
+ Sakalar of their sincerity, that he at once released the
+ captives.</p>
+
+ <p>From that day the two parties were one, and all thoughts of
+ war were completely at an end. A vast deal of bloodshed had
+ been prevented by a few concessions on both sides. The same
+ result might indeed have been come to by killing half of each
+ little tribe, but it is doubtful if the peace would have been
+ as satisfactory to the survivors.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h4>VII.&mdash;THE SUMMER AND AUTUMN.</h4>
+
+ <p>Occupied with the chase, with bartering, and with conversing
+ with their new friends, the summer gradually came around. The
+ snow melted, the hills became a series of cascades, in every
+ direction water poured toward the sea. But the hut remained
+ solid and firm, a little earth only being cast over the snow.
+ Flocks of ducks and geese soon appeared, a slight vegetation
+ was visible, and the sea was in motion. But what principally
+ drew all eyes were the vast heaps of fossil ivory exposed to
+ view on the banks of the stream, laid bare more and more every
+ year by the torrents of spring. A few days sufficed to collect
+ a heap greater than they could take away on the sledges in a
+ dozen journeys. Ivan gazed at his treasure in mute despair.
+ Were all that at Yakoutsk, he was the richest merchant in
+ Siberia; but to take it thither seemed impossible. But in
+ stepped the adventurous Tchouktchas. They offered, for a
+ stipulated sum in tobacco and other valuables, to land a large
+ portion of the ivory at a certain spot on the shores of
+ Siberia, by means of their boats. Ivan, though again surprised
+ at the daring of these wild men, accepted the proposal, and
+ engaged to give them his whole stock. The matter was then
+ settled, and our adventurers and their new friends dispersed to
+ their summer avocations.</p>
+
+ <p>These consisted in fishing and hunting, and repairing boats
+ and sledges. Their canoes were made of skins and whalebone, and
+ bits of wood; but they were large, and capable of sustaining
+ great weight. They proposed to start as soon as the ice was
+ broken up, and to brave all the dangers of so fearful a
+ navigation. They were used to impel themselves along in every
+ open space, and to take shelter on icebergs from danger. When
+ one of these icy mountains went in the right direction, they
+ stuck to it; but at others they paddled away, amid dangers of
+ which they seemed wholly unconscious.</p>
+
+ <p>A month was taken up in fishing, in drying the fish, or in
+ putting it in holes where there was eternal frost. An immense
+ stock was laid in: and then one morning the Tchouktchas took
+ their departure, and the adventurers remained alone. Their hut
+ was broken up, and all made ready for their second journey. The
+ sledges were enlarged, to bear the heaviest possible load at
+ starting. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page213"
+ id="page213"></a>[pg 213]</span> A few days' overloading
+ were not minded, as the provisions would soon decrease.
+ Still not half so much could be taken as they wished, and
+ yet Ivan had nearly a ton of ivory, and thirty tons was the
+ greatest produce of any one year in all Siberia.</p>
+
+ <p>But the sledges were ready long before the sea was so. The
+ interval was spent in continued hunting, to prevent any
+ consumption of the traveling store. All were heartily tired,
+ long before it was over, of a day nearly as long as two English
+ months. Soon the winter set in with intense rigor; the sea
+ ceased to toss and heave; the icebergs and fields moved more
+ and more slowly; at last ocean and land were blended into
+ one&mdash;the night of a month came, and the sun was seen no
+ more.</p>
+
+ <p>The dogs were now roused up; the sledges harnessed; and the
+ instant the sea was firm enough to sustain them, the party
+ started. Sakalar's intention was to try forced marches in a
+ straight line. Fortune favored them. Not an accident occurred
+ for days. At first they did not move exactly in the same
+ direction as when they came, but they soon found traces of
+ their previous journey, proving that a plain of ice had been
+ forced away at least fifty miles during the thaw.</p>
+
+ <p>The road was now again rugged and difficult, firing was
+ getting scarce, the dogs were devouring the fish with rapidity,
+ and only one half the ocean-journey was over. But on they
+ pushed with desperate energy, each eye once more keenly on the
+ look-out for game. Every one drove his team in sullen silence,
+ for all were on short allowance, and all were hungry. They sat
+ on what was to them more valuable than gold, and yet they had
+ not what was necessary for subsistence. The dogs were urged
+ every day to the utmost limits of their strength. But so much
+ space had been taken up by the ivory, that at last there
+ remained neither food nor fuel. None knew at what distance they
+ were from the shore, and their position seemed desperate. There
+ were even whispers of killing some of the dogs; and Sakalar and
+ Ivan were upbraided for the avarice which had brought them to
+ such straits.</p>
+
+ <p>"See!" said the old hunter suddenly, with a delighted smile,
+ pointing toward the south.</p>
+
+ <p>The whole party looked eagerly. A thick column of smoke rose
+ in the air at no very considerable distance. This was the
+ signal agreed on with the Tchouktchas, who were to camp where
+ there was plenty of wood.</p>
+
+ <p>Every hand was raised to urge on the dogs to this point, and
+ at last, from the summit of a hill of ice they saw the shore
+ and the blaze of the fire. The wind was toward them, and the
+ atmosphere heavy. The dogs smelled the distant camp, and darted
+ almost recklessly forward. At last they sank near to the
+ Tchouktcha huts, panting and exhausted.</p>
+
+ <p>Their allies of the spring were true; they gave them food,
+ of which both man and beast ate greedily, and then sought
+ repose. The Tchouktchas had then formed their journey with
+ wonderful success and rapidity, and had found time to lay in a
+ pretty fair stock of fish. This they freely shared with Ivan
+ and his party, and were delighted when he abandoned to them all
+ his tobacco and rum, and part of his tea.</p>
+
+ <p>The Tchouktchas had been four years absent in their
+ wanderings, and were eager to get home once more to the land of
+ the reindeer, and to their friends. They were perhaps the
+ greatest travelers of a tribe noted for its facility of
+ locomotion. And so, with warm expressions of esteem and
+ friendship on both sides, the two parties separated&mdash;the
+ men of the east making their way on foot, toward the Straits of
+ Behring.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h4>VIII.&mdash;THE VOYAGE HOME.</h4>
+
+ <p>Under considerable disadvantages did Sakalar, Ivan, and
+ their friends prepare for the conclusion of their journey.
+ Their provisions were very scanty, and their only hope of
+ replenishing their stores was on the banks of the Vchivaya
+ River, which being in some places pretty rapid might not be
+ frozen over. Sakalar and his friends determined to strike out
+ in a straight line. Part of the ivory had to be concealed and
+ abandoned, to be fetched another time; but as their stock of
+ provisions was so small, they were able to take the principal
+ part. It had been resolved, after some debate, to make in a
+ direct line for the Vchivaya river, and thence to
+ Vijnei-Kolimsk. The road was of a most difficult, and, in part,
+ unknown character; but it was imperative to move in as straight
+ a direction as possible. Time was the great enemy they had to
+ contend with, because their provisions were sufficient for a
+ limited period only.</p>
+
+ <p>The country was at first level enough, and the dogs, after
+ their rest, made sufficiently rapid progress. At night they had
+ reached the commencement of a hilly region, while in the
+ distance could be seen pretty lofty mountains. According to a
+ plan decided on from the first, the human members of the party
+ were placed at once on short allowance, while the dogs received
+ as much food as could be reasonably given. At early dawn the
+ tent was struck, and the dogs were impelled along the banks of
+ a small river completely frozen. Indeed, after a short
+ distance, it was taken as the smoothest path. But at the end of
+ a dozen miles they found themselves in a narrow gorge between
+ two hills; at the foot of a once foaming cataract, now hard
+ frozen. It was necessary to retreat some miles, and gain the
+ land once more. The only path which was now found practicable
+ was along the bottom of some pretty steep rocks. But the track
+ got narrower and narrower, until the dogs were drawing along
+ the edge of a terrific precipice with not four feet of holding.
+ All alighted, and led the dogs, for a false step was death.
+ Fortunately the path became no narrower, and in one place it
+ widened out and made a sort of hollow. Here a bitter blast,
+ almost strong enough to cast them from their feet, checked
+ further progress, and on that naked spot, under a projecting
+ mass of stone, without fire, did the whole party halt.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page214"
+ id="page214"></a>[pg 214]</span> Men and dogs huddled
+ together for warmth, and all dined on raw and frozen fish. A
+ few hours of sleep, however, were snatched; and then, as the
+ storm abated, they again advanced. The descent was soon
+ reached, and led into a vast plain without tree or bush. A
+ range of snow-clad hills lay before them, and through a
+ narrow gully between two mountains was the only practicable
+ pathway. But all hearts were gladdened by the welcome sight
+ of some <i>argali</i>, or Siberian sheep, on the slope of a
+ hill. These animals are the only winter game, bears, and
+ wolves excepted. Kolina was left with the dogs, and the rest
+ started after the animals, which were pawing in the snow for
+ some moss or half-frozen herbs. Every caution was used to
+ approach them against the wind, and a general volley soon
+ sent them scampering away to the mountain-tops, leaving
+ three behind.</p>
+
+ <p>But Ivan saw that he had wounded another, and away he went
+ in chase. The animal ascended a hill, and then halted. But
+ seeing a man coming quickly after him, it turned and fled down
+ the opposite side. Ivan was instantly after him. The descent
+ was steep, but the hunter saw only the argili, and darted down.
+ He slid rather than ran with fearful rapidity, and passed the
+ sheep by, seeking to check himself too late. A tremendous gulf
+ was before him, and his eyes caught an instant glance of a deep
+ distant valley. Then he saw no more until he found himself
+ lying still. He had sunk, on the very brink of the precipice,
+ into a deep snow bank formed by some projecting rock, and had
+ only thus been saved from instant death. Deeply grateful, Ivan
+ crept cautiously up the hill-side, though not without his
+ prize, and rejoined his companions.</p>
+
+ <p>The road now offered innumerable difficulties, it was rough
+ and uneven&mdash;now hard, now soft. They made but slow
+ progress for the next three days, while their provisions began
+ to draw to an end. They had at least a dozen days more before
+ them. All agreed that they were now in the very worst
+ difficulty they had been in. That evening they dined on the
+ last meal of mutton and fish; they were at the foot of a lofty
+ hill, which they determined to ascend while strength was left.
+ The dogs were urged up the steep ascent, and after two hours'
+ toil, they reached the summit. It was a table-land, bleak and
+ miserable, and the wind was too severe to permit camping. On
+ they pushed, and camped a little way down its sides.</p>
+
+ <p>The next morning the dogs had no food, while the men had
+ nothing but large draughts of warm tea. But it was impossible
+ to stop. Away they hurried, after deciding that, if nothing
+ turned up the next morning, two or three of the dogs must be
+ killed to save the rest. Little was the ground they got over,
+ with hungry beasts and starving men, and all were glad to halt
+ near a few dried larches. Men and dogs eyed each other
+ suspiciously, The animals, sixty-four in number, had they not
+ been educated to fear man, would have soon settled the matter.
+ But there they lay, panting and faint&mdash;to start up
+ suddenly with a fearful howl. A bear was on them. Sakalar
+ fired, and then in rushed the dogs, savage and fierce. It was
+ worse than useless, it was dangerous, for the human beings of
+ the party to seek to share this windfall. It was enough that
+ the dogs had found something to appease their hunger.</p>
+
+ <p>Sakalar, however, knew that his faint and weary companions
+ could not move the next day if tea alone were their sustenance
+ that night. He accordingly put in practice one of the devices
+ of his woodcraft. The youngest of the larches was cut down, and
+ the coarse outside bark was taken off. Then every atom of the
+ soft bark was peeled off the tree, and being broken into small
+ pieces, was cast into the boiling pot, already full of water.
+ The quantity was great, and made a thick substance. Round this
+ the whole party collected, eager for the moment when they could
+ fall to. But Sakalar was cool and methodical even in that
+ terrible hour. He took a spoon, and quietly skimmed the pot, to
+ take away the resin that rose to the surface. Then gradually
+ the bark melted away, and presently the pot was filled by a
+ thick paste, and looked not unlike glue. All gladly ate, and
+ found it nutritive, pleasant, and warm. They felt satisfied
+ when the meal was over, and were glad to observe that the dogs
+ returned to the camp completely satisfied also, which, under
+ the circumstances, was matter of great gratification.</p>
+
+ <p>In the morning, after another mess of larch-bark soup, and
+ after a little tea, the adventurers again advanced on their
+ journey. They were now in an arid, bleak, and terrible plain of
+ vast extent. Not a tree, not a shrub, not an elevation was to
+ be seen. Starvation was again staring them in the face, and no
+ man knew when this dreadful plain would end. That night the
+ whole party cowered in their tent without fire, content to chew
+ a few tea-leaves preserved from the last meal. Serious thoughts
+ were now entertained of abandoning their wealth in that wild
+ region. But as none pressed the matter very hardly, the ledges
+ were harnessed again next morning, and the dogs driven on. But
+ man and beast were at the last gasp, and not ten miles were
+ traversed that day, the end of which brought them to a large
+ river, on the borders of which were some trees. Being wide and
+ rapid, it was not frozen, and there was still hope, The seine
+ was drawn from a sledge, and taken into the water. It was
+ fastened from one side to another of a narrow gut, and there
+ left. It was of no avail examining it until morning, for the
+ fish only come out at night.</p>
+
+ <p>There was not a man of the party who had his exact sense
+ about him, while the dogs lay panting on the snow, their
+ tongues hanging out, their eyes glaring with almost savage
+ fury. The trees round the bank were large and dry, and not one
+ had an atom of soft <span class="pagenum"><a name="page215"
+ id="page215"></a>[pg 215]</span> bark on it. All the
+ resource they had was to drink huge draughts of tea, and
+ then seek sleep. Sakalar set the example, and the Kolimsk
+ men, to whom such scenes were not new, followed his advice;
+ but Ivan walked up and down before the tent. A huge fire had
+ been made, which was amply fed by the wood of the river
+ bank, and it blazed on high, showing in bold relief the
+ features of the scene. Ivan gazed vacantly at everything;
+ but he saw not the dark and glancing river&mdash;he saw not
+ the bleak plain of snow&mdash;his eyes looked not on the
+ romantic picture of the tent and its bivouac-fire: his
+ thoughts were on one thing alone. He it was who had brought
+ them to that pass, and on his head rested all the misery
+ endured by man and beast, and, worst of all, by the good and
+ devoted Kolina.</p>
+
+ <p>There she sat, too, on the ground, wrapped in her warm
+ clothes, her eyes, fixed on the crackling logs. Of what was she
+ thinking? Whatever occupied her mind, it was soon chased away
+ by the sudden speech of Ivan. "Kolina," said he, in a tone
+ which borrowed a little of intensity from the state of mind in
+ which hunger had placed all of them, "canst thou ever forgive
+ me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"What?" replied the young girl softly.</p>
+
+ <p>"My having brought you here to die, far away from your
+ native hills?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Kolina cares little for herself," said the Yakouta maiden,
+ rising and speaking perhaps a little wildly; "let her father
+ escape, and she is willing to lie near the tombs of the old
+ people on the borders of the icy sea."</p>
+
+ <p>"But Ivan had hoped to see for Kolina many bright, happy
+ days; for Ivan would have made her father rich, and Kolina
+ would have been the richest unmarried girl in the plain of
+ Miouré!"</p>
+
+ <p>"And would riches make Kolina happy?" said she sadly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Young girl of the Yakouta, hearken to me! Let Ivan live or
+ die this hour; Ivan is a fool. He left home and comfort to
+ cross the icy seas in search of wealth, and to gain happiness;
+ but if he had only had eyes, he would have stopped at Miouré.
+ There he saw a girl, lively as the heaven-fire in the north,
+ good, generous, kind; and she was an old friend, and might have
+ loved Ivan; but the man of Yakoutsk was blind, and told her of
+ his passion for a selfish widow, and the Yakouta maiden never
+ thought of Ivan but as a brother!"</p>
+
+ <p>"What means Ivan?" asked Kolina, trembling with emotion.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ivan has long meant, when he came to the yourte of Sakalar,
+ to lay his wealth at his feet, and beg of his old friend to
+ give him his child: but Ivan now fears that he may die, and
+ wishes to know what would have been the answer of Kolina?"</p>
+
+ <p>"But Maria Vorotinska?" urged the girl, who seemed
+ dreaming.</p>
+
+ <p>"Has long been forgotten. How could I not love my old
+ playmate and friend! Kolina&mdash;Kolina, listen to Ivan!
+ Forget his love for the widow of Yakoutsk, and Ivan will stay
+ in the plain of Vchivaya and die."</p>
+
+ <p>"Kolina is very proud," whispered the girl, sitting down on
+ a log near the fire, and speaking in a low tone; "and Kolina
+ thinks yet that the friend of her father has forgotten himself.
+ But if he be not wild, if the sufferings of the journey have
+ not made him say that which is not, Kolina would be very
+ happy."</p>
+
+ <p>"Be plain, girl of Miouré&mdash;maiden of the Yakouta tribe!
+ and play not with the heart of a man. Can Kolina take Ivan as
+ her husband?"</p>
+
+ <p>A frank and happy reply gave the Yakoutsk merchant all the
+ satisfaction he could wish; and then followed several hours of
+ those sweet and delightful explanations which never end between
+ young lovers when first they have acknowledged their mutual
+ affection. They had hitherto concealed so much, that there was
+ much to tell; and Ivan and Kolina, who for nearly three years
+ had lived together, with a bar between their deep but concealed
+ affection, seemed to have no end of words. Ivan had begun to
+ find his feelings change from the very hour Sakalar's daughter
+ volunteered to accompany him, but it was only in the cave of
+ New Siberia that his heart had been completely won.</p>
+
+ <p>So short, and quiet, and sweet were the hours, that the time
+ of rest passed by without the thought of sleep. Suddenly,
+ however, they were roused to a sense of their situation, and
+ leaving their wearied and exhausted companions still asleep,
+ they moved with doubt and dread to the water's side. Life was
+ now doubly dear to both, and their fancy painted the coming
+ forth of an empty net as the termination of all hope. But the
+ net came heavily and slowly to land. It was full of fish. They
+ were on the well-stocked Vchivaya. More than three hundred
+ fish, small and great, were drawn on shore; and then they
+ recast the net.</p>
+
+ <p>"Up, man and beast!" thundered Ivan, as, after selecting two
+ dozen of the finest, he abandoned the rest to the dogs.</p>
+
+ <p>The animals, faint and weary, greedily seized on the food
+ given them, while Sakalar and the Kolimsk men could scarcely
+ believe their senses. The hot coals were at once brought into
+ requisition, and the party were soon regaling themselves on a
+ splendid meal of tea and broiled fish. I should alarm my
+ readers did I record the quantities eaten. An hour later, every
+ individual was a changed being, but most of all the lovers.
+ Despite their want of rest, they looked fresher than any of the
+ party. It was determined to camp at least twenty hours more in
+ that spot; and the Kolimsk men declared that the river must be
+ the Vchivaya, they could draw the seine all day, for the river
+ was deep, its waters warmer than others, and its abundance of
+ fish such as to border on the fabulous. They went accordingly
+ down to the side of the stream, and then the happy Kolina gave
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page216"
+ id="page216"></a>[pg 216]</span> free vent to her joy. She
+ burst out into a song of her native land, and gave way to
+ some demonstrations of delight, the result of her earlier
+ education, that astonished Sakalar. But when he heard that
+ during that dreadful night he had found a son, Sakalar
+ himself almost lost his reason. The old man loved Ivan
+ almost as much as his own child, and when he saw the youth
+ in his yourte on his hunting trips, had formed some project
+ of the kind now brought about; but the confessions of Ivan
+ on his last visit to Miouré had driven all such thoughts
+ away.</p>
+
+ <p>"Art in earnest, Ivan?" said he, after a pause of some
+ duration.</p>
+
+ <p>"In earnest!" exclaimed Ivan, laughing; "why, I fancy the
+ young men of Miouré will find me so, if they seek to question
+ my right to Kolina!"</p>
+
+ <p>Kolina smiled, and looked happy; and the old hunter heartily
+ blessed his children, adding that the proudest, dearest hope of
+ his heart was now within probable realization.</p>
+
+ <p>The predictions of the Kolimsk men were realized. The river
+ gave them as much fish as they needed for their journey home;
+ and as now Sakalar knew his way, there was little fear for the
+ future. An ample stock was piled on the sledges, the dogs had
+ unlimited feeding for two days, and then away they sped toward
+ an upper part of the river, which, being broad and shallow, was
+ no doubt frozen on the surface. They found it as they expected,
+ and even discovered that the river was gradually freezing all
+ the way down. But little caring for this now, on they went, and
+ after considerable fatigue and some delay, arrived at Kolimsk,
+ to the utter astonishment of all the inhabitants, who had long
+ given them up for lost.</p>
+
+ <p>Great rejoicings took place. The friends of the three
+ Kolimsk men gave a grand festival, in which the rum, and
+ tobacco, and tea, which had been left at the place for payment
+ for their journey, played a conspicuous part. Then, as it was
+ necessary to remain here some time, while the ivory was brought
+ from a deposit near the sea, Ivan and Kolina were married.
+ Neither of them seemed to credit the circumstance, even when
+ fast tied by the Russian church. It had come so suddenly, so
+ unexpectedly on both, that their heads could not quite make the
+ affair out. But they were married in right down earnest, and
+ Kolina was a proud and happy woman. The enormous mass of ivory
+ brought to Kolimsk excited the attention of a distinguished
+ exile, who drew up a statement in Ivan's name, and prepared it
+ for transmission to the White Czar, as the emperor is called in
+ these parts.</p>
+
+ <p>When summer came, the young couple, with Sakalar and a
+ caravan of merchants, started for Yakoutsk, Ivan being by far
+ the richest and most important member of the party. After a
+ single day's halt at Miouré, on they went to the town, and made
+ their triumphal entry in September. Ivan found Maria Vorotinska
+ a wife and mother, and his vanity was not much wounded by the
+ falsehood. The <i>ci-devant</i> widow was a little astonished
+ at Ivan's return, and particularly at his treasure of ivory:
+ but she received his wife with politeness, a little tempered by
+ her sense of her own superiority to a savage, as she designated
+ Kolina to her friends in a whisper. But Kolina was so gentle,
+ so pretty, so good, so cheerful, so happy, that she found her
+ party at once, and the two ladies became rival leaders of the
+ fashion.</p>
+
+ <p>This lasted until the next year, when a messenger from the
+ capital brought a letter to Ivan from the emperor himself,
+ thanking him for his narrative, sending him a rich present, his
+ warm approval, and the office of first civil magistrate in the
+ city of Yakoutsk. This turned the scales wholly on one side,
+ and Maria bowed low to Kolina. But Kolina had no feelings of
+ the parvenu, and she was always a general favorite. Ivan
+ accepted with pride his sovereign's favor, and by dint of
+ assiduity, soon learned to be a useful magistrate. He always
+ remained a good husband, a good father, and a good son, for he
+ made the heart of old Sakalar glad. He never regretted his
+ journey: he always declared he owed to it wealth and happiness,
+ a high position in society, and an admirable wife. Great
+ rejoicings took place many years after in Yakoutsk, at the
+ marriage of the son of Maria, united to the daughter of Ivan,
+ and from the first unto the last, none of the parties concerned
+ ever had reason to mourn over the perilous journey in search of
+ the Ivory Mine.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>For the information of the non-scientific, it may be
+ necessary to mention that the ivory alluded to in the preceding
+ tale, is derived from the tusks of the mammoth, or fossil
+ elephant of the geologist. The remains of this gigantic
+ quadruped are found all over the northern hemisphere, from the
+ 40th to the 75th degree of latitude: but most abundantly in the
+ region which lies between the mountains of Central Asia and the
+ shores and islands of the Frozen Sea. So profusely do they
+ exist in this region, that the tusks have for more than a
+ century constituted an important article of
+ traffic&mdash;furnishing a large proportion of the ivory
+ required by the carver and turner. The remains lie imbedded in
+ the upper tertiary clays and gravels; and these, by exposure to
+ the river-currents, to the waves of the sea, and other erosive
+ agencies, are frequently swept away during the thaws of summer,
+ leaving tusks and bones in masses, and occasionally even entire
+ skeletons, in a wonderful state of preservation. The most
+ perfect specimen yet obtained, and from the study of which the
+ zoologist has been enabled to arrive at an accurate knowledge
+ of the structure and habits of the mammoth, is that discovered
+ by a Tungusian fisherman, near the mouth of the river Lena, in
+ the summer of 1799.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page217"
+ id="page217"></a>[pg 217]</span>
+
+ <p>Being in the habit of collecting tusks among the debris of
+ the gravel-cliffs, (for it is generally at a considerable
+ elevation in the cliffs and river banks that the remains
+ occur,) he observed a strange shapeless mass projecting from an
+ ice-bank some fifty or sixty feet above the river; during next
+ summer's thaw he saw the same object, rather more disengaged
+ from amongst the ice; in 1801 he could distinctly perceive the
+ tusk and flank of an immense animal; and in 1803, in
+ consequence of an earlier and more powerful thaw, the huge
+ carcase became entirely disengaged, and fell on the sandbank
+ beneath. In the spring of the following year the fisherman cut
+ off the tusks, which he sold for fifty rubles (£7, 10s.;) and
+ two years afterward, our countryman, Mr. Adams, visited the
+ spot, and gives the following account of the extraordinary
+ phenomenon:</p>
+
+ <p>"At this time I found the mammoth still in the same place,
+ but altogether mutilated. The discoverer was contented with his
+ profit for the tusks, and the Yakoutski of the neighborhood had
+ cut off the flesh, with which they fed their dogs. During the
+ scarcity, wild beasts, such as white bears, wolves, wolverines,
+ and foxes, also fed upon it, and the traces of their footsteps
+ were seen around. The skeleton, almost entirely cleared of its
+ flesh, remained whole, with the exception of a foreleg. The
+ head was covered with a dry skin; one of the ears, well
+ preserved, was furnished with a tuft of hair. All these parts
+ have necessarily been injured in transporting them a distance
+ of 7,330 miles, (to the Imperial museum of St. Petersburgh,)
+ but the eyes have been preserved, and the pupil of one can
+ still be distinguished. The mammoth was a male, with a long
+ mane on the neck. The tail and proboscis were not preserved.
+ The skin, of which I possess three-fourths, is of a dark-gray
+ color, covered with a reddish wool and black hairs: but the
+ dampness of the spot where it had lain so long had in some
+ degree destroyed the hair. The entire carcase, of which I
+ collected the bones on the spot, was nine feet four inches
+ high, and sixteen feet four inches long, without including the
+ tusks, which measured nine feet six inches along the curve. The
+ distance from the base or root of the tusk to the point is
+ three feet seven inches. The two tusks together weighed three
+ hundred and sixty pounds, English weight, and the head alone
+ four hundred and fourteen pounds. The skin was of such weight
+ that it required ten persons to transport it to the shore; and
+ after having cleared the ground, upward of thirty-six pounds of
+ hair were collected, which the white bears had trodden while
+ devouring the flesh."</p>
+
+ <p>Since then, other carcases of elephants have been
+ discovered, in a greater or less degree of preservation; as
+ also the remains of rhinoceroses, mastodons, and allied
+ pachyderms&mdash;the mammoth more abundantly in the old world,
+ the mastodon in the new. In every case these animals differ
+ from existing species: are of more gigantic dimensions; and,
+ judging from their natural coverings of thick-set curly-crisped
+ wool and strong hair, upward of a foot in length, were fitted
+ to live, if not in a boreal, at least in a coldly-temperate
+ region. Indeed, there is proof positive of the then more milder
+ climate of these regions in the discovery of pine and
+ birch-trunks where no vegetation now flourishes; and further,
+ in the fact that fragments of pine-leaves, birch-twigs, and
+ other northern plants, have been detected between the grinders
+ and within the stomachs of these animals. We have thus
+ evidence, that at the close of the tertiary, and shortly after
+ the commencement of the current epoch, the northern hemisphere
+ enjoyed a much milder climate; that it was the abode of huge
+ pachyderms now extinct; that a different distribution of sea
+ and land prevailed; and that on a new distribution or sea and
+ land, accompanied also by a different relative level, these
+ animals died away, leaving their remains imbedded in the clays,
+ gravels, and other alluvial deposits, where, under the
+ antiseptic influence of an almost eternal frost, many of them
+ have been preserved as entire as at the fatal moment they sank
+ under the rigors of external conditions no longer fitted for
+ their existence. It has been attempted by some to prove the
+ adaptability of these animals to the present conditions of the
+ northern hemisphere; but so untenable in every phase is this
+ opinion, that it would be sheer waste of time and space to
+ attempt its refutation. That they may have migrated northward
+ and southward with the seasons is more than probable, though it
+ has been stated that the remains diminish in size the farther
+ north they are found; but that numerous herds of such huge
+ animals should have existed in these regions at all, and that
+ for thousands of years, presupposes an exuberant arboreal
+ vegetation, and the necessary degree of climate for its growth
+ and development. It has been mentioned that the mastodon and
+ mammoth seem to have attained their meridian toward the close
+ of the tertiary epoch, and that a few may have lived even in
+ the current era; but it is more probable that the commencement
+ of existing conditions was the proximate cause of their
+ extinction, and that not a solitary specimen ever lived to be
+ the contemporary of man.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From Fraser's Magazine.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>ENGLISH HEXAMETERS.</h2>
+
+ <h4>BY WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR.</h4>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Askest thou if in my youth I have mounted, as others
+ have mounted,</p>
+
+ <p>Galloping Hexameter, Pentameter cantering after,</p>
+
+ <p>English by dam and by sire; bit, bridle, and
+ saddlery, English;</p>
+
+ <p>English the girths and the shoes; all English from
+ snaffle to crupper;</p>
+
+ <p>Everything English around, excepting the tune of the
+ jockey?</p>
+
+ <p>Latin and Greek, it is true, I have often attach'd
+ to my phaeton</p>
+
+ <p>Early in life, and sometimes have I ordered them out
+ in its
+ evening,</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page218"
+ id="page218"></a>[pg 218]</span>
+
+ <p>Dusting the linings, and pleas'd to have found them
+ unworn and untarnisht.</p>
+
+ <p>Idle! but Idleness looks never better than close
+ upon sunset.</p>
+
+ <p>Seldom my goosequill, of goose from Germany, fatted
+ in England,</p>
+
+ <p>(Frolicksome though I have been) have I tried on
+ Hexameter, knowing</p>
+
+ <p>Latin and Greek are alone its languages. We have a
+ measure</p>
+
+ <p>Fashion'd by Milton's own hand, a fuller, a deeper,
+ a louder.</p>
+
+ <p>Germans may flounder at will over consonant, vowel,
+ and liquid,</p>
+
+ <p>Liquid and vowel but one to a dozen of consonants,
+ ending</p>
+
+ <p>Each with a verb at the tail, tail heavy as African
+ ram's tail,</p>
+
+ <p>Spenser and Shakspeare had each his own harmony;
+ each an enchanter</p>
+
+ <p>Wanting no aid from without. <i>Chevy Chase</i> had
+ delighted their fathers,</p>
+
+ <p>Though of a different strain from the song on the
+ <i>Wrath of Achilles</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>Southey was fain to pour forth his exuberant stream
+ over regions</p>
+
+ <p>Near and remote: his command was absolute; every
+ subject,</p>
+
+ <p>Little or great, he controll'd; in language,
+ variety, fancy,</p>
+
+ <p>Richer than all his compeers and wanton but once in
+ dominion;</p>
+
+ <p>'Twas when he left the full well that for ages had
+ run by his homestead,</p>
+
+ <p>Pushing the brambles aside which encumber'd another
+ up higher,</p>
+
+ <p>Letting his bucket go down, and hearing it bump in
+ descending,</p>
+
+ <p>Grating against the loose stones 'til it came but
+ half-full from the bottom.</p>
+
+ <p>Others abstain'd from the task. Scott wander'd at
+ large over Scotland;</p>
+
+ <p>Reckless of Roman and Greek, he chanted the <i>Lay
+ of the Minstrel</i></p>
+
+ <p>Better than ever before any minstrel in chamber had
+ chanted.</p>
+
+ <p>Never on mountain or wild hath echo so cheerfully
+ sounded,</p>
+
+ <p>Never did monarch bestow such glorious meeds upon
+ knighthood,</p>
+
+ <p>Never had monarch the power, liberality, justice,
+ discretion.</p>
+
+ <p>Byron liked new-papered rooms, and pull'd down old
+ wainscot of cedar;</p>
+
+ <p>Bright-color'd prints he preferr'd to the graver
+ cartoons of a Raphael,</p>
+
+ <p>Sailor and Turk (with a sack,) to Eginate and
+ Parthenon marbles,</p>
+
+ <p>Splendid the palace he rais'd&mdash;the gin-palace
+ in Poesy's purlieus;</p>
+
+ <p>Soft the divan on the sides, with spittoons for the
+ qualmish and queesy.</p>
+
+ <p>Wordsworth, well pleas'd with himself, cared little
+ for modern or ancient.</p>
+
+ <p>His was the moor and the tarn, the recess in the
+ mountain, the woodland</p>
+
+ <p>Scatter'd with trees far and wide, trees never too
+ solemn or lofty,</p>
+
+ <p>Never entangled with plants overrunning the
+ villager's foot-path.</p>
+
+ <p>Equable was he and plain, but wandering a little in
+ wisdom,</p>
+
+ <p>Sometimes flying from blood and sometimes pouring it
+ freely.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet he was English at heart. If his words were too
+ many; if Fancy's</p>
+
+ <p>Furniture lookt rather scant in a whitewasht homely
+ apartment;</p>
+
+ <p>If in his rural designs there is sameness and
+ tameness; if often</p>
+
+ <p>Feebleness is there for breadth; if his pencil wants
+ rounding and pointing;</p>
+
+ <p>Few of this age or the last stand out on the like
+ elevation.</p>
+
+ <p>There is a sheepfold he rais'd which my memory loves
+ to revisit,</p>
+
+ <p>Sheepfold whose wall shall endure when there is not
+ a stone of the palace.</p>
+
+ <p>Still there are walking on earth many poets whom
+ ages hereafter</p>
+
+ <p>Will be more willing to praise than they are to
+ praise one another:</p>
+
+ <p>Some do I know, but I fear, as is meet, to recount
+ or report them,</p>
+
+ <p>For, be whatever the name that is foremost, the next
+ will run over,</p>
+
+ <p>Trampling and rolling in dust his excellent friend
+ the precursor.</p>
+
+ <p>Peace be with all! but afar be ambition to follow
+ the Roman,</p>
+
+ <p>Led by the German, uncomb'd, and jigging in dactyl
+ and spondee,</p>
+
+ <p>Lumbering shapeless jackboots which nothing can
+ polish or supple.</p>
+
+ <p>Much as old metres delight me, 'tis only where first
+ they were nurtured,</p>
+
+ <p>In their own clime, their own speech: than pamper
+ them here I would rather</p>
+
+ <p>Tie up my Pegasus tight to the scanty-fed rack of a
+ sonnet.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From Household Words.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>A MIGHTIER HUNTER THAN NIMROD.</h2>
+
+ <p>A great deal has been said about the prowess of Nimrod, in
+ connection with the chase, from the days of him of Babylon to
+ those of the late Mr. Apperley of Shropshire; but we question
+ whether, among all the sporting characters mentioned in ancient
+ or modern story, there ever was so mighty a hunter as the
+ gentleman whose sporting calendar now lies before
+ us.<a id="footnotetag4"
+ name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a>
+ The annals of the chase, so far as we are acquainted with
+ them, supply no such instances of familiar intimacy with
+ lions, elephants, hippopotami, rhinoceroses, serpents,
+ crocodiles, and other furious animals, with which the human
+ species in general is not very forward in cultivating an
+ acquaintance.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Cumming had exhausted the deer-forests of his native
+ Scotland; he had sighed for the rolling prairies and rocky
+ mountains of the Far West, and was tied down to military
+ routine as a mounted rifleman in the Cape Colony; when he
+ determined to resign his commission into the hands of
+ Government, and himself to the delights of hunting amid the
+ untrodden plains and forests of South Africa. Having provided
+ himself with wagons to travel and live in, with bullocks to
+ draw them, and with a host of attendants; a sufficiency of
+ arms, horses, dogs, and ammunition, he set out from
+ Graham's-Town in October, 1843. From that period his hunting
+ adventures extended over five years, during which time he
+ penetrated from various points and in various directions from
+ his starting-place in lat. 33 down to lat. 20, and passed
+ through districts upon which no European foot ever before trod;
+ regions where the wildest of wild animals abound&mdash;nothing
+ less serving Mr. Cumming's ardent purpose.</p>
+
+ <p>A lion story in the early part of his book will introduce
+ this fearless hunter-author to our readers better than the most
+ elaborate dissection of his character. He is approaching
+ Colesberg, the northernmost military station belonging to the
+ Cape Colony. He is on a trusty steed, which he calls also
+ "Colesberg." Two of his attendants on horseback are with him.
+ "Suddenly," says the author, "I observed a number of vultures
+ seated on the plain about a quarter of a mile ahead of us, and
+ close beside them stood a huge lioness, consuming a blesblok
+ which she had <span class="pagenum"><a name="page219"
+ id="page219"></a>[pg 219]</span> killed. She was assisted in
+ her repast by about a dozen jackals, which were feasting
+ along with her in the most friendly and confidential manner.
+ Directing my followers' attention to the spot, I remarked,
+ 'I see the lion;' to which they replied, 'Whar? whar? Yah!
+ Almagtig! dat is he;' and instantly reining in their steeds
+ and wheeling about, they pressed their heels to their
+ horses' sides, and were preparing to betake themselves to
+ flight. I asked them what they were going to do? To which
+ they answered, 'We have not yet placed caps on our rifles.'
+ This was true; but while this short conversation was
+ passing, the lioness had observed us. Raising her full round
+ face, she overhauled us for a few seconds, and then set off
+ at a smart canter toward a range of mountains some miles to
+ the northward; the whole troop of jackals also started off
+ in another direction; there was therefore no time to think
+ of caps. The first move was to bring her to bay, and not a
+ second was to be lost. Spurring my good and lively steed,
+ and shouting to my men to follow, I flew across the plain,
+ and, being fortunately mounted on Colesberg, the flower of
+ my stud, I gained upon her at every stride. This was to me a
+ joyful moment, and I at once made up my mind that she or I
+ must die. The lioness soon after suddenly pulled up, and sat
+ on her haunches like a dog, with her back toward me, not
+ even deigning to look round. She then appeared to say to
+ herself, 'Does this fellow know who he is after?' Having
+ thus sat for half a minute, as if involved in thought, she
+ sprang to her feet, and facing about, stood looking at me
+ for a few seconds, moving her tail slowly from side to side,
+ showing her teeth and growling fiercely. She next made a
+ short run forward, making a loud, rumbling noise like
+ thunder. This she did to intimidate me; but finding that I
+ did not flinch an inch, nor seem to heed her hostile
+ demonstrations, she quietly stretched out her massive arms,
+ and lay down on the grass. My Hottentots now coming up, we
+ all three dismounted, and drawing our rifles from their
+ holsters, we looked to see if the powder was up in the
+ nipples, and put on our caps. While this was doing, the
+ lioness sat up, and showed evident symptoms of uneasiness.
+ She looked first at us, and then behind her, as if to see if
+ the coast were clear; after which she made a short run
+ toward us, uttering her deep-drawn murderous growls. Having
+ secured the three horses to one another by their rheims, we
+ led them on as if we intended to pass her, in the hope of
+ obtaining a broadside; but this she carefully avoided to
+ expose, presenting only her full front. I had given Stofolus
+ my Moore rifle, with orders to shoot her if she should
+ spring upon me, but on no account to fire before me.
+ Kleinboy was to stand ready to hand me my Purdey rifle, in
+ case the two-grooved Dixon should not prove sufficient. My
+ men as yet had been steady, but they were in a precious
+ stew, their faces having assumed a ghastly paleness; and I
+ had a painful feeling that I could place no reliance on
+ them. Now, then, for it, neck or nothing! She is within
+ sixty yards of us, and she keeps advancing. We turned the
+ horses' tails to her. I knelt on one side, and taking a
+ steady aim at her breast, let fly. The ball cracked loudly
+ on her tawny hide, and crippled her in the shoulder; upon
+ which she charged with an appalling roar, and in the
+ twinkling of an eye she was in the midst of us. At this
+ moment Stofolus'a rifle exploded in his hand, and Kleinboy,
+ whom I had ordered to stand ready by me, danced about like a
+ duck in a gale of wind. The lioness sprang upon Colesberg,
+ and fearfully lacerated his ribs and haunches with her
+ horrid teeth and claws. The worst wound was on his haunch,
+ which exhibited a sickening, yawning gash, more than twelve
+ inches long, almost laying bare the very bone. I was very
+ cool and steady, and did not feel in the least degree
+ nervous, having fortunately great confidence in my own
+ shooting; but I must confess, when the whole affair was
+ over, I felt that it was a very awful situation, and
+ attended with extreme peril, as I had no friend with me on
+ whom I could rely. When the lioness sprang on Colesberg, I
+ stood out from the horses, ready with my second barrel for
+ the first chance she should give me of a clear shot. This
+ she quickly did; for, seemingly satisfied with the revenge
+ she had now taken, she quitted Colesberg, and slewing her
+ tail to one side, trotted sulkily past within a few paces of
+ me, taking one step to the left. I pitched my rifle to my
+ shoulder, and in another second the lioness was stretched on
+ the plain a lifeless corpse."</p>
+
+ <p>This is, however, but a harmless adventure compared with a
+ subsequent escapade&mdash;not with one, but with six lions. It
+ was the hunter's habit to lay wait near the drinking-places of
+ these animals, concealed in a hole dug for the purpose. In such
+ a place on the occasion in question, Mr. Cumming&mdash;having
+ left one of three rhinoceroses he had previously killed as a
+ bait&mdash;ensconsed himself. Such a savage festival as that
+ which introduced the adventure, has never before, we believe,
+ been introduced through the medium of the softest English and
+ the finest hot-pressed paper to the notice of the civilized
+ public. "Soon after twilight," the author relates, "I went down
+ to my hole with Kleinboy and two natives, who lay concealed in
+ another hole, with Wolf and Boxer ready to slip, in the event
+ of wounding a lion. On reaching the water I looked toward the
+ carcase of the rhinoceros, and, to my astonishment, I beheld
+ the ground alive with large creatures, as though a troop of
+ zebras were approaching the fountain to drink. Kleinboy
+ remarked to me that a troop of zebras were standing on the
+ height. I answered, 'Yes,' but I knew very well that zebras
+ would not be capering around the carcase of a rhinoceros. I
+ quickly <span class="pagenum"><a name="page220"
+ id="page220"></a>[pg 220]</span> arranged my blankets,
+ pillow, and guns in the hole, and then lay down to feast my
+ eyes on the interesting sight before me. It was bright
+ moonlight, as clear as I need wish, and within one night of
+ being full moon. There were six large lions, about twelve or
+ fifteen hyenas, and from twenty to thirty jackals, feasting
+ on and around the carcases of the three rhinoceroses. The
+ lions feasted peacefully, but the hyenas and jackals fought
+ over every mouthful, and chased one another round and round
+ the carcases, growling, laughing, screeching, chattering,
+ and howling without any intermission. The hyenas did not
+ seem afraid of the lions, although they always gave way
+ before them; for I observed that they followed them in the
+ most disrespectful manner, and stood laughing, one or two on
+ either side, when any lions came after their comrades to
+ examine pieces of skin or bones which they were dragging
+ away. I had lain watching this banquet for about three
+ hours, in the strong hope that, when the lions had feasted,
+ they would come and drink. Two black and two white
+ rhinoceroses had made their appearance, but, scared by the
+ smell of the blood, they had made off. At length the lions
+ seemed satisfied. They all walked about with their heads up,
+ and seemed to be thinking about the water; and in two
+ minutes one of them turned his face toward me, and came on;
+ he was immediately followed by a second lion, and in half a
+ minute by the remaining four. It was a decided and general
+ move, they were all coming to drink right bang in my face,
+ within fifteen yards of me."</p>
+
+ <p>The hunters were presently discovered. "An old lioness, who
+ seemed to take the lead, had detected me, and, with her head
+ high and her eyes fixed full upon me she was coming slowly
+ round the corner of the little vley to cultivate further my
+ acquaintance! This unfortunate coincidence put a stop at once
+ to all further contemplation. I thought; in my haste, that it
+ was perhaps most prudent to shoot this lioness, especially as
+ none of the others had noticed me. I accordingly moved my arm
+ and covered her; she saw me move and halted, exposing a full
+ broadside. I fired; the ball entered one shoulder, and passed
+ out behind the other. She bounded forward with repeated growls,
+ and was followed by her five comrades all enveloped in a cloud
+ of dust; nor did they atop until they had reached the cover
+ behind me, except one old gentleman, who halted and looked back
+ for a few seconds, when I fired, but the ball went high. I
+ listened anxiously for some sound to denote the approaching end
+ of the lioness; nor listened in vain. I heard her growling and
+ stationary, as if dying. In one minute her comrades crossed the
+ vley a little below me, and made toward the rhinoceros. I then
+ slipped Wolf and Boxer on her scent, and, following them into
+ the cover, I found her lying dead."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Cumming's adventures with elephants are no less
+ thrilling. He had selected for the aim of his murderous rifle
+ two huge female elephants from a herd. "Two of the troop had
+ walked slowly past at about sixty yards, and the one which I
+ had selected was feeding with two others on a thorny tree
+ before me. My hand was now as steady as the rock on which it
+ rested, so, taking a deliberate aim, I let fly at her head, a
+ little behind the eye. She got it hard and sharp, just where I
+ aimed, but it did not seem to affect her much. Uttering a loud
+ cry, she wheeled about, when I gave her the second ball, close
+ behind the shoulder. All the elephants uttered a strange
+ rumbling noise, and made off in a line to the northward at a
+ brisk ambling pace, their huge fanlike ears flapping in the
+ ratio of their speed. I did not wait to load, but ran back to
+ the hillock to obtain a view. On gaining its summit, the guides
+ pointed out the elephants; they were standing in a grove of
+ shady trees, but the wounded one was some distance behind with
+ another elephant, doubtless its particular friend, who was
+ endeavoring to assist it. These elephants had probably never
+ before heard the report of a gun; and having neither seen nor
+ smelt me, they were unaware of the presence of man, and did not
+ seem inclined to go any further. Presently my men hove in
+ sight, bringing the dogs; and when these came up, I waited some
+ time before commencing the attack, that the dogs and horses
+ might recover their wind. We then rode slowly toward the
+ elephants, and had advanced within two hundred yards of them,
+ when, the ground being open, they observed us, and made off in
+ an easterly direction; but the wounded one immediately dropped
+ astern, and next moment she was surrounded by the dogs, which,
+ barking angrily, seemed to engross her attention. Having placed
+ myself between her and the retreating troop, I dismounted to
+ fire, within forty yards of her, in open ground. Colesberg was
+ extremely afraid of the elephants, and gave me much trouble,
+ jerking my arm when I tried to fire. At length I let fly; but,
+ on endeavoring to regain my saddle. Colesberg declined to allow
+ me to mount; and when I tried to lead him, and run for it, he
+ only backed toward the wounded elephant. At this moment I heard
+ another elephant close behind: and on looking about I beheld
+ the 'friend,' with uplifted trunk, charging down upon me at top
+ speed, shrilly trumpeting, and following an old black pointer
+ named Schwart, that was perfectly deaf, and trotted along
+ before the enraged elephant quite unaware of what was behind
+ him. I felt certain that she would have either me or my horse.
+ I, however, determined not to relinquish my steed, but to hold
+ on by the bridle. My men, who of course kept at a safe
+ distance, stood aghast with their mouths open, and for a few
+ seconds my position was certainly not an enviable one.
+ Fortunately, however, the dogs took off the attention of the
+ elephants; and, just us they
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page221"
+ id="page221"></a>[pg 221]</span> were upon me I managed to
+ spring into the saddle, where I was safe. As I turned my
+ back to mount, the elephants were so very near, that I
+ really expected to feel one of their trunks lay hold of me.
+ I rode up to Kleinboy for my double-barrelled two-grooved
+ rifle; he and Isaac were pale and almost speechless with
+ fright. Returning to the charge, I was soon once more
+ alongside, and, firing from the saddle, I sent another brace
+ of bullets into the wounded elephant. Colesberg was
+ extremely unsteady, and destroyed the correctness of my aim.
+ The 'friend' now seemed resolved to do some mischief, and
+ charged me furiously, pursuing me to a distance of several
+ hundred yards. I therefore deemed it proper to give her a
+ gentle hint to act less officiously, and so, having loaded,
+ I approached within thirty yards, and gave it her sharp,
+ right and left, behind the shoulder; upon which she at once
+ made off with drooping trunk, evidently with a mortal wound.
+ Two more shots finished her; on receiving them she tossed
+ her trunk up and down two or three times, and falling on her
+ broadside against a thorny tree, which yielded like grass
+ before her enormous weight, she uttered a deep hoarse cry
+ and expired."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Cumming's exploits in the water are no less exciting
+ than his land adventures. Here is an account of his victory
+ over a hippopotamus, on the banks of the Limpopo river, near
+ the northernmost extremity of his journeyings.</p>
+
+ <p>"There were four of them, three cows and an old bull; they
+ stood in the middle of the river, and though alarmed, did not
+ appear aware of the extent of the impending danger. I took the
+ sea-cow next me, and with my first ball I gave her a mortal
+ wound, knocking loose a great plate on the top of her skull.
+ She at once commenced plunging round and round, and then
+ occasionally remained still, sitting for a few minutes on the
+ same spot. On hearing the report of my rifle two of the others
+ took up stream, and the fourth dashed down the river; they
+ trotted along, like oxen, at a smart pace as long as the water
+ was shallow. I was now in a state of very great anxiety about
+ my wounded sea-cow, for I feared that she would get down into
+ deep water, and be lost like the last one; her struggles were
+ still carrying her down stream, and the water was becoming
+ deeper. To settle the matter I accordingly fired a second shot
+ from the bank, which, entering the roof of her skull, passed
+ out through her eye; she then, kept continually splashing round
+ and round in a circle in the middle of the river. I had great
+ fears of the crocodiles, and I did not know that the sea-cow
+ might not attack me. My anxiety to secure her, however,
+ overcame all hesitation; so, divesting myself of my leathers,
+ and armed with a sharp knife. I dashed into the water, which at
+ first took me up to my arm-pits, but in the middle was
+ shallower. As I approached Behemoth her eye looked very wicked.
+ I halted for a moment, ready to dive under the water if she
+ attacked me, but she was stunned, and did not know what she was
+ doing; so, running in upon her, and seizing her short tail, I
+ attempted to incline her course to land. It was extraordinary
+ what enormous strength she still had in the water. I could not
+ guide her in the slightest, and she continued to splash, and
+ plunge, and blow, and make her circular course, carrying me
+ along with her as if I was a fly on her tail. Finding her tail
+ gave me but a poor hold, as the only means of securing my prey,
+ I took out my knife, and cutting two deep parallel incisions
+ through the skin on her rump, and lifting this skin from the
+ flesh, so that I could get in my two hands, I made use of this
+ as a handle; and after some desperate hard work, sometimes
+ pushing and sometimes pulling, the sea-cow continuing her
+ circular course all the time and I holding on at her rump like
+ grim Death, eventually I succeeded in bringing this gigantic
+ and most powerful animal to the bank. Here the Bushman, quickly
+ brought me a stout buffalo-rheim from my horse's neck, which I
+ passed through the opening in the thick skin, and moored
+ Behemoth to a tree. I then took my rifle, and sent a ball
+ through the center of her head, and she was numbered with the
+ dead." There is nothing in "Waterton's Wanderings," or in the
+ "Adventures of Baron Munchausen" more startling than this
+ "Waltz with a Hippopotamus!"</p>
+
+ <p>In the all-wise disposition of events, it is perhaps
+ ordained that wild animals should be subdued by man to his use
+ at the expense of such tortures as those described in the work
+ before us. Mere amusement, therefore, is too light a motive for
+ dealing such wounds and death Mr. Cumming owns to; but he had
+ other motives,&mdash;besides a considerable profit he has
+ reaped in trophies, ivory, fur, &amp;c., he has made in his
+ book some valuable contributions to the natural history of the
+ animals he wounded and slew.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>From Graham's Magazine for August</h4>
+
+ <h2>MANUELA.</h2>
+
+ <h3>A BALLAD OF CALIFORNIA.</h3>
+
+ <h4>BY BAYARD TAYLOR.</h4>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>From the doorway, Manuela, in the sheeny April
+ morn,</p>
+
+ <p>Southward looks, along the valley, over leagues of
+ gleaming corn;</p>
+
+ <p>Where the mountain's misty rampart like the wall of
+ Eden towers,</p>
+
+ <p>And the isles of oak are sleeping on a painted sea
+ of flowers.</p>
+
+ <p>All the air is full of music, for the winter rains
+ are o'er,</p>
+
+ <p>And the noisy magpies chatter from the budding
+ sycamore;</p>
+
+ <p>Blithely frisk unnumbered squirrels, over all the
+ grassy slope;</p>
+
+ <p>Where the airy summits brighten, nimbly leaps the
+ antelope.</p>
+
+ <p>Gentle eyes of Manuela! tell me wherefore do ye
+ rest</p>
+
+ <p>On the oaks' enchanted islands and the flowery
+ ocean's breast?</p>
+
+ <p>Tell me wherefore down the valley, ye have traced
+ the highway's mark</p>
+
+ <p>Far beyond the belts of timber, to the
+ mountain-shadows dark?</p>
+
+ <p>Ah, the fragrant bay may blossom, and the sprouting
+ verdure shine</p>
+
+ <p>With the tears of amber dropping from the tassels of
+ the pine.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page222"
+ id="page222"></a>[pg 222]</span>
+
+ <p>And the morning's breath of balsam lightly brush her
+ sunny cheek&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Little recketh Manuela of the tales of Spring they
+ speak.</p>
+
+ <p>When the Summer's burning solstice on the
+ mountain-harvests glowed,</p>
+
+ <p>She had watched a gallant horseman riding down the
+ valley road;</p>
+
+ <p>Many times she saw him turning, looking back with
+ parting thrills,</p>
+
+ <p>Till amid her tears she lost him, in the shadow of
+ the hills.</p>
+
+ <p>Ere the cloudless moons were over, he had passed the
+ Desert's sand.</p>
+
+ <p>Crossed the rushing Colorada and the dark Apache
+ Land,</p>
+
+ <p>And his laden mules were driven, when the time of
+ rains began.</p>
+
+ <p>With the traders of Chihuaha, to the Fair of San
+ Juan.</p>
+
+ <p>Therefore watches Manuela&mdash;therefore lightly
+ doth she start,</p>
+
+ <p>When the sound of distant footsteps seems the
+ beating of her heart;</p>
+
+ <p>Not a wind the green oak rustles or the redwood
+ branches stirs,</p>
+
+ <p>But she hears the silver jingle of his ringing bit
+ and spurs.</p>
+
+ <p>Often, out the hazy distance, come the horsemen, day
+ by day,</p>
+
+ <p>But they come not as Bernardo&mdash;she can see it,
+ far away;</p>
+
+ <p>Well she knows the airy gallop of his mettled
+ <i>alazan</i>,<a id="footnotetag5"
+ name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Light as any antelope upon the Hills of Gavilan.</p>
+
+ <p>She would know him mid a thousand, by his free and
+ gallant air;</p>
+
+ <p>By the featly-knit sarape,<a id="footnotetag6"
+ name="footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a>
+ such as wealthy traders wear;</p>
+
+ <p>By his broidered calzoneros<a id="footnotetag7"
+ name="footnotetag7"></a><a href="#footnote7"><sup>7</sup></a>
+ and his saddle, gaily spread,</p>
+
+ <p>With its cantle rimmed with silver, and its horn a
+ lion's head.</p>
+
+ <p>None like he the light riata<a id="footnotetag8"
+ name="footnotetag8"></a><a href="#footnote8"><sup>8</sup></a>
+ on the maddened bull can throw;</p>
+
+ <p>None amid the mountain-canons, track like he the
+ stealthy doe;</p>
+
+ <p>And at all the Mission festals, few indeed the
+ revelers are</p>
+
+ <p>Who can dance with him the jota, touch with him the
+ gay guitar.</p>
+
+ <p>He has said to Manuela, and the echoes linger
+ still</p>
+
+ <p>In the cloisters of her bosom, with a secret, tender
+ thrill,</p>
+
+ <p>When the hay again has blossomed, and the valley
+ stands in corn,</p>
+
+ <p>Shall the bells of Santa Clara usher in the wedding
+ morn.</p>
+
+ <p>He has pictured the procession, all in holyday
+ attire,</p>
+
+ <p>And the laugh and look of gladness, when they see
+ the distant spire;</p>
+
+ <p>Then their love shall kindle newly, and the world be
+ doubly fair,</p>
+
+ <p>In the cool delicious crystal of the summer morning
+ air.</p>
+
+ <p>Tender eyes of Manuela! what has dimmed your
+ lustrous beam?</p>
+
+ <p>'Tis a tear that falls to glitter on the casket of
+ her dream.</p>
+
+ <p>Ah, the eye of love must brighten, if its watches
+ would be true,</p>
+
+ <p>For the star is falsely mirrored in the rose's drop
+ of dew!</p>
+
+ <p>But her eager eyes rekindle, and her breathless
+ bosom stills,</p>
+
+ <p>As she sees a horseman moving in the shadow of the
+ hills;</p>
+
+ <p>Now in love and fond thanksgiving they may loose
+ their pearly tides&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>'Tis the alazan that gallops, 'tis Bernardo's self
+ that rides!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>From Fraser's Magazine for July.</h4>
+
+ <h3>LEDRU ROLLIN.</h3>
+
+ <p>Ledru Rollin is now in his forty-fourth or forty-fifth year,
+ having been born in 1806 or 1807. He is the grandson of the
+ famous <i>Prestidigateur</i>, or Conjurer Comus, who, about
+ four or five-and-forty years ago, was in the acme of his fame.
+ During the Consulate, and a considerable portion of the Empire,
+ Comus traveled from one department of France to the other, and
+ is even known to have extended his journeys beyond the Rhine
+ and the Moselle on one side, and beyond the RhĂ´ne and Garonne
+ on the other. Of all the conjurers of his day he was the most
+ famous and the most successful, always, of course, excepting
+ that Corsican conjurer who ruled for so many years the
+ destinies of France. From those who have seen that famous
+ trickster, we have learned that the Charleses, the Alexanders,
+ even the Robert Houdins, were children compared with the
+ magical wonder-worker of the past generation. The fame of Comus
+ was enormous, and his gains proportionate; and when he had
+ shuffled off this mortal coil it was found he had left to his
+ descendants a very ample&mdash;indeed, for France, a very large
+ fortune. Of the descendants in a right line, his grandson,
+ Ledru Rollin, was his favorite, and to him the old man left the
+ bulk of his fortune, which, during the minority of Ledru
+ Rollin, grew to a sum amounting to nearly, if not fully, £4,000
+ per annum.</p>
+
+ <p>The scholastic education of the young man who was to inherit
+ this considerable fortune, was nearly completed during the
+ reign of Louis XVIII., and shortly after Charles X. ascended
+ the throne <i>il commençait à faire sur droit</i>, as they
+ phrase it in the <i>pays Latin</i>. Neither during the reign of
+ Louis XVIII., nor indeed now, unless in the exact and physical
+ sciences, does Paris afford a very solid and substantial
+ education. Though the Roman poets and historians are tolerably
+ well studied and taught, yet little attention is paid to Greek
+ literature. The physical and exact sciences are unquestionably
+ admirably taught at the Polytechnique and other schools; but
+ neither at the College of St. Barbe, nor of Henry IV., can a
+ pupil be so well grounded in the rudiments and humanities as in
+ our grammar and public schools. A studious, pains-taking, and
+ docile youth, will, no doubt, learn a great deal, no matter
+ where he has been placed in pupilage; but we have heard from a
+ contemporary of M. Rollin, that he was not particularly
+ distinguished either for his industry or his docility in early
+ life. The earliest days of the reign of Charles X. saw M. Ledru
+ Rollin an <i>étudiant en droit</i> in Paris. Though the schools
+ of law had been re-established during the Consulate pretty much
+ after the fashion in which they existed in the time of Louis
+ the XIV., yet the application of the <i>alumni</i> was fitful
+ and desultory, and perhaps there were no two
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page223"
+ id="page223"></a>[pg 223]</span> classes in France, at the
+ commencement of 1825. who were more imbued with the
+ Voltarian philosophy and the doctrines and principles of
+ Rousseau, than the <i>élèves</i> of the schools of law and
+ medicine.</p>
+
+ <p>Under a king so sceptical and voluptuous, so much of a
+ <i>philosophie</i> and <i>phyrronéste</i>, as Louis XVIII.,
+ such tendencies were likely to spread themselves through all
+ ranks of society&mdash;to permeate from the very highest to the
+ very lowest classes: and not all the lately acquired asceticism
+ of the monarch, his successor, nor all the efforts of the
+ Jesuits could restrain or control the tendencies of the
+ <i>étudiants en droit</i>. What the law-students were
+ antecedently and subsequent to 1825, we know from the
+ <i>Physiologie de l'Homme de Loi</i>; and it is not to be
+ supposed that M. Ledru Rollin, with more ample pecuniary means
+ at command, very much differed from his fellows. After
+ undergoing a three years' course of study, M. Rollin obtained a
+ diploma as a <i>licencié en droit</i>, and commenced his career
+ as <i>stagiare</i> somewhere about the end of 1826 or the
+ beginning of 1827. Toward the close of 1829, or in the first
+ months of 1830, he was, we believe, placed on the roll of
+ advocates; so that he was called to the bar, or, as they say in
+ France, received an advocate, in his twenty-second or
+ twenty-third year.</p>
+
+ <p>The first years of an advocate, even in France, are
+ generally passed in as enforced an idleness as in England.
+ Clients come not to consult the greenhorn of the last term; nor
+ does any <i>avoué</i> among our neighbors, any more than any
+ attorney among ourselves, fancy that an old head is to be found
+ on young shoulders. The years 1830 and 1831 were not marked by
+ any oratorical effort of the author of the <i>Decline of
+ England</i>; nor was it till 1832 that, being then one of the
+ youngest of the bar of Paris, he prepared and signed an opinion
+ against the placing of Paris in a state of siege consequent on
+ the insurrections of June. Two years after he prepared a
+ memoir; or <i>factum</i>, on the affair of the Rue Transonain,
+ and defended Dupoty, accused of <i>complicité morale</i>, a
+ monstrous doctrine invented by the Attorney-General Hebert.
+ From 1834 to 1841 he appeared as counsel in nearly all the
+ cases of <i>émeute</i> or conspiracy where the individuals
+ prosecuted were Republicans, or <i>quasi</i>-Republicans.
+ Meanwhile, he had become the proprietor and <i>rédacteur en
+ chef</i> of the <i>Reforme</i> newspaper, a political journal
+ of an ultra-Liberal&mdash;indeed of a
+ Republican&mdash;complexion, which was then called of extreme
+ opinions, as he had previously been editor of a legal newspaper
+ called <i>Journal du Palais</i>. <i>La Reforme</i> had been
+ originally conducted by Godefroy Cavaignac, the brother of the
+ general, who continued editor till the period of the fatal
+ illness which preceded his death. The defense of Dupoty, tried
+ and sentenced under the ministry of Thiers to five years'
+ imprisonment, as a regicide, because a letter was found open in
+ the letter-box of the paper of which he was editor, addressed
+ to him by a man said to be implicated in the conspiracy of
+ Quenisset, naturally brought M. Rollin into contact with many
+ of the writers in <i>La Reforme</i>; and these persons, among
+ others Guinard Arago, Etienne Arago, and Flocon, induced him to
+ embark some portion of his fortune in the paper. From one step
+ he was led on to another, and ultimately became one of the
+ chief&mdash;indeed, if not the chief proprietor. The
+ speculation was far from successful in a pecuniary sense, but
+ M. Rollin, in furtherance of his opinions, continued for some
+ years to disburse considerable sums in the support of the
+ journal. By this he no doubt increased his popularity and his
+ credit with the Republican party, but it cannot be denied that
+ he very materially injured his private fortune. In the earlier
+ portion of his career, M. Rollin was, it is known, not
+ indisposed to seek a seat in the Chamber, under the auspices of
+ M. Barrot, but subsequently to his connection with the
+ <i>Reforme</i>, he had himself become thoroughly known to the
+ extreme party in the departments, and on the death of Gamier
+ Pagès the elder, was elected in 1841 for Le Mans, in La
+ Sarthe.</p>
+
+ <p>In addressing the electors, after his return, M. Rollin
+ delivered a speech much more Republican than Monarchical. For
+ this he was sentenced to four months' imprisonment, but the
+ sentence was appealed against and annulled on a technical
+ ground, and the honorable member was ultimately acquitted by
+ the Cour d'Assizes of Angers.</p>
+
+ <p>The parliamentary <i>début</i> of M. Rollin took place in
+ 1842. His first speech was delivered on the subject of the
+ secret-service money. The elocution was easy and flowing, the
+ manner oratorical, the style somewhat turgid and bombastic. But
+ in the course of the session M. Rollin improved, and his
+ discourse on the modification of the criminal law, on other
+ legal subjects, and on railways, were more sober specimens of
+ style. In 1843 and 1844 M. Rollin frequently spoke; but though
+ his speeches were a good deal talked of outside the walls of
+ the Chamber, they produced little effect within it.
+ Nevertheless, it was plain to every candid observer that he
+ possessed many of the requisites of the orator&mdash;a good
+ voice, a copious flow of words, considerable energy and
+ enthusiasm, a sanguine temperament and jovial and generous
+ disposition. In the sessions of 1845-46, M. Rollin took a still
+ more prominent part. His purse, his house in the Rue Tournon,
+ his counsels and advice, were all placed at the service of the
+ men of the movement; and by the beginning of 1847 he seemed to
+ be acknowledged by the extreme party as its most conspicuous
+ and popular member. Such indeed was his position when the
+ electoral reform banquets, on a large scale, began to take
+ place in the autumn of 1847. These banquets, promoted and
+ forwarded by the principal members of the opposition to serve
+ the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page224"
+ id="page224"></a>[pg 224]</span> cause of electoral reform,
+ were looked on by M. Rollin and his friends in another
+ light. While Odillon Barrot, Duvergier d'Haurunne, and
+ others, sought by means of them to produce an enlarged
+ constituency, the member for Sarthe looked not merely to
+ functional, but to organic reform&mdash;not merely to an
+ enlargement of the constituency, but to a change in the form
+ of the government. The desire of Barrot was <i>à la vérité à
+ la sincerité des institutions conquises en Juillet</i> 1830;
+ whereas the desire of Rollin was, <i>à l'amélioration des
+ classes laborieuses</i>; the one was willing to go on with
+ the dynasty of Louis Philippe and the Constitution of July
+ improved by diffusion and extension of the franchise, the
+ other looked to a democratic and social republic. The result
+ is now known. It is not here our purpose to go over the
+ events of the Revolution of February 1848, but we may be
+ permitted to observe, that the combinations by which that
+ event was effected were ramified and extensive, and were
+ long silently and secretly in motion.</p>
+
+ <p>The personal history of M. Rollin, since February 1848, is
+ well-known and patent to all the world. He was the <i>ame
+ damnée</i> of the Provisional Government&mdash;the man whose
+ extreme opinions, intemperate circulars, and vehement patronage
+ of persons professing the political creed of
+ Robespierre&mdash;indisposed all moderate men to rally around
+ the new system. It was in covering Ledru Rollin with the shield
+ of his popularity that Lamartine lost his own, and that he
+ ceased to be the political idol of a people of whom he must
+ ever be regarded as one of the literary glories and
+ illustrations. On the dissolution of the Provisional
+ Government, Ledru Rollin constituted himself one of the leaders
+ of the movement party. In ready powers of speech and in
+ popularity no man stood higher; but he did not possess the
+ power of restraining his followers or of holding them in hand,
+ and the result was, that instead of being their leader he
+ became their instrument. Fond of applause, ambitious of
+ distinction, timid by nature, destitute of pluck, and of that
+ rarer virtue moral courage, Ledru Rollin, to avoid the
+ imputation of faint-heartedness, put himself in the foreground,
+ but the measures of his followers being ill-taken, the plot in
+ which he was mixed up egregiously failed, and he is now in
+ consequence an exile in England.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>GENERAL GARIBALDI.</h3>
+
+ <p>MR. FILIPANTE gives the following notice of this Italian
+ revolutionary leader in a communication to the <i>Evening
+ Post</i>. "His exertions in behalf of the liberal movement in
+ Italy have been indefatigable. As active as he was courageous,
+ he was among the first to take up arms against Austrian
+ tyranny, and the last to lay them down. Even when the
+ triumvirate at Rome had been overthrown, and the most ardent
+ spirits despaired of the republic, Garibaldi and his noble band
+ of soldiers refused to yield; they maintained a vigorous
+ resistance to the last, and only quitted the ground when the
+ cause was so far gone that their own success would have been of
+ no general advantage.</p>
+
+ <p>"The General is about forty years of age. He was in early
+ life an officer in the Sardinian service, but, engaging in an
+ unsuccessful revolt against the government of Charles Albert,
+ he was compelled to leave his native land. He fled to
+ Montevideo, where he fought with distinction in the wars
+ against Rosas. At the breaking out of the late revolution he
+ returned. His military capacities being well known, he was
+ entrusted with a command; and throughout the war his services
+ were most efficient. He defeated the allied troops of Austria,
+ France, and Naples, in several battles; his name, in fact,
+ became a terror, and when the republic fell, and he was
+ compelled to retire to the Appenines, the invaders felt that
+ his return would be more formidable than any other event.</p>
+
+ <p>"From Italy he went to Morocco, where he has since lived.
+ But his friends, desiring that his great energies should be
+ actively employed, have offered him the command of a merchant
+ ship, which he has accepted. He will, therefore, hereafter be
+ engaged in the peaceful pursuits of commerce, unless his
+ country should again require his exertions."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>CRIME, IN ENGLAND AND FRANCE.</h3>
+
+ <p>In recent discussions of the effects of education upon
+ morals, the relative conditions of Great Britain and France in
+ this respect have often been referred to. The following
+ paragraph shows that the statistics in the case have not been
+ well understood:</p>
+
+ <p>"In a recent sitting of the Academy of Moral and Political
+ Sciences, M. Leon Faucher, the representative, read a paper on
+ the state of crime in England; and some of the journals have
+ taken advantage of this to institute a comparison with returns
+ of the criminality of France, recently published by the
+ Government&mdash;the result being anything but flattering to
+ England. But M. Faucher, the Academy, the newspapers, and
+ almost everybody else in France, seems to be entirely ignorant
+ that it is impossible to institute a comparison between the
+ amount of crime in England and the amount of crime in France,
+ inasmuch as crimes are not the same in both countries. Thus,
+ for example, it is a felony in England to steal a pair of
+ shoes, the offender is sent before the Court of Assize, and his
+ offense counts in the official returns as a "crime;" in France,
+ on the contrary, a petty theft is considered a <i>délit</i>, or
+ simple offense, is punished by a police magistrate, and figures
+ in the returns as an "offense." With respect to murders, too,
+ the English have only two general names for
+ killing&mdash;murder or manslaughter&mdash;but the French have
+ nearly a dozen categories of killing, of which what the English
+ call murder forms only one. It is the same, in short, with
+ almost every species of crime."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1"
+ name="footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>RURAL HOURS: by a Lady, George P. Putnam, 155 Broadway.
+ 1850.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2"
+ name="footnote2"></a><b>Footnote 2:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>In his early days the President of the Royal Academy
+ painted a very striking portrait of Jane Porter, as
+ "Miranda," and Harlowe painted her in the canoness dress of
+ the order of St. Joachim.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3"
+ name="footnote3"></a><b>Footnote 3:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>In the press of Appleton &amp; Co.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4"
+ name="footnote4"></a><b>Footnote 4:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>A Hunter's Life in South Africa. By R. Gordon Cumming,
+ Esq., of Altyre.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote5"
+ name="footnote5"></a><b>Footnote 5:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag5">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>In California horses are named according to their color.
+ An <i>alazan</i> is a sorrel&mdash;a color generally
+ preferred, as denoting speed and mettle.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote6"
+ name="footnote6"></a><b>Footnote 6:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag6">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The sarape is a knit blanket of many gay colors, worn
+ over the shoulders by an opening in the center, through
+ which the head is thrust.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote7"
+ name="footnote7"></a><b>Footnote 7:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag7">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>Calzoneros are trowsers, generally made of blue cloth or
+ velvet, richly embroidered, and worn over an under pair of
+ white linen. They are slashed up the outside of each leg,
+ for greater convenience in riding, and studded with rows of
+ silver buttons.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote8"
+ name="footnote8"></a><b>Footnote 8:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag8">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The lariat, or riata, as it is indifferently called in
+ California and Mexico, is precisely the same as the lasso
+ of South America.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13711 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+
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+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #13711 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/13711)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The International Weekly Miscellany, Vol.
+1, No. 7, 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 International Weekly Miscellany, Vol. 1, No. 7
+ Of Literature, Art, and Science, August 12, 1850
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 11, 2004 [EBook #13711]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, William Flis, the PG Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team and Cornell University
+
+
+
+
+
+INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MISCELLANY
+
+Of Literature, Art, and Science.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Vol. I. NEW YORK, AUGUST 12, 1850. No. 7.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+WOMEN AND LITERATURE IN FRANCE.
+
+From a sprightly letter from Paris to the _Cologne Gazette_, we
+translate for _The International_ the following account of the
+position of women in the French Republic, together with the
+accompanying gossip concerning sundry ladies whose names have long
+been quite prominently before the public:
+
+"It is curious that the idea of the emancipation of women should have
+originated in France, for there is no country in Europe where the
+sex have so little reason to complain of their position as in this,
+especially at Paris. Leaving out of view a certain paragraph of the
+_Code Civile_--and that is nothing but a sentence in a law-book--and
+looking closely into the features of women's life, we see that they
+are not only queens who reign, but also ministers who govern.
+
+"In France women are engaged in a large proportion of civil
+employments, and may without hesitation devote themselves to art and
+science. It is indeed astonishing to behold the interest with which
+the beautiful sex here enter upon all branches of art and knowledge.
+
+"The ateliers of the painters number quite as many female as male
+students, and there are apparently more women than men who copy the
+pictures in the Louvre. Nothing is more pleasing than to see these
+gentle creatures, with their easels, sitting before a colossal Rubens
+or a Madonna of Raphael. No difficulty alarms them, and prudery is not
+allowed to give a voice in their choice of subjects.
+
+"I have never yet attended a lecture, by either of the professors
+here, but I have found some seats occupied by ladies. Even the
+lectures of Michel Chevalier and Blanqui do not keep back the
+eagerness of the charming Parisians in pursuit of science. That
+Michelet and Edgar Quinet have numerous female disciples is
+accordingly not difficult to believe.
+
+"Go to a public session of the Academy, and you find the '_cercle_'
+filled almost exclusively by ladies, and these laurel-crowned heads
+have the delight of seeing their immortal works applauded by the
+clapping of tenderest hands. In truth, the French savan is uncommonly
+clear in the most abstract things; but it would be an interesting
+question, whether the necessity of being not alone easily intelligible
+but agreeable to the capacity of comprehension possessed by the
+unschooled mind of woman, has not largely contributed to the facility
+and charm which is peculiar to French scientific literature. Read
+for example the discourse on Cabanis, pronounced by Mignet at the
+last session. It would be impossible to write more charmingly, more
+elegantly, more attractively, even upon a subject within the range
+of the fine arts. The works, and especially the historical works, of
+the French, are universally diffused. Popular histories, so-called
+editions for the people, are here entirely unknown; everything that
+is published is in a popular edition, and if as great and various care
+were taken for the education of the people as in Germany, France would
+in this respect be the first country in the world.
+
+"With the increasing influence of monarchical ideas in certain
+circles, the women seem to be returning to the traditions of monarchy,
+and are throwing themselves into the business of making memoirs.
+Hardly have George Sand's Confessions been announced, and already new
+enterprises in the same line are set on foot. The European dancer,
+who is perhaps more famous for making others dance to her music,
+and who has enjoyed a monopoly of cultivated scandal, Lola Montes,
+also intends to publish her memoirs. They will of course contain
+an interesting fragment of German federal politics, and form a
+contribution to German revolutionary literature. Lola herself is still
+too beautiful to devote her own time to the writing. Accordingly, she
+has resorted to the pen of M. Balzac. If Madame Balzac has nothing to
+say against the necessary intimacy with the dangerous Spanish or Irish
+or whatever woman--for Lola Montes is a second Homer--the reading
+world may anticipate an interesting, chapter of life. No writer is
+better fitted for such a work than so profound a man of the world, and
+so keen a painter of character, as Balzac.
+
+"The well-known actress, Mlle. Georges, who was in her prime during
+the most remarkable epoch of the century, and was in relations
+with the most prominent persons of the Empire, is also preparing a
+narrative of her richly varied experiences. Perhaps these attractive
+examples may induce Madame Girardin also to bestow her memoirs upon
+us, and so the process can be repeated infinitely."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+AUTHORS AND BOOKS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Parke Godwin has just given to the public, through Mr. Putnam, a new
+edition of the translation made by himself and some literary friends,
+of Goethe's "Autobiography, or Truth and Poetry from My Life." In his
+new preface Mr. Godwin exposes one of the most scandalous pieces of
+literary imposition that we have ever read of. This translation, with
+a few verbal alterations which mar its beauty and lessen its fidelity,
+has been reprinted in "Bohn's Standard Library," in London, as an
+original English version, in the making of which "the American was of
+_occasional use_," &c. Mr. Godwin is one of our best German scholars,
+and his discourse last winter on the character and genius of Goethe,
+illustrated his thorough appreciation of the Shakspeare of the
+Continent, and that affectionate sympathy which is so necessary to
+the task of turning an author from one language into another. There
+are very few books in modern literature more attractive or more
+instructive to educated men than this Autobiography of Goethe, for
+which we are indebted to him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+John Randolph is the best subject for a biography, that our political
+experience has yet furnished. Who that remembers the long and slender
+man of iron, with his scarcely human scorn of nearly all things
+beyond his "old Dominion," and his withering wit, never restrained
+by any pity, and his passion for destroying all fabrics of policy or
+reputation of which he was not himself the architect, but will read
+with anticipations of keen interest the announcement of a life of
+the eccentric yet great Virginian! Such a work, by the Hon. Hugh
+A. Garland, is in the press of the Appletons. We know little of Mr.
+Garland's capacities in this way, but if his book prove not the most
+attractive in the historical literature of the year, the fault will
+not be in its subject.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Scottish Booksellers have instituted a society for professional
+objects under the title of the "Edinburgh Booksellers' Union." In
+addition to business purposes, they propose to collect and preserve
+books and pamphlets written by or relating to booksellers, printers,
+engravers, or members of collateral professions,--rare editions of
+other works--and generally articles connected with parties belonging
+to the above professions, whether literary, professional, or personal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+D'Israeli abandons himself now-a-days entirely to politics. "The
+forehead high, and gleaming eye, and lip awry, of Benjamin D'Israeli,"
+sung once by _Fraser_ are no longer seen before the title-pages of
+"Wondrous Tales," but only before the Speaker. It is much referred to,
+that in the recent parliamentary commemoration of Sir Robert Peel,
+the Hebrew commoner kept silence; his long war of bitter sarcasm and
+reproach on the defunct statesman was too freshly remembered. Peel
+rarely exerted himself to more advantage than in his replies, to
+D'Israeli, all noticeable for subdued disdain, conscious patriotism,
+and argumentative completeness. For injustice experienced through
+life, the meritorious dead are in a measure revenged by the
+feelings of their accusers or detractors, when the latter retain the
+sensibility which the grave usually excites, and especially amid such
+a chorus of applause from all parties, and a whole people, as we have
+now in England for Sir Robert Peel--the only man in the Empire, except
+Wellington, who had a strictly personal authority.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Dickson, recently of the Medical Department of the New York
+University, and whose ill-health induced the resignation of the chair
+he held there, has returned to Charleston, and we observe that his
+professional and other friends in that city greeted him with a public
+dinner, on the 9th ult. Dr. Dickson we believe is one of the most
+classically elegant writers upon medical science in the United States.
+He ranks with Chapman and Oliver Wendell Holmes in the grace of
+his periods as well as in the thoroughness of his learning and the
+exactness and acuteness of his logic. Like Holmes, too, he is a poet,
+and, generally, a very accomplished _litterateur_. We regret the loss
+that New York sustains in his removal, but congratulate Charleston
+upon the recovery of one of the best known and most loved attractions
+of her society.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. John R. Bartlett's boundary commission will soon be upon the
+field of its activity. We were pleased to see that Mr. Davis, of
+Massachusetts, a few days ago presented in the Senate petitions
+from Edward Everett, Jared Sparks, and others, and from the American
+Academy of Arts and Sciences, at Boston, to the effect that it would
+be of great public utility to attach to the boundary commission to
+run the line between the United States and Mexico, a small corps of
+persons well qualified to make researches in the various departments
+of science.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+William C. Richards, the very clever and accomplished editor of the
+_Southern Literary Gazette_ was the author of "Two Country Sonnets,"
+contributed to a recent number of _The International_, which we
+inadvertently credited to his brother, T. Addison Richards the
+well-known and much esteemed landscape painter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MAJOR POUSSIN, so well-known for his long residence in this country
+as an officer of engineers, and, more recently, as Minister of the
+French republic,--which, intelligent men have no need to be assured,
+he represented with uniform wisdom and manliness,--is now engaged
+at Paris upon a new edition of his important book, _The Power and
+Prospects of the United States_. We perceive that he has lately
+published in the Republican journal _Le Credit_, a translation of the
+American instructions to Mr. Mann, respecting Hungary. In his preface
+to this document, Major Poussin pays the warmest compliments to the
+feelings, measures and policy of our administration, with which he
+contrasts, at the same time, those of the French Government. He
+hopes a great deal for the Democratic cause in Europe from the _moral
+influences_ of the United States.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DR. JOHN W. FRANCIS, one of the most excellent men, as well as one of
+the best physicians of New York, has received from Trinity College,
+Hartford, the degree of Doctor of Laws. We praise the authorities of
+Trinity for this judicious bestowal of its honors. Francis's career
+of professional usefulness and variously successful intellectual
+activity, are deserving such academical recognition. His genial love
+of learning, large intelligence, ready appreciation of individual
+merit, and that genuine love of country which has led him to the
+carefullest and most comprehensive study of our general and particular
+annals, and to the frequentest displays of the sources of its enduring
+grandeur, constitute in him a character eminently entitled to our
+affectionate admiration.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE POEMS OF GRAY, in an edition of singular typographical and
+pictorial beauty, are to be issued as one of the autumn gift-books
+by Henry C. Baird, of Philadelphia. They are to be edited by the
+tasteful and judicious critic, Professor Henry Reed, of the University
+of Pennsylvania, to whom we were indebted for the best edition of
+Wordsworth that appeared during the life of that poet. We have looked
+over Professor Reed's life of Gray, and have seen proofs of the
+admirable engravings with which the work will be embellished. It will
+be dedicated to our American Moxon, JAMES T. FIELDS, as a souvenir.
+we presume, of a visit to the grave of the bard, which the two young
+booksellers made together during a recent tour in Europe. Mr. Baird
+and Mr. Fields are of the small company of publishers, who, if it
+please them, can write their own books. They have both given pleasant
+evidence of abilities in this way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BURNS.--It appears from the Scotch papers that the house in
+Burns-street, Dumfries, in which the bard of "Tam o'Shanter" and his
+wife "bonnie Jean," lived and died, is about to come into the market
+by way of public auction.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"EUROPE, PAST AND PRESENT:" A comprehensive manual of European
+Geography and History, derived from official and authentic sources,
+and comprising not only an accurate geographical and statistical
+description, but also a faithful and interesting history of all
+European States; to which is appended a copious and carefully arranged
+index, by Francis H. Ungewitter, LL.D.,--is a volume of some six
+hundred pages, just published by Mr. Putnam. It has been prepared
+with much well-directed labor, and will be found a valuable and
+comprehensive manual of reference upon all questions relating to the
+history, geographical position, and general statistics of the several
+States of Europe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+M. LIBRI, of whose conviction at Paris (_par contumace_, that is,
+in default of appearance), of stealing books from public libraries,
+we have given some account in _The International_, is warmly and it
+appears to us successfully defended in the Athenæum, in which it is
+alleged that there was not a particle of legal evidence against him.
+M. Libri is, and was at the time of the appearance of the accusation
+against him, a political exile in England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MAJOR RAWLINSON, F.R.S., has published a "Commentary on the Cuneiform
+Inscriptions of Babylon and Assyria," including readings of the
+inscriptions on the Nimroud Obelisk, discovered by Mr. Layard, and a
+brief notice of the ancient kings of Nineveh and Babylon. It was read
+before the Royal Asiatic Society.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REV. DR. WISEMAN, author of the admirable work on the Connection
+between Science and Religion, is to proceed to Rome toward the close
+of the present month to receive the hat of a cardinal. It is many
+years since any English Roman Catholic, resident in England, attained
+this honor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY has published several interesting volumes,
+of which the most important are those of Judge Burnett. An address, by
+William D. Gallagher, its President, on the History and Resources of
+the West and Northwest, has just been issued: and it has nearly ready
+for publication a volume of Mr. Hildreth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE IMPERIAL LIBRARY AT VIENNA has been enriched by a very old Greek
+manuscript on the Advent of Christ, composed by a bishop of the second
+century, named Clement. This manuscript was discovered a short time
+since by M. Waldeck, the philologist, at Constantinople.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. KEIGHTLEY's "History of Greece" has been translated into modern
+Greek and published at Athens.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GUIZOT's book on Democracy, has been prohibited in Austria, through
+General Haynau's influence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WORDSWORTH'S POSTHUMOUS POEM, "The Prelude," is in the press of the
+Appletons, by whose courtesy we are enabled to present the readers
+of _The International_ with the fourth canto of it, before its
+publication in England. The poem is a sort of autobiography in blank
+verse, marked by all the characteristics of the poet--his original
+vein of thought; his majestic, but sometimes diffuse, style of
+speculation; his large sympathies with humanity, from its proudest
+to its humblest forms. It will be read with great avidity by his
+admirers--and there are few at this day who do not belong to that
+class--as affording them a deeper insight into the mind of Wordsworth
+than any of his other works. It is divided into several books, named
+from the different situations or stages of the author's life, or the
+subjects which at any period particularly engaged his attention. We
+believe it will be more generally read than any poem of equal length
+that has issued from the press in this age.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Miss COOPER's "RURAL HOURS"[1] is everywhere commended as one of
+the most charming pictures that have ever appeared of country life.
+The books of the Howitts, delineating the same class of subjects
+in England and Germany, are not to be compared to Miss Cooper's for
+delicate painting or grace and correctness of diction. The Evening
+Post observes:
+
+ "This is one of the most delightful books we have lately
+ taken up. It is a journal of daily observations made by an
+ intelligent and highly educated lady, residing in a most
+ beautiful part of the country, commencing with the spring of
+ 1848, and closing with the end of the winter of 1849. They
+ almost wholly concern the occupations and objects of country
+ life, and it is almost enough to make one in love with such a
+ life to read its history so charmingly narrated. Every day has
+ its little record in this volume,--the record of some rural
+ employment, some note on the climate, some observation
+ in natural history, or occasionally some trait of rural
+ manners. The arrival and departure of the birds of passage
+ is chronicled, the different stages of vegetation are noted,
+ atmospheric changes and phenomena are described, and the
+ various living inhabitants of the field and forest are made
+ to furnish matter of entertainment for the reader. All this
+ is done with great variety and exactness of knowledge, and
+ without any parade of science. Descriptions of rural holidays
+ and rural amusements are thrown in occasionally, to give a
+ living interest to a picture which would otherwise become
+ monotonous from its uniform quiet. The work is written in
+ easy and flexible English, with occasional felicities of
+ expression. It is ascribed, as we believe we have informed our
+ readers, to a daughter of J. Fenimore Cooper. Our country is
+ full of most interesting materials for a work of this sort;
+ but we confess we hardly expected, at the present time, to see
+ them collected and arranged by so skillful a hand."
+
+[Footnote 1: RURAL HOURS: by a Lady, George P. Putnam, 155 Broadway.
+1850.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE REV. SYDNEY SMITH's "Sketches of Modern Philosophy," remarks the
+Tribune, "consist of a course of popular lectures on the subject,
+delivered in the Royal Institution of London in the years 1804-5-6.
+As a contribution to the science of which they profess to treat, their
+claims to respect are very moderate. Indeed, no one would ridicule any
+pretensions of that kind with more zeal than the author himself. The
+manuscripts were left in an imperfect state, Sydney Smith probably
+supposing that no call would ever be made for their publication.
+They were written merely for popular effect, to be spoken before
+a miscellaneous audience, in which any abstract topics of moral
+philosophy would be the last to awaken an interest. The title of
+the book is accordingly a misnomer. It would lead no one to suspect
+the rich and diversified character of its contents. They present no
+ambitious attempts at metaphysical disquisition. They are free from
+dry technicalities of ethical speculation. They have no specimens of
+logical hair-splitting, no pedantic array of barren definitions, no
+subtle distinctions proceeding from an ingenious fancy, and without
+any foundation in nature. On the contrary, we find in this volume a
+series of lively, off-hand, dashing comments on men and manners, often
+running into broad humor, and always marked with the pungent common
+sense that never forsook the facetious divine. His remarks on the
+conduct of the understanding, on literary habits, on the use and value
+of books, and other themes of a similar character, are for the most
+part instructive and practical as well as piquant, and on the whole,
+the admirers of Sydney Smith will have no reason to regret the
+publication of the volume."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[FROM THE LONDON TIMES.]
+
+BIOGRAPHY OF SIR ROBERT PEEL.
+
+In the following brief narrative of the principal facts in the life of
+the great statesman who has just been snatched from among us, we must
+disclaim all intention of dealing with his biography in any searching
+or ambitious spirit. The national loss is so great, the bereavement
+is so sudden, that we cannot sit down calmly either to eulogize or
+arraign the memory of the deceased. We cannot forget that it was not
+a week ago we were occupied in recording and commenting upon his last
+eloquent address to that assembly which had so often listened with
+breathless attention to his statesmanlike expositions of policy. We
+could do little else when the mournful intelligence reached us that
+Sir Robert Peel was no more, than pen a few expressions of sorrow
+and respect. Even now the following imperfect record of facts must
+be accepted as a poor substitute for the biography of that great
+Englishman whose loss will be felt almost as a private bereavement by
+every family throughout the British Empire:--
+
+Sir Robert Peel was in the 63d year of his age, having been born near
+Bury, in Lancashire, on the 5th of February, 1788. His father was a
+manufacturer on a grand scale, and a man of much natural ability, and
+of almost unequaled opulence. Full of a desire to render his son and
+probable successor worthy of the influence and the vast wealth which
+he had to bestow, the first Sir Robert Peel took the utmost pains
+personally with the early training of the future prime minister. He
+retained his son under his own immediate superintendence until he
+arrived at a sufficient age to be sent to Harrow. Lord Byron, his
+contemporary at Harrow, was a better declaimer and a more amusing
+actor, but in sound learning and laborious application to school
+duties young Peel had no equal. He had scarcely completed his 16th
+year when he left Harrow and became a gentleman commoner of Christ
+Church, Oxford, where he took the degree of A.B., in 1808, with
+unprecedented distinction.
+
+The year 1809 saw him attain his majority, and take his seat in the
+House of Commons as a member for Cashel, in Tipperary.
+
+The first Sir Robert Peel had long been a member of the House of
+Commons, and the early efforts of his son in that assembly were
+regarded with considerable interest, not only on account of his
+University reputation, but also because he was the son of such a
+father. He did not, however, begin public life by staking his fame on
+the results of one elaborate oration; on the contrary, he rose now and
+then on comparatively unimportant occasions; made a few brief modest
+remarks, stated a fact or two, explained a difficulty when he happened
+to understand the matter in hand better than others, and then sat down
+without taxing too severely the patience or good nature of an auditory
+accustomed to great performances. Still in the second year of his
+parliamentary course he ventured to make a set speech, when, at the
+commencement of the session of 1810, he seconded the address in
+reply to the King's speech. Thenceforward for nineteen years a more
+highflying Tory than Mr. Peel was not to be found within the walls of
+parliament. Lord Eldon applauded him as a young and valiant champion
+of those abuses in the state which were then fondly called "the
+institutions of the country." Lord Sidmouth regarded him as the
+rightful political heir, and even the Duke of Cumberland patronized
+Mr. Peel. He further became the favorite _eleve_ of Mr. Perceval, the
+first lord of the treasury, and entered office as under-secretary
+for the home department. He continued in the home department for two
+years, not often speaking in parliament, but rather qualifying himself
+for those prodigious labors in debate, in council, and in office,
+which it has since been his lot to encounter and perform.
+
+In May, 1812, Mr. Perceval fell by the hand of an assassin, and the
+composition of the ministry necessarily underwent a great change. The
+result, so far as Mr. Peel was concerned, was, that he was appointed
+Chief Secretary to the Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland. Mr. Peel had only
+reached his 26th year when, in the month of September, 1812, the
+duties of that anxious and laborious position were entrusted to his
+hands. The legislative union was then but lately consummated, and the
+demand for Catholic emancipation had given rise to an agitation of
+only very recent date. But, in proportion to its novelty, so was its
+vigor. Mr. Peel was, therefore, as the representative of the old tory
+Protestant school, called upon to encounter a storm of unpopularity,
+such as not even an Irish secretary has ever been exposed to. The
+late Mr. O'Connell in various forms poured upon Mr. Peel a torrent
+of invective which went beyond even his extraordinary performances
+in the science of scolding. At length he received from Mr. Peel a
+hostile message. Negotiations went on for three or four days, when
+Mr. O'Connell was taken into custody and bound over to keep the peace
+toward all his fellow-subjects in Ireland. Mr. Peel and his friend
+immediately went to England, and subsequently proceeded to the
+continent. Mr. O'Connell followed them to London, but the police were
+active enough to bring him before the chief justice, when he entered
+into recognizances to keep the peace toward all his majesty's
+subjects; and so ended one of the few personal squabbles in which Mr.
+Peel had ever been engaged. For six years he held the office of chief
+secretary to the lord-lieutenant, at a time when the government was
+conducted upon what might be called "anti-conciliation principles."
+The opposite course was commenced by Mr. Peel's immediate successor,
+Mr. Charles Grant, now Lord Glenelg.
+
+That a chief secretary so circumstanced, struggling to sustain extreme
+Orangeism in its dying agonies, should have been called upon to
+encounter great toil and anxiety is a truth too obvious to need
+illustration. That in these straits Mr. Peel acquitted himself with
+infinite address was as readily acknowledged at that time as it has
+ever been even in the zenith of his fame. He held office in that
+country under three successive viceroys, the Duke of Richmond, Earl
+Whitworth, and Earl Talbot, all of whom have long since passed away
+from this life, their names and their deeds long forgotten. But the
+history of their chief secretary happens not to have been composed
+of such perishable materials, and we now approach one of the most
+memorable passages of his eventful career. He was chairman of the
+great bullion committee; but before he engaged in that stupendous task
+he had resigned the chief secretaryship of Ireland. As a consequence
+of the report of that committee, he took charge of and introduced the
+bill for authorizing a return to cash payments which bears his name,
+and which measure received the sanction of parliament in the year
+1819. That measure brought upon Mr. Peel no slight or temporary odium.
+The first Sir Robert Peel was then alive, and altogether differed from
+his son as to the tendency of his measure. It was roundly asserted at
+the time, and very faintly denied, that it rendered that gentleman a
+more wealthy man, by something like half a million sterling, than he
+had previously been. The deceased statesman, however, must, in common
+justice, be acquitted of any sinister purpose.
+
+This narrative now reaches the year 1820, when we have to relate the
+only domestic event in the history of Sir Robert Peel which requires
+notice. On the 8th of June, being then in the 33d year of his age,
+he married Julia, daughter of General Sir John Floyd, who had then
+attained the age of 25.
+
+Two years afterward there was a lull in public affairs, which gave
+somewhat the appearance of tranquillity. Lord Sidmouth was growing
+old, he thought that his system was successful, and that at length he
+might find repose. He considered it then consistent with his public
+duty to consign to younger and stronger hands the seals of the home
+department. He accepted a seat in the cabinet without office, and
+continued to give his support to Lord Liverpool, his ancient political
+chief. In permitting his mantle to fall upon Mr. Peel, he thought he
+was assisting to invest with authority one whose views and policy were
+as narrow as his own, and whose practise in carrying them out would
+be not less rigid and uncompromising. But, like many others, he lived
+long enough to be grievously disappointed by the subsequent career of
+him whom the liberal party have since called "the great minister of
+progress," and whom their opponents have not scrupled to designate
+by appellations not to be repeated in these hours of sorrow and
+bereavement. On the 17th of January, 1822, Mr. Peel was installed at
+the head of the home department, where he remained undisturbed till
+the political demise of Lord Liverpool in the spring of 1827. The most
+distinguished man that has filled the chair of the House of Commons
+in the present century was Charles Abbott, afterward Lord Colchester.
+In the summer of 1817 he had completed sixteen years of hard service
+in that eminent office, and he had represented the University for
+eleven years. His valuable labors having been rewarded with a pension
+and a peerage, he took his seat, full of years and honors, among
+the hereditary legislators of the land, and left a vacancy in the
+representation of his _alma mater_, which Mr. Peel above all living
+men was deemed the most fitting person to occupy. At that time he was
+an intense tory--or as the Irish called him, an Orange Protestant
+of the deepest dye--one prepared to make any sacrifice for the
+maintenance of church and state as established by the revolution of
+1688. Who, therefore, so fit as he to represent the loyalty, learning,
+and orthodoxy of Oxford? To have done so had been the object of Mr.
+Canning's young ambition: but in 1817 he could not be so ungrateful to
+Liverpool as to reject its representation even for the early object
+of his parliamentary affections. Mr. Peel, therefore, was returned
+without opposition, for that constituency which many consider the most
+important in the land--with which he remained on the best possible
+terms for twelve years. The question of the repeal of the penal
+laws affecting the Roman Catholics, which severed so many political
+connections, was, however, destined to separate Mr. Peel from Oxford.
+In 1828 rumors of the coming change were rife, and many expedients
+were devised to extract his opinions on the Catholic question. But
+with the reserve which ever marked his character, left all curiosity
+at fault. At last, the necessities of the government rendered further
+concealment impossible, and out came the truth that he was no longer
+an Orangeman. The ardent friends who had frequently supported
+his Oxford elections, and the hot partisans who shouted "Peel and
+Protestantism," at the Brunswick Clubs, reviled him for his defection
+in no measured terms. On the 4th of February, 1829, he addressed a
+letter to the vice-chancellor of Oxford, stating, in many well-turned
+phrases, that the Catholic question must forthwith be adjusted, under
+advice in which he concurred; and that, therefore, he considered
+himself bound to resign that trust which the University had during so
+many years confided to his hands. His resignation was accepted; but as
+the avowed purpose of that important step was to give his constituents
+an opportunity of pronouncing an opinion upon a change of policy,
+he merely accepted the Chiltern Hundreds with the intention of
+immediately becoming a candidate for that seat in parliament which he
+had just vacated. At this election Mr. Peel was opposed by Sir Robert
+Inglis, who was elected by 755 to 609. Mr. Peel was, therefore,
+obliged to cast himself on the favor of Sir Manasseh Lopez, who
+returned him for Westbury, in Wiltshire, which constituency he
+continued to represent two years, until at the general election in
+1830 he was chosen for Tamworth, in the representation for which he
+continued for twenty years.
+
+The main features of his official life still remain to be noticed.
+With the exception of Lord Palmerston, no statesman of modern times
+has spent so many years in the civil service of the crown. If no
+account be taken of the short time he was engaged upon the bullion
+committee in effecting the change in the currency, and in opposing for
+a few months the ministries of Mr. Canning and Lord Goderich, it may
+be stated that from 1810 to 1830 he formed part of the government, and
+presided over it as a first minister in 1834-5, as well as from 1841
+to 1846 inclusive. During the time that he held the office of home
+secretary under Lord Liverpool he effected many important changes
+in the administration of domestic affairs, and many legislative
+improvements of a practical and comprehensive character. But his fame
+as member of parliament was principally sustained at this period of
+his life by the extensive and admirable alterations which he effected
+in the criminal law. Romilly and Mackintosh had preceded him in the
+great work of reforming and humanizing the code of England. For his
+hand, however, was reserved the introduction of ameliorations which
+they had long toiled and struggled for in vain. The ministry through
+whose influence he was enabled to carry these reforms lost its chief
+in Lord Liverpool during the early part of the year 1827. When Mr.
+Canning undertook to form a government, Mr. Peel, the late Lord Eldon,
+the Duke of Wellington, and other eminent tories of that day, threw up
+office, and are said to have persecuted Mr. Canning with a degree of
+rancor far outstripping the legitimate bounds of political hostility.
+Lord George Bentinck said "they hounded to the death my illustrious
+relative"; and the ardor of his subsequent opposition to Sir Robert
+Peel evidently derived its intensity from a long cherished sense of
+the injuries supposed to have been inflicted upon Mr. Canning. It
+is the opinion of men not ill informed respecting the sentiments of
+Canning, that he considered Peel as his true political successor--as a
+statesman competent to the task of working out that large and liberal
+policy which he fondly hoped the tories might, however tardily,
+be induced to sanction. At all events, he is believed not to have
+entertained toward Mr. Peel any personal hostility, and to have stated
+during his short-lived tenure of office that that gentleman was the
+only member of his party who had not treated him with ingratitude and
+unkindness.
+
+In January, 1828, the Wellington ministry took office and held it till
+November, 1830. Mr. Peel's reputation suffered during this period
+very rude shocks. He gave up, as already stated, his anti-Catholic
+principles, lost the force of twenty years' consistency, and under
+unheard-of disadvantages introduced the very measure he had spent so
+many years in opposing. The debates on Catholic emancipation, which
+preceded the great reform question, constitute a period in his life,
+which, twenty years ago, every one would have considered its chief
+and prominent feature. There can be no doubt that the course he then
+adopted demanded greater moral courage than at any previous period
+of his life he had been called upon to exercise. He believed himself
+incontestibly in the right; he believed, with the Duke of Wellington,
+that the danger of civil war was imminent, and that such an event
+was immeasurably a greater evil than surrendering the constitution
+of 1688. But he was called upon to snap asunder a parliamentary
+connection of twelve years with a great university, in which the most
+interesting period of his youth had been passed; to encounter the
+reproaches of adherents whom he had often led in well-fought contests
+against the advocates of what was termed "civil and religious
+liberty;" to tell the world that the character of public men for
+consistency, however precious, is not to be directly opposed to
+the common weal; and to communicate to many the novel as well as
+unpalatable truth that what they deemed "principle" must give way to
+what he called "expediency."
+
+When he ceased to be a minister of the crown, that general movement
+throughout Europe which succeeded the deposition of the elder branch
+of the Bourbons rendered parliamentary reform as unavoidable as two
+years previously Catholic emancipation had been. He opposed this
+change, no doubt with increased knowledge and matured talents, but
+with impaired influence and few parliamentary followers. The history
+of the reform debates will show that Sir Robert Peel made many
+admirable speeches, which served to raise his reputation, but never
+for a moment turned the tide of fortune against his adversaries, and
+in the first session of the first reformed parliament he found himself
+at the head of a party that in numbers little exceeded one hundred. As
+soon as it was practicable he rallied his broken forces; either he or
+some of his political friends gave them the name of "Conservatives,"
+and it required but a short interval of reflection and observation
+to prove to his sagacious intellect that the period of reaction was
+at hand. Every engine of party organization was put into vigorous
+activity, and before the summer of 1834 reached its close he was at
+the head of a compact, powerful, and well-disciplined opposition. Such
+a high impression of their vigor and efficiency had King William IV
+received, that when, in November, Lord Althorp became a peer, and the
+whigs therefore lost their leader to the House of Commons, his Majesty
+sent in Italy to summon Sir Robert Peel to his councils, with a view
+to the immediate formation of a conservative ministry. He accepted
+this responsibility, though he thought the King had mistaken the
+condition of the country and the chances of success which had awaited
+his political friends. A new House of Commons was instantly called,
+and for nearly three months Sir Robert Peel maintained a struggle
+against the most formidable opposition that for nearly a century any
+minister had been called to encounter. At no time did his command of
+temper, his almost exhaustless resources of information, his vigorous
+and comprehensive intellect appear to create such astonishment or draw
+forth such unbounded admiration as in the early part of 1835. But,
+after a well-fought contest he retired once more into the opposition
+till the close of the second Melbourne Administration in 1841. It
+was in April, 1835, that Lord Melbourne was restored to power, but
+the continued enjoyment of office did not much promote the political
+interests of his party, and from various causes the power of the
+whigs began to decline. The commencement of a new reign gave them some
+popularity, but in the new House of Commons, elected in consequence
+of that event, the conservative party were evidently gaining strength;
+still, after the failure of 1834-5, it was no easy task to dislodge an
+existing ministry, and at the same time to be prepared with a cabinet
+and a party competent to succeed them. Sir Robert Peel, therefore,
+with characteristic caution, "bided his time", conducting the business
+of opposition throughout the whole of this period with an ability and
+success of which history affords few examples. He had accepted the
+Reform Bill as the established law of England, and as the system upon
+which the country was thenceforward to be governed. He was willing
+to carry it out in its true spirit, but he would proceed no further.
+He marshaled his opposition upon the principle of resistance to any
+further organic changes, and he enlisted the majority of the peers
+and nearly the whole of the country gentlemen of England in support
+of the great principle of protection to British industry. The little
+maneuvres and small political intrigues of the period are almost
+forgotten, and the remembrance of them is scarcely worthy of revival.
+It may, however, be mentioned, that in 1839 ministers, being left in
+a minority, resigned, and Sir Robert Peel, when sent for by the Queen,
+demanded that certain ladies in the household of her majesty,--the
+near relatives of eminent whig politicians,--should be removed
+from the personal service of the sovereign. As this was refused,
+he abandoned for the time any attempt to form a government, and his
+opponents remained in office till September, 1841. It was then Sir
+Robert Peel became the first lord of the treasury, and the Duke of
+Wellington, without office, accepted a seat in the cabinet, taking
+the management of the House of Lords. His ministry was formed on
+protectionist principles, but the close of its career was marked by
+the adoption of free trade doctrines differing in the widest and most
+liberal sense. Sir Robert Peel's sense of public duty impelled him
+once more to incur the odium and obliquy which attended a fundamental
+change of policy, and a repudiation of the political partizans
+by whose ardent support a minister may have attained office and
+authority. It was his fate to encounter more than any man ever did,
+that hostility which such conduct, however necessary, never fails
+to produce. This great change in our commercial policy, however
+unavoidable, must be regarded as the proximate cause of his final
+expulsion from office in July, 1846. His administration, however, had
+been signalized by several measures of great political importance.
+Among the earliest and most prominent of these were his financial
+plans, the striking feature of which was an income-tax; greatly
+extolled for the exemption it afforded from other burdens pressing
+more severely on industry, but loudly condemned for its irregular and
+unequal operation, a vice which has since rendered its contemplated
+increase impossible.
+
+Of the ministerial life of Sir Robert Peel little more remains to be
+related except that which properly belongs rather to the history of
+the country than to his individual biography. But it would be unjust
+to the memory of one of the most sagacious statesman that England ever
+produced to deny that his latest renunciation of political principles
+required but two short years to attest the vital necessity of that
+unqualified surrender. If the corn laws had been in existence at the
+period when the political system of the continent was shaken to its
+centre and dynasties crumbled into dust, a question would have been
+left in the hands of the democratic party of England, the force of
+which neither skill nor influence could then have evaded. Instead
+of broken friendships, shattered reputations for consistency, or
+diminished rents, the whole realm of England might have borne a
+fearful share in that storm of wreck and revolution which had its
+crisis in the 10th of April, 1848.
+
+In the course of his long and eventful life many honors were conferred
+upon Sir Robert Peel. Wherever he went, and almost at all times,
+he attracted universal attention, and was always received with the
+highest consideration. At the close of 1836 the University of Glasgow
+elected him Lord Rector, and the conservatives of that city, in
+January, 1837, invited him to a banquet at which three thousand
+gentlemen assembled to do honor to their great political chief. But
+this was only one among many occasions on which he was "the great
+guest." Perhaps the most remarkable of these banquets was that given
+to him in 1835 at Merchant Tailors' Hall by three hundred members of
+the House of Commons. Many other circumstances might be related to
+illustrate the high position which Sir Robert Peel occupied. Anecdotes
+innumerable might be recorded to show the extraordinary influence in
+Parliament which made him "the great commoner" of the age; for Sir
+Robert Peel was not only a skillful and adroit debater, but by many
+degrees the most able and one of the most eloquent men in either house
+of parliament. Nothing could be more stately or imposing than the
+long array of sounding periods in which he expounded his doctrines,
+assailed his political adversaries, or vindicated his own policy. But
+when the whole land laments his loss, when England mourns the untimely
+fate of one of her noblest sons, the task of critical disquisition
+upon literary attainments or public oratory possesses little
+attraction. It may be left for calmer moments, and a more distant
+time, to investigate with unforgiving justice the sources of his
+errors, or to estimate the precise value of services which the
+public is now disposed to regard with no other feelings than those of
+unmingled gratitude.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+FROM THE ART-JOURNAL.
+
+MEMORIES OF MISS JANE PORTER.
+
+BY MRS. S.C. HALL.
+
+The frequent observation of foreigners is, that in England we have
+few "celebrated women." Perhaps they mean that we have few who are
+"notorious;" but let us admit that in either case they are right; and
+may we not express our belief in its being better for women and for
+the community that such is the case. "Celebrity" rarely adds to the
+happiness of a woman, and almost as rarely increases her usefulness.
+The time and attention required to attain "celebrity," must, except
+under very peculiar circumstances, interfere with the faithful
+discharge of those feminine duties upon which the well-doing of
+society depends, and which shed so pure a halo around our English
+homes. Within these "homes" our heroes, statesmen, philosophers, men
+of letters, men of genius, receive their first impressions, and the
+_impetus_ to a faithful discharge of their after callings as Christian
+subjects of the State.
+
+There are few of such men who do not trace back their resolution,
+their patriotism, their wisdom, their learning--the nourishment of
+all their higher aspirations--to a wise, hopeful, loving-hearted
+and faith-inspired Mother; one who believed in a son's destiny to be
+great; it may be, impelled to such belief rather by instinct than by
+reason: who cherished (we can find no better word) the "Hero-feeling"
+of devotion to what was right; though it might have been unworldly;
+and whose deep heart welled up perpetual love and patience toward the
+overboiling faults and frequent stumblings of a hot youth, which she
+felt would mellow into a fruitful manhood.
+
+The strength and glory of England are in the keeping of the wives
+and mothers of its men; and when we are questioned touching our
+"celebrated women", we may in general terms refer to those who have
+watched over, moulded, and inspired our "celebrated men".
+
+Happy is the country where the laws of God and Nature are held in
+reverence--where each sex fulfills its peculiar duties, and renders
+its sphere a sanctuary! And surely such harmony is blessed by the
+Almighty--for while other nations writhe in anarchy and poverty, our
+own spreads wide her arms to receive all who seek protection or need
+repose.
+
+But if we have few "celebrated" women, few who, impelled either by
+circumstances or the irrepressible restlessness of genius, go forth
+amid the pitfalls of publicity, and battle with the world, either as
+poets, or dramatists, or moralists, or mere tale-tellers in simple
+prose--or, more dangerous still, "hold the mirror up to nature" on
+the stage that mimics life--if we have but few, we have, and have
+had _some_, of whom we are justly proud; women of such well-balanced
+minds, that toil they ever so laboriously in their public and perilous
+paths, their domestic and social duties have been fulfilled with as
+diligent and faithful love as though the world had never been purified
+and enriched by the treasures of their feminine wisdom; yet this
+does not shake our belief, that despite the spotless and well-earned
+reputations they enjoyed, the homage they received, (and it has its
+charm,) and even the blessed consciousness of having contributed to
+the healthful recreation, the improved morality, the diffusion of the
+best sort of knowledge--the _woman_ would have been happier had she
+continued enshrined in the privacy of domestic love and domestic duty.
+She may not think this at the commencement of her career; and at its
+termination, if she has lived sufficiently long to have descended,
+even gracefully, from her pedestal, she may often recall the homage of
+the _past_ to make up for its lack in the _present_. But so perfectly
+is woman constituted for the cares, the affections, the duties--the
+blessed duties of un-public life--that if she give nature way it will
+whisper to her a text, that "celebrity never added to the happiness of
+a true woman". She must look for her happiness to HOME. We would have
+young women ponder over this, and watch carefully, ere the veil is
+lifted, and the hard cruel eye of public criticism fixed upon them.
+No profession is pastime; still less so now than ever, when so many
+people are "clever", though so few are great. We would pray those
+especially who direct their thoughts to literature, to think of what
+they have to say, and why they wish to say it; and above all, to weigh
+what they may expect from a capricious public, against the blessed
+shelter and pure harmonies of private life.
+
+But we have had some--and still have some--"celebrated" women, of whom
+we have said "we may be justly proud". We have done pilgrimage to the
+shrine of Lady Rachel Russell, who was so thoroughly "domestic", that
+the Corinthian beauty of her character would never have been matter
+of history, but for the wickedness of a bad king. We have recorded
+the hours spent with Hannah More; the happy days passed with, and the
+years invigorated by, the advice and influence of Maria Edgworth. We
+might recall the stern and faithful puritanism of Maria Jane Jewsbury,
+and the Old World devotion of the true and high-souled daughter of
+Israel--Grace Aguilar. The mellow tones of Felicia Hemans' poetry
+lingers still among all who appreciate the holy sympathies of religion
+and virtue. We could dwell long and profitably on the enduring
+patience and lifelong labor of Barbara Hofland, and steep a diamond in
+tears to record the memories of L.E.L. We could,--alas! alas! barely
+five and twenty years' acquaintance with literature and its ornaments,
+and the brilliant catalogue is but a _Memento Mori_. Perhaps of all
+this list, Maria Edgworth's life was the happiest: simply because she
+was the most retired, the least exposed to the gaze and observation of
+the world, the most occupied by loving duties toward the most united
+circle of old and young we ever saw assembled in one happy home.
+
+The very young have never, perhaps, read one of the tales of a lady
+whose reputation as a novelist was in its zenith when Walter Scott
+published his first novel. We desire to place a chaplet upon the grave
+of a woman once "celebrated" all over the known world, yet who drew
+all her happiness from the lovingness of home and friends, while her
+life was as pure as her renown was extensive.
+
+In our own childhood romance-reading was prohibited, but earnest
+entreaty procured an exception in favor of the "Scottish Chiefs". It
+was the bright summer, and we read it by moonlight, only disturbed
+by the murmur of the distant ocean. We read it, crouched in the deep
+recess of the nursery-window; we read it until moonlight and morning
+met, and the breakfast-bell ringing out into the soft air from the
+old gable, found us at the end of the fourth volume. Dear old times!
+when it would have been deemed little less than sacrilege to crush a
+respectable romance into a shilling volume, and our mammas considered
+_only_ a five-volume story curtailed of its just proportions.
+
+Sir William Wallace has never lost his heroic ascendancy over us,
+and we have steadily resisted every temptation to open the "popular
+edition" of the long-loved romance, lest what people will call "the
+improved state of the human mind", might displace the sweet memory of
+the mingled admiration and indignation that chased each other, while
+we read and wept, without ever questioning the truth of the absorbing
+narrative.
+
+Yet the "Scottish Chiefs" scarcely achieved the popularity of
+"Thaddeus of Warsaw"--the first romance originated by the active
+brain and singularly constructive power of Jane Porter--produced at an
+almost girlish age.
+
+The hero of "Thaddeus of Warsaw" was really Kosciuszko, the beloved
+pupil of George Washington, the grandest and purest patriot the modern
+world has known. The enthusiastic girl was moved to its composition by
+the stirring times in which she lived, and a personal observation
+of and acquaintance with some of those brave men whose struggles for
+liberty only ceased with their exile or their existence.
+
+Miss Porter placed her standard of excellence on high ground, and--all
+gentle-spirited as was her nature--it was firm and unflinching toward
+what she believed the right and true. We must not therefore judge
+her by the depressed state of "feeling" in these times, when its
+demonstration is looked upon as artificial or affected. Toward the
+termination of the last, and the commencement of the present century,
+the world was roused into an interest and enthusiasm, which now we
+can scarcely appreciate or account for; the sympathies of England were
+awakened by the terrible revolutions of France and the desolation of
+Poland; as a principle, we hated Napoleon, though he had neither act
+nor part in the doings of the democrats; and the sea-songs of Dibdin,
+which our youth _now_ would call uncouth and ungraceful rhymes, were
+key-notes to public feeling; the English of that time were thoroughly
+"awake"--the British Lion had not slumbered through a thirty years'
+peace. We were a nation of soldiers, and sailors, and patriots;
+not of mingled cotton-spinners, and railway speculators, and angry
+protectionists. We do not say which state of things is best or worst,
+we desire merely to account for what may be called the taste for
+_heroic_ literature at that time, and the taste for--we really hardly
+know what to call it--literature of the present, made up, as it
+too generally is, of shreds and patches--bits of gold and bits of
+tinsel--things written in a hurry, to be read in a hurry, and never
+thought of afterward--suggestive rather than reflective, at the best:
+and we must plead guilty to a too great proneness to underrate what
+our fathers probably overrated.
+
+At all events we must bear in mind, while reading or thinking over
+Miss Porter's novels, that in her day, even the exaggeration
+of enthusiasm was considered good tone and good taste. How this
+enthusiasm was _fostered_, not subdued, can be gathered by the
+author's ingenious preface to the, we believe, tenth edition of
+"Thaddeus of Warsaw."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+This story brought her abundant honors, and rendered her society,
+as well as the society of her sister and brother, sought for by all
+who aimed at a reputation for taste and talent. Mrs. Porter, on her
+husband's death, (he was the younger son of a well-connected Irish
+family, born in Ireland, in or near Coleraine, we believe, and a major
+in the Enniskillen Dragoons,) sought a residence for her family in
+Edinburgh, where education and good society are attainable to persons
+of moderate fortunes, if they are "well-born;" but the extraordinary
+artistic skill of her son Robert required a wider field, and she
+brought her children to London sooner than she had intended, that his
+promising talents might be cultivated. We believe the greater part
+of "Thaddeus of Warsaw" was written in London, either in St. Martin's
+Lane, Newport Street, or Gerard Street, Soho, (for in these three
+streets the family lived after their arrival in the metropolis);
+though, as soon as Robert Ker Porter's abilities floated him on the
+stream, his mother and sisters retired, in the brightness of their
+fame and beauty, to the village of Thames Ditton, a residence they
+loved to speak of as their "home." The actual labor of "Thaddeus"--her
+first novel--must have been considerable: for testimony was frequently
+borne to the fidelity of its localities, and Poles refused to believe
+the author had not visited Poland; indeed, she had a happy power in
+describing localities. It was on the publication of Miss Porter's two
+first works in the German language that their author was honored by
+being made a Lady of the Chapter of St. Joachim, and received the
+gold cross of the order from Wurtemberg; but "The Scottish Chiefs" was
+never so popular on the Continent as "Thaddeus of Warsaw", although
+Napoleon honored it with an interdict, to prevent its circulation in
+France. If Jane Porter owed her Polish inspirations so peculiarly
+to the tone of the times in which she lived, she traces back, in
+her introduction to the latest edition of "The Scottish Chiefs." her
+enthusiasm in the cause of Sir William Wallace to the influence an
+old "Scotch wife's" tales and ballads produced upon her mind while in
+early childhood. She wandered amid what she describes as "beautiful
+green banks," which rose in natural terraces behind her mothers house,
+and where a cow and a few sheep occasionally fed. This house stood
+alone, at the head of a little square, near the high school; the
+distinguished Lord Elchies formerly lived in the house, which was very
+ancient, and from those green banks it commanded a fine view of the
+Firth of Forth. While gathering "_gowans_" or other wild-flowers for
+her infant sister, (whom she loved more dearly than her life, during
+the years they lived in most tender and affectionate companionship),
+she frequently encountered this aged woman, with her knitting in her
+hand; and she would speak to the eager and intelligent child of the
+blessed quiet of the land, where the cattle were browsing without fear
+of an enemy; and then she would talk of the awful times of the brave
+Sir William Wallace, when he fought for Scotland, "against a cruel
+tyrant; like unto them whom Abraham overcame when he recovered Lot,
+with all his herds and flocks, from the proud foray of the robber
+kings of the South," who, she never failed to add, "were all rightly
+punished for oppressing the stranger in a foreign land! for the Lord
+careth for the stranger." Miss Porter says that this woman never
+omitted mingling pious allusions with her narrative. "Yet she was a
+person of low degree, dressed in a coarse woollen gown, and a plain
+_Mutch_ cap, clasped under the chin with a silver brooch, which her
+father had worn at the battle of Culloden." Of course she filled with
+tales of Sir William Wallace and the Bruce the listening ears of the
+lovely Saxon child, who treasured them in her heart and brain, until
+they fructified in after years into "The Scottish Chiefs." To these
+two were added "The Pastor's Fireside," and a number of other tales
+and romances. She contributed to several annuals and magazines, and
+always took pains to keep up the reputation she had won, achieving
+a large share of the popularity, to which, as an author, she never
+looked for happiness. No one could be more alive to praise or more
+grateful for attention, but the heart of a genuine, pure, loving
+woman, beat within Jane Porter's bosom, and she was never drawn out of
+her domestic circle by the flattery that has spoiled so many, men as
+well as women. Her mind was admirably balanced by her home affections,
+which remained unsullied and unshaken to the end of her days. She
+had, in common with her three brothers and her charming sister, the
+advantage of a wise and loving mother--a woman pious without cant, and
+worldly-wise without being worldly. Mrs. Porter was born at Durham,
+and when very young bestowed her hand and heart on Major Porter.
+An old friend of the family assures us that two or three of their
+children were born in Ireland, and that certainly Jane was amongst the
+number. Although she left Ireland when in early youth, perhaps almost
+an infant, she certainly must be considered Irish, as her father was
+so both by birth and descent, and esteemed during his brief life as a
+brave and generous gentleman. He died young, leaving his lovely widow
+in straitened circumstances, having only her widow's pension to depend
+on. The eldest son--afterward Colonel Porter--was sent to school by
+his grandfather.
+
+We have glanced briefly at Sir Robert Ker Porter's wonderful
+talents, and Anna Maria, when in her twelfth year, rushed, as
+Jane acknowledged, "prematurely into print." Of Anna Maria we knew
+personally but very little, enough however to recall with a pleasant
+memory her readiness in conversation and her bland and cheerful
+manners. No two sisters could have been more different in bearing and
+appearance; Maria was a delicate blonde, with a _riant_ face, and
+an animated manner--we had said almost _peculiarly Irish_--rushing
+at conclusions, where her more thoughtful and careful sister paused
+to consider and calculate. The beauty of Jane was statuesque, her
+deportment serious yet cheerful, a seriousness quite as natural as
+her younger sister's gaiety; they both labored diligently, but Anna
+Maria's labor was sport when compared to her eldest sister's careful
+toil; Jane's mind was of a more lofty order, she was intense, and felt
+more than she said, while Anna Maria often said more than she felt;
+they were a delightful contrast, and yet the harmony between them was
+complete; and one of the happiest days we ever spent, while trembling
+on the threshold of literature, was with them at their pretty
+road-side cottage in the village of Esher before the death of their
+venerable and dearly beloved mother, whose rectitude and prudence had
+both guided and sheltered their youth, and who lived to reap with
+them the harvest of their industry and exertion. We remember the drive
+there, and the anxiety as to how those very "clever ladies" would
+look, and what they would say; we talked over the various letters
+we had received from Jane, and thought of the cordial invitation to
+their cottage--their "mother's cottage"--as they always called it. We
+remember the old white friendly spaniel who looked at us with blinking
+eyes, and preceded us up stairs; we remember the formal old-fashioned
+courtesy of the venerable old lady, who was then nearly eighty--the
+blue ribands and good-natured frankness of Anna Maria, and the noble
+courtesy of Jane, who received visitors as if she granted an audience;
+this manner was natural to her; it was only the manner of one whose
+thoughts have dwelt more upon heroic deeds, and lived more with heroes
+than with actual living men and women; the effect of this, however,
+soon passed away, but not so the fascination which was in all she
+said and did. Her voice was soft and musical, and her conversation
+addressed to one person rather than to the company at large, while
+Maria talked rapidly to every one, or _for_ every one who chose to
+listen. How happily the hours passed!--we were shown some of those
+extraordinary drawings of Sir Robert, who gained an artists reputation
+before he was twenty, and attracted the attention of West and Shee[2]
+in his mere boyhood. We heard all the interesting particulars of his
+panoramic picture of the Storming of Seringapatam, which, the first
+of its class, was known half over the world. We must not, however,
+be misunderstood--there was neither personal nor family egotism in
+the Porters; they invariably spoke of each other with the tenderest
+affection--but unless the conversation was _forced_ by their
+friends--they never mentioned their own, or each other's works, while
+they were most ready to praise what was excellent in the works of
+others; they spoke with pleasure of their sojourns in London; while
+their mother said, it was much wiser and better for young ladies
+who were not rich, to live quietly in the country, and escape the
+temptations of luxury and display. At that time the "young ladies"
+seemed to us certainly _not_ young: that was about two-and-twenty
+years ago, and Jane Porter was seventy-five when she died. They talked
+much of their previous dwelling at Thames Ditton, of the pleasant
+neighborhood they enjoyed there, though their mother's health and
+their own had much improved since their residence on Esher hill;
+their little garden was bounded at the back by the beautiful park of
+Claremont, and the front of the house overlooked the leading roads,
+broken as they are by the village green, and some noble elms. The view
+is crowned by the high trees of Esher Place; opening from the village
+on that side of the brow of the hill. Jane pointed out the _locale_
+of the proud Cardinal Wolsey's domain, inhabited during the days: of
+his power over Henry VIII., and in their cloudy evening, when that
+capricious monarch's favor changed to bitterest hate. It was the very
+spot to foster her high romance, while she could at the same time
+enjoy the sweets of that domestic converse she loved best of all.
+We were prevented by the occupations and heart-beatings of our own
+literary labors from repeating this visit; and in 1831, four years
+after these well-remembered hours, the venerable mother of a family
+so distinguished in literature and art, rendering their names known
+and honored wherever art and letters flourish, was called HOME. The
+sisters, who had resided ten years at Esher, left it, intending to
+sojourn for a time with their second brother, Doctor Porter, (who
+commenced his career as a surgeon in the navy) in Bristol; but within
+a year the youngest, the light-spirited, bright-hearted Anna Maria
+died; her sister was dreadfully shaken by her loss, and the letters
+we received from her after this bereavement, though containing the
+outpourings of a sorrowing spirit, were full of the certainty of
+that re-union hereafter which became the hope of her life. She soon
+resigned her cottage home at Esher, and found the affectionate welcome
+she so well deserved in many homes, where friends vied with each
+other to fill the void in her sensitive heart. She was of too wise
+a nature, and too sympathizing a habit, to shut out new interests
+and affections, but her _old ones_ never withered, nor were they
+ever replaced; were the love of such a sister-friend--the watchful
+tenderness and uncompromising love of a mother--ever "replaced," to a
+lonely sister _or_ a bereaved daughter! Miss Porters pen had been laid
+aside for some time, when suddenly she came before the world as the
+editor of "Sir Edward Seward's Narrative", and set people hunting over
+old atlases to find out the island where he resided. The whole was
+a clever fiction; yet Miss Porter never confided its authorship, we
+believe, beyond her family circle; perhaps the correspondence and
+documents, which are in the hands of one of her kindest friends (her
+executor), Mr. Shepherd, may throw some light upon a subject which the
+"Quarterly" honored by an article. We think the editor certainly used
+her pen as well as her judgment in the work, and we have imagined that
+it might have been written by the family circle, more in sport than in
+earnest, and then produced to serve a double purpose.
+
+[Footnote 2: In his early days the President of the Royal Academy
+painted a very striking portrait of Jane Porter, as "Miranda,"
+and Harlowe painted her in the canoness dress of the order of St.
+Joachim.]
+
+After her sister's death Miss Jane Porter was afflicted with so
+severe an illness, that we, in common with her other friends, thought
+it impossible she could carry out her plan of journeying to St.
+Petersburgh to visit her brother, Sir Robert Ker Porter, who had
+been long united to a Russian princess, and was then a widower; her
+strength was fearfully reduced; her once round figure become almost
+spectral, and little beyond the placid and dignified expression of
+her noble countenance remained to tell of her former beauty; but her
+resolve was taken; she wished, she said, to see once more her youngest
+and most beloved brother, so distinguished in several careers, almost
+deemed incompatible,--as a painter, an author, a soldier, and a
+diplomatist, and nothing could turn her from her purpose: she reached
+St. Petersburgh in safety, and with apparently improved health, found
+her brother as much courted and beloved there as in his own land,
+and his daughter married to a Russian of high distinction. Sir Robert
+longed to return to England. He did not complain of any illness, and
+everything was arranged for their departure; his final visits were
+paid, all but one to the Emperor, who had ever treated him as a
+friend; the day before his intended journey he went to the palace, was
+graciously received, and then drove home, but when the servant opened
+the carriage-door at his own residence he was dead! One sorrow after
+another pressed heavily upon her; yet she was still the same sweet,
+gentle, holy-minded woman she had ever been, bending with Christian
+faith to the will of the Almighty,--"biding her time".
+
+How differently would she have "watched and waited" had she been
+tainted by vanity, or fixed her soul on the mere triumphs of "literary
+reputation". While firm to her own creed, she fully enjoyed the
+success of those who scramble up--where she bore the standard to the
+heights of Parnassus; she was never more happy than when introducing
+some literary "Tyro" to those who could aid or advise a future career.
+We can speak from experience of the warm interest she took in the
+Hospital for the cure of Consumption, and the Governesses' Benevolent
+Institution; during the progress of the latter, her health was
+painfully feeble, yet she used her personal influence for its success,
+and worked with her own hands for its bazaars. She was ever aiding
+those who could not aid themselves; and all her thoughts, words, and
+deeds, were evidence of her clear, powerful mind and kindly loving
+heart; her appearance in the London _coteries_ was always hailed with
+interest and pleasure; to the young she was especially affectionate;
+but it was in the quiet mornings, or in the long twilight evenings
+of summer, when visiting her cherished friends at Shirley Park, in
+Kensington Square, or wherever she might be located for the time--it
+was then that her former spirit revived, and she poured forth anecdote
+and illustration, and the store of many years' observation, filtered
+by experience and purified by that delightful faith to which she
+held,--that "all things work together for good to them that love the
+Lord". She held this in practice, even more than in theory; you saw
+her chastened yet hopeful spirit beaming forth from her gentle eyes,
+and her sweet smile can never be forgotten. The last time we saw her,
+was about two years ago--in Bristol--at her brother's, Dr. Porter's,
+house in Portland Square: then she could hardly stand without
+assistance, yet she never complained of her own suffering or
+feebleness, all her anxiety was about the brother--then dangerously
+ill, and now the last of "his race." Major Porter, it will be
+remembered, left five children, and these have left only one
+descendant--the daughter of Sir Robert Ker Porter and the Russian
+Princess whom he married, a young Russian lady, whose present name we
+do not even know.
+
+We did not think at our last leave-taking that Miss Porter's fragile
+frame could have so long withstood the Power that takes away all we
+hold most dear; but her spirit was at length summoned, after a few
+days' total insensibility, on the 24th of May.
+
+We were haunted by the idea that the pretty cottage at Esher, where
+we spent those happy hours, had been treated even as "Mrs. Porter's
+Arcadia" at Thames Ditton--now altogether removed; and it was with a
+melancholy pleasure we found it the other morning in nothing changed;
+and it was almost impossible to believe that so many years had passed
+since our last visit. While Mr. Fairholt was sketching the cottage, we
+knocked at the door, and were kindly permitted by two gentle sisters,
+who now inhabit it, to enter the little drawing-room and walk round
+the garden: except that the drawing-room has been re-papered and
+painted, and that there were no drawings and no flowers the room was
+not in the least altered; yet to us it seemed like a sepulcher, and we
+rejoiced to breathe the sweet air of the little garden, and listen to
+a nightingale, whose melancholy cadence harmonized with our feelings.
+
+"Whenever you are at Esher," said the devoted daughter, the last
+time we conversed with her, "do visit my mother's tomb." We did so.
+A cypress flourishes at the head of the grave; and the following
+touching inscription is carved on the stone:--
+
+ Here sleeps in Jesus a Christian widow, JANE PORTER. Obiit
+ June 18th, 1831, ætat. 86; the beloved mother of W. Porter,
+ M.D., of Sir Robert Ker Porter, and of Jane and Anna Maria
+ Porter, who mourn in hope, humbly trusting to be born again
+ with her unto the blessed kingdom of their Lord and Savior.
+ Respect her grave, for she ministered to the poor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+RECENT DEATHS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. KIRBY, THE ENTOMOLOGIST.
+
+The Rev. William Kirby, Rector of Barham, Suffolk, who died on the 4th
+ult. in the ninety-first year of his age, with his faculties little
+impaired, ranked as the father of Entomology in England; and to the
+successful results of his labors may he chiefly attributed the advance
+which has been made in this over other kindred departments of natural
+history. His reputation is based not so much on the discoveries made
+by him in the science as on the manner of its teaching. No man ever
+approached the study of the works of nature with a purer or more
+earnest zeal. His interpretation of the distinguishing characters of
+insects for the purposes of classification has excited the warmest
+approval of entomologists at home and abroad; while his agreeable
+narrative of their wonderful transformations and habits, teeming with
+analyses and anecdote, has a charm for almost every kind of reader.
+
+Mr. Kirby's first work of particular note was the "Monographia Apum
+Angliæ", in two volumes published half a century ago at Ipswich; to
+which town he was much endeared, and in whose Museum, as President,
+under the friendly auspices of its Secretary, Mr. George Ransome, he
+took a lively interest. His admirable work on the Wild Bees of Great
+Britain was composed from materials collected almost entirely by
+himself,--and most of the plates were of his etching. Entomology was
+at that time a comparatively new science in this country, and it is an
+honorable proof of the correctness of the author's views that they are
+still acknowledged to be genuine.
+
+His further progress in entomology is abundantly marked by various
+papers in the "Transactions of the Linnæan Society",--by the
+entomological portion of the Bridgewater Treatise "On the History,
+Habits, and Instincts of Animals,"--and by his descriptions, occupying
+a quarto volume, of the insects of Sir John Richardson's "Fauna
+Boreali-Americana." The name of Kirby will, however, be chiefly
+remembered for the "Introduction on Entomology" written by him in
+conjunction with Mr. Spence. In this work a vast amount of material,
+acquired after many years' unremitting observation of the insect
+world, is mingled together by two different but congenial minds in
+the pleasant form of familiar letters. The charm, based on substantial
+knowledge of the subject, which these letters impart, has caused
+them to be studied with an interest never before excited by any work
+on natural history,--and they have served for the model of many an
+interesting and instructive volume. Whether William Kirby or William
+Spence had the more meritorious share in the composition of these
+Letters, has never been ascertained; for each, in the plenitude of his
+esteem and love for the other, renounced all claim, in favor of his
+coadjutor, to whatever portion of the matter might be most valued.
+
+In addition to the honor of being President of the Museum of his
+county town--in which there is an admirable portrait of him--Mr. Kirby
+was Honorary President of the Entomological Society of London, Fellow
+of the Royal, Linnæan, Geological, and Zoological Societies of the
+same city, and corresponding member of several foreign societies.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The death of REV. DR. GRAY, Professor of Oriental Languages in the
+University of Glasgow, is reported in the Scotch papers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE FINE ARTS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One of the favorite painters of Paris is Ingres, renowned especially
+for the beauty of his designs from the human figure, and the sweetness
+of his coloring. Eight years ago he was commissioned by M. de Luynes,
+who then wore the title of Duke--which, it must be said, he is
+still called by, though the Republic frowns on such aristocratic
+distinctions--to paint two historical pictures in fresco, for a
+country-house near Paris. The subjects were left to the choice of
+the artist, who was to have 100,000 francs (or £20,000) for the two
+pictures, one quarter of which was paid him in advance. During these
+eight years Mr. Ingres has begun various designs, and done his best
+to satisfy himself in the planning and execution of the pictures; but
+in vain did he blot out one design and labor long and earnestly upon
+another--success still fled from his pencil. At last, after eight
+years' fruitless exertion, he despaired, and going to M. de Luynes,
+told him that he could not make the pictures. At the same time he
+offered to return the £5,000; but M. de Luynes, one of the most
+munificent gentlemen in France, refused to receive it. Madame Ingres,
+however, arranged the difficulty. She remembered that during these
+eight years her kitchen had been regularly supplied with vegetables
+from M. de Luynes' garden, and these she insisted on paying for. "Very
+well," said M. de Luynes, "if you will have it so, my gardener shall
+bring you his bill." Accordingly, not long after, the gardener brought
+a bill for twenty-five francs. "My friend," said Madame Ingres to him,
+"you are mistaken in the amount: this is very natural, considering the
+length of the time. I have a better memory: your master will find in
+this envelope the exact sum." When M. de Luynes opened the envelope,
+he found in it bills for twenty thousand francs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LESTER, BRADY & DAVIGNON's "_Gallery of Illustrious Americans_," is
+very favorably noticed generally by the foreign critics. _The Art
+Journal_ says of it: "This work is, as its title imports, of a
+strictly national character, consisting of portraits and biographical
+sketches of twenty-four of the most eminent of the citizens of the
+Republic, since the death of Washington; beautifully lithographed from
+daguerreotypes. Each number is devoted to a portrait and memoir, the
+first being that of General Taylor (eleventh President of the United
+States), the second, of John C. Calhoun. Certainly, we have never seen
+more truthful copies of nature than these portraits; they carry in
+them an indelible stamp of all that earnestness and power for which
+our trans-Atlantic brethren have become famous, and are such heads as
+Lavater would have delighted to look upon. They are, truly, speaking
+likenesses, and impress all who see them with the certainty of their
+accuracy, so self-evident is their character. We are always rejoiced
+to notice a great nation doing honor to its great men; it is a noble
+duty which when properly done honors all concerned therewith. We see
+no reason to doubt that America may in this instance rank with the
+greatest."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DR. WAAGEN, so well known for his writings on Art, is at present in
+England for the purpose of adding to his knowledge of the private
+collection of pictures there, but principally to make himself
+acquainted with ancient illuminated manuscripts in several British
+collections.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A MONUMENT IN HONOR OF COWPER, THE POET, is proposed to be erected in
+Westminster Abbey, from a design by Marshall, the Sculptor, exhibited
+at the Royal Academy in 1849.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SUMMER VACATION.
+
+THE FOURTH BOOK OF WORDSWORTH'S UNPUBLISHED POEM.[3]
+
+
+ Bright was the summer's noon when quickening steps
+ Followed each other till a dreary moor
+ Was crossed, a bare ridge clomb, upon whose top
+ Standing alone, as from a rampart's edge,
+ I overlooked the bed of Windermere,
+ Like a vast river, stretching in the sun.
+ With exultation at my feet I saw
+ Lake, islands, promontories, gleaming bays,
+ A universe of Nature's fairest forms
+ Proudly revealed with instantaneous burst,
+ Magnificent, and beautiful, and gay.
+ I bounded down the hill shouting amain
+ For the old Ferryman; to the shout the rocks
+ Replied, and when the Charon of the flood
+ Had stayed his oars, and touched the jutting pier,
+ I did not step into the well-known boat
+ Without a cordial greeting. Thence with speed
+ Up the familiar hill I took my way
+ Toward that sweet Valley where I had been reared;
+ 'Twas but a shore hour's walk, ere veering round
+ I saw the snow-white church upon her hill
+ Sit like a throned Lady, sending out
+ A gracious look all over her domain.
+ You azure smoke betrays the lurking town;
+ With eager footsteps I advance and reach
+ The cottage threshold where my journey closed.
+ Glad welcome had I, with some tear, perhaps,
+ From my old Dame, so kind and motherly,
+ While she perused me with a parent's pride.
+ The thoughts of gratitude shall fall like dew
+ Upon thy grave, good creature! While my heart
+ Can beat never will I forget they name.
+ Heaven's blessing be upon thee where thou liest
+ After thy innocent and busy stir
+ In narrow cares, thy little daily growth
+ Of calm enjoyments, after eighty years,
+ And more than eighty, of untroubled life,
+ Childless, yet by the strangers to thy blood
+ Honored with little less than filial love.
+ What joy was mine to see thee once again,
+ Thee and they dwelling, and a crowd of things
+ About its narrow precincts all beloved,
+ And many of them seeming yet my own!
+ Why should I speak of what a thousand hearts
+ Have felt, and every man alive can guess?
+ The rooms, the court, the garden were not left
+ Long unsaluted, nor the sunny seat
+ Round the stone table under the dark pine,
+ Friendly to studious or to festive hours;
+ Nor that unruly child of mountain birth,
+ The famous brook, who, soon as he was boxed
+ Within our garden, found himself at once,
+ As if by trick insidious and unkind,
+ Stripped of his voice and left to dimple down
+ (Without an effort and without a will)
+ A channel paved by man's officious care.
+ I looked at him and smiled, and smiled again,
+ And in the press of twenty thousand thought,
+ "Ha," quoth I, "pretty prisoner, are you there!"
+ Well might sarcastic Fancy then have whispered,
+ "An emblem here behold of they own life;
+ In its late course of even days with all
+ Their smooth enthralment;" but the heart was full,
+ Too full for that reproach. My aged Dame
+ Walked proudly at my side: she guided me;
+ I willing, nay--nay, wishing to be led.
+ --The face of every neighbor whom I met
+ Was like a volume to me; some were hailed
+ Upon the road, some busy at their work,
+ Unceremonious greetings interchanged
+ With half the length of a long field between.
+ Among my schoolfellows I scattered round
+ Like recognitions, but with some constraint
+ Attended, doubtless, with a little pride,
+ But with more shame, for my habiliments,
+ The transformation wrought by gay attire.
+ Not less delighted did I take my place
+ At our domestic table: and, dear Friend!
+ In this endeavor simply to relate
+ A Poet's history, may I leave untold
+ The thankfulness with which I laid me down
+ In my accustomed bed, more welcome now
+ Perhaps than if it had been more desired
+ Or been more often thought of with regret;
+ That lowly bed whence I had heard the wind
+ Roar and the rain beat hard, where I so oft
+ Had lain awake on summer nights to watch
+ The moon in splendor couched among the leaves
+ Of a tall ash, that near our cottage stood;
+ Had watched her with fixed eyes while to and fro
+ In the dark summit of the waving tree
+ She rocked with every impulse of the breeze.
+ Among the favorites whom it pleased me well
+ To see again, was one by ancient right
+ Our inmate, a rough terrier of the hills;
+ By birth and call of nature pre-ordained
+ To hunt the badger and unearth the fox
+ Among the impervious crags, but having been
+ From youth our own adopted, he had passed
+ Into a gentler service. And when first
+ The boyish spirit flagged, and day by day
+ Along my veins I kindled with the stir,
+ The fermentation, and the vernal heat
+ Of poesy, affecting private shades
+ Like a sick Lover, then this dog was used
+ To watch me, an attendant and a friend,
+ Obsequious to my steps early and late,
+ Though often of such dilatory walk
+ Tired, and uneasy at the halts I made.
+ A hundred times when, roving high and low,
+ I have been harassed with the toil of verse,
+ Much pains and little progress, and at once
+ Some lovely Image in the song rose up
+ Full-formed, like Venus rising from the sea;
+ Then have I darted forward to let loose
+ My hand upon his back with stormy joy,
+ Caressing him again and yet again.
+ And when at evening on the public way
+ I sauntered, like a river murmuring
+ And talking to itself when all things else
+ Are still, the creature trotted on before;
+ Such was his custom; but whene'er he met
+ A passenger approaching, he would turn
+ To give me timely notice, and straightway,
+ Grateful for that admonishment, I hushed
+ My voice, composed my gait, and, with the air
+ And mein of one whose thoughts are free, advanced
+ To give and take a greeting that might save
+ My name from piteous rumors, such as wait
+ On men suspected to be crazed in brain.
+ Those walks well worth to be prized and loved--
+ Regretted!--that word, too, was on my tongue,
+ But they were richly laden with all good,
+ And cannot be remembered but with thanks
+ And gratitude, and perfect joy of heart--
+ Those walks in all their freshness now came back
+ Like a returning Spring. When first I made
+ Once more the circuit of our little lake,
+ If ever happiness hath lodged with man,
+ That day consummate happiness was mine,
+ Wide-spreading, steady, calm, contemplative.
+ The sun was set, or setting, when I left
+ Our cottage door, and evening soon brought on
+ A sober hour, not winning or serene,
+ For cold and raw the air was, and untuned;
+ But as a face we love is sweetest then
+ When sorrow damps it, or, whatever look
+ It chance to wear, is sweetest if the heart
+ Have fullness in herself; even so with me
+ It fared that evening. Gently did my soul
+ Put off her veil, and, self-transmuted, stood
+ Naked, as in the presence of her God.
+ While on I walked, a comfort seemed to touch
+ A heart that had not been disconsolate:
+ Strength came where weakness was not known to be,
+ At least not felt; and restoration came
+ Like an intruder knocking at the door
+ Of unacknowledged weariness. I took
+ The balance, and with firm hand weighted myself.
+ --Of that external scene which round me lay,
+ Little, in this abstraction, did I see;
+ Remembered less; but I had inward hopes
+ And swellings of the spirit, was rapt and soothed,
+ Conversed with promises, had glimmering views
+ How life pervades the undecaying mind;
+ How the immortal soul with God-like power
+ Informs, creates, and thaws the deepest sleep
+ That time can lay upon her; how on earth,
+ Man, if he do but live within the light
+ Of high endeavors, daily spreads abroad
+ His being armed with strength that cannot fail
+ Nor was there want of milder thoughts, of love
+ Of innocence, and holiday repose;
+ And more than pastoral quiet, 'mid the stir
+ Of boldest projects, and a peaceful end
+ At last, or glorious, by endurance won.
+ Thus musing, in a wood I sat me down
+ Alone, continuing there to muse: the slopes
+ And heights meanwhile were slowly overspread
+ With darkness, and before a rippling breeze
+ The long lake lengthened out its hoary line,
+ And in the sheltered coppice where I sat,
+ Around me from among the hazel leaves,
+ Now here, now there, moved by the straggling wind,
+ Came ever and anon a breath-like sound,
+ Quick as the pantings of the faithful dog,
+ The off and on companion of my work;
+ And such, at times, believing them to be,
+ I turned my head to look if he were there;
+ Then into solemn thought I passed once more.
+ A freshness also found I at this time
+ In human Life, the daily life of those
+ Whose occupations really I loved;
+ The peaceful scene oft filled me with surprise,
+ Changed like a garden in the heat of spring
+ After an eight days' absence. For (to omit
+ The things which were the same and yet appeared
+ Far otherwise) amid this rural solitude.
+ A narrow Vale where each was known to all,
+ 'Twas not indifferent to a youthful mind
+ To mark some sheltering bower or sunny nook,
+ Where an old man had used to sit alone,
+ Now vacant; pale-faced babes whom I had left
+ In arms, now rosy prattlers at the feet
+ Of a pleased grandame tottering up and down;
+ And growing girls whose beauty, filched away
+ With all its pleasant promises, was gone
+ To deck some slighted playmate's homely cheek.
+ Yes, I had something of a subtler sense,
+ And often looking round was moved to smiles
+ Such as a delicate work of humor breeds;
+ I read, without design, the opinions, thoughts,
+ Of those plain-living people now observed
+ With clearer knowledge; with another eye
+ I saw the quiet woodman in the woods,
+ The shepherd roam the hills. With new delight,
+ This chiefly, did I note my gray-haired Dame;
+ Saw her go forth to church or other work
+ Of state, equipped in monumental trim;
+ Short velvet cloak, (her bonnet of the like,)
+ A mantle such as Spanish Cavaliers
+ Wore in old time. Her smooth domestic life,
+ Affectionate without disquietude,
+ Her talk, her business, pleased me; and no less
+ Her clear though sallow stream of piety
+ That ran on Sabbath days a fresher course;
+ With thoughts unfelt till now I saw her read
+ Her Bible on hot Sunday afternoons,
+ And loved the book, when she had dropped asleep
+ And made of it a pillow for her head.
+ Nor less do I remember to have felt,
+ Distinctly manifested at this time,
+ A human-heartedness about my love
+ For objects hitherto the absolute wealth
+ Of my own private being and no more:
+ Which I had loved even as a blessed spirit
+ Or Angel, if he were to dwell on earth,
+ Might love in individual happiness.
+ But now there opened on me other thoughts
+ Of change, congratulation or regret,
+ A pensive feeling! It spread far and wide;
+ The trees, the mountains shared it, and the brooks,
+ The stars of heaven, now seen in their old haunts--
+ White Sirius glittering o'er the southern crags,
+ Orion with his belt, and those fair Seven,
+ Acquaintances of every little child,
+ And Jupiter, my own beloved star!
+ Whatever shadings of mortality,
+ Whatever imports from the world of death
+ Had come among these objects heretofore,
+ Were, in the main, of mood less tender: strong,
+ Deep, gloomy were they, and severe: the scatterings
+ Of awe or tremulous dread, that had given way
+ In latter youth to yearnings of a love
+ Enthusiastic, to delight and hope.
+ As one who hangs down-bending from the side
+ Of a slow-moving boat, upon the breast
+ Of a still water, solacing himself
+ With such discoveries as his eye can make
+ Beneath him in the bottom of the deep,
+ Sees many beauteous sights--weeds, fishes, flowers,
+ Grots, pebbles, roots of trees, and fancies more,
+ Yet often is perplexed and cannot part
+ The shadow from the substance, rocks and sky
+ Mountains and clouds, reflected in the depth
+ Of the clear flood, from things which there abide
+ In their true dwelling; now is crossed by gleam
+ Of his own image, by a sunbeam now,
+ And wavering motions sent he knows not whence,
+ Impediments that make his task more sweet;
+ Such pleasant office have we long pursued
+ Incumbent o'er the surface of past time
+ With like success, nor often have appeared
+ Shapes fairer or less doubtfully discerned
+ Than those to which the Tale, indulgent Friend!
+ Would now direct thy notice. Yet in spite
+ Of pleasure won, and knowledge not withheld,
+ There was an inner falling off--I loved,
+ Loved deeply all that had been loved before
+ More deeply even than ever: but a swarm
+ Of heady schemes jostling each other, gawds,
+ And feast and dance, and public revelry,
+ And sports and games (too grateful in themselves,
+ Yet in themselves less grateful, I believe,
+ Than as they were a badge glossy and fresh
+ Of manliness and freedom) all conspired
+ To lure my mind from firm habitual quest
+ Of feeding pleasures, to depress the zeal
+ And damp those yearnings which had once been mine--
+ A wild, unworldly-minded youth, given up
+ To his own eager thoughts. It would demand
+ Some skill, and longer time than may be spared,
+ To paint these vanities, and how they wrought
+ In haunts where they, till now, had been unknown.
+ It seemed the very garments that they wore
+ Preyed on my strength, and stopped the quiet stream
+ Of self-forgetfulness.
+ Yes, that heartless chase
+ Of trivial pleasures was a poor exchange
+ For books and nature at that early age.
+ 'Tis true, some casual knowledge might be gained
+ Of character or life; but at that time,
+ Of manners put to school I took small note,
+ And all my deeper passions lay elsewhere.
+ Far better had it been to exalt the mind
+ By solitary study, to uphold
+ Intense desire through meditative peace;
+ And yet, for chastisement of these regrets,
+ The memory of one particular hour
+ Doth here rise up against me. 'Mid a throng
+ Of maids and youths, old men, and matrons staid,
+ A medley of all tempers, I had passed
+ The night in dancing, gayety, and mirth,
+ With din of instruments and shuffling feet,
+ And glancing forms, and tapers glittering,
+ And unaimed prattle flying up and down;
+ Spirits upon the stretch, and here and there
+ Slight shocks of young love-liking interspersed,
+ Whose transient pleasure mounted to the head,
+ And tingled through the veins. Ere we retired
+ The cock had crowed, and now the eastern sky
+ Was kindling, not unseen, from humble copse
+ And open field, through which the pathway wound,
+ And homeward led my steps. Magnificent
+ The morning rose, in memorable pomp,
+ Glorious as e'er I had beheld--in front,
+ The sea lay laughing at a distance; near,
+ The solid mountains shone, bright as the clouds,
+ Grain-tinctured, drenched in Empyrean light;
+ And in the meadows and the lower grounds
+ Was all the sweetness of a common dawn--
+ Dews, vapors, and the melody of birds,
+ And laborers going forth to till the fields.
+ Ah! need I say, dear Friend! that to the brim
+ My heart was full; I made no vows, but vows
+ Were then made for me; bond unknown to me
+ Was given, that I should be, else sinning greatly,
+ A dedicated Spirit. On I walked
+ In thankful blessedness, which yet survives.
+ Strange rendezvous! My mind was at that time
+ A parti-colored show of grave and gay,
+ Solid and light, short-sighted and profound;
+ Of inconsiderate habits and sedate,
+ Consorting in one mansion unreproved.
+ The worth I knew of powers that I possessed,
+ Though slighted and too oft misused. Besides,
+ That summer, swarming as it did with thoughts
+ Transient and idle, lacked not intervals
+ When Folly from the frown of fleeting Time
+ Shrunk, and the mind experienced in herself
+ Conformity as just as that of old
+ To the end and written spirit of God's works,
+ Whether held forth in Nature or in Man,
+ Through pregnant vision, separate or conjoined.
+ When from our better selves we have too long
+ Been parted by the hurrying world, and droop,
+ Sick of its business, of its pleasure tired,
+ How gracious, how benign, is Solitude;
+ How potent a mere image of her sway;
+ Most potent when impressed upon the mind
+ With an appropriate human centre--hermit,
+ Deep in the bosom of the wilderness;
+ Votary (in vast cathedral, where no foot
+ Is treading, where no other face is seen)
+ Kneeling at prayers; or watchman on the top
+ Of lighthouse, beaten by Atlantic waves;
+ Or as the soul of that great Power is met
+ Sometimes embodied on a public road,
+ When, for the night deserted, it assumes
+ A character of quiet more profound
+ Than pathless wastes.
+ Once, when those summer months,
+ Where flown, and autumn brought its annual show
+ Of oars with oars contending, sails with sails,
+ Upon Windander's spacious breast, it chanced
+ That--after I had left a flower-decked room
+ (Whose in-door pastime, lighted up, survived
+ To a late hour), and spirits overwrought
+ Were making night do penance for a day
+ Spent in a round of strenuous idleness--
+ My homeward course led up a long ascent,
+ Where the road's watery surface, to the top
+ Of that sharp rising, glittered to the moon
+ And bore the semblance of another stream
+ Stealing with silent lapse to join the brook
+ That murmured in the vale. All else was still;
+ No living thing appeared in earth or air,
+ And, save the flowing water's peaceful voice,
+ Sound there was none--but, lo! an uncouth shape,
+ Shown by a sudden turning of the road,
+ So near that, slipping back into the shade
+ Of a thick hawthorn, I could mark him well,
+ Myself unseen. He was of stature tall,
+ A span above man's common measure, tall,
+ Stiff, land, and upright; a more meager man
+ Was never seen before by night or day.
+ Long were his arms, pallid his hands; his mouth
+ Looked ghastly in the moonlight: from behind,
+ A mile-stone propped him; I could also ken
+ That he was clothed in military garb.
+ Though faded, yet entire. Companionless,
+ No dog attending, by no staff sustained,
+ He stood, and in his very dress appeared
+ A desolation, a simplicity,
+ To which the trappings of a gaudy world
+ Make a strange back-ground. From his lips, ere long,
+ Issued low muttered sounds, as if of pain
+ Or some uneasy thought; yet still his form
+ Kept the same awful steadiness--at his feet
+ His shadow lay, and moved not. From self-blame
+ Not wholly free, I watched him thus; at length
+ Subduing my heart's specious cowardice,
+ I left the shady nook where I had stood
+ And hailed him. Slowly from his resting-place
+ He rose, and with a lean and wasted arm
+ In measured gesture lifted to his head
+ Returned my salutation; then resumed
+ His station as before: and when I asked
+ His history, the veteran, in reply,
+ Was neither slow nor eager; but, unmoved,
+ And with a quiet, uncomplaining voice,
+ A stately air of mild indifference,
+ He told in few plain words a soldier's tale--
+ That in the Tropic Islands he had served,
+ Whence he had landed scarcely three weeks past;
+ That on his landing he had been dismissed,
+ And now was traveling toward his native home.
+ This heard, I said, in pity, "Come with me."
+ He stooped, and straightway from the ground took up,
+ An oaken staff by me yet unobserved--
+ A staff which must have dropt from his slack hand
+ And lay till now neglected in the grass.
+ Though weak his step and cautious, he appeared
+ To travel without pain, and I beheld,
+ With an astonishment but ill-suppressed,
+ His ghostly figure moving at my side;
+ Nor could I, while we journeyed thus, forbear
+ To turn from present hardships to the past,
+ And speak of war, battle, and pestilence,
+ Sprinkling this talk with questions, better spared.
+ On what he might himself have seen or felt
+ He all the while was in demeanor calm.
+ Concise in answer: solemn and sublime
+ He might have seen, but that in all he said
+ There was a strange half-absence, as of one
+ Knowing too well the importance of his theme
+ But feeling it no longer. Our discourse
+ Soon ended, and together on we passed
+ In silence through a wood gloomy and still.
+ Up-turning, then, along an open field,
+ We reached a cottage. At the door I knocked.
+ And earnestly to charitable care
+ Commended him as a poor friendless man,
+ Belated and by sickness overcome.
+ Assured that now the traveler would repose
+ In comfort, I entreated that henceforth
+ He would not linger in the public ways,
+ But ask for timely furtherance and help
+ Such as his state required. At this reproof,
+ With the same ghastly mildness in his look,
+ He said, "My trust is in the God of Heaven,
+ And in the eye of him who passes me!"
+ The cottage door was speedily unbarred,
+ And now the soldier touched his hat once more
+ With his lean hand, and in a faltering voice,
+ Whose tone bespake reviving interests
+ Till then unfelt, he thanked me; I returned
+ The farewell blessing of the patient man,
+ And so we parted. Back I cast a look,
+ And lingered near the door a little space,
+ Then sought with quiet heart my distant home.
+
+[Footnote 3: In the press of Appleton & Co.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE IVORY MINE:
+
+A TALE OF THE FROZEN SEA.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VI.--THE IVORY MINE.
+
+The end of so perilous and novel a journey, which must necessarily,
+under the most favorable circumstances, have produced more honor
+than profit, was attained; and yet the success of the adventure was
+doubtful. The season was still too cold for any search for fossil
+ivory, and the first serious duty was the erection of a winter
+residence. Fortunately there was an ample supply of logs of wood, some
+half-rotten, some green, lying under the snow on the shores of the bay
+into which the river poured, and which had been deposited there by
+the currents and waves. A regular pile, too, was found, which had been
+laid up by some of the provident natives of New Siberia, who, like
+the Esquimaux, live in the snow. Under this was a large supply of
+frozen fish, which was taken without ceremony, the party being near
+starvation. Of course Sakalar and Ivan intended replacing the hoard,
+if possible, in the short summer.
+
+Wood was made the groundwork of the winter hut which was to be
+erected, but snow and ice formed by far the larger portion of the
+building materials. So hard and compact did the whole mass become when
+finished, and lined with bear-skins and other furs, that a huge lamp
+sufficed for warmth during the day and night, and the cooking was
+done in a small shed by the side. The dogs were now set to shift for
+themselves as to cover, and were soon buried in the snow. They were
+placed on short allowance, now they had no work to do, for no one yet
+knew what were the resources of this wild place.
+
+As soon as the more immediate duties connected with a camp had been
+completed, the whole party occupied themselves with preparing traps
+for foxes, and in other hunting details. A hole was broken in the
+ice in the bay, and this the Kolimsk men watched with assiduity for
+seals. One or two rewarded their efforts, but no fish were taken.
+Sakalar and Ivan, after a day or two of repose, started with some
+carefully-selected dogs in search of game, and soon found that the
+great white bear took up his quarters even in that northern latitude.
+They succeeded in killing several, which the dogs dragged home.
+
+About ten days after their arrival in the great island, Sakalar, who
+was always the first to be moving, roused his comrades round him just
+as a party of a dozen strange men appeared in the distance. They were
+short, stout fellows, with long lances in their hands, and by their
+dress very much resembled the Esquimaux. Their attitude was menacing
+in the extreme, and by the advice of Sakalar, a general volley was
+fired over their heads. The invaders halted, looked confusedly around,
+and then ran away. Firearms retained. therefore, all their pristine
+qualities with these savages.
+
+"They will return," said Sakalar, moodily; "they did the same when
+I was here before, and then came back and killed my friend at night.
+Sakalar escaped."
+
+Counsel was now held, and it was determined, after due deliberation,
+that strict watch should be kept at all hours, while much was
+necessarily trusted to the dogs. All day one of the party was on the
+lookout, while at night the hut had its entrance well barred. Several
+days, however, were thus passed without molestation, and then Sakalar
+took the Kolimsk men out to hunt, and left Ivan and Kolina together.
+The young man had learned the value of his half-savage friend: her
+devotion to her father and the party generally was unbounded. She
+murmured neither at privations nor at sufferings, and kept up the
+courage of Ivan by painting in glowing terms all his brilliant future.
+She seemed to have laid aside her personal feelings, and to look on
+him only as one doing battle with fortune in the hope of earning the
+hand of the rich widow of Yakoutsk. But Ivan was much disposed to
+gloomy fits; he supposed himself forgotten, and slighted, and looked
+on the time of his probation as interminable. It was in this mood that
+one day he was roused from his fit by a challenge from Kolina to go
+and see if the seals had come up to breathe at the hole which every
+morning was freshly broken in the ice. Ivan assented, and away they
+went gaily down to the bay. No seals were there, and after a short
+stay they returned toward the hut, recalled by the distant howling
+of the dogs. But as they came near, they could see no sign of men or
+animals, though the sensible brutes still whined under the shelter
+of their snow-heaps. Ivan, much surprised, raised the curtain of the
+door, his gun in hand, expecting to find that some animal was inside.
+The lamp was out, and the hut in total darkness. Before Ivan could
+recover his upright position, four men leaped on him, and he was a
+prisoner.
+
+Kolina drew back, and cocked her gun; but the natives, satisfied
+with their present prey, formed round Ivan in a compact body, tied
+his hands, and bade him walk. Their looks were sufficiently wild
+and menacing to make him move, especially as he recognized them
+as belonging to the warlike party of the Tchouktchas--a tribe of
+Siberians who wander about the Polar Seas in search of game, who cross
+Behring's Straits in skin-boats, and who probably are the only persons
+who by their temporary sojourn in New Siberia, have caused some to
+suppose it inhabited. Kolina stood uncertain what to do, but in a few
+minutes she roused four of the dogs, and followed. Ivan bawled to her
+to go back, but the girl paid no attention to his request, determined,
+as it seemed, to know his fate.
+
+The savages hurried Ivan along as rapidly as they could; and soon
+entered a deep and narrow ravine, which about the middle parted into
+two. The narrowest path was selected, and the dwelling of the natives
+soon reached. It was a cavern, the narrow entrance of which they
+crawled through; Ivan followed the leader, and soon found himself in
+a large and wonderful cave. It was by nature divided into several
+compartments, and contained a party of twenty men, as many or more
+women, and numerous children. It was warmed in two ways--by wood-fires
+and grease-lamps, and by a bubbling semi-sulphurous spring, that
+rushed up through a narrow hole, and then fell away into a deep well,
+that carried its warm waters to mingle with the icy sea. The acrid
+smoke escaped by holes in the roof. Ivan, his arms and legs bound, was
+thrust into a separate compartment filled with furs, and formed by a
+projection of the rock and the skin-boats which this primitive race
+employed to cross the most stormy seas. He was almost stunned; he lay
+for a while without thought or motion. Gradually he recovered, and
+gazed around; all was night, save above, where by a narrow orifice
+he saw the smoke which hung in clouds around the roof escaping.
+He expected death. He knew the savage race he was among, who hated
+interference with their hunting-grounds, and whose fish he and his
+party had taken. What, therefore, was his surprise, when from the
+summit of the roof, he heard a gentle voice whispering in soft accents
+his own name. His ears must, he thought, deceive him. The hubbub close
+at hand was terrible. A dispute was going on. Men, women. and children
+all joined, and yet he had heard the word "Ivan." "Kolina," he
+replied, in equally low but clear tones. As he spoke a knife rolled
+near him. But he could not touch it. Then a dark form filled the
+orifice about a dozen feet above his head, and something moved down
+among projecting stones, and then Kolina stood by him. In an instant
+Ivan was free, and an axe in his hand. The exit was before them. Steps
+were cut in the rock, to ascend to the upper entrance, near which Ivan
+had been placed without fear, because tied. But a rush was heard, and
+the friends had only time to throw themselves deeper into the cave,
+when four men rushed in, knife in hand, to immolate the victim. Such
+had been the decision come to after the debate.
+
+The lamps revealed the escape of the fugitive. A wild cry drew all the
+men together, and then up they scampered along the rugged projections,
+and the barking of the dogs as they fled showed that they were in hot
+and eager chase. Ivan and Kolina lost no time. They advanced boldly,
+knife and hatchet in hand, sprang amid the terrified women, darted
+across their horrid cavern, and before one of them had recovered from
+her fright, were in the open air. On they ran in the gloom for some
+distance, when they suddenly heard muttering voices. Down they sank
+behind the first large stone, concealing themselves as well as they
+could in the snow. The party moved slowly on toward them.
+
+"I can trace their tracks still," said Sakalar, in a low deep tone.
+"On, while they are alive, or at least for vengeance!"
+
+"Friends!" cried Ivan.
+
+"Father!" said Kolina, and in an instant the whole party were united.
+Five words were enough to determine Sakalar. The whole body rushed
+back, entered the cavern, and found themselves masters of it without
+a struggle. The women and children attempted no resistance. As soon
+as they were placed in a corner, under the guard of the Kolimsk men,
+a council was held. Sakalar, as the most experienced, decided what
+was to be done. He knew the value of threats: one of the women was
+released, and bade go tell the men what had occurred. She was to add
+the offer of a treaty of peace, to which, if both parties agreed,
+the women were to be given up on the one side, and the hut and its
+contents on the other. But the victors announced their intention
+of taking four of the best-looking boys as hostages, to be returned
+whenever they were convinced of the good faith of the Tchouktchas. The
+envoy soon returned, agreeing to everything. They had not gone near
+the hut, fearing an ambuscade. The four boys were at once selected,
+and the belligerents separated.
+
+Sakalar made the little fellows run before, and thus the hut was
+regained. An inner cabin was erected for the prisoners, and the dogs
+placed over them as spies. But as the boys understood Sakalar to mean
+that the dogs were to eat them if they stirred, they remained still
+enough, and made no attempt to run away.
+
+A hasty meal was now cooked, and after its conclusion Ivan related
+the events of the day, warmly dilating on the devotion and courage of
+Kolina, who, with the keenness of a Yakouta, had found out his prison
+by the smoke, and had seen him on the ground despite the gloom.
+Sakalar then explained how, on his return, he had been terribly
+alarmed, and had followed the trail on the snow. After mutual
+congratulations the whole party went to sleep.
+
+The next morning early, the mothers came humbly with provisions for
+their children. They received some trifling presents and were sent
+away in delight. About midday the whole tribe presented themselves
+unarmed, within a short distance of the hut, and offered a traffic.
+They brought a great quantity of fish, which they wanted to exchange
+for tobacco. Sakalar, who spoke their language freely, first gave them
+a roll, letting them understand it was in payment of the fish taken
+without leave. This at once dissipated all feelings of hostility, and
+solid peace was insured. So satisfied was Sakalar of their sincerity,
+that he at once released the captives.
+
+From that day the two parties were one, and all thoughts of war were
+completely at an end. A vast deal of bloodshed had been prevented by a
+few concessions on both sides. The same result might indeed have been
+come to by killing half of each little tribe, but it is doubtful if
+the peace would have been as satisfactory to the survivors.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VII.--THE SUMMER AND AUTUMN.
+
+Occupied with the chase, with bartering, and with conversing with
+their new friends, the summer gradually came around. The snow melted,
+the hills became a series of cascades, in every direction water
+poured toward the sea. But the hut remained solid and firm, a little
+earth only being cast over the snow. Flocks of ducks and geese soon
+appeared, a slight vegetation was visible, and the sea was in motion.
+But what principally drew all eyes were the vast heaps of fossil ivory
+exposed to view on the banks of the stream, laid bare more and more
+every year by the torrents of spring. A few days sufficed to collect
+a heap greater than they could take away on the sledges in a dozen
+journeys. Ivan gazed at his treasure in mute despair. Were all that
+at Yakoutsk, he was the richest merchant in Siberia; but to take it
+thither seemed impossible. But in stepped the adventurous Tchouktchas.
+They offered, for a stipulated sum in tobacco and other valuables, to
+land a large portion of the ivory at a certain spot on the shores of
+Siberia, by means of their boats. Ivan, though again surprised at the
+daring of these wild men, accepted the proposal, and engaged to give
+them his whole stock. The matter was then settled, and our adventurers
+and their new friends dispersed to their summer avocations.
+
+These consisted in fishing and hunting, and repairing boats and
+sledges. Their canoes were made of skins and whalebone, and bits of
+wood; but they were large, and capable of sustaining great weight.
+They proposed to start as soon as the ice was broken up, and to brave
+all the dangers of so fearful a navigation. They were used to impel
+themselves along in every open space, and to take shelter on icebergs
+from danger. When one of these icy mountains went in the right
+direction, they stuck to it; but at others they paddled away, amid
+dangers of which they seemed wholly unconscious.
+
+A month was taken up in fishing, in drying the fish, or in putting
+it in holes where there was eternal frost. An immense stock was laid
+in: and then one morning the Tchouktchas took their departure, and
+the adventurers remained alone. Their hut was broken up, and all made
+ready for their second journey. The sledges were enlarged, to bear
+the heaviest possible load at starting. A few days' overloading were
+not minded, as the provisions would soon decrease. Still not half so
+much could be taken as they wished, and yet Ivan had nearly a ton of
+ivory, and thirty tons was the greatest produce of any one year in all
+Siberia.
+
+But the sledges were ready long before the sea was so. The interval
+was spent in continued hunting, to prevent any consumption of the
+traveling store. All were heartily tired, long before it was over,
+of a day nearly as long as two English months. Soon the winter set in
+with intense rigor; the sea ceased to toss and heave; the icebergs and
+fields moved more and more slowly; at last ocean and land were blended
+into one--the night of a month came, and the sun was seen no more.
+
+The dogs were now roused up; the sledges harnessed; and the instant
+the sea was firm enough to sustain them, the party started. Sakalar's
+intention was to try forced marches in a straight line. Fortune
+favored them. Not an accident occurred for days. At first they did not
+move exactly in the same direction as when they came, but they soon
+found traces of their previous journey, proving that a plain of ice
+had been forced away at least fifty miles during the thaw.
+
+The road was now again rugged and difficult, firing was getting
+scarce, the dogs were devouring the fish with rapidity, and only one
+half the ocean-journey was over. But on they pushed with desperate
+energy, each eye once more keenly on the look-out for game. Every one
+drove his team in sullen silence, for all were on short allowance, and
+all were hungry. They sat on what was to them more valuable than gold,
+and yet they had not what was necessary for subsistence. The dogs were
+urged every day to the utmost limits of their strength. But so much
+space had been taken up by the ivory, that at last there remained
+neither food nor fuel. None knew at what distance they were from the
+shore, and their position seemed desperate. There were even whispers
+of killing some of the dogs; and Sakalar and Ivan were upbraided for
+the avarice which had brought them to such straits.
+
+"See!" said the old hunter suddenly, with a delighted smile, pointing
+toward the south.
+
+The whole party looked eagerly. A thick column of smoke rose in the
+air at no very considerable distance. This was the signal agreed on
+with the Tchouktchas, who were to camp where there was plenty of wood.
+
+Every hand was raised to urge on the dogs to this point, and at last,
+from the summit of a hill of ice they saw the shore and the blaze of
+the fire. The wind was toward them, and the atmosphere heavy. The dogs
+smelled the distant camp, and darted almost recklessly forward. At
+last they sank near to the Tchouktcha huts, panting and exhausted.
+
+Their allies of the spring were true; they gave them food, of
+which both man and beast ate greedily, and then sought repose. The
+Tchouktchas had then formed their journey with wonderful success and
+rapidity, and had found time to lay in a pretty fair stock of fish.
+This they freely shared with Ivan and his party, and were delighted
+when he abandoned to them all his tobacco and rum, and part of his
+tea.
+
+The Tchouktchas had been four years absent in their wanderings, and
+were eager to get home once more to the land of the reindeer, and to
+their friends. They were perhaps the greatest travelers of a tribe
+noted for its facility of locomotion. And so, with warm expressions
+of esteem and friendship on both sides, the two parties separated--the
+men of the east making their way on foot, toward the Straits of
+Behring.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VIII.--THE VOYAGE HOME.
+
+Under considerable disadvantages did Sakalar, Ivan, and their friends
+prepare for the conclusion of their journey. Their provisions were
+very scanty, and their only hope of replenishing their stores was on
+the banks of the Vchivaya River, which being in some places pretty
+rapid might not be frozen over. Sakalar and his friends determined to
+strike out in a straight line. Part of the ivory had to be concealed
+and abandoned, to be fetched another time; but as their stock of
+provisions was so small, they were able to take the principal part. It
+had been resolved, after some debate, to make in a direct line for the
+Vchivaya river, and thence to Vijnei-Kolimsk. The road was of a most
+difficult, and, in part, unknown character; but it was imperative to
+move in as straight a direction as possible. Time was the great enemy
+they had to contend with, because their provisions were sufficient for
+a limited period only.
+
+The country was at first level enough, and the dogs, after their
+rest, made sufficiently rapid progress. At night they had reached the
+commencement of a hilly region, while in the distance could be seen
+pretty lofty mountains. According to a plan decided on from the first,
+the human members of the party were placed at once on short allowance,
+while the dogs received as much food as could be reasonably given.
+At early dawn the tent was struck, and the dogs were impelled along
+the banks of a small river completely frozen. Indeed, after a short
+distance, it was taken as the smoothest path. But at the end of a
+dozen miles they found themselves in a narrow gorge between two
+hills; at the foot of a once foaming cataract, now hard frozen. It
+was necessary to retreat some miles, and gain the land once more. The
+only path which was now found practicable was along the bottom of some
+pretty steep rocks. But the track got narrower and narrower, until the
+dogs were drawing along the edge of a terrific precipice with not four
+feet of holding. All alighted, and led the dogs, for a false step was
+death. Fortunately the path became no narrower, and in one place it
+widened out and made a sort of hollow. Here a bitter blast, almost
+strong enough to cast them from their feet, checked further progress,
+and on that naked spot, under a projecting mass of stone, without
+fire, did the whole party halt. Men and dogs huddled together for
+warmth, and all dined on raw and frozen fish. A few hours of sleep,
+however, were snatched; and then, as the storm abated, they again
+advanced. The descent was soon reached, and led into a vast plain
+without tree or bush. A range of snow-clad hills lay before them, and
+through a narrow gully between two mountains was the only practicable
+pathway. But all hearts were gladdened by the welcome sight of some
+_argali_, or Siberian sheep, on the slope of a hill. These animals are
+the only winter game, bears, and wolves excepted. Kolina was left with
+the dogs, and the rest started after the animals, which were pawing in
+the snow for some moss or half-frozen herbs. Every caution was used
+to approach them against the wind, and a general volley soon sent them
+scampering away to the mountain-tops, leaving three behind.
+
+But Ivan saw that he had wounded another, and away he went in chase.
+The animal ascended a hill, and then halted. But seeing a man coming
+quickly after him, it turned and fled down the opposite side. Ivan was
+instantly after him. The descent was steep, but the hunter saw only
+the argili, and darted down. He slid rather than ran with fearful
+rapidity, and passed the sheep by, seeking to check himself too late.
+A tremendous gulf was before him, and his eyes caught an instant
+glance of a deep distant valley. Then he saw no more until he found
+himself lying still. He had sunk, on the very brink of the precipice,
+into a deep snow bank formed by some projecting rock, and had only
+thus been saved from instant death. Deeply grateful, Ivan crept
+cautiously up the hill-side, though not without his prize, and
+rejoined his companions.
+
+The road now offered innumerable difficulties, it was rough and
+uneven--now hard, now soft. They made but slow progress for the next
+three days, while their provisions began to draw to an end. They had
+at least a dozen days more before them. All agreed that they were now
+in the very worst difficulty they had been in. That evening they dined
+on the last meal of mutton and fish; they were at the foot of a lofty
+hill, which they determined to ascend while strength was left. The
+dogs were urged up the steep ascent, and after two hours' toil, they
+reached the summit. It was a table-land, bleak and miserable, and the
+wind was too severe to permit camping. On they pushed, and camped a
+little way down its sides.
+
+The next morning the dogs had no food, while the men had nothing but
+large draughts of warm tea. But it was impossible to stop. Away they
+hurried, after deciding that, if nothing turned up the next morning,
+two or three of the dogs must be killed to save the rest. Little was
+the ground they got over, with hungry beasts and starving men, and
+all were glad to halt near a few dried larches. Men and dogs eyed each
+other suspiciously, The animals, sixty-four in number, had they not
+been educated to fear man, would have soon settled the matter. But
+there they lay, panting and faint--to start up suddenly with a fearful
+howl. A bear was on them. Sakalar fired, and then in rushed the dogs,
+savage and fierce. It was worse than useless, it was dangerous, for
+the human beings of the party to seek to share this windfall. It was
+enough that the dogs had found something to appease their hunger.
+
+Sakalar, however, knew that his faint and weary companions could not
+move the next day if tea alone were their sustenance that night. He
+accordingly put in practice one of the devices of his woodcraft. The
+youngest of the larches was cut down, and the coarse outside bark was
+taken off. Then every atom of the soft bark was peeled off the tree,
+and being broken into small pieces, was cast into the boiling pot,
+already full of water. The quantity was great, and made a thick
+substance. Round this the whole party collected, eager for the moment
+when they could fall to. But Sakalar was cool and methodical even in
+that terrible hour. He took a spoon, and quietly skimmed the pot,
+to take away the resin that rose to the surface. Then gradually the
+bark melted away, and presently the pot was filled by a thick paste,
+and looked not unlike glue. All gladly ate, and found it nutritive,
+pleasant, and warm. They felt satisfied when the meal was over, and
+were glad to observe that the dogs returned to the camp completely
+satisfied also, which, under the circumstances, was matter of great
+gratification.
+
+In the morning, after another mess of larch-bark soup, and after a
+little tea, the adventurers again advanced on their journey. They were
+now in an arid, bleak, and terrible plain of vast extent. Not a tree,
+not a shrub, not an elevation was to be seen. Starvation was again
+staring them in the face, and no man knew when this dreadful plain
+would end. That night the whole party cowered in their tent without
+fire, content to chew a few tea-leaves preserved from the last meal.
+Serious thoughts were now entertained of abandoning their wealth in
+that wild region. But as none pressed the matter very hardly, the
+ledges were harnessed again next morning, and the dogs driven on. But
+man and beast were at the last gasp, and not ten miles were traversed
+that day, the end of which brought them to a large river, on the
+borders of which were some trees. Being wide and rapid, it was not
+frozen, and there was still hope, The seine was drawn from a sledge,
+and taken into the water. It was fastened from one side to another of
+a narrow gut, and there left. It was of no avail examining it until
+morning, for the fish only come out at night.
+
+There was not a man of the party who had his exact sense about him,
+while the dogs lay panting on the snow, their tongues hanging out,
+their eyes glaring with almost savage fury. The trees round the bank
+were large and dry, and not one had an atom of soft bark on it. All
+the resource they had was to drink huge draughts of tea, and then
+seek sleep. Sakalar set the example, and the Kolimsk men, to whom such
+scenes were not new, followed his advice; but Ivan walked up and down
+before the tent. A huge fire had been made, which was amply fed by the
+wood of the river bank, and it blazed on high, showing in bold relief
+the features of the scene. Ivan gazed vacantly at everything; but he
+saw not the dark and glancing river--he saw not the bleak plain of
+snow--his eyes looked not on the romantic picture of the tent and its
+bivouac-fire: his thoughts were on one thing alone. He it was who
+had brought them to that pass, and on his head rested all the misery
+endured by man and beast, and, worst of all, by the good and devoted
+Kolina.
+
+There she sat, too, on the ground, wrapped in her warm clothes, her
+eyes, fixed on the crackling logs. Of what was she thinking? Whatever
+occupied her mind, it was soon chased away by the sudden speech
+of Ivan. "Kolina," said he, in a tone which borrowed a little of
+intensity from the state of mind in which hunger had placed all of
+them, "canst thou ever forgive me?"
+
+"What?" replied the young girl softly.
+
+"My having brought you here to die, far away from your native hills?"
+
+"Kolina cares little for herself," said the Yakouta maiden, rising and
+speaking perhaps a little wildly; "let her father escape, and she is
+willing to lie near the tombs of the old people on the borders of the
+icy sea."
+
+"But Ivan had hoped to see for Kolina many bright, happy days; for
+Ivan would have made her father rich, and Kolina would have been the
+richest unmarried girl in the plain of Miouré!"
+
+"And would riches make Kolina happy?" said she sadly.
+
+"Young girl of the Yakouta, hearken to me! Let Ivan live or die this
+hour; Ivan is a fool. He left home and comfort to cross the icy seas
+in search of wealth, and to gain happiness; but if he had only had
+eyes, he would have stopped at Miouré. There he saw a girl, lively as
+the heaven-fire in the north, good, generous, kind; and she was an old
+friend, and might have loved Ivan; but the man of Yakoutsk was blind,
+and told her of his passion for a selfish widow, and the Yakouta
+maiden never thought of Ivan but as a brother!"
+
+"What means Ivan?" asked Kolina, trembling with emotion.
+
+"Ivan has long meant, when he came to the yourte of Sakalar, to lay
+his wealth at his feet, and beg of his old friend to give him his
+child: but Ivan now fears that he may die, and wishes to know what
+would have been the answer of Kolina?"
+
+"But Maria Vorotinska?" urged the girl, who seemed dreaming.
+
+"Has long been forgotten. How could I not love my old playmate and
+friend! Kolina--Kolina, listen to Ivan! Forget his love for the widow
+of Yakoutsk, and Ivan will stay in the plain of Vchivaya and die."
+
+"Kolina is very proud," whispered the girl, sitting down on a log near
+the fire, and speaking in a low tone; "and Kolina thinks yet that the
+friend of her father has forgotten himself. But if he be not wild, if
+the sufferings of the journey have not made him say that which is not,
+Kolina would be very happy."
+
+"Be plain, girl of Miouré--maiden of the Yakouta tribe! and play not
+with the heart of a man. Can Kolina take Ivan as her husband?"
+
+A frank and happy reply gave the Yakoutsk merchant all the
+satisfaction he could wish; and then followed several hours of those
+sweet and delightful explanations which never end between young lovers
+when first they have acknowledged their mutual affection. They had
+hitherto concealed so much, that there was much to tell; and Ivan
+and Kolina, who for nearly three years had lived together, with a bar
+between their deep but concealed affection, seemed to have no end of
+words. Ivan had begun to find his feelings change from the very hour
+Sakalar's daughter volunteered to accompany him, but it was only in
+the cave of New Siberia that his heart had been completely won.
+
+So short, and quiet, and sweet were the hours, that the time of rest
+passed by without the thought of sleep. Suddenly, however, they were
+roused to a sense of their situation, and leaving their wearied and
+exhausted companions still asleep, they moved with doubt and dread to
+the water's side. Life was now doubly dear to both, and their fancy
+painted the coming forth of an empty net as the termination of all
+hope. But the net came heavily and slowly to land. It was full of
+fish. They were on the well-stocked Vchivaya. More than three hundred
+fish, small and great, were drawn on shore; and then they recast the
+net.
+
+"Up, man and beast!" thundered Ivan, as, after selecting two dozen of
+the finest, he abandoned the rest to the dogs.
+
+The animals, faint and weary, greedily seized on the food given them,
+while Sakalar and the Kolimsk men could scarcely believe their senses.
+The hot coals were at once brought into requisition, and the party
+were soon regaling themselves on a splendid meal of tea and broiled
+fish. I should alarm my readers did I record the quantities eaten. An
+hour later, every individual was a changed being, but most of all the
+lovers. Despite their want of rest, they looked fresher than any of
+the party. It was determined to camp at least twenty hours more in
+that spot; and the Kolimsk men declared that the river must be the
+Vchivaya, they could draw the seine all day, for the river was deep,
+its waters warmer than others, and its abundance of fish such as to
+border on the fabulous. They went accordingly down to the side of
+the stream, and then the happy Kolina gave free vent to her joy.
+She burst out into a song of her native land, and gave way to some
+demonstrations of delight, the result of her earlier education, that
+astonished Sakalar. But when he heard that during that dreadful night
+he had found a son, Sakalar himself almost lost his reason. The old
+man loved Ivan almost as much as his own child, and when he saw the
+youth in his yourte on his hunting trips, had formed some project of
+the kind now brought about; but the confessions of Ivan on his last
+visit to Miouré had driven all such thoughts away.
+
+"Art in earnest, Ivan?" said he, after a pause of some duration.
+
+"In earnest!" exclaimed Ivan, laughing; "why, I fancy the young men of
+Miouré will find me so, if they seek to question my right to Kolina!"
+
+Kolina smiled, and looked happy; and the old hunter heartily blessed
+his children, adding that the proudest, dearest hope of his heart was
+now within probable realization.
+
+The predictions of the Kolimsk men were realized. The river gave them
+as much fish as they needed for their journey home; and as now Sakalar
+knew his way, there was little fear for the future. An ample stock was
+piled on the sledges, the dogs had unlimited feeding for two days, and
+then away they sped toward an upper part of the river, which, being
+broad and shallow, was no doubt frozen on the surface. They found it
+as they expected, and even discovered that the river was gradually
+freezing all the way down. But little caring for this now, on they
+went, and after considerable fatigue and some delay, arrived at
+Kolimsk, to the utter astonishment of all the inhabitants, who had
+long given them up for lost.
+
+Great rejoicings took place. The friends of the three Kolimsk men
+gave a grand festival, in which the rum, and tobacco, and tea, which
+had been left at the place for payment for their journey, played
+a conspicuous part. Then, as it was necessary to remain here some
+time, while the ivory was brought from a deposit near the sea,
+Ivan and Kolina were married. Neither of them seemed to credit the
+circumstance, even when fast tied by the Russian church. It had come
+so suddenly, so unexpectedly on both, that their heads could not quite
+make the affair out. But they were married in right down earnest, and
+Kolina was a proud and happy woman. The enormous mass of ivory brought
+to Kolimsk excited the attention of a distinguished exile, who drew
+up a statement in Ivan's name, and prepared it for transmission to the
+White Czar, as the emperor is called in these parts.
+
+When summer came, the young couple, with Sakalar and a caravan of
+merchants, started for Yakoutsk, Ivan being by far the richest and
+most important member of the party. After a single day's halt at
+Miouré, on they went to the town, and made their triumphal entry in
+September. Ivan found Maria Vorotinska a wife and mother, and his
+vanity was not much wounded by the falsehood. The _ci-devant_ widow
+was a little astonished at Ivan's return, and particularly at his
+treasure of ivory: but she received his wife with politeness, a little
+tempered by her sense of her own superiority to a savage, as she
+designated Kolina to her friends in a whisper. But Kolina was so
+gentle, so pretty, so good, so cheerful, so happy, that she found her
+party at once, and the two ladies became rival leaders of the fashion.
+
+This lasted until the next year, when a messenger from the capital
+brought a letter to Ivan from the emperor himself, thanking him for
+his narrative, sending him a rich present, his warm approval, and the
+office of first civil magistrate in the city of Yakoutsk. This turned
+the scales wholly on one side, and Maria bowed low to Kolina. But
+Kolina had no feelings of the parvenu, and she was always a general
+favorite. Ivan accepted with pride his sovereign's favor, and by
+dint of assiduity, soon learned to be a useful magistrate. He always
+remained a good husband, a good father, and a good son, for he made
+the heart of old Sakalar glad. He never regretted his journey: he
+always declared he owed to it wealth and happiness, a high position in
+society, and an admirable wife. Great rejoicings took place many years
+after in Yakoutsk, at the marriage of the son of Maria, united to
+the daughter of Ivan, and from the first unto the last, none of the
+parties concerned ever had reason to mourn over the perilous journey
+in search of the Ivory Mine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For the information of the non-scientific, it may be necessary to
+mention that the ivory alluded to in the preceding tale, is derived
+from the tusks of the mammoth, or fossil elephant of the geologist.
+The remains of this gigantic quadruped are found all over the northern
+hemisphere, from the 40th to the 75th degree of latitude: but most
+abundantly in the region which lies between the mountains of Central
+Asia and the shores and islands of the Frozen Sea. So profusely do
+they exist in this region, that the tusks have for more than a century
+constituted an important article of traffic--furnishing a large
+proportion of the ivory required by the carver and turner. The remains
+lie imbedded in the upper tertiary clays and gravels; and these, by
+exposure to the river-currents, to the waves of the sea, and other
+erosive agencies, are frequently swept away during the thaws of
+summer, leaving tusks and bones in masses, and occasionally even
+entire skeletons, in a wonderful state of preservation. The most
+perfect specimen yet obtained, and from the study of which the
+zoologist has been enabled to arrive at an accurate knowledge of the
+structure and habits of the mammoth, is that discovered by a Tungusian
+fisherman, near the mouth of the river Lena, in the summer of 1799.
+
+Being in the habit of collecting tusks among the debris of the
+gravel-cliffs, (for it is generally at a considerable elevation in the
+cliffs and river banks that the remains occur,) he observed a strange
+shapeless mass projecting from an ice-bank some fifty or sixty feet
+above the river; during next summer's thaw he saw the same object,
+rather more disengaged from amongst the ice; in 1801 he could
+distinctly perceive the tusk and flank of an immense animal; and in
+1803, in consequence of an earlier and more powerful thaw, the huge
+carcase became entirely disengaged, and fell on the sandbank beneath.
+In the spring of the following year the fisherman cut off the tusks,
+which he sold for fifty rubles (£7, 10s.;) and two years afterward,
+our countryman, Mr. Adams, visited the spot, and gives the following
+account of the extraordinary phenomenon:
+
+"At this time I found the mammoth still in the same place, but
+altogether mutilated. The discoverer was contented with his profit
+for the tusks, and the Yakoutski of the neighborhood had cut off
+the flesh, with which they fed their dogs. During the scarcity, wild
+beasts, such as white bears, wolves, wolverines, and foxes, also
+fed upon it, and the traces of their footsteps were seen around. The
+skeleton, almost entirely cleared of its flesh, remained whole, with
+the exception of a foreleg. The head was covered with a dry skin;
+one of the ears, well preserved, was furnished with a tuft of hair.
+All these parts have necessarily been injured in transporting them a
+distance of 7,330 miles, (to the Imperial museum of St. Petersburgh,)
+but the eyes have been preserved, and the pupil of one can still be
+distinguished. The mammoth was a male, with a long mane on the neck.
+The tail and proboscis were not preserved. The skin, of which I
+possess three-fourths, is of a dark-gray color, covered with a reddish
+wool and black hairs: but the dampness of the spot where it had lain
+so long had in some degree destroyed the hair. The entire carcase,
+of which I collected the bones on the spot, was nine feet four inches
+high, and sixteen feet four inches long, without including the tusks,
+which measured nine feet six inches along the curve. The distance from
+the base or root of the tusk to the point is three feet seven inches.
+The two tusks together weighed three hundred and sixty pounds, English
+weight, and the head alone four hundred and fourteen pounds. The skin
+was of such weight that it required ten persons to transport it to
+the shore; and after having cleared the ground, upward of thirty-six
+pounds of hair were collected, which the white bears had trodden while
+devouring the flesh."
+
+Since then, other carcases of elephants have been discovered, in
+a greater or less degree of preservation; as also the remains of
+rhinoceroses, mastodons, and allied pachyderms--the mammoth more
+abundantly in the old world, the mastodon in the new. In every case
+these animals differ from existing species: are of more gigantic
+dimensions; and, judging from their natural coverings of thick-set
+curly-crisped wool and strong hair, upward of a foot in length, were
+fitted to live, if not in a boreal, at least in a coldly-temperate
+region. Indeed, there is proof positive of the then more milder
+climate of these regions in the discovery of pine and birch-trunks
+where no vegetation now flourishes; and further, in the fact that
+fragments of pine-leaves, birch-twigs, and other northern plants, have
+been detected between the grinders and within the stomachs of these
+animals. We have thus evidence, that at the close of the tertiary,
+and shortly after the commencement of the current epoch, the northern
+hemisphere enjoyed a much milder climate; that it was the abode of
+huge pachyderms now extinct; that a different distribution of sea
+and land prevailed; and that on a new distribution or sea and land,
+accompanied also by a different relative level, these animals died
+away, leaving their remains imbedded in the clays, gravels, and other
+alluvial deposits, where, under the antiseptic influence of an almost
+eternal frost, many of them have been preserved as entire as at the
+fatal moment they sank under the rigors of external conditions no
+longer fitted for their existence. It has been attempted by some to
+prove the adaptability of these animals to the present conditions
+of the northern hemisphere; but so untenable in every phase is this
+opinion, that it would be sheer waste of time and space to attempt its
+refutation. That they may have migrated northward and southward with
+the seasons is more than probable, though it has been stated that the
+remains diminish in size the farther north they are found; but that
+numerous herds of such huge animals should have existed in these
+regions at all, and that for thousands of years, presupposes an
+exuberant arboreal vegetation, and the necessary degree of climate for
+its growth and development. It has been mentioned that the mastodon
+and mammoth seem to have attained their meridian toward the close of
+the tertiary epoch, and that a few may have lived even in the current
+era; but it is more probable that the commencement of existing
+conditions was the proximate cause of their extinction, and that not
+a solitary specimen ever lived to be the contemporary of man.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[FROM FRASER'S MAGAZINE.]
+
+ENGLISH HEXAMETERS.
+
+BY WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR.
+
+ Askest thou if in my youth I have mounted, as others have mounted,
+ Galloping Hexameter, Pentameter cantering after,
+ English by dam and by sire; bit, bridle, and saddlery, English;
+ English the girths and the shoes; all English from snaffle to crupper;
+ Everything English around, excepting the tune of the jockey?
+ Latin and Greek, it is true, I have often attach'd to my phaeton
+ Early in life, and sometimes have I ordered them out in its evening,
+ Dusting the linings, and pleas'd to have found them unworn and untarnisht.
+ Idle! but Idleness looks never better than close upon sunset.
+ Seldom my goosequill, of goose from Germany, fatted in England,
+ (Frolicksome though I have been) have I tried on Hexameter, knowing
+ Latin and Greek are alone its languages. We have a measure
+ Fashion'd by Milton's own hand, a fuller, a deeper, a louder.
+ Germans may flounder at will over consonant, vowel, and liquid,
+ Liquid and vowel but one to a dozen of consonants, ending
+ Each with a verb at the tail, tail heavy as African ram's tail,
+ Spenser and Shakspeare had each his own harmony; each an enchanter
+ Wanting no aid from without. _Chevy Chase_ had delighted their fathers,
+ Though of a different strain from the song on the _Wrath of Achilles_.
+ Southey was fain to pour forth his exuberant stream over regions
+ Near and remote: his command was absolute; every subject,
+ Little or great, he controll'd; in language, variety, fancy,
+ Richer than all his compeers and wanton but once in dominion;
+ 'Twas when he left the full well that for ages had run by his homestead,
+ Pushing the brambles aside which encumber'd another up higher,
+ Letting his bucket go down, and hearing it bump in descending,
+ Grating against the loose stones 'til it came but half-full from the bottom.
+ Others abstain'd from the task. Scott wander'd at large over Scotland;
+ Reckless of Roman and Greek, he chanted the _Lay of the Minstrel_
+ Better than ever before any minstrel in chamber had chanted.
+ Never on mountain or wild hath echo so cheerfully sounded,
+ Never did monarch bestow such glorious meeds upon knighthood,
+ Never had monarch the power, liberality, justice, discretion.
+ Byron liked new-papered rooms, and pull'd down old wainscot of cedar;
+ Bright-color'd prints he preferr'd to the graver cartoons of a Raphael,
+ Sailor and Turk (with a sack,) to Eginate and Parthenon marbles,
+ Splendid the palace he rais'd--the gin-palace in Poesy's purlieus;
+ Soft the divan on the sides, with spittoons for the qualmish and queesy.
+ Wordsworth, well pleas'd with himself, cared little for modern or ancient.
+ His was the moor and the tarn, the recess in the mountain, the woodland
+ Scatter'd with trees far and wide, trees never too solemn or lofty,
+ Never entangled with plants overrunning the villager's foot-path.
+ Equable was he and plain, but wandering a little in wisdom,
+ Sometimes flying from blood and sometimes pouring it freely.
+ Yet he was English at heart. If his words were too many; if Fancy's
+ Furniture lookt rather scant in a whitewasht homely apartment;
+ If in his rural designs there is sameness and tameness; if often
+ Feebleness is there for breadth; if his pencil wants rounding and pointing;
+ Few of this age or the last stand out on the like elevation.
+ There is a sheepfold he rais'd which my memory loves to revisit,
+ Sheepfold whose wall shall endure when there is not a stone of the palace.
+ Still there are walking on earth many poets whom ages hereafter
+ Will be more willing to praise than they are to praise one another:
+ Some do I know, but I fear, as is meet, to recount or report them,
+ For, be whatever the name that is foremost, the next will run over,
+ Trampling and rolling in dust his excellent friend the precursor.
+ Peace be with all! but afar be ambition to follow the Roman,
+ Led by the German, uncomb'd, and jigging in dactyl and spondee,
+ Lumbering shapeless jackboots which nothing can polish or supple.
+ Much as old metres delight me, 'tis only where first they were nurtured,
+ In their own clime, their own speech: than pamper them here I would rather
+ Tie up my Pegasus tight to the scanty-fed rack of a sonnet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[FROM HOUSEHOLD WORDS.]
+
+A MIGHTIER HUNTER THAN NIMROD.
+
+A great deal has been said about the prowess of Nimrod, in connection
+with the chase, from the days of him of Babylon to those of the late
+Mr. Apperley of Shropshire; but we question whether, among all the
+sporting characters mentioned in ancient or modern story, there ever
+was so mighty a hunter as the gentleman whose sporting calendar
+now lies before us.[4] The annals of the chase, so far as we are
+acquainted with them, supply no such instances of familiar intimacy
+with lions, elephants, hippopotami, rhinoceroses, serpents,
+crocodiles, and other furious animals, with which the human species
+in general is not very forward in cultivating an acquaintance.
+
+[Footnote 4: A Hunter's Life in South Africa. By R. Gordon Cumming,
+Esq., of Altyre.]
+
+Mr. Cumming had exhausted the deer-forests of his native Scotland;
+he had sighed for the rolling prairies and rocky mountains of the Far
+West, and was tied down to military routine as a mounted rifleman in
+the Cape Colony; when he determined to resign his commission into the
+hands of Government, and himself to the delights of hunting amid the
+untrodden plains and forests of South Africa. Having provided himself
+with wagons to travel and live in, with bullocks to draw them, and
+with a host of attendants; a sufficiency of arms, horses, dogs, and
+ammunition, he set out from Graham's-Town in October, 1843. From that
+period his hunting adventures extended over five years, during which
+time he penetrated from various points and in various directions from
+his starting-place in lat. 33 down to lat. 20, and passed through
+districts upon which no European foot ever before trod; regions where
+the wildest of wild animals abound--nothing less serving Mr. Cumming's
+ardent purpose.
+
+A lion story in the early part of his book will introduce this
+fearless hunter-author to our readers better than the most elaborate
+dissection of his character. He is approaching Colesberg, the
+northernmost military station belonging to the Cape Colony. He is on
+a trusty steed, which he calls also "Colesberg." Two of his attendants
+on horseback are with him. "Suddenly," says the author, "I observed
+a number of vultures seated on the plain about a quarter of a mile
+ahead of us, and close beside them stood a huge lioness, consuming
+a blesblok which she had killed. She was assisted in her repast by
+about a dozen jackals, which were feasting along with her in the most
+friendly and confidential manner. Directing my followers' attention to
+the spot, I remarked, 'I see the lion;' to which they replied, 'Whar?
+whar? Yah! Almagtig! dat is he;' and instantly reining in their steeds
+and wheeling about, they pressed their heels to their horses' sides,
+and were preparing to betake themselves to flight. I asked them what
+they were going to do? To which they answered, 'We have not yet placed
+caps on our rifles.' This was true; but while this short conversation
+was passing, the lioness had observed us. Raising her full round
+face, she overhauled us for a few seconds, and then set off at a smart
+canter toward a range of mountains some miles to the northward; the
+whole troop of jackals also started off in another direction; there
+was therefore no time to think of caps. The first move was to bring
+her to bay, and not a second was to be lost. Spurring my good and
+lively steed, and shouting to my men to follow, I flew across the
+plain, and, being fortunately mounted on Colesberg, the flower of
+my stud, I gained upon her at every stride. This was to me a joyful
+moment, and I at once made up my mind that she or I must die. The
+lioness soon after suddenly pulled up, and sat on her haunches like
+a dog, with her back toward me, not even deigning to look round. She
+then appeared to say to herself, 'Does this fellow know who he is
+after?' Having thus sat for half a minute, as if involved in thought,
+she sprang to her feet, and facing about, stood looking at me for a
+few seconds, moving her tail slowly from side to side, showing her
+teeth and growling fiercely. She next made a short run forward, making
+a loud, rumbling noise like thunder. This she did to intimidate
+me; but finding that I did not flinch an inch, nor seem to heed her
+hostile demonstrations, she quietly stretched out her massive arms,
+and lay down on the grass. My Hottentots now coming up, we all three
+dismounted, and drawing our rifles from their holsters, we looked to
+see if the powder was up in the nipples, and put on our caps. While
+this was doing, the lioness sat up, and showed evident symptoms of
+uneasiness. She looked first at us, and then behind her, as if to see
+if the coast were clear; after which she made a short run toward us,
+uttering her deep-drawn murderous growls. Having secured the three
+horses to one another by their rheims, we led them on as if we
+intended to pass her, in the hope of obtaining a broadside; but this
+she carefully avoided to expose, presenting only her full front. I had
+given Stofolus my Moore rifle, with orders to shoot her if she should
+spring upon me, but on no account to fire before me. Kleinboy was to
+stand ready to hand me my Purdey rifle, in case the two-grooved Dixon
+should not prove sufficient. My men as yet had been steady, but
+they were in a precious stew, their faces having assumed a ghastly
+paleness; and I had a painful feeling that I could place no reliance
+on them. Now, then, for it, neck or nothing! She is within sixty yards
+of us, and she keeps advancing. We turned the horses' tails to her.
+I knelt on one side, and taking a steady aim at her breast, let fly.
+The ball cracked loudly on her tawny hide, and crippled her in the
+shoulder; upon which she charged with an appalling roar, and in
+the twinkling of an eye she was in the midst of us. At this moment
+Stofolus'a rifle exploded in his hand, and Kleinboy, whom I had
+ordered to stand ready by me, danced about like a duck in a gale of
+wind. The lioness sprang upon Colesberg, and fearfully lacerated his
+ribs and haunches with her horrid teeth and claws. The worst wound was
+on his haunch, which exhibited a sickening, yawning gash, more than
+twelve inches long, almost laying bare the very bone. I was very
+cool and steady, and did not feel in the least degree nervous, having
+fortunately great confidence in my own shooting; but I must confess,
+when the whole affair was over, I felt that it was a very awful
+situation, and attended with extreme peril, as I had no friend with
+me on whom I could rely. When the lioness sprang on Colesberg, I
+stood out from the horses, ready with my second barrel for the first
+chance she should give me of a clear shot. This she quickly did; for,
+seemingly satisfied with the revenge she had now taken, she quitted
+Colesberg, and slewing her tail to one side, trotted sulkily past
+within a few paces of me, taking one step to the left. I pitched my
+rifle to my shoulder, and in another second the lioness was stretched
+on the plain a lifeless corpse."
+
+This is, however, but a harmless adventure compared with a subsequent
+escapade--not with one, but with six lions. It was the hunter's habit
+to lay wait near the drinking-places of these animals, concealed in a
+hole dug for the purpose. In such a place on the occasion in question,
+Mr. Cumming--having left one of three rhinoceroses he had previously
+killed as a bait--ensconsed himself. Such a savage festival as that
+which introduced the adventure, has never before, we believe, been
+introduced through the medium of the softest English and the finest
+hot-pressed paper to the notice of the civilized public. "Soon after
+twilight," the author relates, "I went down to my hole with Kleinboy
+and two natives, who lay concealed in another hole, with Wolf and
+Boxer ready to slip, in the event of wounding a lion. On reaching
+the water I looked toward the carcase of the rhinoceros, and, to
+my astonishment, I beheld the ground alive with large creatures,
+as though a troop of zebras were approaching the fountain to drink.
+Kleinboy remarked to me that a troop of zebras were standing on the
+height. I answered, 'Yes,' but I knew very well that zebras would not
+be capering around the carcase of a rhinoceros. I quickly arranged my
+blankets, pillow, and guns in the hole, and then lay down to feast my
+eyes on the interesting sight before me. It was bright moonlight, as
+clear as I need wish, and within one night of being full moon. There
+were six large lions, about twelve or fifteen hyenas, and from twenty
+to thirty jackals, feasting on and around the carcases of the three
+rhinoceroses. The lions feasted peacefully, but the hyenas and jackals
+fought over every mouthful, and chased one another round and round
+the carcases, growling, laughing, screeching, chattering, and howling
+without any intermission. The hyenas did not seem afraid of the lions,
+although they always gave way before them; for I observed that they
+followed them in the most disrespectful manner, and stood laughing,
+one or two on either side, when any lions came after their comrades to
+examine pieces of skin or bones which they were dragging away. I had
+lain watching this banquet for about three hours, in the strong hope
+that, when the lions had feasted, they would come and drink. Two black
+and two white rhinoceroses had made their appearance, but, scared by
+the smell of the blood, they had made off. At length the lions seemed
+satisfied. They all walked about with their heads up, and seemed to
+be thinking about the water; and in two minutes one of them turned his
+face toward me, and came on; he was immediately followed by a second
+lion, and in half a minute by the remaining four. It was a decided
+and general move, they were all coming to drink right bang in my face,
+within fifteen yards of me."
+
+The hunters were presently discovered. "An old lioness, who seemed to
+take the lead, had detected me, and, with her head high and her eyes
+fixed full upon me she was coming slowly round the corner of the
+little vley to cultivate further my acquaintance! This unfortunate
+coincidence put a stop at once to all further contemplation. I
+thought; in my haste, that it was perhaps most prudent to shoot
+this lioness, especially as none of the others had noticed me. I
+accordingly moved my arm and covered her; she saw me move and halted,
+exposing a full broadside. I fired; the ball entered one shoulder, and
+passed out behind the other. She bounded forward with repeated growls,
+and was followed by her five comrades all enveloped in a cloud of
+dust; nor did they atop until they had reached the cover behind
+me, except one old gentleman, who halted and looked back for a few
+seconds, when I fired, but the ball went high. I listened anxiously
+for some sound to denote the approaching end of the lioness; nor
+listened in vain. I heard her growling and stationary, as if dying. In
+one minute her comrades crossed the vley a little below me, and made
+toward the rhinoceros. I then slipped Wolf and Boxer on her scent,
+and, following them into the cover, I found her lying dead."
+
+Mr. Cumming's adventures with elephants are no less thrilling. He had
+selected for the aim of his murderous rifle two huge female elephants
+from a herd. "Two of the troop had walked slowly past at about sixty
+yards, and the one which I had selected was feeding with two others
+on a thorny tree before me. My hand was now as steady as the rock on
+which it rested, so, taking a deliberate aim, I let fly at her head, a
+little behind the eye. She got it hard and sharp, just where I aimed,
+but it did not seem to affect her much. Uttering a loud cry, she
+wheeled about, when I gave her the second ball, close behind the
+shoulder. All the elephants uttered a strange rumbling noise, and made
+off in a line to the northward at a brisk ambling pace, their huge
+fanlike ears flapping in the ratio of their speed. I did not wait to
+load, but ran back to the hillock to obtain a view. On gaining its
+summit, the guides pointed out the elephants; they were standing in
+a grove of shady trees, but the wounded one was some distance behind
+with another elephant, doubtless its particular friend, who was
+endeavoring to assist it. These elephants had probably never before
+heard the report of a gun; and having neither seen nor smelt me, they
+were unaware of the presence of man, and did not seem inclined to go
+any further. Presently my men hove in sight, bringing the dogs; and
+when these came up, I waited some time before commencing the attack,
+that the dogs and horses might recover their wind. We then rode slowly
+toward the elephants, and had advanced within two hundred yards of
+them, when, the ground being open, they observed us, and made off
+in an easterly direction; but the wounded one immediately dropped
+astern, and next moment she was surrounded by the dogs, which, barking
+angrily, seemed to engross her attention. Having placed myself between
+her and the retreating troop, I dismounted to fire, within forty
+yards of her, in open ground. Colesberg was extremely afraid of the
+elephants, and gave me much trouble, jerking my arm when I tried to
+fire. At length I let fly; but, on endeavoring to regain my saddle.
+Colesberg declined to allow me to mount; and when I tried to lead him,
+and run for it, he only backed toward the wounded elephant. At this
+moment I heard another elephant close behind: and on looking about I
+beheld the 'friend,' with uplifted trunk, charging down upon me at top
+speed, shrilly trumpeting, and following an old black pointer named
+Schwart, that was perfectly deaf, and trotted along before the enraged
+elephant quite unaware of what was behind him. I felt certain that
+she would have either me or my horse. I, however, determined not to
+relinquish my steed, but to hold on by the bridle. My men, who of
+course kept at a safe distance, stood aghast with their mouths open,
+and for a few seconds my position was certainly not an enviable
+one. Fortunately, however, the dogs took off the attention of the
+elephants; and, just us they were upon me I managed to spring into the
+saddle, where I was safe. As I turned my back to mount, the elephants
+were so very near, that I really expected to feel one of their
+trunks lay hold of me. I rode up to Kleinboy for my double-barrelled
+two-grooved rifle; he and Isaac were pale and almost speechless with
+fright. Returning to the charge, I was soon once more alongside,
+and, firing from the saddle, I sent another brace of bullets into the
+wounded elephant. Colesberg was extremely unsteady, and destroyed the
+correctness of my aim. The 'friend' now seemed resolved to do some
+mischief, and charged me furiously, pursuing me to a distance of
+several hundred yards. I therefore deemed it proper to give her
+a gentle hint to act less officiously, and so, having loaded, I
+approached within thirty yards, and gave it her sharp, right and left,
+behind the shoulder; upon which she at once made off with drooping
+trunk, evidently with a mortal wound. Two more shots finished her; on
+receiving them she tossed her trunk up and down two or three times,
+and falling on her broadside against a thorny tree, which yielded like
+grass before her enormous weight, she uttered a deep hoarse cry and
+expired."
+
+Mr. Cumming's exploits in the water are no less exciting than his land
+adventures. Here is an account of his victory over a hippopotamus, on
+the banks of the Limpopo river, near the northernmost extremity of his
+journeyings.
+
+"There were four of them, three cows and an old bull; they stood in
+the middle of the river, and though alarmed, did not appear aware of
+the extent of the impending danger. I took the sea-cow next me, and
+with my first ball I gave her a mortal wound, knocking loose a great
+plate on the top of her skull. She at once commenced plunging round
+and round, and then occasionally remained still, sitting for a few
+minutes on the same spot. On hearing the report of my rifle two of
+the others took up stream, and the fourth dashed down the river; they
+trotted along, like oxen, at a smart pace as long as the water was
+shallow. I was now in a state of very great anxiety about my wounded
+sea-cow, for I feared that she would get down into deep water, and
+be lost like the last one; her struggles were still carrying her
+down stream, and the water was becoming deeper. To settle the matter
+I accordingly fired a second shot from the bank, which, entering
+the roof of her skull, passed out through her eye; she then, kept
+continually splashing round and round in a circle in the middle of the
+river. I had great fears of the crocodiles, and I did not know that
+the sea-cow might not attack me. My anxiety to secure her, however,
+overcame all hesitation; so, divesting myself of my leathers, and
+armed with a sharp knife. I dashed into the water, which at first took
+me up to my arm-pits, but in the middle was shallower. As I approached
+Behemoth her eye looked very wicked. I halted for a moment, ready to
+dive under the water if she attacked me, but she was stunned, and did
+not know what she was doing; so, running in upon her, and seizing
+her short tail, I attempted to incline her course to land. It was
+extraordinary what enormous strength she still had in the water. I
+could not guide her in the slightest, and she continued to splash, and
+plunge, and blow, and make her circular course, carrying me along with
+her as if I was a fly on her tail. Finding her tail gave me but a poor
+hold, as the only means of securing my prey, I took out my knife, and
+cutting two deep parallel incisions through the skin on her rump, and
+lifting this skin from the flesh, so that I could get in my two hands,
+I made use of this as a handle; and after some desperate hard work,
+sometimes pushing and sometimes pulling, the sea-cow continuing her
+circular course all the time and I holding on at her rump like grim
+Death, eventually I succeeded in bringing this gigantic and most
+powerful animal to the bank. Here the Bushman, quickly brought me a
+stout buffalo-rheim from my horse's neck, which I passed through the
+opening in the thick skin, and moored Behemoth to a tree. I then took
+my rifle, and sent a ball through the center of her head, and she was
+numbered with the dead." There is nothing in "Waterton's Wanderings,"
+or in the "Adventures of Baron Munchausen" more startling than this
+"Waltz with a Hippopotamus!"
+
+In the all-wise disposition of events, it is perhaps ordained that
+wild animals should be subdued by man to his use at the expense
+of such tortures as those described in the work before us. Mere
+amusement, therefore, is too light a motive for dealing such wounds
+and death Mr. Cumming owns to; but he had other motives,--besides a
+considerable profit he has reaped in trophies, ivory, fur, &c., he has
+made in his book some valuable contributions to the natural history of
+the animals he wounded and slew.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM GRAHAM'S MAGAZINE FOR AUGUST
+
+MANUELA.
+
+A BALLAD OF CALIFORNIA.
+
+BY BAYARD TAYLOR.
+
+ From the doorway, Manuela, in the sheeny April morn,
+ Southward looks, along the valley, over leagues of gleaming corn;
+ Where the mountain's misty rampart like the wall of Eden towers,
+ And the isles of oak are sleeping on a painted sea of flowers.
+ All the air is full of music, for the winter rains are o'er,
+ And the noisy magpies chatter from the budding sycamore;
+ Blithely frisk unnumbered squirrels, over all the grassy slope;
+ Where the airy summits brighten, nimbly leaps the antelope.
+ Gentle eyes of Manuela! tell me wherefore do ye rest
+ On the oaks' enchanted islands and the flowery ocean's breast?
+ Tell me wherefore down the valley, ye have traced the highway's mark
+ Far beyond the belts of timber, to the mountain-shadows dark?
+ Ah, the fragrant bay may blossom, and the sprouting verdure shine
+ With the tears of amber dropping from the tassels of the pine.
+ And the morning's breath of balsam lightly brush her sunny cheek--
+ Little recketh Manuela of the tales of Spring they speak.
+ When the Summer's burning solstice on the mountain-harvests glowed,
+ She had watched a gallant horseman riding down the valley road;
+ Many times she saw him turning, looking back with parting thrills,
+ Till amid her tears she lost him, in the shadow of the hills.
+ Ere the cloudless moons were over, he had passed the Desert's sand.
+ Crossed the rushing Colorada and the dark Apache Land,
+ And his laden mules were driven, when the time of rains began.
+ With the traders of Chihuaha, to the Fair of San Juan.
+ Therefore watches Manuela--therefore lightly doth she start,
+ When the sound of distant footsteps seems the beating of her heart;
+ Not a wind the green oak rustles or the redwood branches stirs,
+ But she hears the silver jingle of his ringing bit and spurs.
+ Often, out the hazy distance, come the horsemen, day by day,
+ But they come not as Bernardo--she can see it, far away;
+ Well she knows the airy gallop of his mettled _alazan_,[5]
+ Light as any antelope upon the Hills of Gavilan.
+ She would know him mid a thousand, by his free and gallant air;
+ By the featly-knit sarape,[6] such as wealthy traders wear;
+ By his broidered calzoneros[7] and his saddle, gaily spread,
+ With its cantle rimmed with silver, and its horn a lion's head.
+ None like he the light riata[8] on the maddened bull can throw;
+ None amid the mountain-canons, track like he the stealthy doe;
+ And at all the Mission festals, few indeed the revelers are
+ Who can dance with him the jota, touch with him the gay guitar.
+ He has said to Manuela, and the echoes linger still
+ In the cloisters of her bosom, with a secret, tender thrill,
+ When the hay again has blossomed, and the valley stands in corn,
+ Shall the bells of Santa Clara usher in the wedding morn.
+ He has pictured the procession, all in holyday attire,
+ And the laugh and look of gladness, when they see the distant spire;
+ Then their love shall kindle newly, and the world be doubly fair,
+ In the cool delicious crystal of the summer morning air.
+ Tender eyes of Manuela! what has dimmed your lustrous beam?
+ 'Tis a tear that falls to glitter on the casket of her dream.
+ Ah, the eye of love must brighten, if its watches would be true,
+ For the star is falsely mirrored in the rose's drop of dew!
+ But her eager eyes rekindle, and her breathless bosom stills,
+ As she sees a horseman moving in the shadow of the hills;
+ Now in love and fond thanksgiving they may loose their pearly tides--
+ 'Tis the alazan that gallops, 'tis Bernardo's self that rides!
+
+[Footnote 5: In California horses are named according to their color.
+An _alazan_ is a sorrel--a color generally preferred, as denoting
+speed and mettle.]
+
+[Footnote 6: The sarape is a knit blanket of many gay colors, worn
+over the shoulders by an opening in the center, through which the head
+is thrust.]
+
+[Footnote 7: Calzoneros are trowsers, generally made of blue cloth
+or velvet, richly embroidered, and worn over an under pair of white
+linen. They are slashed up the outside of each leg, for greater
+convenience in riding, and studded with rows of silver buttons.]
+
+[Footnote 8: The lariat, or riata, as it is indifferently called in
+California and Mexico, is precisely the same as the lasso of South
+America.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM FRASER'S MAGAZINE FOR JULY.
+
+LEDRU ROLLIN.
+
+Ledru Rollin is now in his forty-fourth or forty-fifth year,
+having been born in 1806 or 1807. He is the grandson of the famous
+_Prestidigateur_, or Conjurer Comus, who, about four or five-and-forty
+years ago, was in the acme of his fame. During the Consulate, and a
+considerable portion of the Empire, Comus traveled from one department
+of France to the other, and is even known to have extended his
+journeys beyond the Rhine and the Moselle on one side, and beyond the
+Rhône and Garonne on the other. Of all the conjurers of his day he was
+the most famous and the most successful, always, of course, excepting
+that Corsican conjurer who ruled for so many years the destinies
+of France. From those who have seen that famous trickster, we
+have learned that the Charleses, the Alexanders, even the Robert
+Houdins, were children compared with the magical wonder-worker of
+the past generation. The fame of Comus was enormous, and his gains
+proportionate; and when he had shuffled off this mortal coil it
+was found he had left to his descendants a very ample--indeed, for
+France, a very large fortune. Of the descendants in a right line, his
+grandson, Ledru Rollin, was his favorite, and to him the old man left
+the bulk of his fortune, which, during the minority of Ledru Rollin,
+grew to a sum amounting to nearly, if not fully, £4,000 per annum.
+
+The scholastic education of the young man who was to inherit this
+considerable fortune, was nearly completed during the reign of
+Louis XVIII., and shortly after Charles X. ascended the throne _il
+commençait à faire sur droit_, as they phrase it in the _pays Latin_.
+Neither during the reign of Louis XVIII., nor indeed now, unless in
+the exact and physical sciences, does Paris afford a very solid and
+substantial education. Though the Roman poets and historians are
+tolerably well studied and taught, yet little attention is paid to
+Greek literature. The physical and exact sciences are unquestionably
+admirably taught at the Polytechnique and other schools; but neither
+at the College of St. Barbe, nor of Henry IV., can a pupil be so well
+grounded in the rudiments and humanities as in our grammar and public
+schools. A studious, pains-taking, and docile youth, will, no doubt,
+learn a great deal, no matter where he has been placed in pupilage;
+but we have heard from a contemporary of M. Rollin, that he was not
+particularly distinguished either for his industry or his docility in
+early life. The earliest days of the reign of Charles X. saw M. Ledru
+Rollin an _étudiant en droit_ in Paris. Though the schools of law
+had been re-established during the Consulate pretty much after the
+fashion in which they existed in the time of Louis the XIV., yet the
+application of the _alumni_ was fitful and desultory, and perhaps
+there were no two classes in France, at the commencement of 1825. who
+were more imbued with the Voltarian philosophy and the doctrines and
+principles of Rousseau, than the _élèves_ of the schools of law and
+medicine.
+
+Under a king so sceptical and voluptuous, so much of a _philosophie_
+and _phyrronéste_, as Louis XVIII., such tendencies were likely to
+spread themselves through all ranks of society--to permeate from
+the very highest to the very lowest classes: and not all the lately
+acquired asceticism of the monarch, his successor, nor all the
+efforts of the Jesuits could restrain or control the tendencies of
+the _étudiants en droit_. What the law-students were antecedently and
+subsequent to 1825, we know from the _Physiologie de l'Homme de Loi_;
+and it is not to be supposed that M. Ledru Rollin, with more ample
+pecuniary means at command, very much differed from his fellows.
+After undergoing a three years' course of study, M. Rollin obtained
+a diploma as a _licencié en droit_, and commenced his career as
+_stagiare_ somewhere about the end of 1826 or the beginning of 1827.
+Toward the close of 1829, or in the first months of 1830, he was, we
+believe, placed on the roll of advocates; so that he was called to
+the bar, or, as they say in France, received an advocate, in his
+twenty-second or twenty-third year.
+
+The first years of an advocate, even in France, are generally passed
+in as enforced an idleness as in England. Clients come not to consult
+the greenhorn of the last term; nor does any _avoué_ among our
+neighbors, any more than any attorney among ourselves, fancy that an
+old head is to be found on young shoulders. The years 1830 and 1831
+were not marked by any oratorical effort of the author of the _Decline
+of England_; nor was it till 1832 that, being then one of the youngest
+of the bar of Paris, he prepared and signed an opinion against the
+placing of Paris in a state of siege consequent on the insurrections
+of June. Two years after he prepared a memoir; or _factum_, on
+the affair of the Rue Transonain, and defended Dupoty, accused
+of _complicité morale_, a monstrous doctrine invented by the
+Attorney-General Hebert. From 1834 to 1841 he appeared as counsel in
+nearly all the cases of _émeute_ or conspiracy where the individuals
+prosecuted were Republicans, or _quasi_-Republicans. Meanwhile, he
+had become the proprietor and _rédacteur en chef_ of the _Reforme_
+newspaper, a political journal of an ultra-Liberal--indeed of a
+Republican--complexion, which was then called of extreme opinions, as
+he had previously been editor of a legal newspaper called _Journal
+du Palais_. _La Reforme_ had been originally conducted by Godefroy
+Cavaignac, the brother of the general, who continued editor till the
+period of the fatal illness which preceded his death. The defense
+of Dupoty, tried and sentenced under the ministry of Thiers to five
+years' imprisonment, as a regicide, because a letter was found open
+in the letter-box of the paper of which he was editor, addressed to
+him by a man said to be implicated in the conspiracy of Quenisset,
+naturally brought M. Rollin into contact with many of the writers in
+_La Reforme_; and these persons, among others Guinard Arago, Etienne
+Arago, and Flocon, induced him to embark some portion of his fortune
+in the paper. From one step he was led on to another, and ultimately
+became one of the chief--indeed, if not the chief proprietor. The
+speculation was far from successful in a pecuniary sense, but M.
+Rollin, in furtherance of his opinions, continued for some years to
+disburse considerable sums in the support of the journal. By this he
+no doubt increased his popularity and his credit with the Republican
+party, but it cannot be denied that he very materially injured his
+private fortune. In the earlier portion of his career, M. Rollin was,
+it is known, not indisposed to seek a seat in the Chamber, under the
+auspices of M. Barrot, but subsequently to his connection with the
+_Reforme_, he had himself become thoroughly known to the extreme party
+in the departments, and on the death of Gamier Pagès the elder, was
+elected in 1841 for Le Mans, in La Sarthe.
+
+In addressing the electors, after his return, M. Rollin delivered
+a speech much more Republican than Monarchical. For this he was
+sentenced to four months' imprisonment, but the sentence was appealed
+against and annulled on a technical ground, and the honorable member
+was ultimately acquitted by the Cour d'Assizes of Angers.
+
+The parliamentary _début_ of M. Rollin took place in 1842. His first
+speech was delivered on the subject of the secret-service money.
+The elocution was easy and flowing, the manner oratorical, the style
+somewhat turgid and bombastic. But in the course of the session M.
+Rollin improved, and his discourse on the modification of the criminal
+law, on other legal subjects, and on railways, were more sober
+specimens of style. In 1843 and 1844 M. Rollin frequently spoke; but
+though his speeches were a good deal talked of outside the walls of
+the Chamber, they produced little effect within it. Nevertheless,
+it was plain to every candid observer that he possessed many of the
+requisites of the orator--a good voice, a copious flow of words,
+considerable energy and enthusiasm, a sanguine temperament and jovial
+and generous disposition. In the sessions of 1845-46, M. Rollin took
+a still more prominent part. His purse, his house in the Rue Tournon,
+his counsels and advice, were all placed at the service of the
+men of the movement; and by the beginning of 1847 he seemed to be
+acknowledged by the extreme party as its most conspicuous and popular
+member. Such indeed was his position when the electoral reform
+banquets, on a large scale, began to take place in the autumn of 1847.
+These banquets, promoted and forwarded by the principal members of the
+opposition to serve the cause of electoral reform, were looked on
+by M. Rollin and his friends in another light. While Odillon Barrot,
+Duvergier d'Haurunne, and others, sought by means of them to produce
+an enlarged constituency, the member for Sarthe looked not merely to
+functional, but to organic reform--not merely to an enlargement of
+the constituency, but to a change in the form of the government. The
+desire of Barrot was _à la vérité à la sincerité des institutions
+conquises en Juillet_ 1830; whereas the desire of Rollin was, _à
+l'amélioration des classes laborieuses_; the one was willing to go
+on with the dynasty of Louis Philippe and the Constitution of July
+improved by diffusion and extension of the franchise, the other
+looked to a democratic and social republic. The result is now known.
+It is not here our purpose to go over the events of the Revolution
+of February 1848, but we may be permitted to observe, that the
+combinations by which that event was effected were ramified and
+extensive, and were long silently and secretly in motion.
+
+The personal history of M. Rollin, since February 1848, is well-known
+and patent to all the world. He was the _ame damnée_ of the
+Provisional Government--the man whose extreme opinions, intemperate
+circulars, and vehement patronage of persons professing the political
+creed of Robespierre--indisposed all moderate men to rally around the
+new system. It was in covering Ledru Rollin with the shield of his
+popularity that Lamartine lost his own, and that he ceased to be the
+political idol of a people of whom he must ever be regarded as one
+of the literary glories and illustrations. On the dissolution of
+the Provisional Government, Ledru Rollin constituted himself one of
+the leaders of the movement party. In ready powers of speech and in
+popularity no man stood higher; but he did not possess the power of
+restraining his followers or of holding them in hand, and the result
+was, that instead of being their leader he became their instrument.
+Fond of applause, ambitious of distinction, timid by nature, destitute
+of pluck, and of that rarer virtue moral courage, Ledru Rollin,
+to avoid the imputation of faint-heartedness, put himself in the
+foreground, but the measures of his followers being ill-taken, the
+plot in which he was mixed up egregiously failed, and he is now in
+consequence an exile in England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GENERAL GARIBALDI.
+
+MR. FILIPANTE gives the following notice of this Italian revolutionary
+leader in a communication to the _Evening Post_. "His exertions in
+behalf of the liberal movement in Italy have been indefatigable. As
+active as he was courageous, he was among the first to take up arms
+against Austrian tyranny, and the last to lay them down. Even when the
+triumvirate at Rome had been overthrown, and the most ardent spirits
+despaired of the republic, Garibaldi and his noble band of soldiers
+refused to yield; they maintained a vigorous resistance to the last,
+and only quitted the ground when the cause was so far gone that their
+own success would have been of no general advantage.
+
+"The General is about forty years of age. He was in early life an
+officer in the Sardinian service, but, engaging in an unsuccessful
+revolt against the government of Charles Albert, he was compelled to
+leave his native land. He fled to Montevideo, where he fought with
+distinction in the wars against Rosas. At the breaking out of the late
+revolution he returned. His military capacities being well known, he
+was entrusted with a command; and throughout the war his services were
+most efficient. He defeated the allied troops of Austria, France,
+and Naples, in several battles; his name, in fact, became a terror,
+and when the republic fell, and he was compelled to retire to the
+Appenines, the invaders felt that his return would be more formidable
+than any other event.
+
+"From Italy he went to Morocco, where he has since lived. But his
+friends, desiring that his great energies should be actively employed,
+have offered him the command of a merchant ship, which he has
+accepted. He will, therefore, hereafter be engaged in the peaceful
+pursuits of commerce, unless his country should again require his
+exertions."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CRIME, IN ENGLAND AND FRANCE.
+
+In recent discussions of the effects of education upon morals, the
+relative conditions of Great Britain and France in this respect
+have often been referred to. The following paragraph shows that the
+statistics in the case have not been well understood:
+
+"In a recent sitting of the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences,
+M. Leon Faucher, the representative, read a paper on the state of
+crime in England; and some of the journals have taken advantage
+of this to institute a comparison with returns of the criminality
+of France, recently published by the Government--the result being
+anything but flattering to England. But M. Faucher, the Academy, the
+newspapers, and almost everybody else in France, seems to be entirely
+ignorant that it is impossible to institute a comparison between the
+amount of crime in England and the amount of crime in France, inasmuch
+as crimes are not the same in both countries. Thus, for example, it
+is a felony in England to steal a pair of shoes, the offender is sent
+before the Court of Assize, and his offense counts in the official
+returns as a "crime;" in France, on the contrary, a petty theft is
+considered a _délit_, or simple offense, is punished by a police
+magistrate, and figures in the returns as an "offense." With
+respect to murders, too, the English have only two general names for
+killing--murder or manslaughter--but the French have nearly a dozen
+categories of killing, of which what the English call murder forms
+only one. It is the same, in short, with almost every species of
+crime."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The International Weekly Miscellany,
+Vol. 1, No. 7, by Various
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The International Weekly Miscellany, Vol.
+1, No. 7, 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 International Weekly Miscellany, Vol. 1, No. 7
+ Of Literature, Art, and Science, August 12, 1850
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 11, 2004 [EBook #13711]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, William Flis, the PG Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team and Cornell University
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <h1>INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MISCELLANY<br />
+ Of Literature, Art, and Science.</h1>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <table width="100%"
+ summary="Volume, Number, and Date">
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left"><b>Vol. I.</b></td>
+
+ <td align="center"><b>NEW YORK, AUGUST 12,
+ 1850.</b></td>
+
+ <td align="right"><b>No. 7.</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page193"
+ id="page193"></a>[pg 193]</span>
+
+ <h2>WOMEN AND LITERATURE IN FRANCE.</h2>
+
+ <p>From a sprightly letter from Paris to the <i>Cologne
+ Gazette</i>, we translate for <i>The International</i> the
+ following account of the position of women in the French
+ Republic, together with the accompanying gossip concerning
+ sundry ladies whose names have long been quite prominently
+ before the public:</p>
+
+ <p>"It is curious that the idea of the emancipation of women
+ should have originated in France, for there is no country in
+ Europe where the sex have so little reason to complain of their
+ position as in this, especially at Paris. Leaving out of view a
+ certain paragraph of the <i>Code Civile</i>&mdash;and that is
+ nothing but a sentence in a law-book&mdash;and looking closely
+ into the features of women's life, we see that they are not
+ only queens who reign, but also ministers who govern.</p>
+
+ <p>"In France women are engaged in a large proportion of civil
+ employments, and may without hesitation devote themselves to
+ art and science. It is indeed astonishing to behold the
+ interest with which the beautiful sex here enter upon all
+ branches of art and knowledge.</p>
+
+ <p>"The ateliers of the painters number quite as many female as
+ male students, and there are apparently more women than men who
+ copy the pictures in the Louvre. Nothing is more pleasing than
+ to see these gentle creatures, with their easels, sitting
+ before a colossal Rubens or a Madonna of Raphael. No difficulty
+ alarms them, and prudery is not allowed to give a voice in
+ their choice of subjects.</p>
+
+ <p>"I have never yet attended a lecture, by either of the
+ professors here, but I have found some seats occupied by
+ ladies. Even the lectures of Michel Chevalier and Blanqui do
+ not keep back the eagerness of the charming Parisians in
+ pursuit of science. That Michelet and Edgar Quinet have
+ numerous female disciples is accordingly not difficult to
+ believe.</p>
+
+ <p>"Go to a public session of the Academy, and you find the
+ '<i>cercle</i>' filled almost exclusively by ladies, and these
+ laurel-crowned heads have the delight of seeing their immortal
+ works applauded by the clapping of tenderest hands. In truth,
+ the French savan is uncommonly clear in the most abstract
+ things; but it would be an interesting question, whether the
+ necessity of being not alone easily intelligible but agreeable
+ to the capacity of comprehension possessed by the unschooled
+ mind of woman, has not largely contributed to the facility and
+ charm which is peculiar to French scientific literature. Read
+ for example the discourse on Cabanis, pronounced by Mignet at
+ the last session. It would be impossible to write more
+ charmingly, more elegantly, more attractively, even upon a
+ subject within the range of the fine arts. The works, and
+ especially the historical works, of the French, are universally
+ diffused. Popular histories, so-called editions for the people,
+ are here entirely unknown; everything that is published is in a
+ popular edition, and if as great and various care were taken
+ for the education of the people as in Germany, France would in
+ this respect be the first country in the world.</p>
+
+ <p>"With the increasing influence of monarchical ideas in
+ certain circles, the women seem to be returning to the
+ traditions of monarchy, and are throwing themselves into the
+ business of making memoirs. Hardly have George Sand's
+ Confessions been announced, and already new enterprises in the
+ same line are set on foot. The European dancer, who is perhaps
+ more famous for making others dance to her music, and who has
+ enjoyed a monopoly of cultivated scandal, Lola Montes, also
+ intends to publish her memoirs. They will of course contain an
+ interesting fragment of German federal politics, and form a
+ contribution to German revolutionary literature. Lola herself
+ is still too beautiful to devote her own time to the writing.
+ Accordingly, she has resorted to the pen of M. Balzac. If
+ Madame Balzac has nothing to say against the necessary intimacy
+ with the dangerous Spanish or Irish or whatever woman&mdash;for
+ Lola Montes is a second Homer&mdash;the reading world may
+ anticipate an interesting, chapter of life. No writer is better
+ fitted for such a work than so profound a man of the world, and
+ so keen a painter of character, as
+ Balzac.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page194"
+ id="page194"></a>[pg 194]</span>
+
+ <p>"The well-known actress, Mlle. Georges, who was in her prime
+ during the most remarkable epoch of the century, and was in
+ relations with the most prominent persons of the Empire, is
+ also preparing a narrative of her richly varied experiences.
+ Perhaps these attractive examples may induce Madame Girardin
+ also to bestow her memoirs upon us, and so the process can be
+ repeated infinitely."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>Authors and Books.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Parke Godwin has just given to the public, through Mr.
+ Putnam, a new edition of the translation made by himself and
+ some literary friends, of Goethe's "Autobiography, or Truth and
+ Poetry from My Life." In his new preface Mr. Godwin exposes one
+ of the most scandalous pieces of literary imposition that we
+ have ever read of. This translation, with a few verbal
+ alterations which mar its beauty and lessen its fidelity, has
+ been reprinted in "Bohn's Standard Library," in London, as an
+ original English version, in the making of which "the American
+ was of <i>occasional use</i>," &amp;c. Mr. Godwin is one of our
+ best German scholars, and his discourse last winter on the
+ character and genius of Goethe, illustrated his thorough
+ appreciation of the Shakspeare of the Continent, and that
+ affectionate sympathy which is so necessary to the task of
+ turning an author from one language into another. There are
+ very few books in modern literature more attractive or more
+ instructive to educated men than this Autobiography of Goethe,
+ for which we are indebted to him.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>John Randolph is the best subject for a biography, that our
+ political experience has yet furnished. Who that remembers the
+ long and slender man of iron, with his scarcely human scorn of
+ nearly all things beyond his "old Dominion," and his withering
+ wit, never restrained by any pity, and his passion for
+ destroying all fabrics of policy or reputation of which he was
+ not himself the architect, but will read with anticipations of
+ keen interest the announcement of a life of the eccentric yet
+ great Virginian! Such a work, by the Hon. Hugh A. Garland, is
+ in the press of the Appletons. We know little of Mr. Garland's
+ capacities in this way, but if his book prove not the most
+ attractive in the historical literature of the year, the fault
+ will not be in its subject.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The Scottish Booksellers have instituted a society for
+ professional objects under the title of the "Edinburgh
+ Booksellers' Union." In addition to business purposes, they
+ propose to collect and preserve books and pamphlets written by
+ or relating to booksellers, printers, engravers, or members of
+ collateral professions,&mdash;rare editions of other
+ works&mdash;and generally articles connected with parties
+ belonging to the above professions, whether literary,
+ professional, or personal.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>D'Israeli abandons himself now-a-days entirely to politics.
+ "The forehead high, and gleaming eye, and lip awry, of Benjamin
+ D'Israeli," sung once by <i>Fraser</i> are no longer seen
+ before the title-pages of "Wondrous Tales," but only before the
+ Speaker. It is much referred to, that in the recent
+ parliamentary commemoration of Sir Robert Peel, the Hebrew
+ commoner kept silence; his long war of bitter sarcasm and
+ reproach on the defunct statesman was too freshly remembered.
+ Peel rarely exerted himself to more advantage than in his
+ replies, to D'Israeli, all noticeable for subdued disdain,
+ conscious patriotism, and argumentative completeness. For
+ injustice experienced through life, the meritorious dead are in
+ a measure revenged by the feelings of their accusers or
+ detractors, when the latter retain the sensibility which the
+ grave usually excites, and especially amid such a chorus of
+ applause from all parties, and a whole people, as we have now
+ in England for Sir Robert Peel&mdash;the only man in the
+ Empire, except Wellington, who had a strictly personal
+ authority.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Dr. Dickson, recently of the Medical Department of the New
+ York University, and whose ill-health induced the resignation
+ of the chair he held there, has returned to Charleston, and we
+ observe that his professional and other friends in that city
+ greeted him with a public dinner, on the 9th ult. Dr. Dickson
+ we believe is one of the most classically elegant writers upon
+ medical science in the United States. He ranks with Chapman and
+ Oliver Wendell Holmes in the grace of his periods as well as in
+ the thoroughness of his learning and the exactness and
+ acuteness of his logic. Like Holmes, too, he is a poet, and,
+ generally, a very accomplished <i>litterateur</i>. We regret
+ the loss that New York sustains in his removal, but
+ congratulate Charleston upon the recovery of one of the best
+ known and most loved attractions of her society.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Mr. John R. Bartlett's boundary commission will soon be upon
+ the field of its activity. We were pleased to see that Mr.
+ Davis, of Massachusetts, a few days ago presented in the Senate
+ petitions from Edward Everett, Jared Sparks, and others, and
+ from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, at Boston, to
+ the effect that it would be of great public utility to attach
+ to the boundary commission to run the line between the United
+ States and Mexico, a small corps of persons well qualified to
+ make researches in the various departments of science.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>William C. Richards, the very clever and accomplished editor
+ of the <i>Southern Literary Gazette</i> was the author of "Two
+ Country Sonnets," contributed to a recent number of <i>The
+ International</i>, which we inadvertently credited to his
+ brother, T. Addison Richards the well-known and much esteemed
+ landscape painter.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page195"
+ id="page195"></a>[pg 195]</span>
+
+ <p>MAJOR POUSSIN, so well-known for his long residence in this
+ country as an officer of engineers, and, more recently, as
+ Minister of the French republic,&mdash;which, intelligent men
+ have no need to be assured, he represented with uniform wisdom
+ and manliness,&mdash;is now engaged at Paris upon a new edition
+ of his important book, <i>The Power and Prospects of the United
+ States</i>. We perceive that he has lately published in the
+ Republican journal <i>Le Credit</i>, a translation of the
+ American instructions to Mr. Mann, respecting Hungary. In his
+ preface to this document, Major Poussin pays the warmest
+ compliments to the feelings, measures and policy of our
+ administration, with which he contrasts, at the same time,
+ those of the French Government. He hopes a great deal for the
+ Democratic cause in Europe from the <i>moral influences</i> of
+ the United States.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>DR. JOHN W. FRANCIS, one of the most excellent men, as well
+ as one of the best physicians of New York, has received from
+ Trinity College, Hartford, the degree of Doctor of Laws. We
+ praise the authorities of Trinity for this judicious bestowal
+ of its honors. Francis's career of professional usefulness and
+ variously successful intellectual activity, are deserving such
+ academical recognition. His genial love of learning, large
+ intelligence, ready appreciation of individual merit, and that
+ genuine love of country which has led him to the carefullest
+ and most comprehensive study of our general and particular
+ annals, and to the frequentest displays of the sources of its
+ enduring grandeur, constitute in him a character eminently
+ entitled to our affectionate admiration.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE POEMS OF GRAY, in an edition of singular typographical
+ and pictorial beauty, are to be issued as one of the autumn
+ gift-books by Henry C. Baird, of Philadelphia. They are to be
+ edited by the tasteful and judicious critic, Professor Henry
+ Reed, of the University of Pennsylvania, to whom we were
+ indebted for the best edition of Wordsworth that appeared
+ during the life of that poet. We have looked over Professor
+ Reed's life of Gray, and have seen proofs of the admirable
+ engravings with which the work will be embellished. It will be
+ dedicated to our American Moxon, JAMES T. FIELDS, as a
+ souvenir. we presume, of a visit to the grave of the bard,
+ which the two young booksellers made together during a recent
+ tour in Europe. Mr. Baird and Mr. Fields are of the small
+ company of publishers, who, if it please them, can write their
+ own books. They have both given pleasant evidence of abilities
+ in this way.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>BURNS.&mdash;It appears from the Scotch papers that the
+ house in Burns-street, Dumfries, in which the bard of "Tam
+ o'Shanter" and his wife "bonnie Jean," lived and died, is about
+ to come into the market by way of public auction.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>"EUROPE, PAST AND PRESENT:" A comprehensive manual of
+ European Geography and History, derived from official and
+ authentic sources, and comprising not only an accurate
+ geographical and statistical description, but also a faithful
+ and interesting history of all European States; to which is
+ appended a copious and carefully arranged index, by Francis H.
+ Ungewitter, LL.D.,&mdash;is a volume of some six hundred pages,
+ just published by Mr. Putnam. It has been prepared with much
+ well-directed labor, and will be found a valuable and
+ comprehensive manual of reference upon all questions relating
+ to the history, geographical position, and general statistics
+ of the several States of Europe.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>M. LIBRI, of whose conviction at Paris (<i>par
+ contumace</i>, that is, in default of appearance), of stealing
+ books from public libraries, we have given some account in
+ <i>The International</i>, is warmly and it appears to us
+ successfully defended in the Athenæum, in which it is alleged
+ that there was not a particle of legal evidence against him. M.
+ Libri is, and was at the time of the appearance of the
+ accusation against him, a political exile in England.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>MAJOR RAWLINSON, F.R.S., has published a "Commentary on the
+ Cuneiform Inscriptions of Babylon and Assyria," including
+ readings of the inscriptions on the Nimroud Obelisk, discovered
+ by Mr. Layard, and a brief notice of the ancient kings of
+ Nineveh and Babylon. It was read before the Royal Asiatic
+ Society.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>REV. DR. WISEMAN, author of the admirable work on the
+ Connection between Science and Religion, is to proceed to Rome
+ toward the close of the present month to receive the hat of a
+ cardinal. It is many years since any English Roman Catholic,
+ resident in England, attained this honor.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY has published several
+ interesting volumes, of which the most important are those of
+ Judge Burnett. An address, by William D. Gallagher, its
+ President, on the History and Resources of the West and
+ Northwest, has just been issued: and it has nearly ready for
+ publication a volume of Mr. Hildreth.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE IMPERIAL LIBRARY AT VIENNA has been enriched by a very
+ old Greek manuscript on the Advent of Christ, composed by a
+ bishop of the second century, named Clement. This manuscript
+ was discovered a short time since by M. Waldeck, the
+ philologist, at Constantinople.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>MR. KEIGHTLEY's "History of Greece" has been translated into
+ modern Greek and published at Athens.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>GUIZOT's book on Democracy, has been prohibited in Austria,
+ through General Haynau's influence.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page196"
+ id="page196"></a>[pg 196]</span>
+
+ <p>WORDSWORTH'S POSTHUMOUS POEM, "The Prelude," is in the press
+ of the Appletons, by whose courtesy we are enabled to present
+ the readers of <i>The International</i> with the fourth canto
+ of it, before its publication in England. The poem is a sort of
+ autobiography in blank verse, marked by all the characteristics
+ of the poet&mdash;his original vein of thought; his majestic,
+ but sometimes diffuse, style of speculation; his large
+ sympathies with humanity, from its proudest to its humblest
+ forms. It will be read with great avidity by his
+ admirers&mdash;and there are few at this day who do not belong
+ to that class&mdash;as affording them a deeper insight into the
+ mind of Wordsworth than any of his other works. It is divided
+ into several books, named from the different situations or
+ stages of the author's life, or the subjects which at any
+ period particularly engaged his attention. We believe it will
+ be more generally read than any poem of equal length that has
+ issued from the press in this age.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Miss COOPER's "RURAL HOURS"<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ is everywhere commended as one of the most charming pictures
+ that have ever appeared of country life. The books of the
+ Howitts, delineating the same class of subjects in England
+ and Germany, are not to be compared to Miss Cooper's for
+ delicate painting or grace and correctness of diction. The
+ Evening Post observes:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"This is one of the most delightful books we have lately
+ taken up. It is a journal of daily observations made by an
+ intelligent and highly educated lady, residing in a most
+ beautiful part of the country, commencing with the spring
+ of 1848, and closing with the end of the winter of 1849.
+ They almost wholly concern the occupations and objects of
+ country life, and it is almost enough to make one in love
+ with such a life to read its history so charmingly
+ narrated. Every day has its little record in this
+ volume,&mdash;the record of some rural employment, some
+ note on the climate, some observation in natural history,
+ or occasionally some trait of rural manners. The arrival
+ and departure of the birds of passage is chronicled, the
+ different stages of vegetation are noted, atmospheric
+ changes and phenomena are described, and the various living
+ inhabitants of the field and forest are made to furnish
+ matter of entertainment for the reader. All this is done
+ with great variety and exactness of knowledge, and without
+ any parade of science. Descriptions of rural holidays and
+ rural amusements are thrown in occasionally, to give a
+ living interest to a picture which would otherwise become
+ monotonous from its uniform quiet. The work is written in
+ easy and flexible English, with occasional felicities of
+ expression. It is ascribed, as we believe we have informed
+ our readers, to a daughter of J. Fenimore Cooper. Our
+ country is full of most interesting materials for a work of
+ this sort; but we confess we hardly expected, at the
+ present time, to see them collected and arranged by so
+ skillful a hand."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE REV. SYDNEY SMITH's "Sketches of Modern Philosophy,"
+ remarks the Tribune, "consist of a course of popular lectures
+ on the subject, delivered in the Royal Institution of London in
+ the years 1804-5-6. As a contribution to the science of which
+ they profess to treat, their claims to respect are very
+ moderate. Indeed, no one would ridicule any pretensions of that
+ kind with more zeal than the author himself. The manuscripts
+ were left in an imperfect state, Sydney Smith probably
+ supposing that no call would ever be made for their
+ publication. They were written merely for popular effect, to be
+ spoken before a miscellaneous audience, in which any abstract
+ topics of moral philosophy would be the last to awaken an
+ interest. The title of the book is accordingly a misnomer. It
+ would lead no one to suspect the rich and diversified character
+ of its contents. They present no ambitious attempts at
+ metaphysical disquisition. They are free from dry
+ technicalities of ethical speculation. They have no specimens
+ of logical hair-splitting, no pedantic array of barren
+ definitions, no subtle distinctions proceeding from an
+ ingenious fancy, and without any foundation in nature. On the
+ contrary, we find in this volume a series of lively, off-hand,
+ dashing comments on men and manners, often running into broad
+ humor, and always marked with the pungent common sense that
+ never forsook the facetious divine. His remarks on the conduct
+ of the understanding, on literary habits, on the use and value
+ of books, and other themes of a similar character, are for the
+ most part instructive and practical as well as piquant, and on
+ the whole, the admirers of Sydney Smith will have no reason to
+ regret the publication of the volume."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From the London Times.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>BIOGRAPHY OF SIR ROBERT PEEL.</h2>
+
+ <p>In the following brief narrative of the principal facts in
+ the life of the great statesman who has just been snatched from
+ among us, we must disclaim all intention of dealing with his
+ biography in any searching or ambitious spirit. The national
+ loss is so great, the bereavement is so sudden, that we cannot
+ sit down calmly either to eulogize or arraign the memory of the
+ deceased. We cannot forget that it was not a week ago we were
+ occupied in recording and commenting upon his last eloquent
+ address to that assembly which had so often listened with
+ breathless attention to his statesmanlike expositions of
+ policy. We could do little else when the mournful intelligence
+ reached us that Sir Robert Peel was no more, than pen a few
+ expressions of sorrow and respect. Even now the following
+ imperfect record of facts must be accepted as a poor substitute
+ for the biography <span class="pagenum"><a name="page197"
+ id="page197"></a>[pg 197]</span> of that great Englishman
+ whose loss will be felt almost as a private bereavement by
+ every family throughout the British Empire:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Sir Robert Peel was in the 63d year of his age, having been
+ born near Bury, in Lancashire, on the 5th of February, 1788.
+ His father was a manufacturer on a grand scale, and a man of
+ much natural ability, and of almost unequaled opulence. Full of
+ a desire to render his son and probable successor worthy of the
+ influence and the vast wealth which he had to bestow, the first
+ Sir Robert Peel took the utmost pains personally with the early
+ training of the future prime minister. He retained his son
+ under his own immediate superintendence until he arrived at a
+ sufficient age to be sent to Harrow. Lord Byron, his
+ contemporary at Harrow, was a better declaimer and a more
+ amusing actor, but in sound learning and laborious application
+ to school duties young Peel had no equal. He had scarcely
+ completed his 16th year when he left Harrow and became a
+ gentleman commoner of Christ Church, Oxford, where he took the
+ degree of A.B., in 1808, with unprecedented distinction.</p>
+
+ <p>The year 1809 saw him attain his majority, and take his seat
+ in the House of Commons as a member for Cashel, in
+ Tipperary.</p>
+
+ <p>The first Sir Robert Peel had long been a member of the
+ House of Commons, and the early efforts of his son in that
+ assembly were regarded with considerable interest, not only on
+ account of his University reputation, but also because he was
+ the son of such a father. He did not, however, begin public
+ life by staking his fame on the results of one elaborate
+ oration; on the contrary, he rose now and then on comparatively
+ unimportant occasions; made a few brief modest remarks, stated
+ a fact or two, explained a difficulty when he happened to
+ understand the matter in hand better than others, and then sat
+ down without taxing too severely the patience or good nature of
+ an auditory accustomed to great performances. Still in the
+ second year of his parliamentary course he ventured to make a
+ set speech, when, at the commencement of the session of 1810,
+ he seconded the address in reply to the King's speech.
+ Thenceforward for nineteen years a more highflying Tory than
+ Mr. Peel was not to be found within the walls of parliament.
+ Lord Eldon applauded him as a young and valiant champion of
+ those abuses in the state which were then fondly called "the
+ institutions of the country." Lord Sidmouth regarded him as the
+ rightful political heir, and even the Duke of Cumberland
+ patronized Mr. Peel. He further became the favorite
+ <i>eleve</i> of Mr. Perceval, the first lord of the treasury,
+ and entered office as under-secretary for the home department.
+ He continued in the home department for two years, not often
+ speaking in parliament, but rather qualifying himself for those
+ prodigious labors in debate, in council, and in office, which
+ it has since been his lot to encounter and perform.</p>
+
+ <p>In May, 1812, Mr. Perceval fell by the hand of an assassin,
+ and the composition of the ministry necessarily underwent a
+ great change. The result, so far as Mr. Peel was concerned,
+ was, that he was appointed Chief Secretary to the
+ Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland. Mr. Peel had only reached his 26th
+ year when, in the month of September, 1812, the duties of that
+ anxious and laborious position were entrusted to his hands. The
+ legislative union was then but lately consummated, and the
+ demand for Catholic emancipation had given rise to an agitation
+ of only very recent date. But, in proportion to its novelty, so
+ was its vigor. Mr. Peel was, therefore, as the representative
+ of the old tory Protestant school, called upon to encounter a
+ storm of unpopularity, such as not even an Irish secretary has
+ ever been exposed to. The late Mr. O'Connell in various forms
+ poured upon Mr. Peel a torrent of invective which went beyond
+ even his extraordinary performances in the science of scolding.
+ At length he received from Mr. Peel a hostile message.
+ Negotiations went on for three or four days, when Mr. O'Connell
+ was taken into custody and bound over to keep the peace toward
+ all his fellow-subjects in Ireland. Mr. Peel and his friend
+ immediately went to England, and subsequently proceeded to the
+ continent. Mr. O'Connell followed them to London, but the
+ police were active enough to bring him before the chief
+ justice, when he entered into recognizances to keep the peace
+ toward all his majesty's subjects; and so ended one of the few
+ personal squabbles in which Mr. Peel had ever been engaged. For
+ six years he held the office of chief secretary to the
+ lord-lieutenant, at a time when the government was conducted
+ upon what might be called "anti-conciliation principles." The
+ opposite course was commenced by Mr. Peel's immediate
+ successor, Mr. Charles Grant, now Lord Glenelg.</p>
+
+ <p>That a chief secretary so circumstanced, struggling to
+ sustain extreme Orangeism in its dying agonies, should have
+ been called upon to encounter great toil and anxiety is a truth
+ too obvious to need illustration. That in these straits Mr.
+ Peel acquitted himself with infinite address was as readily
+ acknowledged at that time as it has ever been even in the
+ zenith of his fame. He held office in that country under three
+ successive viceroys, the Duke of Richmond, Earl Whitworth, and
+ Earl Talbot, all of whom have long since passed away from this
+ life, their names and their deeds long forgotten. But the
+ history of their chief secretary happens not to have been
+ composed of such perishable materials, and we now approach one
+ of the most memorable passages of his eventful career. He was
+ chairman of the great bullion committee; but before he engaged
+ in that stupendous task he had resigned the chief secretaryship
+ of Ireland. As a consequence of the report of that committee,
+ he took charge of and introduced the bill for authorizing a
+ return to <span class="pagenum"><a name="page198"
+ id="page198"></a>[pg 198]</span> cash payments which bears
+ his name, and which measure received the sanction of
+ parliament in the year 1819. That measure brought upon Mr.
+ Peel no slight or temporary odium. The first Sir Robert Peel
+ was then alive, and altogether differed from his son as to
+ the tendency of his measure. It was roundly asserted at the
+ time, and very faintly denied, that it rendered that
+ gentleman a more wealthy man, by something like half a
+ million sterling, than he had previously been. The deceased
+ statesman, however, must, in common justice, be acquitted of
+ any sinister purpose.</p>
+
+ <p>This narrative now reaches the year 1820, when we have to
+ relate the only domestic event in the history of Sir Robert
+ Peel which requires notice. On the 8th of June, being then in
+ the 33d year of his age, he married Julia, daughter of General
+ Sir John Floyd, who had then attained the age of 25.</p>
+
+ <p>Two years afterward there was a lull in public affairs,
+ which gave somewhat the appearance of tranquillity. Lord
+ Sidmouth was growing old, he thought that his system was
+ successful, and that at length he might find repose. He
+ considered it then consistent with his public duty to consign
+ to younger and stronger hands the seals of the home department.
+ He accepted a seat in the cabinet without office, and continued
+ to give his support to Lord Liverpool, his ancient political
+ chief. In permitting his mantle to fall upon Mr. Peel, he
+ thought he was assisting to invest with authority one whose
+ views and policy were as narrow as his own, and whose practise
+ in carrying them out would be not less rigid and
+ uncompromising. But, like many others, he lived long enough to
+ be grievously disappointed by the subsequent career of him whom
+ the liberal party have since called "the great minister of
+ progress," and whom their opponents have not scrupled to
+ designate by appellations not to be repeated in these hours of
+ sorrow and bereavement. On the 17th of January, 1822, Mr. Peel
+ was installed at the head of the home department, where he
+ remained undisturbed till the political demise of Lord
+ Liverpool in the spring of 1827. The most distinguished man
+ that has filled the chair of the House of Commons in the
+ present century was Charles Abbott, afterward Lord Colchester.
+ In the summer of 1817 he had completed sixteen years of hard
+ service in that eminent office, and he had represented the
+ University for eleven years. His valuable labors having been
+ rewarded with a pension and a peerage, he took his seat, full
+ of years and honors, among the hereditary legislators of the
+ land, and left a vacancy in the representation of his <i>alma
+ mater</i>, which Mr. Peel above all living men was deemed the
+ most fitting person to occupy. At that time he was an intense
+ tory&mdash;or as the Irish called him, an Orange Protestant of
+ the deepest dye&mdash;one prepared to make any sacrifice for
+ the maintenance of church and state as established by the
+ revolution of 1688. Who, therefore, so fit as he to represent
+ the loyalty, learning, and orthodoxy of Oxford? To have done so
+ had been the object of Mr. Canning's young ambition: but in
+ 1817 he could not be so ungrateful to Liverpool as to reject
+ its representation even for the early object of his
+ parliamentary affections. Mr. Peel, therefore, was returned
+ without opposition, for that constituency which many consider
+ the most important in the land&mdash;with which he remained on
+ the best possible terms for twelve years. The question of the
+ repeal of the penal laws affecting the Roman Catholics, which
+ severed so many political connections, was, however, destined
+ to separate Mr. Peel from Oxford. In 1828 rumors of the coming
+ change were rife, and many expedients were devised to extract
+ his opinions on the Catholic question. But with the reserve
+ which ever marked his character, left all curiosity at fault.
+ At last, the necessities of the government rendered further
+ concealment impossible, and out came the truth that he was no
+ longer an Orangeman. The ardent friends who had frequently
+ supported his Oxford elections, and the hot partisans who
+ shouted "Peel and Protestantism," at the Brunswick Clubs,
+ reviled him for his defection in no measured terms. On the 4th
+ of February, 1829, he addressed a letter to the vice-chancellor
+ of Oxford, stating, in many well-turned phrases, that the
+ Catholic question must forthwith be adjusted, under advice in
+ which he concurred; and that, therefore, he considered himself
+ bound to resign that trust which the University had during so
+ many years confided to his hands. His resignation was accepted;
+ but as the avowed purpose of that important step was to give
+ his constituents an opportunity of pronouncing an opinion upon
+ a change of policy, he merely accepted the Chiltern Hundreds
+ with the intention of immediately becoming a candidate for that
+ seat in parliament which he had just vacated. At this election
+ Mr. Peel was opposed by Sir Robert Inglis, who was elected by
+ 755 to 609. Mr. Peel was, therefore, obliged to cast himself on
+ the favor of Sir Manasseh Lopez, who returned him for Westbury,
+ in Wiltshire, which constituency he continued to represent two
+ years, until at the general election in 1830 he was chosen for
+ Tamworth, in the representation for which he continued for
+ twenty years.</p>
+
+ <p>The main features of his official life still remain to be
+ noticed. With the exception of Lord Palmerston, no statesman of
+ modern times has spent so many years in the civil service of
+ the crown. If no account be taken of the short time he was
+ engaged upon the bullion committee in effecting the change in
+ the currency, and in opposing for a few months the ministries
+ of Mr. Canning and Lord Goderich, it may be stated that from
+ 1810 to 1830 he formed part of the government, and presided
+ over it as a first minister in 1834-5, as well as from 1841 to
+ 1846 inclusive. During the time that he held the office of
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page199"
+ id="page199"></a>[pg 199]</span> home secretary under Lord
+ Liverpool he effected many important changes in the
+ administration of domestic affairs, and many legislative
+ improvements of a practical and comprehensive character. But
+ his fame as member of parliament was principally sustained
+ at this period of his life by the extensive and admirable
+ alterations which he effected in the criminal law. Romilly
+ and Mackintosh had preceded him in the great work of
+ reforming and humanizing the code of England. For his hand,
+ however, was reserved the introduction of ameliorations
+ which they had long toiled and struggled for in vain. The
+ ministry through whose influence he was enabled to carry
+ these reforms lost its chief in Lord Liverpool during the
+ early part of the year 1827. When Mr. Canning undertook to
+ form a government, Mr. Peel, the late Lord Eldon, the Duke
+ of Wellington, and other eminent tories of that day, threw
+ up office, and are said to have persecuted Mr. Canning with
+ a degree of rancor far outstripping the legitimate bounds of
+ political hostility. Lord George Bentinck said "they hounded
+ to the death my illustrious relative"; and the ardor of his
+ subsequent opposition to Sir Robert Peel evidently derived
+ its intensity from a long cherished sense of the injuries
+ supposed to have been inflicted upon Mr. Canning. It is the
+ opinion of men not ill informed respecting the sentiments of
+ Canning, that he considered Peel as his true political
+ successor&mdash;as a statesman competent to the task of
+ working out that large and liberal policy which he fondly
+ hoped the tories might, however tardily, be induced to
+ sanction. At all events, he is believed not to have
+ entertained toward Mr. Peel any personal hostility, and to
+ have stated during his short-lived tenure of office that
+ that gentleman was the only member of his party who had not
+ treated him with ingratitude and unkindness.</p>
+
+ <p>In January, 1828, the Wellington ministry took office and
+ held it till November, 1830. Mr. Peel's reputation suffered
+ during this period very rude shocks. He gave up, as already
+ stated, his anti-Catholic principles, lost the force of twenty
+ years' consistency, and under unheard-of disadvantages
+ introduced the very measure he had spent so many years in
+ opposing. The debates on Catholic emancipation, which preceded
+ the great reform question, constitute a period in his life,
+ which, twenty years ago, every one would have considered its
+ chief and prominent feature. There can be no doubt that the
+ course he then adopted demanded greater moral courage than at
+ any previous period of his life he had been called upon to
+ exercise. He believed himself incontestibly in the right; he
+ believed, with the Duke of Wellington, that the danger of civil
+ war was imminent, and that such an event was immeasurably a
+ greater evil than surrendering the constitution of 1688. But he
+ was called upon to snap asunder a parliamentary connection of
+ twelve years with a great university, in which the most
+ interesting period of his youth had been passed; to encounter
+ the reproaches of adherents whom he had often led in
+ well-fought contests against the advocates of what was termed
+ "civil and religious liberty;" to tell the world that the
+ character of public men for consistency, however precious, is
+ not to be directly opposed to the common weal; and to
+ communicate to many the novel as well as unpalatable truth that
+ what they deemed "principle" must give way to what he called
+ "expediency."</p>
+
+ <p>When he ceased to be a minister of the crown, that general
+ movement throughout Europe which succeeded the deposition of
+ the elder branch of the Bourbons rendered parliamentary reform
+ as unavoidable as two years previously Catholic emancipation
+ had been. He opposed this change, no doubt with increased
+ knowledge and matured talents, but with impaired influence and
+ few parliamentary followers. The history of the reform debates
+ will show that Sir Robert Peel made many admirable speeches,
+ which served to raise his reputation, but never for a moment
+ turned the tide of fortune against his adversaries, and in the
+ first session of the first reformed parliament he found himself
+ at the head of a party that in numbers little exceeded one
+ hundred. As soon as it was practicable he rallied his broken
+ forces; either he or some of his political friends gave them
+ the name of "Conservatives," and it required but a short
+ interval of reflection and observation to prove to his
+ sagacious intellect that the period of reaction was at hand.
+ Every engine of party organization was put into vigorous
+ activity, and before the summer of 1834 reached its close he
+ was at the head of a compact, powerful, and well-disciplined
+ opposition. Such a high impression of their vigor and
+ efficiency had King William IV received, that when, in
+ November, Lord Althorp became a peer, and the whigs therefore
+ lost their leader to the House of Commons, his Majesty sent in
+ Italy to summon Sir Robert Peel to his councils, with a view to
+ the immediate formation of a conservative ministry. He accepted
+ this responsibility, though he thought the King had mistaken
+ the condition of the country and the chances of success which
+ had awaited his political friends. A new House of Commons was
+ instantly called, and for nearly three months Sir Robert Peel
+ maintained a struggle against the most formidable opposition
+ that for nearly a century any minister had been called to
+ encounter. At no time did his command of temper, his almost
+ exhaustless resources of information, his vigorous and
+ comprehensive intellect appear to create such astonishment or
+ draw forth such unbounded admiration as in the early part of
+ 1835. But, after a well-fought contest he retired once more
+ into the opposition till the close of the second Melbourne
+ Administration in 1841. It was in April, 1835, that Lord
+ Melbourne was restored to power, but the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page200"
+ id="page200"></a>[pg 200]</span> continued enjoyment of
+ office did not much promote the political interests of his
+ party, and from various causes the power of the whigs began
+ to decline. The commencement of a new reign gave them some
+ popularity, but in the new House of Commons, elected in
+ consequence of that event, the conservative party were
+ evidently gaining strength; still, after the failure of
+ 1834-5, it was no easy task to dislodge an existing
+ ministry, and at the same time to be prepared with a cabinet
+ and a party competent to succeed them. Sir Robert Peel,
+ therefore, with characteristic caution, "bided his time",
+ conducting the business of opposition throughout the whole
+ of this period with an ability and success of which history
+ affords few examples. He had accepted the Reform Bill as the
+ established law of England, and as the system upon which the
+ country was thenceforward to be governed. He was willing to
+ carry it out in its true spirit, but he would proceed no
+ further. He marshaled his opposition upon the principle of
+ resistance to any further organic changes, and he enlisted
+ the majority of the peers and nearly the whole of the
+ country gentlemen of England in support of the great
+ principle of protection to British industry. The little
+ maneuvres and small political intrigues of the period are
+ almost forgotten, and the remembrance of them is scarcely
+ worthy of revival. It may, however, be mentioned, that in
+ 1839 ministers, being left in a minority, resigned, and Sir
+ Robert Peel, when sent for by the Queen, demanded that
+ certain ladies in the household of her majesty,&mdash;the
+ near relatives of eminent whig politicians,&mdash;should be
+ removed from the personal service of the sovereign. As this
+ was refused, he abandoned for the time any attempt to form a
+ government, and his opponents remained in office till
+ September, 1841. It was then Sir Robert Peel became the
+ first lord of the treasury, and the Duke of Wellington,
+ without office, accepted a seat in the cabinet, taking the
+ management of the House of Lords. His ministry was formed on
+ protectionist principles, but the close of its career was
+ marked by the adoption of free trade doctrines differing in
+ the widest and most liberal sense. Sir Robert Peel's sense
+ of public duty impelled him once more to incur the odium and
+ obliquy which attended a fundamental change of policy, and a
+ repudiation of the political partizans by whose ardent
+ support a minister may have attained office and authority.
+ It was his fate to encounter more than any man ever did,
+ that hostility which such conduct, however necessary, never
+ fails to produce. This great change in our commercial
+ policy, however unavoidable, must be regarded as the
+ proximate cause of his final expulsion from office in July,
+ 1846. His administration, however, had been signalized by
+ several measures of great political importance. Among the
+ earliest and most prominent of these were his financial
+ plans, the striking feature of which was an income-tax;
+ greatly extolled for the exemption it afforded from other
+ burdens pressing more severely on industry, but loudly
+ condemned for its irregular and unequal operation, a vice
+ which has since rendered its contemplated increase
+ impossible.</p>
+
+ <p>Of the ministerial life of Sir Robert Peel little more
+ remains to be related except that which properly belongs rather
+ to the history of the country than to his individual biography.
+ But it would be unjust to the memory of one of the most
+ sagacious statesman that England ever produced to deny that his
+ latest renunciation of political principles required but two
+ short years to attest the vital necessity of that unqualified
+ surrender. If the corn laws had been in existence at the period
+ when the political system of the continent was shaken to its
+ centre and dynasties crumbled into dust, a question would have
+ been left in the hands of the democratic party of England, the
+ force of which neither skill nor influence could then have
+ evaded. Instead of broken friendships, shattered reputations
+ for consistency, or diminished rents, the whole realm of
+ England might have borne a fearful share in that storm of wreck
+ and revolution which had its crisis in the 10th of April,
+ 1848.</p>
+
+ <p>In the course of his long and eventful life many honors were
+ conferred upon Sir Robert Peel. Wherever he went, and almost at
+ all times, he attracted universal attention, and was always
+ received with the highest consideration. At the close of 1836
+ the University of Glasgow elected him Lord Rector, and the
+ conservatives of that city, in January, 1837, invited him to a
+ banquet at which three thousand gentlemen assembled to do honor
+ to their great political chief. But this was only one among
+ many occasions on which he was "the great guest." Perhaps the
+ most remarkable of these banquets was that given to him in 1835
+ at Merchant Tailors' Hall by three hundred members of the House
+ of Commons. Many other circumstances might be related to
+ illustrate the high position which Sir Robert Peel occupied.
+ Anecdotes innumerable might be recorded to show the
+ extraordinary influence in Parliament which made him "the great
+ commoner" of the age; for Sir Robert Peel was not only a
+ skillful and adroit debater, but by many degrees the most able
+ and one of the most eloquent men in either house of parliament.
+ Nothing could be more stately or imposing than the long array
+ of sounding periods in which he expounded his doctrines,
+ assailed his political adversaries, or vindicated his own
+ policy. But when the whole land laments his loss, when England
+ mourns the untimely fate of one of her noblest sons, the task
+ of critical disquisition upon literary attainments or public
+ oratory possesses little attraction. It may be left for calmer
+ moments, and a more distant time, to investigate with
+ unforgiving justice the sources of his errors, or to estimate
+ the precise value of services which the public is now disposed
+ to regard with no other feelings than those of unmingled
+ gratitude.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page201"
+ id="page201"></a>[pg 201]</span>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:70%;">
+ <a href="images/209.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/209.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <h4>From the Art-Journal.</h4>
+
+ <h2>MEMORIES OF MISS JANE PORTER.</h2>
+
+ <h4>BY MRS. S.C. HALL.</h4>
+
+ <p>The frequent observation of foreigners is, that in England
+ we have few "celebrated women." Perhaps they mean that we have
+ few who are "notorious;" but let us admit that in either case
+ they are right; and may we not express our belief in its being
+ better for women and for the community that such is the case.
+ "Celebrity" rarely adds to the happiness of a woman, and almost
+ as rarely increases her usefulness. The time and attention
+ required to attain "celebrity," must, except under very
+ peculiar circumstances, interfere with the faithful discharge
+ of those feminine duties upon which the well-doing of society
+ depends, and which shed so pure a halo around our English
+ homes. Within these "homes" our heroes, statesmen,
+ philosophers, men of letters, men of genius, receive their
+ first impressions, and the <i>impetus</i> to a faithful
+ discharge of their after callings as Christian subjects of the
+ State.</p>
+
+ <p>There are few of such men who do not trace back their
+ resolution, their patriotism, their wisdom, their
+ learning&mdash;the nourishment of all their higher
+ aspirations&mdash;to a wise, hopeful, loving-hearted and
+ faith-inspired Mother; one who believed in a son's destiny to
+ be great; it may be, impelled to such belief rather by instinct
+ than by reason: who cherished (we can find no better word) the
+ "Hero-feeling" of devotion to what was right; though it might
+ have been unworldly; and whose deep heart welled up perpetual
+ love and patience toward the overboiling faults and frequent
+ stumblings of a hot youth, which she felt would mellow into a
+ fruitful manhood.</p>
+
+ <p>The strength and glory of England are in the keeping of the
+ wives and mothers of its men; and when we are questioned
+ touching our "celebrated women", we may in general terms refer
+ to those who have watched over, moulded, and inspired our
+ "celebrated men".</p>
+
+ <p>Happy is the country where the laws of God and Nature are
+ held in reverence&mdash;where each sex fulfills its peculiar
+ duties, and renders its sphere a sanctuary! And surely such
+ harmony is blessed by the Almighty&mdash;for while other
+ nations writhe in anarchy and poverty, our own spreads wide her
+ arms to receive all who seek protection or need repose.</p>
+
+ <p>But if we have few "celebrated" women, few who, impelled
+ either by circumstances or the irrepressible restlessness of
+ genius, go forth amid the pitfalls of publicity, and battle
+ with the world, either as poets, or dramatists, or moralists,
+ or mere tale-tellers in simple prose&mdash;or, more dangerous
+ still, "hold the mirror up to nature" on the stage that mimics
+ life&mdash;if we have but few, we have, and have had
+ <i>some</i>, of whom we are justly proud; women of such
+ well-balanced minds, that toil they ever so laboriously in
+ their public and perilous paths, their domestic and social
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page202"
+ id="page202"></a>[pg 202]</span> duties have been fulfilled
+ with as diligent and faithful love as though the world had
+ never been purified and enriched by the treasures of their
+ feminine wisdom; yet this does not shake our belief, that
+ despite the spotless and well-earned reputations they
+ enjoyed, the homage they received, (and it has its charm,)
+ and even the blessed consciousness of having contributed to
+ the healthful recreation, the improved morality, the
+ diffusion of the best sort of knowledge&mdash;the
+ <i>woman</i> would have been happier had she continued
+ enshrined in the privacy of domestic love and domestic duty.
+ She may not think this at the commencement of her career;
+ and at its termination, if she has lived sufficiently long
+ to have descended, even gracefully, from her pedestal, she
+ may often recall the homage of the <i>past</i> to make up
+ for its lack in the <i>present</i>. But so perfectly is
+ woman constituted for the cares, the affections, the
+ duties&mdash;the blessed duties of un-public life&mdash;that
+ if she give nature way it will whisper to her a text, that
+ "celebrity never added to the happiness of a true woman".
+ She must look for her happiness to HOME. We would have young
+ women ponder over this, and watch carefully, ere the veil is
+ lifted, and the hard cruel eye of public criticism fixed
+ upon them. No profession is pastime; still less so now than
+ ever, when so many people are "clever", though so few are
+ great. We would pray those especially who direct their
+ thoughts to literature, to think of what they have to say,
+ and why they wish to say it; and above all, to weigh what
+ they may expect from a capricious public, against the
+ blessed shelter and pure harmonies of private life.</p>
+
+ <p>But we have had some&mdash;and still have
+ some&mdash;"celebrated" women, of whom we have said "we may be
+ justly proud". We have done pilgrimage to the shrine of Lady
+ Rachel Russell, who was so thoroughly "domestic", that the
+ Corinthian beauty of her character would never have been matter
+ of history, but for the wickedness of a bad king. We have
+ recorded the hours spent with Hannah More; the happy days
+ passed with, and the years invigorated by, the advice and
+ influence of Maria Edgworth. We might recall the stern and
+ faithful puritanism of Maria Jane Jewsbury, and the Old World
+ devotion of the true and high-souled daughter of
+ Israel&mdash;Grace Aguilar. The mellow tones of Felicia Hemans'
+ poetry lingers still among all who appreciate the holy
+ sympathies of religion and virtue. We could dwell long and
+ profitably on the enduring patience and lifelong labor of
+ Barbara Hofland, and steep a diamond in tears to record the
+ memories of L.E.L. We could,&mdash;alas! alas! barely five and
+ twenty years' acquaintance with literature and its ornaments,
+ and the brilliant catalogue is but a <i>Memento Mori</i>.
+ Perhaps of all this list, Maria Edgworth's life was the
+ happiest: simply because she was the most retired, the least
+ exposed to the gaze and observation of the world, the most
+ occupied by loving duties toward the most united circle of old
+ and young we ever saw assembled in one happy home.</p>
+
+ <p>The very young have never, perhaps, read one of the tales of
+ a lady whose reputation as a novelist was in its zenith when
+ Walter Scott published his first novel. We desire to place a
+ chaplet upon the grave of a woman once "celebrated" all over
+ the known world, yet who drew all her happiness from the
+ lovingness of home and friends, while her life was as pure as
+ her renown was extensive.</p>
+
+ <p>In our own childhood romance-reading was prohibited, but
+ earnest entreaty procured an exception in favor of the
+ "Scottish Chiefs". It was the bright summer, and we read it by
+ moonlight, only disturbed by the murmur of the distant ocean.
+ We read it, crouched in the deep recess of the nursery-window;
+ we read it until moonlight and morning met, and the
+ breakfast-bell ringing out into the soft air from the old
+ gable, found us at the end of the fourth volume. Dear old
+ times! when it would have been deemed little less than
+ sacrilege to crush a respectable romance into a shilling
+ volume, and our mammas considered <i>only</i> a five-volume
+ story curtailed of its just proportions.</p>
+
+ <p>Sir William Wallace has never lost his heroic ascendancy
+ over us, and we have steadily resisted every temptation to open
+ the "popular edition" of the long-loved romance, lest what
+ people will call "the improved state of the human mind", might
+ displace the sweet memory of the mingled admiration and
+ indignation that chased each other, while we read and wept,
+ without ever questioning the truth of the absorbing
+ narrative.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet the "Scottish Chiefs" scarcely achieved the popularity
+ of "Thaddeus of Warsaw"&mdash;the first romance originated by
+ the active brain and singularly constructive power of Jane
+ Porter&mdash;produced at an almost girlish age.</p>
+
+ <p>The hero of "Thaddeus of Warsaw" was really Kosciuszko, the
+ beloved pupil of George Washington, the grandest and purest
+ patriot the modern world has known. The enthusiastic girl was
+ moved to its composition by the stirring times in which she
+ lived, and a personal observation of and acquaintance with some
+ of those brave men whose struggles for liberty only ceased with
+ their exile or their existence.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Porter placed her standard of excellence on high
+ ground, and&mdash;all gentle-spirited as was her
+ nature&mdash;it was firm and unflinching toward what she
+ believed the right and true. We must not therefore judge her by
+ the depressed state of "feeling" in these times, when its
+ demonstration is looked upon as artificial or affected. Toward
+ the termination of the last, and the commencement of the
+ present century, the world was roused into an interest and
+ enthusiasm, which now we can scarcely appreciate or account
+ for; the sympathies of England were awakened by
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page203"
+ id="page203"></a>[pg 203]</span> the terrible revolutions of
+ France and the desolation of Poland; as a principle, we
+ hated Napoleon, though he had neither act nor part in the
+ doings of the democrats; and the sea-songs of Dibdin, which
+ our youth <i>now</i> would call uncouth and ungraceful
+ rhymes, were key-notes to public feeling; the English of
+ that time were thoroughly "awake"&mdash;the British Lion had
+ not slumbered through a thirty years' peace. We were a
+ nation of soldiers, and sailors, and patriots; not of
+ mingled cotton-spinners, and railway speculators, and angry
+ protectionists. We do not say which state of things is best
+ or worst, we desire merely to account for what may be called
+ the taste for <i>heroic</i> literature at that time, and the
+ taste for&mdash;we really hardly know what to call
+ it&mdash;literature of the present, made up, as it too
+ generally is, of shreds and patches&mdash;bits of gold and
+ bits of tinsel&mdash;things written in a hurry, to be read
+ in a hurry, and never thought of afterward&mdash;suggestive
+ rather than reflective, at the best: and we must plead
+ guilty to a too great proneness to underrate what our
+ fathers probably overrated.</p>
+
+ <p>At all events we must bear in mind, while reading or
+ thinking over Miss Porter's novels, that in her day, even the
+ exaggeration of enthusiasm was considered good tone and good
+ taste. How this enthusiasm was <i>fostered</i>, not subdued,
+ can be gathered by the author's ingenious preface to the, we
+ believe, tenth edition of "Thaddeus of Warsaw."</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:90%;">
+ <a href="images/211.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/211.png"
+ alt="" /></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>This story brought her abundant honors, and rendered her
+ society, as well as the society of her sister and brother,
+ sought for by all who aimed at a reputation for taste and
+ talent. Mrs. Porter, on her husband's death, (he was the
+ younger son of a well-connected Irish family, born in Ireland,
+ in or near Coleraine, we believe, and a major in the
+ Enniskillen Dragoons,) sought a residence for her family in
+ Edinburgh, where education and good society are attainable to
+ persons of moderate fortunes, if they are "well-born;" but the
+ extraordinary artistic skill of her son Robert required a wider
+ field, and she brought her children to London sooner than she
+ had intended, that his promising talents might be cultivated.
+ We believe the greater part of "Thaddeus of Warsaw" was written
+ in London, either in St. Martin's Lane, Newport Street, or
+ Gerard Street, Soho, (for in these three streets the family
+ lived after their arrival in the metropolis); though, as soon
+ as Robert Ker Porter's abilities floated him on the stream, his
+ mother and sisters retired, in the brightness of their fame and
+ beauty, to the village of Thames Ditton, a residence they loved
+ to speak of as their "home." The actual labor of
+ "Thaddeus"&mdash;her first novel&mdash;must have been
+ considerable: for testimony was frequently borne to the
+ fidelity of its localities, and Poles refused to believe the
+ author had not visited Poland; indeed, she had a happy power in
+ describing localities. It was on the publication of Miss
+ Porter's two first works in the German language that their
+ author was honored by being made a Lady of the Chapter of St.
+ Joachim, and received the gold cross of the order from
+ Wurtemberg; but "The Scottish Chiefs" was never so popular on
+ the Continent as "Thaddeus of Warsaw", although Napoleon
+ honored it with an interdict, to prevent its circulation in
+ France. If Jane Porter owed her Polish inspirations so
+ peculiarly to the tone of the times in which she lived, she
+ traces back, in her introduction to the latest
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page204"
+ id="page204"></a>[pg 204]</span> edition of "The Scottish
+ Chiefs." her enthusiasm in the cause of Sir William Wallace
+ to the influence an old "Scotch wife's" tales and ballads
+ produced upon her mind while in early childhood. She
+ wandered amid what she describes as "beautiful green banks,"
+ which rose in natural terraces behind her mothers house, and
+ where a cow and a few sheep occasionally fed. This house
+ stood alone, at the head of a little square, near the high
+ school; the distinguished Lord Elchies formerly lived in the
+ house, which was very ancient, and from those green banks it
+ commanded a fine view of the Firth of Forth. While gathering
+ "<i>gowans</i>" or other wild-flowers for her infant sister,
+ (whom she loved more dearly than her life, during the years
+ they lived in most tender and affectionate companionship),
+ she frequently encountered this aged woman, with her
+ knitting in her hand; and she would speak to the eager and
+ intelligent child of the blessed quiet of the land, where
+ the cattle were browsing without fear of an enemy; and then
+ she would talk of the awful times of the brave Sir William
+ Wallace, when he fought for Scotland, "against a cruel
+ tyrant; like unto them whom Abraham overcame when he
+ recovered Lot, with all his herds and flocks, from the proud
+ foray of the robber kings of the South," who, she never
+ failed to add, "were all rightly punished for oppressing the
+ stranger in a foreign land! for the Lord careth for the
+ stranger." Miss Porter says that this woman never omitted
+ mingling pious allusions with her narrative. "Yet she was a
+ person of low degree, dressed in a coarse woollen gown, and
+ a plain <i>Mutch</i> cap, clasped under the chin with a
+ silver brooch, which her father had worn at the battle of
+ Culloden." Of course she filled with tales of Sir William
+ Wallace and the Bruce the listening ears of the lovely Saxon
+ child, who treasured them in her heart and brain, until they
+ fructified in after years into "The Scottish Chiefs." To
+ these two were added "The Pastor's Fireside," and a number
+ of other tales and romances. She contributed to several
+ annuals and magazines, and always took pains to keep up the
+ reputation she had won, achieving a large share of the
+ popularity, to which, as an author, she never looked for
+ happiness. No one could be more alive to praise or more
+ grateful for attention, but the heart of a genuine, pure,
+ loving woman, beat within Jane Porter's bosom, and she was
+ never drawn out of her domestic circle by the flattery that
+ has spoiled so many, men as well as women. Her mind was
+ admirably balanced by her home affections, which remained
+ unsullied and unshaken to the end of her days. She had, in
+ common with her three brothers and her charming sister, the
+ advantage of a wise and loving mother&mdash;a woman pious
+ without cant, and worldly-wise without being worldly. Mrs.
+ Porter was born at Durham, and when very young bestowed her
+ hand and heart on Major Porter. An old friend of the family
+ assures us that two or three of their children were born in
+ Ireland, and that certainly Jane was amongst the number.
+ Although she left Ireland when in early youth, perhaps
+ almost an infant, she certainly must be considered Irish, as
+ her father was so both by birth and descent, and esteemed
+ during his brief life as a brave and generous gentleman. He
+ died young, leaving his lovely widow in straitened
+ circumstances, having only her widow's pension to depend on.
+ The eldest son&mdash;afterward Colonel Porter&mdash;was sent
+ to school by his grandfather.</p>
+
+ <p>We have glanced briefly at Sir Robert Ker Porter's wonderful
+ talents, and Anna Maria, when in her twelfth year, rushed, as
+ Jane acknowledged, "prematurely into print." Of Anna Maria we
+ knew personally but very little, enough however to recall with
+ a pleasant memory her readiness in conversation and her bland
+ and cheerful manners. No two sisters could have been more
+ different in bearing and appearance; Maria was a delicate
+ blonde, with a <i>riant</i> face, and an animated
+ manner&mdash;we had said almost <i>peculiarly
+ Irish</i>&mdash;rushing at conclusions, where her more
+ thoughtful and careful sister paused to consider and calculate.
+ The beauty of Jane was statuesque, her deportment serious yet
+ cheerful, a seriousness quite as natural as her younger
+ sister's gaiety; they both labored diligently, but Anna Maria's
+ labor was sport when compared to her eldest sister's careful
+ toil; Jane's mind was of a more lofty order, she was intense,
+ and felt more than she said, while Anna Maria often said more
+ than she felt; they were a delightful contrast, and yet the
+ harmony between them was complete; and one of the happiest days
+ we ever spent, while trembling on the threshold of literature,
+ was with them at their pretty road-side cottage in the village
+ of Esher before the death of their venerable and dearly beloved
+ mother, whose rectitude and prudence had both guided and
+ sheltered their youth, and who lived to reap with them the
+ harvest of their industry and exertion. We remember the drive
+ there, and the anxiety as to how those very "clever ladies"
+ would look, and what they would say; we talked over the various
+ letters we had received from Jane, and thought of the cordial
+ invitation to their cottage&mdash;their "mother's
+ cottage"&mdash;as they always called it. We remember the old
+ white friendly spaniel who looked at us with blinking eyes, and
+ preceded us up stairs; we remember the formal old-fashioned
+ courtesy of the venerable old lady, who was then nearly
+ eighty&mdash;the blue ribands and good-natured frankness of
+ Anna Maria, and the noble courtesy of Jane, who received
+ visitors as if she granted an audience; this manner was natural
+ to her; it was only the manner of one whose thoughts have dwelt
+ more upon heroic deeds, and lived more with heroes than with
+ actual living men and women; the effect of this, however, soon
+ passed away, but not so the fascination which was in all she
+ said and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page205"
+ id="page205"></a>[pg 205]</span> did. Her voice was soft and
+ musical, and her conversation addressed to one person rather
+ than to the company at large, while Maria talked rapidly to
+ every one, or <i>for</i> every one who chose to listen. How
+ happily the hours passed!&mdash;we were shown some of those
+ extraordinary drawings of Sir Robert, who gained an artists
+ reputation before he was twenty, and attracted the attention
+ of West and Shee<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a>
+ in his mere boyhood. We heard all the interesting
+ particulars of his panoramic picture of the Storming of
+ Seringapatam, which, the first of its class, was known half
+ over the world. We must not, however, be
+ misunderstood&mdash;there was neither personal nor family
+ egotism in the Porters; they invariably spoke of each other
+ with the tenderest affection&mdash;but unless the
+ conversation was <i>forced</i> by their friends&mdash;they
+ never mentioned their own, or each other's works, while they
+ were most ready to praise what was excellent in the works of
+ others; they spoke with pleasure of their sojourns in
+ London; while their mother said, it was much wiser and
+ better for young ladies who were not rich, to live quietly
+ in the country, and escape the temptations of luxury and
+ display. At that time the "young ladies" seemed to us
+ certainly <i>not</i> young: that was about two-and-twenty
+ years ago, and Jane Porter was seventy-five when she died.
+ They talked much of their previous dwelling at Thames
+ Ditton, of the pleasant neighborhood they enjoyed there,
+ though their mother's health and their own had much improved
+ since their residence on Esher hill; their little garden was
+ bounded at the back by the beautiful park of Claremont, and
+ the front of the house overlooked the leading roads, broken
+ as they are by the village green, and some noble elms. The
+ view is crowned by the high trees of Esher Place; opening
+ from the village on that side of the brow of the hill. Jane
+ pointed out the <i>locale</i> of the proud Cardinal Wolsey's
+ domain, inhabited during the days: of his power over Henry
+ VIII., and in their cloudy evening, when that capricious
+ monarch's favor changed to bitterest hate. It was the very
+ spot to foster her high romance, while she could at the same
+ time enjoy the sweets of that domestic converse she loved
+ best of all. We were prevented by the occupations and
+ heart-beatings of our own literary labors from repeating
+ this visit; and in 1831, four years after these
+ well-remembered hours, the venerable mother of a family so
+ distinguished in literature and art, rendering their names
+ known and honored wherever art and letters flourish, was
+ called HOME. The sisters, who had resided ten years at
+ Esher, left it, intending to sojourn for a time with their
+ second brother, Doctor Porter, (who commenced his career as
+ a surgeon in the navy) in Bristol; but within a year the
+ youngest, the light-spirited, bright-hearted Anna Maria
+ died; her sister was dreadfully shaken by her loss, and the
+ letters we received from her after this bereavement, though
+ containing the outpourings of a sorrowing spirit, were full
+ of the certainty of that re-union hereafter which became the
+ hope of her life. She soon resigned her cottage home at
+ Esher, and found the affectionate welcome she so well
+ deserved in many homes, where friends vied with each other
+ to fill the void in her sensitive heart. She was of too wise
+ a nature, and too sympathizing a habit, to shut out new
+ interests and affections, but her <i>old ones</i> never
+ withered, nor were they ever replaced; were the love of such
+ a sister-friend&mdash;the watchful tenderness and
+ uncompromising love of a mother&mdash;ever "replaced," to a
+ lonely sister <i>or</i> a bereaved daughter! Miss Porters
+ pen had been laid aside for some time, when suddenly she
+ came before the world as the editor of "Sir Edward Seward's
+ Narrative", and set people hunting over old atlases to find
+ out the island where he resided. The whole was a clever
+ fiction; yet Miss Porter never confided its authorship, we
+ believe, beyond her family circle; perhaps the
+ correspondence and documents, which are in the hands of one
+ of her kindest friends (her executor), Mr. Shepherd, may
+ throw some light upon a subject which the "Quarterly"
+ honored by an article. We think the editor certainly used
+ her pen as well as her judgment in the work, and we have
+ imagined that it might have been written by the family
+ circle, more in sport than in earnest, and then produced to
+ serve a double purpose.</p>
+
+ <p>After her sister's death Miss Jane Porter was afflicted with
+ so severe an illness, that we, in common with her other
+ friends, thought it impossible she could carry out her plan of
+ journeying to St. Petersburgh to visit her brother, Sir Robert
+ Ker Porter, who had been long united to a Russian princess, and
+ was then a widower; her strength was fearfully reduced; her
+ once round figure become almost spectral, and little beyond the
+ placid and dignified expression of her noble countenance
+ remained to tell of her former beauty; but her resolve was
+ taken; she wished, she said, to see once more her youngest and
+ most beloved brother, so distinguished in several careers,
+ almost deemed incompatible,&mdash;as a painter, an author, a
+ soldier, and a diplomatist, and nothing could turn her from her
+ purpose: she reached St. Petersburgh in safety, and with
+ apparently improved health, found her brother as much courted
+ and beloved there as in his own land, and his daughter married
+ to a Russian of high distinction. Sir Robert longed to return
+ to England. He did not complain of any illness, and everything
+ was arranged for their departure; his final visits were paid,
+ all but one to the Emperor, who had ever treated him as a
+ friend; the day before his intended journey he went to the
+ palace, was graciously received, and then drove home, but when
+ the servant opened the carriage-door at his own residence he
+ was dead! One sorrow after another
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page206"
+ id="page206"></a>[pg 206]</span> pressed heavily upon her;
+ yet she was still the same sweet, gentle, holy-minded woman
+ she had ever been, bending with Christian faith to the will
+ of the Almighty,&mdash;"biding her time".</p>
+
+ <p>How differently would she have "watched and waited" had she
+ been tainted by vanity, or fixed her soul on the mere triumphs
+ of "literary reputation". While firm to her own creed, she
+ fully enjoyed the success of those who scramble up&mdash;where
+ she bore the standard to the heights of Parnassus; she was
+ never more happy than when introducing some literary "Tyro" to
+ those who could aid or advise a future career. We can speak
+ from experience of the warm interest she took in the Hospital
+ for the cure of Consumption, and the Governesses' Benevolent
+ Institution; during the progress of the latter, her health was
+ painfully feeble, yet she used her personal influence for its
+ success, and worked with her own hands for its bazaars. She was
+ ever aiding those who could not aid themselves; and all her
+ thoughts, words, and deeds, were evidence of her clear,
+ powerful mind and kindly loving heart; her appearance in the
+ London <i>coteries</i> was always hailed with interest and
+ pleasure; to the young she was especially affectionate; but it
+ was in the quiet mornings, or in the long twilight evenings of
+ summer, when visiting her cherished friends at Shirley Park, in
+ Kensington Square, or wherever she might be located for the
+ time&mdash;it was then that her former spirit revived, and she
+ poured forth anecdote and illustration, and the store of many
+ years' observation, filtered by experience and purified by that
+ delightful faith to which she held,&mdash;that "all things work
+ together for good to them that love the Lord". She held this in
+ practice, even more than in theory; you saw her chastened yet
+ hopeful spirit beaming forth from her gentle eyes, and her
+ sweet smile can never be forgotten. The last time we saw her,
+ was about two years ago&mdash;in Bristol&mdash;at her
+ brother's, Dr. Porter's, house in Portland Square: then she
+ could hardly stand without assistance, yet she never complained
+ of her own suffering or feebleness, all her anxiety was about
+ the brother&mdash;then dangerously ill, and now the last of
+ "his race." Major Porter, it will be remembered, left five
+ children, and these have left only one descendant&mdash;the
+ daughter of Sir Robert Ker Porter and the Russian Princess whom
+ he married, a young Russian lady, whose present name we do not
+ even know.</p>
+
+ <p>We did not think at our last leave-taking that Miss Porter's
+ fragile frame could have so long withstood the Power that takes
+ away all we hold most dear; but her spirit was at length
+ summoned, after a few days' total insensibility, on the 24th of
+ May.</p>
+
+ <p>We were haunted by the idea that the pretty cottage at
+ Esher, where we spent those happy hours, had been treated even
+ as "Mrs. Porter's Arcadia" at Thames Ditton&mdash;now
+ altogether removed; and it was with a melancholy pleasure we
+ found it the other morning in nothing changed; and it was
+ almost impossible to believe that so many years had passed
+ since our last visit. While Mr. Fairholt was sketching the
+ cottage, we knocked at the door, and were kindly permitted by
+ two gentle sisters, who now inhabit it, to enter the little
+ drawing-room and walk round the garden: except that the
+ drawing-room has been re-papered and painted, and that there
+ were no drawings and no flowers the room was not in the least
+ altered; yet to us it seemed like a sepulcher, and we rejoiced
+ to breathe the sweet air of the little garden, and listen to a
+ nightingale, whose melancholy cadence harmonized with our
+ feelings.</p>
+
+ <p>"Whenever you are at Esher," said the devoted daughter, the
+ last time we conversed with her, "do visit my mother's tomb."
+ We did so. A cypress flourishes at the head of the grave; and
+ the following touching inscription is carved on the
+ stone:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>Here sleeps in Jesus a Christian widow, JANE PORTER.
+ Obiit June 18th, 1831, ætat. 86; the beloved mother of W.
+ Porter, M.D., of Sir Robert Ker Porter, and of Jane and
+ Anna Maria Porter, who mourn in hope, humbly trusting to be
+ born again with her unto the blessed kingdom of their Lord
+ and Savior. Respect her grave, for she ministered to the
+ poor.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>Recent Deaths.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h3>MR. KIRBY, THE ENTOMOLOGIST.</h3>
+
+ <p>The Rev. William Kirby, Rector of Barham, Suffolk, who died
+ on the 4th ult. in the ninety-first year of his age, with his
+ faculties little impaired, ranked as the father of Entomology
+ in England; and to the successful results of his labors may he
+ chiefly attributed the advance which has been made in this over
+ other kindred departments of natural history. His reputation is
+ based not so much on the discoveries made by him in the science
+ as on the manner of its teaching. No man ever approached the
+ study of the works of nature with a purer or more earnest zeal.
+ His interpretation of the distinguishing characters of insects
+ for the purposes of classification has excited the warmest
+ approval of entomologists at home and abroad; while his
+ agreeable narrative of their wonderful transformations and
+ habits, teeming with analyses and anecdote, has a charm for
+ almost every kind of reader.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Kirby's first work of particular note was the
+ "Monographia Apum Angliæ", in two volumes published half a
+ century ago at Ipswich; to which town he was much endeared, and
+ in whose Museum, as President, under the friendly auspices of
+ its Secretary, Mr. George Ransome, he took a lively interest.
+ His admirable work on the Wild Bees of Great Britain was
+ composed from materials collected almost entirely by
+ himself,&mdash;and most of the plates were of his etching.
+ Entomology was at that time a comparatively new science in this
+ country, and it is an <span class="pagenum"><a name="page207"
+ id="page207"></a>[pg 207]</span> honorable proof of the
+ correctness of the author's views that they are still
+ acknowledged to be genuine.</p>
+
+ <p>His further progress in entomology is abundantly marked by
+ various papers in the "Transactions of the Linnæan
+ Society",&mdash;by the entomological portion of the Bridgewater
+ Treatise "On the History, Habits, and Instincts of
+ Animals,"&mdash;and by his descriptions, occupying a quarto
+ volume, of the insects of Sir John Richardson's "Fauna
+ Boreali-Americana." The name of Kirby will, however, be chiefly
+ remembered for the "Introduction on Entomology" written by him
+ in conjunction with Mr. Spence. In this work a vast amount of
+ material, acquired after many years' unremitting observation of
+ the insect world, is mingled together by two different but
+ congenial minds in the pleasant form of familiar letters. The
+ charm, based on substantial knowledge of the subject, which
+ these letters impart, has caused them to be studied with an
+ interest never before excited by any work on natural
+ history,&mdash;and they have served for the model of many an
+ interesting and instructive volume. Whether William Kirby or
+ William Spence had the more meritorious share in the
+ composition of these Letters, has never been ascertained; for
+ each, in the plenitude of his esteem and love for the other,
+ renounced all claim, in favor of his coadjutor, to whatever
+ portion of the matter might be most valued.</p>
+
+ <p>In addition to the honor of being President of the Museum of
+ his county town&mdash;in which there is an admirable portrait
+ of him&mdash;Mr. Kirby was Honorary President of the
+ Entomological Society of London, Fellow of the Royal, Linnæan,
+ Geological, and Zoological Societies of the same city, and
+ corresponding member of several foreign societies.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The death of REV. DR. GRAY, Professor of Oriental Languages
+ in the University of Glasgow, is reported in the Scotch
+ papers.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>The Fine Arts.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>One of the favorite painters of Paris is Ingres, renowned
+ especially for the beauty of his designs from the human figure,
+ and the sweetness of his coloring. Eight years ago he was
+ commissioned by M. de Luynes, who then wore the title of
+ Duke&mdash;which, it must be said, he is still called by,
+ though the Republic frowns on such aristocratic
+ distinctions&mdash;to paint two historical pictures in fresco,
+ for a country-house near Paris. The subjects were left to the
+ choice of the artist, who was to have 100,000 francs (or
+ £20,000) for the two pictures, one quarter of which was paid
+ him in advance. During these eight years Mr. Ingres has begun
+ various designs, and done his best to satisfy himself in the
+ planning and execution of the pictures; but in vain did he blot
+ out one design and labor long and earnestly upon
+ another&mdash;success still fled from his pencil. At last,
+ after eight years' fruitless exertion, he despaired, and going
+ to M. de Luynes, told him that he could not make the pictures.
+ At the same time he offered to return the £5,000; but M. de
+ Luynes, one of the most munificent gentlemen in France, refused
+ to receive it. Madame Ingres, however, arranged the difficulty.
+ She remembered that during these eight years her kitchen had
+ been regularly supplied with vegetables from M. de Luynes'
+ garden, and these she insisted on paying for. "Very well," said
+ M. de Luynes, "if you will have it so, my gardener shall bring
+ you his bill." Accordingly, not long after, the gardener
+ brought a bill for twenty-five francs. "My friend," said Madame
+ Ingres to him, "you are mistaken in the amount: this is very
+ natural, considering the length of the time. I have a better
+ memory: your master will find in this envelope the exact sum."
+ When M. de Luynes opened the envelope, he found in it bills for
+ twenty thousand francs.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>LESTER, BRADY &amp; DAVIGNON's "<i>Gallery of Illustrious
+ Americans</i>," is very favorably noticed generally by the
+ foreign critics. <i>The Art Journal</i> says of it: "This work
+ is, as its title imports, of a strictly national character,
+ consisting of portraits and biographical sketches of
+ twenty-four of the most eminent of the citizens of the
+ Republic, since the death of Washington; beautifully
+ lithographed from daguerreotypes. Each number is devoted to a
+ portrait and memoir, the first being that of General Taylor
+ (eleventh President of the United States), the second, of John
+ C. Calhoun. Certainly, we have never seen more truthful copies
+ of nature than these portraits; they carry in them an indelible
+ stamp of all that earnestness and power for which our
+ trans-Atlantic brethren have become famous, and are such heads
+ as Lavater would have delighted to look upon. They are, truly,
+ speaking likenesses, and impress all who see them with the
+ certainty of their accuracy, so self-evident is their
+ character. We are always rejoiced to notice a great nation
+ doing honor to its great men; it is a noble duty which when
+ properly done honors all concerned therewith. We see no reason
+ to doubt that America may in this instance rank with the
+ greatest."</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>DR. WAAGEN, so well known for his writings on Art, is at
+ present in England for the purpose of adding to his knowledge
+ of the private collection of pictures there, but principally to
+ make himself acquainted with ancient illuminated manuscripts in
+ several British collections.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>A MONUMENT IN HONOR OF COWPER, THE POET, is proposed to be
+ erected in Westminster Abbey, from a design by Marshall, the
+ Sculptor, exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1849.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page208"
+ id="page208"></a>[pg 208]</span>
+
+ <h2>SUMMER VACATION.</h2>
+
+ <h4>THE FOURTH BOOK OF WORDSWORTH'S UNPUBLISHED
+ POEM.<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a></h4>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Bright was the summer's noon when quickening
+ steps</p>
+
+ <p>Followed each other till a dreary moor</p>
+
+ <p>Was crossed, a bare ridge clomb, upon whose top</p>
+
+ <p>Standing alone, as from a rampart's edge,</p>
+
+ <p>I overlooked the bed of Windermere,</p>
+
+ <p>Like a vast river, stretching in the sun.</p>
+
+ <p>With exultation at my feet I saw</p>
+
+ <p>Lake, islands, promontories, gleaming bays,</p>
+
+ <p>A universe of Nature's fairest forms</p>
+
+ <p>Proudly revealed with instantaneous burst,</p>
+
+ <p>Magnificent, and beautiful, and gay.</p>
+
+ <p>I bounded down the hill shouting amain</p>
+
+ <p>For the old Ferryman; to the shout the rocks</p>
+
+ <p>Replied, and when the Charon of the flood</p>
+
+ <p>Had stayed his oars, and touched the jutting
+ pier,</p>
+
+ <p>I did not step into the well-known boat</p>
+
+ <p>Without a cordial greeting. Thence with speed</p>
+
+ <p>Up the familiar hill I took my way</p>
+
+ <p>Toward that sweet Valley where I had been
+ reared;</p>
+
+ <p>'Twas but a shore hour's walk, ere veering round</p>
+
+ <p>I saw the snow-white church upon her hill</p>
+
+ <p>Sit like a throned Lady, sending out</p>
+
+ <p>A gracious look all over her domain.</p>
+
+ <p>You azure smoke betrays the lurking town;</p>
+
+ <p>With eager footsteps I advance and reach</p>
+
+ <p>The cottage threshold where my journey closed.</p>
+
+ <p>Glad welcome had I, with some tear, perhaps,</p>
+
+ <p>From my old Dame, so kind and motherly,</p>
+
+ <p>While she perused me with a parent's pride.</p>
+
+ <p>The thoughts of gratitude shall fall like dew</p>
+
+ <p>Upon thy grave, good creature! While my heart</p>
+
+ <p>Can beat never will I forget they name.</p>
+
+ <p>Heaven's blessing be upon thee where thou liest</p>
+
+ <p>After thy innocent and busy stir</p>
+
+ <p>In narrow cares, thy little daily growth</p>
+
+ <p>Of calm enjoyments, after eighty years,</p>
+
+ <p>And more than eighty, of untroubled life,</p>
+
+ <p>Childless, yet by the strangers to thy blood</p>
+
+ <p>Honored with little less than filial love.</p>
+
+ <p>What joy was mine to see thee once again,</p>
+
+ <p>Thee and they dwelling, and a crowd of things</p>
+
+ <p>About its narrow precincts all beloved,</p>
+
+ <p>And many of them seeming yet my own!</p>
+
+ <p>Why should I speak of what a thousand hearts</p>
+
+ <p>Have felt, and every man alive can guess?</p>
+
+ <p>The rooms, the court, the garden were not left</p>
+
+ <p>Long unsaluted, nor the sunny seat</p>
+
+ <p>Round the stone table under the dark pine,</p>
+
+ <p>Friendly to studious or to festive hours;</p>
+
+ <p>Nor that unruly child of mountain birth,</p>
+
+ <p>The famous brook, who, soon as he was boxed</p>
+
+ <p>Within our garden, found himself at once,</p>
+
+ <p>As if by trick insidious and unkind,</p>
+
+ <p>Stripped of his voice and left to dimple down</p>
+
+ <p>(Without an effort and without a will)</p>
+
+ <p>A channel paved by man's officious care.</p>
+
+ <p>I looked at him and smiled, and smiled again,</p>
+
+ <p>And in the press of twenty thousand thought,</p>
+
+ <p>"Ha," quoth I, "pretty prisoner, are you there!"</p>
+
+ <p>Well might sarcastic Fancy then have whispered,</p>
+
+ <p>"An emblem here behold of they own life;</p>
+
+ <p>In its late course of even days with all</p>
+
+ <p>Their smooth enthralment;" but the heart was
+ full,</p>
+
+ <p>Too full for that reproach. My aged Dame</p>
+
+ <p>Walked proudly at my side: she guided me;</p>
+
+ <p>I willing, nay&mdash;nay, wishing to be led.</p>
+
+ <p>&mdash;The face of every neighbor whom I met</p>
+
+ <p>Was like a volume to me; some were hailed</p>
+
+ <p>Upon the road, some busy at their work,</p>
+
+ <p>Unceremonious greetings interchanged</p>
+
+ <p>With half the length of a long field between.</p>
+
+ <p>Among my schoolfellows I scattered round</p>
+
+ <p>Like recognitions, but with some constraint</p>
+
+ <p>Attended, doubtless, with a little pride,</p>
+
+ <p>But with more shame, for my habiliments,</p>
+
+ <p>The transformation wrought by gay attire.</p>
+
+ <p>Not less delighted did I take my place</p>
+
+ <p>At our domestic table: and, dear Friend!</p>
+
+ <p>In this endeavor simply to relate</p>
+
+ <p>A Poet's history, may I leave untold</p>
+
+ <p>The thankfulness with which I laid me down</p>
+
+ <p>In my accustomed bed, more welcome now</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps than if it had been more desired</p>
+
+ <p>Or been more often thought of with regret;</p>
+
+ <p>That lowly bed whence I had heard the wind</p>
+
+ <p>Roar and the rain beat hard, where I so oft</p>
+
+ <p>Had lain awake on summer nights to watch</p>
+
+ <p>The moon in splendor couched among the leaves</p>
+
+ <p>Of a tall ash, that near our cottage stood;</p>
+
+ <p>Had watched her with fixed eyes while to and fro</p>
+
+ <p>In the dark summit of the waving tree</p>
+
+ <p>She rocked with every impulse of the breeze.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Among the favorites whom it pleased me
+ well</p>
+
+ <p>To see again, was one by ancient right</p>
+
+ <p>Our inmate, a rough terrier of the hills;</p>
+
+ <p>By birth and call of nature pre-ordained</p>
+
+ <p>To hunt the badger and unearth the fox</p>
+
+ <p>Among the impervious crags, but having been</p>
+
+ <p>From youth our own adopted, he had passed</p>
+
+ <p>Into a gentler service. And when first</p>
+
+ <p>The boyish spirit flagged, and day by day</p>
+
+ <p>Along my veins I kindled with the stir,</p>
+
+ <p>The fermentation, and the vernal heat</p>
+
+ <p>Of poesy, affecting private shades</p>
+
+ <p>Like a sick Lover, then this dog was used</p>
+
+ <p>To watch me, an attendant and a friend,</p>
+
+ <p>Obsequious to my steps early and late,</p>
+
+ <p>Though often of such dilatory walk</p>
+
+ <p>Tired, and uneasy at the halts I made.</p>
+
+ <p>A hundred times when, roving high and low,</p>
+
+ <p>I have been harassed with the toil of verse,</p>
+
+ <p>Much pains and little progress, and at once</p>
+
+ <p>Some lovely Image in the song rose up</p>
+
+ <p>Full-formed, like Venus rising from the sea;</p>
+
+ <p>Then have I darted forward to let loose</p>
+
+ <p>My hand upon his back with stormy joy,</p>
+
+ <p>Caressing him again and yet again.</p>
+
+ <p>And when at evening on the public way</p>
+
+ <p>I sauntered, like a river murmuring</p>
+
+ <p>And talking to itself when all things else</p>
+
+ <p>Are still, the creature trotted on before;</p>
+
+ <p>Such was his custom; but whene'er he met</p>
+
+ <p>A passenger approaching, he would turn</p>
+
+ <p>To give me timely notice, and straightway,</p>
+
+ <p>Grateful for that admonishment, I hushed</p>
+
+ <p>My voice, composed my gait, and, with the air</p>
+
+ <p>And mein of one whose thoughts are free,
+ advanced</p>
+
+ <p>To give and take a greeting that might save</p>
+
+ <p>My name from piteous rumors, such as wait</p>
+
+ <p>On men suspected to be crazed in brain.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Those walks well worth to be prized and
+ loved&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Regretted!&mdash;that word, too, was on my
+ tongue,</p>
+
+ <p>But they were richly laden with all good,</p>
+
+ <p>And cannot be remembered but with thanks</p>
+
+ <p>And gratitude, and perfect joy of heart&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Those walks in all their freshness now came back</p>
+
+ <p>Like a returning Spring. When first I made</p>
+
+ <p>Once more the circuit of our little lake,</p>
+
+ <p>If ever happiness hath lodged with man,</p>
+
+ <p>That day consummate happiness was mine,</p>
+
+ <p>Wide-spreading, steady, calm, contemplative.</p>
+
+ <p>The sun was set, or setting, when I left</p>
+
+ <p>Our cottage door, and evening soon brought on</p>
+
+ <p>A sober hour, not winning or serene,</p>
+
+ <p>For cold and raw the air was, and untuned;</p>
+
+ <p>But as a face we love is sweetest then</p>
+
+ <p>When sorrow damps it, or, whatever look</p>
+
+ <p>It chance to wear, is sweetest if the heart</p>
+
+ <p>Have fullness in herself; even so with me</p>
+
+ <p>It fared that evening. Gently did my soul</p>
+
+ <p>Put off her veil, and, self-transmuted, stood</p>
+
+ <p>Naked, as in the presence of her God.</p>
+
+ <p>While on I walked, a comfort seemed to touch</p>
+
+ <p>A heart that had not been disconsolate:</p>
+
+ <p>Strength came where weakness was not known to
+ be,</p>
+
+ <p>At least not felt; and restoration came</p>
+
+ <p>Like an intruder knocking at the door</p>
+
+ <p>Of unacknowledged weariness. I took</p>
+
+ <p>The balance, and with firm hand weighted myself.</p>
+
+ <p>&mdash;Of that external scene which round me
+ lay,</p>
+
+ <p>Little, in this abstraction, did I see;</p>
+
+ <p>Remembered less; but I had inward hopes</p>
+
+ <p>And swellings of the spirit, was rapt and
+ soothed,</p>
+
+ <p>Conversed with promises, had glimmering views</p>
+
+ <p>How life pervades the undecaying mind;</p>
+
+ <p>How the immortal soul with God-like power</p>
+
+ <p>Informs, creates, and thaws the deepest sleep</p>
+
+ <p>That time can lay upon her; how on earth,</p>
+
+ <p>Man, if he do but live within the light</p>
+
+ <p>Of high endeavors, daily spreads abroad</p>
+
+ <p>His being armed with strength that cannot fail</p>
+
+ <p>Nor was there want of milder thoughts, of love</p>
+
+ <p>Of innocence, and holiday repose;</p>
+
+ <p>And more than pastoral quiet, 'mid the stir</p>
+
+ <p>Of boldest projects, and a peaceful end</p>
+
+ <p>At last, or glorious, by endurance won.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus musing, in a wood I sat me down</p>
+
+ <p>Alone, continuing there to muse: the slopes</p>
+
+ <p>And heights meanwhile were slowly overspread</p>
+
+ <p>With darkness, and before a rippling
+ breeze</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page209"
+ id="page209"></a>[pg 209]</span>
+
+ <p>The long lake lengthened out its hoary line,</p>
+
+ <p>And in the sheltered coppice where I sat,</p>
+
+ <p>Around me from among the hazel leaves,</p>
+
+ <p>Now here, now there, moved by the straggling
+ wind,</p>
+
+ <p>Came ever and anon a breath-like sound,</p>
+
+ <p>Quick as the pantings of the faithful dog,</p>
+
+ <p>The off and on companion of my work;</p>
+
+ <p>And such, at times, believing them to be,</p>
+
+ <p>I turned my head to look if he were there;</p>
+
+ <p>Then into solemn thought I passed once more.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">A freshness also found I at this time</p>
+
+ <p>In human Life, the daily life of those</p>
+
+ <p>Whose occupations really I loved;</p>
+
+ <p>The peaceful scene oft filled me with surprise,</p>
+
+ <p>Changed like a garden in the heat of spring</p>
+
+ <p>After an eight days' absence. For (to omit</p>
+
+ <p>The things which were the same and yet appeared</p>
+
+ <p>Far otherwise) amid this rural solitude.</p>
+
+ <p>A narrow Vale where each was known to all,</p>
+
+ <p>'Twas not indifferent to a youthful mind</p>
+
+ <p>To mark some sheltering bower or sunny nook,</p>
+
+ <p>Where an old man had used to sit alone,</p>
+
+ <p>Now vacant; pale-faced babes whom I had left</p>
+
+ <p>In arms, now rosy prattlers at the feet</p>
+
+ <p>Of a pleased grandame tottering up and down;</p>
+
+ <p>And growing girls whose beauty, filched away</p>
+
+ <p>With all its pleasant promises, was gone</p>
+
+ <p>To deck some slighted playmate's homely cheek.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Yes, I had something of a subtler
+ sense,</p>
+
+ <p>And often looking round was moved to smiles</p>
+
+ <p>Such as a delicate work of humor breeds;</p>
+
+ <p>I read, without design, the opinions, thoughts,</p>
+
+ <p>Of those plain-living people now observed</p>
+
+ <p>With clearer knowledge; with another eye</p>
+
+ <p>I saw the quiet woodman in the woods,</p>
+
+ <p>The shepherd roam the hills. With new delight,</p>
+
+ <p>This chiefly, did I note my gray-haired Dame;</p>
+
+ <p>Saw her go forth to church or other work</p>
+
+ <p>Of state, equipped in monumental trim;</p>
+
+ <p>Short velvet cloak, (her bonnet of the like,)</p>
+
+ <p>A mantle such as Spanish Cavaliers</p>
+
+ <p>Wore in old time. Her smooth domestic life,</p>
+
+ <p>Affectionate without disquietude,</p>
+
+ <p>Her talk, her business, pleased me; and no less</p>
+
+ <p>Her clear though sallow stream of piety</p>
+
+ <p>That ran on Sabbath days a fresher course;</p>
+
+ <p>With thoughts unfelt till now I saw her read</p>
+
+ <p>Her Bible on hot Sunday afternoons,</p>
+
+ <p>And loved the book, when she had dropped asleep</p>
+
+ <p>And made of it a pillow for her head.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Nor less do I remember to have felt,</p>
+
+ <p>Distinctly manifested at this time,</p>
+
+ <p>A human-heartedness about my love</p>
+
+ <p>For objects hitherto the absolute wealth</p>
+
+ <p>Of my own private being and no more:</p>
+
+ <p>Which I had loved even as a blessed spirit</p>
+
+ <p>Or Angel, if he were to dwell on earth,</p>
+
+ <p>Might love in individual happiness.</p>
+
+ <p>But now there opened on me other thoughts</p>
+
+ <p>Of change, congratulation or regret,</p>
+
+ <p>A pensive feeling! It spread far and wide;</p>
+
+ <p>The trees, the mountains shared it, and the
+ brooks,</p>
+
+ <p>The stars of heaven, now seen in their old
+ haunts&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>White Sirius glittering o'er the southern crags,</p>
+
+ <p>Orion with his belt, and those fair Seven,</p>
+
+ <p>Acquaintances of every little child,</p>
+
+ <p>And Jupiter, my own beloved star!</p>
+
+ <p>Whatever shadings of mortality,</p>
+
+ <p>Whatever imports from the world of death</p>
+
+ <p>Had come among these objects heretofore,</p>
+
+ <p>Were, in the main, of mood less tender: strong,</p>
+
+ <p>Deep, gloomy were they, and severe: the
+ scatterings</p>
+
+ <p>Of awe or tremulous dread, that had given way</p>
+
+ <p>In latter youth to yearnings of a love</p>
+
+ <p>Enthusiastic, to delight and hope.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As one who hangs down-bending from the
+ side</p>
+
+ <p>Of a slow-moving boat, upon the breast</p>
+
+ <p>Of a still water, solacing himself</p>
+
+ <p>With such discoveries as his eye can make</p>
+
+ <p>Beneath him in the bottom of the deep,</p>
+
+ <p>Sees many beauteous sights&mdash;weeds, fishes,
+ flowers,</p>
+
+ <p>Grots, pebbles, roots of trees, and fancies
+ more,</p>
+
+ <p>Yet often is perplexed and cannot part</p>
+
+ <p>The shadow from the substance, rocks and sky</p>
+
+ <p>Mountains and clouds, reflected in the depth</p>
+
+ <p>Of the clear flood, from things which there
+ abide</p>
+
+ <p>In their true dwelling; now is crossed by gleam</p>
+
+ <p>Of his own image, by a sunbeam now,</p>
+
+ <p>And wavering motions sent he knows not whence,</p>
+
+ <p>Impediments that make his task more sweet;</p>
+
+ <p>Such pleasant office have we long pursued</p>
+
+ <p>Incumbent o'er the surface of past time</p>
+
+ <p>With like success, nor often have appeared</p>
+
+ <p>Shapes fairer or less doubtfully discerned</p>
+
+ <p>Than those to which the Tale, indulgent Friend!</p>
+
+ <p>Would now direct thy notice. Yet in spite</p>
+
+ <p>Of pleasure won, and knowledge not withheld,</p>
+
+ <p>There was an inner falling off&mdash;I loved,</p>
+
+ <p>Loved deeply all that had been loved before</p>
+
+ <p>More deeply even than ever: but a swarm</p>
+
+ <p>Of heady schemes jostling each other, gawds,</p>
+
+ <p>And feast and dance, and public revelry,</p>
+
+ <p>And sports and games (too grateful in
+ themselves,</p>
+
+ <p>Yet in themselves less grateful, I believe,</p>
+
+ <p>Than as they were a badge glossy and fresh</p>
+
+ <p>Of manliness and freedom) all conspired</p>
+
+ <p>To lure my mind from firm habitual quest</p>
+
+ <p>Of feeding pleasures, to depress the zeal</p>
+
+ <p>And damp those yearnings which had once been
+ mine&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>A wild, unworldly-minded youth, given up</p>
+
+ <p>To his own eager thoughts. It would demand</p>
+
+ <p>Some skill, and longer time than may be spared,</p>
+
+ <p>To paint these vanities, and how they wrought</p>
+
+ <p>In haunts where they, till now, had been
+ unknown.</p>
+
+ <p>It seemed the very garments that they wore</p>
+
+ <p>Preyed on my strength, and stopped the quiet
+ stream</p>
+
+ <p>Of self-forgetfulness.</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Yes, that heartless chase</p>
+
+ <p>Of trivial pleasures was a poor exchange</p>
+
+ <p>For books and nature at that early age.</p>
+
+ <p>'Tis true, some casual knowledge might be gained</p>
+
+ <p>Of character or life; but at that time,</p>
+
+ <p>Of manners put to school I took small note,</p>
+
+ <p>And all my deeper passions lay elsewhere.</p>
+
+ <p>Far better had it been to exalt the mind</p>
+
+ <p>By solitary study, to uphold</p>
+
+ <p>Intense desire through meditative peace;</p>
+
+ <p>And yet, for chastisement of these regrets,</p>
+
+ <p>The memory of one particular hour</p>
+
+ <p>Doth here rise up against me. 'Mid a throng</p>
+
+ <p>Of maids and youths, old men, and matrons staid,</p>
+
+ <p>A medley of all tempers, I had passed</p>
+
+ <p>The night in dancing, gayety, and mirth,</p>
+
+ <p>With din of instruments and shuffling feet,</p>
+
+ <p>And glancing forms, and tapers glittering,</p>
+
+ <p>And unaimed prattle flying up and down;</p>
+
+ <p>Spirits upon the stretch, and here and there</p>
+
+ <p>Slight shocks of young love-liking interspersed,</p>
+
+ <p>Whose transient pleasure mounted to the head,</p>
+
+ <p>And tingled through the veins. Ere we retired</p>
+
+ <p>The cock had crowed, and now the eastern sky</p>
+
+ <p>Was kindling, not unseen, from humble copse</p>
+
+ <p>And open field, through which the pathway wound,</p>
+
+ <p>And homeward led my steps. Magnificent</p>
+
+ <p>The morning rose, in memorable pomp,</p>
+
+ <p>Glorious as e'er I had beheld&mdash;in front,</p>
+
+ <p>The sea lay laughing at a distance; near,</p>
+
+ <p>The solid mountains shone, bright as the clouds,</p>
+
+ <p>Grain-tinctured, drenched in Empyrean light;</p>
+
+ <p>And in the meadows and the lower grounds</p>
+
+ <p>Was all the sweetness of a common dawn&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Dews, vapors, and the melody of birds,</p>
+
+ <p>And laborers going forth to till the fields.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ah! need I say, dear Friend! that to the
+ brim</p>
+
+ <p>My heart was full; I made no vows, but vows</p>
+
+ <p>Were then made for me; bond unknown to me</p>
+
+ <p>Was given, that I should be, else sinning
+ greatly,</p>
+
+ <p>A dedicated Spirit. On I walked</p>
+
+ <p>In thankful blessedness, which yet survives.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Strange rendezvous! My mind was at that
+ time</p>
+
+ <p>A parti-colored show of grave and gay,</p>
+
+ <p>Solid and light, short-sighted and profound;</p>
+
+ <p>Of inconsiderate habits and sedate,</p>
+
+ <p>Consorting in one mansion unreproved.</p>
+
+ <p>The worth I knew of powers that I possessed,</p>
+
+ <p>Though slighted and too oft misused. Besides,</p>
+
+ <p>That summer, swarming as it did with thoughts</p>
+
+ <p>Transient and idle, lacked not intervals</p>
+
+ <p>When Folly from the frown of fleeting Time</p>
+
+ <p>Shrunk, and the mind experienced in herself</p>
+
+ <p>Conformity as just as that of old</p>
+
+ <p>To the end and written spirit of God's works,</p>
+
+ <p>Whether held forth in Nature or in Man,</p>
+
+ <p>Through pregnant vision, separate or conjoined.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When from our better selves we have too
+ long</p>
+
+ <p>Been parted by the hurrying world, and droop,</p>
+
+ <p>Sick of its business, of its pleasure tired,</p>
+
+ <p>How gracious, how benign, is Solitude;</p>
+
+ <p>How potent a mere image of her sway;</p>
+
+ <p>Most potent when impressed upon the mind</p>
+
+ <p>With an appropriate human centre&mdash;hermit,</p>
+
+ <p>Deep in the bosom of the wilderness;</p>
+
+ <p>Votary (in vast cathedral, where no foot</p>
+
+ <p>Is treading, where no other face is seen)</p>
+
+ <p>Kneeling at prayers; or watchman on the top</p>
+
+ <p>Of lighthouse, beaten by Atlantic waves;</p>
+
+ <p>Or as the soul of that great Power is met</p>
+
+ <p>Sometimes embodied on a public
+ road,</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page210"
+ id="page210"></a>[pg 210]</span>
+
+ <p>When, for the night deserted, it assumes</p>
+
+ <p>A character of quiet more profound</p>
+
+ <p>Than pathless wastes.</p>
+
+ <p class="i10">Once, when those summer months,</p>
+
+ <p>Where flown, and autumn brought its annual show</p>
+
+ <p>Of oars with oars contending, sails with sails,</p>
+
+ <p>Upon Windander's spacious breast, it chanced</p>
+
+ <p>That&mdash;after I had left a flower-decked room</p>
+
+ <p>(Whose in-door pastime, lighted up, survived</p>
+
+ <p>To a late hour), and spirits overwrought</p>
+
+ <p>Were making night do penance for a day</p>
+
+ <p>Spent in a round of strenuous idleness&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>My homeward course led up a long ascent,</p>
+
+ <p>Where the road's watery surface, to the top</p>
+
+ <p>Of that sharp rising, glittered to the moon</p>
+
+ <p>And bore the semblance of another stream</p>
+
+ <p>Stealing with silent lapse to join the brook</p>
+
+ <p>That murmured in the vale. All else was still;</p>
+
+ <p>No living thing appeared in earth or air,</p>
+
+ <p>And, save the flowing water's peaceful voice,</p>
+
+ <p>Sound there was none&mdash;but, lo! an uncouth
+ shape,</p>
+
+ <p>Shown by a sudden turning of the road,</p>
+
+ <p>So near that, slipping back into the shade</p>
+
+ <p>Of a thick hawthorn, I could mark him well,</p>
+
+ <p>Myself unseen. He was of stature tall,</p>
+
+ <p>A span above man's common measure, tall,</p>
+
+ <p>Stiff, land, and upright; a more meager man</p>
+
+ <p>Was never seen before by night or day.</p>
+
+ <p>Long were his arms, pallid his hands; his mouth</p>
+
+ <p>Looked ghastly in the moonlight: from behind,</p>
+
+ <p>A mile-stone propped him; I could also ken</p>
+
+ <p>That he was clothed in military garb.</p>
+
+ <p>Though faded, yet entire. Companionless,</p>
+
+ <p>No dog attending, by no staff sustained,</p>
+
+ <p>He stood, and in his very dress appeared</p>
+
+ <p>A desolation, a simplicity,</p>
+
+ <p>To which the trappings of a gaudy world</p>
+
+ <p>Make a strange back-ground. From his lips, ere
+ long,</p>
+
+ <p>Issued low muttered sounds, as if of pain</p>
+
+ <p>Or some uneasy thought; yet still his form</p>
+
+ <p>Kept the same awful steadiness&mdash;at his feet</p>
+
+ <p>His shadow lay, and moved not. From self-blame</p>
+
+ <p>Not wholly free, I watched him thus; at length</p>
+
+ <p>Subduing my heart's specious cowardice,</p>
+
+ <p>I left the shady nook where I had stood</p>
+
+ <p>And hailed him. Slowly from his resting-place</p>
+
+ <p>He rose, and with a lean and wasted arm</p>
+
+ <p>In measured gesture lifted to his head</p>
+
+ <p>Returned my salutation; then resumed</p>
+
+ <p>His station as before: and when I asked</p>
+
+ <p>His history, the veteran, in reply,</p>
+
+ <p>Was neither slow nor eager; but, unmoved,</p>
+
+ <p>And with a quiet, uncomplaining voice,</p>
+
+ <p>A stately air of mild indifference,</p>
+
+ <p>He told in few plain words a soldier's
+ tale&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>That in the Tropic Islands he had served,</p>
+
+ <p>Whence he had landed scarcely three weeks past;</p>
+
+ <p>That on his landing he had been dismissed,</p>
+
+ <p>And now was traveling toward his native home.</p>
+
+ <p>This heard, I said, in pity, "Come with me."</p>
+
+ <p>He stooped, and straightway from the ground took
+ up,</p>
+
+ <p>An oaken staff by me yet unobserved&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>A staff which must have dropt from his slack
+ hand</p>
+
+ <p>And lay till now neglected in the grass.</p>
+
+ <p>Though weak his step and cautious, he appeared</p>
+
+ <p>To travel without pain, and I beheld,</p>
+
+ <p>With an astonishment but ill-suppressed,</p>
+
+ <p>His ghostly figure moving at my side;</p>
+
+ <p>Nor could I, while we journeyed thus, forbear</p>
+
+ <p>To turn from present hardships to the past,</p>
+
+ <p>And speak of war, battle, and pestilence,</p>
+
+ <p>Sprinkling this talk with questions, better
+ spared.</p>
+
+ <p>On what he might himself have seen or felt</p>
+
+ <p>He all the while was in demeanor calm.</p>
+
+ <p>Concise in answer: solemn and sublime</p>
+
+ <p>He might have seen, but that in all he said</p>
+
+ <p>There was a strange half-absence, as of one</p>
+
+ <p>Knowing too well the importance of his theme</p>
+
+ <p>But feeling it no longer. Our discourse</p>
+
+ <p>Soon ended, and together on we passed</p>
+
+ <p>In silence through a wood gloomy and still.</p>
+
+ <p>Up-turning, then, along an open field,</p>
+
+ <p>We reached a cottage. At the door I knocked.</p>
+
+ <p>And earnestly to charitable care</p>
+
+ <p>Commended him as a poor friendless man,</p>
+
+ <p>Belated and by sickness overcome.</p>
+
+ <p>Assured that now the traveler would repose</p>
+
+ <p>In comfort, I entreated that henceforth</p>
+
+ <p>He would not linger in the public ways,</p>
+
+ <p>But ask for timely furtherance and help</p>
+
+ <p>Such as his state required. At this reproof,</p>
+
+ <p>With the same ghastly mildness in his look,</p>
+
+ <p>He said, "My trust is in the God of Heaven,</p>
+
+ <p>And in the eye of him who passes me!"</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The cottage door was speedily
+ unbarred,</p>
+
+ <p>And now the soldier touched his hat once more</p>
+
+ <p>With his lean hand, and in a faltering voice,</p>
+
+ <p>Whose tone bespake reviving interests</p>
+
+ <p>Till then unfelt, he thanked me; I returned</p>
+
+ <p>The farewell blessing of the patient man,</p>
+
+ <p>And so we parted. Back I cast a look,</p>
+
+ <p>And lingered near the door a little space,</p>
+
+ <p>Then sought with quiet heart my distant home.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE IVORY MINE:</h2>
+
+ <h3>A TALE OF THE FROZEN SEA.</h3>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h4>VI.&mdash;THE IVORY MINE.</h4>
+
+ <p>The end of so perilous and novel a journey, which must
+ necessarily, under the most favorable circumstances, have
+ produced more honor than profit, was attained; and yet the
+ success of the adventure was doubtful. The season was still too
+ cold for any search for fossil ivory, and the first serious
+ duty was the erection of a winter residence. Fortunately there
+ was an ample supply of logs of wood, some half-rotten, some
+ green, lying under the snow on the shores of the bay into which
+ the river poured, and which had been deposited there by the
+ currents and waves. A regular pile, too, was found, which had
+ been laid up by some of the provident natives of New Siberia,
+ who, like the Esquimaux, live in the snow. Under this was a
+ large supply of frozen fish, which was taken without ceremony,
+ the party being near starvation. Of course Sakalar and Ivan
+ intended replacing the hoard, if possible, in the short
+ summer.</p>
+
+ <p>Wood was made the groundwork of the winter hut which was to
+ be erected, but snow and ice formed by far the larger portion
+ of the building materials. So hard and compact did the whole
+ mass become when finished, and lined with bear-skins and other
+ furs, that a huge lamp sufficed for warmth during the day and
+ night, and the cooking was done in a small shed by the side.
+ The dogs were now set to shift for themselves as to cover, and
+ were soon buried in the snow. They were placed on short
+ allowance, now they had no work to do, for no one yet knew what
+ were the resources of this wild place.</p>
+
+ <p>As soon as the more immediate duties connected with a camp
+ had been completed, the whole party occupied themselves with
+ preparing traps for foxes, and in other hunting details. A hole
+ was broken in the ice in the bay, and this the Kolimsk men
+ watched with assiduity for seals. One or two rewarded their
+ efforts, but no fish were taken. Sakalar and Ivan, after a day
+ or two of repose, started with some carefully-selected dogs in
+ search of game, and soon found that the great white bear took
+ up his quarters even in that northern latitude. They succeeded
+ in killing several, which the dogs dragged home.</p>
+
+ <p>About ten days after their arrival in the great island,
+ Sakalar, who was always the first to be moving, roused his
+ comrades round him just as a party of a dozen strange men
+ appeared in the distance. They were short, stout fellows, with
+ long lances in their hands, and by their dress very much
+ resembled the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page211"
+ id="page211"></a>[pg 211]</span> Esquimaux. Their attitude
+ was menacing in the extreme, and by the advice of Sakalar, a
+ general volley was fired over their heads. The invaders
+ halted, looked confusedly around, and then ran away.
+ Firearms retained. therefore, all their pristine qualities
+ with these savages.</p>
+
+ <p>"They will return," said Sakalar, moodily; "they did the
+ same when I was here before, and then came back and killed my
+ friend at night. Sakalar escaped."</p>
+
+ <p>Counsel was now held, and it was determined, after due
+ deliberation, that strict watch should be kept at all hours,
+ while much was necessarily trusted to the dogs. All day one of
+ the party was on the lookout, while at night the hut had its
+ entrance well barred. Several days, however, were thus passed
+ without molestation, and then Sakalar took the Kolimsk men out
+ to hunt, and left Ivan and Kolina together. The young man had
+ learned the value of his half-savage friend: her devotion to
+ her father and the party generally was unbounded. She murmured
+ neither at privations nor at sufferings, and kept up the
+ courage of Ivan by painting in glowing terms all his brilliant
+ future. She seemed to have laid aside her personal feelings,
+ and to look on him only as one doing battle with fortune in the
+ hope of earning the hand of the rich widow of Yakoutsk. But
+ Ivan was much disposed to gloomy fits; he supposed himself
+ forgotten, and slighted, and looked on the time of his
+ probation as interminable. It was in this mood that one day he
+ was roused from his fit by a challenge from Kolina to go and
+ see if the seals had come up to breathe at the hole which every
+ morning was freshly broken in the ice. Ivan assented, and away
+ they went gaily down to the bay. No seals were there, and after
+ a short stay they returned toward the hut, recalled by the
+ distant howling of the dogs. But as they came near, they could
+ see no sign of men or animals, though the sensible brutes still
+ whined under the shelter of their snow-heaps. Ivan, much
+ surprised, raised the curtain of the door, his gun in hand,
+ expecting to find that some animal was inside. The lamp was
+ out, and the hut in total darkness. Before Ivan could recover
+ his upright position, four men leaped on him, and he was a
+ prisoner.</p>
+
+ <p>Kolina drew back, and cocked her gun; but the natives,
+ satisfied with their present prey, formed round Ivan in a
+ compact body, tied his hands, and bade him walk. Their looks
+ were sufficiently wild and menacing to make him move,
+ especially as he recognized them as belonging to the warlike
+ party of the Tchouktchas&mdash;a tribe of Siberians who wander
+ about the Polar Seas in search of game, who cross Behring's
+ Straits in skin-boats, and who probably are the only persons
+ who by their temporary sojourn in New Siberia, have caused some
+ to suppose it inhabited. Kolina stood uncertain what to do, but
+ in a few minutes she roused four of the dogs, and followed.
+ Ivan bawled to her to go back, but the girl paid no attention
+ to his request, determined, as it seemed, to know his fate.</p>
+
+ <p>The savages hurried Ivan along as rapidly as they could; and
+ soon entered a deep and narrow ravine, which about the middle
+ parted into two. The narrowest path was selected, and the
+ dwelling of the natives soon reached. It was a cavern, the
+ narrow entrance of which they crawled through; Ivan followed
+ the leader, and soon found himself in a large and wonderful
+ cave. It was by nature divided into several compartments, and
+ contained a party of twenty men, as many or more women, and
+ numerous children. It was warmed in two ways&mdash;by
+ wood-fires and grease-lamps, and by a bubbling semi-sulphurous
+ spring, that rushed up through a narrow hole, and then fell
+ away into a deep well, that carried its warm waters to mingle
+ with the icy sea. The acrid smoke escaped by holes in the roof.
+ Ivan, his arms and legs bound, was thrust into a separate
+ compartment filled with furs, and formed by a projection of the
+ rock and the skin-boats which this primitive race employed to
+ cross the most stormy seas. He was almost stunned; he lay for a
+ while without thought or motion. Gradually he recovered, and
+ gazed around; all was night, save above, where by a narrow
+ orifice he saw the smoke which hung in clouds around the roof
+ escaping. He expected death. He knew the savage race he was
+ among, who hated interference with their hunting-grounds, and
+ whose fish he and his party had taken. What, therefore, was his
+ surprise, when from the summit of the roof, he heard a gentle
+ voice whispering in soft accents his own name. His ears must,
+ he thought, deceive him. The hubbub close at hand was terrible.
+ A dispute was going on. Men, women. and children all joined,
+ and yet he had heard the word "Ivan." "Kolina," he replied, in
+ equally low but clear tones. As he spoke a knife rolled near
+ him. But he could not touch it. Then a dark form filled the
+ orifice about a dozen feet above his head, and something moved
+ down among projecting stones, and then Kolina stood by him. In
+ an instant Ivan was free, and an axe in his hand. The exit was
+ before them. Steps were cut in the rock, to ascend to the upper
+ entrance, near which Ivan had been placed without fear, because
+ tied. But a rush was heard, and the friends had only time to
+ throw themselves deeper into the cave, when four men rushed in,
+ knife in hand, to immolate the victim. Such had been the
+ decision come to after the debate.</p>
+
+ <p>The lamps revealed the escape of the fugitive. A wild cry
+ drew all the men together, and then up they scampered along the
+ rugged projections, and the barking of the dogs as they fled
+ showed that they were in hot and eager chase. Ivan and Kolina
+ lost no time. They advanced boldly, knife and hatchet in
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page212"
+ id="page212"></a>[pg 212]</span> hand, sprang amid the
+ terrified women, darted across their horrid cavern, and
+ before one of them had recovered from her fright, were in
+ the open air. On they ran in the gloom for some distance,
+ when they suddenly heard muttering voices. Down they sank
+ behind the first large stone, concealing themselves as well
+ as they could in the snow. The party moved slowly on toward
+ them.</p>
+
+ <p>"I can trace their tracks still," said Sakalar, in a low
+ deep tone. "On, while they are alive, or at least for
+ vengeance!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Friends!" cried Ivan.</p>
+
+ <p>"Father!" said Kolina, and in an instant the whole party
+ were united. Five words were enough to determine Sakalar. The
+ whole body rushed back, entered the cavern, and found
+ themselves masters of it without a struggle. The women and
+ children attempted no resistance. As soon as they were placed
+ in a corner, under the guard of the Kolimsk men, a council was
+ held. Sakalar, as the most experienced, decided what was to be
+ done. He knew the value of threats: one of the women was
+ released, and bade go tell the men what had occurred. She was
+ to add the offer of a treaty of peace, to which, if both
+ parties agreed, the women were to be given up on the one side,
+ and the hut and its contents on the other. But the victors
+ announced their intention of taking four of the best-looking
+ boys as hostages, to be returned whenever they were convinced
+ of the good faith of the Tchouktchas. The envoy soon returned,
+ agreeing to everything. They had not gone near the hut, fearing
+ an ambuscade. The four boys were at once selected, and the
+ belligerents separated.</p>
+
+ <p>Sakalar made the little fellows run before, and thus the hut
+ was regained. An inner cabin was erected for the prisoners, and
+ the dogs placed over them as spies. But as the boys understood
+ Sakalar to mean that the dogs were to eat them if they stirred,
+ they remained still enough, and made no attempt to run
+ away.</p>
+
+ <p>A hasty meal was now cooked, and after its conclusion Ivan
+ related the events of the day, warmly dilating on the devotion
+ and courage of Kolina, who, with the keenness of a Yakouta, had
+ found out his prison by the smoke, and had seen him on the
+ ground despite the gloom. Sakalar then explained how, on his
+ return, he had been terribly alarmed, and had followed the
+ trail on the snow. After mutual congratulations the whole party
+ went to sleep.</p>
+
+ <p>The next morning early, the mothers came humbly with
+ provisions for their children. They received some trifling
+ presents and were sent away in delight. About midday the whole
+ tribe presented themselves unarmed, within a short distance of
+ the hut, and offered a traffic. They brought a great quantity
+ of fish, which they wanted to exchange for tobacco. Sakalar,
+ who spoke their language freely, first gave them a roll,
+ letting them understand it was in payment of the fish taken
+ without leave. This at once dissipated all feelings of
+ hostility, and solid peace was insured. So satisfied was
+ Sakalar of their sincerity, that he at once released the
+ captives.</p>
+
+ <p>From that day the two parties were one, and all thoughts of
+ war were completely at an end. A vast deal of bloodshed had
+ been prevented by a few concessions on both sides. The same
+ result might indeed have been come to by killing half of each
+ little tribe, but it is doubtful if the peace would have been
+ as satisfactory to the survivors.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h4>VII.&mdash;THE SUMMER AND AUTUMN.</h4>
+
+ <p>Occupied with the chase, with bartering, and with conversing
+ with their new friends, the summer gradually came around. The
+ snow melted, the hills became a series of cascades, in every
+ direction water poured toward the sea. But the hut remained
+ solid and firm, a little earth only being cast over the snow.
+ Flocks of ducks and geese soon appeared, a slight vegetation
+ was visible, and the sea was in motion. But what principally
+ drew all eyes were the vast heaps of fossil ivory exposed to
+ view on the banks of the stream, laid bare more and more every
+ year by the torrents of spring. A few days sufficed to collect
+ a heap greater than they could take away on the sledges in a
+ dozen journeys. Ivan gazed at his treasure in mute despair.
+ Were all that at Yakoutsk, he was the richest merchant in
+ Siberia; but to take it thither seemed impossible. But in
+ stepped the adventurous Tchouktchas. They offered, for a
+ stipulated sum in tobacco and other valuables, to land a large
+ portion of the ivory at a certain spot on the shores of
+ Siberia, by means of their boats. Ivan, though again surprised
+ at the daring of these wild men, accepted the proposal, and
+ engaged to give them his whole stock. The matter was then
+ settled, and our adventurers and their new friends dispersed to
+ their summer avocations.</p>
+
+ <p>These consisted in fishing and hunting, and repairing boats
+ and sledges. Their canoes were made of skins and whalebone, and
+ bits of wood; but they were large, and capable of sustaining
+ great weight. They proposed to start as soon as the ice was
+ broken up, and to brave all the dangers of so fearful a
+ navigation. They were used to impel themselves along in every
+ open space, and to take shelter on icebergs from danger. When
+ one of these icy mountains went in the right direction, they
+ stuck to it; but at others they paddled away, amid dangers of
+ which they seemed wholly unconscious.</p>
+
+ <p>A month was taken up in fishing, in drying the fish, or in
+ putting it in holes where there was eternal frost. An immense
+ stock was laid in: and then one morning the Tchouktchas took
+ their departure, and the adventurers remained alone. Their hut
+ was broken up, and all made ready for their second journey. The
+ sledges were enlarged, to bear the heaviest possible load at
+ starting. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page213"
+ id="page213"></a>[pg 213]</span> A few days' overloading
+ were not minded, as the provisions would soon decrease.
+ Still not half so much could be taken as they wished, and
+ yet Ivan had nearly a ton of ivory, and thirty tons was the
+ greatest produce of any one year in all Siberia.</p>
+
+ <p>But the sledges were ready long before the sea was so. The
+ interval was spent in continued hunting, to prevent any
+ consumption of the traveling store. All were heartily tired,
+ long before it was over, of a day nearly as long as two English
+ months. Soon the winter set in with intense rigor; the sea
+ ceased to toss and heave; the icebergs and fields moved more
+ and more slowly; at last ocean and land were blended into
+ one&mdash;the night of a month came, and the sun was seen no
+ more.</p>
+
+ <p>The dogs were now roused up; the sledges harnessed; and the
+ instant the sea was firm enough to sustain them, the party
+ started. Sakalar's intention was to try forced marches in a
+ straight line. Fortune favored them. Not an accident occurred
+ for days. At first they did not move exactly in the same
+ direction as when they came, but they soon found traces of
+ their previous journey, proving that a plain of ice had been
+ forced away at least fifty miles during the thaw.</p>
+
+ <p>The road was now again rugged and difficult, firing was
+ getting scarce, the dogs were devouring the fish with rapidity,
+ and only one half the ocean-journey was over. But on they
+ pushed with desperate energy, each eye once more keenly on the
+ look-out for game. Every one drove his team in sullen silence,
+ for all were on short allowance, and all were hungry. They sat
+ on what was to them more valuable than gold, and yet they had
+ not what was necessary for subsistence. The dogs were urged
+ every day to the utmost limits of their strength. But so much
+ space had been taken up by the ivory, that at last there
+ remained neither food nor fuel. None knew at what distance they
+ were from the shore, and their position seemed desperate. There
+ were even whispers of killing some of the dogs; and Sakalar and
+ Ivan were upbraided for the avarice which had brought them to
+ such straits.</p>
+
+ <p>"See!" said the old hunter suddenly, with a delighted smile,
+ pointing toward the south.</p>
+
+ <p>The whole party looked eagerly. A thick column of smoke rose
+ in the air at no very considerable distance. This was the
+ signal agreed on with the Tchouktchas, who were to camp where
+ there was plenty of wood.</p>
+
+ <p>Every hand was raised to urge on the dogs to this point, and
+ at last, from the summit of a hill of ice they saw the shore
+ and the blaze of the fire. The wind was toward them, and the
+ atmosphere heavy. The dogs smelled the distant camp, and darted
+ almost recklessly forward. At last they sank near to the
+ Tchouktcha huts, panting and exhausted.</p>
+
+ <p>Their allies of the spring were true; they gave them food,
+ of which both man and beast ate greedily, and then sought
+ repose. The Tchouktchas had then formed their journey with
+ wonderful success and rapidity, and had found time to lay in a
+ pretty fair stock of fish. This they freely shared with Ivan
+ and his party, and were delighted when he abandoned to them all
+ his tobacco and rum, and part of his tea.</p>
+
+ <p>The Tchouktchas had been four years absent in their
+ wanderings, and were eager to get home once more to the land of
+ the reindeer, and to their friends. They were perhaps the
+ greatest travelers of a tribe noted for its facility of
+ locomotion. And so, with warm expressions of esteem and
+ friendship on both sides, the two parties separated&mdash;the
+ men of the east making their way on foot, toward the Straits of
+ Behring.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h4>VIII.&mdash;THE VOYAGE HOME.</h4>
+
+ <p>Under considerable disadvantages did Sakalar, Ivan, and
+ their friends prepare for the conclusion of their journey.
+ Their provisions were very scanty, and their only hope of
+ replenishing their stores was on the banks of the Vchivaya
+ River, which being in some places pretty rapid might not be
+ frozen over. Sakalar and his friends determined to strike out
+ in a straight line. Part of the ivory had to be concealed and
+ abandoned, to be fetched another time; but as their stock of
+ provisions was so small, they were able to take the principal
+ part. It had been resolved, after some debate, to make in a
+ direct line for the Vchivaya river, and thence to
+ Vijnei-Kolimsk. The road was of a most difficult, and, in part,
+ unknown character; but it was imperative to move in as straight
+ a direction as possible. Time was the great enemy they had to
+ contend with, because their provisions were sufficient for a
+ limited period only.</p>
+
+ <p>The country was at first level enough, and the dogs, after
+ their rest, made sufficiently rapid progress. At night they had
+ reached the commencement of a hilly region, while in the
+ distance could be seen pretty lofty mountains. According to a
+ plan decided on from the first, the human members of the party
+ were placed at once on short allowance, while the dogs received
+ as much food as could be reasonably given. At early dawn the
+ tent was struck, and the dogs were impelled along the banks of
+ a small river completely frozen. Indeed, after a short
+ distance, it was taken as the smoothest path. But at the end of
+ a dozen miles they found themselves in a narrow gorge between
+ two hills; at the foot of a once foaming cataract, now hard
+ frozen. It was necessary to retreat some miles, and gain the
+ land once more. The only path which was now found practicable
+ was along the bottom of some pretty steep rocks. But the track
+ got narrower and narrower, until the dogs were drawing along
+ the edge of a terrific precipice with not four feet of holding.
+ All alighted, and led the dogs, for a false step was death.
+ Fortunately the path became no narrower, and in one place it
+ widened out and made a sort of hollow. Here a bitter blast,
+ almost strong enough to cast them from their feet, checked
+ further progress, and on that naked spot, under a projecting
+ mass of stone, without fire, did the whole party halt.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page214"
+ id="page214"></a>[pg 214]</span> Men and dogs huddled
+ together for warmth, and all dined on raw and frozen fish. A
+ few hours of sleep, however, were snatched; and then, as the
+ storm abated, they again advanced. The descent was soon
+ reached, and led into a vast plain without tree or bush. A
+ range of snow-clad hills lay before them, and through a
+ narrow gully between two mountains was the only practicable
+ pathway. But all hearts were gladdened by the welcome sight
+ of some <i>argali</i>, or Siberian sheep, on the slope of a
+ hill. These animals are the only winter game, bears, and
+ wolves excepted. Kolina was left with the dogs, and the rest
+ started after the animals, which were pawing in the snow for
+ some moss or half-frozen herbs. Every caution was used to
+ approach them against the wind, and a general volley soon
+ sent them scampering away to the mountain-tops, leaving
+ three behind.</p>
+
+ <p>But Ivan saw that he had wounded another, and away he went
+ in chase. The animal ascended a hill, and then halted. But
+ seeing a man coming quickly after him, it turned and fled down
+ the opposite side. Ivan was instantly after him. The descent
+ was steep, but the hunter saw only the argili, and darted down.
+ He slid rather than ran with fearful rapidity, and passed the
+ sheep by, seeking to check himself too late. A tremendous gulf
+ was before him, and his eyes caught an instant glance of a deep
+ distant valley. Then he saw no more until he found himself
+ lying still. He had sunk, on the very brink of the precipice,
+ into a deep snow bank formed by some projecting rock, and had
+ only thus been saved from instant death. Deeply grateful, Ivan
+ crept cautiously up the hill-side, though not without his
+ prize, and rejoined his companions.</p>
+
+ <p>The road now offered innumerable difficulties, it was rough
+ and uneven&mdash;now hard, now soft. They made but slow
+ progress for the next three days, while their provisions began
+ to draw to an end. They had at least a dozen days more before
+ them. All agreed that they were now in the very worst
+ difficulty they had been in. That evening they dined on the
+ last meal of mutton and fish; they were at the foot of a lofty
+ hill, which they determined to ascend while strength was left.
+ The dogs were urged up the steep ascent, and after two hours'
+ toil, they reached the summit. It was a table-land, bleak and
+ miserable, and the wind was too severe to permit camping. On
+ they pushed, and camped a little way down its sides.</p>
+
+ <p>The next morning the dogs had no food, while the men had
+ nothing but large draughts of warm tea. But it was impossible
+ to stop. Away they hurried, after deciding that, if nothing
+ turned up the next morning, two or three of the dogs must be
+ killed to save the rest. Little was the ground they got over,
+ with hungry beasts and starving men, and all were glad to halt
+ near a few dried larches. Men and dogs eyed each other
+ suspiciously, The animals, sixty-four in number, had they not
+ been educated to fear man, would have soon settled the matter.
+ But there they lay, panting and faint&mdash;to start up
+ suddenly with a fearful howl. A bear was on them. Sakalar
+ fired, and then in rushed the dogs, savage and fierce. It was
+ worse than useless, it was dangerous, for the human beings of
+ the party to seek to share this windfall. It was enough that
+ the dogs had found something to appease their hunger.</p>
+
+ <p>Sakalar, however, knew that his faint and weary companions
+ could not move the next day if tea alone were their sustenance
+ that night. He accordingly put in practice one of the devices
+ of his woodcraft. The youngest of the larches was cut down, and
+ the coarse outside bark was taken off. Then every atom of the
+ soft bark was peeled off the tree, and being broken into small
+ pieces, was cast into the boiling pot, already full of water.
+ The quantity was great, and made a thick substance. Round this
+ the whole party collected, eager for the moment when they could
+ fall to. But Sakalar was cool and methodical even in that
+ terrible hour. He took a spoon, and quietly skimmed the pot, to
+ take away the resin that rose to the surface. Then gradually
+ the bark melted away, and presently the pot was filled by a
+ thick paste, and looked not unlike glue. All gladly ate, and
+ found it nutritive, pleasant, and warm. They felt satisfied
+ when the meal was over, and were glad to observe that the dogs
+ returned to the camp completely satisfied also, which, under
+ the circumstances, was matter of great gratification.</p>
+
+ <p>In the morning, after another mess of larch-bark soup, and
+ after a little tea, the adventurers again advanced on their
+ journey. They were now in an arid, bleak, and terrible plain of
+ vast extent. Not a tree, not a shrub, not an elevation was to
+ be seen. Starvation was again staring them in the face, and no
+ man knew when this dreadful plain would end. That night the
+ whole party cowered in their tent without fire, content to chew
+ a few tea-leaves preserved from the last meal. Serious thoughts
+ were now entertained of abandoning their wealth in that wild
+ region. But as none pressed the matter very hardly, the ledges
+ were harnessed again next morning, and the dogs driven on. But
+ man and beast were at the last gasp, and not ten miles were
+ traversed that day, the end of which brought them to a large
+ river, on the borders of which were some trees. Being wide and
+ rapid, it was not frozen, and there was still hope, The seine
+ was drawn from a sledge, and taken into the water. It was
+ fastened from one side to another of a narrow gut, and there
+ left. It was of no avail examining it until morning, for the
+ fish only come out at night.</p>
+
+ <p>There was not a man of the party who had his exact sense
+ about him, while the dogs lay panting on the snow, their
+ tongues hanging out, their eyes glaring with almost savage
+ fury. The trees round the bank were large and dry, and not one
+ had an atom of soft <span class="pagenum"><a name="page215"
+ id="page215"></a>[pg 215]</span> bark on it. All the
+ resource they had was to drink huge draughts of tea, and
+ then seek sleep. Sakalar set the example, and the Kolimsk
+ men, to whom such scenes were not new, followed his advice;
+ but Ivan walked up and down before the tent. A huge fire had
+ been made, which was amply fed by the wood of the river
+ bank, and it blazed on high, showing in bold relief the
+ features of the scene. Ivan gazed vacantly at everything;
+ but he saw not the dark and glancing river&mdash;he saw not
+ the bleak plain of snow&mdash;his eyes looked not on the
+ romantic picture of the tent and its bivouac-fire: his
+ thoughts were on one thing alone. He it was who had brought
+ them to that pass, and on his head rested all the misery
+ endured by man and beast, and, worst of all, by the good and
+ devoted Kolina.</p>
+
+ <p>There she sat, too, on the ground, wrapped in her warm
+ clothes, her eyes, fixed on the crackling logs. Of what was she
+ thinking? Whatever occupied her mind, it was soon chased away
+ by the sudden speech of Ivan. "Kolina," said he, in a tone
+ which borrowed a little of intensity from the state of mind in
+ which hunger had placed all of them, "canst thou ever forgive
+ me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"What?" replied the young girl softly.</p>
+
+ <p>"My having brought you here to die, far away from your
+ native hills?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Kolina cares little for herself," said the Yakouta maiden,
+ rising and speaking perhaps a little wildly; "let her father
+ escape, and she is willing to lie near the tombs of the old
+ people on the borders of the icy sea."</p>
+
+ <p>"But Ivan had hoped to see for Kolina many bright, happy
+ days; for Ivan would have made her father rich, and Kolina
+ would have been the richest unmarried girl in the plain of
+ Miouré!"</p>
+
+ <p>"And would riches make Kolina happy?" said she sadly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Young girl of the Yakouta, hearken to me! Let Ivan live or
+ die this hour; Ivan is a fool. He left home and comfort to
+ cross the icy seas in search of wealth, and to gain happiness;
+ but if he had only had eyes, he would have stopped at Miouré.
+ There he saw a girl, lively as the heaven-fire in the north,
+ good, generous, kind; and she was an old friend, and might have
+ loved Ivan; but the man of Yakoutsk was blind, and told her of
+ his passion for a selfish widow, and the Yakouta maiden never
+ thought of Ivan but as a brother!"</p>
+
+ <p>"What means Ivan?" asked Kolina, trembling with emotion.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ivan has long meant, when he came to the yourte of Sakalar,
+ to lay his wealth at his feet, and beg of his old friend to
+ give him his child: but Ivan now fears that he may die, and
+ wishes to know what would have been the answer of Kolina?"</p>
+
+ <p>"But Maria Vorotinska?" urged the girl, who seemed
+ dreaming.</p>
+
+ <p>"Has long been forgotten. How could I not love my old
+ playmate and friend! Kolina&mdash;Kolina, listen to Ivan!
+ Forget his love for the widow of Yakoutsk, and Ivan will stay
+ in the plain of Vchivaya and die."</p>
+
+ <p>"Kolina is very proud," whispered the girl, sitting down on
+ a log near the fire, and speaking in a low tone; "and Kolina
+ thinks yet that the friend of her father has forgotten himself.
+ But if he be not wild, if the sufferings of the journey have
+ not made him say that which is not, Kolina would be very
+ happy."</p>
+
+ <p>"Be plain, girl of Miouré&mdash;maiden of the Yakouta tribe!
+ and play not with the heart of a man. Can Kolina take Ivan as
+ her husband?"</p>
+
+ <p>A frank and happy reply gave the Yakoutsk merchant all the
+ satisfaction he could wish; and then followed several hours of
+ those sweet and delightful explanations which never end between
+ young lovers when first they have acknowledged their mutual
+ affection. They had hitherto concealed so much, that there was
+ much to tell; and Ivan and Kolina, who for nearly three years
+ had lived together, with a bar between their deep but concealed
+ affection, seemed to have no end of words. Ivan had begun to
+ find his feelings change from the very hour Sakalar's daughter
+ volunteered to accompany him, but it was only in the cave of
+ New Siberia that his heart had been completely won.</p>
+
+ <p>So short, and quiet, and sweet were the hours, that the time
+ of rest passed by without the thought of sleep. Suddenly,
+ however, they were roused to a sense of their situation, and
+ leaving their wearied and exhausted companions still asleep,
+ they moved with doubt and dread to the water's side. Life was
+ now doubly dear to both, and their fancy painted the coming
+ forth of an empty net as the termination of all hope. But the
+ net came heavily and slowly to land. It was full of fish. They
+ were on the well-stocked Vchivaya. More than three hundred
+ fish, small and great, were drawn on shore; and then they
+ recast the net.</p>
+
+ <p>"Up, man and beast!" thundered Ivan, as, after selecting two
+ dozen of the finest, he abandoned the rest to the dogs.</p>
+
+ <p>The animals, faint and weary, greedily seized on the food
+ given them, while Sakalar and the Kolimsk men could scarcely
+ believe their senses. The hot coals were at once brought into
+ requisition, and the party were soon regaling themselves on a
+ splendid meal of tea and broiled fish. I should alarm my
+ readers did I record the quantities eaten. An hour later, every
+ individual was a changed being, but most of all the lovers.
+ Despite their want of rest, they looked fresher than any of the
+ party. It was determined to camp at least twenty hours more in
+ that spot; and the Kolimsk men declared that the river must be
+ the Vchivaya, they could draw the seine all day, for the river
+ was deep, its waters warmer than others, and its abundance of
+ fish such as to border on the fabulous. They went accordingly
+ down to the side of the stream, and then the happy Kolina gave
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page216"
+ id="page216"></a>[pg 216]</span> free vent to her joy. She
+ burst out into a song of her native land, and gave way to
+ some demonstrations of delight, the result of her earlier
+ education, that astonished Sakalar. But when he heard that
+ during that dreadful night he had found a son, Sakalar
+ himself almost lost his reason. The old man loved Ivan
+ almost as much as his own child, and when he saw the youth
+ in his yourte on his hunting trips, had formed some project
+ of the kind now brought about; but the confessions of Ivan
+ on his last visit to Miouré had driven all such thoughts
+ away.</p>
+
+ <p>"Art in earnest, Ivan?" said he, after a pause of some
+ duration.</p>
+
+ <p>"In earnest!" exclaimed Ivan, laughing; "why, I fancy the
+ young men of Miouré will find me so, if they seek to question
+ my right to Kolina!"</p>
+
+ <p>Kolina smiled, and looked happy; and the old hunter heartily
+ blessed his children, adding that the proudest, dearest hope of
+ his heart was now within probable realization.</p>
+
+ <p>The predictions of the Kolimsk men were realized. The river
+ gave them as much fish as they needed for their journey home;
+ and as now Sakalar knew his way, there was little fear for the
+ future. An ample stock was piled on the sledges, the dogs had
+ unlimited feeding for two days, and then away they sped toward
+ an upper part of the river, which, being broad and shallow, was
+ no doubt frozen on the surface. They found it as they expected,
+ and even discovered that the river was gradually freezing all
+ the way down. But little caring for this now, on they went, and
+ after considerable fatigue and some delay, arrived at Kolimsk,
+ to the utter astonishment of all the inhabitants, who had long
+ given them up for lost.</p>
+
+ <p>Great rejoicings took place. The friends of the three
+ Kolimsk men gave a grand festival, in which the rum, and
+ tobacco, and tea, which had been left at the place for payment
+ for their journey, played a conspicuous part. Then, as it was
+ necessary to remain here some time, while the ivory was brought
+ from a deposit near the sea, Ivan and Kolina were married.
+ Neither of them seemed to credit the circumstance, even when
+ fast tied by the Russian church. It had come so suddenly, so
+ unexpectedly on both, that their heads could not quite make the
+ affair out. But they were married in right down earnest, and
+ Kolina was a proud and happy woman. The enormous mass of ivory
+ brought to Kolimsk excited the attention of a distinguished
+ exile, who drew up a statement in Ivan's name, and prepared it
+ for transmission to the White Czar, as the emperor is called in
+ these parts.</p>
+
+ <p>When summer came, the young couple, with Sakalar and a
+ caravan of merchants, started for Yakoutsk, Ivan being by far
+ the richest and most important member of the party. After a
+ single day's halt at Miouré, on they went to the town, and made
+ their triumphal entry in September. Ivan found Maria Vorotinska
+ a wife and mother, and his vanity was not much wounded by the
+ falsehood. The <i>ci-devant</i> widow was a little astonished
+ at Ivan's return, and particularly at his treasure of ivory:
+ but she received his wife with politeness, a little tempered by
+ her sense of her own superiority to a savage, as she designated
+ Kolina to her friends in a whisper. But Kolina was so gentle,
+ so pretty, so good, so cheerful, so happy, that she found her
+ party at once, and the two ladies became rival leaders of the
+ fashion.</p>
+
+ <p>This lasted until the next year, when a messenger from the
+ capital brought a letter to Ivan from the emperor himself,
+ thanking him for his narrative, sending him a rich present, his
+ warm approval, and the office of first civil magistrate in the
+ city of Yakoutsk. This turned the scales wholly on one side,
+ and Maria bowed low to Kolina. But Kolina had no feelings of
+ the parvenu, and she was always a general favorite. Ivan
+ accepted with pride his sovereign's favor, and by dint of
+ assiduity, soon learned to be a useful magistrate. He always
+ remained a good husband, a good father, and a good son, for he
+ made the heart of old Sakalar glad. He never regretted his
+ journey: he always declared he owed to it wealth and happiness,
+ a high position in society, and an admirable wife. Great
+ rejoicings took place many years after in Yakoutsk, at the
+ marriage of the son of Maria, united to the daughter of Ivan,
+ and from the first unto the last, none of the parties concerned
+ ever had reason to mourn over the perilous journey in search of
+ the Ivory Mine.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>For the information of the non-scientific, it may be
+ necessary to mention that the ivory alluded to in the preceding
+ tale, is derived from the tusks of the mammoth, or fossil
+ elephant of the geologist. The remains of this gigantic
+ quadruped are found all over the northern hemisphere, from the
+ 40th to the 75th degree of latitude: but most abundantly in the
+ region which lies between the mountains of Central Asia and the
+ shores and islands of the Frozen Sea. So profusely do they
+ exist in this region, that the tusks have for more than a
+ century constituted an important article of
+ traffic&mdash;furnishing a large proportion of the ivory
+ required by the carver and turner. The remains lie imbedded in
+ the upper tertiary clays and gravels; and these, by exposure to
+ the river-currents, to the waves of the sea, and other erosive
+ agencies, are frequently swept away during the thaws of summer,
+ leaving tusks and bones in masses, and occasionally even entire
+ skeletons, in a wonderful state of preservation. The most
+ perfect specimen yet obtained, and from the study of which the
+ zoologist has been enabled to arrive at an accurate knowledge
+ of the structure and habits of the mammoth, is that discovered
+ by a Tungusian fisherman, near the mouth of the river Lena, in
+ the summer of 1799.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page217"
+ id="page217"></a>[pg 217]</span>
+
+ <p>Being in the habit of collecting tusks among the debris of
+ the gravel-cliffs, (for it is generally at a considerable
+ elevation in the cliffs and river banks that the remains
+ occur,) he observed a strange shapeless mass projecting from an
+ ice-bank some fifty or sixty feet above the river; during next
+ summer's thaw he saw the same object, rather more disengaged
+ from amongst the ice; in 1801 he could distinctly perceive the
+ tusk and flank of an immense animal; and in 1803, in
+ consequence of an earlier and more powerful thaw, the huge
+ carcase became entirely disengaged, and fell on the sandbank
+ beneath. In the spring of the following year the fisherman cut
+ off the tusks, which he sold for fifty rubles (£7, 10s.;) and
+ two years afterward, our countryman, Mr. Adams, visited the
+ spot, and gives the following account of the extraordinary
+ phenomenon:</p>
+
+ <p>"At this time I found the mammoth still in the same place,
+ but altogether mutilated. The discoverer was contented with his
+ profit for the tusks, and the Yakoutski of the neighborhood had
+ cut off the flesh, with which they fed their dogs. During the
+ scarcity, wild beasts, such as white bears, wolves, wolverines,
+ and foxes, also fed upon it, and the traces of their footsteps
+ were seen around. The skeleton, almost entirely cleared of its
+ flesh, remained whole, with the exception of a foreleg. The
+ head was covered with a dry skin; one of the ears, well
+ preserved, was furnished with a tuft of hair. All these parts
+ have necessarily been injured in transporting them a distance
+ of 7,330 miles, (to the Imperial museum of St. Petersburgh,)
+ but the eyes have been preserved, and the pupil of one can
+ still be distinguished. The mammoth was a male, with a long
+ mane on the neck. The tail and proboscis were not preserved.
+ The skin, of which I possess three-fourths, is of a dark-gray
+ color, covered with a reddish wool and black hairs: but the
+ dampness of the spot where it had lain so long had in some
+ degree destroyed the hair. The entire carcase, of which I
+ collected the bones on the spot, was nine feet four inches
+ high, and sixteen feet four inches long, without including the
+ tusks, which measured nine feet six inches along the curve. The
+ distance from the base or root of the tusk to the point is
+ three feet seven inches. The two tusks together weighed three
+ hundred and sixty pounds, English weight, and the head alone
+ four hundred and fourteen pounds. The skin was of such weight
+ that it required ten persons to transport it to the shore; and
+ after having cleared the ground, upward of thirty-six pounds of
+ hair were collected, which the white bears had trodden while
+ devouring the flesh."</p>
+
+ <p>Since then, other carcases of elephants have been
+ discovered, in a greater or less degree of preservation; as
+ also the remains of rhinoceroses, mastodons, and allied
+ pachyderms&mdash;the mammoth more abundantly in the old world,
+ the mastodon in the new. In every case these animals differ
+ from existing species: are of more gigantic dimensions; and,
+ judging from their natural coverings of thick-set curly-crisped
+ wool and strong hair, upward of a foot in length, were fitted
+ to live, if not in a boreal, at least in a coldly-temperate
+ region. Indeed, there is proof positive of the then more milder
+ climate of these regions in the discovery of pine and
+ birch-trunks where no vegetation now flourishes; and further,
+ in the fact that fragments of pine-leaves, birch-twigs, and
+ other northern plants, have been detected between the grinders
+ and within the stomachs of these animals. We have thus
+ evidence, that at the close of the tertiary, and shortly after
+ the commencement of the current epoch, the northern hemisphere
+ enjoyed a much milder climate; that it was the abode of huge
+ pachyderms now extinct; that a different distribution of sea
+ and land prevailed; and that on a new distribution or sea and
+ land, accompanied also by a different relative level, these
+ animals died away, leaving their remains imbedded in the clays,
+ gravels, and other alluvial deposits, where, under the
+ antiseptic influence of an almost eternal frost, many of them
+ have been preserved as entire as at the fatal moment they sank
+ under the rigors of external conditions no longer fitted for
+ their existence. It has been attempted by some to prove the
+ adaptability of these animals to the present conditions of the
+ northern hemisphere; but so untenable in every phase is this
+ opinion, that it would be sheer waste of time and space to
+ attempt its refutation. That they may have migrated northward
+ and southward with the seasons is more than probable, though it
+ has been stated that the remains diminish in size the farther
+ north they are found; but that numerous herds of such huge
+ animals should have existed in these regions at all, and that
+ for thousands of years, presupposes an exuberant arboreal
+ vegetation, and the necessary degree of climate for its growth
+ and development. It has been mentioned that the mastodon and
+ mammoth seem to have attained their meridian toward the close
+ of the tertiary epoch, and that a few may have lived even in
+ the current era; but it is more probable that the commencement
+ of existing conditions was the proximate cause of their
+ extinction, and that not a solitary specimen ever lived to be
+ the contemporary of man.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From Fraser's Magazine.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>ENGLISH HEXAMETERS.</h2>
+
+ <h4>BY WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR.</h4>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Askest thou if in my youth I have mounted, as others
+ have mounted,</p>
+
+ <p>Galloping Hexameter, Pentameter cantering after,</p>
+
+ <p>English by dam and by sire; bit, bridle, and
+ saddlery, English;</p>
+
+ <p>English the girths and the shoes; all English from
+ snaffle to crupper;</p>
+
+ <p>Everything English around, excepting the tune of the
+ jockey?</p>
+
+ <p>Latin and Greek, it is true, I have often attach'd
+ to my phaeton</p>
+
+ <p>Early in life, and sometimes have I ordered them out
+ in its
+ evening,</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page218"
+ id="page218"></a>[pg 218]</span>
+
+ <p>Dusting the linings, and pleas'd to have found them
+ unworn and untarnisht.</p>
+
+ <p>Idle! but Idleness looks never better than close
+ upon sunset.</p>
+
+ <p>Seldom my goosequill, of goose from Germany, fatted
+ in England,</p>
+
+ <p>(Frolicksome though I have been) have I tried on
+ Hexameter, knowing</p>
+
+ <p>Latin and Greek are alone its languages. We have a
+ measure</p>
+
+ <p>Fashion'd by Milton's own hand, a fuller, a deeper,
+ a louder.</p>
+
+ <p>Germans may flounder at will over consonant, vowel,
+ and liquid,</p>
+
+ <p>Liquid and vowel but one to a dozen of consonants,
+ ending</p>
+
+ <p>Each with a verb at the tail, tail heavy as African
+ ram's tail,</p>
+
+ <p>Spenser and Shakspeare had each his own harmony;
+ each an enchanter</p>
+
+ <p>Wanting no aid from without. <i>Chevy Chase</i> had
+ delighted their fathers,</p>
+
+ <p>Though of a different strain from the song on the
+ <i>Wrath of Achilles</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>Southey was fain to pour forth his exuberant stream
+ over regions</p>
+
+ <p>Near and remote: his command was absolute; every
+ subject,</p>
+
+ <p>Little or great, he controll'd; in language,
+ variety, fancy,</p>
+
+ <p>Richer than all his compeers and wanton but once in
+ dominion;</p>
+
+ <p>'Twas when he left the full well that for ages had
+ run by his homestead,</p>
+
+ <p>Pushing the brambles aside which encumber'd another
+ up higher,</p>
+
+ <p>Letting his bucket go down, and hearing it bump in
+ descending,</p>
+
+ <p>Grating against the loose stones 'til it came but
+ half-full from the bottom.</p>
+
+ <p>Others abstain'd from the task. Scott wander'd at
+ large over Scotland;</p>
+
+ <p>Reckless of Roman and Greek, he chanted the <i>Lay
+ of the Minstrel</i></p>
+
+ <p>Better than ever before any minstrel in chamber had
+ chanted.</p>
+
+ <p>Never on mountain or wild hath echo so cheerfully
+ sounded,</p>
+
+ <p>Never did monarch bestow such glorious meeds upon
+ knighthood,</p>
+
+ <p>Never had monarch the power, liberality, justice,
+ discretion.</p>
+
+ <p>Byron liked new-papered rooms, and pull'd down old
+ wainscot of cedar;</p>
+
+ <p>Bright-color'd prints he preferr'd to the graver
+ cartoons of a Raphael,</p>
+
+ <p>Sailor and Turk (with a sack,) to Eginate and
+ Parthenon marbles,</p>
+
+ <p>Splendid the palace he rais'd&mdash;the gin-palace
+ in Poesy's purlieus;</p>
+
+ <p>Soft the divan on the sides, with spittoons for the
+ qualmish and queesy.</p>
+
+ <p>Wordsworth, well pleas'd with himself, cared little
+ for modern or ancient.</p>
+
+ <p>His was the moor and the tarn, the recess in the
+ mountain, the woodland</p>
+
+ <p>Scatter'd with trees far and wide, trees never too
+ solemn or lofty,</p>
+
+ <p>Never entangled with plants overrunning the
+ villager's foot-path.</p>
+
+ <p>Equable was he and plain, but wandering a little in
+ wisdom,</p>
+
+ <p>Sometimes flying from blood and sometimes pouring it
+ freely.</p>
+
+ <p>Yet he was English at heart. If his words were too
+ many; if Fancy's</p>
+
+ <p>Furniture lookt rather scant in a whitewasht homely
+ apartment;</p>
+
+ <p>If in his rural designs there is sameness and
+ tameness; if often</p>
+
+ <p>Feebleness is there for breadth; if his pencil wants
+ rounding and pointing;</p>
+
+ <p>Few of this age or the last stand out on the like
+ elevation.</p>
+
+ <p>There is a sheepfold he rais'd which my memory loves
+ to revisit,</p>
+
+ <p>Sheepfold whose wall shall endure when there is not
+ a stone of the palace.</p>
+
+ <p>Still there are walking on earth many poets whom
+ ages hereafter</p>
+
+ <p>Will be more willing to praise than they are to
+ praise one another:</p>
+
+ <p>Some do I know, but I fear, as is meet, to recount
+ or report them,</p>
+
+ <p>For, be whatever the name that is foremost, the next
+ will run over,</p>
+
+ <p>Trampling and rolling in dust his excellent friend
+ the precursor.</p>
+
+ <p>Peace be with all! but afar be ambition to follow
+ the Roman,</p>
+
+ <p>Led by the German, uncomb'd, and jigging in dactyl
+ and spondee,</p>
+
+ <p>Lumbering shapeless jackboots which nothing can
+ polish or supple.</p>
+
+ <p>Much as old metres delight me, 'tis only where first
+ they were nurtured,</p>
+
+ <p>In their own clime, their own speech: than pamper
+ them here I would rather</p>
+
+ <p>Tie up my Pegasus tight to the scanty-fed rack of a
+ sonnet.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From Household Words.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>A MIGHTIER HUNTER THAN NIMROD.</h2>
+
+ <p>A great deal has been said about the prowess of Nimrod, in
+ connection with the chase, from the days of him of Babylon to
+ those of the late Mr. Apperley of Shropshire; but we question
+ whether, among all the sporting characters mentioned in ancient
+ or modern story, there ever was so mighty a hunter as the
+ gentleman whose sporting calendar now lies before
+ us.<a id="footnotetag4"
+ name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a>
+ The annals of the chase, so far as we are acquainted with
+ them, supply no such instances of familiar intimacy with
+ lions, elephants, hippopotami, rhinoceroses, serpents,
+ crocodiles, and other furious animals, with which the human
+ species in general is not very forward in cultivating an
+ acquaintance.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Cumming had exhausted the deer-forests of his native
+ Scotland; he had sighed for the rolling prairies and rocky
+ mountains of the Far West, and was tied down to military
+ routine as a mounted rifleman in the Cape Colony; when he
+ determined to resign his commission into the hands of
+ Government, and himself to the delights of hunting amid the
+ untrodden plains and forests of South Africa. Having provided
+ himself with wagons to travel and live in, with bullocks to
+ draw them, and with a host of attendants; a sufficiency of
+ arms, horses, dogs, and ammunition, he set out from
+ Graham's-Town in October, 1843. From that period his hunting
+ adventures extended over five years, during which time he
+ penetrated from various points and in various directions from
+ his starting-place in lat. 33 down to lat. 20, and passed
+ through districts upon which no European foot ever before trod;
+ regions where the wildest of wild animals abound&mdash;nothing
+ less serving Mr. Cumming's ardent purpose.</p>
+
+ <p>A lion story in the early part of his book will introduce
+ this fearless hunter-author to our readers better than the most
+ elaborate dissection of his character. He is approaching
+ Colesberg, the northernmost military station belonging to the
+ Cape Colony. He is on a trusty steed, which he calls also
+ "Colesberg." Two of his attendants on horseback are with him.
+ "Suddenly," says the author, "I observed a number of vultures
+ seated on the plain about a quarter of a mile ahead of us, and
+ close beside them stood a huge lioness, consuming a blesblok
+ which she had <span class="pagenum"><a name="page219"
+ id="page219"></a>[pg 219]</span> killed. She was assisted in
+ her repast by about a dozen jackals, which were feasting
+ along with her in the most friendly and confidential manner.
+ Directing my followers' attention to the spot, I remarked,
+ 'I see the lion;' to which they replied, 'Whar? whar? Yah!
+ Almagtig! dat is he;' and instantly reining in their steeds
+ and wheeling about, they pressed their heels to their
+ horses' sides, and were preparing to betake themselves to
+ flight. I asked them what they were going to do? To which
+ they answered, 'We have not yet placed caps on our rifles.'
+ This was true; but while this short conversation was
+ passing, the lioness had observed us. Raising her full round
+ face, she overhauled us for a few seconds, and then set off
+ at a smart canter toward a range of mountains some miles to
+ the northward; the whole troop of jackals also started off
+ in another direction; there was therefore no time to think
+ of caps. The first move was to bring her to bay, and not a
+ second was to be lost. Spurring my good and lively steed,
+ and shouting to my men to follow, I flew across the plain,
+ and, being fortunately mounted on Colesberg, the flower of
+ my stud, I gained upon her at every stride. This was to me a
+ joyful moment, and I at once made up my mind that she or I
+ must die. The lioness soon after suddenly pulled up, and sat
+ on her haunches like a dog, with her back toward me, not
+ even deigning to look round. She then appeared to say to
+ herself, 'Does this fellow know who he is after?' Having
+ thus sat for half a minute, as if involved in thought, she
+ sprang to her feet, and facing about, stood looking at me
+ for a few seconds, moving her tail slowly from side to side,
+ showing her teeth and growling fiercely. She next made a
+ short run forward, making a loud, rumbling noise like
+ thunder. This she did to intimidate me; but finding that I
+ did not flinch an inch, nor seem to heed her hostile
+ demonstrations, she quietly stretched out her massive arms,
+ and lay down on the grass. My Hottentots now coming up, we
+ all three dismounted, and drawing our rifles from their
+ holsters, we looked to see if the powder was up in the
+ nipples, and put on our caps. While this was doing, the
+ lioness sat up, and showed evident symptoms of uneasiness.
+ She looked first at us, and then behind her, as if to see if
+ the coast were clear; after which she made a short run
+ toward us, uttering her deep-drawn murderous growls. Having
+ secured the three horses to one another by their rheims, we
+ led them on as if we intended to pass her, in the hope of
+ obtaining a broadside; but this she carefully avoided to
+ expose, presenting only her full front. I had given Stofolus
+ my Moore rifle, with orders to shoot her if she should
+ spring upon me, but on no account to fire before me.
+ Kleinboy was to stand ready to hand me my Purdey rifle, in
+ case the two-grooved Dixon should not prove sufficient. My
+ men as yet had been steady, but they were in a precious
+ stew, their faces having assumed a ghastly paleness; and I
+ had a painful feeling that I could place no reliance on
+ them. Now, then, for it, neck or nothing! She is within
+ sixty yards of us, and she keeps advancing. We turned the
+ horses' tails to her. I knelt on one side, and taking a
+ steady aim at her breast, let fly. The ball cracked loudly
+ on her tawny hide, and crippled her in the shoulder; upon
+ which she charged with an appalling roar, and in the
+ twinkling of an eye she was in the midst of us. At this
+ moment Stofolus'a rifle exploded in his hand, and Kleinboy,
+ whom I had ordered to stand ready by me, danced about like a
+ duck in a gale of wind. The lioness sprang upon Colesberg,
+ and fearfully lacerated his ribs and haunches with her
+ horrid teeth and claws. The worst wound was on his haunch,
+ which exhibited a sickening, yawning gash, more than twelve
+ inches long, almost laying bare the very bone. I was very
+ cool and steady, and did not feel in the least degree
+ nervous, having fortunately great confidence in my own
+ shooting; but I must confess, when the whole affair was
+ over, I felt that it was a very awful situation, and
+ attended with extreme peril, as I had no friend with me on
+ whom I could rely. When the lioness sprang on Colesberg, I
+ stood out from the horses, ready with my second barrel for
+ the first chance she should give me of a clear shot. This
+ she quickly did; for, seemingly satisfied with the revenge
+ she had now taken, she quitted Colesberg, and slewing her
+ tail to one side, trotted sulkily past within a few paces of
+ me, taking one step to the left. I pitched my rifle to my
+ shoulder, and in another second the lioness was stretched on
+ the plain a lifeless corpse."</p>
+
+ <p>This is, however, but a harmless adventure compared with a
+ subsequent escapade&mdash;not with one, but with six lions. It
+ was the hunter's habit to lay wait near the drinking-places of
+ these animals, concealed in a hole dug for the purpose. In such
+ a place on the occasion in question, Mr. Cumming&mdash;having
+ left one of three rhinoceroses he had previously killed as a
+ bait&mdash;ensconsed himself. Such a savage festival as that
+ which introduced the adventure, has never before, we believe,
+ been introduced through the medium of the softest English and
+ the finest hot-pressed paper to the notice of the civilized
+ public. "Soon after twilight," the author relates, "I went down
+ to my hole with Kleinboy and two natives, who lay concealed in
+ another hole, with Wolf and Boxer ready to slip, in the event
+ of wounding a lion. On reaching the water I looked toward the
+ carcase of the rhinoceros, and, to my astonishment, I beheld
+ the ground alive with large creatures, as though a troop of
+ zebras were approaching the fountain to drink. Kleinboy
+ remarked to me that a troop of zebras were standing on the
+ height. I answered, 'Yes,' but I knew very well that zebras
+ would not be capering around the carcase of a rhinoceros. I
+ quickly <span class="pagenum"><a name="page220"
+ id="page220"></a>[pg 220]</span> arranged my blankets,
+ pillow, and guns in the hole, and then lay down to feast my
+ eyes on the interesting sight before me. It was bright
+ moonlight, as clear as I need wish, and within one night of
+ being full moon. There were six large lions, about twelve or
+ fifteen hyenas, and from twenty to thirty jackals, feasting
+ on and around the carcases of the three rhinoceroses. The
+ lions feasted peacefully, but the hyenas and jackals fought
+ over every mouthful, and chased one another round and round
+ the carcases, growling, laughing, screeching, chattering,
+ and howling without any intermission. The hyenas did not
+ seem afraid of the lions, although they always gave way
+ before them; for I observed that they followed them in the
+ most disrespectful manner, and stood laughing, one or two on
+ either side, when any lions came after their comrades to
+ examine pieces of skin or bones which they were dragging
+ away. I had lain watching this banquet for about three
+ hours, in the strong hope that, when the lions had feasted,
+ they would come and drink. Two black and two white
+ rhinoceroses had made their appearance, but, scared by the
+ smell of the blood, they had made off. At length the lions
+ seemed satisfied. They all walked about with their heads up,
+ and seemed to be thinking about the water; and in two
+ minutes one of them turned his face toward me, and came on;
+ he was immediately followed by a second lion, and in half a
+ minute by the remaining four. It was a decided and general
+ move, they were all coming to drink right bang in my face,
+ within fifteen yards of me."</p>
+
+ <p>The hunters were presently discovered. "An old lioness, who
+ seemed to take the lead, had detected me, and, with her head
+ high and her eyes fixed full upon me she was coming slowly
+ round the corner of the little vley to cultivate further my
+ acquaintance! This unfortunate coincidence put a stop at once
+ to all further contemplation. I thought; in my haste, that it
+ was perhaps most prudent to shoot this lioness, especially as
+ none of the others had noticed me. I accordingly moved my arm
+ and covered her; she saw me move and halted, exposing a full
+ broadside. I fired; the ball entered one shoulder, and passed
+ out behind the other. She bounded forward with repeated growls,
+ and was followed by her five comrades all enveloped in a cloud
+ of dust; nor did they atop until they had reached the cover
+ behind me, except one old gentleman, who halted and looked back
+ for a few seconds, when I fired, but the ball went high. I
+ listened anxiously for some sound to denote the approaching end
+ of the lioness; nor listened in vain. I heard her growling and
+ stationary, as if dying. In one minute her comrades crossed the
+ vley a little below me, and made toward the rhinoceros. I then
+ slipped Wolf and Boxer on her scent, and, following them into
+ the cover, I found her lying dead."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Cumming's adventures with elephants are no less
+ thrilling. He had selected for the aim of his murderous rifle
+ two huge female elephants from a herd. "Two of the troop had
+ walked slowly past at about sixty yards, and the one which I
+ had selected was feeding with two others on a thorny tree
+ before me. My hand was now as steady as the rock on which it
+ rested, so, taking a deliberate aim, I let fly at her head, a
+ little behind the eye. She got it hard and sharp, just where I
+ aimed, but it did not seem to affect her much. Uttering a loud
+ cry, she wheeled about, when I gave her the second ball, close
+ behind the shoulder. All the elephants uttered a strange
+ rumbling noise, and made off in a line to the northward at a
+ brisk ambling pace, their huge fanlike ears flapping in the
+ ratio of their speed. I did not wait to load, but ran back to
+ the hillock to obtain a view. On gaining its summit, the guides
+ pointed out the elephants; they were standing in a grove of
+ shady trees, but the wounded one was some distance behind with
+ another elephant, doubtless its particular friend, who was
+ endeavoring to assist it. These elephants had probably never
+ before heard the report of a gun; and having neither seen nor
+ smelt me, they were unaware of the presence of man, and did not
+ seem inclined to go any further. Presently my men hove in
+ sight, bringing the dogs; and when these came up, I waited some
+ time before commencing the attack, that the dogs and horses
+ might recover their wind. We then rode slowly toward the
+ elephants, and had advanced within two hundred yards of them,
+ when, the ground being open, they observed us, and made off in
+ an easterly direction; but the wounded one immediately dropped
+ astern, and next moment she was surrounded by the dogs, which,
+ barking angrily, seemed to engross her attention. Having placed
+ myself between her and the retreating troop, I dismounted to
+ fire, within forty yards of her, in open ground. Colesberg was
+ extremely afraid of the elephants, and gave me much trouble,
+ jerking my arm when I tried to fire. At length I let fly; but,
+ on endeavoring to regain my saddle. Colesberg declined to allow
+ me to mount; and when I tried to lead him, and run for it, he
+ only backed toward the wounded elephant. At this moment I heard
+ another elephant close behind: and on looking about I beheld
+ the 'friend,' with uplifted trunk, charging down upon me at top
+ speed, shrilly trumpeting, and following an old black pointer
+ named Schwart, that was perfectly deaf, and trotted along
+ before the enraged elephant quite unaware of what was behind
+ him. I felt certain that she would have either me or my horse.
+ I, however, determined not to relinquish my steed, but to hold
+ on by the bridle. My men, who of course kept at a safe
+ distance, stood aghast with their mouths open, and for a few
+ seconds my position was certainly not an enviable one.
+ Fortunately, however, the dogs took off the attention of the
+ elephants; and, just us they
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page221"
+ id="page221"></a>[pg 221]</span> were upon me I managed to
+ spring into the saddle, where I was safe. As I turned my
+ back to mount, the elephants were so very near, that I
+ really expected to feel one of their trunks lay hold of me.
+ I rode up to Kleinboy for my double-barrelled two-grooved
+ rifle; he and Isaac were pale and almost speechless with
+ fright. Returning to the charge, I was soon once more
+ alongside, and, firing from the saddle, I sent another brace
+ of bullets into the wounded elephant. Colesberg was
+ extremely unsteady, and destroyed the correctness of my aim.
+ The 'friend' now seemed resolved to do some mischief, and
+ charged me furiously, pursuing me to a distance of several
+ hundred yards. I therefore deemed it proper to give her a
+ gentle hint to act less officiously, and so, having loaded,
+ I approached within thirty yards, and gave it her sharp,
+ right and left, behind the shoulder; upon which she at once
+ made off with drooping trunk, evidently with a mortal wound.
+ Two more shots finished her; on receiving them she tossed
+ her trunk up and down two or three times, and falling on her
+ broadside against a thorny tree, which yielded like grass
+ before her enormous weight, she uttered a deep hoarse cry
+ and expired."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Cumming's exploits in the water are no less exciting
+ than his land adventures. Here is an account of his victory
+ over a hippopotamus, on the banks of the Limpopo river, near
+ the northernmost extremity of his journeyings.</p>
+
+ <p>"There were four of them, three cows and an old bull; they
+ stood in the middle of the river, and though alarmed, did not
+ appear aware of the extent of the impending danger. I took the
+ sea-cow next me, and with my first ball I gave her a mortal
+ wound, knocking loose a great plate on the top of her skull.
+ She at once commenced plunging round and round, and then
+ occasionally remained still, sitting for a few minutes on the
+ same spot. On hearing the report of my rifle two of the others
+ took up stream, and the fourth dashed down the river; they
+ trotted along, like oxen, at a smart pace as long as the water
+ was shallow. I was now in a state of very great anxiety about
+ my wounded sea-cow, for I feared that she would get down into
+ deep water, and be lost like the last one; her struggles were
+ still carrying her down stream, and the water was becoming
+ deeper. To settle the matter I accordingly fired a second shot
+ from the bank, which, entering the roof of her skull, passed
+ out through her eye; she then, kept continually splashing round
+ and round in a circle in the middle of the river. I had great
+ fears of the crocodiles, and I did not know that the sea-cow
+ might not attack me. My anxiety to secure her, however,
+ overcame all hesitation; so, divesting myself of my leathers,
+ and armed with a sharp knife. I dashed into the water, which at
+ first took me up to my arm-pits, but in the middle was
+ shallower. As I approached Behemoth her eye looked very wicked.
+ I halted for a moment, ready to dive under the water if she
+ attacked me, but she was stunned, and did not know what she was
+ doing; so, running in upon her, and seizing her short tail, I
+ attempted to incline her course to land. It was extraordinary
+ what enormous strength she still had in the water. I could not
+ guide her in the slightest, and she continued to splash, and
+ plunge, and blow, and make her circular course, carrying me
+ along with her as if I was a fly on her tail. Finding her tail
+ gave me but a poor hold, as the only means of securing my prey,
+ I took out my knife, and cutting two deep parallel incisions
+ through the skin on her rump, and lifting this skin from the
+ flesh, so that I could get in my two hands, I made use of this
+ as a handle; and after some desperate hard work, sometimes
+ pushing and sometimes pulling, the sea-cow continuing her
+ circular course all the time and I holding on at her rump like
+ grim Death, eventually I succeeded in bringing this gigantic
+ and most powerful animal to the bank. Here the Bushman, quickly
+ brought me a stout buffalo-rheim from my horse's neck, which I
+ passed through the opening in the thick skin, and moored
+ Behemoth to a tree. I then took my rifle, and sent a ball
+ through the center of her head, and she was numbered with the
+ dead." There is nothing in "Waterton's Wanderings," or in the
+ "Adventures of Baron Munchausen" more startling than this
+ "Waltz with a Hippopotamus!"</p>
+
+ <p>In the all-wise disposition of events, it is perhaps
+ ordained that wild animals should be subdued by man to his use
+ at the expense of such tortures as those described in the work
+ before us. Mere amusement, therefore, is too light a motive for
+ dealing such wounds and death Mr. Cumming owns to; but he had
+ other motives,&mdash;besides a considerable profit he has
+ reaped in trophies, ivory, fur, &amp;c., he has made in his
+ book some valuable contributions to the natural history of the
+ animals he wounded and slew.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>From Graham's Magazine for August</h4>
+
+ <h2>MANUELA.</h2>
+
+ <h3>A BALLAD OF CALIFORNIA.</h3>
+
+ <h4>BY BAYARD TAYLOR.</h4>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>From the doorway, Manuela, in the sheeny April
+ morn,</p>
+
+ <p>Southward looks, along the valley, over leagues of
+ gleaming corn;</p>
+
+ <p>Where the mountain's misty rampart like the wall of
+ Eden towers,</p>
+
+ <p>And the isles of oak are sleeping on a painted sea
+ of flowers.</p>
+
+ <p>All the air is full of music, for the winter rains
+ are o'er,</p>
+
+ <p>And the noisy magpies chatter from the budding
+ sycamore;</p>
+
+ <p>Blithely frisk unnumbered squirrels, over all the
+ grassy slope;</p>
+
+ <p>Where the airy summits brighten, nimbly leaps the
+ antelope.</p>
+
+ <p>Gentle eyes of Manuela! tell me wherefore do ye
+ rest</p>
+
+ <p>On the oaks' enchanted islands and the flowery
+ ocean's breast?</p>
+
+ <p>Tell me wherefore down the valley, ye have traced
+ the highway's mark</p>
+
+ <p>Far beyond the belts of timber, to the
+ mountain-shadows dark?</p>
+
+ <p>Ah, the fragrant bay may blossom, and the sprouting
+ verdure shine</p>
+
+ <p>With the tears of amber dropping from the tassels of
+ the pine.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page222"
+ id="page222"></a>[pg 222]</span>
+
+ <p>And the morning's breath of balsam lightly brush her
+ sunny cheek&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Little recketh Manuela of the tales of Spring they
+ speak.</p>
+
+ <p>When the Summer's burning solstice on the
+ mountain-harvests glowed,</p>
+
+ <p>She had watched a gallant horseman riding down the
+ valley road;</p>
+
+ <p>Many times she saw him turning, looking back with
+ parting thrills,</p>
+
+ <p>Till amid her tears she lost him, in the shadow of
+ the hills.</p>
+
+ <p>Ere the cloudless moons were over, he had passed the
+ Desert's sand.</p>
+
+ <p>Crossed the rushing Colorada and the dark Apache
+ Land,</p>
+
+ <p>And his laden mules were driven, when the time of
+ rains began.</p>
+
+ <p>With the traders of Chihuaha, to the Fair of San
+ Juan.</p>
+
+ <p>Therefore watches Manuela&mdash;therefore lightly
+ doth she start,</p>
+
+ <p>When the sound of distant footsteps seems the
+ beating of her heart;</p>
+
+ <p>Not a wind the green oak rustles or the redwood
+ branches stirs,</p>
+
+ <p>But she hears the silver jingle of his ringing bit
+ and spurs.</p>
+
+ <p>Often, out the hazy distance, come the horsemen, day
+ by day,</p>
+
+ <p>But they come not as Bernardo&mdash;she can see it,
+ far away;</p>
+
+ <p>Well she knows the airy gallop of his mettled
+ <i>alazan</i>,<a id="footnotetag5"
+ name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Light as any antelope upon the Hills of Gavilan.</p>
+
+ <p>She would know him mid a thousand, by his free and
+ gallant air;</p>
+
+ <p>By the featly-knit sarape,<a id="footnotetag6"
+ name="footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a>
+ such as wealthy traders wear;</p>
+
+ <p>By his broidered calzoneros<a id="footnotetag7"
+ name="footnotetag7"></a><a href="#footnote7"><sup>7</sup></a>
+ and his saddle, gaily spread,</p>
+
+ <p>With its cantle rimmed with silver, and its horn a
+ lion's head.</p>
+
+ <p>None like he the light riata<a id="footnotetag8"
+ name="footnotetag8"></a><a href="#footnote8"><sup>8</sup></a>
+ on the maddened bull can throw;</p>
+
+ <p>None amid the mountain-canons, track like he the
+ stealthy doe;</p>
+
+ <p>And at all the Mission festals, few indeed the
+ revelers are</p>
+
+ <p>Who can dance with him the jota, touch with him the
+ gay guitar.</p>
+
+ <p>He has said to Manuela, and the echoes linger
+ still</p>
+
+ <p>In the cloisters of her bosom, with a secret, tender
+ thrill,</p>
+
+ <p>When the hay again has blossomed, and the valley
+ stands in corn,</p>
+
+ <p>Shall the bells of Santa Clara usher in the wedding
+ morn.</p>
+
+ <p>He has pictured the procession, all in holyday
+ attire,</p>
+
+ <p>And the laugh and look of gladness, when they see
+ the distant spire;</p>
+
+ <p>Then their love shall kindle newly, and the world be
+ doubly fair,</p>
+
+ <p>In the cool delicious crystal of the summer morning
+ air.</p>
+
+ <p>Tender eyes of Manuela! what has dimmed your
+ lustrous beam?</p>
+
+ <p>'Tis a tear that falls to glitter on the casket of
+ her dream.</p>
+
+ <p>Ah, the eye of love must brighten, if its watches
+ would be true,</p>
+
+ <p>For the star is falsely mirrored in the rose's drop
+ of dew!</p>
+
+ <p>But her eager eyes rekindle, and her breathless
+ bosom stills,</p>
+
+ <p>As she sees a horseman moving in the shadow of the
+ hills;</p>
+
+ <p>Now in love and fond thanksgiving they may loose
+ their pearly tides&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>'Tis the alazan that gallops, 'tis Bernardo's self
+ that rides!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>From Fraser's Magazine for July.</h4>
+
+ <h3>LEDRU ROLLIN.</h3>
+
+ <p>Ledru Rollin is now in his forty-fourth or forty-fifth year,
+ having been born in 1806 or 1807. He is the grandson of the
+ famous <i>Prestidigateur</i>, or Conjurer Comus, who, about
+ four or five-and-forty years ago, was in the acme of his fame.
+ During the Consulate, and a considerable portion of the Empire,
+ Comus traveled from one department of France to the other, and
+ is even known to have extended his journeys beyond the Rhine
+ and the Moselle on one side, and beyond the Rhône and Garonne
+ on the other. Of all the conjurers of his day he was the most
+ famous and the most successful, always, of course, excepting
+ that Corsican conjurer who ruled for so many years the
+ destinies of France. From those who have seen that famous
+ trickster, we have learned that the Charleses, the Alexanders,
+ even the Robert Houdins, were children compared with the
+ magical wonder-worker of the past generation. The fame of Comus
+ was enormous, and his gains proportionate; and when he had
+ shuffled off this mortal coil it was found he had left to his
+ descendants a very ample&mdash;indeed, for France, a very large
+ fortune. Of the descendants in a right line, his grandson,
+ Ledru Rollin, was his favorite, and to him the old man left the
+ bulk of his fortune, which, during the minority of Ledru
+ Rollin, grew to a sum amounting to nearly, if not fully, £4,000
+ per annum.</p>
+
+ <p>The scholastic education of the young man who was to inherit
+ this considerable fortune, was nearly completed during the
+ reign of Louis XVIII., and shortly after Charles X. ascended
+ the throne <i>il commençait à faire sur droit</i>, as they
+ phrase it in the <i>pays Latin</i>. Neither during the reign of
+ Louis XVIII., nor indeed now, unless in the exact and physical
+ sciences, does Paris afford a very solid and substantial
+ education. Though the Roman poets and historians are tolerably
+ well studied and taught, yet little attention is paid to Greek
+ literature. The physical and exact sciences are unquestionably
+ admirably taught at the Polytechnique and other schools; but
+ neither at the College of St. Barbe, nor of Henry IV., can a
+ pupil be so well grounded in the rudiments and humanities as in
+ our grammar and public schools. A studious, pains-taking, and
+ docile youth, will, no doubt, learn a great deal, no matter
+ where he has been placed in pupilage; but we have heard from a
+ contemporary of M. Rollin, that he was not particularly
+ distinguished either for his industry or his docility in early
+ life. The earliest days of the reign of Charles X. saw M. Ledru
+ Rollin an <i>étudiant en droit</i> in Paris. Though the schools
+ of law had been re-established during the Consulate pretty much
+ after the fashion in which they existed in the time of Louis
+ the XIV., yet the application of the <i>alumni</i> was fitful
+ and desultory, and perhaps there were no two
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page223"
+ id="page223"></a>[pg 223]</span> classes in France, at the
+ commencement of 1825. who were more imbued with the
+ Voltarian philosophy and the doctrines and principles of
+ Rousseau, than the <i>élèves</i> of the schools of law and
+ medicine.</p>
+
+ <p>Under a king so sceptical and voluptuous, so much of a
+ <i>philosophie</i> and <i>phyrronéste</i>, as Louis XVIII.,
+ such tendencies were likely to spread themselves through all
+ ranks of society&mdash;to permeate from the very highest to the
+ very lowest classes: and not all the lately acquired asceticism
+ of the monarch, his successor, nor all the efforts of the
+ Jesuits could restrain or control the tendencies of the
+ <i>étudiants en droit</i>. What the law-students were
+ antecedently and subsequent to 1825, we know from the
+ <i>Physiologie de l'Homme de Loi</i>; and it is not to be
+ supposed that M. Ledru Rollin, with more ample pecuniary means
+ at command, very much differed from his fellows. After
+ undergoing a three years' course of study, M. Rollin obtained a
+ diploma as a <i>licencié en droit</i>, and commenced his career
+ as <i>stagiare</i> somewhere about the end of 1826 or the
+ beginning of 1827. Toward the close of 1829, or in the first
+ months of 1830, he was, we believe, placed on the roll of
+ advocates; so that he was called to the bar, or, as they say in
+ France, received an advocate, in his twenty-second or
+ twenty-third year.</p>
+
+ <p>The first years of an advocate, even in France, are
+ generally passed in as enforced an idleness as in England.
+ Clients come not to consult the greenhorn of the last term; nor
+ does any <i>avoué</i> among our neighbors, any more than any
+ attorney among ourselves, fancy that an old head is to be found
+ on young shoulders. The years 1830 and 1831 were not marked by
+ any oratorical effort of the author of the <i>Decline of
+ England</i>; nor was it till 1832 that, being then one of the
+ youngest of the bar of Paris, he prepared and signed an opinion
+ against the placing of Paris in a state of siege consequent on
+ the insurrections of June. Two years after he prepared a
+ memoir; or <i>factum</i>, on the affair of the Rue Transonain,
+ and defended Dupoty, accused of <i>complicité morale</i>, a
+ monstrous doctrine invented by the Attorney-General Hebert.
+ From 1834 to 1841 he appeared as counsel in nearly all the
+ cases of <i>émeute</i> or conspiracy where the individuals
+ prosecuted were Republicans, or <i>quasi</i>-Republicans.
+ Meanwhile, he had become the proprietor and <i>rédacteur en
+ chef</i> of the <i>Reforme</i> newspaper, a political journal
+ of an ultra-Liberal&mdash;indeed of a
+ Republican&mdash;complexion, which was then called of extreme
+ opinions, as he had previously been editor of a legal newspaper
+ called <i>Journal du Palais</i>. <i>La Reforme</i> had been
+ originally conducted by Godefroy Cavaignac, the brother of the
+ general, who continued editor till the period of the fatal
+ illness which preceded his death. The defense of Dupoty, tried
+ and sentenced under the ministry of Thiers to five years'
+ imprisonment, as a regicide, because a letter was found open in
+ the letter-box of the paper of which he was editor, addressed
+ to him by a man said to be implicated in the conspiracy of
+ Quenisset, naturally brought M. Rollin into contact with many
+ of the writers in <i>La Reforme</i>; and these persons, among
+ others Guinard Arago, Etienne Arago, and Flocon, induced him to
+ embark some portion of his fortune in the paper. From one step
+ he was led on to another, and ultimately became one of the
+ chief&mdash;indeed, if not the chief proprietor. The
+ speculation was far from successful in a pecuniary sense, but
+ M. Rollin, in furtherance of his opinions, continued for some
+ years to disburse considerable sums in the support of the
+ journal. By this he no doubt increased his popularity and his
+ credit with the Republican party, but it cannot be denied that
+ he very materially injured his private fortune. In the earlier
+ portion of his career, M. Rollin was, it is known, not
+ indisposed to seek a seat in the Chamber, under the auspices of
+ M. Barrot, but subsequently to his connection with the
+ <i>Reforme</i>, he had himself become thoroughly known to the
+ extreme party in the departments, and on the death of Gamier
+ Pagès the elder, was elected in 1841 for Le Mans, in La
+ Sarthe.</p>
+
+ <p>In addressing the electors, after his return, M. Rollin
+ delivered a speech much more Republican than Monarchical. For
+ this he was sentenced to four months' imprisonment, but the
+ sentence was appealed against and annulled on a technical
+ ground, and the honorable member was ultimately acquitted by
+ the Cour d'Assizes of Angers.</p>
+
+ <p>The parliamentary <i>début</i> of M. Rollin took place in
+ 1842. His first speech was delivered on the subject of the
+ secret-service money. The elocution was easy and flowing, the
+ manner oratorical, the style somewhat turgid and bombastic. But
+ in the course of the session M. Rollin improved, and his
+ discourse on the modification of the criminal law, on other
+ legal subjects, and on railways, were more sober specimens of
+ style. In 1843 and 1844 M. Rollin frequently spoke; but though
+ his speeches were a good deal talked of outside the walls of
+ the Chamber, they produced little effect within it.
+ Nevertheless, it was plain to every candid observer that he
+ possessed many of the requisites of the orator&mdash;a good
+ voice, a copious flow of words, considerable energy and
+ enthusiasm, a sanguine temperament and jovial and generous
+ disposition. In the sessions of 1845-46, M. Rollin took a still
+ more prominent part. His purse, his house in the Rue Tournon,
+ his counsels and advice, were all placed at the service of the
+ men of the movement; and by the beginning of 1847 he seemed to
+ be acknowledged by the extreme party as its most conspicuous
+ and popular member. Such indeed was his position when the
+ electoral reform banquets, on a large scale, began to take
+ place in the autumn of 1847. These banquets, promoted and
+ forwarded by the principal members of the opposition to serve
+ the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page224"
+ id="page224"></a>[pg 224]</span> cause of electoral reform,
+ were looked on by M. Rollin and his friends in another
+ light. While Odillon Barrot, Duvergier d'Haurunne, and
+ others, sought by means of them to produce an enlarged
+ constituency, the member for Sarthe looked not merely to
+ functional, but to organic reform&mdash;not merely to an
+ enlargement of the constituency, but to a change in the form
+ of the government. The desire of Barrot was <i>à la vérité à
+ la sincerité des institutions conquises en Juillet</i> 1830;
+ whereas the desire of Rollin was, <i>à l'amélioration des
+ classes laborieuses</i>; the one was willing to go on with
+ the dynasty of Louis Philippe and the Constitution of July
+ improved by diffusion and extension of the franchise, the
+ other looked to a democratic and social republic. The result
+ is now known. It is not here our purpose to go over the
+ events of the Revolution of February 1848, but we may be
+ permitted to observe, that the combinations by which that
+ event was effected were ramified and extensive, and were
+ long silently and secretly in motion.</p>
+
+ <p>The personal history of M. Rollin, since February 1848, is
+ well-known and patent to all the world. He was the <i>ame
+ damnée</i> of the Provisional Government&mdash;the man whose
+ extreme opinions, intemperate circulars, and vehement patronage
+ of persons professing the political creed of
+ Robespierre&mdash;indisposed all moderate men to rally around
+ the new system. It was in covering Ledru Rollin with the shield
+ of his popularity that Lamartine lost his own, and that he
+ ceased to be the political idol of a people of whom he must
+ ever be regarded as one of the literary glories and
+ illustrations. On the dissolution of the Provisional
+ Government, Ledru Rollin constituted himself one of the leaders
+ of the movement party. In ready powers of speech and in
+ popularity no man stood higher; but he did not possess the
+ power of restraining his followers or of holding them in hand,
+ and the result was, that instead of being their leader he
+ became their instrument. Fond of applause, ambitious of
+ distinction, timid by nature, destitute of pluck, and of that
+ rarer virtue moral courage, Ledru Rollin, to avoid the
+ imputation of faint-heartedness, put himself in the foreground,
+ but the measures of his followers being ill-taken, the plot in
+ which he was mixed up egregiously failed, and he is now in
+ consequence an exile in England.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>GENERAL GARIBALDI.</h3>
+
+ <p>MR. FILIPANTE gives the following notice of this Italian
+ revolutionary leader in a communication to the <i>Evening
+ Post</i>. "His exertions in behalf of the liberal movement in
+ Italy have been indefatigable. As active as he was courageous,
+ he was among the first to take up arms against Austrian
+ tyranny, and the last to lay them down. Even when the
+ triumvirate at Rome had been overthrown, and the most ardent
+ spirits despaired of the republic, Garibaldi and his noble band
+ of soldiers refused to yield; they maintained a vigorous
+ resistance to the last, and only quitted the ground when the
+ cause was so far gone that their own success would have been of
+ no general advantage.</p>
+
+ <p>"The General is about forty years of age. He was in early
+ life an officer in the Sardinian service, but, engaging in an
+ unsuccessful revolt against the government of Charles Albert,
+ he was compelled to leave his native land. He fled to
+ Montevideo, where he fought with distinction in the wars
+ against Rosas. At the breaking out of the late revolution he
+ returned. His military capacities being well known, he was
+ entrusted with a command; and throughout the war his services
+ were most efficient. He defeated the allied troops of Austria,
+ France, and Naples, in several battles; his name, in fact,
+ became a terror, and when the republic fell, and he was
+ compelled to retire to the Appenines, the invaders felt that
+ his return would be more formidable than any other event.</p>
+
+ <p>"From Italy he went to Morocco, where he has since lived.
+ But his friends, desiring that his great energies should be
+ actively employed, have offered him the command of a merchant
+ ship, which he has accepted. He will, therefore, hereafter be
+ engaged in the peaceful pursuits of commerce, unless his
+ country should again require his exertions."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h3>CRIME, IN ENGLAND AND FRANCE.</h3>
+
+ <p>In recent discussions of the effects of education upon
+ morals, the relative conditions of Great Britain and France in
+ this respect have often been referred to. The following
+ paragraph shows that the statistics in the case have not been
+ well understood:</p>
+
+ <p>"In a recent sitting of the Academy of Moral and Political
+ Sciences, M. Leon Faucher, the representative, read a paper on
+ the state of crime in England; and some of the journals have
+ taken advantage of this to institute a comparison with returns
+ of the criminality of France, recently published by the
+ Government&mdash;the result being anything but flattering to
+ England. But M. Faucher, the Academy, the newspapers, and
+ almost everybody else in France, seems to be entirely ignorant
+ that it is impossible to institute a comparison between the
+ amount of crime in England and the amount of crime in France,
+ inasmuch as crimes are not the same in both countries. Thus,
+ for example, it is a felony in England to steal a pair of
+ shoes, the offender is sent before the Court of Assize, and his
+ offense counts in the official returns as a "crime;" in France,
+ on the contrary, a petty theft is considered a <i>délit</i>, or
+ simple offense, is punished by a police magistrate, and figures
+ in the returns as an "offense." With respect to murders, too,
+ the English have only two general names for
+ killing&mdash;murder or manslaughter&mdash;but the French have
+ nearly a dozen categories of killing, of which what the English
+ call murder forms only one. It is the same, in short, with
+ almost every species of crime."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1"
+ name="footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>RURAL HOURS: by a Lady, George P. Putnam, 155 Broadway.
+ 1850.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2"
+ name="footnote2"></a><b>Footnote 2:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>In his early days the President of the Royal Academy
+ painted a very striking portrait of Jane Porter, as
+ "Miranda," and Harlowe painted her in the canoness dress of
+ the order of St. Joachim.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3"
+ name="footnote3"></a><b>Footnote 3:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>In the press of Appleton &amp; Co.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4"
+ name="footnote4"></a><b>Footnote 4:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>A Hunter's Life in South Africa. By R. Gordon Cumming,
+ Esq., of Altyre.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote5"
+ name="footnote5"></a><b>Footnote 5:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag5">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>In California horses are named according to their color.
+ An <i>alazan</i> is a sorrel&mdash;a color generally
+ preferred, as denoting speed and mettle.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote6"
+ name="footnote6"></a><b>Footnote 6:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag6">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The sarape is a knit blanket of many gay colors, worn
+ over the shoulders by an opening in the center, through
+ which the head is thrust.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote7"
+ name="footnote7"></a><b>Footnote 7:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag7">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>Calzoneros are trowsers, generally made of blue cloth or
+ velvet, richly embroidered, and worn over an under pair of
+ white linen. They are slashed up the outside of each leg,
+ for greater convenience in riding, and studded with rows of
+ silver buttons.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote8"
+ name="footnote8"></a><b>Footnote 8:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag8">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The lariat, or riata, as it is indifferently called in
+ California and Mexico, is precisely the same as the lasso
+ of South America.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The International Weekly Miscellany,
+Vol. 1, No. 7, by Various
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The International Weekly Miscellany, Vol.
+1, No. 7, 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 International Weekly Miscellany, Vol. 1, No. 7
+ Of Literature, Art, and Science, August 12, 1850
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 11, 2004 [EBook #13711]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, William Flis, the PG Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team and Cornell University
+
+
+
+
+
+INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MISCELLANY
+
+Of Literature, Art, and Science.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Vol. I. NEW YORK, AUGUST 12, 1850. No. 7.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+WOMEN AND LITERATURE IN FRANCE.
+
+From a sprightly letter from Paris to the _Cologne Gazette_, we
+translate for _The International_ the following account of the
+position of women in the French Republic, together with the
+accompanying gossip concerning sundry ladies whose names have long
+been quite prominently before the public:
+
+"It is curious that the idea of the emancipation of women should have
+originated in France, for there is no country in Europe where the
+sex have so little reason to complain of their position as in this,
+especially at Paris. Leaving out of view a certain paragraph of the
+_Code Civile_--and that is nothing but a sentence in a law-book--and
+looking closely into the features of women's life, we see that they
+are not only queens who reign, but also ministers who govern.
+
+"In France women are engaged in a large proportion of civil
+employments, and may without hesitation devote themselves to art and
+science. It is indeed astonishing to behold the interest with which
+the beautiful sex here enter upon all branches of art and knowledge.
+
+"The ateliers of the painters number quite as many female as male
+students, and there are apparently more women than men who copy the
+pictures in the Louvre. Nothing is more pleasing than to see these
+gentle creatures, with their easels, sitting before a colossal Rubens
+or a Madonna of Raphael. No difficulty alarms them, and prudery is not
+allowed to give a voice in their choice of subjects.
+
+"I have never yet attended a lecture, by either of the professors
+here, but I have found some seats occupied by ladies. Even the
+lectures of Michel Chevalier and Blanqui do not keep back the
+eagerness of the charming Parisians in pursuit of science. That
+Michelet and Edgar Quinet have numerous female disciples is
+accordingly not difficult to believe.
+
+"Go to a public session of the Academy, and you find the '_cercle_'
+filled almost exclusively by ladies, and these laurel-crowned heads
+have the delight of seeing their immortal works applauded by the
+clapping of tenderest hands. In truth, the French savan is uncommonly
+clear in the most abstract things; but it would be an interesting
+question, whether the necessity of being not alone easily intelligible
+but agreeable to the capacity of comprehension possessed by the
+unschooled mind of woman, has not largely contributed to the facility
+and charm which is peculiar to French scientific literature. Read
+for example the discourse on Cabanis, pronounced by Mignet at the
+last session. It would be impossible to write more charmingly, more
+elegantly, more attractively, even upon a subject within the range
+of the fine arts. The works, and especially the historical works, of
+the French, are universally diffused. Popular histories, so-called
+editions for the people, are here entirely unknown; everything that
+is published is in a popular edition, and if as great and various care
+were taken for the education of the people as in Germany, France would
+in this respect be the first country in the world.
+
+"With the increasing influence of monarchical ideas in certain
+circles, the women seem to be returning to the traditions of monarchy,
+and are throwing themselves into the business of making memoirs.
+Hardly have George Sand's Confessions been announced, and already new
+enterprises in the same line are set on foot. The European dancer,
+who is perhaps more famous for making others dance to her music,
+and who has enjoyed a monopoly of cultivated scandal, Lola Montes,
+also intends to publish her memoirs. They will of course contain
+an interesting fragment of German federal politics, and form a
+contribution to German revolutionary literature. Lola herself is still
+too beautiful to devote her own time to the writing. Accordingly, she
+has resorted to the pen of M. Balzac. If Madame Balzac has nothing to
+say against the necessary intimacy with the dangerous Spanish or Irish
+or whatever woman--for Lola Montes is a second Homer--the reading
+world may anticipate an interesting, chapter of life. No writer is
+better fitted for such a work than so profound a man of the world, and
+so keen a painter of character, as Balzac.
+
+"The well-known actress, Mlle. Georges, who was in her prime during
+the most remarkable epoch of the century, and was in relations
+with the most prominent persons of the Empire, is also preparing a
+narrative of her richly varied experiences. Perhaps these attractive
+examples may induce Madame Girardin also to bestow her memoirs upon
+us, and so the process can be repeated infinitely."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+AUTHORS AND BOOKS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Parke Godwin has just given to the public, through Mr. Putnam, a new
+edition of the translation made by himself and some literary friends,
+of Goethe's "Autobiography, or Truth and Poetry from My Life." In his
+new preface Mr. Godwin exposes one of the most scandalous pieces of
+literary imposition that we have ever read of. This translation, with
+a few verbal alterations which mar its beauty and lessen its fidelity,
+has been reprinted in "Bohn's Standard Library," in London, as an
+original English version, in the making of which "the American was of
+_occasional use_," &c. Mr. Godwin is one of our best German scholars,
+and his discourse last winter on the character and genius of Goethe,
+illustrated his thorough appreciation of the Shakspeare of the
+Continent, and that affectionate sympathy which is so necessary to
+the task of turning an author from one language into another. There
+are very few books in modern literature more attractive or more
+instructive to educated men than this Autobiography of Goethe, for
+which we are indebted to him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+John Randolph is the best subject for a biography, that our political
+experience has yet furnished. Who that remembers the long and slender
+man of iron, with his scarcely human scorn of nearly all things
+beyond his "old Dominion," and his withering wit, never restrained
+by any pity, and his passion for destroying all fabrics of policy or
+reputation of which he was not himself the architect, but will read
+with anticipations of keen interest the announcement of a life of
+the eccentric yet great Virginian! Such a work, by the Hon. Hugh
+A. Garland, is in the press of the Appletons. We know little of Mr.
+Garland's capacities in this way, but if his book prove not the most
+attractive in the historical literature of the year, the fault will
+not be in its subject.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Scottish Booksellers have instituted a society for professional
+objects under the title of the "Edinburgh Booksellers' Union." In
+addition to business purposes, they propose to collect and preserve
+books and pamphlets written by or relating to booksellers, printers,
+engravers, or members of collateral professions,--rare editions of
+other works--and generally articles connected with parties belonging
+to the above professions, whether literary, professional, or personal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+D'Israeli abandons himself now-a-days entirely to politics. "The
+forehead high, and gleaming eye, and lip awry, of Benjamin D'Israeli,"
+sung once by _Fraser_ are no longer seen before the title-pages of
+"Wondrous Tales," but only before the Speaker. It is much referred to,
+that in the recent parliamentary commemoration of Sir Robert Peel,
+the Hebrew commoner kept silence; his long war of bitter sarcasm and
+reproach on the defunct statesman was too freshly remembered. Peel
+rarely exerted himself to more advantage than in his replies, to
+D'Israeli, all noticeable for subdued disdain, conscious patriotism,
+and argumentative completeness. For injustice experienced through
+life, the meritorious dead are in a measure revenged by the
+feelings of their accusers or detractors, when the latter retain the
+sensibility which the grave usually excites, and especially amid such
+a chorus of applause from all parties, and a whole people, as we have
+now in England for Sir Robert Peel--the only man in the Empire, except
+Wellington, who had a strictly personal authority.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Dickson, recently of the Medical Department of the New York
+University, and whose ill-health induced the resignation of the chair
+he held there, has returned to Charleston, and we observe that his
+professional and other friends in that city greeted him with a public
+dinner, on the 9th ult. Dr. Dickson we believe is one of the most
+classically elegant writers upon medical science in the United States.
+He ranks with Chapman and Oliver Wendell Holmes in the grace of
+his periods as well as in the thoroughness of his learning and the
+exactness and acuteness of his logic. Like Holmes, too, he is a poet,
+and, generally, a very accomplished _litterateur_. We regret the loss
+that New York sustains in his removal, but congratulate Charleston
+upon the recovery of one of the best known and most loved attractions
+of her society.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. John R. Bartlett's boundary commission will soon be upon the
+field of its activity. We were pleased to see that Mr. Davis, of
+Massachusetts, a few days ago presented in the Senate petitions
+from Edward Everett, Jared Sparks, and others, and from the American
+Academy of Arts and Sciences, at Boston, to the effect that it would
+be of great public utility to attach to the boundary commission to
+run the line between the United States and Mexico, a small corps of
+persons well qualified to make researches in the various departments
+of science.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+William C. Richards, the very clever and accomplished editor of the
+_Southern Literary Gazette_ was the author of "Two Country Sonnets,"
+contributed to a recent number of _The International_, which we
+inadvertently credited to his brother, T. Addison Richards the
+well-known and much esteemed landscape painter.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MAJOR POUSSIN, so well-known for his long residence in this country
+as an officer of engineers, and, more recently, as Minister of the
+French republic,--which, intelligent men have no need to be assured,
+he represented with uniform wisdom and manliness,--is now engaged
+at Paris upon a new edition of his important book, _The Power and
+Prospects of the United States_. We perceive that he has lately
+published in the Republican journal _Le Credit_, a translation of the
+American instructions to Mr. Mann, respecting Hungary. In his preface
+to this document, Major Poussin pays the warmest compliments to the
+feelings, measures and policy of our administration, with which he
+contrasts, at the same time, those of the French Government. He
+hopes a great deal for the Democratic cause in Europe from the _moral
+influences_ of the United States.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DR. JOHN W. FRANCIS, one of the most excellent men, as well as one of
+the best physicians of New York, has received from Trinity College,
+Hartford, the degree of Doctor of Laws. We praise the authorities of
+Trinity for this judicious bestowal of its honors. Francis's career
+of professional usefulness and variously successful intellectual
+activity, are deserving such academical recognition. His genial love
+of learning, large intelligence, ready appreciation of individual
+merit, and that genuine love of country which has led him to the
+carefullest and most comprehensive study of our general and particular
+annals, and to the frequentest displays of the sources of its enduring
+grandeur, constitute in him a character eminently entitled to our
+affectionate admiration.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE POEMS OF GRAY, in an edition of singular typographical and
+pictorial beauty, are to be issued as one of the autumn gift-books
+by Henry C. Baird, of Philadelphia. They are to be edited by the
+tasteful and judicious critic, Professor Henry Reed, of the University
+of Pennsylvania, to whom we were indebted for the best edition of
+Wordsworth that appeared during the life of that poet. We have looked
+over Professor Reed's life of Gray, and have seen proofs of the
+admirable engravings with which the work will be embellished. It will
+be dedicated to our American Moxon, JAMES T. FIELDS, as a souvenir.
+we presume, of a visit to the grave of the bard, which the two young
+booksellers made together during a recent tour in Europe. Mr. Baird
+and Mr. Fields are of the small company of publishers, who, if it
+please them, can write their own books. They have both given pleasant
+evidence of abilities in this way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BURNS.--It appears from the Scotch papers that the house in
+Burns-street, Dumfries, in which the bard of "Tam o'Shanter" and his
+wife "bonnie Jean," lived and died, is about to come into the market
+by way of public auction.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"EUROPE, PAST AND PRESENT:" A comprehensive manual of European
+Geography and History, derived from official and authentic sources,
+and comprising not only an accurate geographical and statistical
+description, but also a faithful and interesting history of all
+European States; to which is appended a copious and carefully arranged
+index, by Francis H. Ungewitter, LL.D.,--is a volume of some six
+hundred pages, just published by Mr. Putnam. It has been prepared
+with much well-directed labor, and will be found a valuable and
+comprehensive manual of reference upon all questions relating to the
+history, geographical position, and general statistics of the several
+States of Europe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+M. LIBRI, of whose conviction at Paris (_par contumace_, that is,
+in default of appearance), of stealing books from public libraries,
+we have given some account in _The International_, is warmly and it
+appears to us successfully defended in the Athenaeum, in which it is
+alleged that there was not a particle of legal evidence against him.
+M. Libri is, and was at the time of the appearance of the accusation
+against him, a political exile in England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MAJOR RAWLINSON, F.R.S., has published a "Commentary on the Cuneiform
+Inscriptions of Babylon and Assyria," including readings of the
+inscriptions on the Nimroud Obelisk, discovered by Mr. Layard, and a
+brief notice of the ancient kings of Nineveh and Babylon. It was read
+before the Royal Asiatic Society.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REV. DR. WISEMAN, author of the admirable work on the Connection
+between Science and Religion, is to proceed to Rome toward the close
+of the present month to receive the hat of a cardinal. It is many
+years since any English Roman Catholic, resident in England, attained
+this honor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE OHIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY has published several interesting volumes,
+of which the most important are those of Judge Burnett. An address, by
+William D. Gallagher, its President, on the History and Resources of
+the West and Northwest, has just been issued: and it has nearly ready
+for publication a volume of Mr. Hildreth.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE IMPERIAL LIBRARY AT VIENNA has been enriched by a very old Greek
+manuscript on the Advent of Christ, composed by a bishop of the second
+century, named Clement. This manuscript was discovered a short time
+since by M. Waldeck, the philologist, at Constantinople.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. KEIGHTLEY's "History of Greece" has been translated into modern
+Greek and published at Athens.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GUIZOT's book on Democracy, has been prohibited in Austria, through
+General Haynau's influence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WORDSWORTH'S POSTHUMOUS POEM, "The Prelude," is in the press of the
+Appletons, by whose courtesy we are enabled to present the readers
+of _The International_ with the fourth canto of it, before its
+publication in England. The poem is a sort of autobiography in blank
+verse, marked by all the characteristics of the poet--his original
+vein of thought; his majestic, but sometimes diffuse, style of
+speculation; his large sympathies with humanity, from its proudest
+to its humblest forms. It will be read with great avidity by his
+admirers--and there are few at this day who do not belong to that
+class--as affording them a deeper insight into the mind of Wordsworth
+than any of his other works. It is divided into several books, named
+from the different situations or stages of the author's life, or the
+subjects which at any period particularly engaged his attention. We
+believe it will be more generally read than any poem of equal length
+that has issued from the press in this age.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Miss COOPER's "RURAL HOURS"[1] is everywhere commended as one of
+the most charming pictures that have ever appeared of country life.
+The books of the Howitts, delineating the same class of subjects
+in England and Germany, are not to be compared to Miss Cooper's for
+delicate painting or grace and correctness of diction. The Evening
+Post observes:
+
+ "This is one of the most delightful books we have lately
+ taken up. It is a journal of daily observations made by an
+ intelligent and highly educated lady, residing in a most
+ beautiful part of the country, commencing with the spring of
+ 1848, and closing with the end of the winter of 1849. They
+ almost wholly concern the occupations and objects of country
+ life, and it is almost enough to make one in love with such a
+ life to read its history so charmingly narrated. Every day has
+ its little record in this volume,--the record of some rural
+ employment, some note on the climate, some observation
+ in natural history, or occasionally some trait of rural
+ manners. The arrival and departure of the birds of passage
+ is chronicled, the different stages of vegetation are noted,
+ atmospheric changes and phenomena are described, and the
+ various living inhabitants of the field and forest are made
+ to furnish matter of entertainment for the reader. All this
+ is done with great variety and exactness of knowledge, and
+ without any parade of science. Descriptions of rural holidays
+ and rural amusements are thrown in occasionally, to give a
+ living interest to a picture which would otherwise become
+ monotonous from its uniform quiet. The work is written in
+ easy and flexible English, with occasional felicities of
+ expression. It is ascribed, as we believe we have informed our
+ readers, to a daughter of J. Fenimore Cooper. Our country is
+ full of most interesting materials for a work of this sort;
+ but we confess we hardly expected, at the present time, to see
+ them collected and arranged by so skillful a hand."
+
+[Footnote 1: RURAL HOURS: by a Lady, George P. Putnam, 155 Broadway.
+1850.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE REV. SYDNEY SMITH's "Sketches of Modern Philosophy," remarks the
+Tribune, "consist of a course of popular lectures on the subject,
+delivered in the Royal Institution of London in the years 1804-5-6.
+As a contribution to the science of which they profess to treat, their
+claims to respect are very moderate. Indeed, no one would ridicule any
+pretensions of that kind with more zeal than the author himself. The
+manuscripts were left in an imperfect state, Sydney Smith probably
+supposing that no call would ever be made for their publication.
+They were written merely for popular effect, to be spoken before
+a miscellaneous audience, in which any abstract topics of moral
+philosophy would be the last to awaken an interest. The title of
+the book is accordingly a misnomer. It would lead no one to suspect
+the rich and diversified character of its contents. They present no
+ambitious attempts at metaphysical disquisition. They are free from
+dry technicalities of ethical speculation. They have no specimens of
+logical hair-splitting, no pedantic array of barren definitions, no
+subtle distinctions proceeding from an ingenious fancy, and without
+any foundation in nature. On the contrary, we find in this volume a
+series of lively, off-hand, dashing comments on men and manners, often
+running into broad humor, and always marked with the pungent common
+sense that never forsook the facetious divine. His remarks on the
+conduct of the understanding, on literary habits, on the use and value
+of books, and other themes of a similar character, are for the most
+part instructive and practical as well as piquant, and on the whole,
+the admirers of Sydney Smith will have no reason to regret the
+publication of the volume."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[FROM THE LONDON TIMES.]
+
+BIOGRAPHY OF SIR ROBERT PEEL.
+
+In the following brief narrative of the principal facts in the life of
+the great statesman who has just been snatched from among us, we must
+disclaim all intention of dealing with his biography in any searching
+or ambitious spirit. The national loss is so great, the bereavement
+is so sudden, that we cannot sit down calmly either to eulogize or
+arraign the memory of the deceased. We cannot forget that it was not
+a week ago we were occupied in recording and commenting upon his last
+eloquent address to that assembly which had so often listened with
+breathless attention to his statesmanlike expositions of policy. We
+could do little else when the mournful intelligence reached us that
+Sir Robert Peel was no more, than pen a few expressions of sorrow
+and respect. Even now the following imperfect record of facts must
+be accepted as a poor substitute for the biography of that great
+Englishman whose loss will be felt almost as a private bereavement by
+every family throughout the British Empire:--
+
+Sir Robert Peel was in the 63d year of his age, having been born near
+Bury, in Lancashire, on the 5th of February, 1788. His father was a
+manufacturer on a grand scale, and a man of much natural ability, and
+of almost unequaled opulence. Full of a desire to render his son and
+probable successor worthy of the influence and the vast wealth which
+he had to bestow, the first Sir Robert Peel took the utmost pains
+personally with the early training of the future prime minister. He
+retained his son under his own immediate superintendence until he
+arrived at a sufficient age to be sent to Harrow. Lord Byron, his
+contemporary at Harrow, was a better declaimer and a more amusing
+actor, but in sound learning and laborious application to school
+duties young Peel had no equal. He had scarcely completed his 16th
+year when he left Harrow and became a gentleman commoner of Christ
+Church, Oxford, where he took the degree of A.B., in 1808, with
+unprecedented distinction.
+
+The year 1809 saw him attain his majority, and take his seat in the
+House of Commons as a member for Cashel, in Tipperary.
+
+The first Sir Robert Peel had long been a member of the House of
+Commons, and the early efforts of his son in that assembly were
+regarded with considerable interest, not only on account of his
+University reputation, but also because he was the son of such a
+father. He did not, however, begin public life by staking his fame on
+the results of one elaborate oration; on the contrary, he rose now and
+then on comparatively unimportant occasions; made a few brief modest
+remarks, stated a fact or two, explained a difficulty when he happened
+to understand the matter in hand better than others, and then sat down
+without taxing too severely the patience or good nature of an auditory
+accustomed to great performances. Still in the second year of his
+parliamentary course he ventured to make a set speech, when, at the
+commencement of the session of 1810, he seconded the address in
+reply to the King's speech. Thenceforward for nineteen years a more
+highflying Tory than Mr. Peel was not to be found within the walls of
+parliament. Lord Eldon applauded him as a young and valiant champion
+of those abuses in the state which were then fondly called "the
+institutions of the country." Lord Sidmouth regarded him as the
+rightful political heir, and even the Duke of Cumberland patronized
+Mr. Peel. He further became the favorite _eleve_ of Mr. Perceval, the
+first lord of the treasury, and entered office as under-secretary
+for the home department. He continued in the home department for two
+years, not often speaking in parliament, but rather qualifying himself
+for those prodigious labors in debate, in council, and in office,
+which it has since been his lot to encounter and perform.
+
+In May, 1812, Mr. Perceval fell by the hand of an assassin, and the
+composition of the ministry necessarily underwent a great change. The
+result, so far as Mr. Peel was concerned, was, that he was appointed
+Chief Secretary to the Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland. Mr. Peel had only
+reached his 26th year when, in the month of September, 1812, the
+duties of that anxious and laborious position were entrusted to his
+hands. The legislative union was then but lately consummated, and the
+demand for Catholic emancipation had given rise to an agitation of
+only very recent date. But, in proportion to its novelty, so was its
+vigor. Mr. Peel was, therefore, as the representative of the old tory
+Protestant school, called upon to encounter a storm of unpopularity,
+such as not even an Irish secretary has ever been exposed to. The
+late Mr. O'Connell in various forms poured upon Mr. Peel a torrent
+of invective which went beyond even his extraordinary performances
+in the science of scolding. At length he received from Mr. Peel a
+hostile message. Negotiations went on for three or four days, when
+Mr. O'Connell was taken into custody and bound over to keep the peace
+toward all his fellow-subjects in Ireland. Mr. Peel and his friend
+immediately went to England, and subsequently proceeded to the
+continent. Mr. O'Connell followed them to London, but the police were
+active enough to bring him before the chief justice, when he entered
+into recognizances to keep the peace toward all his majesty's
+subjects; and so ended one of the few personal squabbles in which Mr.
+Peel had ever been engaged. For six years he held the office of chief
+secretary to the lord-lieutenant, at a time when the government was
+conducted upon what might be called "anti-conciliation principles."
+The opposite course was commenced by Mr. Peel's immediate successor,
+Mr. Charles Grant, now Lord Glenelg.
+
+That a chief secretary so circumstanced, struggling to sustain extreme
+Orangeism in its dying agonies, should have been called upon to
+encounter great toil and anxiety is a truth too obvious to need
+illustration. That in these straits Mr. Peel acquitted himself with
+infinite address was as readily acknowledged at that time as it has
+ever been even in the zenith of his fame. He held office in that
+country under three successive viceroys, the Duke of Richmond, Earl
+Whitworth, and Earl Talbot, all of whom have long since passed away
+from this life, their names and their deeds long forgotten. But the
+history of their chief secretary happens not to have been composed
+of such perishable materials, and we now approach one of the most
+memorable passages of his eventful career. He was chairman of the
+great bullion committee; but before he engaged in that stupendous task
+he had resigned the chief secretaryship of Ireland. As a consequence
+of the report of that committee, he took charge of and introduced the
+bill for authorizing a return to cash payments which bears his name,
+and which measure received the sanction of parliament in the year
+1819. That measure brought upon Mr. Peel no slight or temporary odium.
+The first Sir Robert Peel was then alive, and altogether differed from
+his son as to the tendency of his measure. It was roundly asserted at
+the time, and very faintly denied, that it rendered that gentleman a
+more wealthy man, by something like half a million sterling, than he
+had previously been. The deceased statesman, however, must, in common
+justice, be acquitted of any sinister purpose.
+
+This narrative now reaches the year 1820, when we have to relate the
+only domestic event in the history of Sir Robert Peel which requires
+notice. On the 8th of June, being then in the 33d year of his age,
+he married Julia, daughter of General Sir John Floyd, who had then
+attained the age of 25.
+
+Two years afterward there was a lull in public affairs, which gave
+somewhat the appearance of tranquillity. Lord Sidmouth was growing
+old, he thought that his system was successful, and that at length he
+might find repose. He considered it then consistent with his public
+duty to consign to younger and stronger hands the seals of the home
+department. He accepted a seat in the cabinet without office, and
+continued to give his support to Lord Liverpool, his ancient political
+chief. In permitting his mantle to fall upon Mr. Peel, he thought he
+was assisting to invest with authority one whose views and policy were
+as narrow as his own, and whose practise in carrying them out would
+be not less rigid and uncompromising. But, like many others, he lived
+long enough to be grievously disappointed by the subsequent career of
+him whom the liberal party have since called "the great minister of
+progress," and whom their opponents have not scrupled to designate
+by appellations not to be repeated in these hours of sorrow and
+bereavement. On the 17th of January, 1822, Mr. Peel was installed at
+the head of the home department, where he remained undisturbed till
+the political demise of Lord Liverpool in the spring of 1827. The most
+distinguished man that has filled the chair of the House of Commons
+in the present century was Charles Abbott, afterward Lord Colchester.
+In the summer of 1817 he had completed sixteen years of hard service
+in that eminent office, and he had represented the University for
+eleven years. His valuable labors having been rewarded with a pension
+and a peerage, he took his seat, full of years and honors, among
+the hereditary legislators of the land, and left a vacancy in the
+representation of his _alma mater_, which Mr. Peel above all living
+men was deemed the most fitting person to occupy. At that time he was
+an intense tory--or as the Irish called him, an Orange Protestant
+of the deepest dye--one prepared to make any sacrifice for the
+maintenance of church and state as established by the revolution of
+1688. Who, therefore, so fit as he to represent the loyalty, learning,
+and orthodoxy of Oxford? To have done so had been the object of Mr.
+Canning's young ambition: but in 1817 he could not be so ungrateful to
+Liverpool as to reject its representation even for the early object
+of his parliamentary affections. Mr. Peel, therefore, was returned
+without opposition, for that constituency which many consider the most
+important in the land--with which he remained on the best possible
+terms for twelve years. The question of the repeal of the penal
+laws affecting the Roman Catholics, which severed so many political
+connections, was, however, destined to separate Mr. Peel from Oxford.
+In 1828 rumors of the coming change were rife, and many expedients
+were devised to extract his opinions on the Catholic question. But
+with the reserve which ever marked his character, left all curiosity
+at fault. At last, the necessities of the government rendered further
+concealment impossible, and out came the truth that he was no longer
+an Orangeman. The ardent friends who had frequently supported
+his Oxford elections, and the hot partisans who shouted "Peel and
+Protestantism," at the Brunswick Clubs, reviled him for his defection
+in no measured terms. On the 4th of February, 1829, he addressed a
+letter to the vice-chancellor of Oxford, stating, in many well-turned
+phrases, that the Catholic question must forthwith be adjusted, under
+advice in which he concurred; and that, therefore, he considered
+himself bound to resign that trust which the University had during so
+many years confided to his hands. His resignation was accepted; but as
+the avowed purpose of that important step was to give his constituents
+an opportunity of pronouncing an opinion upon a change of policy,
+he merely accepted the Chiltern Hundreds with the intention of
+immediately becoming a candidate for that seat in parliament which he
+had just vacated. At this election Mr. Peel was opposed by Sir Robert
+Inglis, who was elected by 755 to 609. Mr. Peel was, therefore,
+obliged to cast himself on the favor of Sir Manasseh Lopez, who
+returned him for Westbury, in Wiltshire, which constituency he
+continued to represent two years, until at the general election in
+1830 he was chosen for Tamworth, in the representation for which he
+continued for twenty years.
+
+The main features of his official life still remain to be noticed.
+With the exception of Lord Palmerston, no statesman of modern times
+has spent so many years in the civil service of the crown. If no
+account be taken of the short time he was engaged upon the bullion
+committee in effecting the change in the currency, and in opposing for
+a few months the ministries of Mr. Canning and Lord Goderich, it may
+be stated that from 1810 to 1830 he formed part of the government, and
+presided over it as a first minister in 1834-5, as well as from 1841
+to 1846 inclusive. During the time that he held the office of home
+secretary under Lord Liverpool he effected many important changes
+in the administration of domestic affairs, and many legislative
+improvements of a practical and comprehensive character. But his fame
+as member of parliament was principally sustained at this period of
+his life by the extensive and admirable alterations which he effected
+in the criminal law. Romilly and Mackintosh had preceded him in the
+great work of reforming and humanizing the code of England. For his
+hand, however, was reserved the introduction of ameliorations which
+they had long toiled and struggled for in vain. The ministry through
+whose influence he was enabled to carry these reforms lost its chief
+in Lord Liverpool during the early part of the year 1827. When Mr.
+Canning undertook to form a government, Mr. Peel, the late Lord Eldon,
+the Duke of Wellington, and other eminent tories of that day, threw up
+office, and are said to have persecuted Mr. Canning with a degree of
+rancor far outstripping the legitimate bounds of political hostility.
+Lord George Bentinck said "they hounded to the death my illustrious
+relative"; and the ardor of his subsequent opposition to Sir Robert
+Peel evidently derived its intensity from a long cherished sense of
+the injuries supposed to have been inflicted upon Mr. Canning. It
+is the opinion of men not ill informed respecting the sentiments of
+Canning, that he considered Peel as his true political successor--as a
+statesman competent to the task of working out that large and liberal
+policy which he fondly hoped the tories might, however tardily,
+be induced to sanction. At all events, he is believed not to have
+entertained toward Mr. Peel any personal hostility, and to have stated
+during his short-lived tenure of office that that gentleman was the
+only member of his party who had not treated him with ingratitude and
+unkindness.
+
+In January, 1828, the Wellington ministry took office and held it till
+November, 1830. Mr. Peel's reputation suffered during this period
+very rude shocks. He gave up, as already stated, his anti-Catholic
+principles, lost the force of twenty years' consistency, and under
+unheard-of disadvantages introduced the very measure he had spent so
+many years in opposing. The debates on Catholic emancipation, which
+preceded the great reform question, constitute a period in his life,
+which, twenty years ago, every one would have considered its chief
+and prominent feature. There can be no doubt that the course he then
+adopted demanded greater moral courage than at any previous period
+of his life he had been called upon to exercise. He believed himself
+incontestibly in the right; he believed, with the Duke of Wellington,
+that the danger of civil war was imminent, and that such an event
+was immeasurably a greater evil than surrendering the constitution
+of 1688. But he was called upon to snap asunder a parliamentary
+connection of twelve years with a great university, in which the most
+interesting period of his youth had been passed; to encounter the
+reproaches of adherents whom he had often led in well-fought contests
+against the advocates of what was termed "civil and religious
+liberty;" to tell the world that the character of public men for
+consistency, however precious, is not to be directly opposed to
+the common weal; and to communicate to many the novel as well as
+unpalatable truth that what they deemed "principle" must give way to
+what he called "expediency."
+
+When he ceased to be a minister of the crown, that general movement
+throughout Europe which succeeded the deposition of the elder branch
+of the Bourbons rendered parliamentary reform as unavoidable as two
+years previously Catholic emancipation had been. He opposed this
+change, no doubt with increased knowledge and matured talents, but
+with impaired influence and few parliamentary followers. The history
+of the reform debates will show that Sir Robert Peel made many
+admirable speeches, which served to raise his reputation, but never
+for a moment turned the tide of fortune against his adversaries, and
+in the first session of the first reformed parliament he found himself
+at the head of a party that in numbers little exceeded one hundred. As
+soon as it was practicable he rallied his broken forces; either he or
+some of his political friends gave them the name of "Conservatives,"
+and it required but a short interval of reflection and observation
+to prove to his sagacious intellect that the period of reaction was
+at hand. Every engine of party organization was put into vigorous
+activity, and before the summer of 1834 reached its close he was at
+the head of a compact, powerful, and well-disciplined opposition. Such
+a high impression of their vigor and efficiency had King William IV
+received, that when, in November, Lord Althorp became a peer, and the
+whigs therefore lost their leader to the House of Commons, his Majesty
+sent in Italy to summon Sir Robert Peel to his councils, with a view
+to the immediate formation of a conservative ministry. He accepted
+this responsibility, though he thought the King had mistaken the
+condition of the country and the chances of success which had awaited
+his political friends. A new House of Commons was instantly called,
+and for nearly three months Sir Robert Peel maintained a struggle
+against the most formidable opposition that for nearly a century any
+minister had been called to encounter. At no time did his command of
+temper, his almost exhaustless resources of information, his vigorous
+and comprehensive intellect appear to create such astonishment or draw
+forth such unbounded admiration as in the early part of 1835. But,
+after a well-fought contest he retired once more into the opposition
+till the close of the second Melbourne Administration in 1841. It
+was in April, 1835, that Lord Melbourne was restored to power, but
+the continued enjoyment of office did not much promote the political
+interests of his party, and from various causes the power of the
+whigs began to decline. The commencement of a new reign gave them some
+popularity, but in the new House of Commons, elected in consequence
+of that event, the conservative party were evidently gaining strength;
+still, after the failure of 1834-5, it was no easy task to dislodge an
+existing ministry, and at the same time to be prepared with a cabinet
+and a party competent to succeed them. Sir Robert Peel, therefore,
+with characteristic caution, "bided his time", conducting the business
+of opposition throughout the whole of this period with an ability and
+success of which history affords few examples. He had accepted the
+Reform Bill as the established law of England, and as the system upon
+which the country was thenceforward to be governed. He was willing
+to carry it out in its true spirit, but he would proceed no further.
+He marshaled his opposition upon the principle of resistance to any
+further organic changes, and he enlisted the majority of the peers
+and nearly the whole of the country gentlemen of England in support
+of the great principle of protection to British industry. The little
+maneuvres and small political intrigues of the period are almost
+forgotten, and the remembrance of them is scarcely worthy of revival.
+It may, however, be mentioned, that in 1839 ministers, being left in
+a minority, resigned, and Sir Robert Peel, when sent for by the Queen,
+demanded that certain ladies in the household of her majesty,--the
+near relatives of eminent whig politicians,--should be removed
+from the personal service of the sovereign. As this was refused,
+he abandoned for the time any attempt to form a government, and his
+opponents remained in office till September, 1841. It was then Sir
+Robert Peel became the first lord of the treasury, and the Duke of
+Wellington, without office, accepted a seat in the cabinet, taking
+the management of the House of Lords. His ministry was formed on
+protectionist principles, but the close of its career was marked by
+the adoption of free trade doctrines differing in the widest and most
+liberal sense. Sir Robert Peel's sense of public duty impelled him
+once more to incur the odium and obliquy which attended a fundamental
+change of policy, and a repudiation of the political partizans
+by whose ardent support a minister may have attained office and
+authority. It was his fate to encounter more than any man ever did,
+that hostility which such conduct, however necessary, never fails
+to produce. This great change in our commercial policy, however
+unavoidable, must be regarded as the proximate cause of his final
+expulsion from office in July, 1846. His administration, however, had
+been signalized by several measures of great political importance.
+Among the earliest and most prominent of these were his financial
+plans, the striking feature of which was an income-tax; greatly
+extolled for the exemption it afforded from other burdens pressing
+more severely on industry, but loudly condemned for its irregular and
+unequal operation, a vice which has since rendered its contemplated
+increase impossible.
+
+Of the ministerial life of Sir Robert Peel little more remains to be
+related except that which properly belongs rather to the history of
+the country than to his individual biography. But it would be unjust
+to the memory of one of the most sagacious statesman that England ever
+produced to deny that his latest renunciation of political principles
+required but two short years to attest the vital necessity of that
+unqualified surrender. If the corn laws had been in existence at the
+period when the political system of the continent was shaken to its
+centre and dynasties crumbled into dust, a question would have been
+left in the hands of the democratic party of England, the force of
+which neither skill nor influence could then have evaded. Instead
+of broken friendships, shattered reputations for consistency, or
+diminished rents, the whole realm of England might have borne a
+fearful share in that storm of wreck and revolution which had its
+crisis in the 10th of April, 1848.
+
+In the course of his long and eventful life many honors were conferred
+upon Sir Robert Peel. Wherever he went, and almost at all times,
+he attracted universal attention, and was always received with the
+highest consideration. At the close of 1836 the University of Glasgow
+elected him Lord Rector, and the conservatives of that city, in
+January, 1837, invited him to a banquet at which three thousand
+gentlemen assembled to do honor to their great political chief. But
+this was only one among many occasions on which he was "the great
+guest." Perhaps the most remarkable of these banquets was that given
+to him in 1835 at Merchant Tailors' Hall by three hundred members of
+the House of Commons. Many other circumstances might be related to
+illustrate the high position which Sir Robert Peel occupied. Anecdotes
+innumerable might be recorded to show the extraordinary influence in
+Parliament which made him "the great commoner" of the age; for Sir
+Robert Peel was not only a skillful and adroit debater, but by many
+degrees the most able and one of the most eloquent men in either house
+of parliament. Nothing could be more stately or imposing than the
+long array of sounding periods in which he expounded his doctrines,
+assailed his political adversaries, or vindicated his own policy. But
+when the whole land laments his loss, when England mourns the untimely
+fate of one of her noblest sons, the task of critical disquisition
+upon literary attainments or public oratory possesses little
+attraction. It may be left for calmer moments, and a more distant
+time, to investigate with unforgiving justice the sources of his
+errors, or to estimate the precise value of services which the
+public is now disposed to regard with no other feelings than those of
+unmingled gratitude.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration]
+
+FROM THE ART-JOURNAL.
+
+MEMORIES OF MISS JANE PORTER.
+
+BY MRS. S.C. HALL.
+
+The frequent observation of foreigners is, that in England we have
+few "celebrated women." Perhaps they mean that we have few who are
+"notorious;" but let us admit that in either case they are right; and
+may we not express our belief in its being better for women and for
+the community that such is the case. "Celebrity" rarely adds to the
+happiness of a woman, and almost as rarely increases her usefulness.
+The time and attention required to attain "celebrity," must, except
+under very peculiar circumstances, interfere with the faithful
+discharge of those feminine duties upon which the well-doing of
+society depends, and which shed so pure a halo around our English
+homes. Within these "homes" our heroes, statesmen, philosophers, men
+of letters, men of genius, receive their first impressions, and the
+_impetus_ to a faithful discharge of their after callings as Christian
+subjects of the State.
+
+There are few of such men who do not trace back their resolution,
+their patriotism, their wisdom, their learning--the nourishment of
+all their higher aspirations--to a wise, hopeful, loving-hearted
+and faith-inspired Mother; one who believed in a son's destiny to be
+great; it may be, impelled to such belief rather by instinct than by
+reason: who cherished (we can find no better word) the "Hero-feeling"
+of devotion to what was right; though it might have been unworldly;
+and whose deep heart welled up perpetual love and patience toward the
+overboiling faults and frequent stumblings of a hot youth, which she
+felt would mellow into a fruitful manhood.
+
+The strength and glory of England are in the keeping of the wives
+and mothers of its men; and when we are questioned touching our
+"celebrated women", we may in general terms refer to those who have
+watched over, moulded, and inspired our "celebrated men".
+
+Happy is the country where the laws of God and Nature are held in
+reverence--where each sex fulfills its peculiar duties, and renders
+its sphere a sanctuary! And surely such harmony is blessed by the
+Almighty--for while other nations writhe in anarchy and poverty, our
+own spreads wide her arms to receive all who seek protection or need
+repose.
+
+But if we have few "celebrated" women, few who, impelled either by
+circumstances or the irrepressible restlessness of genius, go forth
+amid the pitfalls of publicity, and battle with the world, either as
+poets, or dramatists, or moralists, or mere tale-tellers in simple
+prose--or, more dangerous still, "hold the mirror up to nature" on
+the stage that mimics life--if we have but few, we have, and have
+had _some_, of whom we are justly proud; women of such well-balanced
+minds, that toil they ever so laboriously in their public and perilous
+paths, their domestic and social duties have been fulfilled with as
+diligent and faithful love as though the world had never been purified
+and enriched by the treasures of their feminine wisdom; yet this
+does not shake our belief, that despite the spotless and well-earned
+reputations they enjoyed, the homage they received, (and it has its
+charm,) and even the blessed consciousness of having contributed to
+the healthful recreation, the improved morality, the diffusion of the
+best sort of knowledge--the _woman_ would have been happier had she
+continued enshrined in the privacy of domestic love and domestic duty.
+She may not think this at the commencement of her career; and at its
+termination, if she has lived sufficiently long to have descended,
+even gracefully, from her pedestal, she may often recall the homage of
+the _past_ to make up for its lack in the _present_. But so perfectly
+is woman constituted for the cares, the affections, the duties--the
+blessed duties of un-public life--that if she give nature way it will
+whisper to her a text, that "celebrity never added to the happiness of
+a true woman". She must look for her happiness to HOME. We would have
+young women ponder over this, and watch carefully, ere the veil is
+lifted, and the hard cruel eye of public criticism fixed upon them.
+No profession is pastime; still less so now than ever, when so many
+people are "clever", though so few are great. We would pray those
+especially who direct their thoughts to literature, to think of what
+they have to say, and why they wish to say it; and above all, to weigh
+what they may expect from a capricious public, against the blessed
+shelter and pure harmonies of private life.
+
+But we have had some--and still have some--"celebrated" women, of whom
+we have said "we may be justly proud". We have done pilgrimage to the
+shrine of Lady Rachel Russell, who was so thoroughly "domestic", that
+the Corinthian beauty of her character would never have been matter
+of history, but for the wickedness of a bad king. We have recorded
+the hours spent with Hannah More; the happy days passed with, and the
+years invigorated by, the advice and influence of Maria Edgworth. We
+might recall the stern and faithful puritanism of Maria Jane Jewsbury,
+and the Old World devotion of the true and high-souled daughter of
+Israel--Grace Aguilar. The mellow tones of Felicia Hemans' poetry
+lingers still among all who appreciate the holy sympathies of religion
+and virtue. We could dwell long and profitably on the enduring
+patience and lifelong labor of Barbara Hofland, and steep a diamond in
+tears to record the memories of L.E.L. We could,--alas! alas! barely
+five and twenty years' acquaintance with literature and its ornaments,
+and the brilliant catalogue is but a _Memento Mori_. Perhaps of all
+this list, Maria Edgworth's life was the happiest: simply because she
+was the most retired, the least exposed to the gaze and observation of
+the world, the most occupied by loving duties toward the most united
+circle of old and young we ever saw assembled in one happy home.
+
+The very young have never, perhaps, read one of the tales of a lady
+whose reputation as a novelist was in its zenith when Walter Scott
+published his first novel. We desire to place a chaplet upon the grave
+of a woman once "celebrated" all over the known world, yet who drew
+all her happiness from the lovingness of home and friends, while her
+life was as pure as her renown was extensive.
+
+In our own childhood romance-reading was prohibited, but earnest
+entreaty procured an exception in favor of the "Scottish Chiefs". It
+was the bright summer, and we read it by moonlight, only disturbed
+by the murmur of the distant ocean. We read it, crouched in the deep
+recess of the nursery-window; we read it until moonlight and morning
+met, and the breakfast-bell ringing out into the soft air from the
+old gable, found us at the end of the fourth volume. Dear old times!
+when it would have been deemed little less than sacrilege to crush a
+respectable romance into a shilling volume, and our mammas considered
+_only_ a five-volume story curtailed of its just proportions.
+
+Sir William Wallace has never lost his heroic ascendancy over us,
+and we have steadily resisted every temptation to open the "popular
+edition" of the long-loved romance, lest what people will call "the
+improved state of the human mind", might displace the sweet memory of
+the mingled admiration and indignation that chased each other, while
+we read and wept, without ever questioning the truth of the absorbing
+narrative.
+
+Yet the "Scottish Chiefs" scarcely achieved the popularity of
+"Thaddeus of Warsaw"--the first romance originated by the active
+brain and singularly constructive power of Jane Porter--produced at an
+almost girlish age.
+
+The hero of "Thaddeus of Warsaw" was really Kosciuszko, the beloved
+pupil of George Washington, the grandest and purest patriot the modern
+world has known. The enthusiastic girl was moved to its composition by
+the stirring times in which she lived, and a personal observation
+of and acquaintance with some of those brave men whose struggles for
+liberty only ceased with their exile or their existence.
+
+Miss Porter placed her standard of excellence on high ground, and--all
+gentle-spirited as was her nature--it was firm and unflinching toward
+what she believed the right and true. We must not therefore judge
+her by the depressed state of "feeling" in these times, when its
+demonstration is looked upon as artificial or affected. Toward the
+termination of the last, and the commencement of the present century,
+the world was roused into an interest and enthusiasm, which now we
+can scarcely appreciate or account for; the sympathies of England were
+awakened by the terrible revolutions of France and the desolation of
+Poland; as a principle, we hated Napoleon, though he had neither act
+nor part in the doings of the democrats; and the sea-songs of Dibdin,
+which our youth _now_ would call uncouth and ungraceful rhymes, were
+key-notes to public feeling; the English of that time were thoroughly
+"awake"--the British Lion had not slumbered through a thirty years'
+peace. We were a nation of soldiers, and sailors, and patriots;
+not of mingled cotton-spinners, and railway speculators, and angry
+protectionists. We do not say which state of things is best or worst,
+we desire merely to account for what may be called the taste for
+_heroic_ literature at that time, and the taste for--we really hardly
+know what to call it--literature of the present, made up, as it
+too generally is, of shreds and patches--bits of gold and bits of
+tinsel--things written in a hurry, to be read in a hurry, and never
+thought of afterward--suggestive rather than reflective, at the best:
+and we must plead guilty to a too great proneness to underrate what
+our fathers probably overrated.
+
+At all events we must bear in mind, while reading or thinking over
+Miss Porter's novels, that in her day, even the exaggeration
+of enthusiasm was considered good tone and good taste. How this
+enthusiasm was _fostered_, not subdued, can be gathered by the
+author's ingenious preface to the, we believe, tenth edition of
+"Thaddeus of Warsaw."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+This story brought her abundant honors, and rendered her society,
+as well as the society of her sister and brother, sought for by all
+who aimed at a reputation for taste and talent. Mrs. Porter, on her
+husband's death, (he was the younger son of a well-connected Irish
+family, born in Ireland, in or near Coleraine, we believe, and a major
+in the Enniskillen Dragoons,) sought a residence for her family in
+Edinburgh, where education and good society are attainable to persons
+of moderate fortunes, if they are "well-born;" but the extraordinary
+artistic skill of her son Robert required a wider field, and she
+brought her children to London sooner than she had intended, that his
+promising talents might be cultivated. We believe the greater part
+of "Thaddeus of Warsaw" was written in London, either in St. Martin's
+Lane, Newport Street, or Gerard Street, Soho, (for in these three
+streets the family lived after their arrival in the metropolis);
+though, as soon as Robert Ker Porter's abilities floated him on the
+stream, his mother and sisters retired, in the brightness of their
+fame and beauty, to the village of Thames Ditton, a residence they
+loved to speak of as their "home." The actual labor of "Thaddeus"--her
+first novel--must have been considerable: for testimony was frequently
+borne to the fidelity of its localities, and Poles refused to believe
+the author had not visited Poland; indeed, she had a happy power in
+describing localities. It was on the publication of Miss Porter's two
+first works in the German language that their author was honored by
+being made a Lady of the Chapter of St. Joachim, and received the
+gold cross of the order from Wurtemberg; but "The Scottish Chiefs" was
+never so popular on the Continent as "Thaddeus of Warsaw", although
+Napoleon honored it with an interdict, to prevent its circulation in
+France. If Jane Porter owed her Polish inspirations so peculiarly
+to the tone of the times in which she lived, she traces back, in
+her introduction to the latest edition of "The Scottish Chiefs." her
+enthusiasm in the cause of Sir William Wallace to the influence an
+old "Scotch wife's" tales and ballads produced upon her mind while in
+early childhood. She wandered amid what she describes as "beautiful
+green banks," which rose in natural terraces behind her mothers house,
+and where a cow and a few sheep occasionally fed. This house stood
+alone, at the head of a little square, near the high school; the
+distinguished Lord Elchies formerly lived in the house, which was very
+ancient, and from those green banks it commanded a fine view of the
+Firth of Forth. While gathering "_gowans_" or other wild-flowers for
+her infant sister, (whom she loved more dearly than her life, during
+the years they lived in most tender and affectionate companionship),
+she frequently encountered this aged woman, with her knitting in her
+hand; and she would speak to the eager and intelligent child of the
+blessed quiet of the land, where the cattle were browsing without fear
+of an enemy; and then she would talk of the awful times of the brave
+Sir William Wallace, when he fought for Scotland, "against a cruel
+tyrant; like unto them whom Abraham overcame when he recovered Lot,
+with all his herds and flocks, from the proud foray of the robber
+kings of the South," who, she never failed to add, "were all rightly
+punished for oppressing the stranger in a foreign land! for the Lord
+careth for the stranger." Miss Porter says that this woman never
+omitted mingling pious allusions with her narrative. "Yet she was a
+person of low degree, dressed in a coarse woollen gown, and a plain
+_Mutch_ cap, clasped under the chin with a silver brooch, which her
+father had worn at the battle of Culloden." Of course she filled with
+tales of Sir William Wallace and the Bruce the listening ears of the
+lovely Saxon child, who treasured them in her heart and brain, until
+they fructified in after years into "The Scottish Chiefs." To these
+two were added "The Pastor's Fireside," and a number of other tales
+and romances. She contributed to several annuals and magazines, and
+always took pains to keep up the reputation she had won, achieving
+a large share of the popularity, to which, as an author, she never
+looked for happiness. No one could be more alive to praise or more
+grateful for attention, but the heart of a genuine, pure, loving
+woman, beat within Jane Porter's bosom, and she was never drawn out of
+her domestic circle by the flattery that has spoiled so many, men as
+well as women. Her mind was admirably balanced by her home affections,
+which remained unsullied and unshaken to the end of her days. She
+had, in common with her three brothers and her charming sister, the
+advantage of a wise and loving mother--a woman pious without cant, and
+worldly-wise without being worldly. Mrs. Porter was born at Durham,
+and when very young bestowed her hand and heart on Major Porter.
+An old friend of the family assures us that two or three of their
+children were born in Ireland, and that certainly Jane was amongst the
+number. Although she left Ireland when in early youth, perhaps almost
+an infant, she certainly must be considered Irish, as her father was
+so both by birth and descent, and esteemed during his brief life as a
+brave and generous gentleman. He died young, leaving his lovely widow
+in straitened circumstances, having only her widow's pension to depend
+on. The eldest son--afterward Colonel Porter--was sent to school by
+his grandfather.
+
+We have glanced briefly at Sir Robert Ker Porter's wonderful
+talents, and Anna Maria, when in her twelfth year, rushed, as
+Jane acknowledged, "prematurely into print." Of Anna Maria we knew
+personally but very little, enough however to recall with a pleasant
+memory her readiness in conversation and her bland and cheerful
+manners. No two sisters could have been more different in bearing and
+appearance; Maria was a delicate blonde, with a _riant_ face, and
+an animated manner--we had said almost _peculiarly Irish_--rushing
+at conclusions, where her more thoughtful and careful sister paused
+to consider and calculate. The beauty of Jane was statuesque, her
+deportment serious yet cheerful, a seriousness quite as natural as
+her younger sister's gaiety; they both labored diligently, but Anna
+Maria's labor was sport when compared to her eldest sister's careful
+toil; Jane's mind was of a more lofty order, she was intense, and felt
+more than she said, while Anna Maria often said more than she felt;
+they were a delightful contrast, and yet the harmony between them was
+complete; and one of the happiest days we ever spent, while trembling
+on the threshold of literature, was with them at their pretty
+road-side cottage in the village of Esher before the death of their
+venerable and dearly beloved mother, whose rectitude and prudence had
+both guided and sheltered their youth, and who lived to reap with
+them the harvest of their industry and exertion. We remember the drive
+there, and the anxiety as to how those very "clever ladies" would
+look, and what they would say; we talked over the various letters
+we had received from Jane, and thought of the cordial invitation to
+their cottage--their "mother's cottage"--as they always called it. We
+remember the old white friendly spaniel who looked at us with blinking
+eyes, and preceded us up stairs; we remember the formal old-fashioned
+courtesy of the venerable old lady, who was then nearly eighty--the
+blue ribands and good-natured frankness of Anna Maria, and the noble
+courtesy of Jane, who received visitors as if she granted an audience;
+this manner was natural to her; it was only the manner of one whose
+thoughts have dwelt more upon heroic deeds, and lived more with heroes
+than with actual living men and women; the effect of this, however,
+soon passed away, but not so the fascination which was in all she
+said and did. Her voice was soft and musical, and her conversation
+addressed to one person rather than to the company at large, while
+Maria talked rapidly to every one, or _for_ every one who chose to
+listen. How happily the hours passed!--we were shown some of those
+extraordinary drawings of Sir Robert, who gained an artists reputation
+before he was twenty, and attracted the attention of West and Shee[2]
+in his mere boyhood. We heard all the interesting particulars of his
+panoramic picture of the Storming of Seringapatam, which, the first
+of its class, was known half over the world. We must not, however,
+be misunderstood--there was neither personal nor family egotism in
+the Porters; they invariably spoke of each other with the tenderest
+affection--but unless the conversation was _forced_ by their
+friends--they never mentioned their own, or each other's works, while
+they were most ready to praise what was excellent in the works of
+others; they spoke with pleasure of their sojourns in London; while
+their mother said, it was much wiser and better for young ladies
+who were not rich, to live quietly in the country, and escape the
+temptations of luxury and display. At that time the "young ladies"
+seemed to us certainly _not_ young: that was about two-and-twenty
+years ago, and Jane Porter was seventy-five when she died. They talked
+much of their previous dwelling at Thames Ditton, of the pleasant
+neighborhood they enjoyed there, though their mother's health and
+their own had much improved since their residence on Esher hill;
+their little garden was bounded at the back by the beautiful park of
+Claremont, and the front of the house overlooked the leading roads,
+broken as they are by the village green, and some noble elms. The view
+is crowned by the high trees of Esher Place; opening from the village
+on that side of the brow of the hill. Jane pointed out the _locale_
+of the proud Cardinal Wolsey's domain, inhabited during the days: of
+his power over Henry VIII., and in their cloudy evening, when that
+capricious monarch's favor changed to bitterest hate. It was the very
+spot to foster her high romance, while she could at the same time
+enjoy the sweets of that domestic converse she loved best of all.
+We were prevented by the occupations and heart-beatings of our own
+literary labors from repeating this visit; and in 1831, four years
+after these well-remembered hours, the venerable mother of a family
+so distinguished in literature and art, rendering their names known
+and honored wherever art and letters flourish, was called HOME. The
+sisters, who had resided ten years at Esher, left it, intending to
+sojourn for a time with their second brother, Doctor Porter, (who
+commenced his career as a surgeon in the navy) in Bristol; but within
+a year the youngest, the light-spirited, bright-hearted Anna Maria
+died; her sister was dreadfully shaken by her loss, and the letters
+we received from her after this bereavement, though containing the
+outpourings of a sorrowing spirit, were full of the certainty of
+that re-union hereafter which became the hope of her life. She soon
+resigned her cottage home at Esher, and found the affectionate welcome
+she so well deserved in many homes, where friends vied with each
+other to fill the void in her sensitive heart. She was of too wise
+a nature, and too sympathizing a habit, to shut out new interests
+and affections, but her _old ones_ never withered, nor were they
+ever replaced; were the love of such a sister-friend--the watchful
+tenderness and uncompromising love of a mother--ever "replaced," to a
+lonely sister _or_ a bereaved daughter! Miss Porters pen had been laid
+aside for some time, when suddenly she came before the world as the
+editor of "Sir Edward Seward's Narrative", and set people hunting over
+old atlases to find out the island where he resided. The whole was
+a clever fiction; yet Miss Porter never confided its authorship, we
+believe, beyond her family circle; perhaps the correspondence and
+documents, which are in the hands of one of her kindest friends (her
+executor), Mr. Shepherd, may throw some light upon a subject which the
+"Quarterly" honored by an article. We think the editor certainly used
+her pen as well as her judgment in the work, and we have imagined that
+it might have been written by the family circle, more in sport than in
+earnest, and then produced to serve a double purpose.
+
+[Footnote 2: In his early days the President of the Royal Academy
+painted a very striking portrait of Jane Porter, as "Miranda,"
+and Harlowe painted her in the canoness dress of the order of St.
+Joachim.]
+
+After her sister's death Miss Jane Porter was afflicted with so
+severe an illness, that we, in common with her other friends, thought
+it impossible she could carry out her plan of journeying to St.
+Petersburgh to visit her brother, Sir Robert Ker Porter, who had
+been long united to a Russian princess, and was then a widower; her
+strength was fearfully reduced; her once round figure become almost
+spectral, and little beyond the placid and dignified expression of
+her noble countenance remained to tell of her former beauty; but her
+resolve was taken; she wished, she said, to see once more her youngest
+and most beloved brother, so distinguished in several careers, almost
+deemed incompatible,--as a painter, an author, a soldier, and a
+diplomatist, and nothing could turn her from her purpose: she reached
+St. Petersburgh in safety, and with apparently improved health, found
+her brother as much courted and beloved there as in his own land,
+and his daughter married to a Russian of high distinction. Sir Robert
+longed to return to England. He did not complain of any illness, and
+everything was arranged for their departure; his final visits were
+paid, all but one to the Emperor, who had ever treated him as a
+friend; the day before his intended journey he went to the palace, was
+graciously received, and then drove home, but when the servant opened
+the carriage-door at his own residence he was dead! One sorrow after
+another pressed heavily upon her; yet she was still the same sweet,
+gentle, holy-minded woman she had ever been, bending with Christian
+faith to the will of the Almighty,--"biding her time".
+
+How differently would she have "watched and waited" had she been
+tainted by vanity, or fixed her soul on the mere triumphs of "literary
+reputation". While firm to her own creed, she fully enjoyed the
+success of those who scramble up--where she bore the standard to the
+heights of Parnassus; she was never more happy than when introducing
+some literary "Tyro" to those who could aid or advise a future career.
+We can speak from experience of the warm interest she took in the
+Hospital for the cure of Consumption, and the Governesses' Benevolent
+Institution; during the progress of the latter, her health was
+painfully feeble, yet she used her personal influence for its success,
+and worked with her own hands for its bazaars. She was ever aiding
+those who could not aid themselves; and all her thoughts, words, and
+deeds, were evidence of her clear, powerful mind and kindly loving
+heart; her appearance in the London _coteries_ was always hailed with
+interest and pleasure; to the young she was especially affectionate;
+but it was in the quiet mornings, or in the long twilight evenings
+of summer, when visiting her cherished friends at Shirley Park, in
+Kensington Square, or wherever she might be located for the time--it
+was then that her former spirit revived, and she poured forth anecdote
+and illustration, and the store of many years' observation, filtered
+by experience and purified by that delightful faith to which she
+held,--that "all things work together for good to them that love the
+Lord". She held this in practice, even more than in theory; you saw
+her chastened yet hopeful spirit beaming forth from her gentle eyes,
+and her sweet smile can never be forgotten. The last time we saw her,
+was about two years ago--in Bristol--at her brother's, Dr. Porter's,
+house in Portland Square: then she could hardly stand without
+assistance, yet she never complained of her own suffering or
+feebleness, all her anxiety was about the brother--then dangerously
+ill, and now the last of "his race." Major Porter, it will be
+remembered, left five children, and these have left only one
+descendant--the daughter of Sir Robert Ker Porter and the Russian
+Princess whom he married, a young Russian lady, whose present name we
+do not even know.
+
+We did not think at our last leave-taking that Miss Porter's fragile
+frame could have so long withstood the Power that takes away all we
+hold most dear; but her spirit was at length summoned, after a few
+days' total insensibility, on the 24th of May.
+
+We were haunted by the idea that the pretty cottage at Esher, where
+we spent those happy hours, had been treated even as "Mrs. Porter's
+Arcadia" at Thames Ditton--now altogether removed; and it was with a
+melancholy pleasure we found it the other morning in nothing changed;
+and it was almost impossible to believe that so many years had passed
+since our last visit. While Mr. Fairholt was sketching the cottage, we
+knocked at the door, and were kindly permitted by two gentle sisters,
+who now inhabit it, to enter the little drawing-room and walk round
+the garden: except that the drawing-room has been re-papered and
+painted, and that there were no drawings and no flowers the room was
+not in the least altered; yet to us it seemed like a sepulcher, and we
+rejoiced to breathe the sweet air of the little garden, and listen to
+a nightingale, whose melancholy cadence harmonized with our feelings.
+
+"Whenever you are at Esher," said the devoted daughter, the last
+time we conversed with her, "do visit my mother's tomb." We did so.
+A cypress flourishes at the head of the grave; and the following
+touching inscription is carved on the stone:--
+
+ Here sleeps in Jesus a Christian widow, JANE PORTER. Obiit
+ June 18th, 1831, aetat. 86; the beloved mother of W. Porter,
+ M.D., of Sir Robert Ker Porter, and of Jane and Anna Maria
+ Porter, who mourn in hope, humbly trusting to be born again
+ with her unto the blessed kingdom of their Lord and Savior.
+ Respect her grave, for she ministered to the poor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+RECENT DEATHS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. KIRBY, THE ENTOMOLOGIST.
+
+The Rev. William Kirby, Rector of Barham, Suffolk, who died on the 4th
+ult. in the ninety-first year of his age, with his faculties little
+impaired, ranked as the father of Entomology in England; and to the
+successful results of his labors may he chiefly attributed the advance
+which has been made in this over other kindred departments of natural
+history. His reputation is based not so much on the discoveries made
+by him in the science as on the manner of its teaching. No man ever
+approached the study of the works of nature with a purer or more
+earnest zeal. His interpretation of the distinguishing characters of
+insects for the purposes of classification has excited the warmest
+approval of entomologists at home and abroad; while his agreeable
+narrative of their wonderful transformations and habits, teeming with
+analyses and anecdote, has a charm for almost every kind of reader.
+
+Mr. Kirby's first work of particular note was the "Monographia Apum
+Angliae", in two volumes published half a century ago at Ipswich; to
+which town he was much endeared, and in whose Museum, as President,
+under the friendly auspices of its Secretary, Mr. George Ransome, he
+took a lively interest. His admirable work on the Wild Bees of Great
+Britain was composed from materials collected almost entirely by
+himself,--and most of the plates were of his etching. Entomology was
+at that time a comparatively new science in this country, and it is an
+honorable proof of the correctness of the author's views that they are
+still acknowledged to be genuine.
+
+His further progress in entomology is abundantly marked by various
+papers in the "Transactions of the Linnaean Society",--by the
+entomological portion of the Bridgewater Treatise "On the History,
+Habits, and Instincts of Animals,"--and by his descriptions, occupying
+a quarto volume, of the insects of Sir John Richardson's "Fauna
+Boreali-Americana." The name of Kirby will, however, be chiefly
+remembered for the "Introduction on Entomology" written by him in
+conjunction with Mr. Spence. In this work a vast amount of material,
+acquired after many years' unremitting observation of the insect
+world, is mingled together by two different but congenial minds in
+the pleasant form of familiar letters. The charm, based on substantial
+knowledge of the subject, which these letters impart, has caused
+them to be studied with an interest never before excited by any work
+on natural history,--and they have served for the model of many an
+interesting and instructive volume. Whether William Kirby or William
+Spence had the more meritorious share in the composition of these
+Letters, has never been ascertained; for each, in the plenitude of his
+esteem and love for the other, renounced all claim, in favor of his
+coadjutor, to whatever portion of the matter might be most valued.
+
+In addition to the honor of being President of the Museum of his
+county town--in which there is an admirable portrait of him--Mr. Kirby
+was Honorary President of the Entomological Society of London, Fellow
+of the Royal, Linnaean, Geological, and Zoological Societies of the
+same city, and corresponding member of several foreign societies.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The death of REV. DR. GRAY, Professor of Oriental Languages in the
+University of Glasgow, is reported in the Scotch papers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE FINE ARTS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One of the favorite painters of Paris is Ingres, renowned especially
+for the beauty of his designs from the human figure, and the sweetness
+of his coloring. Eight years ago he was commissioned by M. de Luynes,
+who then wore the title of Duke--which, it must be said, he is
+still called by, though the Republic frowns on such aristocratic
+distinctions--to paint two historical pictures in fresco, for a
+country-house near Paris. The subjects were left to the choice of
+the artist, who was to have 100,000 francs (or L20,000) for the two
+pictures, one quarter of which was paid him in advance. During these
+eight years Mr. Ingres has begun various designs, and done his best
+to satisfy himself in the planning and execution of the pictures; but
+in vain did he blot out one design and labor long and earnestly upon
+another--success still fled from his pencil. At last, after eight
+years' fruitless exertion, he despaired, and going to M. de Luynes,
+told him that he could not make the pictures. At the same time he
+offered to return the L5,000; but M. de Luynes, one of the most
+munificent gentlemen in France, refused to receive it. Madame Ingres,
+however, arranged the difficulty. She remembered that during these
+eight years her kitchen had been regularly supplied with vegetables
+from M. de Luynes' garden, and these she insisted on paying for. "Very
+well," said M. de Luynes, "if you will have it so, my gardener shall
+bring you his bill." Accordingly, not long after, the gardener brought
+a bill for twenty-five francs. "My friend," said Madame Ingres to him,
+"you are mistaken in the amount: this is very natural, considering the
+length of the time. I have a better memory: your master will find in
+this envelope the exact sum." When M. de Luynes opened the envelope,
+he found in it bills for twenty thousand francs.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+LESTER, BRADY & DAVIGNON's "_Gallery of Illustrious Americans_," is
+very favorably noticed generally by the foreign critics. _The Art
+Journal_ says of it: "This work is, as its title imports, of a
+strictly national character, consisting of portraits and biographical
+sketches of twenty-four of the most eminent of the citizens of the
+Republic, since the death of Washington; beautifully lithographed from
+daguerreotypes. Each number is devoted to a portrait and memoir, the
+first being that of General Taylor (eleventh President of the United
+States), the second, of John C. Calhoun. Certainly, we have never seen
+more truthful copies of nature than these portraits; they carry in
+them an indelible stamp of all that earnestness and power for which
+our trans-Atlantic brethren have become famous, and are such heads as
+Lavater would have delighted to look upon. They are, truly, speaking
+likenesses, and impress all who see them with the certainty of their
+accuracy, so self-evident is their character. We are always rejoiced
+to notice a great nation doing honor to its great men; it is a noble
+duty which when properly done honors all concerned therewith. We see
+no reason to doubt that America may in this instance rank with the
+greatest."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DR. WAAGEN, so well known for his writings on Art, is at present in
+England for the purpose of adding to his knowledge of the private
+collection of pictures there, but principally to make himself
+acquainted with ancient illuminated manuscripts in several British
+collections.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A MONUMENT IN HONOR OF COWPER, THE POET, is proposed to be erected in
+Westminster Abbey, from a design by Marshall, the Sculptor, exhibited
+at the Royal Academy in 1849.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+SUMMER VACATION.
+
+THE FOURTH BOOK OF WORDSWORTH'S UNPUBLISHED POEM.[3]
+
+
+ Bright was the summer's noon when quickening steps
+ Followed each other till a dreary moor
+ Was crossed, a bare ridge clomb, upon whose top
+ Standing alone, as from a rampart's edge,
+ I overlooked the bed of Windermere,
+ Like a vast river, stretching in the sun.
+ With exultation at my feet I saw
+ Lake, islands, promontories, gleaming bays,
+ A universe of Nature's fairest forms
+ Proudly revealed with instantaneous burst,
+ Magnificent, and beautiful, and gay.
+ I bounded down the hill shouting amain
+ For the old Ferryman; to the shout the rocks
+ Replied, and when the Charon of the flood
+ Had stayed his oars, and touched the jutting pier,
+ I did not step into the well-known boat
+ Without a cordial greeting. Thence with speed
+ Up the familiar hill I took my way
+ Toward that sweet Valley where I had been reared;
+ 'Twas but a shore hour's walk, ere veering round
+ I saw the snow-white church upon her hill
+ Sit like a throned Lady, sending out
+ A gracious look all over her domain.
+ You azure smoke betrays the lurking town;
+ With eager footsteps I advance and reach
+ The cottage threshold where my journey closed.
+ Glad welcome had I, with some tear, perhaps,
+ From my old Dame, so kind and motherly,
+ While she perused me with a parent's pride.
+ The thoughts of gratitude shall fall like dew
+ Upon thy grave, good creature! While my heart
+ Can beat never will I forget they name.
+ Heaven's blessing be upon thee where thou liest
+ After thy innocent and busy stir
+ In narrow cares, thy little daily growth
+ Of calm enjoyments, after eighty years,
+ And more than eighty, of untroubled life,
+ Childless, yet by the strangers to thy blood
+ Honored with little less than filial love.
+ What joy was mine to see thee once again,
+ Thee and they dwelling, and a crowd of things
+ About its narrow precincts all beloved,
+ And many of them seeming yet my own!
+ Why should I speak of what a thousand hearts
+ Have felt, and every man alive can guess?
+ The rooms, the court, the garden were not left
+ Long unsaluted, nor the sunny seat
+ Round the stone table under the dark pine,
+ Friendly to studious or to festive hours;
+ Nor that unruly child of mountain birth,
+ The famous brook, who, soon as he was boxed
+ Within our garden, found himself at once,
+ As if by trick insidious and unkind,
+ Stripped of his voice and left to dimple down
+ (Without an effort and without a will)
+ A channel paved by man's officious care.
+ I looked at him and smiled, and smiled again,
+ And in the press of twenty thousand thought,
+ "Ha," quoth I, "pretty prisoner, are you there!"
+ Well might sarcastic Fancy then have whispered,
+ "An emblem here behold of they own life;
+ In its late course of even days with all
+ Their smooth enthralment;" but the heart was full,
+ Too full for that reproach. My aged Dame
+ Walked proudly at my side: she guided me;
+ I willing, nay--nay, wishing to be led.
+ --The face of every neighbor whom I met
+ Was like a volume to me; some were hailed
+ Upon the road, some busy at their work,
+ Unceremonious greetings interchanged
+ With half the length of a long field between.
+ Among my schoolfellows I scattered round
+ Like recognitions, but with some constraint
+ Attended, doubtless, with a little pride,
+ But with more shame, for my habiliments,
+ The transformation wrought by gay attire.
+ Not less delighted did I take my place
+ At our domestic table: and, dear Friend!
+ In this endeavor simply to relate
+ A Poet's history, may I leave untold
+ The thankfulness with which I laid me down
+ In my accustomed bed, more welcome now
+ Perhaps than if it had been more desired
+ Or been more often thought of with regret;
+ That lowly bed whence I had heard the wind
+ Roar and the rain beat hard, where I so oft
+ Had lain awake on summer nights to watch
+ The moon in splendor couched among the leaves
+ Of a tall ash, that near our cottage stood;
+ Had watched her with fixed eyes while to and fro
+ In the dark summit of the waving tree
+ She rocked with every impulse of the breeze.
+ Among the favorites whom it pleased me well
+ To see again, was one by ancient right
+ Our inmate, a rough terrier of the hills;
+ By birth and call of nature pre-ordained
+ To hunt the badger and unearth the fox
+ Among the impervious crags, but having been
+ From youth our own adopted, he had passed
+ Into a gentler service. And when first
+ The boyish spirit flagged, and day by day
+ Along my veins I kindled with the stir,
+ The fermentation, and the vernal heat
+ Of poesy, affecting private shades
+ Like a sick Lover, then this dog was used
+ To watch me, an attendant and a friend,
+ Obsequious to my steps early and late,
+ Though often of such dilatory walk
+ Tired, and uneasy at the halts I made.
+ A hundred times when, roving high and low,
+ I have been harassed with the toil of verse,
+ Much pains and little progress, and at once
+ Some lovely Image in the song rose up
+ Full-formed, like Venus rising from the sea;
+ Then have I darted forward to let loose
+ My hand upon his back with stormy joy,
+ Caressing him again and yet again.
+ And when at evening on the public way
+ I sauntered, like a river murmuring
+ And talking to itself when all things else
+ Are still, the creature trotted on before;
+ Such was his custom; but whene'er he met
+ A passenger approaching, he would turn
+ To give me timely notice, and straightway,
+ Grateful for that admonishment, I hushed
+ My voice, composed my gait, and, with the air
+ And mein of one whose thoughts are free, advanced
+ To give and take a greeting that might save
+ My name from piteous rumors, such as wait
+ On men suspected to be crazed in brain.
+ Those walks well worth to be prized and loved--
+ Regretted!--that word, too, was on my tongue,
+ But they were richly laden with all good,
+ And cannot be remembered but with thanks
+ And gratitude, and perfect joy of heart--
+ Those walks in all their freshness now came back
+ Like a returning Spring. When first I made
+ Once more the circuit of our little lake,
+ If ever happiness hath lodged with man,
+ That day consummate happiness was mine,
+ Wide-spreading, steady, calm, contemplative.
+ The sun was set, or setting, when I left
+ Our cottage door, and evening soon brought on
+ A sober hour, not winning or serene,
+ For cold and raw the air was, and untuned;
+ But as a face we love is sweetest then
+ When sorrow damps it, or, whatever look
+ It chance to wear, is sweetest if the heart
+ Have fullness in herself; even so with me
+ It fared that evening. Gently did my soul
+ Put off her veil, and, self-transmuted, stood
+ Naked, as in the presence of her God.
+ While on I walked, a comfort seemed to touch
+ A heart that had not been disconsolate:
+ Strength came where weakness was not known to be,
+ At least not felt; and restoration came
+ Like an intruder knocking at the door
+ Of unacknowledged weariness. I took
+ The balance, and with firm hand weighted myself.
+ --Of that external scene which round me lay,
+ Little, in this abstraction, did I see;
+ Remembered less; but I had inward hopes
+ And swellings of the spirit, was rapt and soothed,
+ Conversed with promises, had glimmering views
+ How life pervades the undecaying mind;
+ How the immortal soul with God-like power
+ Informs, creates, and thaws the deepest sleep
+ That time can lay upon her; how on earth,
+ Man, if he do but live within the light
+ Of high endeavors, daily spreads abroad
+ His being armed with strength that cannot fail
+ Nor was there want of milder thoughts, of love
+ Of innocence, and holiday repose;
+ And more than pastoral quiet, 'mid the stir
+ Of boldest projects, and a peaceful end
+ At last, or glorious, by endurance won.
+ Thus musing, in a wood I sat me down
+ Alone, continuing there to muse: the slopes
+ And heights meanwhile were slowly overspread
+ With darkness, and before a rippling breeze
+ The long lake lengthened out its hoary line,
+ And in the sheltered coppice where I sat,
+ Around me from among the hazel leaves,
+ Now here, now there, moved by the straggling wind,
+ Came ever and anon a breath-like sound,
+ Quick as the pantings of the faithful dog,
+ The off and on companion of my work;
+ And such, at times, believing them to be,
+ I turned my head to look if he were there;
+ Then into solemn thought I passed once more.
+ A freshness also found I at this time
+ In human Life, the daily life of those
+ Whose occupations really I loved;
+ The peaceful scene oft filled me with surprise,
+ Changed like a garden in the heat of spring
+ After an eight days' absence. For (to omit
+ The things which were the same and yet appeared
+ Far otherwise) amid this rural solitude.
+ A narrow Vale where each was known to all,
+ 'Twas not indifferent to a youthful mind
+ To mark some sheltering bower or sunny nook,
+ Where an old man had used to sit alone,
+ Now vacant; pale-faced babes whom I had left
+ In arms, now rosy prattlers at the feet
+ Of a pleased grandame tottering up and down;
+ And growing girls whose beauty, filched away
+ With all its pleasant promises, was gone
+ To deck some slighted playmate's homely cheek.
+ Yes, I had something of a subtler sense,
+ And often looking round was moved to smiles
+ Such as a delicate work of humor breeds;
+ I read, without design, the opinions, thoughts,
+ Of those plain-living people now observed
+ With clearer knowledge; with another eye
+ I saw the quiet woodman in the woods,
+ The shepherd roam the hills. With new delight,
+ This chiefly, did I note my gray-haired Dame;
+ Saw her go forth to church or other work
+ Of state, equipped in monumental trim;
+ Short velvet cloak, (her bonnet of the like,)
+ A mantle such as Spanish Cavaliers
+ Wore in old time. Her smooth domestic life,
+ Affectionate without disquietude,
+ Her talk, her business, pleased me; and no less
+ Her clear though sallow stream of piety
+ That ran on Sabbath days a fresher course;
+ With thoughts unfelt till now I saw her read
+ Her Bible on hot Sunday afternoons,
+ And loved the book, when she had dropped asleep
+ And made of it a pillow for her head.
+ Nor less do I remember to have felt,
+ Distinctly manifested at this time,
+ A human-heartedness about my love
+ For objects hitherto the absolute wealth
+ Of my own private being and no more:
+ Which I had loved even as a blessed spirit
+ Or Angel, if he were to dwell on earth,
+ Might love in individual happiness.
+ But now there opened on me other thoughts
+ Of change, congratulation or regret,
+ A pensive feeling! It spread far and wide;
+ The trees, the mountains shared it, and the brooks,
+ The stars of heaven, now seen in their old haunts--
+ White Sirius glittering o'er the southern crags,
+ Orion with his belt, and those fair Seven,
+ Acquaintances of every little child,
+ And Jupiter, my own beloved star!
+ Whatever shadings of mortality,
+ Whatever imports from the world of death
+ Had come among these objects heretofore,
+ Were, in the main, of mood less tender: strong,
+ Deep, gloomy were they, and severe: the scatterings
+ Of awe or tremulous dread, that had given way
+ In latter youth to yearnings of a love
+ Enthusiastic, to delight and hope.
+ As one who hangs down-bending from the side
+ Of a slow-moving boat, upon the breast
+ Of a still water, solacing himself
+ With such discoveries as his eye can make
+ Beneath him in the bottom of the deep,
+ Sees many beauteous sights--weeds, fishes, flowers,
+ Grots, pebbles, roots of trees, and fancies more,
+ Yet often is perplexed and cannot part
+ The shadow from the substance, rocks and sky
+ Mountains and clouds, reflected in the depth
+ Of the clear flood, from things which there abide
+ In their true dwelling; now is crossed by gleam
+ Of his own image, by a sunbeam now,
+ And wavering motions sent he knows not whence,
+ Impediments that make his task more sweet;
+ Such pleasant office have we long pursued
+ Incumbent o'er the surface of past time
+ With like success, nor often have appeared
+ Shapes fairer or less doubtfully discerned
+ Than those to which the Tale, indulgent Friend!
+ Would now direct thy notice. Yet in spite
+ Of pleasure won, and knowledge not withheld,
+ There was an inner falling off--I loved,
+ Loved deeply all that had been loved before
+ More deeply even than ever: but a swarm
+ Of heady schemes jostling each other, gawds,
+ And feast and dance, and public revelry,
+ And sports and games (too grateful in themselves,
+ Yet in themselves less grateful, I believe,
+ Than as they were a badge glossy and fresh
+ Of manliness and freedom) all conspired
+ To lure my mind from firm habitual quest
+ Of feeding pleasures, to depress the zeal
+ And damp those yearnings which had once been mine--
+ A wild, unworldly-minded youth, given up
+ To his own eager thoughts. It would demand
+ Some skill, and longer time than may be spared,
+ To paint these vanities, and how they wrought
+ In haunts where they, till now, had been unknown.
+ It seemed the very garments that they wore
+ Preyed on my strength, and stopped the quiet stream
+ Of self-forgetfulness.
+ Yes, that heartless chase
+ Of trivial pleasures was a poor exchange
+ For books and nature at that early age.
+ 'Tis true, some casual knowledge might be gained
+ Of character or life; but at that time,
+ Of manners put to school I took small note,
+ And all my deeper passions lay elsewhere.
+ Far better had it been to exalt the mind
+ By solitary study, to uphold
+ Intense desire through meditative peace;
+ And yet, for chastisement of these regrets,
+ The memory of one particular hour
+ Doth here rise up against me. 'Mid a throng
+ Of maids and youths, old men, and matrons staid,
+ A medley of all tempers, I had passed
+ The night in dancing, gayety, and mirth,
+ With din of instruments and shuffling feet,
+ And glancing forms, and tapers glittering,
+ And unaimed prattle flying up and down;
+ Spirits upon the stretch, and here and there
+ Slight shocks of young love-liking interspersed,
+ Whose transient pleasure mounted to the head,
+ And tingled through the veins. Ere we retired
+ The cock had crowed, and now the eastern sky
+ Was kindling, not unseen, from humble copse
+ And open field, through which the pathway wound,
+ And homeward led my steps. Magnificent
+ The morning rose, in memorable pomp,
+ Glorious as e'er I had beheld--in front,
+ The sea lay laughing at a distance; near,
+ The solid mountains shone, bright as the clouds,
+ Grain-tinctured, drenched in Empyrean light;
+ And in the meadows and the lower grounds
+ Was all the sweetness of a common dawn--
+ Dews, vapors, and the melody of birds,
+ And laborers going forth to till the fields.
+ Ah! need I say, dear Friend! that to the brim
+ My heart was full; I made no vows, but vows
+ Were then made for me; bond unknown to me
+ Was given, that I should be, else sinning greatly,
+ A dedicated Spirit. On I walked
+ In thankful blessedness, which yet survives.
+ Strange rendezvous! My mind was at that time
+ A parti-colored show of grave and gay,
+ Solid and light, short-sighted and profound;
+ Of inconsiderate habits and sedate,
+ Consorting in one mansion unreproved.
+ The worth I knew of powers that I possessed,
+ Though slighted and too oft misused. Besides,
+ That summer, swarming as it did with thoughts
+ Transient and idle, lacked not intervals
+ When Folly from the frown of fleeting Time
+ Shrunk, and the mind experienced in herself
+ Conformity as just as that of old
+ To the end and written spirit of God's works,
+ Whether held forth in Nature or in Man,
+ Through pregnant vision, separate or conjoined.
+ When from our better selves we have too long
+ Been parted by the hurrying world, and droop,
+ Sick of its business, of its pleasure tired,
+ How gracious, how benign, is Solitude;
+ How potent a mere image of her sway;
+ Most potent when impressed upon the mind
+ With an appropriate human centre--hermit,
+ Deep in the bosom of the wilderness;
+ Votary (in vast cathedral, where no foot
+ Is treading, where no other face is seen)
+ Kneeling at prayers; or watchman on the top
+ Of lighthouse, beaten by Atlantic waves;
+ Or as the soul of that great Power is met
+ Sometimes embodied on a public road,
+ When, for the night deserted, it assumes
+ A character of quiet more profound
+ Than pathless wastes.
+ Once, when those summer months,
+ Where flown, and autumn brought its annual show
+ Of oars with oars contending, sails with sails,
+ Upon Windander's spacious breast, it chanced
+ That--after I had left a flower-decked room
+ (Whose in-door pastime, lighted up, survived
+ To a late hour), and spirits overwrought
+ Were making night do penance for a day
+ Spent in a round of strenuous idleness--
+ My homeward course led up a long ascent,
+ Where the road's watery surface, to the top
+ Of that sharp rising, glittered to the moon
+ And bore the semblance of another stream
+ Stealing with silent lapse to join the brook
+ That murmured in the vale. All else was still;
+ No living thing appeared in earth or air,
+ And, save the flowing water's peaceful voice,
+ Sound there was none--but, lo! an uncouth shape,
+ Shown by a sudden turning of the road,
+ So near that, slipping back into the shade
+ Of a thick hawthorn, I could mark him well,
+ Myself unseen. He was of stature tall,
+ A span above man's common measure, tall,
+ Stiff, land, and upright; a more meager man
+ Was never seen before by night or day.
+ Long were his arms, pallid his hands; his mouth
+ Looked ghastly in the moonlight: from behind,
+ A mile-stone propped him; I could also ken
+ That he was clothed in military garb.
+ Though faded, yet entire. Companionless,
+ No dog attending, by no staff sustained,
+ He stood, and in his very dress appeared
+ A desolation, a simplicity,
+ To which the trappings of a gaudy world
+ Make a strange back-ground. From his lips, ere long,
+ Issued low muttered sounds, as if of pain
+ Or some uneasy thought; yet still his form
+ Kept the same awful steadiness--at his feet
+ His shadow lay, and moved not. From self-blame
+ Not wholly free, I watched him thus; at length
+ Subduing my heart's specious cowardice,
+ I left the shady nook where I had stood
+ And hailed him. Slowly from his resting-place
+ He rose, and with a lean and wasted arm
+ In measured gesture lifted to his head
+ Returned my salutation; then resumed
+ His station as before: and when I asked
+ His history, the veteran, in reply,
+ Was neither slow nor eager; but, unmoved,
+ And with a quiet, uncomplaining voice,
+ A stately air of mild indifference,
+ He told in few plain words a soldier's tale--
+ That in the Tropic Islands he had served,
+ Whence he had landed scarcely three weeks past;
+ That on his landing he had been dismissed,
+ And now was traveling toward his native home.
+ This heard, I said, in pity, "Come with me."
+ He stooped, and straightway from the ground took up,
+ An oaken staff by me yet unobserved--
+ A staff which must have dropt from his slack hand
+ And lay till now neglected in the grass.
+ Though weak his step and cautious, he appeared
+ To travel without pain, and I beheld,
+ With an astonishment but ill-suppressed,
+ His ghostly figure moving at my side;
+ Nor could I, while we journeyed thus, forbear
+ To turn from present hardships to the past,
+ And speak of war, battle, and pestilence,
+ Sprinkling this talk with questions, better spared.
+ On what he might himself have seen or felt
+ He all the while was in demeanor calm.
+ Concise in answer: solemn and sublime
+ He might have seen, but that in all he said
+ There was a strange half-absence, as of one
+ Knowing too well the importance of his theme
+ But feeling it no longer. Our discourse
+ Soon ended, and together on we passed
+ In silence through a wood gloomy and still.
+ Up-turning, then, along an open field,
+ We reached a cottage. At the door I knocked.
+ And earnestly to charitable care
+ Commended him as a poor friendless man,
+ Belated and by sickness overcome.
+ Assured that now the traveler would repose
+ In comfort, I entreated that henceforth
+ He would not linger in the public ways,
+ But ask for timely furtherance and help
+ Such as his state required. At this reproof,
+ With the same ghastly mildness in his look,
+ He said, "My trust is in the God of Heaven,
+ And in the eye of him who passes me!"
+ The cottage door was speedily unbarred,
+ And now the soldier touched his hat once more
+ With his lean hand, and in a faltering voice,
+ Whose tone bespake reviving interests
+ Till then unfelt, he thanked me; I returned
+ The farewell blessing of the patient man,
+ And so we parted. Back I cast a look,
+ And lingered near the door a little space,
+ Then sought with quiet heart my distant home.
+
+[Footnote 3: In the press of Appleton & Co.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE IVORY MINE:
+
+A TALE OF THE FROZEN SEA.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VI.--THE IVORY MINE.
+
+The end of so perilous and novel a journey, which must necessarily,
+under the most favorable circumstances, have produced more honor
+than profit, was attained; and yet the success of the adventure was
+doubtful. The season was still too cold for any search for fossil
+ivory, and the first serious duty was the erection of a winter
+residence. Fortunately there was an ample supply of logs of wood, some
+half-rotten, some green, lying under the snow on the shores of the bay
+into which the river poured, and which had been deposited there by
+the currents and waves. A regular pile, too, was found, which had been
+laid up by some of the provident natives of New Siberia, who, like
+the Esquimaux, live in the snow. Under this was a large supply of
+frozen fish, which was taken without ceremony, the party being near
+starvation. Of course Sakalar and Ivan intended replacing the hoard,
+if possible, in the short summer.
+
+Wood was made the groundwork of the winter hut which was to be
+erected, but snow and ice formed by far the larger portion of the
+building materials. So hard and compact did the whole mass become when
+finished, and lined with bear-skins and other furs, that a huge lamp
+sufficed for warmth during the day and night, and the cooking was
+done in a small shed by the side. The dogs were now set to shift for
+themselves as to cover, and were soon buried in the snow. They were
+placed on short allowance, now they had no work to do, for no one yet
+knew what were the resources of this wild place.
+
+As soon as the more immediate duties connected with a camp had been
+completed, the whole party occupied themselves with preparing traps
+for foxes, and in other hunting details. A hole was broken in the
+ice in the bay, and this the Kolimsk men watched with assiduity for
+seals. One or two rewarded their efforts, but no fish were taken.
+Sakalar and Ivan, after a day or two of repose, started with some
+carefully-selected dogs in search of game, and soon found that the
+great white bear took up his quarters even in that northern latitude.
+They succeeded in killing several, which the dogs dragged home.
+
+About ten days after their arrival in the great island, Sakalar, who
+was always the first to be moving, roused his comrades round him just
+as a party of a dozen strange men appeared in the distance. They were
+short, stout fellows, with long lances in their hands, and by their
+dress very much resembled the Esquimaux. Their attitude was menacing
+in the extreme, and by the advice of Sakalar, a general volley was
+fired over their heads. The invaders halted, looked confusedly around,
+and then ran away. Firearms retained. therefore, all their pristine
+qualities with these savages.
+
+"They will return," said Sakalar, moodily; "they did the same when
+I was here before, and then came back and killed my friend at night.
+Sakalar escaped."
+
+Counsel was now held, and it was determined, after due deliberation,
+that strict watch should be kept at all hours, while much was
+necessarily trusted to the dogs. All day one of the party was on the
+lookout, while at night the hut had its entrance well barred. Several
+days, however, were thus passed without molestation, and then Sakalar
+took the Kolimsk men out to hunt, and left Ivan and Kolina together.
+The young man had learned the value of his half-savage friend: her
+devotion to her father and the party generally was unbounded. She
+murmured neither at privations nor at sufferings, and kept up the
+courage of Ivan by painting in glowing terms all his brilliant future.
+She seemed to have laid aside her personal feelings, and to look on
+him only as one doing battle with fortune in the hope of earning the
+hand of the rich widow of Yakoutsk. But Ivan was much disposed to
+gloomy fits; he supposed himself forgotten, and slighted, and looked
+on the time of his probation as interminable. It was in this mood that
+one day he was roused from his fit by a challenge from Kolina to go
+and see if the seals had come up to breathe at the hole which every
+morning was freshly broken in the ice. Ivan assented, and away they
+went gaily down to the bay. No seals were there, and after a short
+stay they returned toward the hut, recalled by the distant howling
+of the dogs. But as they came near, they could see no sign of men or
+animals, though the sensible brutes still whined under the shelter
+of their snow-heaps. Ivan, much surprised, raised the curtain of the
+door, his gun in hand, expecting to find that some animal was inside.
+The lamp was out, and the hut in total darkness. Before Ivan could
+recover his upright position, four men leaped on him, and he was a
+prisoner.
+
+Kolina drew back, and cocked her gun; but the natives, satisfied
+with their present prey, formed round Ivan in a compact body, tied
+his hands, and bade him walk. Their looks were sufficiently wild
+and menacing to make him move, especially as he recognized them
+as belonging to the warlike party of the Tchouktchas--a tribe of
+Siberians who wander about the Polar Seas in search of game, who cross
+Behring's Straits in skin-boats, and who probably are the only persons
+who by their temporary sojourn in New Siberia, have caused some to
+suppose it inhabited. Kolina stood uncertain what to do, but in a few
+minutes she roused four of the dogs, and followed. Ivan bawled to her
+to go back, but the girl paid no attention to his request, determined,
+as it seemed, to know his fate.
+
+The savages hurried Ivan along as rapidly as they could; and soon
+entered a deep and narrow ravine, which about the middle parted into
+two. The narrowest path was selected, and the dwelling of the natives
+soon reached. It was a cavern, the narrow entrance of which they
+crawled through; Ivan followed the leader, and soon found himself in
+a large and wonderful cave. It was by nature divided into several
+compartments, and contained a party of twenty men, as many or more
+women, and numerous children. It was warmed in two ways--by wood-fires
+and grease-lamps, and by a bubbling semi-sulphurous spring, that
+rushed up through a narrow hole, and then fell away into a deep well,
+that carried its warm waters to mingle with the icy sea. The acrid
+smoke escaped by holes in the roof. Ivan, his arms and legs bound, was
+thrust into a separate compartment filled with furs, and formed by a
+projection of the rock and the skin-boats which this primitive race
+employed to cross the most stormy seas. He was almost stunned; he lay
+for a while without thought or motion. Gradually he recovered, and
+gazed around; all was night, save above, where by a narrow orifice
+he saw the smoke which hung in clouds around the roof escaping.
+He expected death. He knew the savage race he was among, who hated
+interference with their hunting-grounds, and whose fish he and his
+party had taken. What, therefore, was his surprise, when from the
+summit of the roof, he heard a gentle voice whispering in soft accents
+his own name. His ears must, he thought, deceive him. The hubbub close
+at hand was terrible. A dispute was going on. Men, women. and children
+all joined, and yet he had heard the word "Ivan." "Kolina," he
+replied, in equally low but clear tones. As he spoke a knife rolled
+near him. But he could not touch it. Then a dark form filled the
+orifice about a dozen feet above his head, and something moved down
+among projecting stones, and then Kolina stood by him. In an instant
+Ivan was free, and an axe in his hand. The exit was before them. Steps
+were cut in the rock, to ascend to the upper entrance, near which Ivan
+had been placed without fear, because tied. But a rush was heard, and
+the friends had only time to throw themselves deeper into the cave,
+when four men rushed in, knife in hand, to immolate the victim. Such
+had been the decision come to after the debate.
+
+The lamps revealed the escape of the fugitive. A wild cry drew all the
+men together, and then up they scampered along the rugged projections,
+and the barking of the dogs as they fled showed that they were in hot
+and eager chase. Ivan and Kolina lost no time. They advanced boldly,
+knife and hatchet in hand, sprang amid the terrified women, darted
+across their horrid cavern, and before one of them had recovered from
+her fright, were in the open air. On they ran in the gloom for some
+distance, when they suddenly heard muttering voices. Down they sank
+behind the first large stone, concealing themselves as well as they
+could in the snow. The party moved slowly on toward them.
+
+"I can trace their tracks still," said Sakalar, in a low deep tone.
+"On, while they are alive, or at least for vengeance!"
+
+"Friends!" cried Ivan.
+
+"Father!" said Kolina, and in an instant the whole party were united.
+Five words were enough to determine Sakalar. The whole body rushed
+back, entered the cavern, and found themselves masters of it without
+a struggle. The women and children attempted no resistance. As soon
+as they were placed in a corner, under the guard of the Kolimsk men,
+a council was held. Sakalar, as the most experienced, decided what
+was to be done. He knew the value of threats: one of the women was
+released, and bade go tell the men what had occurred. She was to add
+the offer of a treaty of peace, to which, if both parties agreed,
+the women were to be given up on the one side, and the hut and its
+contents on the other. But the victors announced their intention
+of taking four of the best-looking boys as hostages, to be returned
+whenever they were convinced of the good faith of the Tchouktchas. The
+envoy soon returned, agreeing to everything. They had not gone near
+the hut, fearing an ambuscade. The four boys were at once selected,
+and the belligerents separated.
+
+Sakalar made the little fellows run before, and thus the hut was
+regained. An inner cabin was erected for the prisoners, and the dogs
+placed over them as spies. But as the boys understood Sakalar to mean
+that the dogs were to eat them if they stirred, they remained still
+enough, and made no attempt to run away.
+
+A hasty meal was now cooked, and after its conclusion Ivan related
+the events of the day, warmly dilating on the devotion and courage of
+Kolina, who, with the keenness of a Yakouta, had found out his prison
+by the smoke, and had seen him on the ground despite the gloom.
+Sakalar then explained how, on his return, he had been terribly
+alarmed, and had followed the trail on the snow. After mutual
+congratulations the whole party went to sleep.
+
+The next morning early, the mothers came humbly with provisions for
+their children. They received some trifling presents and were sent
+away in delight. About midday the whole tribe presented themselves
+unarmed, within a short distance of the hut, and offered a traffic.
+They brought a great quantity of fish, which they wanted to exchange
+for tobacco. Sakalar, who spoke their language freely, first gave them
+a roll, letting them understand it was in payment of the fish taken
+without leave. This at once dissipated all feelings of hostility, and
+solid peace was insured. So satisfied was Sakalar of their sincerity,
+that he at once released the captives.
+
+From that day the two parties were one, and all thoughts of war were
+completely at an end. A vast deal of bloodshed had been prevented by a
+few concessions on both sides. The same result might indeed have been
+come to by killing half of each little tribe, but it is doubtful if
+the peace would have been as satisfactory to the survivors.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VII.--THE SUMMER AND AUTUMN.
+
+Occupied with the chase, with bartering, and with conversing with
+their new friends, the summer gradually came around. The snow melted,
+the hills became a series of cascades, in every direction water
+poured toward the sea. But the hut remained solid and firm, a little
+earth only being cast over the snow. Flocks of ducks and geese soon
+appeared, a slight vegetation was visible, and the sea was in motion.
+But what principally drew all eyes were the vast heaps of fossil ivory
+exposed to view on the banks of the stream, laid bare more and more
+every year by the torrents of spring. A few days sufficed to collect
+a heap greater than they could take away on the sledges in a dozen
+journeys. Ivan gazed at his treasure in mute despair. Were all that
+at Yakoutsk, he was the richest merchant in Siberia; but to take it
+thither seemed impossible. But in stepped the adventurous Tchouktchas.
+They offered, for a stipulated sum in tobacco and other valuables, to
+land a large portion of the ivory at a certain spot on the shores of
+Siberia, by means of their boats. Ivan, though again surprised at the
+daring of these wild men, accepted the proposal, and engaged to give
+them his whole stock. The matter was then settled, and our adventurers
+and their new friends dispersed to their summer avocations.
+
+These consisted in fishing and hunting, and repairing boats and
+sledges. Their canoes were made of skins and whalebone, and bits of
+wood; but they were large, and capable of sustaining great weight.
+They proposed to start as soon as the ice was broken up, and to brave
+all the dangers of so fearful a navigation. They were used to impel
+themselves along in every open space, and to take shelter on icebergs
+from danger. When one of these icy mountains went in the right
+direction, they stuck to it; but at others they paddled away, amid
+dangers of which they seemed wholly unconscious.
+
+A month was taken up in fishing, in drying the fish, or in putting
+it in holes where there was eternal frost. An immense stock was laid
+in: and then one morning the Tchouktchas took their departure, and
+the adventurers remained alone. Their hut was broken up, and all made
+ready for their second journey. The sledges were enlarged, to bear
+the heaviest possible load at starting. A few days' overloading were
+not minded, as the provisions would soon decrease. Still not half so
+much could be taken as they wished, and yet Ivan had nearly a ton of
+ivory, and thirty tons was the greatest produce of any one year in all
+Siberia.
+
+But the sledges were ready long before the sea was so. The interval
+was spent in continued hunting, to prevent any consumption of the
+traveling store. All were heartily tired, long before it was over,
+of a day nearly as long as two English months. Soon the winter set in
+with intense rigor; the sea ceased to toss and heave; the icebergs and
+fields moved more and more slowly; at last ocean and land were blended
+into one--the night of a month came, and the sun was seen no more.
+
+The dogs were now roused up; the sledges harnessed; and the instant
+the sea was firm enough to sustain them, the party started. Sakalar's
+intention was to try forced marches in a straight line. Fortune
+favored them. Not an accident occurred for days. At first they did not
+move exactly in the same direction as when they came, but they soon
+found traces of their previous journey, proving that a plain of ice
+had been forced away at least fifty miles during the thaw.
+
+The road was now again rugged and difficult, firing was getting
+scarce, the dogs were devouring the fish with rapidity, and only one
+half the ocean-journey was over. But on they pushed with desperate
+energy, each eye once more keenly on the look-out for game. Every one
+drove his team in sullen silence, for all were on short allowance, and
+all were hungry. They sat on what was to them more valuable than gold,
+and yet they had not what was necessary for subsistence. The dogs were
+urged every day to the utmost limits of their strength. But so much
+space had been taken up by the ivory, that at last there remained
+neither food nor fuel. None knew at what distance they were from the
+shore, and their position seemed desperate. There were even whispers
+of killing some of the dogs; and Sakalar and Ivan were upbraided for
+the avarice which had brought them to such straits.
+
+"See!" said the old hunter suddenly, with a delighted smile, pointing
+toward the south.
+
+The whole party looked eagerly. A thick column of smoke rose in the
+air at no very considerable distance. This was the signal agreed on
+with the Tchouktchas, who were to camp where there was plenty of wood.
+
+Every hand was raised to urge on the dogs to this point, and at last,
+from the summit of a hill of ice they saw the shore and the blaze of
+the fire. The wind was toward them, and the atmosphere heavy. The dogs
+smelled the distant camp, and darted almost recklessly forward. At
+last they sank near to the Tchouktcha huts, panting and exhausted.
+
+Their allies of the spring were true; they gave them food, of
+which both man and beast ate greedily, and then sought repose. The
+Tchouktchas had then formed their journey with wonderful success and
+rapidity, and had found time to lay in a pretty fair stock of fish.
+This they freely shared with Ivan and his party, and were delighted
+when he abandoned to them all his tobacco and rum, and part of his
+tea.
+
+The Tchouktchas had been four years absent in their wanderings, and
+were eager to get home once more to the land of the reindeer, and to
+their friends. They were perhaps the greatest travelers of a tribe
+noted for its facility of locomotion. And so, with warm expressions
+of esteem and friendship on both sides, the two parties separated--the
+men of the east making their way on foot, toward the Straits of
+Behring.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+VIII.--THE VOYAGE HOME.
+
+Under considerable disadvantages did Sakalar, Ivan, and their friends
+prepare for the conclusion of their journey. Their provisions were
+very scanty, and their only hope of replenishing their stores was on
+the banks of the Vchivaya River, which being in some places pretty
+rapid might not be frozen over. Sakalar and his friends determined to
+strike out in a straight line. Part of the ivory had to be concealed
+and abandoned, to be fetched another time; but as their stock of
+provisions was so small, they were able to take the principal part. It
+had been resolved, after some debate, to make in a direct line for the
+Vchivaya river, and thence to Vijnei-Kolimsk. The road was of a most
+difficult, and, in part, unknown character; but it was imperative to
+move in as straight a direction as possible. Time was the great enemy
+they had to contend with, because their provisions were sufficient for
+a limited period only.
+
+The country was at first level enough, and the dogs, after their
+rest, made sufficiently rapid progress. At night they had reached the
+commencement of a hilly region, while in the distance could be seen
+pretty lofty mountains. According to a plan decided on from the first,
+the human members of the party were placed at once on short allowance,
+while the dogs received as much food as could be reasonably given.
+At early dawn the tent was struck, and the dogs were impelled along
+the banks of a small river completely frozen. Indeed, after a short
+distance, it was taken as the smoothest path. But at the end of a
+dozen miles they found themselves in a narrow gorge between two
+hills; at the foot of a once foaming cataract, now hard frozen. It
+was necessary to retreat some miles, and gain the land once more. The
+only path which was now found practicable was along the bottom of some
+pretty steep rocks. But the track got narrower and narrower, until the
+dogs were drawing along the edge of a terrific precipice with not four
+feet of holding. All alighted, and led the dogs, for a false step was
+death. Fortunately the path became no narrower, and in one place it
+widened out and made a sort of hollow. Here a bitter blast, almost
+strong enough to cast them from their feet, checked further progress,
+and on that naked spot, under a projecting mass of stone, without
+fire, did the whole party halt. Men and dogs huddled together for
+warmth, and all dined on raw and frozen fish. A few hours of sleep,
+however, were snatched; and then, as the storm abated, they again
+advanced. The descent was soon reached, and led into a vast plain
+without tree or bush. A range of snow-clad hills lay before them, and
+through a narrow gully between two mountains was the only practicable
+pathway. But all hearts were gladdened by the welcome sight of some
+_argali_, or Siberian sheep, on the slope of a hill. These animals are
+the only winter game, bears, and wolves excepted. Kolina was left with
+the dogs, and the rest started after the animals, which were pawing in
+the snow for some moss or half-frozen herbs. Every caution was used
+to approach them against the wind, and a general volley soon sent them
+scampering away to the mountain-tops, leaving three behind.
+
+But Ivan saw that he had wounded another, and away he went in chase.
+The animal ascended a hill, and then halted. But seeing a man coming
+quickly after him, it turned and fled down the opposite side. Ivan was
+instantly after him. The descent was steep, but the hunter saw only
+the argili, and darted down. He slid rather than ran with fearful
+rapidity, and passed the sheep by, seeking to check himself too late.
+A tremendous gulf was before him, and his eyes caught an instant
+glance of a deep distant valley. Then he saw no more until he found
+himself lying still. He had sunk, on the very brink of the precipice,
+into a deep snow bank formed by some projecting rock, and had only
+thus been saved from instant death. Deeply grateful, Ivan crept
+cautiously up the hill-side, though not without his prize, and
+rejoined his companions.
+
+The road now offered innumerable difficulties, it was rough and
+uneven--now hard, now soft. They made but slow progress for the next
+three days, while their provisions began to draw to an end. They had
+at least a dozen days more before them. All agreed that they were now
+in the very worst difficulty they had been in. That evening they dined
+on the last meal of mutton and fish; they were at the foot of a lofty
+hill, which they determined to ascend while strength was left. The
+dogs were urged up the steep ascent, and after two hours' toil, they
+reached the summit. It was a table-land, bleak and miserable, and the
+wind was too severe to permit camping. On they pushed, and camped a
+little way down its sides.
+
+The next morning the dogs had no food, while the men had nothing but
+large draughts of warm tea. But it was impossible to stop. Away they
+hurried, after deciding that, if nothing turned up the next morning,
+two or three of the dogs must be killed to save the rest. Little was
+the ground they got over, with hungry beasts and starving men, and
+all were glad to halt near a few dried larches. Men and dogs eyed each
+other suspiciously, The animals, sixty-four in number, had they not
+been educated to fear man, would have soon settled the matter. But
+there they lay, panting and faint--to start up suddenly with a fearful
+howl. A bear was on them. Sakalar fired, and then in rushed the dogs,
+savage and fierce. It was worse than useless, it was dangerous, for
+the human beings of the party to seek to share this windfall. It was
+enough that the dogs had found something to appease their hunger.
+
+Sakalar, however, knew that his faint and weary companions could not
+move the next day if tea alone were their sustenance that night. He
+accordingly put in practice one of the devices of his woodcraft. The
+youngest of the larches was cut down, and the coarse outside bark was
+taken off. Then every atom of the soft bark was peeled off the tree,
+and being broken into small pieces, was cast into the boiling pot,
+already full of water. The quantity was great, and made a thick
+substance. Round this the whole party collected, eager for the moment
+when they could fall to. But Sakalar was cool and methodical even in
+that terrible hour. He took a spoon, and quietly skimmed the pot,
+to take away the resin that rose to the surface. Then gradually the
+bark melted away, and presently the pot was filled by a thick paste,
+and looked not unlike glue. All gladly ate, and found it nutritive,
+pleasant, and warm. They felt satisfied when the meal was over, and
+were glad to observe that the dogs returned to the camp completely
+satisfied also, which, under the circumstances, was matter of great
+gratification.
+
+In the morning, after another mess of larch-bark soup, and after a
+little tea, the adventurers again advanced on their journey. They were
+now in an arid, bleak, and terrible plain of vast extent. Not a tree,
+not a shrub, not an elevation was to be seen. Starvation was again
+staring them in the face, and no man knew when this dreadful plain
+would end. That night the whole party cowered in their tent without
+fire, content to chew a few tea-leaves preserved from the last meal.
+Serious thoughts were now entertained of abandoning their wealth in
+that wild region. But as none pressed the matter very hardly, the
+ledges were harnessed again next morning, and the dogs driven on. But
+man and beast were at the last gasp, and not ten miles were traversed
+that day, the end of which brought them to a large river, on the
+borders of which were some trees. Being wide and rapid, it was not
+frozen, and there was still hope, The seine was drawn from a sledge,
+and taken into the water. It was fastened from one side to another of
+a narrow gut, and there left. It was of no avail examining it until
+morning, for the fish only come out at night.
+
+There was not a man of the party who had his exact sense about him,
+while the dogs lay panting on the snow, their tongues hanging out,
+their eyes glaring with almost savage fury. The trees round the bank
+were large and dry, and not one had an atom of soft bark on it. All
+the resource they had was to drink huge draughts of tea, and then
+seek sleep. Sakalar set the example, and the Kolimsk men, to whom such
+scenes were not new, followed his advice; but Ivan walked up and down
+before the tent. A huge fire had been made, which was amply fed by the
+wood of the river bank, and it blazed on high, showing in bold relief
+the features of the scene. Ivan gazed vacantly at everything; but he
+saw not the dark and glancing river--he saw not the bleak plain of
+snow--his eyes looked not on the romantic picture of the tent and its
+bivouac-fire: his thoughts were on one thing alone. He it was who
+had brought them to that pass, and on his head rested all the misery
+endured by man and beast, and, worst of all, by the good and devoted
+Kolina.
+
+There she sat, too, on the ground, wrapped in her warm clothes, her
+eyes, fixed on the crackling logs. Of what was she thinking? Whatever
+occupied her mind, it was soon chased away by the sudden speech
+of Ivan. "Kolina," said he, in a tone which borrowed a little of
+intensity from the state of mind in which hunger had placed all of
+them, "canst thou ever forgive me?"
+
+"What?" replied the young girl softly.
+
+"My having brought you here to die, far away from your native hills?"
+
+"Kolina cares little for herself," said the Yakouta maiden, rising and
+speaking perhaps a little wildly; "let her father escape, and she is
+willing to lie near the tombs of the old people on the borders of the
+icy sea."
+
+"But Ivan had hoped to see for Kolina many bright, happy days; for
+Ivan would have made her father rich, and Kolina would have been the
+richest unmarried girl in the plain of Mioure!"
+
+"And would riches make Kolina happy?" said she sadly.
+
+"Young girl of the Yakouta, hearken to me! Let Ivan live or die this
+hour; Ivan is a fool. He left home and comfort to cross the icy seas
+in search of wealth, and to gain happiness; but if he had only had
+eyes, he would have stopped at Mioure. There he saw a girl, lively as
+the heaven-fire in the north, good, generous, kind; and she was an old
+friend, and might have loved Ivan; but the man of Yakoutsk was blind,
+and told her of his passion for a selfish widow, and the Yakouta
+maiden never thought of Ivan but as a brother!"
+
+"What means Ivan?" asked Kolina, trembling with emotion.
+
+"Ivan has long meant, when he came to the yourte of Sakalar, to lay
+his wealth at his feet, and beg of his old friend to give him his
+child: but Ivan now fears that he may die, and wishes to know what
+would have been the answer of Kolina?"
+
+"But Maria Vorotinska?" urged the girl, who seemed dreaming.
+
+"Has long been forgotten. How could I not love my old playmate and
+friend! Kolina--Kolina, listen to Ivan! Forget his love for the widow
+of Yakoutsk, and Ivan will stay in the plain of Vchivaya and die."
+
+"Kolina is very proud," whispered the girl, sitting down on a log near
+the fire, and speaking in a low tone; "and Kolina thinks yet that the
+friend of her father has forgotten himself. But if he be not wild, if
+the sufferings of the journey have not made him say that which is not,
+Kolina would be very happy."
+
+"Be plain, girl of Mioure--maiden of the Yakouta tribe! and play not
+with the heart of a man. Can Kolina take Ivan as her husband?"
+
+A frank and happy reply gave the Yakoutsk merchant all the
+satisfaction he could wish; and then followed several hours of those
+sweet and delightful explanations which never end between young lovers
+when first they have acknowledged their mutual affection. They had
+hitherto concealed so much, that there was much to tell; and Ivan
+and Kolina, who for nearly three years had lived together, with a bar
+between their deep but concealed affection, seemed to have no end of
+words. Ivan had begun to find his feelings change from the very hour
+Sakalar's daughter volunteered to accompany him, but it was only in
+the cave of New Siberia that his heart had been completely won.
+
+So short, and quiet, and sweet were the hours, that the time of rest
+passed by without the thought of sleep. Suddenly, however, they were
+roused to a sense of their situation, and leaving their wearied and
+exhausted companions still asleep, they moved with doubt and dread to
+the water's side. Life was now doubly dear to both, and their fancy
+painted the coming forth of an empty net as the termination of all
+hope. But the net came heavily and slowly to land. It was full of
+fish. They were on the well-stocked Vchivaya. More than three hundred
+fish, small and great, were drawn on shore; and then they recast the
+net.
+
+"Up, man and beast!" thundered Ivan, as, after selecting two dozen of
+the finest, he abandoned the rest to the dogs.
+
+The animals, faint and weary, greedily seized on the food given them,
+while Sakalar and the Kolimsk men could scarcely believe their senses.
+The hot coals were at once brought into requisition, and the party
+were soon regaling themselves on a splendid meal of tea and broiled
+fish. I should alarm my readers did I record the quantities eaten. An
+hour later, every individual was a changed being, but most of all the
+lovers. Despite their want of rest, they looked fresher than any of
+the party. It was determined to camp at least twenty hours more in
+that spot; and the Kolimsk men declared that the river must be the
+Vchivaya, they could draw the seine all day, for the river was deep,
+its waters warmer than others, and its abundance of fish such as to
+border on the fabulous. They went accordingly down to the side of
+the stream, and then the happy Kolina gave free vent to her joy.
+She burst out into a song of her native land, and gave way to some
+demonstrations of delight, the result of her earlier education, that
+astonished Sakalar. But when he heard that during that dreadful night
+he had found a son, Sakalar himself almost lost his reason. The old
+man loved Ivan almost as much as his own child, and when he saw the
+youth in his yourte on his hunting trips, had formed some project of
+the kind now brought about; but the confessions of Ivan on his last
+visit to Mioure had driven all such thoughts away.
+
+"Art in earnest, Ivan?" said he, after a pause of some duration.
+
+"In earnest!" exclaimed Ivan, laughing; "why, I fancy the young men of
+Mioure will find me so, if they seek to question my right to Kolina!"
+
+Kolina smiled, and looked happy; and the old hunter heartily blessed
+his children, adding that the proudest, dearest hope of his heart was
+now within probable realization.
+
+The predictions of the Kolimsk men were realized. The river gave them
+as much fish as they needed for their journey home; and as now Sakalar
+knew his way, there was little fear for the future. An ample stock was
+piled on the sledges, the dogs had unlimited feeding for two days, and
+then away they sped toward an upper part of the river, which, being
+broad and shallow, was no doubt frozen on the surface. They found it
+as they expected, and even discovered that the river was gradually
+freezing all the way down. But little caring for this now, on they
+went, and after considerable fatigue and some delay, arrived at
+Kolimsk, to the utter astonishment of all the inhabitants, who had
+long given them up for lost.
+
+Great rejoicings took place. The friends of the three Kolimsk men
+gave a grand festival, in which the rum, and tobacco, and tea, which
+had been left at the place for payment for their journey, played
+a conspicuous part. Then, as it was necessary to remain here some
+time, while the ivory was brought from a deposit near the sea,
+Ivan and Kolina were married. Neither of them seemed to credit the
+circumstance, even when fast tied by the Russian church. It had come
+so suddenly, so unexpectedly on both, that their heads could not quite
+make the affair out. But they were married in right down earnest, and
+Kolina was a proud and happy woman. The enormous mass of ivory brought
+to Kolimsk excited the attention of a distinguished exile, who drew
+up a statement in Ivan's name, and prepared it for transmission to the
+White Czar, as the emperor is called in these parts.
+
+When summer came, the young couple, with Sakalar and a caravan of
+merchants, started for Yakoutsk, Ivan being by far the richest and
+most important member of the party. After a single day's halt at
+Mioure, on they went to the town, and made their triumphal entry in
+September. Ivan found Maria Vorotinska a wife and mother, and his
+vanity was not much wounded by the falsehood. The _ci-devant_ widow
+was a little astonished at Ivan's return, and particularly at his
+treasure of ivory: but she received his wife with politeness, a little
+tempered by her sense of her own superiority to a savage, as she
+designated Kolina to her friends in a whisper. But Kolina was so
+gentle, so pretty, so good, so cheerful, so happy, that she found her
+party at once, and the two ladies became rival leaders of the fashion.
+
+This lasted until the next year, when a messenger from the capital
+brought a letter to Ivan from the emperor himself, thanking him for
+his narrative, sending him a rich present, his warm approval, and the
+office of first civil magistrate in the city of Yakoutsk. This turned
+the scales wholly on one side, and Maria bowed low to Kolina. But
+Kolina had no feelings of the parvenu, and she was always a general
+favorite. Ivan accepted with pride his sovereign's favor, and by
+dint of assiduity, soon learned to be a useful magistrate. He always
+remained a good husband, a good father, and a good son, for he made
+the heart of old Sakalar glad. He never regretted his journey: he
+always declared he owed to it wealth and happiness, a high position in
+society, and an admirable wife. Great rejoicings took place many years
+after in Yakoutsk, at the marriage of the son of Maria, united to
+the daughter of Ivan, and from the first unto the last, none of the
+parties concerned ever had reason to mourn over the perilous journey
+in search of the Ivory Mine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For the information of the non-scientific, it may be necessary to
+mention that the ivory alluded to in the preceding tale, is derived
+from the tusks of the mammoth, or fossil elephant of the geologist.
+The remains of this gigantic quadruped are found all over the northern
+hemisphere, from the 40th to the 75th degree of latitude: but most
+abundantly in the region which lies between the mountains of Central
+Asia and the shores and islands of the Frozen Sea. So profusely do
+they exist in this region, that the tusks have for more than a century
+constituted an important article of traffic--furnishing a large
+proportion of the ivory required by the carver and turner. The remains
+lie imbedded in the upper tertiary clays and gravels; and these, by
+exposure to the river-currents, to the waves of the sea, and other
+erosive agencies, are frequently swept away during the thaws of
+summer, leaving tusks and bones in masses, and occasionally even
+entire skeletons, in a wonderful state of preservation. The most
+perfect specimen yet obtained, and from the study of which the
+zoologist has been enabled to arrive at an accurate knowledge of the
+structure and habits of the mammoth, is that discovered by a Tungusian
+fisherman, near the mouth of the river Lena, in the summer of 1799.
+
+Being in the habit of collecting tusks among the debris of the
+gravel-cliffs, (for it is generally at a considerable elevation in the
+cliffs and river banks that the remains occur,) he observed a strange
+shapeless mass projecting from an ice-bank some fifty or sixty feet
+above the river; during next summer's thaw he saw the same object,
+rather more disengaged from amongst the ice; in 1801 he could
+distinctly perceive the tusk and flank of an immense animal; and in
+1803, in consequence of an earlier and more powerful thaw, the huge
+carcase became entirely disengaged, and fell on the sandbank beneath.
+In the spring of the following year the fisherman cut off the tusks,
+which he sold for fifty rubles (L7, 10s.;) and two years afterward,
+our countryman, Mr. Adams, visited the spot, and gives the following
+account of the extraordinary phenomenon:
+
+"At this time I found the mammoth still in the same place, but
+altogether mutilated. The discoverer was contented with his profit
+for the tusks, and the Yakoutski of the neighborhood had cut off
+the flesh, with which they fed their dogs. During the scarcity, wild
+beasts, such as white bears, wolves, wolverines, and foxes, also
+fed upon it, and the traces of their footsteps were seen around. The
+skeleton, almost entirely cleared of its flesh, remained whole, with
+the exception of a foreleg. The head was covered with a dry skin;
+one of the ears, well preserved, was furnished with a tuft of hair.
+All these parts have necessarily been injured in transporting them a
+distance of 7,330 miles, (to the Imperial museum of St. Petersburgh,)
+but the eyes have been preserved, and the pupil of one can still be
+distinguished. The mammoth was a male, with a long mane on the neck.
+The tail and proboscis were not preserved. The skin, of which I
+possess three-fourths, is of a dark-gray color, covered with a reddish
+wool and black hairs: but the dampness of the spot where it had lain
+so long had in some degree destroyed the hair. The entire carcase,
+of which I collected the bones on the spot, was nine feet four inches
+high, and sixteen feet four inches long, without including the tusks,
+which measured nine feet six inches along the curve. The distance from
+the base or root of the tusk to the point is three feet seven inches.
+The two tusks together weighed three hundred and sixty pounds, English
+weight, and the head alone four hundred and fourteen pounds. The skin
+was of such weight that it required ten persons to transport it to
+the shore; and after having cleared the ground, upward of thirty-six
+pounds of hair were collected, which the white bears had trodden while
+devouring the flesh."
+
+Since then, other carcases of elephants have been discovered, in
+a greater or less degree of preservation; as also the remains of
+rhinoceroses, mastodons, and allied pachyderms--the mammoth more
+abundantly in the old world, the mastodon in the new. In every case
+these animals differ from existing species: are of more gigantic
+dimensions; and, judging from their natural coverings of thick-set
+curly-crisped wool and strong hair, upward of a foot in length, were
+fitted to live, if not in a boreal, at least in a coldly-temperate
+region. Indeed, there is proof positive of the then more milder
+climate of these regions in the discovery of pine and birch-trunks
+where no vegetation now flourishes; and further, in the fact that
+fragments of pine-leaves, birch-twigs, and other northern plants, have
+been detected between the grinders and within the stomachs of these
+animals. We have thus evidence, that at the close of the tertiary,
+and shortly after the commencement of the current epoch, the northern
+hemisphere enjoyed a much milder climate; that it was the abode of
+huge pachyderms now extinct; that a different distribution of sea
+and land prevailed; and that on a new distribution or sea and land,
+accompanied also by a different relative level, these animals died
+away, leaving their remains imbedded in the clays, gravels, and other
+alluvial deposits, where, under the antiseptic influence of an almost
+eternal frost, many of them have been preserved as entire as at the
+fatal moment they sank under the rigors of external conditions no
+longer fitted for their existence. It has been attempted by some to
+prove the adaptability of these animals to the present conditions
+of the northern hemisphere; but so untenable in every phase is this
+opinion, that it would be sheer waste of time and space to attempt its
+refutation. That they may have migrated northward and southward with
+the seasons is more than probable, though it has been stated that the
+remains diminish in size the farther north they are found; but that
+numerous herds of such huge animals should have existed in these
+regions at all, and that for thousands of years, presupposes an
+exuberant arboreal vegetation, and the necessary degree of climate for
+its growth and development. It has been mentioned that the mastodon
+and mammoth seem to have attained their meridian toward the close of
+the tertiary epoch, and that a few may have lived even in the current
+era; but it is more probable that the commencement of existing
+conditions was the proximate cause of their extinction, and that not
+a solitary specimen ever lived to be the contemporary of man.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[FROM FRASER'S MAGAZINE.]
+
+ENGLISH HEXAMETERS.
+
+BY WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR.
+
+ Askest thou if in my youth I have mounted, as others have mounted,
+ Galloping Hexameter, Pentameter cantering after,
+ English by dam and by sire; bit, bridle, and saddlery, English;
+ English the girths and the shoes; all English from snaffle to crupper;
+ Everything English around, excepting the tune of the jockey?
+ Latin and Greek, it is true, I have often attach'd to my phaeton
+ Early in life, and sometimes have I ordered them out in its evening,
+ Dusting the linings, and pleas'd to have found them unworn and untarnisht.
+ Idle! but Idleness looks never better than close upon sunset.
+ Seldom my goosequill, of goose from Germany, fatted in England,
+ (Frolicksome though I have been) have I tried on Hexameter, knowing
+ Latin and Greek are alone its languages. We have a measure
+ Fashion'd by Milton's own hand, a fuller, a deeper, a louder.
+ Germans may flounder at will over consonant, vowel, and liquid,
+ Liquid and vowel but one to a dozen of consonants, ending
+ Each with a verb at the tail, tail heavy as African ram's tail,
+ Spenser and Shakspeare had each his own harmony; each an enchanter
+ Wanting no aid from without. _Chevy Chase_ had delighted their fathers,
+ Though of a different strain from the song on the _Wrath of Achilles_.
+ Southey was fain to pour forth his exuberant stream over regions
+ Near and remote: his command was absolute; every subject,
+ Little or great, he controll'd; in language, variety, fancy,
+ Richer than all his compeers and wanton but once in dominion;
+ 'Twas when he left the full well that for ages had run by his homestead,
+ Pushing the brambles aside which encumber'd another up higher,
+ Letting his bucket go down, and hearing it bump in descending,
+ Grating against the loose stones 'til it came but half-full from the bottom.
+ Others abstain'd from the task. Scott wander'd at large over Scotland;
+ Reckless of Roman and Greek, he chanted the _Lay of the Minstrel_
+ Better than ever before any minstrel in chamber had chanted.
+ Never on mountain or wild hath echo so cheerfully sounded,
+ Never did monarch bestow such glorious meeds upon knighthood,
+ Never had monarch the power, liberality, justice, discretion.
+ Byron liked new-papered rooms, and pull'd down old wainscot of cedar;
+ Bright-color'd prints he preferr'd to the graver cartoons of a Raphael,
+ Sailor and Turk (with a sack,) to Eginate and Parthenon marbles,
+ Splendid the palace he rais'd--the gin-palace in Poesy's purlieus;
+ Soft the divan on the sides, with spittoons for the qualmish and queesy.
+ Wordsworth, well pleas'd with himself, cared little for modern or ancient.
+ His was the moor and the tarn, the recess in the mountain, the woodland
+ Scatter'd with trees far and wide, trees never too solemn or lofty,
+ Never entangled with plants overrunning the villager's foot-path.
+ Equable was he and plain, but wandering a little in wisdom,
+ Sometimes flying from blood and sometimes pouring it freely.
+ Yet he was English at heart. If his words were too many; if Fancy's
+ Furniture lookt rather scant in a whitewasht homely apartment;
+ If in his rural designs there is sameness and tameness; if often
+ Feebleness is there for breadth; if his pencil wants rounding and pointing;
+ Few of this age or the last stand out on the like elevation.
+ There is a sheepfold he rais'd which my memory loves to revisit,
+ Sheepfold whose wall shall endure when there is not a stone of the palace.
+ Still there are walking on earth many poets whom ages hereafter
+ Will be more willing to praise than they are to praise one another:
+ Some do I know, but I fear, as is meet, to recount or report them,
+ For, be whatever the name that is foremost, the next will run over,
+ Trampling and rolling in dust his excellent friend the precursor.
+ Peace be with all! but afar be ambition to follow the Roman,
+ Led by the German, uncomb'd, and jigging in dactyl and spondee,
+ Lumbering shapeless jackboots which nothing can polish or supple.
+ Much as old metres delight me, 'tis only where first they were nurtured,
+ In their own clime, their own speech: than pamper them here I would rather
+ Tie up my Pegasus tight to the scanty-fed rack of a sonnet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[FROM HOUSEHOLD WORDS.]
+
+A MIGHTIER HUNTER THAN NIMROD.
+
+A great deal has been said about the prowess of Nimrod, in connection
+with the chase, from the days of him of Babylon to those of the late
+Mr. Apperley of Shropshire; but we question whether, among all the
+sporting characters mentioned in ancient or modern story, there ever
+was so mighty a hunter as the gentleman whose sporting calendar
+now lies before us.[4] The annals of the chase, so far as we are
+acquainted with them, supply no such instances of familiar intimacy
+with lions, elephants, hippopotami, rhinoceroses, serpents,
+crocodiles, and other furious animals, with which the human species
+in general is not very forward in cultivating an acquaintance.
+
+[Footnote 4: A Hunter's Life in South Africa. By R. Gordon Cumming,
+Esq., of Altyre.]
+
+Mr. Cumming had exhausted the deer-forests of his native Scotland;
+he had sighed for the rolling prairies and rocky mountains of the Far
+West, and was tied down to military routine as a mounted rifleman in
+the Cape Colony; when he determined to resign his commission into the
+hands of Government, and himself to the delights of hunting amid the
+untrodden plains and forests of South Africa. Having provided himself
+with wagons to travel and live in, with bullocks to draw them, and
+with a host of attendants; a sufficiency of arms, horses, dogs, and
+ammunition, he set out from Graham's-Town in October, 1843. From that
+period his hunting adventures extended over five years, during which
+time he penetrated from various points and in various directions from
+his starting-place in lat. 33 down to lat. 20, and passed through
+districts upon which no European foot ever before trod; regions where
+the wildest of wild animals abound--nothing less serving Mr. Cumming's
+ardent purpose.
+
+A lion story in the early part of his book will introduce this
+fearless hunter-author to our readers better than the most elaborate
+dissection of his character. He is approaching Colesberg, the
+northernmost military station belonging to the Cape Colony. He is on
+a trusty steed, which he calls also "Colesberg." Two of his attendants
+on horseback are with him. "Suddenly," says the author, "I observed
+a number of vultures seated on the plain about a quarter of a mile
+ahead of us, and close beside them stood a huge lioness, consuming
+a blesblok which she had killed. She was assisted in her repast by
+about a dozen jackals, which were feasting along with her in the most
+friendly and confidential manner. Directing my followers' attention to
+the spot, I remarked, 'I see the lion;' to which they replied, 'Whar?
+whar? Yah! Almagtig! dat is he;' and instantly reining in their steeds
+and wheeling about, they pressed their heels to their horses' sides,
+and were preparing to betake themselves to flight. I asked them what
+they were going to do? To which they answered, 'We have not yet placed
+caps on our rifles.' This was true; but while this short conversation
+was passing, the lioness had observed us. Raising her full round
+face, she overhauled us for a few seconds, and then set off at a smart
+canter toward a range of mountains some miles to the northward; the
+whole troop of jackals also started off in another direction; there
+was therefore no time to think of caps. The first move was to bring
+her to bay, and not a second was to be lost. Spurring my good and
+lively steed, and shouting to my men to follow, I flew across the
+plain, and, being fortunately mounted on Colesberg, the flower of
+my stud, I gained upon her at every stride. This was to me a joyful
+moment, and I at once made up my mind that she or I must die. The
+lioness soon after suddenly pulled up, and sat on her haunches like
+a dog, with her back toward me, not even deigning to look round. She
+then appeared to say to herself, 'Does this fellow know who he is
+after?' Having thus sat for half a minute, as if involved in thought,
+she sprang to her feet, and facing about, stood looking at me for a
+few seconds, moving her tail slowly from side to side, showing her
+teeth and growling fiercely. She next made a short run forward, making
+a loud, rumbling noise like thunder. This she did to intimidate
+me; but finding that I did not flinch an inch, nor seem to heed her
+hostile demonstrations, she quietly stretched out her massive arms,
+and lay down on the grass. My Hottentots now coming up, we all three
+dismounted, and drawing our rifles from their holsters, we looked to
+see if the powder was up in the nipples, and put on our caps. While
+this was doing, the lioness sat up, and showed evident symptoms of
+uneasiness. She looked first at us, and then behind her, as if to see
+if the coast were clear; after which she made a short run toward us,
+uttering her deep-drawn murderous growls. Having secured the three
+horses to one another by their rheims, we led them on as if we
+intended to pass her, in the hope of obtaining a broadside; but this
+she carefully avoided to expose, presenting only her full front. I had
+given Stofolus my Moore rifle, with orders to shoot her if she should
+spring upon me, but on no account to fire before me. Kleinboy was to
+stand ready to hand me my Purdey rifle, in case the two-grooved Dixon
+should not prove sufficient. My men as yet had been steady, but
+they were in a precious stew, their faces having assumed a ghastly
+paleness; and I had a painful feeling that I could place no reliance
+on them. Now, then, for it, neck or nothing! She is within sixty yards
+of us, and she keeps advancing. We turned the horses' tails to her.
+I knelt on one side, and taking a steady aim at her breast, let fly.
+The ball cracked loudly on her tawny hide, and crippled her in the
+shoulder; upon which she charged with an appalling roar, and in
+the twinkling of an eye she was in the midst of us. At this moment
+Stofolus'a rifle exploded in his hand, and Kleinboy, whom I had
+ordered to stand ready by me, danced about like a duck in a gale of
+wind. The lioness sprang upon Colesberg, and fearfully lacerated his
+ribs and haunches with her horrid teeth and claws. The worst wound was
+on his haunch, which exhibited a sickening, yawning gash, more than
+twelve inches long, almost laying bare the very bone. I was very
+cool and steady, and did not feel in the least degree nervous, having
+fortunately great confidence in my own shooting; but I must confess,
+when the whole affair was over, I felt that it was a very awful
+situation, and attended with extreme peril, as I had no friend with
+me on whom I could rely. When the lioness sprang on Colesberg, I
+stood out from the horses, ready with my second barrel for the first
+chance she should give me of a clear shot. This she quickly did; for,
+seemingly satisfied with the revenge she had now taken, she quitted
+Colesberg, and slewing her tail to one side, trotted sulkily past
+within a few paces of me, taking one step to the left. I pitched my
+rifle to my shoulder, and in another second the lioness was stretched
+on the plain a lifeless corpse."
+
+This is, however, but a harmless adventure compared with a subsequent
+escapade--not with one, but with six lions. It was the hunter's habit
+to lay wait near the drinking-places of these animals, concealed in a
+hole dug for the purpose. In such a place on the occasion in question,
+Mr. Cumming--having left one of three rhinoceroses he had previously
+killed as a bait--ensconsed himself. Such a savage festival as that
+which introduced the adventure, has never before, we believe, been
+introduced through the medium of the softest English and the finest
+hot-pressed paper to the notice of the civilized public. "Soon after
+twilight," the author relates, "I went down to my hole with Kleinboy
+and two natives, who lay concealed in another hole, with Wolf and
+Boxer ready to slip, in the event of wounding a lion. On reaching
+the water I looked toward the carcase of the rhinoceros, and, to
+my astonishment, I beheld the ground alive with large creatures,
+as though a troop of zebras were approaching the fountain to drink.
+Kleinboy remarked to me that a troop of zebras were standing on the
+height. I answered, 'Yes,' but I knew very well that zebras would not
+be capering around the carcase of a rhinoceros. I quickly arranged my
+blankets, pillow, and guns in the hole, and then lay down to feast my
+eyes on the interesting sight before me. It was bright moonlight, as
+clear as I need wish, and within one night of being full moon. There
+were six large lions, about twelve or fifteen hyenas, and from twenty
+to thirty jackals, feasting on and around the carcases of the three
+rhinoceroses. The lions feasted peacefully, but the hyenas and jackals
+fought over every mouthful, and chased one another round and round
+the carcases, growling, laughing, screeching, chattering, and howling
+without any intermission. The hyenas did not seem afraid of the lions,
+although they always gave way before them; for I observed that they
+followed them in the most disrespectful manner, and stood laughing,
+one or two on either side, when any lions came after their comrades to
+examine pieces of skin or bones which they were dragging away. I had
+lain watching this banquet for about three hours, in the strong hope
+that, when the lions had feasted, they would come and drink. Two black
+and two white rhinoceroses had made their appearance, but, scared by
+the smell of the blood, they had made off. At length the lions seemed
+satisfied. They all walked about with their heads up, and seemed to
+be thinking about the water; and in two minutes one of them turned his
+face toward me, and came on; he was immediately followed by a second
+lion, and in half a minute by the remaining four. It was a decided
+and general move, they were all coming to drink right bang in my face,
+within fifteen yards of me."
+
+The hunters were presently discovered. "An old lioness, who seemed to
+take the lead, had detected me, and, with her head high and her eyes
+fixed full upon me she was coming slowly round the corner of the
+little vley to cultivate further my acquaintance! This unfortunate
+coincidence put a stop at once to all further contemplation. I
+thought; in my haste, that it was perhaps most prudent to shoot
+this lioness, especially as none of the others had noticed me. I
+accordingly moved my arm and covered her; she saw me move and halted,
+exposing a full broadside. I fired; the ball entered one shoulder, and
+passed out behind the other. She bounded forward with repeated growls,
+and was followed by her five comrades all enveloped in a cloud of
+dust; nor did they atop until they had reached the cover behind
+me, except one old gentleman, who halted and looked back for a few
+seconds, when I fired, but the ball went high. I listened anxiously
+for some sound to denote the approaching end of the lioness; nor
+listened in vain. I heard her growling and stationary, as if dying. In
+one minute her comrades crossed the vley a little below me, and made
+toward the rhinoceros. I then slipped Wolf and Boxer on her scent,
+and, following them into the cover, I found her lying dead."
+
+Mr. Cumming's adventures with elephants are no less thrilling. He had
+selected for the aim of his murderous rifle two huge female elephants
+from a herd. "Two of the troop had walked slowly past at about sixty
+yards, and the one which I had selected was feeding with two others
+on a thorny tree before me. My hand was now as steady as the rock on
+which it rested, so, taking a deliberate aim, I let fly at her head, a
+little behind the eye. She got it hard and sharp, just where I aimed,
+but it did not seem to affect her much. Uttering a loud cry, she
+wheeled about, when I gave her the second ball, close behind the
+shoulder. All the elephants uttered a strange rumbling noise, and made
+off in a line to the northward at a brisk ambling pace, their huge
+fanlike ears flapping in the ratio of their speed. I did not wait to
+load, but ran back to the hillock to obtain a view. On gaining its
+summit, the guides pointed out the elephants; they were standing in
+a grove of shady trees, but the wounded one was some distance behind
+with another elephant, doubtless its particular friend, who was
+endeavoring to assist it. These elephants had probably never before
+heard the report of a gun; and having neither seen nor smelt me, they
+were unaware of the presence of man, and did not seem inclined to go
+any further. Presently my men hove in sight, bringing the dogs; and
+when these came up, I waited some time before commencing the attack,
+that the dogs and horses might recover their wind. We then rode slowly
+toward the elephants, and had advanced within two hundred yards of
+them, when, the ground being open, they observed us, and made off
+in an easterly direction; but the wounded one immediately dropped
+astern, and next moment she was surrounded by the dogs, which, barking
+angrily, seemed to engross her attention. Having placed myself between
+her and the retreating troop, I dismounted to fire, within forty
+yards of her, in open ground. Colesberg was extremely afraid of the
+elephants, and gave me much trouble, jerking my arm when I tried to
+fire. At length I let fly; but, on endeavoring to regain my saddle.
+Colesberg declined to allow me to mount; and when I tried to lead him,
+and run for it, he only backed toward the wounded elephant. At this
+moment I heard another elephant close behind: and on looking about I
+beheld the 'friend,' with uplifted trunk, charging down upon me at top
+speed, shrilly trumpeting, and following an old black pointer named
+Schwart, that was perfectly deaf, and trotted along before the enraged
+elephant quite unaware of what was behind him. I felt certain that
+she would have either me or my horse. I, however, determined not to
+relinquish my steed, but to hold on by the bridle. My men, who of
+course kept at a safe distance, stood aghast with their mouths open,
+and for a few seconds my position was certainly not an enviable
+one. Fortunately, however, the dogs took off the attention of the
+elephants; and, just us they were upon me I managed to spring into the
+saddle, where I was safe. As I turned my back to mount, the elephants
+were so very near, that I really expected to feel one of their
+trunks lay hold of me. I rode up to Kleinboy for my double-barrelled
+two-grooved rifle; he and Isaac were pale and almost speechless with
+fright. Returning to the charge, I was soon once more alongside,
+and, firing from the saddle, I sent another brace of bullets into the
+wounded elephant. Colesberg was extremely unsteady, and destroyed the
+correctness of my aim. The 'friend' now seemed resolved to do some
+mischief, and charged me furiously, pursuing me to a distance of
+several hundred yards. I therefore deemed it proper to give her
+a gentle hint to act less officiously, and so, having loaded, I
+approached within thirty yards, and gave it her sharp, right and left,
+behind the shoulder; upon which she at once made off with drooping
+trunk, evidently with a mortal wound. Two more shots finished her; on
+receiving them she tossed her trunk up and down two or three times,
+and falling on her broadside against a thorny tree, which yielded like
+grass before her enormous weight, she uttered a deep hoarse cry and
+expired."
+
+Mr. Cumming's exploits in the water are no less exciting than his land
+adventures. Here is an account of his victory over a hippopotamus, on
+the banks of the Limpopo river, near the northernmost extremity of his
+journeyings.
+
+"There were four of them, three cows and an old bull; they stood in
+the middle of the river, and though alarmed, did not appear aware of
+the extent of the impending danger. I took the sea-cow next me, and
+with my first ball I gave her a mortal wound, knocking loose a great
+plate on the top of her skull. She at once commenced plunging round
+and round, and then occasionally remained still, sitting for a few
+minutes on the same spot. On hearing the report of my rifle two of
+the others took up stream, and the fourth dashed down the river; they
+trotted along, like oxen, at a smart pace as long as the water was
+shallow. I was now in a state of very great anxiety about my wounded
+sea-cow, for I feared that she would get down into deep water, and
+be lost like the last one; her struggles were still carrying her
+down stream, and the water was becoming deeper. To settle the matter
+I accordingly fired a second shot from the bank, which, entering
+the roof of her skull, passed out through her eye; she then, kept
+continually splashing round and round in a circle in the middle of the
+river. I had great fears of the crocodiles, and I did not know that
+the sea-cow might not attack me. My anxiety to secure her, however,
+overcame all hesitation; so, divesting myself of my leathers, and
+armed with a sharp knife. I dashed into the water, which at first took
+me up to my arm-pits, but in the middle was shallower. As I approached
+Behemoth her eye looked very wicked. I halted for a moment, ready to
+dive under the water if she attacked me, but she was stunned, and did
+not know what she was doing; so, running in upon her, and seizing
+her short tail, I attempted to incline her course to land. It was
+extraordinary what enormous strength she still had in the water. I
+could not guide her in the slightest, and she continued to splash, and
+plunge, and blow, and make her circular course, carrying me along with
+her as if I was a fly on her tail. Finding her tail gave me but a poor
+hold, as the only means of securing my prey, I took out my knife, and
+cutting two deep parallel incisions through the skin on her rump, and
+lifting this skin from the flesh, so that I could get in my two hands,
+I made use of this as a handle; and after some desperate hard work,
+sometimes pushing and sometimes pulling, the sea-cow continuing her
+circular course all the time and I holding on at her rump like grim
+Death, eventually I succeeded in bringing this gigantic and most
+powerful animal to the bank. Here the Bushman, quickly brought me a
+stout buffalo-rheim from my horse's neck, which I passed through the
+opening in the thick skin, and moored Behemoth to a tree. I then took
+my rifle, and sent a ball through the center of her head, and she was
+numbered with the dead." There is nothing in "Waterton's Wanderings,"
+or in the "Adventures of Baron Munchausen" more startling than this
+"Waltz with a Hippopotamus!"
+
+In the all-wise disposition of events, it is perhaps ordained that
+wild animals should be subdued by man to his use at the expense
+of such tortures as those described in the work before us. Mere
+amusement, therefore, is too light a motive for dealing such wounds
+and death Mr. Cumming owns to; but he had other motives,--besides a
+considerable profit he has reaped in trophies, ivory, fur, &c., he has
+made in his book some valuable contributions to the natural history of
+the animals he wounded and slew.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM GRAHAM'S MAGAZINE FOR AUGUST
+
+MANUELA.
+
+A BALLAD OF CALIFORNIA.
+
+BY BAYARD TAYLOR.
+
+ From the doorway, Manuela, in the sheeny April morn,
+ Southward looks, along the valley, over leagues of gleaming corn;
+ Where the mountain's misty rampart like the wall of Eden towers,
+ And the isles of oak are sleeping on a painted sea of flowers.
+ All the air is full of music, for the winter rains are o'er,
+ And the noisy magpies chatter from the budding sycamore;
+ Blithely frisk unnumbered squirrels, over all the grassy slope;
+ Where the airy summits brighten, nimbly leaps the antelope.
+ Gentle eyes of Manuela! tell me wherefore do ye rest
+ On the oaks' enchanted islands and the flowery ocean's breast?
+ Tell me wherefore down the valley, ye have traced the highway's mark
+ Far beyond the belts of timber, to the mountain-shadows dark?
+ Ah, the fragrant bay may blossom, and the sprouting verdure shine
+ With the tears of amber dropping from the tassels of the pine.
+ And the morning's breath of balsam lightly brush her sunny cheek--
+ Little recketh Manuela of the tales of Spring they speak.
+ When the Summer's burning solstice on the mountain-harvests glowed,
+ She had watched a gallant horseman riding down the valley road;
+ Many times she saw him turning, looking back with parting thrills,
+ Till amid her tears she lost him, in the shadow of the hills.
+ Ere the cloudless moons were over, he had passed the Desert's sand.
+ Crossed the rushing Colorada and the dark Apache Land,
+ And his laden mules were driven, when the time of rains began.
+ With the traders of Chihuaha, to the Fair of San Juan.
+ Therefore watches Manuela--therefore lightly doth she start,
+ When the sound of distant footsteps seems the beating of her heart;
+ Not a wind the green oak rustles or the redwood branches stirs,
+ But she hears the silver jingle of his ringing bit and spurs.
+ Often, out the hazy distance, come the horsemen, day by day,
+ But they come not as Bernardo--she can see it, far away;
+ Well she knows the airy gallop of his mettled _alazan_,[5]
+ Light as any antelope upon the Hills of Gavilan.
+ She would know him mid a thousand, by his free and gallant air;
+ By the featly-knit sarape,[6] such as wealthy traders wear;
+ By his broidered calzoneros[7] and his saddle, gaily spread,
+ With its cantle rimmed with silver, and its horn a lion's head.
+ None like he the light riata[8] on the maddened bull can throw;
+ None amid the mountain-canons, track like he the stealthy doe;
+ And at all the Mission festals, few indeed the revelers are
+ Who can dance with him the jota, touch with him the gay guitar.
+ He has said to Manuela, and the echoes linger still
+ In the cloisters of her bosom, with a secret, tender thrill,
+ When the hay again has blossomed, and the valley stands in corn,
+ Shall the bells of Santa Clara usher in the wedding morn.
+ He has pictured the procession, all in holyday attire,
+ And the laugh and look of gladness, when they see the distant spire;
+ Then their love shall kindle newly, and the world be doubly fair,
+ In the cool delicious crystal of the summer morning air.
+ Tender eyes of Manuela! what has dimmed your lustrous beam?
+ 'Tis a tear that falls to glitter on the casket of her dream.
+ Ah, the eye of love must brighten, if its watches would be true,
+ For the star is falsely mirrored in the rose's drop of dew!
+ But her eager eyes rekindle, and her breathless bosom stills,
+ As she sees a horseman moving in the shadow of the hills;
+ Now in love and fond thanksgiving they may loose their pearly tides--
+ 'Tis the alazan that gallops, 'tis Bernardo's self that rides!
+
+[Footnote 5: In California horses are named according to their color.
+An _alazan_ is a sorrel--a color generally preferred, as denoting
+speed and mettle.]
+
+[Footnote 6: The sarape is a knit blanket of many gay colors, worn
+over the shoulders by an opening in the center, through which the head
+is thrust.]
+
+[Footnote 7: Calzoneros are trowsers, generally made of blue cloth
+or velvet, richly embroidered, and worn over an under pair of white
+linen. They are slashed up the outside of each leg, for greater
+convenience in riding, and studded with rows of silver buttons.]
+
+[Footnote 8: The lariat, or riata, as it is indifferently called in
+California and Mexico, is precisely the same as the lasso of South
+America.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FROM FRASER'S MAGAZINE FOR JULY.
+
+LEDRU ROLLIN.
+
+Ledru Rollin is now in his forty-fourth or forty-fifth year,
+having been born in 1806 or 1807. He is the grandson of the famous
+_Prestidigateur_, or Conjurer Comus, who, about four or five-and-forty
+years ago, was in the acme of his fame. During the Consulate, and a
+considerable portion of the Empire, Comus traveled from one department
+of France to the other, and is even known to have extended his
+journeys beyond the Rhine and the Moselle on one side, and beyond the
+Rhone and Garonne on the other. Of all the conjurers of his day he was
+the most famous and the most successful, always, of course, excepting
+that Corsican conjurer who ruled for so many years the destinies
+of France. From those who have seen that famous trickster, we
+have learned that the Charleses, the Alexanders, even the Robert
+Houdins, were children compared with the magical wonder-worker of
+the past generation. The fame of Comus was enormous, and his gains
+proportionate; and when he had shuffled off this mortal coil it
+was found he had left to his descendants a very ample--indeed, for
+France, a very large fortune. Of the descendants in a right line, his
+grandson, Ledru Rollin, was his favorite, and to him the old man left
+the bulk of his fortune, which, during the minority of Ledru Rollin,
+grew to a sum amounting to nearly, if not fully, L4,000 per annum.
+
+The scholastic education of the young man who was to inherit this
+considerable fortune, was nearly completed during the reign of
+Louis XVIII., and shortly after Charles X. ascended the throne _il
+commencait a faire sur droit_, as they phrase it in the _pays Latin_.
+Neither during the reign of Louis XVIII., nor indeed now, unless in
+the exact and physical sciences, does Paris afford a very solid and
+substantial education. Though the Roman poets and historians are
+tolerably well studied and taught, yet little attention is paid to
+Greek literature. The physical and exact sciences are unquestionably
+admirably taught at the Polytechnique and other schools; but neither
+at the College of St. Barbe, nor of Henry IV., can a pupil be so well
+grounded in the rudiments and humanities as in our grammar and public
+schools. A studious, pains-taking, and docile youth, will, no doubt,
+learn a great deal, no matter where he has been placed in pupilage;
+but we have heard from a contemporary of M. Rollin, that he was not
+particularly distinguished either for his industry or his docility in
+early life. The earliest days of the reign of Charles X. saw M. Ledru
+Rollin an _etudiant en droit_ in Paris. Though the schools of law
+had been re-established during the Consulate pretty much after the
+fashion in which they existed in the time of Louis the XIV., yet the
+application of the _alumni_ was fitful and desultory, and perhaps
+there were no two classes in France, at the commencement of 1825. who
+were more imbued with the Voltarian philosophy and the doctrines and
+principles of Rousseau, than the _eleves_ of the schools of law and
+medicine.
+
+Under a king so sceptical and voluptuous, so much of a _philosophie_
+and _phyrroneste_, as Louis XVIII., such tendencies were likely to
+spread themselves through all ranks of society--to permeate from
+the very highest to the very lowest classes: and not all the lately
+acquired asceticism of the monarch, his successor, nor all the
+efforts of the Jesuits could restrain or control the tendencies of
+the _etudiants en droit_. What the law-students were antecedently and
+subsequent to 1825, we know from the _Physiologie de l'Homme de Loi_;
+and it is not to be supposed that M. Ledru Rollin, with more ample
+pecuniary means at command, very much differed from his fellows.
+After undergoing a three years' course of study, M. Rollin obtained
+a diploma as a _licencie en droit_, and commenced his career as
+_stagiare_ somewhere about the end of 1826 or the beginning of 1827.
+Toward the close of 1829, or in the first months of 1830, he was, we
+believe, placed on the roll of advocates; so that he was called to
+the bar, or, as they say in France, received an advocate, in his
+twenty-second or twenty-third year.
+
+The first years of an advocate, even in France, are generally passed
+in as enforced an idleness as in England. Clients come not to consult
+the greenhorn of the last term; nor does any _avoue_ among our
+neighbors, any more than any attorney among ourselves, fancy that an
+old head is to be found on young shoulders. The years 1830 and 1831
+were not marked by any oratorical effort of the author of the _Decline
+of England_; nor was it till 1832 that, being then one of the youngest
+of the bar of Paris, he prepared and signed an opinion against the
+placing of Paris in a state of siege consequent on the insurrections
+of June. Two years after he prepared a memoir; or _factum_, on
+the affair of the Rue Transonain, and defended Dupoty, accused
+of _complicite morale_, a monstrous doctrine invented by the
+Attorney-General Hebert. From 1834 to 1841 he appeared as counsel in
+nearly all the cases of _emeute_ or conspiracy where the individuals
+prosecuted were Republicans, or _quasi_-Republicans. Meanwhile, he
+had become the proprietor and _redacteur en chef_ of the _Reforme_
+newspaper, a political journal of an ultra-Liberal--indeed of a
+Republican--complexion, which was then called of extreme opinions, as
+he had previously been editor of a legal newspaper called _Journal
+du Palais_. _La Reforme_ had been originally conducted by Godefroy
+Cavaignac, the brother of the general, who continued editor till the
+period of the fatal illness which preceded his death. The defense
+of Dupoty, tried and sentenced under the ministry of Thiers to five
+years' imprisonment, as a regicide, because a letter was found open
+in the letter-box of the paper of which he was editor, addressed to
+him by a man said to be implicated in the conspiracy of Quenisset,
+naturally brought M. Rollin into contact with many of the writers in
+_La Reforme_; and these persons, among others Guinard Arago, Etienne
+Arago, and Flocon, induced him to embark some portion of his fortune
+in the paper. From one step he was led on to another, and ultimately
+became one of the chief--indeed, if not the chief proprietor. The
+speculation was far from successful in a pecuniary sense, but M.
+Rollin, in furtherance of his opinions, continued for some years to
+disburse considerable sums in the support of the journal. By this he
+no doubt increased his popularity and his credit with the Republican
+party, but it cannot be denied that he very materially injured his
+private fortune. In the earlier portion of his career, M. Rollin was,
+it is known, not indisposed to seek a seat in the Chamber, under the
+auspices of M. Barrot, but subsequently to his connection with the
+_Reforme_, he had himself become thoroughly known to the extreme party
+in the departments, and on the death of Gamier Pages the elder, was
+elected in 1841 for Le Mans, in La Sarthe.
+
+In addressing the electors, after his return, M. Rollin delivered
+a speech much more Republican than Monarchical. For this he was
+sentenced to four months' imprisonment, but the sentence was appealed
+against and annulled on a technical ground, and the honorable member
+was ultimately acquitted by the Cour d'Assizes of Angers.
+
+The parliamentary _debut_ of M. Rollin took place in 1842. His first
+speech was delivered on the subject of the secret-service money.
+The elocution was easy and flowing, the manner oratorical, the style
+somewhat turgid and bombastic. But in the course of the session M.
+Rollin improved, and his discourse on the modification of the criminal
+law, on other legal subjects, and on railways, were more sober
+specimens of style. In 1843 and 1844 M. Rollin frequently spoke; but
+though his speeches were a good deal talked of outside the walls of
+the Chamber, they produced little effect within it. Nevertheless,
+it was plain to every candid observer that he possessed many of the
+requisites of the orator--a good voice, a copious flow of words,
+considerable energy and enthusiasm, a sanguine temperament and jovial
+and generous disposition. In the sessions of 1845-46, M. Rollin took
+a still more prominent part. His purse, his house in the Rue Tournon,
+his counsels and advice, were all placed at the service of the
+men of the movement; and by the beginning of 1847 he seemed to be
+acknowledged by the extreme party as its most conspicuous and popular
+member. Such indeed was his position when the electoral reform
+banquets, on a large scale, began to take place in the autumn of 1847.
+These banquets, promoted and forwarded by the principal members of the
+opposition to serve the cause of electoral reform, were looked on
+by M. Rollin and his friends in another light. While Odillon Barrot,
+Duvergier d'Haurunne, and others, sought by means of them to produce
+an enlarged constituency, the member for Sarthe looked not merely to
+functional, but to organic reform--not merely to an enlargement of
+the constituency, but to a change in the form of the government. The
+desire of Barrot was _a la verite a la sincerite des institutions
+conquises en Juillet_ 1830; whereas the desire of Rollin was, _a
+l'amelioration des classes laborieuses_; the one was willing to go
+on with the dynasty of Louis Philippe and the Constitution of July
+improved by diffusion and extension of the franchise, the other
+looked to a democratic and social republic. The result is now known.
+It is not here our purpose to go over the events of the Revolution
+of February 1848, but we may be permitted to observe, that the
+combinations by which that event was effected were ramified and
+extensive, and were long silently and secretly in motion.
+
+The personal history of M. Rollin, since February 1848, is well-known
+and patent to all the world. He was the _ame damnee_ of the
+Provisional Government--the man whose extreme opinions, intemperate
+circulars, and vehement patronage of persons professing the political
+creed of Robespierre--indisposed all moderate men to rally around the
+new system. It was in covering Ledru Rollin with the shield of his
+popularity that Lamartine lost his own, and that he ceased to be the
+political idol of a people of whom he must ever be regarded as one
+of the literary glories and illustrations. On the dissolution of
+the Provisional Government, Ledru Rollin constituted himself one of
+the leaders of the movement party. In ready powers of speech and in
+popularity no man stood higher; but he did not possess the power of
+restraining his followers or of holding them in hand, and the result
+was, that instead of being their leader he became their instrument.
+Fond of applause, ambitious of distinction, timid by nature, destitute
+of pluck, and of that rarer virtue moral courage, Ledru Rollin,
+to avoid the imputation of faint-heartedness, put himself in the
+foreground, but the measures of his followers being ill-taken, the
+plot in which he was mixed up egregiously failed, and he is now in
+consequence an exile in England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GENERAL GARIBALDI.
+
+MR. FILIPANTE gives the following notice of this Italian revolutionary
+leader in a communication to the _Evening Post_. "His exertions in
+behalf of the liberal movement in Italy have been indefatigable. As
+active as he was courageous, he was among the first to take up arms
+against Austrian tyranny, and the last to lay them down. Even when the
+triumvirate at Rome had been overthrown, and the most ardent spirits
+despaired of the republic, Garibaldi and his noble band of soldiers
+refused to yield; they maintained a vigorous resistance to the last,
+and only quitted the ground when the cause was so far gone that their
+own success would have been of no general advantage.
+
+"The General is about forty years of age. He was in early life an
+officer in the Sardinian service, but, engaging in an unsuccessful
+revolt against the government of Charles Albert, he was compelled to
+leave his native land. He fled to Montevideo, where he fought with
+distinction in the wars against Rosas. At the breaking out of the late
+revolution he returned. His military capacities being well known, he
+was entrusted with a command; and throughout the war his services were
+most efficient. He defeated the allied troops of Austria, France,
+and Naples, in several battles; his name, in fact, became a terror,
+and when the republic fell, and he was compelled to retire to the
+Appenines, the invaders felt that his return would be more formidable
+than any other event.
+
+"From Italy he went to Morocco, where he has since lived. But his
+friends, desiring that his great energies should be actively employed,
+have offered him the command of a merchant ship, which he has
+accepted. He will, therefore, hereafter be engaged in the peaceful
+pursuits of commerce, unless his country should again require his
+exertions."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CRIME, IN ENGLAND AND FRANCE.
+
+In recent discussions of the effects of education upon morals, the
+relative conditions of Great Britain and France in this respect
+have often been referred to. The following paragraph shows that the
+statistics in the case have not been well understood:
+
+"In a recent sitting of the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences,
+M. Leon Faucher, the representative, read a paper on the state of
+crime in England; and some of the journals have taken advantage
+of this to institute a comparison with returns of the criminality
+of France, recently published by the Government--the result being
+anything but flattering to England. But M. Faucher, the Academy, the
+newspapers, and almost everybody else in France, seems to be entirely
+ignorant that it is impossible to institute a comparison between the
+amount of crime in England and the amount of crime in France, inasmuch
+as crimes are not the same in both countries. Thus, for example, it
+is a felony in England to steal a pair of shoes, the offender is sent
+before the Court of Assize, and his offense counts in the official
+returns as a "crime;" in France, on the contrary, a petty theft is
+considered a _delit_, or simple offense, is punished by a police
+magistrate, and figures in the returns as an "offense." With
+respect to murders, too, the English have only two general names for
+killing--murder or manslaughter--but the French have nearly a dozen
+categories of killing, of which what the English call murder forms
+only one. It is the same, in short, with almost every species of
+crime."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The International Weekly Miscellany,
+Vol. 1, No. 7, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY ***
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