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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13797 ***
+
+INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY MISCELLANY
+
+Of Literature, Art, and Science.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Vol. I. NEW YORK, AUGUST 26, 1850. No. 9.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+NUMISMATIC ARCHÆOLOGY.
+
+A magnificent work[1] upon this subject has just been completed in
+Paris, where it was commenced fifteen years ago. It was begun under
+the auspices of M. Paul Delaroche and M.C. Lenormand, member of the
+Institute, and well known already as one of the first authorities in
+the numismatic branch of archæology. Some faint idea of the greatness
+of the task may be given by stating that it embraces the whole range
+of art, from the regal coins of Syracuse and of the Ptolemies, down to
+those of our day; that such a stupendous scheme should ever have been
+carried into execution is not solely due to the admirable ease and
+fidelity, with which the "Collas machine" renders the smallest and the
+largest gems of the antique: but to him who first felt, appreciated,
+and afterward promoted its capabilities in this labor of love, M.A.
+Lachevardiere. Comparisons and contrasts, which are the life of art,
+though generally confined to the mental vision, are not the least of
+the recommendations of this vast work. For the first time have the
+minor treasures of each country been brought together, and not the
+least conspicuous portion are those from the British Museum and the
+Bank of England.
+
+[Footnote 1: Trésor de Numismatique et de Glyptique; ou, Recueil
+Général de Médailles, Monnaies, Pierres Gravées, Sceaux, Bas-reliefs,
+Ornements, &c. Paris, 1850.]
+
+Whether we consider the selection of these monumental relics, the
+explanatory letterpress, or the engravings which reproduce them, we
+are struck by the admirable taste, science, and fidelity with which
+the largest as well as the smallest gems have each and every one been
+made to tally in size with the originals.
+
+The collection of the "Trésor de Numismatique et Glyptique,"
+consisting of twenty volumes in folio, and containing a thousand
+engraved plates in folio, reproduces upward of 15,000 specimens, and
+is divided into three classes--1st. The coins, medals, cameos, &c.
+of antiquity; 2d. Those of the middle ages; lastly, those of modern
+times. The details of this immense mass of artistic wealth would be
+endless; but these three classes seem to be arranged according to the
+latest classification of numismatists.
+
+In the first class may be noticed--1. The regal coins of Greece,
+which contains, beside the portraits of the Greek Kings, to be found
+in Visconti's "Iconographie," copied from medals and engraved gems,
+all the coins bearing the Greek name of either a king, a prince, or
+a tyrant, and every variety of these types, whether they bear the
+effigy of a prince, or only reproduce his name. To the medals of each
+sovereign are joined the most authentic and celebrated engraved gems
+of European cabinets. Next come the series of portraits of the Roman
+emperors and their families, with all the important varieties of Roman
+numismatics, amongst which will be found the most celebrated coins
+of France, Vienna, Dresden, Munich, Florence, Naples, St. Petersburg,
+Weimar, &c.; and, moreover, those medallions which perpetuate great
+events. These two volumes contain eight-fold more matter than the
+great work of Visconti.
+
+In the second class, containing the works of the middle ages, and
+showing the uninterrupted progress of the numismatic art down to
+modern times, and forming alone fourteen volumes, we find the source
+which the French artists and men of letters have studied with such
+predilection. First in order are the Italian medals of the fifteenth
+and sixteenth centuries, chiefly by the famous Victor Pisano, a
+Veronese, whom Nasari has so much lauded. The scholars and imitators
+of Pisano also produced works as interesting as historical documents
+as they are admirable in workmanship. Here also will be found the
+French and English seals, in which the balance of skill in design and
+execution is acknowledged to be in our favor.
+
+Less barbarous, and indeed perfect works of art, in character of
+costume and visage, are the medals struck in Germany during the
+sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, when the influence of Albert
+Durer and his school was strongly felt. And finally, relics of
+ornamental art of different nations and epochs.
+
+In the third class, two parts only are devoted to contemporary art;
+the medals illustrative of the French revolution of 1789; those of
+the "Empire" and of the Emperor "Napoleon;" generally smacking of the
+florid and corrupt taste of that period, they are nevertheless curious
+as being often the sole evidence of the facts commemorated. There is,
+however, a manifest improvement in the late ones, and in them may be
+traced the transition from the independent ideas of the revolution
+to the subsequent submission to one man: and not less striking is
+the transition from a slip-shod style of art to a pedantic imitation
+of the antique. The "Trésor de Numismatique et de Glyptique" is the
+most scientific and important work of art which has been executed and
+achieved of late years in France. Our great public libraries may be
+proud of possessing so rich, so valuable, and so curious a collection,
+
+Most lovers of art have their favorite periods and well-beloved
+masters, but in this varied range of excellence it is difficult which
+to select for preference and admiration. The cameos have a beauty and
+_finesse_ which far surpass that of busts and statues; they evince the
+skill of grouping, which, with rare exceptions, such as the Niobe and
+Laocoon, is seldom aimed at in the more important pieces of sculpture.
+Cameos, moreover, let us, as it were, into the secrets of indoor
+life. To these considerations we may add that these gems have had an
+immense influence on French modern art. The "Apotheosis of Augustus"
+especially, known to antiquarians as the "Agate of Tiberius," the
+largest cameo in the world, and beautifully engraved the size of the
+original in this collection, may be traced in more than one of their
+late compositions.
+
+It is said that large medallions are a sign of taste either in the
+medalist or the monarch he is supposed to honor; if so, Dupré and
+Varin have drawn a thick vail over the effulgence of Louis XIV.
+We would not, however, lose their wigs and smiles for a world of
+historiettes.
+
+But it is to be remembered that the more names are blazoned on works
+of art, the more art becomes deteriorated. In this respect the present
+collection shows the rapidly progressive march of this evil through
+twenty-five centuries--a most instructive subject of contemplation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE CSIKOS OF HUNGARY.
+
+Of the chivalry, the gallantry, the splendor, the hospitality, the
+courage, and the love of liberty of the Hungarian noble or gentleman,
+no one doubts. Of his ideas of true constitutional freedom, or the
+zeal with which that or Hungarian independence has been maintained
+first through Turkish, and then German domination for some hundred
+years past, doubts may be entertained. Neither do the Hungarian
+peasantry or people reflect high credit on their "natural superiors."
+Something should be deducted for the forced vivacity and straining
+after effect of the littérateur; but this sketch of a large class of
+peasantry from Max Schlesinger's "War in Hungary," just published
+in London, must have some foundation in truth--and very like the Red
+Indians or half-breeds of Spanish America the people look.
+
+"The Csikos is a man who from his birth, somehow or other, finds
+himself seated upon a foal. Instinctively the boy remains fixed upon
+the animal's back, and grows up in his seat as other children do in
+the cradle.
+
+"The boy grows by degrees to a big horse-herd. To earn his livelihood,
+he enters the service of some nobleman, or of the Government, who
+possess in Hungary immense herds of wild horses. These herds range
+over a tract of many German square miles, for the most part some level
+plain, with wood, marsh, heath, and moorland; they rove about where
+they please, multiply, and enjoy freedom of existence. Nevertheless,
+it is a common error to imagine that these horses, like a pack of
+wolves in the mountains, are left to themselves and nature, without
+any care or thought of man. Wild horses, in the proper sense of the
+term, are in Europe at the present day only met with in Bessarabia;
+whereas the so-called wild herds in Hungary may rather be compared
+to the animals ranging in our large parks, which are attended to and
+watched. The deer are left to the illusion that they enjoy the most
+unbounded freedom; and the deer-stalker, when in pursuit of his game,
+readily gives in to the same illusion. Or, to take another simile, the
+reader has only to picture to himself a well-constituted free state,
+whether a republic or a monarchy is all one.
+
+"The Csikos has the difficult task of keeping a watchful eye upon
+these herds. He knows their strength, their habits, the spots they
+frequent; he knows the birthday of every foal, and when the animal,
+fit for training, should be taken out of the herd. He has then a hard
+task upon his hands, compared with which a Grand-Ducal wild-boar hunt
+is child's play; for the horse has not only to be taken alive from the
+midst of the herd, but of course safe and sound in wind and limb. For
+this purpose, the celebrated whip of the Csikos serves him; probably
+at some future time a few splendid specimens of this instrument will
+be exhibited in the Imperial Arsenal at Vienna, beside the sword of
+Scanderberg and the Swiss 'morning-stars.'
+
+"This whip has a stout handle from one and a half to two feet long,
+and a cord which measures not less than from eighteen to twenty-four
+feet in length. The cord is attached to a short iron chain, fixed
+to the top of the handle by an iron ring. A large leaden button is
+fastened to the end of the cord, and similar smaller buttons are
+distributed along it at distances, according to certain rules
+derived from experience, of which we are ignorant. Armed with this
+weapon, which the Csikos carries in his belt, together with a short
+grappling-iron or hook, he sets out on his horse-chase. Thus mounted
+and equipped without saddle or stirrup, he flies like the storm-wind
+over the heath, with such velocity that the grass scarcely bends
+under the horse's hoof; the step of his horse is not heard, and the
+whirling cloud of dust above his head alone marks his approach and
+disappearance. Although familiar with the use of a bridle, he despises
+such a troublesome article of luxury, and guides his horse with his
+voice, hands, and feet--nay, it almost seems as if he directed it by
+the mere exercise of the will, as we move our feet to the right or
+left, backward or forward, without its ever coming into our head to
+regulate our movements by a leather strap.
+
+"In this manner for hours he chases the flying herd, until at length
+he succeeds in approaching the animal which he is bent on catching.
+He then swings his whip round in immense circles, and throws the cord
+with such dexterity and precision that it twines around the neck of
+his victim. The leaden button at the end, and the knots along the
+cord, form a noose, which draws closer and tighter the faster the
+horse hastens on.
+
+"See how he flies along with outstretched legs, his mane whistling
+in the wind, his eye darting fire, his mouth covered with foam, and
+the dust whirling aloft on all sides! But the noble animal breathes
+shorter, his eye grows wild and staring, his nostrils are reddened
+with blood, the veins of his neck are distended like cords, his legs
+refuse longer service--he sinks exhausted and powerless, a picture
+of death. But at the same instant the pursuing steed likewise stands
+still and fixed as if turned to stone. An instant, and the Csikos has
+flung himself off his horse upon the ground, and inclining his body
+backward, to keep the noose tight, he seizes the cord alternately with
+the right and left hand, shorter and shorter, drawing himself by it
+nearer and nearer to the panting and prostrate animal, till at last
+coming up to it he flings his legs across its back. He now begins to
+slacken the noose gently, allowing the creature to recover breath: but
+hardly does the horse feel this relief, before he leaps up, and darts
+off again in a wild course, as if still able to escape from his enemy.
+But the man is already bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh; he
+sits fixed upon his neck as if grown to it, and makes the horse feel
+his power at will, by tightening or slackening the cord. A second time
+the hunted animal sinks upon the ground; again he rises, and again
+breaks down, until at length, overpowered with exhaustion, he can no
+longer stir a limb....
+
+"The foot-soldier who has discharged his musket is lost when opposed
+to the Csikos. His bayonet, with which he can defend himself against
+the Uhlans and Hussars, is here of no use to him; all his practiced
+maneuvers and skill are unavailing against the long whip of his enemy,
+which drags him to the ground, or beats him to death with his leaden
+buttons; nay, even if he had still a charge in his musket, he could
+sooner hit a bird on the wing than the Csikos, who, riding round and
+round him in wild bounds, dashes with his steed first to one side then
+to another, with the speed of lightning, so as to frustrate any aim.
+The horse-soldier, armed in the usual manner, fares not much better;
+and wo to him if he meets a Csikos singly! better to fall in with a
+pack of ravenous wolves."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE PRESENT RELIGION OF PERSIA.
+
+An account of the Expedition for the survey of the rivers Euphrates
+and Tigris, carried on by order of the British Government, in the
+years 1835, 1836, and 1837; preceded by geographical and historical
+notices of the regions situated between the Nile and the Indus, with
+fourteen maps and charts, and ninety-seven plates, besides numerous
+woodcuts, has just appeared in London, in four large volumes, from the
+pen of Lieutenant-Colonel Chesney, R.A., F.R.S., &c., commander of
+the Expedition. It is too comprehensive a work ever to be reprinted
+here, or to be much read, even in England, but it is undoubtedly very
+valuable as an authority. The following paragraphs from it describe
+the present state of religion in Persia:
+
+"The title of Múlla is conferred on a candidate by some member of the
+order, after the requisite examination in theology and law; and the
+person is then intrusted with the education of youth, as well as
+the administration of justice, and the practice of law. The Múllas
+sometimes possess sufficient power not only to influence the people at
+large, but even the King himself.
+
+"Of this class of priests, those who have been successful in life are
+either placed in mosques or private families, waiting for advancement;
+but a greater number are nominally attached to colleges, and live
+by the practice of astrology, fortune-telling, the sale of charms,
+talismans, &c. They who are not possessed of the requisite ingenuity
+to subsist by the credulity of others, take charge of an inferior
+school, or write letters, and draw up marriage and other engagements,
+for those who are unequal to the task. They mix at the same time
+largely in the domestic concerns of families. But in addition to
+these and other vocations, a considerable number of the lowest priests
+derive a scanty support from that charity which no one denies to
+the true believer. These men wander as fakirs from place to place,
+carrying news, and repeating poems, tales, &c., mixed with verses from
+the Koran. The heterodox religions are very numerous; nor is Irián
+without her free-thinkers, as the Kamúrs and Mu'tazelís, (Mitaulis,)
+who deny everything which they cannot prove by natural reason. A third
+sect, the Mahadelis, or Molochadis, still maintain the Magian belief
+that the stars and the planets govern all things. Another, the Ehl
+el Tabkwid, (men of truth,) hold that there is no God except the four
+elements, and no rational soul or life after this one. They maintain
+also, that all living bodies, being mixtures of the elements, will
+after death return to their first principles. They also affirm that
+paradise and hell belong to this world, into which every man returns
+in the form of a beast, a plant, or again as a man; and that in this
+second state, he is great, powerful, and happy, or poor, despicable,
+and unhappy, according to his former merits or demerits. In practice
+they inculcate kindness to and respect for each other, with implicit
+obedience to their chiefs, who are called Pir, (old men,) and are
+furnished with all kinds of provisions for their subsistence. This
+sect is found in the provinces of Irák and Fárs.
+
+"The Táríkh Zenádikah (way of the covetous) are directly opposed to
+the last on the subject of transmigration; and they believe that God
+is in all places, and performs all things. They likewise maintain
+that the whole visible universe is only a manifestation of the
+Supreme Being; the soul itself being a portion of the Divine essence.
+Therefore, they consider, that whatever appears to the eye is God, and
+that all religious rites should be comprised in the contemplation of
+God's goodness and greatness.
+
+"On these various creeds the different branches of Suffeeism seem to
+have been founded. One of the most extraordinary of these sects is the
+Rasháníyah; the followers of which believe in the transmigration of
+souls, and the manifestation of the Divinity in the persons of holy
+men. They maintain likewise, that all men who do not join their
+sect are to be considered as dead, and that their goods belong, in
+consequence, to the true believers, as the only survivors."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE "OLD DUKE OF QUEENSBURY."
+
+Mr. Burke gives in his gossiping book about the English aristocracy,
+the following anecdotes of this once famous person:
+
+"Few men occupied a more conspicuous place about the court and town
+for nearly seventy years, during the reigns of the Second and Third
+Georges. Like Wilmot Earl of Rochester, he pursued pleasure under
+every shape, and with as much ardor at fourscore as he had done at
+twenty. At the decease of his father, in 1731, he became Earl of
+March; and he subsequently, in 1748, inherited his mother's earldom
+of Ruglen, together with the family's estates in the counties of
+Edinburgh and Linlithgow. These rich endowments of fortune, and a
+handsome person, of which he was especially careful, combined to
+invest the youthful Earl with no ordinary attractions, and the
+ascendency they acquired he retained for a longer period than any one
+of his contemporaries; from his first appearance in the fashionable
+world in the year 1746, to the year he left it forever, in 1810,
+at the age of eighty-five, he was always an object of comparative
+notoriety. There was no interregnum in the public course of his
+existence. His first distinction he achieved on the turf; his
+knowledge of which, both in theory and practice, equaled that of the
+most accomplished adepts of Newmarket. In all his principal matches
+he rode himself, and in that branch of equitation rivaled the most
+professional jockeys. Properly accoutered in his velvet cap, red
+silken jacket, buckskin breeches, and long spurs, his Lordship bore
+away the prize on many a well-contested field. His famous match with
+the Duke of Hamilton was long remembered in sporting annals. Both
+noblemen rode their own horses, and each was supported by numerous
+partisans. The contest took place on the race-ground at Newmarket, and
+attracted all the fashionables of the period. Lord March, thin, agile,
+and admirably qualified for exertion, was the victor. Still more
+celebrated was his Lordship's wager with the famous Count O'Taafe.
+During a conversation at a convivial meeting on the subject of
+'running against time,' it was suggested by Lord March, that it
+was possible for a carriage to be drawn with a degree of celerity
+previously unexampled, and believed to be impossible. Being desired to
+name his maximum, he undertook, provided choice of ground were given
+him and a certain period for training, to draw a carriage with four
+wheels not less than nineteen miles within the space of sixty minutes.
+The accomplishment of such rapidity staggered the belief of his
+hearers; and a heavy wager was the consequence. Success mainly
+depending on the lightness of the carriage, Wright of Long Acre, the
+most ingenious coach-builder of the day, devoted the whole resources
+of his skill to its construction, and produced a vehicle formed partly
+of wood and partly of whale-bone, with silk harness, that came up
+to the wishes of his employer. Four blood horses of approved speed
+were then selected, and the course at Newmarket chosen as the ground
+of contest. On the day appointed, 29th of August, 1750, noble and
+ignoble gamesters journeyed from far and near to witness the wonderful
+experiment; excitement reached the highest point, and bets to an
+enormous amount were made. At length the jockeys mounted; the carriage
+was put in motion, and rushing on with a velocity marvelous in those
+times of coach traveling, but easily conceived by us railway travelers
+of the nineteenth century, gained within the stipulated hour the goal
+of victory."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE DECAY OF GREAT FAMILIES.
+
+Not the least valuable parts of Burke's just published "Anecdotes of
+the Aristocracy," are a species of essay on the fortunes of families.
+The following is from a chapter on their decadence:
+
+"It has often occurred to us that a very interesting paper might
+be written on the rise and fall of English families. Truly does Dr.
+Borlase remark that 'the most lasting houses have only their seasons,
+more or less, of a certain constitutional strength. They have their
+spring and summer sunshine glare, their wane, decline, and death.'
+Take, for example, the Plantagenets, the Staffords, and the Nevills,
+the three most illustrious names on the roll of England's nobility.
+What race in Europe surpassed in royal position, in personal
+achievement, our Henries and our Edwards? and yet we find the
+great-great-grandson of Margaret Plantagenet, daughter and heiress
+of George Duke of Clarence, following the craft of a cobbler at the
+little town of Newport in Shropshire, in the year 1637. Beside, if
+we were to investigate the fortunes of many of the inheritors of the
+royal arms, it would soon be discovered that
+
+ 'The aspiring blood of Lancaster'
+
+had sunk into the ground. The princely stream at the present time
+flows through very humble veins. Among the lineal descendants of
+Edmund of Woodstock, Earl of Kent, sixth son of Edward I., King
+of England, entitled to quarter the Royal arms, occur Mr. Joseph
+Smart, of Hales Owen, butcher, and Mr. George Wilmot, keeper of the
+turnpike-gate at Cooper's Bank, near Dudley; and among the descendants
+of Thomas Plantagenet, Duke of Gloucester, fifth son of Edward
+III., we may mention Mr. Stephen James Penny, the late sexton at St.
+George's, Hanover Square.
+
+"The story of the Gargraves is a melancholy chapter in the romance
+of real life. For full two centuries, or more, scarcely a family in
+Yorkshire enjoyed a higher position. Its chiefs earned distinction
+in peace and war; one died in France, Master of the Ordnance to King
+Henry V.; another, a soldier, too, fell with Salisbury, at the siege
+of Orleans; and a third filled the Speaker's chair of the House of
+Commons. What an awful contrast to this fair picture does the sequel
+offer. Thomas Gargrave, the Speaker's eldest son, was hung at York,
+for murder; and his half-brother, Sir Richard, endured a fate only
+less miserable. The splendid estate he inherited he wasted by the most
+wanton extravagance, and at length reduced himself to abject want.
+'His excesses,' says Mr. Hunter, in his 'History of Doncaster,' 'are
+still, at the expiration of two centuries, the subject of village
+tradition; and his attachment to gaming is commemorated in an old
+painting, long preserved in the neighboring mansion of Badsworth, in
+which he is represented as playing at the old game of put, the right
+hand against the left, for the stake of a cup of ale.
+
+"The close of Sir Richard's story is as lamentable as its course.
+An utter bankrupt in means and reputation, he is stated to have been
+reduced to travel with the pack-horses to London, and was at last
+found dead in an old hostelry! He had married Catherine, sister of
+Lord Danvers, and by her left three daughters. Of the descendants of
+his brothers few particulars can be ascertained. Not many years since,
+a Mr. Gargrave, believed to be one of them, filled the mean employment
+of parish-clerk of Kippax.
+
+"A similar melancholy narrative applies to another great Yorkshire
+house. Sir William Reresby, Bart., son and heir of the celebrated
+author, succeeded, at the death of his father, in 1689, to the
+beautiful estate of Thrybergh, in Yorkshire, where his ancestors had
+been seated uninterruptedly from the time of the Conquest; and he
+lived to see himself denuded of every acre of his broad lands. Le Neve
+states, in his MSS. preserved in the Heralds' College, that he became
+a tapster in the King's Bench Prison, and was tried and imprisoned for
+cheating in 1711. He was alive in 1727, when Wootton's account of the
+Baronets was published. In that work he is said to be reduced to a low
+condition. At length he died in great obscurity, a melancholy instance
+how low pursuits and base pleasures may sully the noblest name, and
+waste an estate gathered with labor and preserved by the care of a
+race of distinguished progenitors. Gaming was amongst Sir William's
+follies--particularly that lowest specimen of the folly, the fights
+of game-cocks. The tradition at Thrybergh is (for his name is not
+quite forgotten) that the fine estate of Dennaby was staked and lost
+on a single main. Sir William Reresby was not the only baronet who
+disgraced his order at that period. In 1722, Sir Charles Burton was
+tried at the Old Bailey for stealing a seal; pleaded poverty, but
+was found guilty, and sentenced to transportation; which sentence was
+afterward commuted for a milder punishment."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MADRID AND THE SPANISH SENATE.
+
+Gazpacho; or, Summer Months in Spain, is the title of a new book by W.
+George Clark, published in London. Gazpacho, it seems, is the name of
+a dish peculiar to Spain, but of universal use there, a sort of cold
+soup, made up of familiars and handy things, as bread, pot-herbs, oil,
+and water. "My Gazpacho," says the author, "has been prepared after
+a similar receipt. I know not how it will please the more refined
+and fastidious palates to which it will be submitted; indeed, amid
+the multitude of dainties wherewith the table is loaded, it may well
+remain untasted." It at least deserves a better fate than that. The
+volume relates, in a pleasant, intelligent, and gossiping way, a
+summer's ramble through Spain, describing with considerable force the
+peculiarities of its people, and the romantic features by which it
+is marked. The clever painter could not have better materials. The
+party-colored costumes of the peasants, like dahlias at a Chiswick
+show; the somber garments of the priests, the fine old churches, the
+queer rambling houses, looking centuries old, the dull, gloomy streets
+of Madrid, the life and activity of the market-place. Such are the
+objects upon which the eye rests, and of which Mr. Clark was too
+observant to neglect any. The following passages will give an idea of
+the materials of which the Gazpacho is made up:--
+
+MADRID.
+
+"I left, I suppose, scarcely a street in Madrid which I did not
+traverse, or a church which I did not enter. The result is hardly
+worth the trouble. One street and church are exactly like another
+street and church. In the latter, one always finds the same profusion
+of wooden Christs, and Madonnas in real petticoats, on the walls, and
+the same scanty sprinkling of worshipers, also in petticoats, on the
+floor. The images outnumber the devotees here, as in all other Roman
+Catholic countries (except Ireland, which is an exception to every
+rule.) To a stranger, the markets are always the most interesting
+haunts. A Spaniard, he or she, talks more while making the daily
+bargain than in all the rest of the twenty-four hours. The fruit and
+vegetable market was my especial lounge. There is such a fresh, sweet
+smell of the country, and the groups throw themselves, or are thrown,
+into such pretty tableaux after the Rubens and Snyders fashion. The
+shambles one avoids instinctively, and fish-market there is none,
+for Madrid is fifty hours' journey from the nearest sea, and the
+Manzanares has every requisite for a fine trout stream, but water.
+
+"Madrid has one peculiarity which conduces very much to the visitor's
+comfort, namely, that there are very few inevitable 'sights' to be
+gone through. The armory said to be the finest in the world; the
+palace, ditto (which people who are addicted to upholstering may
+go and see, if they don't mind breaking the tenth commandment); the
+museum of natural history, where is the largest loadstone in active
+operation between this and Medina; and the Academia, nearly complete
+the list. Everybody should devote a morning to the last-named, were it
+only for the sake of the Murillos. The famous picture of 'St. Isabel
+giving alms to the sick' has been arrested at Madrid on its return
+from Paris to Seville. As the Sevilians have instituted a 'process'
+for its recovery, it is likely to stay there for some time longer.
+'The Patrician's Dream' is quite cheering to look upon, so rich and
+glowing it is. Shut your eyes to the semi-ludicrous effect of husband,
+wife, and dog, in a decreasing series, like the three genders in
+Lindley Murray, all asleep.
+
+"The gardens of the queen, sunk in a deep hollow below the palace,
+deserve a visit. The head-gardener, of course a Frenchman, struggles
+gallantly against all kinds of difficulties of soil, climate, and lack
+of water. By a series of ingenious artifices he has concocted a plot
+of grass, some ten feet square, to the great astonishment of all
+natives."
+
+NARVAEZ IN THE SENATE.
+
+"One day my kind friend Colonel S. took me to hear a debate in the
+_Senado_, the Spanish Chamber of Peers, which holds its sittings in
+the chapel of a suppressed convent, near the palace. By dint of paint,
+gilding, and carpets, the room has been divested of its sanctified
+aspect, and made to look like a handsome modern room. They have not
+thought it necessary that a place in which a hundred gentlemen in
+surtouts meet to discuss secular matters in this nineteenth century,
+should be made to resemble a chapel of the fifteenth. Antiquity is
+here represented in the person of two halberdiers, who stand to guard
+the door, dressed in extravagant costume, like beefeaters in full
+bloom. Rows of raised seats extend on each side of the room; in
+the center, facing the beef-eaters, are the chair and desk of the
+president, and on each side a little tribune, from which the clerks
+read out documents from time to time. The spectators are accommodated
+in niches round the walls. Each member speaks from his place, and the
+voting is by ballot. First a footman hands round a tray of beans, and
+then each advances, when his name is called, to a table in the center,
+where he drops his bean into the box. The beans are then counted, and
+the result proclaimed by the president. On the right of the chair, in
+the front, is the bench assigned to the ministers; and there I had
+the good luck to see Narvaez, otherwise called Duke of Valencia, and
+a great many fine names besides, and, in reality, master of all the
+Spains. His face wears a fixed expression of inflexible resolve, very
+effective, and garnished with a fierce dyed mustache, and a somewhat
+palpable wig to match. His style of dress was what, in an inferior
+man, one would have called 'dandified.' An unexceptionable surtout,
+opened to display a white waistcoat with sundry chains, and the
+extremities terminated, respectively, in patent leather and primrose
+kid. During the discussion he alternately fondled a neat riding-whip
+and aired a snowy pocket-handkerchief. Those who know him give him
+credit for good intentions and great courage, but do not expect
+that he will ever set the Thames on fire, whatever he may do to
+the Manzanares. He is a mixture, they say, of the chivalric and the
+asinine: a kind of moral mule. His personal weakness is a wish to be
+thought young, and hence he was naturally angry when Lord Palmerston
+wanted to give him a 'wrinkle.' I saw, likewise, Mon, the Minister of
+Finance, smiling complacently, like a shopkeeper on his customers;
+and the venerable Castanos, Duke of Bailen, who, as he tottered in,
+stooping under the weight of ninety years, was affectionately greeted
+by Narvaez and others. On the whole, the debate seemed to be languid,
+and to be listened to with little interest; but that is the general
+fate of debates in July."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE KANASZ.
+
+Of the Servian swineherd we have heard something of late, both in
+history and romance; because this was the vocation of Kara George, the
+Servian Liberator. In Hungary the swine-keeper does not seem to be so
+respectable a person. Here is a sketch of him from Max Schlesinger's
+new book on the Hungarian war:
+
+"The Kanasz is a swineherd, whose occupation, everywhere unpoetical
+and dirty, is doubly troublesome and dirty in Hungary. Large droves
+of pigs migrate annually into the latter country from Serbia, where
+they still live in a half-wild state. In Hungary they fatten in the
+extensive oak-forests, and are sent to market in the large towns, even
+to Vienna, and still further....
+
+"It is a true enjoyment to live in these shady forests. The oak
+attains a finer and more luxuriant growth on the Hungarian soil than
+in any part of Germany. The hogs find food in profusion, and commonly
+stuff themselves to such a degree that they lose all desire for roving
+about: so that dog, master, and ass, lead a comparatively easy life,
+and are left to the quiet enjoyment of nature. But the lot of the
+Kanasz is a pitiable one when, at the close of summer, he has to
+drive his swine to market. From Debreczin, nay even from the Serbian
+frontier, he has to make a journey on foot more toilsome than was ever
+undertaken by the most adventurous traveler, pacing slowly over the
+interminable heaths in rain, storm, or under a burning sun, behind
+his pigs, which drive into his face hot clouds of dust. Every now and
+then a hog has stuffed itself so full as to be unable to stir from the
+spot; and there it lies on the road without moving, whilst the whole
+caravan is obliged to wait for half a day or longer, until the glutted
+animal can get on his legs again; and when at length this feat is
+accomplished, frequently his neighbor begins the same trick. There
+is truly not a more toilsome business in the wide world than that of
+a Kanasz.... The fokos is a hatchet, with a long handle, which the
+Kanasz hurls with great dexterity. Whenever he desires to pick out
+and slaughter one of his hogs, either for his own use or for sale,
+the attempt would be attended with danger, in the half-savage state
+of these animals, without such a weapon. The fokos here assists him;
+which he flings with such force and precision, that the sharp iron
+strikes exactly into the center of the frontal bone of the animal
+he has marked out; the victim sinks on the earth without uttering a
+sound, and the drove quietly proceeds on its way. That he can strike
+down a man with equal precision at eighty to a hundred paces, is
+proved by the gallows at the entrance of the forest--the three-legged
+monument of his dexterity. During recent events, too, the surgeons
+of the Austrian army will readily furnish the Kanasz and Csikos with
+certificates of their ability and skill."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE "WILD HUSSAR" OF HUNGARY.
+
+France, Russia, Prussia, and other countries, have introduced the
+Hussars into their armies; but these soldiers are merely Russian,
+French, and Prussian cavalry, dressed in the Hungarian laced jacket:
+they want the spirit, the horse, and--the 'Magyar Isten.' For this
+reason, the Hungarian Hussar will not acknowledge them as brethren;
+and whenever he comes in contact with foreign Hussars, he lets them
+feel in battle the full force of his contempt. A story is told, that
+during a campaign against the French in the war with Napoleon, the
+bivouacs of the Prussian and Hungarian Hussars were near to one
+another. A Prussian came over to his neighbors in a familiar way with
+a glass of wine, and drank it to the health of his 'brother hussar.'
+But the Hungarian gently pushed the glass back, and stroked his beard,
+saying, 'What brother?--no brother--I hussar--you jack-pudding.'
+
+This expression is not to be mistaken for a brag. The Hungarian hussar
+is no fanfaron like the French chasseur, but he is conscious of his
+own powers, like a Grenadier of the Old Imperial Guard. The dolmany,
+the csako, and the csizma, have grown to his body; they form his
+holyday dress even when off duty--the national costume transferred
+into the army; and as he is aware that this is not the case in other
+countries, the foreign Hussar's dress is in his eyes a mere servant's
+livery; and logically the man is not altogether wrong.
+
+The Hussar, like the Magyars in general, is naturally good-tempered.
+The finest man in the service, he is at the same time the most jovial
+companion in the tavern, and will not sit by and empty his glass by
+himself when a Bohemian or German comrade at his side has spent all
+his money. There is only one biped under the sun who is in his eyes
+more contemptible and hateful than any animal of marsh or forest. This
+is the Banderial Hussar--that half-breed between Croat and Magyar,
+that caricature of the true Hussar, who serves in the cavalry, as
+the Croat in the infantry, of the Military Frontier. Never was an
+Hungarian Hussar known to drink with a Banderial Hussar; never will he
+sit at the same table: if he meets a snake he crushes it under foot--a
+wolf he will hunt in the mountains--with a buffalo he will fight on
+the open heath--with a miserable horse-stealer he will wrestle for a
+halter; but as for the Banderial Hussar, he spits in his face wherever
+he meets him.
+
+It was at Hatvan, or at Tapjo-Bicske, that Hungarian and Banderial
+Hussars were for the first time in this war--the first time perhaps
+in the recollection of man--opposed to one another in battle. If looks
+could slay, there would have been no need of a conflict, for the eyes
+of the Magyars shot death and contempt at their unworthy adversaries.
+The signal of attack sounded; and at the same instant, as if seized by
+one common thought, the Hungarian Hussars clattered their heavy sabres
+back into the scabbard, and with a fearful imprecation, such as no
+German tongue could echo, charged weaponless and at full speed their
+mimic caricatures whom fate had thrown in their way. The shock was so
+irresistible, that the poor Croats could make no use of their sabers
+against the furious onset of their unarmed foe: they were beaten down
+from their saddles with the fist, and dragged off their horses by
+their dolmanys; those who could save themselves fled. The Hussars
+disdained to pursue them; but they complained to their Colonel at
+having been opposed to 'such a rabble.'--_Schlesinger_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ORIGINAL POETRY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A HOROSCOPE.
+
+BY ELIZABETH OAKES SMITH.
+
+"Quorum pars magna fui."
+
+ Oh! loveliest of the stars of Heaven,
+ Thus did ye walk the crystal dome,
+ When to the earth a child was given,
+ Within a love-lit, northern home;
+ Thus leading up the starry train,
+ With aspect still benign,
+ Ye move in your fair orbs again
+ As on that birth long syne.
+
+ Within her curtained room apart,
+ The pale young mother faintly smiled;
+ While warmly to a father's heart
+ With love and prayer was pressed the child;
+ And, softly to the lattice led,
+ In whispers grandams show
+ How those presaging stars have shed
+ Around the child a glow.
+
+ Born in the glowing summer prime,
+ With planets thus conjoined in space
+ As if they watched the natal time,
+ And came to bless the infant face;
+ Oh! there was gladness in that bower,
+ And beauty in the sky;
+ And Hope and Love foretold a dower
+ Of brightest destiny.
+
+ Unconscious child! that smiling lay
+ Where love's fond eyes, and bright stars gleamed,
+ How long and toilsome grew the way
+ O'er which those brilliant orbs had beamed;
+ How oft the faltering step drew back
+ In terror of the path,
+ When giddy steep, and wildering track
+ Seemed fraught with only wrath!
+
+ How oft recoiled the woman foot,
+ With tears that shamed the path she trod.
+ To find a canker at the root
+ Of every hope, save that in God!
+ And long, oh! long, and weary long,
+ Ere she had learned to feel
+ That Love, unselfish, deep, and strong,
+ Repays its own wild zeal.
+
+ Bright Hesperus! who on the eyes
+ Of Milton poured thy brightest ray!
+ Effulgent dweller of the skies,
+ Take not from me thy light away--
+ I look on thee, and I recall
+ The dreams of by-gone years--
+ O'er many a hope I lay the pall
+ With its becoming tears;
+
+ Yet turn to thee with thy full beam,
+ And bless thee, Oh love-giving star!
+ For life's sweet, sad, illusive dream
+ Fruition, though in Heaven afar--
+ "A silver lining" hath the cloud
+ Through dark and stormiest night,
+ And there are eyes to pierce the shroud
+ And see the hidden light.
+
+ Thou movest side by side with Jove,
+ And, 'tis a quaint conceit, perchance--
+ Thou seem'st in humid light to move
+ As tears concealed thy burning glance--
+ Such Virgil saw thee, when thine eyes,
+ More lovely through their glow,[2]
+ Won from the Thunderer of the skies
+ An accent soft and low.
+
+ And Mars is there with his red beams,
+ Tumultuous, earnest, unsubdued--
+ And silver-footed Dian gleams
+ Faint as when she, on Latmos stood--
+ God help the child! such night brought forth
+ When Love to Power appeals,
+ And strong-willed Mars at frozen north
+ Beside Diana steals.
+
+BROOKLYN, August, 1850.
+
+[Footnote 2: "Lachrymis oculos effusa nitentes."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FRIENDSHIP.
+
+ How oft the burdened heart would sink
+ In fathomless despair
+ But for an angel on the brink--
+ In mercy standing there:
+ An angel bright with heavenly light--
+ And born of loftiest skies,
+ Who shows her face to mortal race,
+ In Friendship's holy guise.
+
+ Upon the brink of dark despair,
+ With smiling face she stands;
+ And to the victim shrinking there,
+ Outspreads her eager hands:
+ In accents low that sweetly flow
+ To his awakening ear,
+ She woos him back--his deathward track.
+ Toward Hope's effulgent sphere.
+
+ Sweet Friendship! let me daily give
+ Thanks to my God for thee!
+ Without thy smiles t'were death to live,
+ And joy to cease to be:
+ Oh, bitterest drop in woe's full cup--
+ To have no friend in need!
+ To struggle on, with grief alone--
+ Were agony indeed!
+
+August. WILLIAM C. RICHARDS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BALANCE OF LIFE.
+
+ All daring sympathy--clear-sighted love--
+ Is, from its source, a ray of endless bliss;
+ Self has no place in the pure world above,
+ Its shadows vanish in the strife of this.
+
+ The toil--the tumult--the sharp struggle o'er,--
+ The casket breaks;--men say, "A martyr dies!"
+ The death--the martyrdom--has past before:
+ The soul, transfigured, finds its native skies.
+
+ The good--the ill--we vainly strive to weigh
+ With Reason's scales, hung in the mists of Time:
+ Yet child-like Faith the balance doth survey,
+ Held high in ether, by a hand sublime.
+
+May, 1850. HERMA.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SCIENCE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The SPANISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES have announced the following subject
+for competition: "An experimental investigation and explanation of
+the theory of nitrification, the causes which most influence the
+production of this phenomenon, and the means most conducive in Spain
+to natural nitrification." The prize, to be awarded in May 1851, is to
+be a gold medal and 6000 copper reals--about seventy pounds sterling;
+and a second similar medal will be given to the second best paper. The
+papers, written in Spanish or Latin, are to be sent in before the 1st
+May, with, as usual, the author's name under seal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IMPROVEMENTS IN THE TELEGRAPH.--The _Presse_ gives some account of
+experiments made at the house of M. de Girardin, in Paris, with a
+new telegraphic dictionary, the invention of M. Gonon. Dispatches
+in French, English, Portuguese, Russian, and Latin, including proper
+names of men and places, and also figures, were transmitted and
+translated, says this account, with a rapidity and fidelity alike
+marvelous, by an officer who knew nothing of any one of the languages
+used except his own. Dots, commas, accents, and breaks were all in
+their places. This dictionary of M. Gonon is applicable alike to
+electric and aerial telegraphy, to transmissions by night and by day,
+to maritime and to military telegraphing. The same paper speaks of
+the great interest excited in the European capitals by the approaching
+experiment of submarine telegraphic communication between England
+and France. The wires, it says, on the English side are deposited
+and ready for laying down. It is probable that in a very few days the
+experiment will be complete.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+AUTHORS AND BOOKS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NEW ORLEANS AS SEEN BY A GERMAN PRINCE is very naturally not quite
+the same city as in the opinion of her own pleasure-loving citizens,
+nor can the republic whose South-western metropolis is condemned with
+the rigidity of a merciless judge and the jaundice of an unfriendly
+traveler, hope to get clear of censure from the same super-royal pen.
+It seems that his serenest highness Major-General Duke Paul William,
+of Wirtemburg, is traveling in America, and that the _Ausland_, a
+weekly paper, of Stuttgart, is from time to time favored with the
+results of his experience on the way. From some recent portions of his
+correspondence _The International_ translates the subjoined _morceau_,
+which, however, despite its great exaggeration, is not altogether
+devoid of truth: "It is not necessary here to mention how much
+New Orleans has altered, increased, and deteriorated, for it is an
+established thing that cities which grow to such gigantic proportions
+gain nothing in respect to the morals of their inhabitants. Here
+drunkenness and gambling, two vices of which the Americans were
+ignorant in the time of the founders of their great federation,
+have taken very deep root. The decrease of the inflexible spirit of
+religion, and the increase of vice and luxury, gnaw the powerful tree,
+and are fearful enemies, which cannot be resisted by a structure that
+might resist with scorn all foreign foes, and would have played a
+mighty part in the world's history had the spirit of Washington and
+Franklin remained with it. The annexation of Texas, the war with
+Mexico, and now the gold of California, have transformed the United
+States. A people which makes conquests, loses inward power in
+proportion to the aggrandizement of its volume, and the increase of
+its external enemies."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN ARABIAN NEWSPAPER, with the title _Mobacher_. has lately been
+commenced in Algiers, at the expense of the French Government. It
+is edited in the cabinet of the Governor-General, issued weekly, and
+lithographed, as less expensive than printing, which in Arabic types
+would be quite costly. It contains political news from Europe and
+Africa, the latest advices from Constantinople, all those laws and
+decrees of the Government which in any way concern the Arabs, and
+descriptions of such new discoveries and inventions as can be made
+intelligible to the readers for whom it is designed. A thousand copies
+are printed weekly and sent to the chiefs and headmen of all the
+tribes that are under French rule or influence. At first it was not
+read much, but now the vanity of the Arabs has been excited by it as a
+mark of special attention from the Governor-General, so that they take
+it as an honor, and a degree of curiosity has been excited to obtain
+news from other parts of the world.
+
+Within a short time, also, an additional importance has been given to
+the paper by the publication in it of the amount of the tribute which
+each tribe is required to pay to France. Formerly this was known only
+to the chiefs who would accordingly exact from their people whatever
+amount they deemed best, under the pretense that it was for the
+government, while the greater part was retained by themselves. These
+tribes have profited greatly by the French conquest; it is estimated
+that of the eighty millions of francs which the army in Algeria costs
+yearly, from twenty to twenty-five millions remain in the hands of the
+Arabs. The Arab sells his corn, dates, horses, sheep, the baskets he
+weaves, &c., to the European population, but never buys anything from
+them in turn, except it be arms and powder. The rest of his money he
+carries home and buries where no one knows but himself, so that, if
+he dies suddenly, it is lost. Only the chiefs of the tribe know how to
+extort anything of these hidden sums. According to the most moderate
+estimates the tribes must have from two to three hundred millions
+of French money. The gains which the chiefs draw from this wealth is
+considerable; some of them have from a hundred to a hundred and fifty
+thousand francs income. They are beginning to build large houses,
+and cultivate gardens around them, a disposition which the government
+favors, because it is easier to keep tribes in order that are
+settled and have dwellings to lose which they cannot take with them.
+The publication of the tribute in the _Mobacher_, is, under these
+circumstances, of great value for the Arabs, because it enables them,
+as it were, to supervise their chiefs, and to refuse to pay exorbitant
+taxes laid under pretense of a high tribute. This has increased the
+respect generally felt for the paper, though it has not rendered it
+more a favorite with the chiefs. The power of these leaders is very
+great in the various tribes, having been in most cases hereditary, at
+least since the tenth century, and although not always inherited in
+direct line, the tribes have never suffered it to pass into the hands
+of new families. Hitherto nothing has diminished it; the war rather
+gave it new strength, and it is only by means of the chiefs that the
+French can keep Algiers quiet. It would be a remarkable fact if the
+dissolving power of publicity through the press should be manifested
+here as elsewhere, and begin the overthrow of the long standing
+influence exercised by the great Arabian families.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. M. ST. LEON LOUD, of Philadelphia, has in the press of Ticknor,
+Reed & Fields, of Boston, a collection of her poems, entitled,
+"Wayside Flowers." Mrs. Loud is a writer of much grace and elegance,
+and occasionally of a rich and delicate fancy. The late Mr. Poe was
+accustomed to praise her works very highly, and was to have edited
+this edition of them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LITERATURE OF SOCIALISM occupies the press in France. The subject
+is warmly debated, _pro_ and _con_. In a pamphlet called _Despotisme
+ou Socialisme_, M. Pompery rapidly sketches the alternative which, he
+says, lies open to those who rise against despotism. There are but two
+religious doctrines according to him: the one absolutist, represented
+by De Maistre, and the Catholic school, which is, logically enough,
+desirous of reestablishing the Inquisition; the other professed by all
+the illustrious teachers of mankind, by Pythagoras, Jesus, Socrates,
+Pascal, &c., which, believing in the goodness of the Creator and the
+perfectibility of man, endeavors to found upon earth the reign of
+justice, fraternity, and equality. A more important work on Socialism
+is that of Dr. Guepin, of Nantes, _Philosophie du Socialisme_; and M.
+Lecouturier announces a _Science du Socialisme_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. G.P.R. JAMES has taken a cottage at Jamaica, Long Island, and
+is domiciliated as an American--we hope for a long time. He has made
+troops of friends since his arrival here, and is likely to be as
+popular in society as he has long been in literature. We are sure
+we communicate a very pleasing fact when we state that it is his
+intention to give in two or three of our principal cities, during the
+autumn and fall, a series of lectures--probably upon the chivalric
+ages, with which no one is more profoundly familiar, and of which
+no one can discourse more wisely or agreeably. His abilities, his
+reputation, and the almost universal acquaintance with his works,
+insure for him the largest success. We are indebted to no other living
+author for so much enjoyment, and by his proposed lectures he will not
+only add to our obligations, but furnish an opportunity to repair
+in some degree the wrong he has suffered from the imperfection and
+injustice of our copyright system.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"THE LIFE, CHARACTER, AND GENIUS OF EBENEZER ELLIOTT," is a volume
+by January Searle, author of _Leaves from Sherwood Forest_, &c., who
+knew the corn-law rhymer well, and has been enabled to give very
+characteristic sketches, original descriptions, correspondence, &c.
+There are in it many judiciously selected specimens of Elliott's
+poems, prose productions, and lectures. Mr. Searle observes of him,
+that "he was cradled into poetry by human wrong and misery; and was
+emphatically the bard of poverty--singing of the poor man's loves and
+sorrows, and denouncing his oppressors." Again: "He has one central
+idea--terrible and awful in its aspect, although beautiful and
+beneficent in spirit--before which he tries all causes, and men, and
+things. It is the Eternal Idea of Right; his synonyme of God. And this
+idea is perpetually present in his mind, pervades all his thoughts,
+will not be shuffled nor cheated, but demands a full satisfaction from
+all violators of it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LATE MRS. OSGOOD was in a very remarkable degree respected and
+beloved by those who were admitted to her acquaintance. Without envy
+or jealousy, or any of the immoralities of the intellect which most
+commonly beset writers of her sex, she occasioned no enmities and was
+a party to none, but was regarded, especially by the literary women
+of this country, with a feeling of tenderness and devotion probably
+unparalleled in the annals of literature or of society. Immediately
+after her death, therefore, a desire was manifested to illustrate
+the common regard for her by some suitable testimonial, and upon
+consultation, it was decided to publish a splendid souvenir, to
+consist of the gratuitous contributions of her friends, and with the
+profits accruing from its sale to erect a monument to her memory in
+the cemetery of Mount Auburn. This gift book, edited by Mrs. Osgood's
+most intimate friend, Mary E. Hewitt, will be published by Mr. Putnam,
+on the first of October, under the title of _The Cairn_, and it will
+contain original articles by George Aubrey, Lord Bishop of Jamaica:
+the Right Rev. George W. Doane, the Right Rev. Alonzo Potter, the
+Hon. R.H. Walworth, the Hon. J. Leander Starr, the Rev. C.S. Henry,
+D.D., G.P.R. James, Esq., N.P. Willis, Esq., W. Gilmore Simms, Esq.,
+Bayard Taylor, Esq., J.H. Boker, Esq., Alfred B. Street, Esq., R.
+H. Stoddard, Esq., Miss Fredrika Bremer, Mrs. Sigourney, Mrs. Oakes
+Smith, Mrs. Embury, Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. Neal, Mrs. Willard, Mrs. Whitman,
+Miss Lynch, Miss Hunter, Miss Cheesebro', and indeed nearly all the
+writers of her sex who have attained any eminence in our literary
+world. The volume will be illustrated with nine engravings on steel,
+by Cheney and other eminent artists.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE REV. WALTER COLTON has just published through A.S. Barnes & Co.
+"Three Years in California," a journal of experiences and observations
+in the gold region, from the period when it first attracted the
+attention of the Atlantic cities. Mr. Colton was some time alcade
+of Monterey, and he had in every way abundant opportunity to acquire
+whatever facts are deserving of preservation in history. His "Ship
+and Shore," "Constantinople and Athens," "Deck and Port," and other
+works, have illustrated his genial temper, shrewdness, and skill in
+description and character writing; and this book will increase his
+reputation for these qualities. It contains portraits of Capt. Sutter,
+Col. Fremont, Mr. Gwin, Mr. Wright, Mr. Larkin, and Mr. Snyder, a map
+of the valley of the Sacramento, and several other engravings, very
+spirited in design and execution.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. GEORGE STEPHENS, author of the "_Manuscripts of Erdely_," has
+been struck by ill health and reduced to poverty, and an amateur play
+has been prepared for his benefit at the Soho Theater. He wrote "The
+Vampire," "Montezuma," and "Martinuzzi."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Gallery of Illustrious Americans, conducted by Mr. Lester,
+continues with every number to increase in interest. The work is
+designed to embrace folio portraits, engraved by Davignon, from
+daguerreotypes by Brady, of twenty-four of the most eminent American
+citizens who have lived since the time of Washington. The portraits
+thus far have been admirable for truthfulness and artistic effect. It
+may be said that the _only_ published pictures we have, deserving to
+be called portraits, of the historian Prescott, or Mr. Calhoun, or
+Colonel Fremont, are in this Gallery. The great artist, naturalist,
+and man of letters, Audubon, is reflected here as he appears at the
+close of the battle, receiving the reverence of nations and ages.
+In the biographical department Mr. Lester has evinced very eminent
+abilities for this kind of writing. He seizes the prominent events
+of history and the strong points of character, and presents them
+with such force and fullness, and happy combination, as to make the
+letter-press as interesting and valuable as the engraved portion
+of the work. We are pleased to learn that the Gallery is remarkably
+successful. No publication of equal splendor and expensiveness has
+ever before been so well received in this country. The cost of it
+is but one dollar per number, or twenty dollars for the series of
+twenty-four numbers. It is now half completed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+M. Max Schlesinger, author of "The War in Hungary, in 1848-9,"--a
+work which, from what we read of it in the foreign journals, is much
+the most striking and attractive of all that have appeared upon its
+subject in English,--is described in the _Athenæum_, as by birth
+a Hungarian, by the accidents of fortune a German. For some time a
+resident in Prague, and more recently settled in Berlin, he has had
+excellent opportunities of seeing the men and studying the questions
+connected both in the literary and political sense with the present
+movement of ideas and races in Eastern Europe. His acquaintance
+with the aspects of nature in his native land--his knowledge of the
+peculiar character of its inhabitants, their manners, modes of thought
+and habits of life--his familiarity with past history--his right
+conception of the leading men in the recent struggle--are all vouched
+for as "essentially accurate" by no less an authority than Count
+Pulszky. It would be an injustice merely to say that M. Schlesinger
+has given in an original and picturesque way a general view of the
+course of events in the late war, more complete and connected than is
+afforded in any account hitherto presented to the public. He has done
+more: he has enabled the German and English reader to understand the
+miracle of a nation of four or five millions of men rising up at the
+command of a great statesman, and doing successful battle with the
+elaborately organized power of a first-class European state, shaking
+it to its very foundations, and contending, not without hope,
+against two mighty military empires,--until the treachery from within
+paralyzed its power of resistance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Mayo's new novel, "The Berber, or the Mountaineer of the Atlas,"
+published by Putnam, promises to be scarcely less popular than his
+"Kaloolah." The _Evening Post_ says of it: "Kaloolah was a sprightly
+narrative of the wanderings of a Yankee, who seemed to combine in
+his person the characteristics of Robinson Crusoe with those of Baron
+Munchausen; but the Berber professes to be nothing more than a novel;
+or, as the author says in his preface, his principal object has been
+to tell an agreeable story in an agreeable way. In doing so, however,
+an eye has been had to the illustration of Moorish manners, customs,
+history, and geography; to the exemplification of Moorish life as
+it actually is in Barbary in the present day, and not as it usually
+appears in the vague and poetic glamour of the common Moorish romance.
+It has also been an object to introduce to the acquaintance of the
+reader a people who have played a most important part in the world's
+history, but of whom very few educated people know anything more than
+the name. As Dr. Mayo has traveled extensively over the regions he
+describes, we presume that his descriptions may be taken as true. His
+account of the Berbers, a tribe of ancient Asiatic origin, who inhabit
+a range of the Atlas, and who live a semi-savage life like the Arabs,
+is minute, and to the intelligent reader quite as interesting as the
+more narrative parts of the work. It is, perhaps, the best evidence of
+the merits of the book, that the whole first edition was exhausted by
+orders from the country before the first number had appeared in the
+city."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Col. Forbes, who was in Italy during the revolution, and many years
+previous, and who was himself, both in a military and civic capacity,
+one of the actors in that event, the _Evening Post_ informs us, is
+about to give public lectures on the subject of Italy in the various
+cities and towns of the United States. Col. Forbes was intimately
+connected with the revolutionary chiefs during the brief existence
+of the Roman Republic, and was directly and confidently employed by
+Mazzini. His knowledge of the country, its people, its politics, and
+its recent history, will supply him with materials for making his
+lectures highly interesting and instructive.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Gem of the Western World, edited by Mrs. Hewitt, and published by
+Cornish & Co., Fulton street, is a very beautiful gift-book, and in
+its literary character is deserving of a place with the most splendid
+and; tasteful annuals of the season. Mrs. Hewitt's own contributions
+to it embrace some of her finest compositions, and are of course among
+its most brilliant contents.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FRENCH PERIODICALS.--A Parisian correspondent of the London _Literary
+Gazette_ observes, that if we exclude the _Revue des Deux Mondes_--a,
+sort of cross between the English _Quarterly_ and the monthlies,--if
+we exclude also a few dry scientific periodicals, and one or two
+theatrical or musical newspapers, we shall seek in vain for any
+_Quarterly_, or _Blackwood_, or _Art Union_, or _Literary Gazette_;
+and that even the periodicals and journals which make the nearest
+approach to the weekly, monthly, or quarterly publications of England,
+are either wretched compilations, or abominably ill-written and
+ill-printed. The _feuilleton_ system of the newspapers is no doubt
+the principal cause of the periodical literature being in such
+an extremely low condition. But though literary and scientific
+periodicals be, generally speaking, vile in quality, they can at least
+boast of quantity. There are, it seems, not fewer than 300 of one
+kind or another published in Paris alone. Among them are 44 devoted
+to medicine, chemistry, natural science, &c.; 42, trade, commerce,
+railways, advertisements; 34, fashions; 30, law; 22, administration,
+public works, roads, bridges, mines; 19, archæology, history,
+biography, geography, numismatics; 19, public instruction and
+education; 15, agriculture and horticulture; 8, bibliography and
+typography; 10, army and navy; 7, literary; the rest theatrical,
+musical, or of a character too hybrid to be classified.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ILLUSTRATED DOMESTIC BIBLE, edited by the Rev. Ingram Cobbin,
+seems to us decidedly the best family Bible ever offered to the trade
+in this country. It is printed with remarkable correctness and beauty;
+illustrated with a very large number of maps and engravings on wood;
+and its notes, written with much condensation and perspicuity, are
+such as are necessary for the understanding of the text. Indeed, all
+that is added to the letter of the Bible is legitimate and necessary
+_illustration_. It is being published in a series of twenty-five
+numbers, at twenty-five cents each, by S. Hueston, publisher of _The
+Knickerbocker_, Nassau-street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE VIENNA UNIVERSITY, long one of the best in Europe, has not been
+reopened since the insurrection of November, 1848, its principal
+edifice having been occupied as barracks for a regiment of soldiers.
+It is now proposed to restore it to its proper use, but great
+difficulty is experienced in finding professors. The old ones
+are scattered, some as exiles in foreign countries, on account of
+democratic opinions,--some in prison for the same reason, others
+employed elsewhere. Wackernagel, the eminent professor of the German
+Language and Literature at Basle, Switzerland, tempted by liberal
+offers, had promised to come to Vienna, and lend the aid of his
+reputation and talents to the restoration of the University, but being
+lately at Milan, on a wedding tour, as he and his wife were passing
+through the _Piazza d'Armi_, their ears were saluted by cries of
+pain, which on inquiry they found to proceed from sundry rebellious
+Italians, of both sexes, who were receiving each from twenty-five to
+fifty blows of the military baton, or cane, employed by the Austrians
+in flogging soldiers. Madame Wackernagel at once declared that she
+would never willingly inhabit a country whose laws and habits suffered
+women to be so brutally punished for patriotism, and her husband could
+only agree with her. He has accordingly broken off the engagement, and
+the Government cannot hope to supply his place.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HINCKS ON LITERARY LARCENY.--A Canadian friend sends us the following
+extract from a speech by Francis Hincks, a leading member of the
+Canadian Ministry, touching the International Copyright question:
+
+ "The American publisher steals the works of British authors,
+ because he is immoral enough to do it, because he is scoundrel
+ enough, and the nation is scoundrel enough to permit it.
+ (Ironical cheers.) Yes, because the nation is scoundrel enough
+ to permit it."
+
+Our unknown friend who sends us this wants us to give Hincks a
+thorough roasting for it, and evidently expects every hair on our head
+to bristle with indignation. Now we have not the least objection to
+roasting the Minister aforesaid, and will do it when a fair chance
+presents itself, but we don't consider this such a chance. In fact,
+though we think Francis has drawn rather a strong draught from "the
+well of English undefiled," yet essentially we regard his observations
+above quoted as rather more than half right. It _is_ rascally to steal
+a man's book, print it, sell it, read it, and refuse him any pay for
+the labor of writing it; and we don't see that his being an Englishman
+makes any material difference. There may be a cheaper way to get the
+proceeds of another man's toil than by paying for it, but we don't
+think there is any other strictly honest way.--_Tribune_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HERR SCHUMANN's opera, "Généviève," was produced at Leipsic on the
+28th ultimo. "This work," says the _Gazette Musicale_, "after having
+been much recommended beforehand, does not seem to have satisfied
+public expectation, being concert music, without any dramatic force."
+For the verdict which will finally be passed on "Généviève" every
+one must be curious who has at all followed the journals of Young
+Germany in the recent crusades which they nave made, not so much to
+establish Schumann as a great composer, as to prove him greater than
+Mendelssohn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GRAND LITERARY TRADE SALES are now in progress in New York: and
+the catalogues of the rival houses are the largest ever printed.
+Cooley & Keese at their splendid hall in Broadway present this year a
+richer and more extensive series of invoices than has ever before been
+sold in America.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE FINE ARTS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bavaria is a sort of artists' paradise, both the late King Louis and
+the present Maximilian being determined to leave behind them the glory
+of munificent patrons of art. In this they have so far succeeded, that
+Munich, which before their time was by no means among German cities
+the most worthy a traveler's attention, may now dispute the palm even
+with Dresden, notwithstanding the unrivaled gallery of paintings,
+possessed by the latter. For students of modern art, and especially
+of the German schools, Munich is incomparable, while its collection of
+ancient sculptures cannot be equaled out of Italy. We now learn that
+King Maximilian has conceived the plan of a grand series of pictures
+to comprehend the prominent epochs and events of history. The most
+eminent German and foreign artists are to be invited to assist in
+carrying out this immense undertaking; so that thus the series will
+not only represent the great experiences of mankind, but will, it is
+hoped, contain specimens of all the great schools of modern painting.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An exhibition of indisputable works by the old painters is now open
+at Valenciennes, in France. It consists of pictures belonging to the
+family of the Belgian general Rottiers. They are for sale, either
+single or together. Among them is a St. Denis, bearing his Head, by
+Rubens, said to have been painted by order of Pope Urban VIII. It was
+deposited in the Convent of the _Annunciades_, at Antioch; in 1747,
+Louis XV. offered 100,000 francs for it, but was refused, the convent
+having no right to dispose of it. Afterward, on the suppression
+of the convent, it fell into the hands of the family to which it
+now belongs. The exhibition also contains a landscape by Salvator
+Rosa, representing a scene in the Appenines; a Magdalen kneeling
+in a Cavern, by Kneller; two Allegories, by Giulio Romano; several
+portraits by Rubens and Van Dyke, besides other works of less value.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Darley's "Sleepy Hollow."--The London Art Journal, for July, has the
+following notice of Mr. Darley's illustrations of Irving's "Legends of
+Sleepy Hollow," published by the _American Art Union_: "The charmingly
+quaint original legend told with so much quiet humor by Washington
+Irving, is here illustrated by a native artist in a congenial spirit,
+and his scenes realized in a manner which must give its author
+satisfaction, and redound to the credit of the designer. We have
+before noticed the great ability exhibited by Mr. Darley for the mode
+of illustration he adopts, which we may add is that rendered famous
+by Retzsh. The series we are now noticing are quite as meritorious as
+that designed by the same artist to Rip Van Winkle; but the subject
+matter is not equally capable of such broad contrasts in drollery
+as that legend presents. Nevertheless, Mr. Darley has executed his
+task in the truest appreciation of his author; and his hero is the
+veritable Ichabod Crane of Irving; his love-making scene with "the
+peerless daughter of Van Tassel" is exquisite in its quiet humor;
+so also is the merry-making in the Dutch Farmer's home. Altogether,
+the series is extremely good, and does the greatest credit to the
+designer. American literature thus illustrated by American artists
+cannot fail to achieve honor to that country in the old world as well
+as the new. We believe Mr. Darley, in his line, to be as great as any
+American artist whose works have fallen under our notice."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Chaucer's Monument.--The _Athenæum_ says, "One of the objections
+formerly urged against taking steps to restore the perishing memorial
+of the Father of English Poetry in Poet's Corner was, that it was not
+really his tomb, but a monument erected to do honor to his memory a
+century and a half after his death. An examination, however, of the
+tomb itself, by competent authorities, has proved this objection to
+be unfounded--inasmuch as there can exist no doubt, we hear, from
+the difference of workmanship, material, &c., that the altar tomb is
+the original tomb of Geoffrey Chaucer,--and that instead of Nicholas
+Brigham having erected an entirely new monument, he only added to that
+which then existed the overhanging canopy, &c. So that the sympathy of
+Chaucer's admirers is now invited to the restoration of what till now
+was really not known to exist--_the original tomb_ of the Poet--as
+well as to the additions made to it by the affectionate remembrance of
+Nicholas Brigham."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lessing's new picture.--A letter from Düsseldorf under date of
+9th July, in the _Courier and Enquirer_, says that Lessing's great
+painting, "The Martyrdom of Huss," Sad just been finished and had been
+exhibited for the last few days at the Academy of Fine Arts, where
+it was visited by thousands. When it became known that orders for its
+immediate shipment had arrived from New York, the desire to obtain a
+last view of this truly great work became so intense that it was found
+necessary to put the Police in requisition to keep back the throng,
+and the gates of the Academy had to be closed. It causes general
+regret that it is to be sent out of the country. The _Cologne Gazette_
+calls this picture the most sublime production of the great artist,
+and expresses the conviction that a speedy fortune might be realized
+by its exhibition in Europe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. George Flagg has just completed a portrait of Mrs. E. Oakes Smith,
+which will be ranked among the first productions of his pencil. We
+know of scarce a picture as beautiful or a portrait as truthful. It is
+to be engraved, we believe, by Cheney.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mlle. Rachel.--The wonderful accuracy of the death-scene in "Adrienne
+Lecouvreur" has been the object of universal praise in London, not
+merely from the thrilled and thralled public, but from men of art
+and science. A physician, it is said, was complimenting Mademoiselle
+on her amazing truth to the symptoms of mortal agony: "You must have
+studied death closely," said he. "Yes, I have," was the quiet reply;
+"my maid's. I went up to her--I stayed with her--she recommended her
+mother to me!--I was studying my part." This is probably merely one
+of those cynical stories with which the sharp people of Paris love
+to environ and encircle every one who stands a dangerous chance of
+becoming too popular. But smaller artists than Mademoiselle Rachel
+have sometimes had recourse to curious expedients to give their
+dramatic personations a show at reality. The French _prima donna_, who
+not very long ago appeared in M. Clapisson's poor opera, "Jeanne la
+Folle," is said to have shut herself up in the _Salpêtrière_, by way
+of studying _her_ part, and to have been rewarded for her zealous
+curiosity by receiving a basin of scalding soup dashed in her face by
+one of the poor miserable objects of her examination.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Frankfort journal states that the colossal statue of Bavaria, by
+SCHWANTHALER, which is to be placed on the hill of Seudling, surpasses
+in its gigantic proportions all the works of the moderns. It will have
+to be removed in pieces from the foundry where it is cast to its place
+of destination,--and each piece will require sixteen horses to draw
+it. The great toes are each half a metre in length. In the head two
+persons could dance a polka very conveniently,--while the nose might
+lodge the musician. The thickness of the robe--which forms a rich
+drapery descending to the ankles--is about six inches, and its
+circumference at the bottom about two hundred metres. The Crown
+of Victory which the figure holds in her hands weighs one hundred
+quintals (a quintal is a hundred-weight).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The death of SIR ROBERT PEEL, says the _Literary Gazette_, has
+awakened a busy competing spirit for the production of articles
+relating to him, and especially in connection with Literature and the
+Arta. In the one, Memoirs, Speeches, Recollections, Anecdotes, &c.,
+have been abundantly supplied; and in the other, every printshop
+window in London displays its Peels of every style and every degree,
+but mostly very indifferent, absolutely bad, or utter caricature.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Goupil, Vibert & Co. have published a series of portraits of eminent
+Americans which is deserving of the largest approval and sale.
+The head of Mr. Bryant is the best ever published of that poet; it
+presents his fine features and striking phrenology with great force
+and with pleasing as well as just effect. A portrait of Mr. Willis
+is wonderfully truthful, in detail, and is in an eminent degree
+characteristic. The admirers of that author who have not seen him will
+find in it their ideal, and all his acquaintances will see in it as
+distinctly the real man who sits in the congress of editors as the
+representative of the polite world. The head of the artist Mount,
+after Elliott, is not by any means less successful. Among the other
+portraits are those of Gen. Scott, President Fillmore, Robert Fulton,
+J.Q. Adams, Mr. Clay, Mr. Webster, and President Taylor. They are all
+on imperial sheets, and are sold at $1 each.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Paris papers tell a story of a young actor, who finding no
+engagement in that city, came to America to try his fortune. From
+New Orleans he went to California, was lucky as a digger, embarked
+in business and got immensely rich. He is now building in the Champs
+Elysées a magnificent hotel for his mother. All actors are not so
+fortunate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Expected arrivals from Nineveh.--The Great Bull, and upward of one
+hundred tons of sculpture, excavated by Dr. Layard, are now on their
+way to England, and may be expected in the course of September. In
+addition-to the Elgin, Phigalian, Lycian, and Boodroun marbles, the
+British Museum will soon be enriched with a magnificent series of
+Assyrian sculptures.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. Burt has nearly finished the "Anne Page and Slender" of Leslie,
+which is to be the annual engraving of the Art Union. It will be an
+admirable picture, but we cannot but regret that the managers selected
+for this purpose a work so familiar.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The French Minister of the Interior has decided that marble busts of
+M. Gay-Lussac and of M. Blainville shall be executed at the expense of
+the government, and placed in the Institute.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Mr. Powell, who is living in Paris, engaged upon his picture for the
+capital, has been in ill health nearly all the summer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+RECENT DEATHS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The French papers report the death, at Paris, of M. MORA, the Mexican
+Minister Plenipotentiary at the Court of St. James. M. Mora was
+the author of a History of Mexico and its Revolutions since the
+establishment of its independence, and editor-in-chief of several
+journals in Mexico.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. B. SIMMONS, an amiable and accomplished writer, whose name will
+be recollected as that of a frequent contributor of lyrical poems of
+a high order to _Blackwood's Magazine_, and to several of the Annuals,
+died in London on the 20th of July.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM GRAHAM'S MAGAZINE.]
+
+ON A PORTRAIT OF CROMWELL.
+
+BY JAMES T. FIELD.
+
+ "Paint me as I am," said Cromwell,
+ Rough with age, and gashed with wars--
+ "Show my visage as you find it--
+ Less than truth my soul abhors!"
+
+ This was he whose mustering phalanx
+ Swept the foe at Marston Moor;
+ This was he whose arm uplifted
+ From the dust the fainting poor.
+
+ God had made his face uncomely--
+ "Paint me as I am," he said.
+ So he lives upon the canvas
+ Whom they chronicled as _dead_!
+
+ Simple justice he requested
+ At the artist's glowing hands,
+ "Simple justice!" from his ashes
+ Cries a voice that still commands.
+
+ And, behold! the page of History,
+ Centuries dark with Cromwell's name,
+ Shines to-day with thrilling luster
+ From the light of Cromwell's fame!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE EXAMINER.]
+
+WORDSWORTH'S POSTHUMOUS POEM.[3]
+
+This is a voice that speaks to us across a gulf of nearly fifty years.
+A few months ago Wordsworth was taken from us at the ripe age of
+fourscore, yet here we have him addressing the public, as for the
+first time, with all the fervor, the unworn freshness, the hopeful
+confidence of thirty. We are carried back to the period when
+Coleridge, Byron, Scott, Rogers, and Moore were in their youthful
+prime. We live again in the stirring days when the poets who divided
+public attention and interest with the Fabian struggle in Portugal and
+Spain, with the wild and terrible events of the Russian campaign, with
+the uprising of the Teutonic nations and the overthrow of Napoleon,
+were in a manner but commencing their cycle of songs. This is to
+renew, to antedate, the youth of a majority of the living generation.
+But only those whose memory still carries them so far back, can feel
+within them any reflex of that eager excitement with which the news of
+battles fought and won, or mailcoach copies of some new work of Scott,
+or Byron, or the _Edinburgh Review_, were looked for and received in
+those already old days.
+
+[Footnote 3: The Prelude, or Growth of a Poet's Mind; an
+Autobiographical Poem. By William Wordsworth. London, Moxon. [New
+York, Appletons.]]
+
+We need not remind the readers of the _Excursion_ that when Wordsworth
+was enabled by the generous enthusiasm of Raisley Calvert to retire
+with a slender independence to his native mountains, there to devote
+himself exclusively to his art, his first step was to review and
+record in verse the origin and progress of his own powers, as far
+as he was acquainted with them. This was at once an exercise in
+versification, and a test for the kind of poetry for which he was
+by temperament fitted. The result was a determination to compose a
+philosophical poem containing views of man, of nature, and of society.
+This, ambitious conception has been doomed to share the fate of so
+many other colossal undertakings. Of the three parts of his _Recluse_,
+thus planned, only the second, (the _Excursion_, published in 1814,)
+has been completed. Of the other two there exists only the first book
+of the first, and the plan of the third. The _Recluse_ will remain in
+fragmentary greatness, a poetical Cathedral of Cologne.
+
+Matters standing thus, it has not been without a melancholy sense of
+the uncertainty of human projects, and of the contrast between the
+sanguine enterprise and its silent evaporation (so often the "history
+of an individual mind"), that we have perused this _Prelude_ which no
+completed strain was destined to follow. Yet in the poem itself there
+is nothing to inspire depression. It is animated throughout with the
+hopeful confidence in the poet's own powers, so natural to the time
+of life at which it was composed; it evinces a power and soar of
+imagination unsurpassed in any of his writings; and its images and
+incidents have a freshness and distinctness which they not seldom
+lost, when they came to be elaborated, as many of them were, in his
+minor poems of a later date.
+
+The _Prelude_, as the title-page indicates, is a poetical
+autobiography, commencing with the earliest reminiscences of the
+author, and continued to the time at which it was composed. We are
+told that it was begun in 1799 and completed, in 1805. It consists
+of fourteen books. Two are devoted to the infancy and school-time of
+the poet; four to the period of his University life; two to a brief
+residence in London immediately subsequent to his leaving Cambridge,
+and a retrospect of the progress his mind had then made; and three
+to a residence in France, chiefly in the Loire, but partly in Paris,
+during the stormy period of Louis the Sixteenth's flight and capture,
+and the fierce contest between the Girondins and Robespierre. Five
+books are then occupied with an analysis of the internal struggle
+occasioned by the contradictory influences of rural and secluded
+nature in boyhood, and of society when the young man first mingles
+with the world. The surcease of the strife is recorded in the
+fourteenth book, entitled "Conclusion."
+
+The poem is addressed to Coleridge; and apart from its poetical
+merits, is interesting as at once a counterpart and a supplement to
+that author's philosophical and beautiful criticism of the _Lyrical
+Ballads_ in his _Biographia Literaria_. It completes the explanation,
+there given, of the peculiar constitution of Wordsworth's mind, and of
+his poetical theory. It confirms and justifies our opinion that that
+theory was essentially partial and erroneous; but at the same time it
+establishes the fact that Wordsworth was a true and a great poet in
+despite of his theory.
+
+The great defect of Wordsworth, in our judgment, was want of sympathy
+with and knowledge of men. From his birth till his entry at college,
+he lived in a region where he met with none whose minds might awaken
+his sympathies, and where life was altogether uneventful. On the
+other hand, that region abounded with the inert, striking, and most
+impressive objects of natural scenery. The elementary grandeur
+and beauty of external nature came thus to fill up his mind to
+the exclusion of human interests. To such a result his individual
+constitution powerfully contributed. The sensuous element was
+singularly deficient in his nature. He never seems to have passed
+through that erotic period out of which some poets have never emerged.
+A soaring, speculative imagination, and an impetuous, resistless
+self-will, were his distinguishing characteristics. From first to last
+he concentrated himself within himself; brooding over his own fancies
+and imaginations to the comparative disregard of the incidents and
+impressions which suggested them; and was little susceptible of ideas
+originating in other minds. We behold the result. He lives alone in a
+world of mountains, streams, and atmospheric phenomena, dealing with
+moral abstractions, and rarely encountered by even shadowy specters
+of beings outwardly resembling himself. There is measureless grandeur
+and power in his moral speculations. There is intense reality in
+his pictures of external nature. But though his human characters are
+presented with great skill of metaphysical analysis, they have rarely
+life or animation. He is always the prominent, often the exclusive,
+object of his own song.
+
+Upon a mind so constituted, with its psychological peculiarities
+so cherished and confirmed, the fortunes and fates of others, and
+the stirring events of his time, made vivid but very transient
+impressions. The conversation and writing of contemporaries trained
+among books, and with the faculty of speech more fully developed than
+that of thought, seemed colorless and empty to one with--whom natural
+objects and grandeurs were always present in such overpowering force.
+Excluded by his social position from taking an active part in the
+public events of the day, and repelled by the emptiness of the then
+fashionable literature, he turned to private and humble life as
+possessing at least a reality. But he thus withheld himself from
+the contemplation of those great mental excitements which only great
+public struggles can awaken. He contracted a habit of exaggerating the
+importance of every-day incidents and emotions. He accustomed himself
+to see in men and in social relations only what he was predetermined
+to see there, and to impute to them a value and importance derived
+mainly from his own self-will. Even his natural good taste contributed
+to confirm him in his error. The two prevailing schools of literature
+in England, at that time, were the trashy and mouthing writers who
+adopted the sounding language of Johnson and Darwin, unenlivened
+by the vigorous thought of either; and the "dead-sea apes" of
+that inflated, sentimental, revolutionary style which Diderot had
+unconsciously originated, and Kotzebue carried beyond the verge of
+caricature. The right feeling and manly thought of Wordsworth were
+disgusted by these shallow word-mongers, and he flew to the other
+extreme. Under the influences--repulsive and attractive--we have thus
+attempted to indicate, he adopted the theory that as much of grandeur
+and profound emotion was to be found in mere domestic incidents and
+feelings, as on the more conspicuous stage of public life; and that
+a bald and naked simplicity of language was the perfection of style.
+Singularly enough, he was confirmed in these notions by the very
+writer of the day whose own natural genius, more than any of his
+contemporaries, impelled him to revel in great, wild, supernatural
+conceptions; and to give utterance to them in gorgeous language.
+Coleridge was perhaps the only contemporary from whom Wordsworth ever
+took an opinion; and that he did so from him, is mainly attributable
+to the fact that Coleridge did little more than reproduce to him
+his own notions, sometimes rectified by a subtler logic, but always
+rendered more attractive by new and dazzling illustrations.
+
+Fortunately it is out of the power of the most perverse theory to
+spoil the true poet. The poems of Wordsworth must continue to charm
+and elevate mankind, in defiance of his crotchets, just as Luther,
+Henri Quatre, and other living impersonations of poetry do, despite
+all quaint peculiarities of the attire, the customs, or the opinions
+of their respective ages, with which they were imbued. The spirit of
+truth and poetry redeems, ennobles, hallows, every external form in
+which it may be lodged. We may "pshaw" and "pooh" at Harry Gill and
+the Idiot Boy; but the deep and tremulous tenderness of sentiment,
+the strong-winged flight of fancy, the excelling and unvarying purity,
+which pervade all the writings of Wordsworth, and the exquisite melody
+of his lyrical poems, must ever continue to attract and purify the
+mind. The very excesses into which his one-sided theory betrayed him,
+acted as a useful counter-agent to the prevailing bad taste of his
+time.
+
+The Prelude may take a permanent place as one of the most perfect of
+his compositions. It has much of the fearless felicity of youth; and
+its imagery has the sharp and vivid outline of ideas fresh from the
+brain. The subject--the development of his own great powers--raises
+him above that willful dallying with trivialties which repels us in
+some of his other works. And there is real vitality in the theme,
+both from our anxiety to know the course of such a mind, and from
+the effect of an absorbing interest in himself excluding that languor
+which sometimes seized him in his efforts to impart or attribute
+interest to themes possessing little or none in themselves. Its mere
+narrative, though often very homely, and dealing in too many words,
+is often characterized also by elevated imagination, and always by
+eloquence. The bustle of London life, the prosaic uncouthness of its
+exterior, the earnest heart that beats beneath it, the details even of
+its commonest amusements, from Bartholomew Fair to Sadler's Wells, are
+portrayed with simple force and delicate discrimination; and for the
+most part skillfully contrasted with the rural life of the poet's
+native home. There are some truthful and powerful sketches of French
+character and life, in the early revolutionary era. But above all,
+as might have been anticipated, Wordsworth's heart revels in the
+elementary beauty and grandeur of his mountain theme; while his
+own simple history is traced with minute fidelity, and is full of
+unflagging interest.
+
+We have already adverted to the fact that this Prelude was but
+the overture to a grander song which the poet has left, in a great
+measure, unsung. Reverting to this consideration an important
+fact seems to force itself upon our notice. The creative power of
+Wordsworth would appear to have been paralyzed after the publication
+of his Excursion. All his most finished works precede that period. His
+later writings generally lack the strength and freshness which we find
+in those of an earlier date. Some may attribute this to his want of
+the stimulus which the necessity of writing for a livelihood imparts,
+and in part they may be right; but this is not the whole secret. That
+his isolation from the stirring contact of competition, that his utter
+disregard of contemporary events, allowed his mind, which for perfect
+health's sake requires constantly-renewed impulses from without, to
+subside into comparative hebetude, there can be no doubt whatever.
+But the main secret of the freezing up of his fountain of poetical
+inspiration, we really take to have been his change of politics.
+Wordsworth's muse was essentially liberal--one may say, Jacobinical.
+That he was unconscious of any sordid motive for his change, we
+sincerely believe; but as certainly his conforming was the result less
+of reasonable conviction than of willfulness. It was by a determined
+effort of his will that he brought himself, to believe in the
+Church-and-State notions which he latterly promulgated. Hence the want
+of definite views, and of a living interest, which characterizes all
+his writings subsequent to that change, when compared with those of
+an earlier time. It was Wordsworth's wayward fate to be patronized and
+puffed into notice by the champions of old abuses, by the advocates
+of the pedantry of Oxford, and by the maintainers of the despotism not
+even of Pitt but of Castlereagh. It is already felt, however, that the
+poet whom these men were mainly instrumental in bringing into notice,
+will live in men's memories by exactly those of his writings most
+powerful to undermine and overthrow their dull and faded bigotries.
+Despite his own efforts, Wordsworth (as has been said of Napoleon) is
+the child and champion of Jacobinism. Though clothed in ecclesiastical
+formulas, his religion is little more than the simple worship of
+nature; his noblest moral flights are struggles to emancipate himself
+from conventional usage; and the strong ground of his thoughts, as of
+his style, is nature stripped of the gauds with which the pupils of
+courts and circles would bedeck and be-ribbon it. Even in the ranks of
+our opponents Wordsworth has been laboring in our behalf.
+
+It is in the record of his extra-academic life that the poet soars his
+freest flight, in passages where we have a very echo of the emotions
+of an emancipated worshiper of nature flying back to his loved
+resorts. Apart from its poetic value, the book is a graphical and
+interesting portraiture of the struggles of an ingenuous and impetuous
+mind to arrive at a clear insight into its own interior constitution
+and external relations, and to secure the composure of self-knowledge
+and of equally adjusted aspirations. As a poem it is likely to
+lay fast and enduring hold on pure and aspiring intellects, and to
+strengthen the claim of Wordsworth to endure with his land's language.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE MONUMENT TO SIR ROBERT PEEL.
+
+A LETTER FROM WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR,
+
+TO THE EDITOR OF THE 'EXAMINER.'
+
+Now the fever hath somewhat subsided which came over the people from
+the grave of Sir Robert Peel, there is room for a few observations on
+his decease and on its consequences. All public writers, I believe,
+have expatiated on his character, comparing him with others who,
+within our times, have occupied the same position. My own opinion
+has invariably been that he was the wisest of all our statesmen;
+and certainly, though he found reason to change his sentiments and
+his measures, he changed them honestly, well weighed, always from
+conviction, and always for the better. He has been compared, and
+seemingly in no spirit of hostility or derision, with a Castlereagh,
+a Perceval, an Addington. a Canning. Only one of these is worthy of
+notice, namely Canning, whose brilliancy made his shallowness less
+visible, and whose graces, of style and elocution threw a vail over
+his unsoundness and lubricity. Sir Robert Peel was no satirist or
+epigrammatist: he was only a statesman in public life: only a virtuous
+and friendly man in private. _Par negotiis, nee supra_. Walpole alone
+possessed his talents for business. But neither Peel nor his family
+was enriched from the spoils of his country; Walpole spent in building
+and pictures more than double the value of his hereditary estate, and
+left the quadruple to his descendants.
+
+Dissimilar from Walpole, and from commoner and coarser men who
+occupied the same office, Peel forbade that a name which he had
+made illustrious should be degraded and stigmatized by any title
+of nobility. For he knew that all those titles had their origin and
+nomenclature from military services, and belong to military men, like
+their epaulets and spurs and chargers. They sound well enough against
+the sword and helmet, but strangely in law-courts and cathedrals: but,
+reformer as he was, he could not reform all this; he could only keep
+clear of it in his own person.
+
+I now come to the main object of my letter.
+
+Subscriptions are advertised for the purpose of raising monuments
+to Sir Robert Peel; and a motion has been made in Parliament for
+one in Westminster Abbey at the public expense, Whatever may be the
+precedents, surely the house of God should contain no object but
+such as may remind us of His presence and our duty to Him. Long ago I
+proposed that ranges of statues and busts should commemorate the great
+worthies of our country. All the lower part of our National Gallery
+might be laid open for this purpose. Even the best monuments in
+Westminster Abbey and St. Paul's are deformities to the edifice. Let
+us not continue this disgrace. Deficient as we are in architects,
+we have many good statuaries, and we might well employ them on the
+statues of illustrious commanders, and the busts of illustrious
+statesmen and writers. Meanwhile our cities, and especially the
+commercial, would, I am convinced, act more wisely, and more
+satisfactorily to the relict of the deceased, if, instead of statues,
+they erected schools and almshouses, with an inscription to his
+memory.
+
+We glory in about sixty whose busts and statues may occupy what are
+now the "deep solitudes and awful cells" in our national gallery. Our
+literary men of eminence are happily more numerous than the political
+or the warlike, or both together. There is only one class of them
+which might be advantageously excluded, namely, the theological; and
+my reasons are these. First, their great talents were chiefly employed
+on controversy; secondly, and consequently, their images would excite
+dogmatical discord. Every sect of the Anglican Church, and every
+class of dissenters, complaining of undue preferences. Painture and
+sculpture lived in the midst of corruption, lived throughout it, and
+seemed indeed to draw vitality from it, as flowers the most delicate
+from noxious air; but they collapsed at the searching breath of free
+inquiry, and could not abide persecution. The torch of Philosophy
+never kindled the suffocating fagot, under whose smoke Theology was
+mistaken for Religion. Theology had, until now, been speculative
+and quiescent: she abandoned to Philosophy these humbler qualities:
+instead of allaying and dissipating, as Philosophy had always done,
+she excited and she directed animosities. Oriental in her parentage,
+and keeping up her wide connections in that country, she acquired
+there all the artifices most necessary to the furtherance of her
+designs: among the rest was ventriloquism, which she quite perfected,
+making her words seem to sound from above and from below and from
+every side around. Ultimately, when men had fallen on their faces at
+this miracle, she assumed the supreme power. Kings were her lackeys,
+and nations the dust under her palfrey's hoof. By her sentence Truth
+was gagged, scourged, branded, cast down on the earth in manacles; and
+Fortitude, who had stood at Truth's side, was fastened with nails and
+pulleys to the stake. I would not revive by any images, in the abode
+of the graceful and the gentle Arts, these sorrowful reminiscences.
+The vicissitudes of the world appear to be bringing round again the
+spectral Past. Let us place great men between it and ourselves: they
+all are tutelar: not the warrior and the statesman only; not only the
+philosopher; but also the historian who follows them step by step, and
+the poet who secures us from peril and dejection by his counter-charm.
+Philosophers in most places are unwelcome: but there is no better
+reason why Shaftesbury and Hobbes should be excluded from our
+gallery, than why Epicurus should have been from Cicero's or Zeno from
+Lucullus's. Of our sovereigns, I think Alfred, Cromwell, and William
+III alone are eligible; and they, because they opposed successfully
+the subverters of the laws. Three viceroys of Ireland will deservedly
+be placed in the same receptacle; Sir John Perrot, Lord Chesterfield,
+and (in due time) the last Lord-Deputy. One Speaker, one only, of the
+Parliament; he without whom no Parliament would be now existing;
+he who declared to Henry IV. that until all public grievances were
+removed, no subsidy should be granted. The name of this Speaker may be
+found in Rapin; English historians talk about facts, forgetting men.
+
+Admirals and generals are numerous and conspicuous. Drake, Blake,
+Rodney, Jervis, Nelson, Collingwood; the subduer of Algiers beaten
+down for the French to occupy: and the defender of Acre, the first who
+defeated, discomfited, routed, broke, and threw into shameful flight,
+Bonaparte. Our generals are Marlborough, Peterborough, Wellington, and
+that successor to his fame in India, who established the empire that
+was falling from us, who achieved in a few days two arduous victories,
+who never failed in any enterprise, who accomplished the most
+difficult with the smallest expenditure of blood, who corrected
+the disorders of the military, who gave the soldier an example of
+temperance, the civilian of simplicity and frugality, and whose sole
+(but exceedingly great) reward, was the approbation of our greatest
+man.
+
+With these come the statesmen of the Commonwealth, the students of
+Bacon, the readers of Philip Sidney, the companions of Algernon, the
+precursors of Locke and Newton. Opposite to them are Chaucer, Spenser,
+Shakspeare, Milton; lower in dignity, Dryden, Pope, Gray, Goldsmith,
+Cowper, Scott, Burns, Shelley, Southey, Byron, Wordsworth; the author
+of _Hohenlinden_ and the _Battle of the Baltic_; and the glorious
+woman who equaled these, two animated works in her _Ivan_ and
+_Casabianca_. Historians have but recently risen up among us: and long
+be it before, by command of Parliament, the chisel grates on the brow
+of a Napier, a Grote, and Macaulay!
+
+WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE SPECTATOR.]
+
+JURISPRUDENCE OF THE MOGULS: THE PANDECTS OF AURUNGZEBE.[4]
+
+THE Government of British India have not neglected to countenance
+the study of the indigenous and other systems of law which they found
+established on acquiring possession of the country. Warren Hastings
+was the first to recognize the value of such knowledge; and to his
+encouragement, if not to his incitement, we are indebted for the
+compilation of Hindoo law translated by Halbed, Jones, Colebrooke,
+Macnaghten, Hamilton, and a pretty numerous body of accomplished
+men, of whom Mr. Baillie is the most recently enrolled laborer in
+the vineyard, have carried on the good work. More comprehensive and
+accurate views of Hindoo law have gradually been developed, and the
+more advanced and more influential system of Mahometan jurisprudence
+has also shared in the attention of European students. There is,
+however, still much to be done in this field of inquiry; as a few
+remarks on the nature of the present publication, and the source
+whence its materials are derived, will show.
+
+[Footnote 4: The Moohummadan Law of Sale, according to the Hunefeea
+Code: from the Futawa Alumgeeree, a Digest of the whole Law, prepared
+by command of the Emperor Aurungzebe Alumgeer. Selected and translated
+from the original Arabic, with an Introduction and explanatory Notes,
+by Neil B.E. Baillie, Author of "The Moohummadan Law of inheritance."
+Published by Smith and Elder.]
+
+The law of Mahometan jurists is for India pretty much what the Roman
+law is for Scotland and the Continental nations of Europe. Savigny has
+shown how, throughout all the territories formerly included within the
+limits of the Roman Empire, a large amount of Roman legal doctrines
+and forms of procedure continued to be operative after the Empire's
+subversion. The revival of the study of the Roman law, as embodied
+in the compilations of Justinian, by the doctors of the school
+of Bologna, augmented and systematized these remnants of Roman
+jurisprudence, and extended their application to countries which (like
+great part of Germany) had never been subjected to the sway of Rome.
+In like manner, throughout that part of India which was permanently
+subdued and organized by the Mogul dynasty, and also those parts in
+which minor Islamitic states were established, the organization of
+the courts of justice, and the legal opinions of the individuals who
+officiated in them, necessarily introduced a large amount of Mahometan
+jurisprudence. This element of the law of India was augmented and
+systematized by the writings of private jurists, and by compilations
+undertaken by command of princes. As with the Roman jurisprudence in
+Europe, so with Mahometan jurisprudence in India, only so much of its
+doctrines and forms could at any time be considered to possess legal
+force as had been reenacted by the local sovereigns, or introduced by
+judges in the form of decisions. A systematic knowledge of the whole
+body of Mahometan law was important to the Indian lawyer, as enabling
+him more thoroughly to understand the system, and its various isolated
+doctrines; but the whole body of that law was at no time binding in
+India. Since the establishment of British sway, only so much of the
+Mahometan law as has kept its ground in the practice of the courts,
+or has been reenacted by the "regulations" or "ordinances" of the
+Anglo-Indian Government, _is law_; the rest is only valuable as the
+"antiquities of the law," which help to trace the origin of what
+survives, and thereby throw light upon what in it is obscure or
+doubtful.
+
+Among the most valuable, if not indeed the most valuable of the
+compilations from which we may obtain a knowledge of Mahometan
+jurisprudence, is the "Futawa Alumgeeree," mentioned in Mr. Baillie's
+title-page. Its value is not confined to the purposes of those
+who would make themselves acquainted with Mahometan jurisprudence
+in the peculiar form it assumed in India. It is highly esteemed
+throughout Islam, and is quoted even by the doctors of Mecca as the
+Futawa-i-hind, or the Indian _responsa prudentum_. It was compiled by
+the orders of the Emperor Aurungzebe. It is a digest of the "Futawa"
+of the most celebrated jurists of the Hanifeh (or, as Mr. Baillie
+spells it, _Hunefeeah_) sect or school. Mr. Baillie informs us in
+his preface, that "_futawa_ is the plural form of _futwa_, a term in
+common use in Mahometan countries to signify an exposition of law by a
+public officer called the _mooftee_, or a case submitted to him by the
+_kazee_ or judge." The "futwa," therefore, seems to correspond not
+so much with our English "decisions" or "precedents" as with the
+"responsa prudentum," that fertile source of doctrines in the Roman
+law. The "Futawa Alumgeeree" consequently resembles the Pandects
+of Justinian in being a systematical arrangement of selections from
+juridical authorities--compiled by Imperial authority; but differs
+from it in this, that the selections are made exclusively from the
+"responsa prudentum," and a few legal treatises, whereas Justinian's
+digest combined with those excerpts from judicial decisions,
+prætorian edicts, &c. With this distinction, we may regard the "Futawa
+Alumgeeree" as the Pandects or Digest of Mahometan Law. As in the
+Roman work of that name, to each extract is appended the name of the
+original work from which it is taken; and the whole of them are so
+arranged as to form a complete digest of Mahometan law.
+
+A work of this kind is invaluable to the student who would make
+himself master of Mahometan jurisprudence as a system. But great care
+must be taken not to misapprehend the exact nature of the knowledge
+to be obtained from it. The "Futawa Alumgeeree" is a systematic
+exposition of the principles of Mahometan law; it assuredly does not
+enable us to ascertain what doctrines of that law are now of legal
+force in India, or even what doctrines have at any time had force
+in India. It does not appear to have been Aurungzebe's intention to
+promulgate it as a code, but to present it to lawyers as a complete
+text-book. Even if he did by ordinance attribute to it the power of
+law, such ordinance was only effectual at any time in the provinces of
+the Mogul Empire; and since the disruption of that empire, it has been
+superseded and modified by laws and the practice of law-courts in the
+various independent states erected on its ruins.
+
+Again the general scholar must be on his guard against the delusion
+that he will find in this digest materials illustrative of the social
+condition of India under the Mogul dynasty. The juridical works
+excerpted in it are almost all foreign to Hindostan; the special cases
+illustrative of abstract doctrines are taken from other countries,
+and many of them from ages antecedent to the invasion of India by the
+Moguls.
+
+Though Persian was the court language of the Mogul dynasty, there is
+scarcely any Persian element in Aurungzebe's legal compilation. The
+Shiite views of jurisprudence, as of theology, prevailed in Persia;
+the "Futawa Alumgeeree" is strictly Sunnite. It is not difficult to
+account for this.--The Mahometan conquerors of India were mainly of
+Turkish or Tartar race; they came from Turan, a region which from time
+immemorial has stood in antagonistic relations to Iran or Persia. This
+may account for the fact that the races of Turan which have embraced
+Mahometanism have uniformly adhered to the Sunnite sect--the sect
+most hostile to the Persian Shias--not only when they settled in the
+countries where the Sunnite sect originated, but when they remained in
+their native regions. The views of the Sunnites were first promulgated
+and have prevailed most extensively in those regions of Islam which
+were once part of the Roman empire, which nominally at least was
+Christian; those of the Shiites, in the countries where, under the
+Sassanides and Arsacidæ, the doctrines of Zoroaster predominated. The
+Euphrates forms pretty nearly the line of demarkation between them.
+
+The Caliphs dominated over both countries and over both sects. Under
+their orthodox protection the Sunnite doctrines were able to strike
+root in Balkh and Samarkand--the ancient Turan, and therefore hostile
+to Iran and Persia. When Islam was reorganized after the anarchy which
+ensued upon the overthrow of the Caliphs, Persia became the appanage
+of the Sophis or Shiite dynasty; the regions to the West of the
+Euphrates--the ci-devant Roman Empire--acknowledged the rule of
+the Turkish dynasties, which were Sunnite. On the Oxus and further
+East--the old Turan--the Sunnite sect was sufficiently strong to defy
+the efforts of the Shiite sovereigns of Persia to eradicate it. The
+doctors of Samarkand and Bokhara continued (and continue) as orthodox
+Sunnites as those of Kufah, Mecca, and Stamboul.
+
+Accordingly, we find the authorities excerpted in the "Futawa
+Alumgeeree" consist almost exclusively of two classes; they are either
+the immediate disciples of Hanifa at Kufah and Bagdad, or the jurists
+of Samarkand and Bokhara. The law-cases they expounded are such as had
+originated, or might have originated, in those countries--in Babylonia
+or Turan. And they are for the most part taken from a state of
+society, and illustrative of social relations, which prevailed in
+these countries at a period long antecedent to that of Aurunzebe. To
+attempt to illustrate the civil and social condition of India, under
+that Emperor by their aid, would be as preposterous as to attempt to
+illustrate the civil and social condition of those parts of Germany
+where the Roman law still possesses authority from cases recorded in
+the Pandects of Justinian.
+
+The real use and value of the "Futawa Alumgeeree" may be briefly
+explained. In every country in Europe where the Roman law is still
+recognized as more or less authoritative--and indeed in every country
+where the common law has borrowed more or less from the Roman--an
+acquaintance with the system of Roman jurisprudence as it is embodied
+in the law-books of Justinian has its value for the scientific lawyer.
+In like manner a knowledge of Mahometan jurisprudence as embodied in
+the "Futawa Alumgeeree" cannot fail to be instructive for the lawyers
+of all the countries of Islam, and the lawyers of India, where so much
+of the existing practical law has been derived from that source. To
+the general scholar who wishes to master the civil history of Arabia
+and Babylonia, in which the Sunnite sect, and more particularly the
+Hanifite subdivision of it, originated, or to familiarize himself
+with the moral theories which regulate the judgments and actions of
+the modern Turks, Turcomans, Arabians, and Egyptians, the digest of
+Aurungzeebee is also a valuable repertory of facts and illustrations.
+
+For this reason we incline to be of opinion that Mr. Baillie is
+mistaken in thinking that a selection from the two books of the
+"Futawa Alumgeeree," which embrace the subject of "sale" can have much
+utility for Indian practitioners. It does not follow, because a legal
+doctrine is declared sound in this work, that it is or ever has been
+practically applicable in India. As an authoritative declaration of
+legal doctrines, the book is as likely to mislead as to guide aright.
+On the other hand, as an exposition of the general principles of
+Mahometan law, even with regard to sale, it is necessarily imperfect.
+The work from which it is taken is a collection of legal opinions,
+which had in their day the force of judicial decisions--of something
+equivalent to the "responsa prudentum" of Roman jurisprudence. Each is
+expounded on its own merits; and all the special doctrines involved
+in it are laid down. Hence it comes, that much that is calculated
+to throw light on the principles of the law of sale must be sought
+under other heads; and that much included in the chapters ostensibly
+treating of sale refers to other topics. As part of an entire digest
+of the law compiled on the same principle as that of Justinian,
+the two books relating to sale are sufficient; but for an isolated
+treatise on "sale," they contain at once too much and too little.
+
+Nevertheless, we welcome Mr. Baillie's publication as a valuable
+addition to juridical and even to general literature. The translation,
+though not by any means free from defects, is the best specimen of
+a really good Mahometan law-book that has yet been published. The
+defects to which we allude are twofold. In the first place, though Mr.
+Baillie mentions that in the original the name of the treatise from
+which it is taken is appended to every excerpt, he has not in his
+translation given those references. His work is not therefore what
+the original is, a Chrestomathia of the best Arabian jurists--a
+succedaneum for their complete works--an illustration of Arabic legal
+literature. Again, he is often loose and vacillating in the use of
+the English words he has selected as corresponding to the technical
+phraseology of the Arabian jurists, and sometimes infelicitous in the
+selection of his English terms. It has occurred to us that he would
+have succeeded better in rendering the exact meaning of his originals,
+had he availed himself more of technical phrases of the Roman law
+which are familiar to all European jurists. Is does not occur to
+us that he would by doing so have been in danger of Romanizing the
+Mahometan to an extent that might mislead. Mill, in his History of
+British India, has noticed how closely the classification of the
+Mahometan approaches to that of the Roman jurists. An attentive
+perusal of Mr. Baillie's volume has convinced us that the analogy in
+the substance is quite as strong as in the arrangements. This fact
+seems susceptible of being accounted for on historical grounds.
+Mahometanism is in fact a sect or heresy of Christianity. The views
+and sentiments, the aggregate of which make up the body of Christian
+opinion, are not all of Jewish or Christian origin. They are the moral
+creed of societies whose opinions and civilization have been derived
+in part from other sources. The philosophy of Greece and the law of
+Rome have contributed in nearly equal proportions to the theosophy
+of the Hebrews. The jurisprudence of all Christian nations is mainly
+referable to Rome for its origin, and the same is the case with at
+least the Sunnite Mahometans. The nations of Islam took only their
+religious creed from their Prophet; the jurists of Kufah retained and
+expounded the civil law which prevailed among them before his time.
+That law was the law of the Greek Empire, developed in the same way as
+that of the Western Empire under the judicial and legislative auspices
+of Roman Prætors and Pro-Consuls, aided by Roman jurists. Theophilus,
+one of the jurists employed by Justinian for his compilations,
+lectured in Greek on the Institutions; and the substance of
+his lectures still survives under the name of the Paraphrase of
+Theophilus. The Greek edicts and novels of Justinian's successors are
+mainly Roman law. Throughout the Byzantine Empire (within which Kufah
+and the region where Bagdad now stands were included) Roman law was
+paramount, and Roman jurists were numerous. The arrangement, the
+subdivisions, and the substance of Mahometan jurisprudence, show
+that it has been principally derived from this source. Some of its
+doctrines are doubtless aboriginal engrafted on the law of the
+Empire; and it has been modified in some respects to reconcile it to
+the religious dictates of Islam, just as the law of Pagan Rome was
+modified after Christianity became the religion of the Empire. But
+still Mahometan jurisprudence retains undeniably the lineaments of its
+parentage.
+
+This consideration places in a strong light the importance of the
+study of Mahometan law. The increasing intimacy of our relations with
+independent Mahometan states makes it of the utmost consequence that
+we should entertain correct views of their opinions and institutions;
+and no better key to the knowledge of both can be found than in the
+historical study of their law. Again, we are called upon to legislate
+and supply judges for British India, a large proportion of the
+inhabitants of which are Mahometans. Even the Hindoos of the former
+Mogul Empire have adopted many legal forms and doctrines from
+their conquerors. A minute and accurate acquaintance with Mahometan
+jurisprudence is an indispensable preliminary to judicious legislation
+for British India. For these reasons, it could be wished that Mr.
+Baillie, or some other equally accomplished laborer in that field,
+would set himself to do for the "Futawa Alumgeeree" what Heineccius
+and other modern civilians have done for the law-books of
+Justinian--present the European public with an elegant and exact
+abstract of its contents.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The following, from Southey's "Gridiron," now first published in his
+Memoirs, ought to be set to music for the Beef-Steak Club:--
+
+ "Now the perfect Steak prepare!
+ Now the appointed rites begin!
+ Cut it from the pinguid rump.
+ Not too thick and not too thin;
+ Somewhat to the thick inclining,
+ Yet the thick and thin between,
+ That the gods, when they are dining,
+ May comment the golden mean.
+ Ne'er till now have they been blest
+ With a beef-steak daily drest:
+ Ne'er till this auspicious morn
+ When the Gridiron was born."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The most ignorant of the world's fools are those called "knowing
+ones," a phrase satirical with the very glee of irony.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE MYSTERIOUS COMPACT.
+
+A FREE TRANSLATION FROM THE GERMAN.
+
+PART II--CONCLUSION
+
+(CONCLUDED FROM PAGE 192.)
+
+Several weeks passed away. Edward spared no pains to discover
+some trace of the lady in question, but all in vain. No one in the
+neighborhood knew the family; and he had already determined, as
+soon as the spring began, to ask for leave of absence, and to travel
+through the country where Ferdinand had formed his unfortunate
+attachment, when a circumstance occurred which coincided strangely
+with his wishes. His commanding-officer gave him a commission to
+purchase some horses, which, to his great consolation, led him exactly
+into that part of the country where Ferdinand had been quartered.
+It was a market-town of some importance. He was to remain there some
+time, which suited his plans exactly; and he made use of every leisure
+hour to cultivate the acquaintance of the officers, to inquire into
+Ferdinand's connections and acquaintance, to trace the mysterious name
+if possible, and thus fulfill a sacred duty. For to him it appeared a
+sacred duty to execute the commission of his departed friend--to get
+possession of the ring, and to be the means, as he hoped, of giving
+rest to the troubled spirit of Ferdinand.
+
+Already, on the evening of the second day, he was sitting in the
+coffee-room with burghers of the place and officers of different
+regiments.
+
+A newly-arrived cornet was inquiring whether the neighborhood were a
+pleasant one, of an infantry officer, one of Hallberg's corps. "For,"
+said he, "I come from charming quarters."
+
+"There is not much to boast of," replied the captain. "There is no
+good fellowship, no harmony among the people."
+
+"I will tell you why that is," cried an animated lieutenant; "that is
+because there is no house as a point of reunion, where one is sure
+to find and make acquaintances, and to be amused, and where each
+individual ascertains his own merits by the effect they produce on
+society at large."
+
+"Yes, we have had nothing of that kind since the Varniers left us,"
+said the captain.
+
+"Varniers!" cried Edward, with an eagerness he could ill conceal. "The
+name sounds foreign."
+
+"They were not Germans--they were emigrants from the Netherlands, who
+had left their country on account of political troubles," replied the
+captain.
+
+"Ah, that was a charming house," cried the lieutenant, "cultivation,
+refinement, a sufficient competency, the whole style of establishment
+free from ostentation, yet most comfortable; and Emily--Emily was the
+soul of the whole house."
+
+"Emily Varnier!" echoed Edward, while his heart beat fast and loud.
+
+"Yes, yes! that was the name of the prettiest, most graceful, most
+amiable girl in the world," said the lieutenant.
+
+"You seem bewitched by the fair Emily," observed the cornet.
+
+"I think you would have been too, had you known her," rejoined the
+lieutenant; "she was the jewel of the whole society. Since she went
+away there is no bearing their stupid balls and assemblies."
+
+"But you must not forget," the captain resumed once more, "when you
+attribute everything to the charms of the fair girl, that not only
+she but the whole family has disappeared, and we have lost that
+house which formed, as you say, so charming a point of reunion in our
+neighborhood."
+
+"Yes, yes; exactly so," said an old gentleman, a civilian, who had
+been silent hitherto; "the Varniers' house is a great loss in the
+country, where such losses are not so easily replaced as in a large
+town. First, the father died, then came the cousin and carried the
+daughter away."
+
+"And did this cousin marry the young lady?" inquired Edward, in a tone
+tremulous with agitation.
+
+"Certainly," answered the old gentleman; "it was a very great match
+for her; he bought land to the value of half a million about here."
+
+"And he was an agreeable, handsome man, we must all allow," remarked
+the captain.
+
+"But she would never have married him," exclaimed the lieutenant, "if
+poor Hallberg had not died."
+
+Edward was breathless, but he did not speak a word.
+
+"She would have been compelled to do so in any case," said the old
+man; "the father had destined them for each other from infancy,
+and people say he made his daughter take a vow as he lay on his
+death-bed."
+
+"That sounds terrible," said Edward; "and does not speak much for the
+good feeling of the cousin."
+
+"She could not have fulfilled her father's wish," interposed the
+lieutenant; "her heart was bound up in Hallberg, and Hallberg's in
+her. Few people, perhaps, know this, for the lovers were prudent and
+discreet; I, however, knew it all."
+
+"And why was she not allowed to follow the inclination of her heart?"
+asked Edward.
+
+"Because her father had promised her," replied the captain: "you used
+just now the word terrible; it is a fitting expression, according to
+my version of the matter. It appears that one of the branches of the
+house of Varnier had committed an act of injustice toward another, and
+Emily's father considered it a point of conscience to make reparation.
+Only through the marriage of his daughter with a member of the
+ill-used branch could that act be obliterated and made up for, and,
+therefore, he pressed the matter sorely."
+
+"Yes, and the headlong passion which Emily inspired her cousin with
+abetted his designs."
+
+"Then her cousin loved Emily?" inquired Edward.
+
+"Oh, to desperation," was the reply. "He was a rival to her shadow,
+who followed her not more closely than he did. He was jealous of the
+rose that she placed on her bosom."
+
+"Then poor Emily is not likely to have a calm life with such a man,"
+said Edward.
+
+"Come," interposed the old gentleman, with en authoritative tone, "I
+think you, gentlemen, go a little too far. I know D'Effernay; he is an
+honest, talented man, very rich, indeed, and generous; he anticipates
+his wife in every wish. She has the most brilliant house in the
+neighborhood, and lives like a princess."
+
+"And trembles," insisted the lieutenant, "when she hears her husband's
+footstep. What good can riches be to her? She would have been happier
+with Hallberg."
+
+"I do not know," rejoined the captain, "why you always looked upon
+that attachment as something so decided. It never appeared so to
+me; and you yourself say that D'Effernay is very jealous, which I
+believe him to be, for he is a man of strong passions; and this very
+circumstance causes me to doubt the rest of your story. Jealousy has
+sharp eyes, and D'Effernay would have discovered a rival in Hallberg,
+and not proved himself the friend he always was to our poor comrade."
+
+"That does not follow at all," replied the lieutenant, "it only proves
+that the lovers were very cautious. So far, however, I agree with you.
+I believe that if D'Effernay had suspected anything of the kind he
+would have murdered Hallberg."
+
+A shudder passed through Edward's veins.
+
+"Murdered!" he repeated, in a hollow voice; "do you not judge too
+harshly of this man when you hint the possibility of such a thing?"
+
+"That does he, indeed," said the old man; "these gentlemen are all
+angry with D'Effernay, because he has carried off the prettiest girl
+in the country. But I am told he does not intend remaining where he
+now lives. He wishes to sell his estates."
+
+"Really," inquired the captain, "and where is he going?"
+
+"I have no idea," replied the other; "but he is selling everything
+off. One manor is already disposed of, and there have been people
+already in negotiation for the place where he resides."
+
+The conversation now turned on the value of D'Effernay's property, and
+of land in general, &c.
+
+Edward had gained materials enough for reflection; he rose soon, took
+leave of the company, and gave himself up, in the solitude of his
+own room, to the torrent of thought and feeling which that night's
+conversation had let loose. So, then, it was true; Emily Varnier was
+no fabulous being! Hallberg had loved her, his love had been returned,
+but a cruel destiny had separated them. How wonderfully did all he
+had heard explain the dream at the Castle, and how completely did
+that supply what had remained doubtful, or had been omitted in the
+officers' narrative. Emily Varnier, doubtless, possessed that ring, to
+gain possession of which now seemed his bounden duty. He resolved not
+to delay its fulfillment a moment, however difficult it might prove,
+and he only reflected on the best manner in which he should perform
+the task allotted to him. The sale of the property appeared to him a
+favorable opening. The fame of his father's wealth made it probable
+that the son might wish to be purchaser of a fine estate, like the one
+in question. He spoke openly of such a project, made inquiries of the
+old gentleman, and the captain, who seemed to him to know most about
+the matter; and as his duties permitted a trip for a week or so, he
+started immediately, and arrived on the second day at the place of his
+destination. He stopped in the public house in the village to inquire
+if the estate lay near, and whether visitors were allowed to see the
+house and grounds. Mine host, who doubtless had had his directions,
+sent a messenger immediately to the Castle, who returned before long,
+accompanied by a chasseur, in a splendid livery, who invited the
+stranger to the Castle in the name of M. D'Effernay.
+
+This was exactly what Edward wished, and expected. Escorted by
+the chasseur he soon arrived at the Castle, and was shown up
+a spacious staircase into a modern, almost, one might say, a
+magnificently-furnished room, where the master of the house received
+him. It was evening, toward the end of winter, the shades of twilight
+had already fallen, and Edward found himself suddenly in a room quite
+illuminated with wax candles. D'Effernay stood in the middle of the
+saloon, a tall, thin young man. A proud bearing seemed to bespeak
+a consciousness of his own merit, or at least of his position. His
+features were finely formed, but the traces of strong passion, or of
+internal discontent, had lined them prematurely.
+
+In figure he was very slender, and the deep-sunken eye, the gloomy
+frown which was fixed between his brows, and the thin lips, had no
+very prepossessing expression, and yet there was something imposing in
+the whole appearance of the man.
+
+Edward thanked him civilly for his invitation, spoke of his idea of
+being a purchaser as a motive for his visit, and gave his own, and
+his father's name. D'Effernay seemed pleased with all he said. He had
+known Edward's family in the metropolis; he regretted that the late
+hour would render it impossible for them to visit the property to-day,
+and concluded by pressing the lieutenant to pass the night at the
+Castle. On the morrow they would proceed to business, and now he would
+have the pleasure of presenting his wife to the visitor. Edward's
+heart beat violently--at length then he would see her! Had he loved
+her himself he could not have gone to meet her with more agitation.
+D'Effernay led his guest through many rooms, which were all as well
+furnished, and as brilliantly lighted as the first he had entered.
+At length he opened the door of a small boudoir, where there was no
+light, save that which the faint, gray twilight imparted through the
+windows.
+
+The simple arrangement of this little room, with dark green walls,
+only relieved by some engravings and coats of arms, formed a pleasing
+contrast to Edward's eyes, after the glaring splendor of the other
+apartments. From behind a piano-forte, at which she had been seated
+in a recess, rose a tall, slender female form, in a white dress of
+extreme simplicity.
+
+"My love," said D'Effernay, "I bring you a welcome guest, Lieutenant
+Wensleben, who is willing to purchase the estate."
+
+Emily courtesied; the friendly twilight concealed the shudder that
+passed over her whole frame, as she heard the familiar name which
+aroused so many recollections.
+
+She bade the stranger welcome, in a low, sweet voice, whose tremulous
+accents were not unobserved by Edward; and while the husband made some
+further observation, he had leisure to remark, as well as the fading
+light would allow, the fair outline of her oval face, the modest
+grace of her movements, her pretty, nymph-like figure--in fact, all
+those charms which seemed familiar to him through the impassioned
+descriptions of his friend.
+
+"But what can this fancy be, to sit in the dark?" asked D'Effernay, in
+no mild tone; "you know that is a thing I cannot bear." and with these
+words, and without waiting his wife's answer, he rang the bell over
+her sofa, and ordered lights.
+
+While these were placed on the table the company sat down by the fire,
+and conversation commenced. By the full light Edward could perceive
+all Emily's real beauty--her pale, but lovely face, the sad expression
+of her large blue eyes, so often concealed by their dark lashes, and
+then raised, with a look full of feeling, a sad, pensive, intellectual
+expression; and he admired the simplicity of her dress, and of every
+object that surrounded her: all appeared to him to bespeak a superior
+mind.
+
+They had not sat long, before D'Effernay was called away. One of
+his people had something important, something urgent to communicate
+to him, which admitted of no delay. A look of fierce anger almost
+distorted his features; in an instant his thin lips moved rapidly, and
+Edward thought he muttered some curses between his teeth. He left the
+room, but in so doing, he cast a glance of mistrust and ill-temper
+on the handsome stranger with whom he was compelled to leave his wife
+alone. Edward observed it all. All that he had seen to-day, all that
+he had heard from his comrades of the man's passionate and suspicious
+disposition, convinced him that his stay here would not be long, and
+that perhaps a second opportunity of speaking alone with Emily might
+not offer itself.
+
+He determined, therefore, to profit by the present moment; and no
+sooner had D'Effernay left the room, than he began to tell Emily she
+was not so complete a stranger to him as it might seem; that long
+before he had had the pleasure of seeing her--even before he had heard
+her name--she was known to him, so to speak, in spirit.
+
+Madame D'Effernay was moved. She was silent for a time, and gazed
+fixedly on the ground; then she looked up; the mist of unshed tears
+dimmed her blue eyes, and her bosom heaved with the sigh she could not
+suppress.
+
+"To me also the name of Wensleben is familiar. There is a link between
+our souls. Your friend has often spoken of you to me."
+
+But she could say no more; tears checked her speech.
+
+Edward's eyes were glistening also, and the two companions were
+silent; at length he began once more:
+
+"My dear lady," he said, "my time is short, and I have a solemn
+message to deliver to you. Will you allow me to do so now?"
+
+"To me?" she asked, in a tone of astonishment.
+
+"From my departed friend," answered Edward, emphatically.
+
+"From Ferdinand?--and that now--after--" she shrunk back, as if in
+terror.
+
+"Now that he is no longer with us, do you mean? I found the message
+in his papers, which have been intrusted to me only lately, since I
+have been in the neighborhood. Among them was a token which I was to
+restore to you." He produced the ring. Emily seized it wildly, and
+trembled as she looked upon it.
+
+"It is indeed my ring," she said at length, "the same which I gave
+him when we plighted our troth in secret. You are acquainted with
+everything, I perceive; I shall therefore risk nothing if I speak
+openly."
+
+She wept, and pressed the ring to her lips.
+
+"I see that my friend's memory is dear to you," continued Edward. You
+will forgive the prayer I am about to make to you: my visit to you
+concerns his ring."
+
+"How--what is it you wish?" cried Emily; terrified.
+
+"It was _his_ wish," replied Edward. "He evinced an earnest desire
+to have this pledge of an unfortunate and unfulfilled engagement
+restored."
+
+"How is that possible? You did not speak with him before his
+death; and this happened so suddenly after, that, to give you the
+commission--"
+
+"There was no time for it! that is true," answered Edward, with an
+inward shudder, although outwardly he was calm. "Perhaps this wish
+was awakened immediately before his death. I found it, as I told you,
+expressed in those papers."
+
+"Incomprehensible!" she exclaimed. "Only a short time before his
+death, we cherished--deceitful, indeed, they proved, but, oh, what
+blessed hopes! we reckoned on casualties, on what might possibly
+occur to assist as. Neither of us could endure to dwell on the idea
+of separation; and yet--yet since--Oh, my God," she cried, overcome by
+sorrow, and she hid her face between her hands.
+
+Edward was lost in confused thought. For a time both again were
+silent: at length Emily started up--
+
+"Forgive me, M. de Wensleben. What you have related to me, what you
+have asked of me, has produced so much excitement, so much agitation,
+that it is necessary that I should be alone for a few moments, to
+recover my composure."
+
+"I am gone," cried Edward, springing from his chair.
+
+"No! no!" she replied, "you are my guest; remain here. I have a
+household duty which calls me away." She laid a stress on these words.
+
+She leant forward, and with a sad, sweet smile, she gave her hand to
+the friend of her lost Ferdinand, pressing his gently, and disappeared
+through the inner door.
+
+Edward stood stunned, bewildered; then he paced the room with hasty
+steps, threw himself on the sofa, and took up one of the books that
+lay on the table, rather to have something in his hand, than to read.
+It proved to be Young's "Night Thoughts." He looked through it, and
+was attracted by many passages, which seemed, in his present frame
+of mind, fraught with peculiar meaning; yet his thoughts wandered
+constantly from the page to his dead friend. The candles, unheeded
+both by Emily and him, burned on with long wicks, giving little light
+in the silent room, over which the red glare from the hearth shed a
+lurid glow. Hurried footsteps sounded in the anteroom; the door was
+thrown open.
+
+Edward looked up, and saw D'Effernay staring at him, and round the
+room, in an angry, restless manner.
+
+Edward could not but think there was something almost unearthly in
+those dark looks and that towering form.
+
+"Where is my wife?" was D'Effernay's first question.
+
+"She is gone to fulfill some household duty," replied the other.
+
+"And leaves you here alone in this miserable darkness! Most
+extraordinary!--indeed, most unaccountable!" and as he spoke he
+approached the table and snuffed the candles, with a movement of
+impatience.
+
+"She left me here with old friends," said Edward, with a forced smile.
+"I have been reading."
+
+"What, in the dark?" inquired D'Effernay, with a look of mistrust.
+"It was so dark when I came in, that you could not possibly have
+distinguished a letter."
+
+"I read for some time, and then I fell into a train of thought, which
+is usually the result of reading Young's 'Night Thoughts.'"
+
+"Young! I cannot bear that author. He is so gloomy."
+
+"But you are fortunately so happy, that the lamentations of the lonely
+mourner can find no echo in your breast."
+
+"You think so!" said D'Effernay, in a churlish tone, and he pressed
+his lips together tightly, as Emily came into the room: he went to
+meet her.
+
+"You have been a long time away," was his observation, as he looked
+into her eyes, where the trace of tears might easily be detected. "I
+found our guest alone."
+
+"M. de Wensleben was good enough to excuse me," she replied; "and then
+I thought you would be back immediately."
+
+They sat down to the table; coffee was brought, and the past appeared
+to be forgotten.
+
+The conversation at first was broken by constant pauses. Edward saw
+that Emily did all she could to play the hostess agreeably, and to
+pacify her husband's ill-humor.
+
+In this attempt the young man assisted her, and at last they were
+successful. D'Effernay became more cheerful; the conversation more
+animated; and Edward found that his host could be a very agreeable
+member of society when he pleased, combining a good deal of
+information with great natural powers. The evening passed away more
+pleasantly than it promised at one time; and after an excellent and
+well-served supper, the young officer was shown into a comfortable
+room, fitted up with every modern luxury; and weary in mind and body,
+he soon fell asleep. He dreamed of all that had occupied his waking
+thoughts-of his friend, and his friend's history.
+
+But in that species of confusion which often characterizes dreams,
+he fancied that he was Ferdinand, or at least, his own individuality
+seemed mixed up with that of Hallberg. He felt that he was ill. He lay
+in an unknown room, and by his bedside stood a small table, covered
+with glasses and phials, containing medicines, as is usual in a sick
+room.
+
+The door opened, and D'Effernay came in, in his dressing-gown, as
+if he had just left his bed: and now in Edward's mind dreams and
+realities were mingled together, and he thought that D'Effernay came,
+perhaps, to speak with him on the occurrences of the preceding day.
+But no! he approached the table on which the medicines stood, looked
+at the watch, took up one of the phials and a cup, measured the
+draught, drop by drop, then he turned and looked round him stealthily,
+and then he drew from his breast a pale blue, coiling serpent, which
+he threw into the cup, and held it to the patient's lips, who drank,
+and instantly felt a numbness creep over his frame which ended in
+death. Edward fancied that he was dead; he saw the coffin brought, but
+the terror lest he should be buried alive, made him start up with a
+sudden effort, and he opened his eyes.
+
+The dream had passed away; he sat in his bed safe and well; but it was
+long ere he could in any degree recover his composure, or get rid of
+the impression which the frightful apparition had made on him. They
+brought his breakfast, with a message from the master of the house
+to inquire whether he would like to visit the park, farms, &c. He
+dressed quickly, and descended to the court, where he found his host
+in a riding dress, by the side of two fine horses, already saddled.
+D'Effernay greeted the young man courteously; but Edward felt
+an inward repugnance as he looked on that gloomy though handsome
+countenance, now lighted up by the beams of the morning sun, yet
+recalling vividly the dark visions of the night. D'Effernay was full
+of attentions to his new friend. They started on their ride, in spite
+of some threatening clouds, and began the inspection of meadows,
+shrubberies, farms, &c. After a couple of hours, which were consumed
+in this manner, it began to rain a few drops, and at last burst out
+into a heavy shower. It was soon impossible even to ride through the
+woods for the torrents that were pouring down, and so they returned to
+the castle.
+
+Edward retired to his room to change his dress, and to write some
+letters, he said, but more particularly to avoid Emily, in order not
+to excite her husband's jealousy. As the bell rang for dinner he
+saw her again, and found to his surprise that the captain, whom he
+had first seen in the coffee-room, and who had given him so much
+information, was one of the party. He was much pleased, for they had
+taken a mutual fancy to each other. The captain was not at quarters
+the day Edward had left them, but as soon as he heard where his friend
+had gone, he put horses to his carriage and followed him, for he said
+he also should like to see these famous estates. D'Effernay seemed
+in high good humor to-day, Emily far more silent than yesterday,
+and taking little part in the conversation of the men, which turned
+on political economy. After coffee she found an opportunity to give
+Edward (unobserved) a little packet. The look with which she did so,
+told plainly what it contained, and the young man hurried to his room
+as soon as he fancied he could do so without remark or comment. The
+continued rain precluded all idea of leaving the house any more that
+day. He unfolded the packet; there were a couple of sheets, written
+closely in a woman's fair hand, and something wrapped carefully in a
+paper, which he knew to be the ring. It was the fellow to that which
+he had given the day before to Emily, only Ferdinand's name was
+engraved inside instead of hers. Such were the contents of the
+papers:--
+
+"Secrecy would be misplaced with the friend of the dead. Therefore,
+will I speak to you of things which I have never uttered to a human
+being until now. Jules D'Effernay is nearly related to me. We knew
+each other in the Netherlands, where our estates joined. The boy loved
+me already with a love that amounted to passion; this love was my
+father's greatest joy, for there was an old and crying injustice which
+the ancestors of D'Effernay had suffered from ours, that could alone,
+he thought, be made up by the marriage of the only children of the two
+branches. So we were destined for each other almost from our cradles;
+and I was content it should be so, for Jules's handsome face and
+decided preference for me were agreeable to me, although I felt no
+great affection for him. We were separated: Jules traveled in France,
+England, and America, and made money as a merchant, which profession
+he had taken up suddenly. My father, who had a place under government,
+left his country in consequence of political troubles, and came into
+this part of the world where some distant relations of my mother's
+lived. He liked the neighborhood; he bought land; we lived very
+happily; I was quite contented in Jules's absence; I had no yearning
+of the heart toward him, yet I thought kindly of him, and troubled
+myself little about my future. Then--then I learned to know your
+friend. Oh, then! I felt, when I looked upon him, when I listened to
+him, when we conversed together, I felt, I acknowledged that there
+might be happiness on earth, of which I had hitherto never dreamed.
+Then I loved for the first time, ardently, passionately, and was
+beloved in return. Acquainted with the family engagements, he did not
+dare openly to proclaim his love, and I knew I ought not to foster
+the feeling; but, alas! how seldom does passion listen to the voice
+of reason and of duty. Your friend and I met in secret; in secret we
+plighted our troth, and exchanged those rings, and hoped and believed
+that by showing a bold front to our destiny we should subdue it to our
+will. The commencement was sinful, it has met with a dire retribution,
+Jules's letters announced his speedy return. He had sold everything
+in his own country, had given up all his mercantile affairs, through
+which he had greatly increased an already considerable fortune, and
+now he was about to join us, or rather me, without whom he could not
+live. This appeared to me like the demand for payment of a heavy debt.
+This debt I owed to Jules, who loved me with all his heart, who was
+in possession of my father's promised word and mine also. Yet I could
+not give up your friend. In a state of distraction I told him all; we
+meditated flight. Yes, I was so far guilty, and I make the confession
+in hopes that some portion of my errors may be expiated by repentance.
+My father, who had long been in a declining state, suddenly grew
+worse, and this delayed and hindered the fulfillment of our designs.
+Jules arrived. During the five years he had been away he was much
+changed in appearance, and that advantageously. I was struck when
+I first saw him, but it was also easy to detect in those handsome
+features and manly bearing, a spirit of restlessness and violence
+which had already shown itself in him as a boy, and which passing
+years, with their bitter experience and strong passions, had greatly
+developed. The hope that we had cherished of D'Effernay's possible
+indifference to me, of the change which time might have wrought in
+his attachment, now seemed idle and absurd. His love was indeed
+impassioned. He embraced me in a manner that made me shrink from him,
+and altogether his deportment toward me was a strange contrast to
+the gentle, tender, refined affection of our dear friend. I trembled
+whenever Jules entered the room, and all that I had prepared to say
+to him, all the plans which I had revolved in my mind respecting
+him, vanished in an instant before the power of his presence, and
+the almost imperative manner in which he claimed my hand. My father's
+illness increased; he was now in a very precarious state, hopeless
+indeed. Jules rivaled me in filial attentions to him, that I can never
+cease to thank him for; but this illness made my situation more and
+more critical, and it accelerated the fulfillment of the contract.
+I was now to renew my promise to him by the death-bed of my father.
+Alas, alas! I fell senseless to the ground when this announcement
+was made to me. Jules began to suspect. Already my cold, embarrassed
+manner toward him since his return had struck him as strange. He began
+to suspect, I repeat, and the effect that this suspicion had on him,
+it would be impossible to describe to you. Even now, after so long a
+time, now that I am accustomed to his ways, and more reconciled to my
+fate by the side of a noble, though somewhat impetuous man, it makes
+me tremble to think of those paroxysms, which the idea that I did not
+love him called forth. They were fearful; he nearly sank under them.
+During two days his life was in danger. At last the storm passed, my
+father died; Jules watched over me with the tenderness of a brother,
+the solicitude of a parent; for that indeed I shall ever be grateful.
+His suspicion once awakened, he gazed round with penetrating looks
+to discover the cause of my altered feelings. But your friend never
+came to our house; we met in an unfrequented spot, and my father's
+illness had interrupted these interviews. Altogether I cannot tell
+if Jules discovered anything. A fearful circumstance rendered all
+our precautions useless, and cut the knot of our secret connection,
+to loose which voluntarily I felt I had no power. A wedding feast,
+at a neighboring castle, assembled all the nobility and gentry, and
+officers quartered near, together; my deep mourning was an excuse for
+my absence. Jules, though he usually was happiest by my side, could
+not resist the invitation, and your friend resolved to go, although he
+was unwell; he feared to raise suspicion by remaining away, when I was
+left at home. With great difficulty he contrived the first day to make
+one at a splendid hunt, the second day he could not leave his bed.
+A physician, who was in the house, pronounced his complaint to be
+violent fever, and Jules, whose room joined that of the sick man,
+offered him every little service and kindness which compassion and
+good feeling prompted; and I cannot but praise him all the more for
+it, as who can tell, perhaps, his suspicion might have taken the right
+direction? On the morning of the second day--but let me glance quickly
+at that terrible time, the memory of which can never pass from my
+mind--a fit of apoplexy most unexpectedly, but gently, ended the
+noblest life, and separated us forever! Now you know all. I inclose
+the ring. I cannot write more. Farewell!"
+
+The conclusion of the letter made a deep impression on Edward. His
+dream rose up before his remembrance, the slight indisposition, the
+sudden death, the fearful nursetender, all arranged themselves in
+order before his mind, and an awful whole rose out of all these
+reflections, a terrible suspicion which he tried to throw off. But
+he could not do so, and when he met the captain and D'Effernay
+in the evening, and the latter challenged his visitors to a game
+of billiards, Edward glanced from time to time at his host in
+a scrutinizing manner, and could not but feel that the restless
+discontent which was visible in his countenance, and the unsteady
+glare of his eyes, which shunned the fixed look of others, only fitted
+too well into the shape of the dark thoughts which were crossing his
+own mind. Late in the evening, after supper, they played whist in
+Emily's boudoir. On the morrow, if the weather permitted, they were
+to conclude their inspection of the surrounding property, and the next
+day they were to visit the iron foundries, which, although distant
+from the Castle several miles, formed a very important item in the
+rent-roll of the estates. The company separated for the night.
+Edward fell asleep; and the same dream, with the same circumstances,
+recurred, only with the full consciousness that the sick man
+was Ferdinand. Edward felt overpowered, a species of horror
+took possession of his mind, as he found himself now in regular
+communication with the beings of the invisible world.
+
+The weather favored D'Effernay's projects. The whole day was passed
+in the open air. Emily only appeared at meals, and in the evening when
+they played at cards. Both she and Edward avoided, as if by mutual
+consent, every word, every look that could awaken the slightest
+suspicion or jealous feeling in D'Effernay's mind. She thanked him
+in her heart for this forbearance, but her thoughts were in another
+world; she took little heed of what passed around her. Her husband was
+in an excellent temper; he played the part of host to perfection; and
+when the two officers were established comfortably by the fire, in the
+captain's room, smoking together, they could not but do justice to his
+courteous manners.
+
+"He appears to be a man of general information," remarked Edward.
+
+"He has traveled a great deal, and read a great deal, as I told you
+when we first met: he is a remarkable man, but one of uncontrolled
+passions, and desperately jealous."
+
+"Yet he appears very attentive to his wife."
+
+"Undoubtedly he is wildly in love with her; yet he makes her unhappy,
+and himself too."
+
+"He certainly does not appear happy, there is so much restlessness."
+
+"He can never bear to remain in one place for any length of time
+together. He is now going to sell the property he only bought last
+year. There is an instability about him; everything palls on him."
+
+"That is the complaint of many who are rich and well to do in the
+world."
+
+"Yes; only not in the same degree. I assure you it has often struck me
+that man must have a bad conscience."
+
+"What an idea!" rejoined Edward, with a forced laugh, for the
+captain's remark struck him forcibly. "He seems a man of honor."
+
+"Oh, one may be a man of honor, as it is called, and yet have
+something quite bad enough to reproach yourself with. But I know
+nothing about it, and would not breathe such a thing except to you.
+His wife, too, looks so pale and so oppressed."
+
+"But, perhaps, that is her natural complexion and expression."
+
+"Oh, no! no! the year before D'Effernay came from Paris, she was as
+fresh as a rose. Many people declare that your poor friend loved her.
+The affair was wrapped in mystery, and I never believed the report,
+for Hallberg was a steady man, and the whole country knew that Emily
+had been engaged a long time."
+
+"Hallberg never mentioned the name in his letters," answered Edward,
+with less candor than usual.
+
+"I thought not. Besides D'Effernay was very much attached to him, and
+mourned his death."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"I assure you the morning that Hallberg was found dead in his bed so
+unexpectedly, D'Effernay was like one beside himself."
+
+"Very extraordinary. But as we are on the subject, tell me, I pray
+you, all the circumstances of my poor Ferdinand's illness, and awful
+sudden death."
+
+"I can tell you all about it, as well as any one, for I was one of the
+guests at that melancholy wedding. Your friend, and I, and many others
+were invited. Hallberg had some idea of not going; he was unwell, with
+violent headache and giddiness. But we persuaded him, and he consented
+to go with us. The first day he felt tolerably well. We hunted in
+the open field; we were all on horseback, the day hot. Hallberg felt
+worse. The second day he had a great deal of fever; he could not
+stay up. The physician (for fortunately there was one in the company)
+ordered rest, cooling medicine, neither of which seemed to do him
+good. The rest of the men dispersed, to amuse themselves in various
+ways. Only D'Effernay remained at home; he was never very fond of
+large societies, and we voted that he was discontented and out of
+humor because his betrothed bride was not with him. His room was next
+to the sick man's, to whom he gave all possible care and attention,
+for poor Hallberg, besides being ill, was in despair at giving so
+much trouble in a strange house. D'Effernay tried to calm him on
+this point; he nursed him, amused him with conversation, mixed his
+medicines, and, in fact, showed more kindness and tenderness, than any
+of us would have given him credit for. Before I went to bed I visited
+Hallberg, and found him much better, and more cheerful; the doctor
+had promised that he should leave his bed next day. So I left him and
+retired with the rest of the world, rather late, and very tired, to
+rest. The next morning I was awoke by the fatal tidings. I did not
+wait to dress, I ran to his room, it was full of people."
+
+"And how, how was the death first discovered?" inquired Edward, in
+breathless eagerness.
+
+"The servant, who came in to attend on him, thought he was asleep, for
+he lay in his usual position, his head upon his hand. He went away
+and waited for some time; but hours passed, and he thought he ought to
+wake his master to give him his medicine. Then the awful discovery was
+made. He must have died peacefully, for his countenance was so calm,
+his limbs undisturbed. A fit of apoplexy had terminated his life, but
+in the most tranquil manner."
+
+"Incomprehensible," said Edward, with a deep sigh. "Did they take no
+measures to restore animation?"
+
+"Certainly; all that could be done was done, bleeding, fomentation,
+friction; the physician superintended, but there was no hope, it was
+all too late. He must have been dead some hours, for he was already
+cold and stiff. If there had been a spark of life in him he would have
+been saved. It was all over; I had lost my good lieutenant, and the
+regiment one of its finest officers."
+
+He was silent, and appeared lost in thought. Edward, for his part,
+felt overwhelmed by terrible suspicions and sad memories. After a long
+pause he recovered himself: "and where was D'Effernay?" he inquired.
+
+"D'Effernay," answered the Captain, rather surprised at the question;
+"oh! he was not in the Castle when we made the dreadful discovery: he
+had gone out for an early walk, and when he came back late, not before
+noon, he learned the truth, and was like one out of his senses. It
+seemed so awful to him, because he had been so much, the very day
+before, with poor Hallberg."
+
+"Aye," answered Edward, whose suspicions were being more and more
+confirmed every moment. "And did he see the corpse, did he go into the
+chamber of death?"
+
+"No," replied the captain; "he assured us it was out of his power to
+do so; he could not bear the sight; and I believe it. People with such
+uncontrolled feelings as this D'Effernay, are incapable of performing
+those duties which others think it necessary and incumbent on them to
+fulfill."
+
+"And where was Hallberg buried?"
+
+"Not far from the castle where the mournful event took place.
+To-morrow, if we go to the iron foundry, we shall be near the spot."
+
+"I am glad of it," cried Edward eagerly, while a host of projects rose
+up in his mind. "But now, captain, I will not trespass any longer on
+your kindness. It is late, and we must be up betimes to-morrow. How
+far have we to go?"
+
+"Not less than four leagues certainly. D'Effernay has arranged that we
+shall drive there, and see it all at our leisure: then we shall return
+in the evening. Good night, Wensleben."
+
+They separated: Edward hurried to his room; his heart overflowed.
+Sorrow on the one hand, horror and even hatred on the other, agitated
+him by turns. It was long before he could sleep. For the third time
+the vision haunted him; but now it was clearer than before; now he
+saw plainly the features of him who lay in bed, and of him who stood
+beside the bed--they were those of Hallberg and of D'Effernay.
+
+This third apparition, the exact counterpart of the two former (only
+more vivid), all that he had gathered from conversations on the
+subject, and the contents of Emily's letter, left scarcely the shadow
+of a doubt remaining as to how his friend had left the world.
+
+D'Effernay's jealous and passionate nature seemed to allow of the
+possibility of such a crime, and it could scarcely be wondered at, if
+Edward regarded him with a feeling akin to hatred. Indeed the desire
+of visiting Hallberg's grave, in order to place the ring in the
+coffin, could alone reconcile Wensleben to the idea of remaining any
+longer beneath the roof of a man whom he now considered the murderer
+of his friend. His mind was a prey to conflicting doubts; detestation
+for the culprit, and grief for the victim, pointed out one line of
+conduct, while the difficulty of proving D'Effernay's guilt, and still
+more, pity and consideration for Emily, determined him at length to
+let the matter rest, and to leave the murderer, if such he really
+were, to the retribution which his own conscience and the justice of
+God would award him. He would seek his friend's grave, and then he
+would separate from D'Effernay, and never see him more. In the midst
+of these reflections the servant came to tell him that the carriage
+was ready. A shudder passed over his frame as D'Effernay greeted him;
+but he commanded himself, and they started on their expedition.
+
+Edward spoke but little, and that only when it was necessary, and
+the conversation was kept up by his two companions; he had made every
+inquiry, before he set out, respecting the place of his friend's
+interment, the exact situation of the tomb, the name of the village,
+and its distance from the main road. On their way home, he requested
+that D'Effernay would give orders to the coachman to make a round of
+a mile or two as far as the village of ----, with whose rector he
+was particularly desirous to speak. A momentary cloud gathered on
+D'Effernay's brow, yet it seemed no more than his usual expression
+of vexation at any delay or hindrance; and he was so anxious to
+propitiate his rich visitor, who appeared likely to take the estate
+off his hands, that he complied with all possible courtesy. The
+coachman was directed to turn down a by-road, and a very bad one it
+was. The captain stood up in the carriage and pointed out the village
+to him, at some distance off; it lay in a deep ravine at the foot of
+the mountains.
+
+They arrived in the course of time, and inquired for the clergyman's
+house, which, as well as the church, was situated on rising ground.
+The three companions alighted from the carriage, which they left at
+the bottom of the hill, and walked up together in the direction of the
+rectory. Edward knocked at the door and was admitted, while the two
+others sat on a bench outside. He had promised to return speedily,
+but to D'Effernay's restless spirit, one-quarter of an hour appeared
+interminable.
+
+He turned to the captain and said, in a tone of impatience, "M. de
+Wensleben must have a great deal of business with the rector: we have
+been here an immense time, and he does not seem inclined to make his
+appearance.
+
+"Oh, I dare say he will come soon. The matter cannot detain him long."
+
+"What on earth can he have to do here?"
+
+"Perhaps you would call it a mere fancy--the enthusiasm of youth."
+
+"It has a name, I suppose?"
+
+"Certainly, but--"
+
+"Is it sufficiently important, think you, to make us run the risk of
+being benighted on such roads as these?"
+
+"Why, it is quite early in the day."
+
+"But we have more than two leagues to go. Why will you not
+speak?--there cannot any great mystery."
+
+"Well, perhaps not a mystery, exactly, but just one of those subjects
+on which we are usually reserved with others."
+
+"So! so!" rejoined D'Effernay, with a little sneer. "Some love affair;
+some girl or another who pursues him, that he wants to get rid of."
+
+"Nothing of the kind, I can assure you," replied the captain drily.
+"It could scarcely be more innocent. He wishes, in fact, to visit his
+friend's grave."
+
+The listener's expression was one of scorn and anger. "It is worth the
+trouble certainly," he exclaimed, with a mocking laugh. "A charming
+sentimental pilgrimage, truly; and pray who is this beloved
+friend, over whose resting-place he must shed a tear and plant a
+forget-me-not? He told me he had never been in the neighborhood
+before."
+
+"No more he had; neither did he know where poor Hallberg was buried
+until I told him."
+
+"Hallberg!" echoed the other in a tone that startled the captain,
+and caused him to turn and look fixedly in the speaker's face. It was
+deadly pale, and the captain observed the effort which D'Effernay made
+to recover his composure.
+
+"Hallberg!" he repeated again, in a calmer tone, "and was Wensleben a
+friend of his?"
+
+"His bosom friend from childhood. They were brought up together at the
+academy. Hallberg left it a year earlier than his friend."
+
+"Indeed!" said D'Effernay, scowling as he spoke, and working himself
+up into a passion. "And this lieutenant came here on this account,
+then, and the purchase of the estates was a mere excuse."
+
+"I beg your pardon," observed the captain, in a decided tone of voice;
+"I have already told you that it was I who informed him of the place
+where his friend lies buried."
+
+"That may be, but it was owing to his friendship, to the wish to learn
+something further of his fate, that we are indebted for the visit of
+this romantic knight-errant."
+
+"That does not appear likely," replied the captain, who thought it
+better to avert, if possible, the rising storm of his companion's
+fury. "Why should he seek for news of Hallberg here, when he comes
+from the place where he was quartered for a long time, and where all
+his comrades now are."
+
+"Well, I don't know," cried D'Effernay, whose passion was increasing
+every moment. "Perhaps you have heard what was once gossiped about
+the neighborhood, that Hallberg was an admirer of my wife before she
+married."
+
+"Oh yes, I have heard that report, but never believed it. Hallberg was
+a prudent, steady man, and every one knew that Mademoiselle Varnier's
+hand had been promised for some time."
+
+"Yes! yes! but you do not know to what lengths passion and avarice may
+lead: for Emily was rich. We must not forget that, when we discuss
+the matter; an elopement with the rich heiress would have been a fine
+thing for a poor, beggarly lieutenant."
+
+"Shame! shame! M. D'Effernay. How can you slander the character
+of that upright young man? If Hallberg were so unhappy as to love
+Mademoiselle Varnier--"
+
+"That he did! you may believe me so far, I had reason to know it, and
+I did know it."
+
+"We had better change the conversation altogether, as it has taken
+so unpleasant a turn, Hallberg is dead; his errors, be they what they
+may, lie buried with him. His name stands high with all who knew him
+Even you, M. D'Effernay--you were his friend."
+
+"I his friend? I hated him!--I loathed him!" D'Effernay could not
+proceed; he foamed at the mouth with rage.
+
+"Compose yourself!" said the Captain, rising as he spoke; "you look
+and speak like a madman."
+
+A madman! Who says I am mad? Now I see it all--the connection of the
+whole--the shameful conspiracy."
+
+"Your conduct is perfectly incomprehensible to me," answered the
+captain, with perfect coolness. "Did you not attend Hallberg in his
+last illness, and give him his medicines with your own hand?"
+
+"I!" stammered D'Effernay. "No! no! no!" he cried, while the
+captain's growing suspicions increased every moment, on account of
+the perturbation which his companion displayed. "I never gave his
+medicines; whoever says that is a liar."
+
+"I say it!" exclaimed the officer, in a loud tone, for his patience
+was exhausted. "I say it, because I know that it was so, and I will
+maintain that fact against any one at any time. If you choose to
+contradict the evidence of my senses, it is you who are a liar!"
+
+"Ha! you shall give me satisfaction for this insult. Depend upon it,
+I am not one to be trifled with, as you shall find. You shall retract
+your words."
+
+"Never! I am ready to defend every word I have uttered here on this
+spot, at this moment, if you please. You have your pistols in the
+carriage, you know."
+
+D'Effernay cast a look of hatred on the speaker, and then dashing
+down the little hill, to the surprise of the servants, he dragged
+the pistols from the sword-case, and was by the captain's side in a
+moment. But the loud voices of the disputants had attracted Edward to
+the spot, and there he stood on D'Effernay's return; and by his side a
+venerable old man, who carried a large bunch of keys in his hand.
+
+"In heaven's name, what has happened?" cried Wensleben.
+
+"What are you about to do?" interposed the rector, in a tone of
+authority, though his countenance was expressive of horror. "Are you
+going to commit murder on this sacred spot, close to the precincts of
+the church?"
+
+"Murder! who speaks of murder?" cried D'Effernay. "Who can prove it?"
+and as he spoke, the captain turned a fierce, penetrating look upon
+him, beneath which he quailed.
+
+"But, I repeat the question," Edward began once more, "what does all
+this mean? I left you a short time ago in friendly conversation. I
+come back and find you both armed--both violently agitated--and M.
+D'Effernay, at least, speaking incoherently. What do you mean by
+'proving it?'--to what do you allude?" At this moment, before any
+answer could be made, a man came out of the house with a pick-axe
+and shovel on his shoulder, and advancing toward the rector, said
+respectfully, "I am quite ready, sir, if you have the key of the
+churchyard."
+
+It was now the captain's turn to look anxious: "What are you going
+to do, you surely don't intend--?" but as he spoke, the rector
+interrupted him.
+
+"This gentleman is very desirous to see the place where his friend
+lies buried."
+
+"But these preparations, what do they mean?"
+
+"I will tell you," said Edward, in a voice and tone that betrayed
+the deepest emotion, "I have a holy duty to perform. I must cause the
+coffin to be opened."
+
+"How, what!" screamed D'Effernay, once again. "Never--I will never
+permit such a thing."
+
+"But, sir," the old man spoke, in a tone of calm decision, contrasting
+wonderfully with the violence of him whom he addressed, "you have no
+possible right to interfere. If this gentleman wishes it, and I accede
+to the proposition, no one can prevent us from doing as we would."
+
+"I tell you I will not suffer it," continued D'Effernay, with the same
+frightful agitation. "Stir at your peril," he cried, turning sharply
+round upon the grave-digger, and holding a pistol to his head; but the
+captain pulled his arm away, to the relief of the frightened peasant.
+
+"M. D'Effernay," he said, "your conduct for the last half-hour has
+been most unaccountable--most unreasonable."
+
+"Come, come," interposed Edward, "Let us say no more on the subject;
+but let us be going," he addressed the rector; "we will not detain
+these gentlemen much longer."
+
+He made a step toward the churchyard, but D'Effernay clutched his arm,
+and, with an impious oath, "you shall not stir," he said; "that grave
+shall not be opened."
+
+Edward shook him off, with a look of silent hatred, for now indeed all
+his doubts were confirmed.
+
+D'Effernay saw that Wensleben was resolved, and a deadly pallor spread
+itself over his features, and a shudder passed visibly over his frame.
+
+"You are going!" he cried, with every gesture and appearance of
+insanity. "Go, then;" ... and he pointed the muzzle of the pistol to
+his mouth, and before any one could prevent him, he drew the trigger,
+and fell back a corpse. The spectators were motionless with surprise
+and horror; the captain was the first to recover himself in some
+degree. He bent over the body with the faint hope of detecting some
+sign of life. The old man turned pale and dizzy with a sense of
+terror, and he looked as if he would have swooned, had not Edward led
+him gently into his house, while the two others busied themselves with
+vain attempts to restore life.
+
+The spirit of D'Effernay had gone to its last account!
+
+It was, indeed, an awful moment. Death in its worst shape was before
+them, and a terrible duty still remained to be performed.
+
+Edward's cheek was blanched; his eye had a fixed look, yet he moved
+and spoke with a species of mechanical action, which had something
+almost ghastly in it. Causing the body to be removed into the house,
+he bade the captain summon the servants of the deceased, and then
+motioning with his hand to the awe-struck sexton, he proceeded with
+him to the churchyard. A few clods of earth alone were removed ere the
+captain stood by his friend's side.
+
+Here we must pause. Perhaps it were better altogether to emulate the
+silence that was maintained then and afterward by the two comrades.
+But the sexton could not be bribed to entire secrecy, and it was a
+story he loved to tell, with details we gladly omit, of how Wensleben
+solemnly performed his task--of how no doubt could any longer exist
+as to the cause of Hallberg's death. Those who love the horrible must
+draw on their own imaginations to supply what we resolutely withhold.
+
+Edward, we believe, never alluded to D'Effernay's death, and all the
+awful circumstances attending it, but twice--once, when, with every
+necessary detail, he and the captain gave their evidence to the legal
+authorities; and once, with as few details as possible, when he had an
+interview with the widow of the murderer, the beloved of the victim.
+The particulars of this interview he never divulged, for he considered
+Emily's grief too sacred to be exposed to the prying eyes of the
+curious and the unfeeling. She left the neighborhood immediately,
+leaving her worldly affairs in Wensleben's hands, who soon disposed
+of the property for her. She returned to her native country, with the
+resolution of spending the greater part of her wealth in relieving
+the distresses of others, wisely seeking, in the exercise of piety
+and benevolence, the only possible alleviation of her own deep
+and many-sided griefs. For Edward, he was soon pronounced to have
+recovered entirely from the shock of these terrible events. Of a
+courageous and energetic disposition, he pursued the duties of his
+profession with a firm step, and hid his mighty sorrow deep in the
+recesses of his heart. To the superficial observer, tears, groans, and
+lamentations are the only proofs of sorrow: and when they subside,
+the sorrow is said to have passed away also. Thus the captive, immured
+within the walls of his prison-house, is as one dead to the outward
+world, though the gaoler be a daily witness to the vitality of
+affliction.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Paris has been again emptied of its citizens to see M. Poitevin make
+his second ascent on horseback from the Champ de Mars. To show that he
+was not fastened to his saddle, the idiot, when some hundred yards
+up in the air, stood upright on his horse, and saluted the multitude
+below with both his hands.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PEASANT LIFE IN GERMANY.
+
+We copy the following interesting paragraph from a work just issued in
+London on "The Social Condition and Education of the People of England
+and Europe," by Joseph Kay, of Cambridge University.
+
+ "As I have already said, the _moral, intellectual and physical
+ condition of the peasants and operatives_ of Prussia, Saxony
+ and other parts of Germany, of Holland, and of the Protestant
+ cantons of Switzerland, and the social condition of the
+ peasants in the greater part of France, _is very much higher
+ and happier, and very much more satisfactory, than that of
+ the peasants and operatives of England_; the condition of the
+ _poor_ in the North German, Swiss and Dutch _towns_, is as
+ remarkable a contrast to that of the poor of the _English
+ towns_ as can well be imagined; and that the condition of the
+ _poorer classes_ of Germany, Switzerland, Holland and France
+ is _rapidly improving_. The great _superiority_ of the
+ _preparation_ for life which a _poor man_ receives in those
+ countries I have mentioned, to that which a peasant or
+ operative receives _in England_, and the difference of the
+ social position of a poor man in those countries to that of
+ a peasant or operative in England, seem sufficient to explain
+ the difference which exists between the moral and social
+ condition of the poor of our own country and of the other
+ countries I have named. In Germany, Holland, and Switzerland,
+ a child begins its life in the society of parents who have
+ been educated and brought up for years in the company of
+ learned and gentlemanly professors, and in the society and
+ under the direction of a father who has been exercised in
+ military arts, and who has acquired the bearing, the clean and
+ orderly habits, and the taste for respectable attire, which
+ characterize the soldier. The children of these countries
+ spend the first six years of their lives in homes which
+ are well regulated. They are during this time accustomed to
+ orderly habits, to neat and clean clothes, and to ideas of the
+ value of instruction, of the respect due to the teachers,
+ and of the excellence of the schools, by parents who have, by
+ their training in early life, acquired such tastes and ideas
+ themselves. Each child at the age of six begins to attend a
+ school, which is perfectly clean, well ventilated, directed by
+ an able and well-educated gentleman, and superintended by the
+ religious ministers and by the inspectors of the Government.
+ Until the completion of its _fourteenth_ year, each child
+ continues regular daily attendance at one of these schools,
+ daily strengthening its habits of cleanliness and order,
+ learning the rudiments of useful knowledge, receiving the
+ principles of religion and morality, and gaining confirmed
+ health and physical energy by the exercise and drill of the
+ school playground. _No children are left idle in the streets
+ of the towns; no children are allowed to grovel in the
+ gutters; no children are allowed to make_ their appearance
+ at the schools dirty, or in ragged clothes; and the local
+ authorities are obliged to clothe all whose parents cannot
+ afford to clothe them. The children of the _poor_ of
+ Germany, Holland and Switzerland acquire stronger habits of
+ cleanliness, neatness and industry at the _primary_ schools,
+ than the children of the _small shopkeeping_ classes of
+ England do at the private schools of England; and they
+ leave the _primary schools_ of these countries _much better
+ instructed_ than those who leave our _middle class private
+ schools_. After having learnt reading, writing, arithmetic,
+ singing, geography, history and the Scriptures, the children
+ leave the schools, carrying with them into life habits of
+ cleanliness, neatness, order and industry, and awakened
+ intellect, capable of collecting truths and reasoning upon
+ them."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE.]
+
+SUMMER PASTIME.
+
+ Do you ask how I'd amuse me
+ When the long bright summer comes,
+ And welcome leisure woos me
+ To shun life's crowded homes;
+ To shun the sultry city,
+ Whose dense, oppressive air
+ Might make one weep with pity
+ For those who must be there.
+
+ I'll tell you then--I would not
+ To foreign countries roam,
+ As though my fancy could not
+ Find occupance at home;
+ Nor to home-haunts of fashion
+ Would I, least of all, repair,
+ For guilt, and pride, and passion,
+ Have summer-quarters there.
+
+ Far, far from watering-places
+ Of note and name I'd keep,
+ For there would vapid faces
+ Still throng me in my sleep;
+ Then contact with the foolish,
+ The arrogant, the vain,
+ The meaningless--the mulish,
+ Would sicken heart and brain.
+
+ No--I'd seek some shore of ocean
+ Where nothing comes to mar
+ The ever-fresh commotion
+ Of sea and land at war;
+ Save the gentle evening only
+ As it steals along the deep,
+ So spirit-like and lonely,
+ To still the waves to sleep.
+
+ There long hours I'd spend in viewing
+ The elemental strife,
+ My soul the while subduing
+ With the littleness of life;
+ Of life, with all its paltry plans,
+ Its conflicts and its cares--
+ The feebleness of all that's man's--
+ The might that's God's and theirs!
+
+ And when eve came I'd listen
+ To the stilling of that war,
+ Till o'er my head should glisten
+ The first pure silver star;
+ Then, wandering homeward slowly,
+ I'd learn my heart the tune
+ Which the dreaming billows lowly,
+ Were murmuring to the moon!
+
+R.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+True genius is perpetual youth, health, serenity, and strength. The
+eye is bright with a fine fire that is undimmed by time, and the mind,
+not sharing the body's decline from the prime of middle age, continues
+on with illimitable accession of spiritual power.
+
+Our convictions should be based on conceptions got from insight of
+principles, and not upon opinions spawned of authority and expediency.
+Every man shall influence me, no man can decide for me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE SPIRIT OF THE TIMES]
+
+REMINISCENCES OF SARGENT S. PRENTISS, OF MISSISSIPPI.
+
+BY T.B. THORPE.
+
+AUTHOR OF "TOM OWEN, THE BEE HUNTER."
+
+The death of Sargeant S. Prentiss has called forth an universal
+feeling of sorrow; the consciousness that "a great man has fallen" is
+depicted upon the faces of the multitude.
+
+The eloquent offerings to his virtues and to his genius that
+everywhere follow the news of his demise, are but slight tokens of
+that sorrow that fills the heart of all who knew the gifted Prentiss.
+Having known him long, and having had frequent occasions to witness
+exhibitions of his great mental powers, I cannot refrain from paying
+an imperfect tribute to his memory.
+
+I first met Mr. Prentiss when he was in the full maturity of his
+power, but I have the pleasure of knowing hundreds who were well
+acquainted with his early history and early triumphs. Volumes of
+interest might be written upon the life of Mr. Prentiss. And then
+his high sense of honor, his brave spirit, his nobleness of soul, his
+intense but commendable pride, his classical attainments, and his deep
+knowledge of the law, can scarcely be illustrated, so universal and
+superior were his accomplishments and acquirements.
+
+In his early career, I consider Mr. Prentiss both fortunate and
+unfortunate. I have often imagined the shrinking but proud boy, living
+unnoticed and unknown among the wealthiest citizens of the south.
+Buried in the obscurity of his humble school, he looked out upon the
+busy world, and measured the mighty capacities of his own soul with
+those whom society had placed above him. I think I see him brooding
+over his position, and longing to be free, as the suffocating man
+longs for the boundless air of heaven. His hour of triumph came,
+and surpassed, perhaps, his own aspirations. From the schoolroom he
+entered that of the court--a chance offered--a position gained--the
+law his theme, he at once not only equaled, but soared even beyond the
+aim of the most favored of his compeers.
+
+The era was one of extravagance. The virgin soil of Mississippi was
+pouring into the laps of her generous sons untold abundance. There
+were thousands of her citizens, full of health and talent, who adorned
+excesses of living by the tasteful procurements of wealth, and the
+highest accomplishments of mind. Into this world Prentiss entered,
+heralded by naught save his own genius. The heirs of princely
+fortunes, the descendants of heroes, men of power and place, of family
+pride, of national associations, were not more proud, more gallant,
+than was Prentiss, for "he was reckoned among the noblest Romans of
+them all."
+
+Each step in his new fortune seemed only to elicit new qualities
+for admiration. At the forum he dazzled--the jury and the judge were
+confounded--the crowd carried him to the stump, and the multitude
+listened as to one inspired. Fair ladies vied with each other in
+waving tiny hands in token of admiration--the stolid judges of the
+Supreme Court wondered at the mind of the apparent boy--even the walls
+of Congress echoed forth pæans to his praise. His course was as rapid
+and brilliant as that of the meteor that suddenly springs athwart the
+heavens, but he was human and accomplished his task, herculean as he
+was, at the price of an injured constitution.
+
+In personal appearance Prentiss was eminently handsome, and yet
+eminently manly. Although of medium height, there was that in the
+carriage of his head that was astonishingly impressive. I shall never
+forget him on one occasion, "in '44," when he rose at a public meeting
+to reply to an antagonist worthy of his steel. His whole soul was
+roused, his high smooth forehead fairly coruscated. He remained silent
+for some seconds, and only _looked_. The bald eagle never glanced
+so fiercely from his eyry. It seemed as if his deep blue eye would
+distend until it swallowed up the thousands of his audience. For an
+instant the effect was painful; he saw it and smiled, when a cheer
+burst from the admiring multitude that fairly shook the earth.
+
+His voice was clear and sweet, and could be heard at an immense
+distance, and yet, to be all like Demosthenes, he had a perceptible
+impediment in his speech. As a reader he had no superior. His
+narration was clear and unadorned, proper sentences were subduedly
+humorous, but the impressive parts were delivered with an effect that
+reminded me of the elder Kean.
+
+His imagination was unsurpassed, and the rich stores of his mind
+supplied him with never-ending material, quoted and original.
+The slightest allusion to anything gave him the key to all its
+peculiarities if he had occasion to allude to the diamond, its bed in
+the Golconda, its discovery by some poor native, its being associated
+with commerce, its polish by the lapidary, its adorning the neck
+of beauty, its rays brilliant and serene, its birth, its life,
+its history, all flashed upon him. So with every idea in the vast
+storehouse of his mind. He seemed to know all things, in mass and in
+particulars, never confused, never at a loss--the hearer listened,
+wondered, and dreamed. Thoughts of moment came forth as demanded, but
+ten thousand other thoughts rare and beautiful, continued to bubble
+up, after all effort ceased.
+
+No man had a more delicate or subtle wit than Prentiss, or a more
+Falstaffian humor when it suited his purpose. Who will ever forget the
+spending of a social dinner hour with him, when his health was high
+and his mind at ease? Who so lovely?--who so refined? What delight
+was exhibited by sweet ladies who listened to his words! Who could
+so eloquently discourse of roses and buds, of lilies and pearls, of
+eyes and graces, of robes and angels, and yet never offend the most
+sensitive of the sex, or call other than the blush of pleasure and
+joy to the cheek? Who could, on the "public day," ascend so gracefully
+from the associations of tariffs, and banks, and cotton, and sugar,
+to greet the fair ladies that honored him with their presence? How
+he would lean toward them, as he dwelt upon "the blessed of all God's
+handiwork," compared their bright eyes to "day-stars" that lit up the
+dark recesses of his own clouded imagination; and how he would revel,
+like another Puck, among the rays and beams of smiles called forth by
+his own happy compliments--and how he would change from all this, and
+in an instant seemingly arm himself with the thunderbolts of Jove,
+which he would dash with appalling sound among his antagonists, or at
+principles he opposed, and yet with such a charm, with such a manner,
+that these very daughters of the sunny South who had listened to his
+syren-song so admiringly, would now stare, and wonder, and pallor, and
+yet listen, even as one gazes over the precipice, and is fascinated at
+the very nearness to destruction.
+
+Prentiss had originally a constitution of iron; his frame was so
+perfect in its organization, that, in spite of the most extraordinary
+negligence of health, his muscles had all the compactness, glossiness,
+and distinctiveness of one who had specially trained by diet and
+exercise. It was this constitution that enabled him to accomplish
+so much in so short a time. He could almost wholly discard sleep for
+weeks, with apparent impunity; he could eat or starve; do anything
+that would kill ordinary men, yet never feel a twinge of pain. I
+saw him once amidst a tremendous political excitement; he had been
+talking, arguing, dining, visiting, and traveling, without rest for
+three whole days. His companions would steal away at times for sleep,
+but Prentiss was like an ever-busy spirit, here, and there, and
+everywhere. The morning of the fourth day came, and he was to appear
+before an audience familiar with his fame, but one that had never
+heard him speak; an audience critical in the last degree, he desired
+to succeed, for more was depending than he had ever before had cause
+to stake upon such an occasion. Many felt a fear that he would be
+unprepared. I mingled in the expecting crowd: I saw ladies who had
+never honored the stump with their presence struggling for seats,
+counselors, statesmen, and professional men, the elite of a great
+city, were gathered together. An hour before I had seen Prentiss,
+still apparently ignorant of his engagement.
+
+The time of trial came, and the remarkable man presented himself,
+the very picture of buoyant health, of unbroken rest. All this had
+been done _by the unyielding resolve of his will_--his triumph was
+complete; high-wrought expectations were more than realized, prejudice
+was demolished, professional jealousy silenced, and he descended from
+the rostrum, freely accorded his proper place among the orators and
+statesmen of the "Southern Metropolis."
+
+Mr. Clay visited the South in the fall of '44, and, as he was
+then candidate for the Presidency, he attracted in New Orleans, if
+possible, more than usual notice. His hotel was the St. Charles;
+toward noon he reached that magnificent palace. The streets presented
+a vast ocean of heads, and every building commanding a view was
+literally covered with human beings. The great "Statesman of the West"
+presented himself to the multitude between the tall columns of the
+finest portico in the world. The scene was beyond description, and of
+vast interest. As the crowd swayed to and fro, a universal shout was
+raised for Mr. Clay to speak; he uttered a sentence or two, waved his
+hand in adieu, and escaped amidst the prevailing confusion. Prentiss
+meanwhile was at a side window, evidently unconscious of being himself
+noticed, gazing upon what was passing with all the delight of the
+humblest spectator. Suddenly his name was announced. He attempted to
+withdraw from public gaze, but his friends pushed him forward. Again
+his name was shouted, hats and caps were thrown in the air, and he
+was finally compelled to show himself on the portico. With remarkable
+delicacy, he chose a less prominent place than that previously
+occupied by Mr. Clay, although perfectly visible. He thanked his
+friends for their kindness by repeated bows, and by such smiles as he
+alone could give. "A speech! A speech!" thundered a thousand voices.
+Prentiss lifted his hand; in an instant everything was still--then
+pointing to the group that surrounded Mr. Clay, he said,
+"Fellow-citizens, when the eagle is soaring in the sky, the owls
+and the bats retire to their holes." And long before the shout that
+followed this remark had ceased, Prentiss had disappeared amid the
+multitude.
+
+But the most extraordinary exhibition of Prentiss' powers of mind and
+endurance of body, was shown while he was running for Congress. He
+had the whole State to canvass, and the magnitude of the work was just
+what he desired. From what I have learned from anecdotes, that canvass
+must have presented some scenes combining the highest mental and
+physical exertion that was ever witnessed in the world. Prentiss was
+in perfect health, and in the first blush of success, and it cannot be
+doubted but that his best efforts of oratory were then made, and now
+live recorded only in the fading memories of his hearers. An incident
+illustrative of the time is remembered, that may hear repeating.
+
+The whole state of Mississippi was alive with excitement; for the
+moment, she felt that her sovereign dignity had been trifled with,
+and that her reputation demanded the return of Prentiss to Congress.
+Crowds followed him from place to place, making a gala time of weeks
+together. Among the shrewd worldlings who take advantage of such times
+"to coin money," was the proprietor of a traveling menagerie, and he
+soon found out that the multitude followed Prentiss. Getting the list
+of that remarkable man's "appointments," he filled up his own, and it
+was soon noticed as a remarkable coincidence, that the orator always
+"arrived along with the other 'lions.'" The reason of this meeting was
+discovered, and the "boys" decided that Prentiss should "next time"
+speak from the top of the lion's cage. Never was the menagerie more
+crowded. At the proper time, the candidate gratified his constituents,
+and mounted his singular rostrum. I was told by a person, who
+professed to be an eye witness, that the whole affair presented a
+singular mixture of the terrible and the comical. Prentiss was, as
+usual, eloquent, and, as if ignorant of the novel circumstances with
+which he was surrounded, went deeply into the matter in hand, his
+election. For a while the audience and the animals were quiet, the
+former listening, the latter eyeing the speaker with grave intensity.
+The first burst of applause electrified the menagerie; the elephant
+threw his trunk into the air and echoed back the noise, while the
+tigers and bears significantly growled. On went Prentiss, and as each
+peculiar animal vented his rage or approbation, he most ingeniously
+wrought in its habits, as a facsimile of some man or passion. In the
+meanwhile, the stately king of beasts, who had been quietly treading
+the mazes of his prison, became alarmed at the footsteps over
+his head, and placing his mouth upon the floor of his cage, made
+everything shake by his terrible roar. This, joined with the already
+excited feelings of the audience, caused the ladies to shriek, and
+a fearful commotion for a moment followed. Prentiss, equal to every
+occasion, changed his tone and manner; he commenced a playful strain,
+and introduced the fox, the jackal, and hyena, and capped the climax
+by likening some well known political opponent to a grave baboon that
+presided over the "cage with monkeys"; the resemblance was instantly
+recognized, and bursts of laughter followed, that literally set many
+into convulsions. The baboon, all unconscious of the attention he
+was attracting, suddenly assumed a grimace, and then a serious face,
+when Prentiss exclaimed--"I see, my fine fellow, that your feelings
+are hurt by my unjust comparison, and I humbly beg your pardon."
+The effect of all this may be vaguely imagined, but it cannot be
+described.
+
+Of Prentiss' power before a jury too much cannot be said. Innumerable
+illustrations might be gathered up, showing that he far surpassed
+any living advocate. "The trial of the Wilkinsons" might be cited,
+although it was far from being one of his best efforts. Two young men,
+only sons, and deeply attached as friends, quarreled, and in the mad
+excitement of the moment, one of them was killed. Upon the trial, the
+testimony of the mother of the deceased was so direct, that it seemed
+to render "the clearing of the prisoner" hopeless. Prentiss spoke to
+the witness in the blandest manner and most courtly style. The mother,
+arrayed in weeds, and bowed down with sorrow, turned toward Prentiss,
+and answered his inquiries with all the dignity of a perfectly
+accomplished lady--she calmly uttered the truth, and every word she
+spoke rendered the defense apparently more hopeless.
+
+"Would you punish that young man with death?" said Prentiss, pointing
+to the prisoner.
+
+The questioned looked, and answered--"He has made me childless, let
+the law take its course."
+
+"And would wringing his mother's heart and hurrying her gray hairs
+with sorrow into the grave, by rendering her childless, assuage your
+grief?"
+
+All present were dissolved in tears--even convulsive sobbing was heard
+in the courtroom.
+
+"No!" said the witness, with all the gushing tenderness of a
+mother--"No! I would not add a sorrow to her heart, nor that of her
+son!"
+
+Admissions in the evidence followed, and hopes were uttered for
+the prisoner's acquittal, that changed the whole character of the
+testimony. What was a few moments before so dark, grew light, and
+without the slightest act that might be construed into an unfair
+advantage, in the hands of Prentiss, the witness pleaded for the
+accused.
+
+Soon after Mr. Prentiss settled in New Orleans, a meeting was held
+to raise funds for the erection of a suitable monument to Franklin.
+On that occasion, the lamented Wilde and the accomplished McCaleb
+delivered ornate and chaste addresses upon the value of art, and the
+policy of enriching New Orleans with its exhibition. At the close
+of the meeting, as the audience rose to depart, some one discovered
+Prentiss, and calling his name, it was echoed from all sides--he tried
+to escape, but was literally carried on the stand.
+
+As a rich specimen of off-hand eloquence, I think the address he
+delivered on that occasion was unequaled. Unlike any other speech,
+he had the arts to deal with, and of course the associations were of
+surpassing splendor. I knew that he was ignorant of the technicalities
+of art, and had paid but little attention to their study, and my
+surprise was unbounded to see him, thus unexpectedly called upon,
+instantly arrange in his mind ideas, and expressing facts and
+illustrations that would have done honor to Burke, when dwelling upon
+the sublime and beautiful. Had he been bred to the easel, or confined
+to the sculptor's room, he could not have been more familiar with the
+details of the studio--he painted with all the brilliancy of Titian,
+and with the correctness of Raphael, while his images in marble
+combined the softness of Praxiteles, and the nervous energy of Michael
+Angelo. All this with Prentiss was intuition--I believe that the whole
+was the spontaneous thought of the moment, the crude outlines that
+floated through his mind being filled up by the intuitive teachings of
+his surpassing genius. His conclusion was gorgeous--he passed Napoleon
+to the summit of the Alps--his hearers saw him and his steel clad
+warriors threading the snows of Mount St. Bernard, and having gained
+the dizzy height, Prentiss represented "the man of destiny" looking
+down upon the sunny plains of Italy, and then with a mighty swoop,
+descending from the clouds and making the grasp of Empire secondary to
+that of Art.
+
+I had the melancholy pleasure of hearing his last, and, it would seem
+to me, his greatest speech. Toward the close of the last Presidential
+campaign, I found him in the interior of the State, endeavoring
+to recruit his declining health. He had been obliged to avoid all
+public speaking, and had gone far into the country to get away from
+excitement. But there was a "gathering" near by his temporary home,
+and he consented to be present. It was late in the evening when
+he ascended the "stand," which was supported by the trunks of two
+magnificent forest trees, through which the setting sun poured with
+picturesque effect. The ravages of ill health were apparent upon his
+face, and his high massive forehead was paler, and seemingly more
+transparent than usual. His audience, some three or four hundred, was
+composed in a large degree of his old and early friends. He seemed to
+feel deeply, and as there was nothing to oppose, he assumed the style
+of the mild and beautiful--he casually alluded to the days of his
+early coming among his Southern friends--of hours of pleasure he had
+massed, and of the hopes of the future. In a few moments the bustle
+and confusion natural to a fatiguing day of political wrangling
+ceased--one straggler after another suspended his noisy demonstration,
+and gathered near the speaker. Soon a mass of silent but heart-heaving
+humanity was crowded compactly before him. Had Prentiss, on that
+occasion, held the very heart-strings of his auditors in his hand, he
+could not have had them more in his power. For an hour he continued,
+rising from one important subject to another, until the breath was
+fairly suspended in the excitement. An uninterested spectator would
+have supposed that he had used sorcery in thus transfixing his
+auditors. While all others forgot, he noticed the day was drawing to a
+close, he turned and looked toward the setting sun, and apostrophized
+its fading glory--then in his most touching voice and manner,
+concluded as follows:--
+
+"Friends--That glorious orb reminds me that the day is spent, and
+that I too must close. Ere we part, let me hope that it may be our
+good fortune to end our days in the same splendor, and that when the
+evening of life comes, we may sink to rest with the clouds that close
+in on our departure, gold-tipped with the glorious effulgence of a
+well-spent life!"
+
+In conclusion, I would ask, will some historian, who can sympathize
+with the noble dead, gather up the now fleeting memorials that still
+live in memory, and combine them together, that future generations may
+know something of the mighty mind of Prentiss.
+
+The remains of the orator must ever be imperfect--the tone of
+voice--the flashing eye--the occasion, and the mighty shout of the
+multitude, cannot be impressed; but still Prentiss has left enough
+in his brilliant career, if treasured up, to show posterity that he
+was every inch a man. Let his fragmentary printed speeches--let the
+reminiscences of his friends that treat of his power as an orator,
+be brought together, and unsatisfactory as they may be, there will
+be found left intrinsic value enough to accomplish the object. There
+will be in the fluted column, though shattered and defaced, an Ionian
+beauty that will tell unerringly of the magnificent temple that it
+once adorned.
+
+BATON ROUGE, July 9, 1850.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM HOUSEHOLD WORDS.]
+
+THE CHEMISTRY OF A CANDLE.
+
+The Wilkinsons were having a small party,--it consisted of themselves
+and Uncle Bagges--at which the younger members of the family, home
+for the holidays, had been just admitted to assist after dinner. Uncle
+Bagges was a gentleman from whom his affectionate relatives cherished
+expectations of a testamentary nature. Hence the greatest attention
+was paid by them to the wishes of Mr. Bagges, as well as to every
+observation which he might be pleased to make.
+
+"Eh! what? you sir," said Mr. Bagges, facetiously addressing himself
+to his eldest nephew, Harry,--"Eh! what? I am glad to hear, sir, that
+you are doing well at school. Now--eh? now, are you clever enough to
+tell where was Moses when he put the candle out?"
+
+"That depends, uncle," said the young gentleman, "on whether he had
+lighted the candle to see with at night, or by daylight, to seal a
+letter."
+
+"Eh! Very good, now! 'Pon my word, very good," exclaimed Uncle Bagges.
+"You must be Lord Chancellor, sir--Lord Chancellor, one of these
+days."
+
+"And now, uncle," asked Harry, who was a favorite with his uncle, "can
+you tell me what you do when you put a candle out?"
+
+"Clap an extinguisher on it, you young rogue, to be sure."
+
+"Oh! but I mean, you cut off its supply of oxygen," said Master Harry.
+
+"Cut off its ox's--eh? what? I shall cut off your nose, you young dog,
+one of these fine days."
+
+"He means something he heard at the Royal Institution," observed Mrs.
+Wilkinson. "He reads a great deal about chemistry, and he attended
+Professor Faraday's lectures there on the chemical history of a
+candle, and has been full of it ever since."
+
+"Now, you sir," said Uncle Bagges, "come you here to me, and tell
+me what you have to say about this chemical, eh?--or comical:
+which?--this comical chemical history of a candle."
+
+"He'll bore you, Bagges," said Mr. Wilkinson. "Harry, don't be
+troublesome to your uncle."
+
+"Troublesome! Oh, not at all. He amuses me. I like to hear him. So let
+him teach his old uncle the comicality and chemicality of a farthing
+rushlight."
+
+"A wax candle will be nicer and cleaner, uncle, and answer the same
+purpose. There's one on the mantel-shelf. Let me light it.
+
+"Take care you don't burn your fingers, Or set anything on fire," said
+Mrs. Wilkinson.
+
+"Now, uncle," commenced Harry, having drawn his chair to the side of
+Mr. Bagges, "we have got our candle burning. What do you see?"
+
+"Let me put on my spectacles," answered the uncle.
+
+"Look down on the top of the candle around the wick. See, it is a
+little cup full of melted wax. The heat of the flame has melted the
+wax just round the wick. The cold air keeps the outside of it hard,
+so as to make the rim of it. The melted wax in the little cup goes up
+through the wick to be burnt, just as oil does in the wick of a lamp.
+What do you think makes it go up, uncle?"
+
+"Why--why, the flame draws it up, doesn't it?"
+
+"Not exactly, uncle. It goes up through little tiny passages in the
+cotton wick, because very, very small channels, or pipes, or pores,
+have the power in themselves of sucking up liquids. What they do it by
+is called cap--something."
+
+"Capillary attraction, Harry," suggested Mr. Wilkinson.
+
+"Yes, that's it; just as a sponge sucks up water, or a bit of
+lump-sugar the little drop of tea or coffee left in the bottom of a
+cup. But I mustn't say much more about this, or else you will tell me
+I am doing something very much like teaching my grandmother to--you
+know what."
+
+"Your grandmother, eh, young sharp-shins?"
+
+"No--I mean my uncle. Now, I'll blow the candle out, like Moses; not
+to be in the dark, though, but to see into what it is. Look at the
+smoke rising from the wick. I'll hold a bit of lighted paper in the
+smoke, so as not to touch the wick. But see, for all that, the candle
+lights again. So this shows that the melted wax sucked up through
+the wick is turned into vapor; and the vapor burns. The heat of the
+burning vapor keeps on melting more wax, and that is sucked up too
+within the flame, and turned into vapor, and burnt, and so on till the
+was is all used up, and the candle is gone. So the flame, uncle, you
+see, is the last of the candle, and the candle seems to go through the
+flame into nothing--although it doesn't, but goes into several things,
+and isn't it curious, as Professor Faraday said, that the candle
+should look so splendid and glorious in going away?"
+
+"How well he remembers, doesn't he?" observed Mrs. Wilkinson.
+
+"I dare say," proceeded Harry, "that the flame of the candle looks
+flat to you; but if we were to put a lamp glass over it, so as
+to shelter it from the draught, you would see it is round,--round
+sideways and running up to a peak. It is drawn up by the hot air; you
+know that hot air always rises, and that is the way smoke is taken up
+the chimney. What should you think was in the middle of the flame?"
+
+"I should say fire," replied Uncle Bagges.
+
+"Oh, no! The flame is hollow. The bright flame we see is something
+no thicker than a thin peel, or skin; and it doesn't touch the wick.
+Inside of it is the vapor I told you of just now. If you put one end
+of a bent pipe into the middle of the flame, and let the other end of
+the pipe dip into a bottle, the vapor or gas from the candle will mix
+with the air there; and if you set fire to the mixture of gas from the
+candle and air in the bottle, it would go off with a bang."
+
+"I wish you'd do that, Harry," said Master Tom, the younger brother of
+the juvenile lecturer.
+
+"I want the proper things," answered Harry. "Well, uncle, the flame
+of the candle is a little shining case, with gas in the inside of it,
+and air on the outside, so that the case of flame is between the air
+and the gas. The gas keeps going into the flame to burn, and when the
+candle burns properly, none of it ever passes out through the flame;
+and none of the air ever gets in through the flame to the gas. The
+greatest heat of the candle is in this skin, or peel, or case of
+flame."
+
+"Case of flame!" repeated Mr. Bagges. "Live and learn. I should have
+thought a candle-flame was as thick as my poor old noddle."
+
+"I can show you the contrary," said Harry. "I take this piece of white
+paper, look, and hold it a second or two down upon the candle-flame,
+keeping the flame very steady. Now I'll rub off the black of the
+smoke, and--there--you find that the paper is scorched in the shape
+of a ring; but inside the ring it is only dirtied, and not singed at
+all."
+
+"Seeing is believing," remarked the uncle.
+
+"But," proceeded Harry, "there is more in the candle-flame than the
+gas that comes out of the candle. You know a candle won't burn without
+air. There must be always air around the gas, and touching it like, to
+make it burn. If a candle hasn't got enough air, it goes out, or burns
+badly, so that some of the vapor inside of the flame comes out through
+it in the form of smoke, and this is the reason of a candle smoking.
+So now you know why a great clumsy dip smokes more than a neat wax
+candle; it is because the thick wick of the dip makes too much fuel in
+proportion to the air that can get to it."
+
+"Dear me! Well, I suppose there is a reason for everything," exclaimed
+the young philosopher's mamma.
+
+"What should you say now," continued Harry, "if I told you that the
+smoke that comes out of a candle is the very thing that makes a candle
+light? Yes; a candle shines by consuming its own smoke. The smoke of
+a candle is a cloud of small dust, and the little grains of the dust
+are bits of charcoal, or carbon, as chemists call it. They are made in
+the flame, and burnt in the flame, and, while burning, make the flame
+bright. They are burnt the moment they are made; but the flame goes on
+making more of them as fast as it burns them: and that is how it keeps
+bright. The place they are made in, is in the ease of flame itself,
+where the strong heat is. The great heat separates them from the gas
+which conies from the melted wax, and, as soon as they touch the air
+on the outside of the thin case of flame, they burn."
+
+"Can you tell how it is that the little bits of carbon came the
+brightness of the flame?" asked Mr. Wilkinson.
+
+"Because they are pieces of solid matter," answered Harry. "To make
+a flame shine, there must always be some solid--or at least
+liquid-matter in it."
+
+"Very good." said Mr. Bagges,--"solid stuff necessary to brightness."
+
+"Some gases and other things," resumed Harry, "that burn with a
+flame you can hardly see, burn splendidly when something solid is
+put into them. Oxygen and hydrogen--tell me if I use too hard words,
+uncle--oxygen and hydrogen gases, if mixed together and blown through
+a pipe, burn with plenty of heat but with very little light. But if
+their flame is blown upon a piece of quick-lime, it gets so bright
+as to be quite dazzling, Make the smoke of oil of turpentine pass
+through the same flame, and it gives the flame a beautiful brightness
+directly."
+
+"I wonder," observed Uncle Bagges, "what has made you such a bright
+youth."
+
+"Taking after uncle, perhaps," retorted his nephew. "Don't put my
+candle and me out. Well, carbon, or charcoal is what causes the
+brightness of all lamps, and candles, and other common lights; so, of
+course, there is carbon in what they are all made of."
+
+"So carbon is smoke, eh? and light is owing to your carbon. Giving
+light out of smoke, eh? as they say in the classics," observed Mr.
+Bagges.
+
+"But what becomes of the candle," pursued Harry, "as it burns away?
+where does it go?"
+
+"Nowhere," said his mamma, "I should think. It burns to nothing."
+
+"Oh, dear, no!" said Harry, "everything--everybody goes somewhere."
+
+"Eh!--rather an important consideration, that," Mr. Bagges moralized.
+
+"You can see it goes into smoke, which makes soot, for one thing,"
+pursued Harry. "There are other things it goes into, not to be seen
+by only looking, but you can get to see them by taking the right
+means,--just put your hand over the candle, uncle."
+
+"Thank you, young gentleman, I had rather be excused."
+
+"Not close enough down to burn you, uncle; higher up. There--you
+feel a stream of hot air; so something seems to rise from the candle.
+Suppose you were to put a very long slender gas-burner over the flame,
+and let the flame burn just within the end of it, as if it were a
+chimney,--some of the hot steam would go up and come out at the top,
+but a sort of dew would be left behind in the glass chimney, if
+the chimney was cold enough when you put it on. There are ways of
+collecting this sort of dew, and when it is collected it turns out to
+be really water. I am not joking, uncle. Water is one of the things
+which the candle turns into in burning,--water coming out of fire. A
+jet of oil gives above a pint of water in burning. In some lighthouses
+they burn, Professor Faraday says, up to two gallons of oil in a
+night, and if the windows are cold the steam from the oil clouds the
+inside of the windows, and, in frosty weather, freezes into ice."
+
+"Water out of a candle, eh?" exclaimed Mr. Bagges. "As hard to get, I
+should have thought, as blood out of a post. Where does it come from?"
+
+"Part from the wax, and part from the air, and yet not a drop of
+it comes either from the air or the wax. What do you make of that,
+uncle?"
+
+"Eh? Oh! I'm no hand at riddles. Give it up."
+
+"No riddle at all, uncle. The part that comes from the wax isn't
+water, and the part that comes from the air isn't water, but when put
+together they become water. Water is a mixture of two things then.
+This can be shown. Put some iron wire or turnings into a gun barrel
+open at both ends. Heat the middle of the barrel red-hot in a little
+furnace. Keep the heat up, and send the steam of boiling water through
+the red-hot gun barrel. What will come out at the other end of the
+barrel won't be steam; it will be gas, which doesn't turn to water
+again when it gets cold, and which burns if you put a light to it.
+Take the turnings out of the gun-barrel, and you will find them
+changed to rust, and heavier than when they were put in. Part of the
+water is the gas that comes out of the barrel, the other part is what
+mixes with the iron turnings, and changes them to rust, and makes
+them heavier. You can fill a Wadder with the gas that comes out of
+the gun-barrel, or you can pass bubbles of it up into a jar of water
+turned upside down in a trough, and, as I said, you can make this part
+of the water burn."
+
+"Eh?" cried Mr. Bagges. "Upon my word! One of these day, we shall have
+you setting the Thames on fire."
+
+"Nothing more easy," said Harry, "than to burn part of the Thames, or
+of any other water; I mean the gas that I have just told you about,
+which is called hydrogen. In burning, hydrogen produces water again,
+like the flame of a candle. Indeed, hydrogen is that part of the water
+formed by a candle burning, that comes from the wax. All things that
+have hydrogen in them produce water in burning, and the more there
+is in them the more they produce. When pure hydrogen burns, nothing
+comes from it but water, no smoke or soot at all. If you were to burn
+one ounce of it, the water you would get would be just nine ounces.
+There are many ways of making hydrogen besides out of steam by the
+hot gun-barrel. I could show it you in a moment by pouring a little
+sulphuric acid mixed with water into a bottle upon a few zinc or steel
+filings, and putting a cork in the bottle with a little pipe through
+it, and setting fire to the gas that would come from the mouth of
+the pipe. We should find the flame very hot, but having scarcely
+any brightness. I should like you to see the curious qualities of
+hydrogen, particularly how light it is, so as to carry things up in
+the air; and I wish I had a small balloon to fill with it, and make go
+up to the ceiling, or a bag-pipe full of it to blow soap-bubbles with,
+and show how much faster they rise than common ones, blown with the
+breath."
+
+"So do I," interposed Master Tom.
+
+"And so," resumed Harry, "hydrogen, you know, uncle, is part of water,
+and just one-ninth part."
+
+"As hydrogen is to water, so is a tailor to an ordinary individual,
+eh?" Mr. Bagges remarked.
+
+"Well, now then, uncle, if hydrogen is the tailor's part of the
+water, what are the other eight parts? The iron turnings used to make
+hydrogen in the gun-barrel, and rusted, take just those eight parts
+from the water in the shape of steam, and are so much the heavier.
+Burn iron turnings in the air, and they make the same rust, and gain
+just the same in weight. So the other eight parts must be found in the
+air for one thing, and in the rusted iron turnings for another, and
+they must also be in the water; and now the question is, how to get at
+them?"
+
+"Out of the water? Fish for them, I should say," suggested Mr. Bagges.
+
+"Why, so we can," said Harry. "Only, instead of hooks and lines, we
+must use wires--two wires, one from one end, the other from the other,
+of a galvanic battery. Put the points of these wires into water, a
+little distance apart, and they instantly take the water to pieces.
+If they are of copper, or a metal that will rust easily, one of them
+begins to rust, and air-bubbles come up from the other. These bubbles
+are hydrogen. The other part of the water mixes with the end of the
+wire and makes rust. But if the wires are of gold, or a metal that
+does not rust easily, air-bubbles rise from the ends of both wires.
+Collect the bubbles from both wires in a tube, and fire them, and they
+turn to water again; and this water is exactly the same weight as the
+quantity that has been changed into the two gases. Now then, uncle,
+what should you think water was composed of?"
+
+"Eh? well--I suppose of those very identical two gases, young
+gentleman."
+
+"Right, uncle. Recollect that the gas from one of the wires was
+hydrogen, the one-ninth of water. What should you guess the gas from
+the other wire to be?"
+
+"Stop--eh?--wait a bit--eh?--oh! why, the other eight-ninths, to be
+sure."
+
+"Good again, uncle. Now this gas that is eight-ninths of water is the
+gas called oxygen that I mentioned just now. This is a very curious
+gas. It won't burn in air at all itself, like gas from a lamp, but it
+has a wonderful power of making things burn that are lighted and put
+into it. If you fill a jar with it--"
+
+"How do you manage that?" Mr. Bagges inquired.
+
+"You fill the jar with water," answered Harry, "and you stand it
+upside down in a vessel full of water too. Then you let bubbles of the
+gas up into the jar, and they turn out the water and take its place.
+Put a stopper in the neck of the jar, or hold a glass plate against
+the mouth of it, and you can take it out of the water and so have
+bottled oxygen. A lighted candle put into a jar of oxygen blazes up
+directly, and is consumed before you can say Jack Robinson. Charcoal
+burns away in it as fast, with beautiful bright sparks--phosphorus
+with a light that dazzles you to look at--and a piece of iron or steel
+just made red-hot at the end first, is burnt in oxygen quicker than
+a stick would be in common air. The experiment of burning things in
+oxygen beats any fire-works."
+
+"Oh, how jolly!" exclaimed Tom.
+
+"Now we see, uncle," Harry continued, "that water is hydrogen and
+oxygen united together, that water is got wherever hydrogen is burnt
+in common air, that a candle won't burn without air, and that when a
+candle burns there is hydrogen in it burning, and forming water. Now,
+then, where does the hydrogen of the candle get the oxygen from, to
+turn into water with it?"
+
+"From the air, eh?"
+
+"Just so. I can't stop to tell you of the other things which there is
+oxygen in, and the many beautiful and amusing ways of getting it. But
+as there is oxygen in the air, and as oxygen makes things burn at such
+a rate, perhaps you wonder why air does not make things burn as fast
+as oxygen. The reason is, that there is something else in the air that
+mixes with the oxygen and weakens it."
+
+"Makes a sort of gaseous grog of it, eh?" said Mr. Bagges. "But how is
+that proved?"
+
+"Why, there is a gas, called nitrous gas, which, if you mix it with
+oxygen, takes all the oxygen into itself, and the mixture of the
+nitrous gas and oxygen, if you put water with it, goes into the water.
+Mix nitrous gas and air together in a jar over water, and the nitrous
+gas takes away the oxygen, and then the water sucks up the mixed
+oxygen and nitrous gas, and that part of the air which weakens the
+oxygen is left behind. Burning phosphorus in confined air will also
+take all the oxygen from it, and there are other ways of doing the
+same thing. The portion of the air left behind is called nitrogen. You
+wouldn't know it from common air by the look; it has no color, taste,
+nor smell, and it won't burn. But things won't burn in it, either;
+and anything on fire put into it goes out directly. It isn't fit to
+breathe, and a mouse, or any animal, shut up in it, dies. It isn't
+poisonous, though; creatures only die in it for want of oxygen. We
+breathe it with oxygen, and then it does no harm, but good: for if
+we breathed pure oxygen, we should breathe away so violently, that
+we should soon breathe our life out. In the same way, if the air were
+nothing but oxygen, a candle would not last above a minute.
+
+"What a tallow-chandler's bill we should have!" remarked Mrs.
+Wilkinson.
+
+"'If a house were on fire in oxygen,' as Professor Faraday said,
+'every iron bar, or rafter, or pillar, every nail and iron tool,
+and the fire-place itself; all the zinc and copper roofs, and leaden
+coverings, and gutters, and pipes, would consume and burn, increasing
+the combustion.'"
+
+"That would be, indeed, burning 'like a house on fire,'" observed Mr.
+Bagges.
+
+"'Think,'" said Harry, continuing his quotation, "'of the Houses
+of Parliament, or a steam-engine manufactory. Think of an iron
+proof-chest no proof against oxygen. Think of a locomotive and its
+train,--every engine, every carriage, and even every rail would be set
+on fire and burnt up.' So now, uncle, I think you see what the use of
+nitrogen is, and especially how it prevents a candle from burning out
+too fast."
+
+"Eh?" said Mr. Bagges. "Well, I will say I do think we are under
+considerable obligations to nitrogen."
+
+"I have explained to you, uncle," pursued Harry, "how a candle, in
+burning, turns into water. But it turns into something else. besides
+that. There is a stream of hot air going up from it that won't
+condense into dew; some of that is the nitrogen of the air which the
+candle has taken all the oxygen from. But there is more in it than
+nitrogen. Hold a long glass tube over a candle, so that the stream
+of hot air from it may go up through the tube. Hold a jar over the
+end of the tube to collect some of the stream of hot air. Put some
+lime-water, which looks quite clear, into the jar; stop the jar,
+and shake it up. The lime-water, which was quite clear before, turns
+milky. Then there is something made by the burning of the candle that
+changes the color of the lime-water. That is a gas, too, and you can
+collect it, and examine it. It is to be got from several things,
+and is a part of all chalk, marble, and the shells of eggs or of
+shell-fish. The easiest way to make it is by pouring muriatic or
+sulphuric acid on chalk or marble. The marble or chalk begins to hiss
+or bubble, and you can collect the bubbles in the same way that you
+can oxygen. The gas made by the candle in burning, and which also is
+got out of the chalk and marble, is called carbonic acid. It puts out
+a light in a moment; it kills any animal that breathes it, and it is
+really poisonous to breathe, because it destroys life even when mixed
+with a pretty large quantity of common air. The bubbles made by beer
+when it ferments, are carbonic acid, so is the air that fizzes out of
+soda-water, and it is good to swallow though it is deadly to breathe.
+It is got from chalk by burning the chalk as well as by putting acid
+to it, and burning the carbonic acid out of chalk makes the chalk
+lime. This is why people are killed sometimes by getting in the way of
+the wind that blows from lime-kilns."
+
+"Of which it is advisable carefully to keep to the windward." Mr.
+Wilkinson observed.
+
+"The most curious thing about carbonic acid gas," proceeded Harry, "is
+its weight. Although it is only a sort of air, it is so heavy that
+you can pour it from one vessel into another. You may dip a cup of it
+and pour it down upon a candle, and it will put the candle out, which
+would astonish an ignorant person; because carbonic acid gas is as
+invisible as the air, and the candle seems to be put out by nothing. A
+soap-bubble or common air floats on it like wood on water. Its weight
+is what makes it collect in brewers' vats; and also in wells, where
+it is produced naturally; and owing to its collecting in such places
+it causes the deaths we so often hear about of those who go down into
+them without proper care. It is found in many springs of water, more
+or less; and a great deal of it comes out of the earth in some places.
+Carbonic acid gas is what stupefies the dogs in the Grotto del Cane.
+Well, but how is carbonic acid gas made by the candle?"
+
+"I hope with your candle you'll throw some light upon the subject,"
+said Uncle Bagges.
+
+"I hope so," answered Harry. "Recollect it is the burning of the
+smoke, or soot, or carbon of the candle, that makes the candle-flame
+bright. Also that the candle won't burn without air. Likewise that it
+will not burn in nitrogen, or air that has been deprived of oxygen.
+So the carbon of the candle mingles with oxygen, in burning, to make
+carbonic acid gas; just as the hydrogen does to form water. Carbonic
+acid gas, then, is carbon or charcoal dissolved in oxygen. Here is
+black soot getting invisible and changing into air; and this seems
+strange, uncle, doesn't it?"
+
+"Ahem! Strange, if true," answered Mr. Bagges. "Eh? Well! I suppose
+it's all right."
+
+"Quite so, uncle. Burn carbon or charcoal either in the air or in
+oxygen, and it is sure always to make carbonic acid, and nothing else,
+if it is dry. No dew or mist gathers in a cold glass jar if you burn
+dry charcoal in it. The charcoal goes entirely into carbonic acid gas,
+and leaves nothing behind but ashes, which are only earthy stuff that
+was in the charcoal, but not part of the charcoal itself. And now,
+shall I tell you something about carbon?"
+
+"With all my heart," assented Mr. Bagges.
+
+"I said that there was carbon or charcoal in all common lights, so
+there is in every common kind of fuel. If you heat coal or wood away
+from the air, some gas comes away, and leaves behind coke from coal,
+and charcoal from wood; both carbon, though not pure. Heat carbon
+as much as you will in a close vessel, and it does not change in the
+least; but let the air get to it, and then it burns and flies off in
+carbonic acid gas. This makes carbon so convenient for fuel. But it is
+ornamental as well as useful, uncle. The diamond is nothing else than
+carbon."
+
+"The diamond, eh! You mean the black diamond."
+
+"No: the diamond, really and truly. The diamond is only carbon in the
+shape of a crystal."
+
+"Eh? and can't some of your clever chemists crystalize a little bit of
+carbon, and make a Koh-i-noor?"
+
+"Ah, uncle, perhaps we shall, some day. In the mean time I suppose we
+must be content with making carbon so brilliant as it is in the flame
+of a candle. Well; now you see that a candle-flame is vapor burning,
+and the vapor, in burning, turns into water and carbonic acid gas. The
+oxygen of both the carbonic acid gas and the water comes from the air,
+and the hydrogen and carbon together are the vapor. They are distilled
+out of the melted was by the heat. But, you know, carbon alone can't
+be distilled by any heat. It can be distilled, though, when it is
+joined with hydrogen, as it is in the wax, and then the mixed hydrogen
+and carbon rise in gas of the same kind as the gas in the streets, and
+that also is distilled by heat from coal. So a candle is a little gas
+manufactory in itself, that burns the gas as fast as it makes it."
+
+"Haven't you pretty nearly come to your candle's end'!" said Mr.
+Wilkinson.
+
+"Nearly. I only want to tell uncle, that the burning of a candle is
+almost exactly like our breathing. Breathing is consuming oxygen,
+only not so fast as burning. In breathing we throw out water in vapor
+and carbonic acid from our lungs, and take oxygen in. Oxygen is as
+necessary to support the life of the body, as it is to keep up the
+flame of a candle."
+
+"So," said Mr. Bagges, "man is a candle, eh? and Shakspeare knew that,
+I suppose, (as he did most things,) when he wrote
+
+ 'Out, out, brief candle!'
+
+"Well, well; we old ones are moulds, and you young squires are dips
+and rushlights, eh? Any more to tell us about the candle?"
+
+"I could tell you a great deal more about oxygen, and hydrogen, and
+carbon, and water, and breathing, that Professor Faraday said, if I
+had time; but you should go and hear him yourself, uncle."
+
+"Eh? well! I think I will. Some of us seniors may learn something from
+a juvenile lecture, at any rate, if given by a Faraday. And now, my
+boy. I will tell you what," added Mr. Bagges, "I am very glad to find
+you so fond of study and science; and you deserve to be encouraged:
+and so I'll give you a what-d'ye-call-it'?--a Galvanic Battery, on
+your next birth-day; and so much for your teaching your old uncle the
+chemistry of a candle."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM A REVIEW OF GRISWOLD'S _PROSE WRITERS OF AMERICA_, IN THE
+SOUTHERN LITERARY MESSENGER.]
+
+DANIEL WEBSTER,
+
+AS A STATESMAN, AND AS A MAN OF LETTERS.
+
+Mr. Webster is properly selected as the representative of the
+best sense, and highest wisdom, and most consummate dignity, of
+the politics and oratory of the present times, because his great
+intelligence has continued to be so finely sensitive to all the
+influences that stir the action and speculation of the country.
+
+With elements of reason, definite, absolute, and emphatic; with
+principles settled, strenuous, deep and unchangeable as his being;
+his wisdom is yet exquisitely practical: with subtlest sagacity it
+apprehends every change in the circumstances in which it is to act,
+and can accommodate its action without loss of vigor, or alteration
+of its general purpose. Its theories always "lean and hearken" to
+the actual. By a sympathy of the mind, almost transcendental in
+its delicacy, its speculations are attracted into a parallelism
+with the logic of life and nature. In most men, that intellectual
+susceptibility by which they are capable of being reacted upon by the
+outer world, and having their principles and views expanded, modified
+or quickened, does not outlast the first period of life; from
+that time they remain fixed and rigid in their policy, temper and
+characteristics; if a new phase of society is developed, it must
+find its exponent in other men. But in Webster this fresh suggestive
+sensibility of the judgment has been carried on into the matured and
+determined wisdom of manhood. His perceptions, feelings, reasonings,
+tone, are always up to the level of the hour, or in advance of it;
+sometimes far, very far in advance, as in the views thrown out in his
+speech at Baltimore, on an international commercial system, in which
+he showed that he then foresaw both the fate of the tariff and the
+fallacy of free-trade. No man has ever been able to say, or now can
+say, that he is before Webster. The youngest men in the nation look to
+him, not as representing the past, but as leading in the future.
+
+This practicalness and readiness of adaptation are instinctive,
+not voluntary and designed. They are united with the most decided
+preference for certain opinions and the most earnest averseness to
+others. Nothing can be less like Talleyrand's system of waiting
+for events. He has never, in view of a change which he saw to be
+inevitable, held himself in reserve and uncommitted. What Webster is
+at any time, that he is strenuously, entirely, openly. He has first
+opposed, with every energy of his mind and temper, that which, when
+it has actually come, he is ready to accept, and make the best of. He
+never surrenders in advance a position which knows will be carried; he
+takes his place, and delivers battle; he fights as one who is fighting
+the last battle of his country's hopes; he fires the last shot. When
+the smoke and tumult are cleared off, where is Webster! Look around
+for the nearest rallying point which the view presents; there he
+stands, with his hand upon his heart, in grim composure; calm,
+dignified, resolute; neither disheartened nor surprised by defeat.
+"Leaving the things that are behind," is now the trumpet-sound by
+which he rallies his friends to a new confidence, and stimulates them
+to fresh efforts. It is obvious that Webster, when contending with
+all his force for or against some particular measure, has not been
+contemplating the probability of being compelled to oppose or defend a
+different policy, and, so, choosing his words warily, in reference to
+future possibilities of a personal kind: yet when the time has come
+that he has been obliged to fight with his face in another direction,
+it has always been found that no one principle had been asserted, no
+one sentiment displayed, incompatible with his new positions. This
+union of consistency with practicability has arisen naturally from
+the extent and comprehensiveness of his views, from the breadth and
+generality with which the analytical power of his understanding has
+always led him to state his principles and define his position. From
+the particular scheme or special maxim which his party was insisting
+upon, his mind rose to a higher and more general formula of truth.
+
+Owing to the same superior penetration and reach of thought, the gloom
+of successive repulses has never been able to paralyze the power
+which it has saddened. The constitution has been so often invaded
+and trampled upon, that to a common eye it might well seem to have
+lost all the resentments of vitality. But Webster has distinguished
+between the constitution and its administration. He has seen that the
+constitution, though in bondage, is not killed; that the channels
+of its life-giving wisdom are stuffed up with rubbish, but not
+obliterated. He has been determined that if the rulers of the country
+will deny the truth, they shall not debauch it; if they depart from
+the constitution, they shall not deprave it. He has been resolved,
+that when this tyranny of corruption shall be overpast, and the
+constitution draws again its own free breath of virtue, truth and
+wisdom, it shall be found perfect of limb and feature, prepared to
+rise like a giant refreshed by sleep.
+
+Mr. Griswold, we suppose, is quite right in suggesting that the only
+name in modern times to which reference can with any fitness be made
+for purposes of analogy or comparison with Webster is that of Burke.
+In many respects there is a correspondence between their characters;
+in some others they differ widely. As a prophet of the truth of
+political morals, as a revealer of those essential elements in the
+constitution of life, upon which, or of which, society is constructed
+and government evolved, Burke had no peer. In that department he rises
+into the distance and grandeur of inspiration; _nil mortote sonans_.
+Nor do we doubt that the Providence of God had raised him up for the
+purposes of public safety and guidance, any more than we doubt the
+mission of Jeremiah or Elisha, or any other of the school of the
+Lord's prophets. But leaving Burke unapproached in this region of
+the nature and philosophy of government, and looking at him, in his
+general career, as a man of intellect and action, we might indicate an
+analogy of this kind, that the character, temper and reason of Burke
+seem to be almost an image of the English constitution, and Webster's
+of the American. To get the key to Burke's somewhat irregular and
+startling career, it is necessary, to study the idea of the old whig
+constitution of the English monarchy: viewing his course from that
+point of view, we comprehend his almost countenancing and encouraging
+rebellion in the case of the American colonies; his intense hostility
+to Warren Hastings' imperial system; his unchastised earnestness
+in opposition to French maxims in the decline of his life. The
+constitution of the United States, that most wonderful of the
+emanations of providential wisdom, seems to be not only the home of
+Webster's affections and seat of his proudest hopes, but the very type
+of his understanding and fountain of his intellectual strength:
+
+ ----"hic illius arma;----
+ Hic currus."
+
+The genius of Burke, like the one, was inexhaustible in resources,
+so composite and so averse from theory as to appear incongruous, but
+justified in the result; not formal, not always entirely perspicuous.
+Webster's mind, like the other, is eminently logical, reduced
+into principles, orderly, distinct, reconciling abstraction with
+convenience, various in manifestation, yet pervaded by an unity of
+character.
+
+Mr. Webster has not merely illustrated a great range of mental powers
+and accomplishments, but has filled, in the eye of the nation, on a
+great scale, and to the farthest reach of their exigency, a diversity
+of intellectual characters; while the manner in which Burke's wisdom
+displayed itself was usually the same. We cannot suppose that Burke
+could have been a great lawyer. Webster possesses a consummate legal
+judgment and prodigious powers of legal logic, and is felt to be
+the highest authority on a great question of law in this country.
+The demonstrative faculty; the capacity to analyze and open any
+proposition so as to identify its separate elements with the very
+consciousness of the reader's or hearer's mind; this, which is the
+lawyer's peculiar power, had not been particularly developed in Burke,
+but exists in Webster in greater expansion and force than in any
+one since Doctor Johnson, who, it always appeared to us, had he been
+educated for the bar, would have made the greatest lawyer that ever
+led the decisions of Westminster-Hall. We should hardly be justified
+in saying that Burke would have made a great First Lord of the
+Treasury. Mr. Webster, as Secretary of State, proved himself to be
+a practical statesman of the highest; finest, promptest sagacity and
+foresight that this or any nation ever witnessed. Who now doubts the
+surpassing wisdom, who now but reverences the exalted patriotism,
+of the advice and the example which he gave, but gave in vain, to
+the Whig party at the beginning of Mr. Tyler's administration? His
+official correspondence would be lowered by a comparison with any
+state papers since the secretaryship of John Marshall. Does the public
+generally know what has become of that portentous difficulty about the
+Right of Search, upon which England and America, five years ago, were
+on the point of being "_lento collisæ duello_." Mr. Webster settled it
+by mere force of mind: he dissipated the Question, _by seeing through
+it_, and by compelling others to see a fallacy in its terms which
+before had imposed upon the understanding of two nations. In the
+essential and universal philosophy of politics, Webster is second only
+to Burke. After Burke, there is no statesman whose writings might be
+read with greater advantage by foreign nations, or would have been
+studied with so much respect by antiquity, as Webster's.
+
+In a merely literary point of view, this perhaps may be said of Mr.
+Webster, that he is the only powerful and fervid orator, since the
+glorious days of Greece, whose style is so disciplined that any of
+his great public harangues might be used as models of composition. His
+language is beautifully pure, and his combinations of it exhibit more
+knowledge of the genius, spirit, and classic vigor of the English
+tongue, than it has entered the mind of any professor of rhetoric to
+apprehend. As the most impetuous sweeps of passion in him are pervaded
+and informed and guided by intellect, so the most earnest struggles
+of intellect seem to be calmed and made gentle in their vehemence,
+by a more essential rationality of taste. That imperious mind, which
+seems fit to defy the universe, is ever subordinate, by a kind of
+fascination, to the perfect law of grace. In the highest of his
+intellectual flights--and who can follow the winged rush of that eagle
+mind?--in the widest of his mental ranges-and who shall measure their
+extent?--he is ever moving within the severest line of beauty. No one
+would think of saying that Mr. Webster's speeches are thrown off with
+ease, and cost him but little effort; they are clearly the result
+of the intensest stress of mental energy; yet the manner is never
+discomposed; the decency and propriety of the display never interfered
+with; he is always greater than his genius; you see "the depth out not
+the tumult" of the mind. Whether, with extended arm, he strangles
+the "reluctantes dracones" of democracy, or with every faculty called
+home, concentrates the light and heat of his being in developing into
+principles those great sentiments and great instincts which are his
+inspiration; in all, the orator stands forth with the majesty and
+chastened grace of Pericles himself. In the fiercest of encounters
+with the deadliest of foes, the mind, which is enraged, is never
+perturbed; the style, which leaps like the fire of heaven, is never
+disordered. As in Guido's picture of St. Michael piercing the dragon,
+while the gnarled muscles of the arms and hands attest the utmost
+strain of the strength, the countenance remains placid, serene, and
+undisturbed. In this great quality of mental dignity, Mr. Webster's
+speeches have become more and more eminent. The glow and luster
+which set his earlier speeches a-blaze with splendor, is in his
+later discourses rarely let forth; but they have gained more, in the
+increase of dignity, than they have parted with in the diminution
+of brilliancy. We regard his speech before the shop-keepers, calling
+themselves merchants, of Philadelphia, as one of the most weighty
+and admirable of the intellectual efforts of his life. The range of
+profound and piercing wisdom; the exquisite and faultless taste; but
+above all, the august and indefectible dignity, that are illustrated
+from the beginning to the end of that great display of matured
+and finished strength, leave us in mingled wonder and reverence.
+There is one sentence there which seems to us almost to reach the
+_intellectual_ sublime; and while it stirs within us the depths of
+sympathy and admiration, we could heartily wish that the young men of
+America would inhale the almost supra-mortal spirit which it breathes:
+"I would not with any idolatrous admiration regard the Constitution
+of the United States, nor any other work of man; but this side of
+idolatry, I hold it in profound respect. I believe that no human
+working on such a subject, no human ability exerted for such an end,
+has ever produced so much happiness, or holds out now to so many
+millions of people the prospect, through such a succession of ages and
+ages, of so much happiness, as the Constitution of the United States.
+We who are here for one generation, for a single life, and yet in our
+several stations and relations in society intrusted in some degree
+with its protection and support, what duty does it devolve, what duty
+does it _not_ devolve, upon us!" In the name of distant ages, and a
+remote posterity, we hail the author of this and similar orations, as
+Webster the _Olympian_.
+
+But we leave a subject which we have incidentally touched, sincerely
+disclaiming any attempt to estimate the character or define the
+greatness of Webster. In reference to him we feel, as Cicero said to
+Cæsar, "_Nil vulgare te dignum videri possit._"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE ATHENÆUM.]
+
+THE NEW PROPHET IN THE EAST.[5]
+
+The vicissitudes of the war in the Caucasus of late have been
+surprising enough to awaken the interest of Western Europe, even
+amidst her own nearer anxieties. Last year it was said that the
+conquest of Achulgo, the stronghold of the redoubtable Schamyl,
+had effectually broken the power of that daring leader. In direct
+contradiction to such reports, later accounts from Daghestan tell
+of the reappearance of the notable partisan amidst the lines of the
+Russians, and of a defeat of the latter, the most severe, if the
+details of the event be true, that they have yet suffered in the
+Caucasus. In any case, these exciting changes of fortune would be in
+favor of a book professing to describe this interesting region, and
+to add to our knowledge of its brave inhabitants. The main interest
+of Herr Bodenstedt's work will now be enhanced by its undertaking
+to give a more precise account than had previously appeared of the
+priest-warrior of Daghestan. and of the new sect as the prophet of
+which he succeeded in arraying the independent mountain clans against
+their common enemy with a kind of combination unknown in earlier
+periods of the struggle.
+
+[Footnote 5: The people of the Caucasus, and their Struggle for
+Liberty with the Russians--(_Die Volker des Caucasus, &c._) By
+Friedrich Bodenstedt. Second Edition. Frankfurt am Main, Lizius;
+London, Nutt.]
+
+The author has evidently lived for some time in the region which he
+describes, or in the bordering districts along the Caspian, both in
+Georgia and in North Daghestan, His acquaintance with Asiatic and
+Russian languages and customs appears to have been gained both by
+study and from intercourse with the natives of the south-eastern
+frontier. He is not ignorant of Oriental writings that refer to
+his subject; and his Russian statistics prove an access to official
+authorities which are not to be found in print. These, however
+obtained, can scarcely have been imparted to him as one of those
+writers whom the Court of St. Petersburg hires to promote its views
+through the press of Western Europe. His sympathies are declared
+against Russian usurpation; and the tendency of his essay is to prove
+how little real progress it has yet made in subduing the Caucasus, the
+enormous waste of money and life with which its fluctuating successes
+have been bought, and the fallacy of expecting a better result
+hereafter.
+
+What it has cost in life on the Russian side to attack-hitherto with
+no lasting effect--the handful of Caucasian mountaineers, may be
+guessed from a single note, dated 1847: "The present Russian force in
+the Caucasus"--including of course, the armed Cossacks of the Kuban
+and Terek--"amounts to two hundred thousand." Taking into account the
+numbers yearly cut off by disease, more fatal even than the mountain
+war, every step of which must be won by the most reckless waste
+of life,--the "Russian Officer" may perhaps truly affirm that the
+_annual_ expenditure of life by Russia, in her warfare with Schamyl,
+has for many years past exceeded the whole number of the population at
+any one time directly under the rule of that chieftain.
+
+We have said that the most instructive part of Herr Bodenstedt's essay
+is his sketch of that politico-religious scheme which made Schamyl
+formidable to the Russians. This system, it is to be observed, arose
+and has since been fully developed only in the Eastern Caucasus, where
+of late the main stress of the war has been. The western tribes (our
+"Circassians") who took the lead at an earlier stage of the contest,
+were not then, nor have they since been, inspired by the fanatic zeal
+which united the tribes of Daghestan. They fought from a mere love
+of independence, each little republic by itself; and their efforts,
+however heroic, being without concert, gradually declined before the
+vast force of the invader. In the region looking westward from the
+Georgian frontier on the Euxine, on the one side of the Caucasian
+range, and along the lower Kuban on the other, the Russian posts
+are now seldom threatened but by small predatory bands; the natives,
+retired to their mountain villages, have for some time made but few
+more formidable incursions. The war is transferred to the region
+spreading eastward from the Elbrus to the Caspian; where the strife
+for free existence is animated not less by the hatred of Russian
+slavery than by a fresh outbreak of Mohammedan zeal against infidel
+invasion,--a revival, in fact, of that war-like fanaticism which made
+the Moslem name terrible from the eighth to the sixteenth century.
+
+It dates from the years 1823-4; at which period a "new doctrine" began
+to be preached, secretly at first, to the select Uléma, afterward to
+greater numbers, in word and writing, by one Mullah Mohammed, a famous
+teacher and a judge (or _kadi_) of Jarach, in the Kurin district of
+Daghestan. He professed to have learnt it from Hadis-Ismail, an Alim
+of Kurdomir, highly famed for wisdom and sanctity. It laid bare the
+degradation into which his countrymen had sunk by irreligion and by
+the jealousy of sect; their danger, in consequence, from enemies
+of the true faith; and urged the necessity of reform in creed and
+practice, in order to regain the invincible character promised by the
+Prophet to believers. The theoretical part of the reformed doctrine
+seems to be a kind of Sufism,--the general character of which mode
+of Islam, long prevalent in the adjacent kingdom of Persia, has
+been described by our own orientalists. Disputed questions as to its
+origin, whether in Brahmin philosophy or in the reveries of Moslem
+mystics, cannot be discussed here; it must suffice to indicate those
+points which appear to connect it with the hieratic policy that has
+given a new aspect to the war in the Caucasus.
+
+Proceeding nominally on the basis of the Koran, it inculcates or
+expounds a kind of spiritual transcendentalism; in which the adept is
+raised above the necessity of formal laws, which are only requisite
+for those who are not capable of rising to a full intelligence of the
+supreme power. To gain this height, by devout contemplation, must be
+the personal work and endeavor of each individual. The revelation of
+divine truth, once attained, supersedes specific moral injunctions;
+ceremonies and systems, even, of religion, become indifferent to the
+mind illuminated by the sacred idea. A higher degree is the perfect
+conception or ecstatic vision of the Deity;--the highest-reserved
+only for the prophetic few--a real immediate union with his essence.
+Here, it will be seen, are four steps or stages, each of which has
+its sacred manual or appropriate system of teaching. In the hieratic
+system, of which Schamyl is the head, the divisions seem to correspond
+pretty nearly with this arrangement, as follows:--
+
+The _first_ includes the mass of the armed people; whose zeal it
+promotes by strict religious and moral injunctions enjoining purity of
+life, exact regard to the ritual of the Koran, teaching pilgrimages,
+fasting, ablutions; the duty of implacable war against the Infidel,
+the sin of enduring his tyranny.
+
+The _second_ is composed of those, who, in virtue of striving upward
+to a higher Divine intelligence, are elevated above ceremonial
+religion. Of these the _Murids_ (_seekers_ or _strugglers_,) are
+formed: a body of religious warriors attached to the Imam, whose
+courage in battle, raised to a kind of frenzy, despises numbers and
+laughs at death. To accept quarter, or to fly from the Infidel, is
+forbidden to this class.
+
+The _third_ includes the more perfect acolytes, who are presumed to
+have risen to the ecstatic view of the Deity. These are the elect,
+whom the Imam makes _Naibs_ or vice-regents,--invested with nearly
+absolute power in his absence.
+
+The _fourth_, or highest, implying entire union with the Divine
+essence, is held by Schamyl alone. In virtue of this elevation and
+spiritual endowment, the Imam, as an immediate organ of the Supreme
+Will, is himself the source of all law to his followers, unerring,
+impeccable; to question or disobey his behests is a sin against
+religion, as well as a political crime. It may be seen what advantage
+this system must have given to Schamyl in his conflict with the
+Russians. The doctrine of the indifference of sects and forms enabled
+him to unite the divided followers of Omar and of Ali, in a region
+where both abound, and where the schism had formerly been one of
+the most effectual instruments of the enemy. The belief in a Divine
+mission and spiritual powers sustains his adherents in all reverses;
+while it invites to defection from the Russian side those of the
+Mohammedan tribes who have submitted to the invader. Among these,
+however, Schamyl, like his predecessors in the same priestly office,
+by no means confides the progress of his sect to spiritual influences
+only. The work of conversion, where exhortation fails, is carried on
+remorselessly by fire and sword; and the Imam is as terrible to those
+of his countrymen whom fear or interest retains in alliance with
+Russia, as to the soldiers of the Czar. With a character in which
+extreme daring is allied with coolness, cunning, and military genius,
+with a good fortune which has hitherto preserved his life in many
+circumstances where escape seemed impossible,--it may be seen that the
+belief in his supernatural gifts and privileges, once created, must
+always tend to increase in intensity and effect among the imaginative
+and credulous Mohammedans of the Caucasus; and that this apt
+combination of the warrior with the politician and prophet accounts
+for his success in combining against the Russians a force of the once
+discordant tribes of Daghestan, possessing more of the character
+of a national resistance than had been ever known before in the
+Caucasus,--and compelling the invaders to purchase every one of their
+few, trifling, and dubious advances by the terrible sacrifice of life
+already noticed.
+
+In this formidable movement the highlander's natural freedom is fanned
+into a blaze by a religious zeal like that which once led the armies
+of Islam over one half of Asia and Europe. Although it reached its
+highest energy and a more consummate development under Schamyl, it was
+begun by his predecessors. Of the Mullah Mohammed, who first preached
+the duty of casting off the yoke of the Giaour, and the necessity of
+a religious reform and union of rival sects, as a means to that end,
+we have already spoken. This founder of the new system, an aged man,
+untrained in arms, never himself drew the sword in the cause; but was
+active in diffusing its principles and preparing a warlike rising by
+exhortations and letters circulated through all Daghestan. Suspected
+of these designs, he was seized, in 1826, by the orders of Jermoloff;
+and although be escaped,--by the connivance, it is said, of the native
+prince employed to capture him,--he afterward lived, in a kind of
+concealment, for some years. The post of Imam was thereupon assumed
+by a priest who was able to fight for the new doctrine as well as
+to preach it. The first armed outbreak took place under Kasi-Mullah,
+about the year 1829; from which time, until his death in a battle at
+Himry, in 1831, he waged a terrible, and, although often defeated,
+a virtually successful warfare, against the Russians, while he
+prosecuted the work of conversion among the tribes of Islam who
+delayed to acknowledge his mission, and to join in his enmity to the
+Russians, by the extremities of bloodshed and rapine. His death, after
+an heroic resistance, was hailed as a triumph by the Russians. They
+counted on the extinction of the new sect in the defeat of its leader,
+whose dead body they carried about the country to prove the imposture
+of his pretensions. This piece of barbarism produced an effect the
+reverse of what they expected. The venerable face of the Imam, the
+attitude in which he had expired, with one hand pointed as if to
+heaven, was more impressive to those who crowded round the body than
+his fearless enthusiasm had been,--and thousands who till then had
+held aloof, now joined his followers in venerating him as a prophet.
+Of this first warrior-priest of Daghestan, Schamyl was the favorite
+disciple and the most trusted soldier. Kasi-Mullah was not killed
+until Schamyl had already fallen as it seemed, under several deadly
+wounds:--his reappearance after this bloody scene was but the first of
+many similar escapes, the report of which sounds like a fable. He did
+not, however, at once succeed to the dignity of Imam: the office was
+usurped for more than a year by Hamsad Beg (Bey), whose rapacious and
+savage treatment of some of the princely families of Daghestan nearly
+caused a fatal reaction against the new sect, and the destruction
+of its main support, the Murids. Hamsad Beg performed no action of
+consequence against the Russians; but expended his rage upon the
+natives allied with them, or reluctant to obey his mandates. He
+was assassinated in 1834, by some kinsmen of a princely house whose
+territories he had usurped after a massacre of its princes. In the
+affray which took place on this occasion, there perished with him
+many of the fanatic Murids, who had become odious as instruments of
+the cruelties of their Imam. On his death, Schamyl was raised to
+the dignity,--but it was some time before the mischief done by his
+predecessor was so far repaired as to allow him to act with energy
+as the prophet of the new doctrine. One of the ill effects of Hamsad
+Beg's iniquities had been the defection to the Russians of n notable
+partisan--Hadjii Murad--for many years a fatal thorn in the side of
+the independent party.[6] This and other difficulties, among which was
+the unpopularity of the Murids under Hamsad Beg, were removed by new
+alliances and precautions, while all that eloquence and skill could
+perform was applied to restore the credit of the religious system,
+before Schamyl could hazard a direct attack of the Russian enemy,
+who meanwhile had taken advantage of the delay and disunion to gain
+ground in many parts of Daghestan. From the year 1839, however, the
+tide rapidly turned; and the result, from that date until the period
+at which the account closes (1845)--when Woronzow was appointed to
+command in the Caucasus, with nearly unlimited powers,--has been,
+that the Russians, in spite of tremendous sacrifices, were constantly
+losing ground and influence, while Schamyl gained both in equal
+proportion. The details of the campaigns during this interval are
+highly interesting; and we regret that conditions of space forbid
+us to translate some of the exciting episodes recorded by Herr
+Bodenstedt. We may, however, extract the following account of the
+Caucasian hero,--whose portrait, we believe, has never before been so
+fully exhibited to European readers;--
+
+[Footnote 6: It is worth noting--as a characteristic of Russian
+misrule and of its consequences--that this chieftain, after having
+been a devoted soldier of the Emperor for seven years, was goaded by
+the ill treatment of his officers into abjuring the service; make the
+offer of his sword to Schamyl, against whom he had fought with the
+utmost animosity; was heartily welcomed by that prudent leader, and
+became one of his principal lieutenants.]
+
+"Schamyl is of middle stature; he has light hair, gray eyes, shaded
+by bushy and well-arched eyebrows,--a nose finely moulded, and a small
+mouth. His features are distinguished from those of his race by a
+peculiar fairness of complexion and delicacy of skin: the elegant form
+of his hands and feet is not less remarkable. The apparent stiffness
+of his arms, when he walks, is a sign of his stern and impenetrable
+character. His address is thoroughly noble and dignified. Of himself
+he is completely master; and he exerts a tacit supremacy over all who
+approach him. An immovable stony calmness, which never forsakes him,
+even in moments of the utmost danger, broods over his countenance.
+He passes a sentence of death with the same composure with which
+he distributes "the sabre of honor" to his bravest Murids, after a
+bloody encounter. With traitors or criminals whom he has resolved to
+destroy, he will converse without betraying the least sign of anger or
+vengeance. He regards himself as a mere instrument in the hands of a
+higher Being; and holds, according to the Sufi doctrine, that all his
+thoughts and determinations are immediate inspirations from God. The
+flow of his speech is as animating and irresistible as his outward
+appearance is awful and commanding. "He shoots flames from his eyes,
+and scatters flowers from his lips,"--said Bersek Bey, who sheltered
+him for some days after the fall of Achulgo,--when Schamyl dwelt for
+some time among the princes of the Djighetes and Ubiches, for the
+purpose of inciting the tribes on the Black Sea to rise against the
+Russians. Schamyl is now (_circa_ 1847?) fifty years old, but still
+full of vigor and strength: it is however said, that he has for some
+years past suffered from an obstinate disease of the eyes, which is
+constantly growing worse. He fills the intervals of leisure which his
+public charges allow him, in reading the Koran, fasting, and prayer.
+Of late years he has but seldom, and then only on critical occasions,
+taken a personal share in warlike encounters. In spite of his almost
+supernatural activity, Schamyl is excessively severe and temperate in
+his habits. A few hours of sleep are enough for him: at times he will
+watch for the whole night, without Showing the least trace of fatigue
+on the following day. He eats little, and water is his only beverage.
+According to Mohammedan custom, he keeps several wives--[this
+contradicts Wagner, who affirms that Schamyl always confined himself
+to one]; in 1844 he had _three_, of which his favorite, _Dur Heremen_,
+(Pearl of the Harem) as she was called, was an Armenian, of exquisite
+beauty."
+
+Will Russian arms prevail in the end? The following is Herr
+Bodenstedt's answer; after noticing the arrival of Woronzow, and the
+expectations raised by his talents, by the immense resources at
+his command, as well as by such events as the storm of Schamyl's
+stronghold of Cargo:--
+
+"He who believes that the issue of this contest hangs on the
+destruction of stone fortresses, on the devastation of tracts of
+forest, has not yet conceived the essential nature of the war in the
+Caucasus. This is not merely a war of men against men--it is a strife
+between the mountain and the steppe. The population of the Caucasus
+may be changed; the air of liberty wafted from its heights will
+ever remain the same. Invigorated by this atmosphere, even Russian
+hirelings would grow into men eager for freedom: and among their
+descendants a new race of heroes would arise, to point their weapons
+against that servile constitution, to extend which their fathers had
+once fought, as blind, unquestioning slaves."
+
+To this answer of Herr Bodenstedt's we will add nothing of our own. We
+are weary with waiting for the events of history such as we would have
+them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+COOLING A BURNING SPIRIT.
+
+An incident which occurred soon after the accession of the present
+Sultan, shows that, in some respects, at least, he is not indisposed
+to follow up the strong traditions of his race. At the beginning
+of his reign, the Ulema was resolved, if possible, to prevent the
+new Sultan from carrying on those reforms which had ever been so
+distasteful to the Turks, grating at once against their religious
+associations and their pride of race, and which recent events
+had certainly proved not to be productive of those good results
+anticipated by Sultan Mamoud. To attain this object, the Muftis
+adopted the expedient of working on the religious fears of the
+youthful prince. One day as he was praying, according to his custom,
+at his father's tomb, he heard a voice from beneath reiterating, in a
+stifled tone, the words, "I burn." The next time that he prayed there
+the same words assailed his ears. "I burn" was repeated again and
+again, and no word beside. He applied to the chief of the Imams to
+know what this prodigy might mean; and was informed in reply, that
+his father, though a great man, had also been, unfortunately, a great
+reformer, and that as such it was too much to be feared that he had
+a terrible penance to undergo in the other world. The Sultan sent for
+his brother-in-law to pray at the same place, and afterward several
+others of his household; and on each occasion the same portentous
+words were heard. One day he announced his intention of going in state
+to his father's tomb, and was attended thither by a splendid retinue,
+including the chief doctors of the Mahometan law. Again, during his
+devotions, were heard the words, "I burn," and all except the Sultan
+trembled. Rising from his prayer-carpet, he called in his guards, and
+commanded them to dig up the pavement and remove the tomb. It was in
+vain that the Muftis interposed, reprobating so great a profanation,
+and uttering warnings as to its consequences. The Sultan persisted,
+the foundations of the tomb were laid bare, and in a cavity skillfully
+left among them was found--not a burning Sultan, but a Dervise. The
+young monarch regarded him for a time fixedly and in silence, and then
+said, without any further remark or the slightest expression of anger,
+"You burn?--We must cool you in the Bosphorus." In a few minutes more
+the dervise was in a bag, and the bag immediately after was in the
+Bosphorus.--_De Vere's Sketches_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM HOUSEHOLD WORDS.]
+
+AN OLD HAUNT.
+
+ The rippling water, with its drowsy tone,--
+ The tall elms, tow 'ring in their stately pride,--
+ And--sorrow's type--the willow sad and lone,
+ Kissing in graceful woe the murmuring tide;--
+
+ The grey church-tower,--and dimly seen beyond,
+ The faint hills gilded by the parting sun,--
+ All were the same, and seem'd with greeting fond
+ To welcome me as they of old had done.
+
+ And for a while I stood as in a trance,
+ On that loved spot, forgetting toil and pain;--
+ Buoyant my limbs, and keen and bright my glance,
+ For that brief space I was a boy again!
+
+ Again with giddy mates I careless play'd,
+ Or plied the quiv'ring oar, on conquest bent:--
+ Again, beneath the tall elms' silent shade,
+ I woo'd the fair, and won the sweet consent.
+
+ But brief, alas! the spell,--for suddenly
+ Peal'd from the tower the old familiar chimes,
+ And with their clear, heart-thrilling melody,
+ Awaked the spectral forms of darker times
+
+ And I remember'd all that years had wrought--
+ How bow'd my care-worn frame, how dimm'd my eye,
+ How poor the gauds by Youth so keenly sought,
+ How quench'd and dull Youth's aspirations high!
+
+ And in half mournful, half upbraiding host,
+ Duties neglected--high resolves unkept--
+ And many a heart by death or falsehood lost,
+ In lightning current o'er my bosom swept.
+
+ Then bow'd the stubborn knees, as backward sped
+ The self-accusing thoughts in dread array,
+ And, slowly, from their long-congealed bed,
+ Forced the remorseful tears their silent way.
+
+ Bitter yet healing drops in mercy sent,
+ Like soft dews tailing on a thirsty plain,--
+ And ere those chimes their last faint notes had spent,
+ Strengthen'd and calm'd, I stood erect again.
+
+ Strengthen'd, the tasks allotted to fulfill;--
+ Calm'd the thick-coming sorrows to endure;
+ Fearful of nought but of my own frail will,--
+ In His Almighty strength and aid secure.
+
+ For a sweet voice had whisper'd hope to me,--
+ Had through my darkness shed a kindly ray;--
+ It said: "The past is fix'd immutably,
+ Yet is there comfort in the coming day!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+KILLING A GIRAFFE.
+
+At every stride I gained upon the giraffes, and, after a short burst
+at a swingeing gallop, I was in the middle of them, and turned
+the finest cow out of the herd. On finding herself driven from her
+comrades and hotly pursued, she increased her pace, and cantered along
+with tremendous strides, clearing an amazing extent of ground at every
+bound; while her neck and breast, coming in contact with the dead old
+branches of the trees, were continually strewing them in my path. In
+a few minutes I was riding within five yards of her stern, and, firing
+at a gallop, I sent a bullet into her back. Increasing my pace, I next
+rode alongside, and, placing the muzzle of my rifle within a few feet
+of her, I fired my second shot behind the shoulder; the ball, however,
+seemed to have little effect. I then placed myself directly in front,
+when she came to a walk. Dismounting, I hastily loaded both barrels,
+putting in double charges of powder. Before this was accomplished, she
+was off at a canter. In a short time I brought her to a stand in the
+dry bed of a watercourse, where I fired at fifteen yards, aiming where
+I thought the heart lay, upon which she again made off. Having loaded,
+I followed, and had very nearly lost her; she had turned abruptly
+to the left, and was far out of sight among the trees. Once more I
+brought her to a stand, and dismounted from my horse. There we stood
+together alone in the wild wood. I gazed in wonder at her extreme
+beauty, while her soft dark eye, with its silky fringe, looked down
+imploringly at me, and I really felt a pang of sorrow in this moment
+of triumph for the blood I was shedding. Pointing my rifle toward the
+skies, I sent a bullet through her neck. On receiving it she reared
+high on her hind legs and fell back with a heavy crash, making the
+earth shake around her. A thick stream of dark blood spouted out
+from the wound, her colossal limbs quivered for a moment, and she
+expired.--_Cummings' Adventures_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE VETERAN KOLOMBESKI.
+
+Several journals have spoken of the entry into the Hotel des Invalides
+of a soldier, stated to be 126 years of age. This is not quite
+correct. The following are some precise details respecting this
+extraordinary man, who arrived at the Hotel on the 21st inst.:--Jean
+Kolombeski, born at Astrona (Poland), on the 1st of March, 1730,
+entered the service of France, as a volunteer in the Bourbon regiment
+of infantry, in 1774, at the age of forty-four. He was made corporal
+in 1790, at the age of sixty. He made all the campaigns of the
+Revolution and of the Empire, in different regiments of infantry,
+and was incorporated, in 1808, in the 3d regiment of the Vistula. He
+was wounded in 1814, and entered the hospital at Poitiers, which he
+soon afterward left to be placed _en subsistence_ in the 2d regiment
+of light infantry. On the 11th of October of the same year he was
+admitted into the 1st company of _sous-officiers sedentaires_, and, in
+1846, into the 5th company of Veteran Sub-Officers. The last three of
+these companies having just been suppressed by the Minister of War,
+Kolombeski was placed _en subsistence_ in the 61st regiment of the
+line, received a retiring pension by decree of May 17, 1850, and the
+Minister authorized his admission into the Invalides. Kolombeski is,
+therefore, more than 120 years of age; he reckons seventy-five and
+a half years of service, and twenty-nine campaigns. He enjoys good
+health, is strong and well made, and does not appear to be more than
+seventy or eighty. He performed every duty with big comrades of the
+5th company of Veterans, When King Louis Philippe visited Dreus,
+Kolombeski was presented to him, who, taking the decoration from
+his breast, presented it to the veteran soldier. This is the most
+astonishing instance of longevity that has, perhaps, been ever known
+in the army. The Marshal Governor of the Invalides ordered that
+Kolombeski should be brought to him on his arrival; but, as the old
+soldier was fatigued, he was taken to the infirmary, and the Governor,
+informed of it, went to his bedside with General Petit, the commandant
+of the hotel, and addressed the veteran in the kindest manner. The
+Governor has issued an order that, for the future, all centenarian
+soldiers admitted into the hospital shall mess with the officers, in
+order to show his respect for their age, and for the long services
+they have rendered to the state.--_Galignani's Messenger_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ANECDOTE OF LORD BROUGHAM.
+
+The "Life of the Rev. Dr. Hugh Heugh" has a description of an
+interview which a deputation of Scotch dissenters had some years ago
+with Lord Brougham. The _Scotsman_ adds, from its private knowledge,
+some odd incidents of the affair.
+
+His lordship, on coming out of the court to meet the deputation,
+immediately on being informed of their object, burst out in a volley
+of exclamations to the effect that, but for dissent, there would be
+"No vital religion--no vital religion, gentlemen, no vital religion."
+While pouring forth this in a most solemn tone, he was all the while
+shaking violently the locked doors of a lobby full of committee rooms,
+into one of which he wished to find entrance, and calling for an
+absent official not only in passionate tones, but in phraseology
+which the reverend deputation, at first unwilling to trust their own
+ears, were at last forced to believe was nothing better than profane
+swearing. At last, he suddenly drew himself up to the wall opposite a
+locked door, and with a tremendous kick, smashed the lock, and entered
+(exclaiming, first in a vehement and then in a solemn tone, but
+without pause) "--that fellow! where the ---- does he always go to! No
+vital religion, gentlemen, no vital religion--no, no, no."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The International Weekly Miscellany,
+Volume I. No. 9., by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13797 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13797 ***</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 26,
+ 1850.</b></td>
+
+ <td align="right"><b>No. 9.</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page257"
+ id="page257"></a>[pg 257]</span>
+
+ <h2>NUMISMATIC ARCHÆOLOGY.</h2>
+
+ <p>A magnificent work<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ upon this subject has just been completed in Paris, where it
+ was commenced fifteen years ago. It was begun under the
+ auspices of M. Paul Delaroche and M.C. Lenormand, member of
+ the Institute, and well known already as one of the first
+ authorities in the numismatic branch of archæology. Some
+ faint idea of the greatness of the task may be given by
+ stating that it embraces the whole range of art, from the
+ regal coins of Syracuse and of the Ptolemies, down to those
+ of our day; that such a stupendous scheme should ever have
+ been carried into execution is not solely due to the
+ admirable ease and fidelity, with which the "Collas machine"
+ renders the smallest and the largest gems of the antique:
+ but to him who first felt, appreciated, and afterward
+ promoted its capabilities in this labor of love, M.A.
+ Lachevardiere. Comparisons and contrasts, which are the life
+ of art, though generally confined to the mental vision, are
+ not the least of the recommendations of this vast work. For
+ the first time have the minor treasures of each country been
+ brought together, and not the least conspicuous portion are
+ those from the British Museum and the Bank of England.</p>
+
+ <p>Whether we consider the selection of these monumental
+ relics, the explanatory letterpress, or the engravings which
+ reproduce them, we are struck by the admirable taste, science,
+ and fidelity with which the largest as well as the smallest
+ gems have each and every one been made to tally in size with
+ the originals.</p>
+
+ <p>The collection of the "Trésor de Numismatique et Glyptique,"
+ consisting of twenty volumes in folio, and containing a
+ thousand engraved plates in folio, reproduces upward of 15,000
+ specimens, and is divided into three classes&mdash;1st. The
+ coins, medals, cameos, &amp;c. of antiquity; 2d. Those of the
+ middle ages; lastly, those of modern times. The details of this
+ immense mass of artistic wealth would be endless; but these
+ three classes seem to be arranged according to the latest
+ classification of numismatists.</p>
+
+ <p>In the first class may be noticed&mdash;1. The regal coins
+ of Greece, which contains, beside the portraits of the Greek
+ Kings, to be found in Visconti's "Iconographie," copied from
+ medals and engraved gems, all the coins bearing the Greek name
+ of either a king, a prince, or a tyrant, and every variety of
+ these types, whether they bear the effigy of a prince, or only
+ reproduce his name. To the medals of each sovereign are joined
+ the most authentic and celebrated engraved gems of European
+ cabinets. Next come the series of portraits of the Roman
+ emperors and their families, with all the important varieties
+ of Roman numismatics, amongst which will be found the most
+ celebrated coins of France, Vienna, Dresden, Munich, Florence,
+ Naples, St. Petersburg, Weimar, &amp;c.; and, moreover, those
+ medallions which perpetuate great events. These two volumes
+ contain eight-fold more matter than the great work of
+ Visconti.</p>
+
+ <p>In the second class, containing the works of the middle
+ ages, and showing the uninterrupted progress of the numismatic
+ art down to modern times, and forming alone fourteen volumes,
+ we find the source which the French artists and men of letters
+ have studied with such predilection. First in order are the
+ Italian medals of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries,
+ chiefly by the famous Victor Pisano, a Veronese, whom Nasari
+ has so much lauded. The scholars and imitators of Pisano also
+ produced works as interesting as historical documents as they
+ are admirable in workmanship. Here also will be found the
+ French and English seals, in which the balance of skill in
+ design and execution is acknowledged to be in our favor.</p>
+
+ <p>Less barbarous, and indeed perfect works of art, in
+ character of costume and visage, are the medals struck in
+ Germany during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, when
+ the influence of Albert Durer and his school was strongly felt.
+ And finally, relics of ornamental art of different nations and
+ epochs.</p>
+
+ <p>In the third class, two parts only are devoted to
+ contemporary art; the medals illustrative of the French
+ revolution of 1789; those of the "Empire" and of the Emperor
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page258"
+ id="page258"></a>[pg 258]</span> "Napoleon;" generally
+ smacking of the florid and corrupt taste of that period,
+ they are nevertheless curious as being often the sole
+ evidence of the facts commemorated. There is, however, a
+ manifest improvement in the late ones, and in them may be
+ traced the transition from the independent ideas of the
+ revolution to the subsequent submission to one man: and not
+ less striking is the transition from a slip-shod style of
+ art to a pedantic imitation of the antique. The "Trésor de
+ Numismatique et de Glyptique" is the most scientific and
+ important work of art which has been executed and achieved
+ of late years in France. Our great public libraries may be
+ proud of possessing so rich, so valuable, and so curious a
+ collection,</p>
+
+ <p>Most lovers of art have their favorite periods and
+ well-beloved masters, but in this varied range of excellence it
+ is difficult which to select for preference and admiration. The
+ cameos have a beauty and <i>finesse</i> which far surpass that
+ of busts and statues; they evince the skill of grouping, which,
+ with rare exceptions, such as the Niobe and Laocoon, is seldom
+ aimed at in the more important pieces of sculpture. Cameos,
+ moreover, let us, as it were, into the secrets of indoor life.
+ To these considerations we may add that these gems have had an
+ immense influence on French modern art. The "Apotheosis of
+ Augustus" especially, known to antiquarians as the "Agate of
+ Tiberius," the largest cameo in the world, and beautifully
+ engraved the size of the original in this collection, may be
+ traced in more than one of their late compositions.</p>
+
+ <p>It is said that large medallions are a sign of taste either
+ in the medalist or the monarch he is supposed to honor; if so,
+ Dupré and Varin have drawn a thick vail over the effulgence of
+ Louis XIV. We would not, however, lose their wigs and smiles
+ for a world of historiettes.</p>
+
+ <p>But it is to be remembered that the more names are blazoned
+ on works of art, the more art becomes deteriorated. In this
+ respect the present collection shows the rapidly progressive
+ march of this evil through twenty-five centuries&mdash;a most
+ instructive subject of contemplation.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE CSIKOS OF HUNGARY.</h2>
+
+ <p>Of the chivalry, the gallantry, the splendor, the
+ hospitality, the courage, and the love of liberty of the
+ Hungarian noble or gentleman, no one doubts. Of his ideas of
+ true constitutional freedom, or the zeal with which that or
+ Hungarian independence has been maintained first through
+ Turkish, and then German domination for some hundred years
+ past, doubts may be entertained. Neither do the Hungarian
+ peasantry or people reflect high credit on their "natural
+ superiors." Something should be deducted for the forced
+ vivacity and straining after effect of the littérateur; but
+ this sketch of a large class of peasantry from Max
+ Schlesinger's "War in Hungary," just published in London, must
+ have some foundation in truth&mdash;and very like the Red
+ Indians or half-breeds of Spanish America the people look.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Csikos is a man who from his birth, somehow or other,
+ finds himself seated upon a foal. Instinctively the boy remains
+ fixed upon the animal's back, and grows up in his seat as other
+ children do in the cradle.</p>
+
+ <p>"The boy grows by degrees to a big horse-herd. To earn his
+ livelihood, he enters the service of some nobleman, or of the
+ Government, who possess in Hungary immense herds of wild
+ horses. These herds range over a tract of many German square
+ miles, for the most part some level plain, with wood, marsh,
+ heath, and moorland; they rove about where they please,
+ multiply, and enjoy freedom of existence. Nevertheless, it is a
+ common error to imagine that these horses, like a pack of
+ wolves in the mountains, are left to themselves and nature,
+ without any care or thought of man. Wild horses, in the proper
+ sense of the term, are in Europe at the present day only met
+ with in Bessarabia; whereas the so-called wild herds in Hungary
+ may rather be compared to the animals ranging in our large
+ parks, which are attended to and watched. The deer are left to
+ the illusion that they enjoy the most unbounded freedom; and
+ the deer-stalker, when in pursuit of his game, readily gives in
+ to the same illusion. Or, to take another simile, the reader
+ has only to picture to himself a well-constituted free state,
+ whether a republic or a monarchy is all one.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Csikos has the difficult task of keeping a watchful eye
+ upon these herds. He knows their strength, their habits, the
+ spots they frequent; he knows the birthday of every foal, and
+ when the animal, fit for training, should be taken out of the
+ herd. He has then a hard task upon his hands, compared with
+ which a Grand-Ducal wild-boar hunt is child's play; for the
+ horse has not only to be taken alive from the midst of the
+ herd, but of course safe and sound in wind and limb. For this
+ purpose, the celebrated whip of the Csikos serves him; probably
+ at some future time a few splendid specimens of this instrument
+ will be exhibited in the Imperial Arsenal at Vienna, beside the
+ sword of Scanderberg and the Swiss 'morning-stars.'</p>
+
+ <p>"This whip has a stout handle from one and a half to two
+ feet long, and a cord which measures not less than from
+ eighteen to twenty-four feet in length. The cord is attached to
+ a short iron chain, fixed to the top of the handle by an iron
+ ring. A large leaden button is fastened to the end of the cord,
+ and similar smaller buttons are distributed along it at
+ distances, according to certain rules derived from experience,
+ of which we are ignorant. Armed with this weapon, which the
+ Csikos carries in his belt, together with a short
+ grappling-iron or hook, he sets out on his horse-chase. Thus
+ mounted and equipped without saddle or stirrup, he flies like
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page259"
+ id="page259"></a>[pg 259]</span> the storm-wind over the
+ heath, with such velocity that the grass scarcely bends
+ under the horse's hoof; the step of his horse is not heard,
+ and the whirling cloud of dust above his head alone marks
+ his approach and disappearance. Although familiar with the
+ use of a bridle, he despises such a troublesome article of
+ luxury, and guides his horse with his voice, hands, and
+ feet&mdash;nay, it almost seems as if he directed it by the
+ mere exercise of the will, as we move our feet to the right
+ or left, backward or forward, without its ever coming into
+ our head to regulate our movements by a leather strap.</p>
+
+ <p>"In this manner for hours he chases the flying herd, until
+ at length he succeeds in approaching the animal which he is
+ bent on catching. He then swings his whip round in immense
+ circles, and throws the cord with such dexterity and precision
+ that it twines around the neck of his victim. The leaden button
+ at the end, and the knots along the cord, form a noose, which
+ draws closer and tighter the faster the horse hastens on.</p>
+
+ <p>"See how he flies along with outstretched legs, his mane
+ whistling in the wind, his eye darting fire, his mouth covered
+ with foam, and the dust whirling aloft on all sides! But the
+ noble animal breathes shorter, his eye grows wild and staring,
+ his nostrils are reddened with blood, the veins of his neck are
+ distended like cords, his legs refuse longer service&mdash;he
+ sinks exhausted and powerless, a picture of death. But at the
+ same instant the pursuing steed likewise stands still and fixed
+ as if turned to stone. An instant, and the Csikos has flung
+ himself off his horse upon the ground, and inclining his body
+ backward, to keep the noose tight, he seizes the cord
+ alternately with the right and left hand, shorter and shorter,
+ drawing himself by it nearer and nearer to the panting and
+ prostrate animal, till at last coming up to it he flings his
+ legs across its back. He now begins to slacken the noose
+ gently, allowing the creature to recover breath: but hardly
+ does the horse feel this relief, before he leaps up, and darts
+ off again in a wild course, as if still able to escape from his
+ enemy. But the man is already bone of his bone and flesh of his
+ flesh; he sits fixed upon his neck as if grown to it, and makes
+ the horse feel his power at will, by tightening or slackening
+ the cord. A second time the hunted animal sinks upon the
+ ground; again he rises, and again breaks down, until at length,
+ overpowered with exhaustion, he can no longer stir a
+ limb....</p>
+
+ <p>"The foot-soldier who has discharged his musket is lost when
+ opposed to the Csikos. His bayonet, with which he can defend
+ himself against the Uhlans and Hussars, is here of no use to
+ him; all his practiced maneuvers and skill are unavailing
+ against the long whip of his enemy, which drags him to the
+ ground, or beats him to death with his leaden buttons; nay,
+ even if he had still a charge in his musket, he could sooner
+ hit a bird on the wing than the Csikos, who, riding round and
+ round him in wild bounds, dashes with his steed first to one
+ side then to another, with the speed of lightning, so as to
+ frustrate any aim. The horse-soldier, armed in the usual
+ manner, fares not much better; and wo to him if he meets a
+ Csikos singly! better to fall in with a pack of ravenous
+ wolves."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE PRESENT RELIGION OF PERSIA.</h2>
+
+ <p>An account of the Expedition for the survey of the rivers
+ Euphrates and Tigris, carried on by order of the British
+ Government, in the years 1835, 1836, and 1837; preceded by
+ geographical and historical notices of the regions situated
+ between the Nile and the Indus, with fourteen maps and charts,
+ and ninety-seven plates, besides numerous woodcuts, has just
+ appeared in London, in four large volumes, from the pen of
+ Lieutenant-Colonel Chesney, R.A., F.R.S., &amp;c., commander of
+ the Expedition. It is too comprehensive a work ever to be
+ reprinted here, or to be much read, even in England, but it is
+ undoubtedly very valuable as an authority. The following
+ paragraphs from it describe the present state of religion in
+ Persia:</p>
+
+ <p>"The title of Múlla is conferred on a candidate by some
+ member of the order, after the requisite examination in
+ theology and law; and the person is then intrusted with the
+ education of youth, as well as the administration of justice,
+ and the practice of law. The Múllas sometimes possess
+ sufficient power not only to influence the people at large, but
+ even the King himself.</p>
+
+ <p>"Of this class of priests, those who have been successful in
+ life are either placed in mosques or private families, waiting
+ for advancement; but a greater number are nominally attached to
+ colleges, and live by the practice of astrology,
+ fortune-telling, the sale of charms, talismans, &amp;c. They
+ who are not possessed of the requisite ingenuity to subsist by
+ the credulity of others, take charge of an inferior school, or
+ write letters, and draw up marriage and other engagements, for
+ those who are unequal to the task. They mix at the same time
+ largely in the domestic concerns of families. But in addition
+ to these and other vocations, a considerable number of the
+ lowest priests derive a scanty support from that charity which
+ no one denies to the true believer. These men wander as fakirs
+ from place to place, carrying news, and repeating poems, tales,
+ &amp;c., mixed with verses from the Koran. The heterodox
+ religions are very numerous; nor is Irián without her
+ free-thinkers, as the Kamúrs and Mu'tazelís, (Mitaulis,) who
+ deny everything which they cannot prove by natural reason. A
+ third sect, the Mahadelis, or Molochadis, still maintain the
+ Magian belief that the stars and the planets govern all things.
+ Another, the Ehl el Tabkwid, (men of truth,) hold that there is
+ no God except the four elements, and no rational soul or life
+ after this one. They maintain also, that all living bodies,
+ being mixtures of the elements, will
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page260"
+ id="page260"></a>[pg 260]</span> after death return to their
+ first principles. They also affirm that paradise and hell
+ belong to this world, into which every man returns in the
+ form of a beast, a plant, or again as a man; and that in
+ this second state, he is great, powerful, and happy, or
+ poor, despicable, and unhappy, according to his former
+ merits or demerits. In practice they inculcate kindness to
+ and respect for each other, with implicit obedience to their
+ chiefs, who are called Pir, (old men,) and are furnished
+ with all kinds of provisions for their subsistence. This
+ sect is found in the provinces of Irák and Fárs.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Táríkh Zenádikah (way of the covetous) are directly
+ opposed to the last on the subject of transmigration; and they
+ believe that God is in all places, and performs all things.
+ They likewise maintain that the whole visible universe is only
+ a manifestation of the Supreme Being; the soul itself being a
+ portion of the Divine essence. Therefore, they consider, that
+ whatever appears to the eye is God, and that all religious
+ rites should be comprised in the contemplation of God's
+ goodness and greatness.</p>
+
+ <p>"On these various creeds the different branches of Suffeeism
+ seem to have been founded. One of the most extraordinary of
+ these sects is the Rasháníyah; the followers of which believe
+ in the transmigration of souls, and the manifestation of the
+ Divinity in the persons of holy men. They maintain likewise,
+ that all men who do not join their sect are to be considered as
+ dead, and that their goods belong, in consequence, to the true
+ believers, as the only survivors."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE "OLD DUKE OF QUEENSBURY."</h2>
+
+ <p>Mr. Burke gives in his gossiping book about the English
+ aristocracy, the following anecdotes of this once famous
+ person:</p>
+
+ <p>"Few men occupied a more conspicuous place about the court
+ and town for nearly seventy years, during the reigns of the
+ Second and Third Georges. Like Wilmot Earl of Rochester, he
+ pursued pleasure under every shape, and with as much ardor at
+ fourscore as he had done at twenty. At the decease of his
+ father, in 1731, he became Earl of March; and he subsequently,
+ in 1748, inherited his mother's earldom of Ruglen, together
+ with the family's estates in the counties of Edinburgh and
+ Linlithgow. These rich endowments of fortune, and a handsome
+ person, of which he was especially careful, combined to invest
+ the youthful Earl with no ordinary attractions, and the
+ ascendency they acquired he retained for a longer period than
+ any one of his contemporaries; from his first appearance in the
+ fashionable world in the year 1746, to the year he left it
+ forever, in 1810, at the age of eighty-five, he was always an
+ object of comparative notoriety. There was no interregnum in
+ the public course of his existence. His first distinction he
+ achieved on the turf; his knowledge of which, both in theory
+ and practice, equaled that of the most accomplished adepts of
+ Newmarket. In all his principal matches he rode himself, and in
+ that branch of equitation rivaled the most professional
+ jockeys. Properly accoutered in his velvet cap, red silken
+ jacket, buckskin breeches, and long spurs, his Lordship bore
+ away the prize on many a well-contested field. His famous match
+ with the Duke of Hamilton was long remembered in sporting
+ annals. Both noblemen rode their own horses, and each was
+ supported by numerous partisans. The contest took place on the
+ race-ground at Newmarket, and attracted all the fashionables of
+ the period. Lord March, thin, agile, and admirably qualified
+ for exertion, was the victor. Still more celebrated was his
+ Lordship's wager with the famous Count O'Taafe. During a
+ conversation at a convivial meeting on the subject of 'running
+ against time,' it was suggested by Lord March, that it was
+ possible for a carriage to be drawn with a degree of celerity
+ previously unexampled, and believed to be impossible. Being
+ desired to name his maximum, he undertook, provided choice of
+ ground were given him and a certain period for training, to
+ draw a carriage with four wheels not less than nineteen miles
+ within the space of sixty minutes. The accomplishment of such
+ rapidity staggered the belief of his hearers; and a heavy wager
+ was the consequence. Success mainly depending on the lightness
+ of the carriage, Wright of Long Acre, the most ingenious
+ coach-builder of the day, devoted the whole resources of his
+ skill to its construction, and produced a vehicle formed partly
+ of wood and partly of whale-bone, with silk harness, that came
+ up to the wishes of his employer. Four blood horses of approved
+ speed were then selected, and the course at Newmarket chosen as
+ the ground of contest. On the day appointed, 29th of August,
+ 1750, noble and ignoble gamesters journeyed from far and near
+ to witness the wonderful experiment; excitement reached the
+ highest point, and bets to an enormous amount were made. At
+ length the jockeys mounted; the carriage was put in motion, and
+ rushing on with a velocity marvelous in those times of coach
+ traveling, but easily conceived by us railway travelers of the
+ nineteenth century, gained within the stipulated hour the goal
+ of victory."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE DECAY OF GREAT FAMILIES.</h2>
+
+ <p>Not the least valuable parts of Burke's just published
+ "Anecdotes of the Aristocracy," are a species of essay on the
+ fortunes of families. The following is from a chapter on their
+ decadence:</p>
+
+ <p>"It has often occurred to us that a very interesting paper
+ might be written on the rise and fall of English families.
+ Truly does Dr. Borlase remark that 'the most lasting houses
+ have only their seasons, more or less, of a certain
+ constitutional strength. They have their spring and summer
+ sunshine glare, their wane, decline, and death.' Take, for
+ example, the Plantagenets, the Staffords, and the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page261"
+ id="page261"></a>[pg 261]</span> Nevills, the three most
+ illustrious names on the roll of England's nobility. What
+ race in Europe surpassed in royal position, in personal
+ achievement, our Henries and our Edwards? and yet we find
+ the great-great-grandson of Margaret Plantagenet, daughter
+ and heiress of George Duke of Clarence, following the craft
+ of a cobbler at the little town of Newport in Shropshire, in
+ the year 1637. Beside, if we were to investigate the
+ fortunes of many of the inheritors of the royal arms, it
+ would soon be discovered that</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>'The aspiring blood of Lancaster'</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>had sunk into the ground. The princely stream at the present
+ time flows through very humble veins. Among the lineal
+ descendants of Edmund of Woodstock, Earl of Kent, sixth son of
+ Edward I., King of England, entitled to quarter the Royal arms,
+ occur Mr. Joseph Smart, of Hales Owen, butcher, and Mr. George
+ Wilmot, keeper of the turnpike-gate at Cooper's Bank, near
+ Dudley; and among the descendants of Thomas Plantagenet, Duke
+ of Gloucester, fifth son of Edward III., we may mention Mr.
+ Stephen James Penny, the late sexton at St. George's, Hanover
+ Square.</p>
+
+ <p>"The story of the Gargraves is a melancholy chapter in the
+ romance of real life. For full two centuries, or more, scarcely
+ a family in Yorkshire enjoyed a higher position. Its chiefs
+ earned distinction in peace and war; one died in France, Master
+ of the Ordnance to King Henry V.; another, a soldier, too, fell
+ with Salisbury, at the siege of Orleans; and a third filled the
+ Speaker's chair of the House of Commons. What an awful contrast
+ to this fair picture does the sequel offer. Thomas Gargrave,
+ the Speaker's eldest son, was hung at York, for murder; and his
+ half-brother, Sir Richard, endured a fate only less miserable.
+ The splendid estate he inherited he wasted by the most wanton
+ extravagance, and at length reduced himself to abject want.
+ 'His excesses,' says Mr. Hunter, in his 'History of Doncaster,'
+ 'are still, at the expiration of two centuries, the subject of
+ village tradition; and his attachment to gaming is commemorated
+ in an old painting, long preserved in the neighboring mansion
+ of Badsworth, in which he is represented as playing at the old
+ game of put, the right hand against the left, for the stake of
+ a cup of ale.</p>
+
+ <p>"The close of Sir Richard's story is as lamentable as its
+ course. An utter bankrupt in means and reputation, he is stated
+ to have been reduced to travel with the pack-horses to London,
+ and was at last found dead in an old hostelry! He had married
+ Catherine, sister of Lord Danvers, and by her left three
+ daughters. Of the descendants of his brothers few particulars
+ can be ascertained. Not many years since, a Mr. Gargrave,
+ believed to be one of them, filled the mean employment of
+ parish-clerk of Kippax.</p>
+
+ <p>"A similar melancholy narrative applies to another great
+ Yorkshire house. Sir William Reresby, Bart., son and heir of
+ the celebrated author, succeeded, at the death of his father,
+ in 1689, to the beautiful estate of Thrybergh, in Yorkshire,
+ where his ancestors had been seated uninterruptedly from the
+ time of the Conquest; and he lived to see himself denuded of
+ every acre of his broad lands. Le Neve states, in his MSS.
+ preserved in the Heralds' College, that he became a tapster in
+ the King's Bench Prison, and was tried and imprisoned for
+ cheating in 1711. He was alive in 1727, when Wootton's account
+ of the Baronets was published. In that work he is said to be
+ reduced to a low condition. At length he died in great
+ obscurity, a melancholy instance how low pursuits and base
+ pleasures may sully the noblest name, and waste an estate
+ gathered with labor and preserved by the care of a race of
+ distinguished progenitors. Gaming was amongst Sir William's
+ follies&mdash;particularly that lowest specimen of the folly,
+ the fights of game-cocks. The tradition at Thrybergh is (for
+ his name is not quite forgotten) that the fine estate of
+ Dennaby was staked and lost on a single main. Sir William
+ Reresby was not the only baronet who disgraced his order at
+ that period. In 1722, Sir Charles Burton was tried at the Old
+ Bailey for stealing a seal; pleaded poverty, but was found
+ guilty, and sentenced to transportation; which sentence was
+ afterward commuted for a milder punishment."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>MADRID AND THE SPANISH SENATE.</h2>
+
+ <p>Gazpacho; or, Summer Months in Spain, is the title of a new
+ book by W. George Clark, published in London. Gazpacho, it
+ seems, is the name of a dish peculiar to Spain, but of
+ universal use there, a sort of cold soup, made up of familiars
+ and handy things, as bread, pot-herbs, oil, and water. "My
+ Gazpacho," says the author, "has been prepared after a similar
+ receipt. I know not how it will please the more refined and
+ fastidious palates to which it will be submitted; indeed, amid
+ the multitude of dainties wherewith the table is loaded, it may
+ well remain untasted." It at least deserves a better fate than
+ that. The volume relates, in a pleasant, intelligent, and
+ gossiping way, a summer's ramble through Spain, describing with
+ considerable force the peculiarities of its people, and the
+ romantic features by which it is marked. The clever painter
+ could not have better materials. The party-colored costumes of
+ the peasants, like dahlias at a Chiswick show; the somber
+ garments of the priests, the fine old churches, the queer
+ rambling houses, looking centuries old, the dull, gloomy
+ streets of Madrid, the life and activity of the market-place.
+ Such are the objects upon which the eye rests, and of which Mr.
+ Clark was too observant to neglect any. The following passages
+ will give an idea of the materials of which the Gazpacho is
+ made up:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <h4>MADRID.</h4>
+
+ <p>"I left, I suppose, scarcely a street in Madrid which I did
+ not traverse, or a church which I did not enter. The result is
+ hardly worth the trouble. One street and church
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page262"
+ id="page262"></a>[pg 262]</span> are exactly like another
+ street and church. In the latter, one always finds the same
+ profusion of wooden Christs, and Madonnas in real
+ petticoats, on the walls, and the same scanty sprinkling of
+ worshipers, also in petticoats, on the floor. The images
+ outnumber the devotees here, as in all other Roman Catholic
+ countries (except Ireland, which is an exception to every
+ rule.) To a stranger, the markets are always the most
+ interesting haunts. A Spaniard, he or she, talks more while
+ making the daily bargain than in all the rest of the
+ twenty-four hours. The fruit and vegetable market was my
+ especial lounge. There is such a fresh, sweet smell of the
+ country, and the groups throw themselves, or are thrown,
+ into such pretty tableaux after the Rubens and Snyders
+ fashion. The shambles one avoids instinctively, and
+ fish-market there is none, for Madrid is fifty hours'
+ journey from the nearest sea, and the Manzanares has every
+ requisite for a fine trout stream, but water.</p>
+
+ <p>"Madrid has one peculiarity which conduces very much to the
+ visitor's comfort, namely, that there are very few inevitable
+ 'sights' to be gone through. The armory said to be the finest
+ in the world; the palace, ditto (which people who are addicted
+ to upholstering may go and see, if they don't mind breaking the
+ tenth commandment); the museum of natural history, where is the
+ largest loadstone in active operation between this and Medina;
+ and the Academia, nearly complete the list. Everybody should
+ devote a morning to the last-named, were it only for the sake
+ of the Murillos. The famous picture of 'St. Isabel giving alms
+ to the sick' has been arrested at Madrid on its return from
+ Paris to Seville. As the Sevilians have instituted a 'process'
+ for its recovery, it is likely to stay there for some time
+ longer. 'The Patrician's Dream' is quite cheering to look upon,
+ so rich and glowing it is. Shut your eyes to the semi-ludicrous
+ effect of husband, wife, and dog, in a decreasing series, like
+ the three genders in Lindley Murray, all asleep.</p>
+
+ <p>"The gardens of the queen, sunk in a deep hollow below the
+ palace, deserve a visit. The head-gardener, of course a
+ Frenchman, struggles gallantly against all kinds of
+ difficulties of soil, climate, and lack of water. By a series
+ of ingenious artifices he has concocted a plot of grass, some
+ ten feet square, to the great astonishment of all natives."</p>
+
+ <h4>NARVAEZ IN THE SENATE.</h4>
+
+ <p>"One day my kind friend Colonel S. took me to hear a debate
+ in the <i>Senado</i>, the Spanish Chamber of Peers, which holds
+ its sittings in the chapel of a suppressed convent, near the
+ palace. By dint of paint, gilding, and carpets, the room has
+ been divested of its sanctified aspect, and made to look like a
+ handsome modern room. They have not thought it necessary that a
+ place in which a hundred gentlemen in surtouts meet to discuss
+ secular matters in this nineteenth century, should be made to
+ resemble a chapel of the fifteenth. Antiquity is here
+ represented in the person of two halberdiers, who stand to
+ guard the door, dressed in extravagant costume, like beefeaters
+ in full bloom. Rows of raised seats extend on each side of the
+ room; in the center, facing the beef-eaters, are the chair and
+ desk of the president, and on each side a little tribune, from
+ which the clerks read out documents from time to time. The
+ spectators are accommodated in niches round the walls. Each
+ member speaks from his place, and the voting is by ballot.
+ First a footman hands round a tray of beans, and then each
+ advances, when his name is called, to a table in the center,
+ where he drops his bean into the box. The beans are then
+ counted, and the result proclaimed by the president. On the
+ right of the chair, in the front, is the bench assigned to the
+ ministers; and there I had the good luck to see Narvaez,
+ otherwise called Duke of Valencia, and a great many fine names
+ besides, and, in reality, master of all the Spains. His face
+ wears a fixed expression of inflexible resolve, very effective,
+ and garnished with a fierce dyed mustache, and a somewhat
+ palpable wig to match. His style of dress was what, in an
+ inferior man, one would have called 'dandified.' An
+ unexceptionable surtout, opened to display a white waistcoat
+ with sundry chains, and the extremities terminated,
+ respectively, in patent leather and primrose kid. During the
+ discussion he alternately fondled a neat riding-whip and aired
+ a snowy pocket-handkerchief. Those who know him give him credit
+ for good intentions and great courage, but do not expect that
+ he will ever set the Thames on fire, whatever he may do to the
+ Manzanares. He is a mixture, they say, of the chivalric and the
+ asinine: a kind of moral mule. His personal weakness is a wish
+ to be thought young, and hence he was naturally angry when Lord
+ Palmerston wanted to give him a 'wrinkle.' I saw, likewise,
+ Mon, the Minister of Finance, smiling complacently, like a
+ shopkeeper on his customers; and the venerable Castanos, Duke
+ of Bailen, who, as he tottered in, stooping under the weight of
+ ninety years, was affectionately greeted by Narvaez and others.
+ On the whole, the debate seemed to be languid, and to be
+ listened to with little interest; but that is the general fate
+ of debates in July."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE KANASZ.</h2>
+
+ <p>Of the Servian swineherd we have heard something of late,
+ both in history and romance; because this was the vocation of
+ Kara George, the Servian Liberator. In Hungary the swine-keeper
+ does not seem to be so respectable a person. Here is a sketch
+ of him from Max Schlesinger's new book on the Hungarian
+ war:</p>
+
+ <p>"The Kanasz is a swineherd, whose occupation, everywhere
+ unpoetical and dirty, is doubly troublesome and dirty in
+ Hungary. Large droves of pigs migrate annually into the latter
+ country from Serbia, where they still live in a half-wild
+ state. In Hungary <span class="pagenum"><a name="page263"
+ id="page263"></a>[pg 263]</span> they fatten in the
+ extensive oak-forests, and are sent to market in the large
+ towns, even to Vienna, and still further....</p>
+
+ <p>"It is a true enjoyment to live in these shady forests. The
+ oak attains a finer and more luxuriant growth on the Hungarian
+ soil than in any part of Germany. The hogs find food in
+ profusion, and commonly stuff themselves to such a degree that
+ they lose all desire for roving about: so that dog, master, and
+ ass, lead a comparatively easy life, and are left to the quiet
+ enjoyment of nature. But the lot of the Kanasz is a pitiable
+ one when, at the close of summer, he has to drive his swine to
+ market. From Debreczin, nay even from the Serbian frontier, he
+ has to make a journey on foot more toilsome than was ever
+ undertaken by the most adventurous traveler, pacing slowly over
+ the interminable heaths in rain, storm, or under a burning sun,
+ behind his pigs, which drive into his face hot clouds of dust.
+ Every now and then a hog has stuffed itself so full as to be
+ unable to stir from the spot; and there it lies on the road
+ without moving, whilst the whole caravan is obliged to wait for
+ half a day or longer, until the glutted animal can get on his
+ legs again; and when at length this feat is accomplished,
+ frequently his neighbor begins the same trick. There is truly
+ not a more toilsome business in the wide world than that of a
+ Kanasz.... The fokos is a hatchet, with a long handle, which
+ the Kanasz hurls with great dexterity. Whenever he desires to
+ pick out and slaughter one of his hogs, either for his own use
+ or for sale, the attempt would be attended with danger, in the
+ half-savage state of these animals, without such a weapon. The
+ fokos here assists him; which he flings with such force and
+ precision, that the sharp iron strikes exactly into the center
+ of the frontal bone of the animal he has marked out; the victim
+ sinks on the earth without uttering a sound, and the drove
+ quietly proceeds on its way. That he can strike down a man with
+ equal precision at eighty to a hundred paces, is proved by the
+ gallows at the entrance of the forest&mdash;the three-legged
+ monument of his dexterity. During recent events, too, the
+ surgeons of the Austrian army will readily furnish the Kanasz
+ and Csikos with certificates of their ability and skill."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE "WILD HUSSAR" OF HUNGARY.</h2>
+
+ <p>France, Russia, Prussia, and other countries, have
+ introduced the Hussars into their armies; but these soldiers
+ are merely Russian, French, and Prussian cavalry, dressed in
+ the Hungarian laced jacket: they want the spirit, the horse,
+ and&mdash;the 'Magyar Isten.' For this reason, the Hungarian
+ Hussar will not acknowledge them as brethren; and whenever he
+ comes in contact with foreign Hussars, he lets them feel in
+ battle the full force of his contempt. A story is told, that
+ during a campaign against the French in the war with Napoleon,
+ the bivouacs of the Prussian and Hungarian Hussars were near to
+ one another. A Prussian came over to his neighbors in a
+ familiar way with a glass of wine, and drank it to the health
+ of his 'brother hussar.' But the Hungarian gently pushed the
+ glass back, and stroked his beard, saying, 'What
+ brother?&mdash;no brother&mdash;I hussar&mdash;you
+ jack-pudding.'</p>
+
+ <p>This expression is not to be mistaken for a brag. The
+ Hungarian hussar is no fanfaron like the French chasseur, but
+ he is conscious of his own powers, like a Grenadier of the Old
+ Imperial Guard. The dolmany, the csako, and the csizma, have
+ grown to his body; they form his holyday dress even when off
+ duty&mdash;the national costume transferred into the army; and
+ as he is aware that this is not the case in other countries,
+ the foreign Hussar's dress is in his eyes a mere servant's
+ livery; and logically the man is not altogether wrong.</p>
+
+ <p>The Hussar, like the Magyars in general, is naturally
+ good-tempered. The finest man in the service, he is at the same
+ time the most jovial companion in the tavern, and will not sit
+ by and empty his glass by himself when a Bohemian or German
+ comrade at his side has spent all his money. There is only one
+ biped under the sun who is in his eyes more contemptible and
+ hateful than any animal of marsh or forest. This is the
+ Banderial Hussar&mdash;that half-breed between Croat and
+ Magyar, that caricature of the true Hussar, who serves in the
+ cavalry, as the Croat in the infantry, of the Military
+ Frontier. Never was an Hungarian Hussar known to drink with a
+ Banderial Hussar; never will he sit at the same table: if he
+ meets a snake he crushes it under foot&mdash;a wolf he will
+ hunt in the mountains&mdash;with a buffalo he will fight on the
+ open heath&mdash;with a miserable horse-stealer he will wrestle
+ for a halter; but as for the Banderial Hussar, he spits in his
+ face wherever he meets him.</p>
+
+ <p>It was at Hatvan, or at Tapjo-Bicske, that Hungarian and
+ Banderial Hussars were for the first time in this war&mdash;the
+ first time perhaps in the recollection of man&mdash;opposed to
+ one another in battle. If looks could slay, there would have
+ been no need of a conflict, for the eyes of the Magyars shot
+ death and contempt at their unworthy adversaries. The signal of
+ attack sounded; and at the same instant, as if seized by one
+ common thought, the Hungarian Hussars clattered their heavy
+ sabres back into the scabbard, and with a fearful imprecation,
+ such as no German tongue could echo, charged weaponless and at
+ full speed their mimic caricatures whom fate had thrown in
+ their way. The shock was so irresistible, that the poor Croats
+ could make no use of their sabers against the furious onset of
+ their unarmed foe: they were beaten down from their saddles
+ with the fist, and dragged off their horses by their dolmanys;
+ those who could save themselves fled. The Hussars disdained to
+ pursue them; but they complained to their Colonel at having
+ been opposed to 'such a rabble.'&mdash;<i>Schlesinger</i>.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page264"
+ id="page264"></a>[pg 264]</span>
+
+ <h2>Original Poetry.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h3>A HOROSCOPE.</h3>
+
+ <h4>BY ELIZABETH OAKES SMITH.</h4>
+
+ <center>
+ "Quorum pars magna fui."
+ </center>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Oh! loveliest of the stars of Heaven,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Thus did ye walk the crystal dome,</p>
+
+ <p>When to the earth a child was given,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Within a love-lit, northern home;</p>
+
+ <p>Thus leading up the starry train,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With aspect still benign,</p>
+
+ <p>Ye move in your fair orbs again</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As on that birth long syne.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Within her curtained room apart,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The pale young mother faintly smiled;</p>
+
+ <p>While warmly to a father's heart</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With love and prayer was pressed the
+ child;</p>
+
+ <p>And, softly to the lattice led,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In whispers grandams show</p>
+
+ <p>How those presaging stars have shed</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Around the child a glow.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Born in the glowing summer prime,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With planets thus conjoined in space</p>
+
+ <p>As if they watched the natal time,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And came to bless the infant face;</p>
+
+ <p>Oh! there was gladness in that bower,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And beauty in the sky;</p>
+
+ <p>And Hope and Love foretold a dower</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of brightest destiny.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Unconscious child! that smiling lay</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Where love's fond eyes, and bright stars
+ gleamed,</p>
+
+ <p>How long and toilsome grew the way</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">O'er which those brilliant orbs had
+ beamed;</p>
+
+ <p>How oft the faltering step drew back</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In terror of the path,</p>
+
+ <p>When giddy steep, and wildering track</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Seemed fraught with only wrath!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>How oft recoiled the woman foot,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With tears that shamed the path she
+ trod.</p>
+
+ <p>To find a canker at the root</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of every hope, save that in God!</p>
+
+ <p>And long, oh! long, and weary long,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ere she had learned to feel</p>
+
+ <p>That Love, unselfish, deep, and strong,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Repays its own wild zeal.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Bright Hesperus! who on the eyes</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of Milton poured thy brightest ray!</p>
+
+ <p>Effulgent dweller of the skies,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Take not from me thy light
+ away&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>I look on thee, and I recall</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The dreams of by-gone years&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>O'er many a hope I lay the pall</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With its becoming tears;</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Yet turn to thee with thy full beam,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And bless thee, Oh love-giving star!</p>
+
+ <p>For life's sweet, sad, illusive dream</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Fruition, though in Heaven
+ afar&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"A silver lining" hath the cloud</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Through dark and stormiest night,</p>
+
+ <p>And there are eyes to pierce the shroud</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And see the hidden light.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Thou movest side by side with Jove,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And, 'tis a quaint conceit,
+ perchance&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Thou seem'st in humid light to move</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As tears concealed thy burning
+ glance&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Such Virgil saw thee, when thine eyes,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">More lovely through their
+ glow,<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Won from the Thunderer of the skies</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">An accent soft and low.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And Mars is there with his red beams,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Tumultuous, earnest, unsubdued&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>And silver-footed Dian gleams</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Faint as when she, on Latmos
+ stood&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>God help the child! such night brought forth</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When Love to Power appeals,</p>
+
+ <p>And strong-willed Mars at frozen north</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Beside Diana steals.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author">BROOKLYN, August, 1850.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h3>FRIENDSHIP.</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>How oft the burdened heart would sink</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In fathomless despair</p>
+
+ <p>But for an angel on the brink&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In mercy standing there:</p>
+
+ <p>An angel bright with heavenly light&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And born of loftiest skies,</p>
+
+ <p>Who shows her face to mortal race,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In Friendship's holy guise.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Upon the brink of dark despair,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With smiling face she stands;</p>
+
+ <p>And to the victim shrinking there,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Outspreads her eager hands:</p>
+
+ <p>In accents low that sweetly flow</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To his awakening ear,</p>
+
+ <p>She woos him back&mdash;his deathward track.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Toward Hope's effulgent sphere.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Sweet Friendship! let me daily give</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Thanks to my God for thee!</p>
+
+ <p>Without thy smiles t'were death to live,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And joy to cease to be:</p>
+
+ <p>Oh, bitterest drop in woe's full cup&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To have no friend in need!</p>
+
+ <p>To struggle on, with grief alone&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Were agony indeed!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author">August. WILLIAM C. RICHARDS.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h3>THE BALANCE OF LIFE.</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>All daring sympathy&mdash;clear-sighted
+ love&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Is, from its source, a ray of endless
+ bliss;</p>
+
+ <p>Self has no place in the pure world above,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Its shadows vanish in the strife of
+ this.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The toil&mdash;the tumult&mdash;the sharp struggle
+ o'er,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The casket breaks;&mdash;men say, "A
+ martyr dies!"</p>
+
+ <p>The death&mdash;the martyrdom&mdash;has past
+ before:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The soul, transfigured, finds its native
+ skies.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The good&mdash;the ill&mdash;we vainly strive to
+ weigh</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With Reason's scales, hung in the mists
+ of Time:</p>
+
+ <p>Yet child-like Faith the balance doth survey,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Held high in ether, by a hand
+ sublime.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author">May, 1850. HERMA.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>Science.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The SPANISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES have announced the following
+ subject for competition: "An experimental investigation and
+ explanation of the theory of nitrification, the causes which
+ most influence the production of this phenomenon, and the means
+ most conducive in Spain to natural nitrification." The prize,
+ to be awarded in May 1851, is to be a gold medal and 6000
+ copper reals&mdash;about seventy pounds sterling; and a second
+ similar medal will be given to the second best paper. The
+ papers, written in Spanish or Latin, are to be sent in before
+ the 1st May, with, as usual, the author's name under seal.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>IMPROVEMENTS IN THE TELEGRAPH.&mdash;The <i>Presse</i> gives
+ some account of experiments made at the house of M. de
+ Girardin, in Paris, with a new telegraphic dictionary, the
+ invention of M. Gonon. Dispatches in French, English,
+ Portuguese, Russian, and Latin, including proper names of men
+ and places, and also figures, were transmitted and translated,
+ says this account, with a rapidity and fidelity alike
+ marvelous, by an officer who knew nothing of any one of the
+ languages used except his own. Dots, commas, accents, and
+ breaks were all in their places. This dictionary of M. Gonon is
+ applicable alike to electric and aerial telegraphy, to
+ transmissions by night and by day, to maritime and to military
+ telegraphing. The same paper speaks of the great interest
+ excited in the European capitals by the approaching experiment
+ of submarine telegraphic communication between England and
+ France. The wires, it says, on the English side are deposited
+ and ready for laying down. It is probable that in a very few
+ days the experiment will be complete.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page265"
+ id="page265"></a>[pg 265]</span>
+
+ <h2>Authors and Books.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>NEW ORLEANS AS SEEN BY A GERMAN PRINCE is very naturally not
+ quite the same city as in the opinion of her own
+ pleasure-loving citizens, nor can the republic whose
+ South-western metropolis is condemned with the rigidity of a
+ merciless judge and the jaundice of an unfriendly traveler,
+ hope to get clear of censure from the same super-royal pen. It
+ seems that his serenest highness Major-General Duke Paul
+ William, of Wirtemburg, is traveling in America, and that the
+ <i>Ausland</i>, a weekly paper, of Stuttgart, is from time to
+ time favored with the results of his experience on the way.
+ From some recent portions of his correspondence <i>The
+ International</i> translates the subjoined <i>morceau</i>,
+ which, however, despite its great exaggeration, is not
+ altogether devoid of truth: "It is not necessary here to
+ mention how much New Orleans has altered, increased, and
+ deteriorated, for it is an established thing that cities which
+ grow to such gigantic proportions gain nothing in respect to
+ the morals of their inhabitants. Here drunkenness and gambling,
+ two vices of which the Americans were ignorant in the time of
+ the founders of their great federation, have taken very deep
+ root. The decrease of the inflexible spirit of religion, and
+ the increase of vice and luxury, gnaw the powerful tree, and
+ are fearful enemies, which cannot be resisted by a structure
+ that might resist with scorn all foreign foes, and would have
+ played a mighty part in the world's history had the spirit of
+ Washington and Franklin remained with it. The annexation of
+ Texas, the war with Mexico, and now the gold of California,
+ have transformed the United States. A people which makes
+ conquests, loses inward power in proportion to the
+ aggrandizement of its volume, and the increase of its external
+ enemies."</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>AN ARABIAN NEWSPAPER, with the title <i>Mobacher</i>. has
+ lately been commenced in Algiers, at the expense of the French
+ Government. It is edited in the cabinet of the
+ Governor-General, issued weekly, and lithographed, as less
+ expensive than printing, which in Arabic types would be quite
+ costly. It contains political news from Europe and Africa, the
+ latest advices from Constantinople, all those laws and decrees
+ of the Government which in any way concern the Arabs, and
+ descriptions of such new discoveries and inventions as can be
+ made intelligible to the readers for whom it is designed. A
+ thousand copies are printed weekly and sent to the chiefs and
+ headmen of all the tribes that are under French rule or
+ influence. At first it was not read much, but now the vanity of
+ the Arabs has been excited by it as a mark of special attention
+ from the Governor-General, so that they take it as an honor,
+ and a degree of curiosity has been excited to obtain news from
+ other parts of the world.</p>
+
+ <p>Within a short time, also, an additional importance has been
+ given to the paper by the publication in it of the amount of
+ the tribute which each tribe is required to pay to France.
+ Formerly this was known only to the chiefs who would
+ accordingly exact from their people whatever amount they deemed
+ best, under the pretense that it was for the government, while
+ the greater part was retained by themselves. These tribes have
+ profited greatly by the French conquest; it is estimated that
+ of the eighty millions of francs which the army in Algeria
+ costs yearly, from twenty to twenty-five millions remain in the
+ hands of the Arabs. The Arab sells his corn, dates, horses,
+ sheep, the baskets he weaves, &amp;c., to the European
+ population, but never buys anything from them in turn, except
+ it be arms and powder. The rest of his money he carries home
+ and buries where no one knows but himself, so that, if he dies
+ suddenly, it is lost. Only the chiefs of the tribe know how to
+ extort anything of these hidden sums. According to the most
+ moderate estimates the tribes must have from two to three
+ hundred millions of French money. The gains which the chiefs
+ draw from this wealth is considerable; some of them have from a
+ hundred to a hundred and fifty thousand francs income. They are
+ beginning to build large houses, and cultivate gardens around
+ them, a disposition which the government favors, because it is
+ easier to keep tribes in order that are settled and have
+ dwellings to lose which they cannot take with them. The
+ publication of the tribute in the <i>Mobacher</i>, is, under
+ these circumstances, of great value for the Arabs, because it
+ enables them, as it were, to supervise their chiefs, and to
+ refuse to pay exorbitant taxes laid under pretense of a high
+ tribute. This has increased the respect generally felt for the
+ paper, though it has not rendered it more a favorite with the
+ chiefs. The power of these leaders is very great in the various
+ tribes, having been in most cases hereditary, at least since
+ the tenth century, and although not always inherited in direct
+ line, the tribes have never suffered it to pass into the hands
+ of new families. Hitherto nothing has diminished it; the war
+ rather gave it new strength, and it is only by means of the
+ chiefs that the French can keep Algiers quiet. It would be a
+ remarkable fact if the dissolving power of publicity through
+ the press should be manifested here as elsewhere, and begin the
+ overthrow of the long standing influence exercised by the great
+ Arabian families.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>MRS. M. ST. LEON LOUD, of Philadelphia, has in the press of
+ Ticknor, Reed &amp; Fields, of Boston, a collection of her
+ poems, entitled, "Wayside Flowers." Mrs. Loud is a writer of
+ much grace and elegance, and occasionally of a rich and
+ delicate fancy. The late Mr. Poe was accustomed to praise her
+ works very highly, and was to have edited this edition of
+ them.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page266"
+ id="page266"></a>[pg 266]</span>
+
+ <p>THE LITERATURE OF SOCIALISM occupies the press in France.
+ The subject is warmly debated, <i>pro</i> and <i>con</i>. In a
+ pamphlet called <i>Despotisme ou Socialisme</i>, M. Pompery
+ rapidly sketches the alternative which, he says, lies open to
+ those who rise against despotism. There are but two religious
+ doctrines according to him: the one absolutist, represented by
+ De Maistre, and the Catholic school, which is, logically
+ enough, desirous of reestablishing the Inquisition; the other
+ professed by all the illustrious teachers of mankind, by
+ Pythagoras, Jesus, Socrates, Pascal, &amp;c., which, believing
+ in the goodness of the Creator and the perfectibility of man,
+ endeavors to found upon earth the reign of justice, fraternity,
+ and equality. A more important work on Socialism is that of Dr.
+ Guepin, of Nantes, <i>Philosophie du Socialisme</i>; and M.
+ Lecouturier announces a <i>Science du Socialisme</i>.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>MR. G.P.R. JAMES has taken a cottage at Jamaica, Long
+ Island, and is domiciliated as an American&mdash;we hope for a
+ long time. He has made troops of friends since his arrival
+ here, and is likely to be as popular in society as he has long
+ been in literature. We are sure we communicate a very pleasing
+ fact when we state that it is his intention to give in two or
+ three of our principal cities, during the autumn and fall, a
+ series of lectures&mdash;probably upon the chivalric ages, with
+ which no one is more profoundly familiar, and of which no one
+ can discourse more wisely or agreeably. His abilities, his
+ reputation, and the almost universal acquaintance with his
+ works, insure for him the largest success. We are indebted to
+ no other living author for so much enjoyment, and by his
+ proposed lectures he will not only add to our obligations, but
+ furnish an opportunity to repair in some degree the wrong he
+ has suffered from the imperfection and injustice of our
+ copyright system.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>"THE LIFE, CHARACTER, AND GENIUS OF EBENEZER ELLIOTT," is a
+ volume by January Searle, author of <i>Leaves from Sherwood
+ Forest</i>, &amp;c., who knew the corn-law rhymer well, and has
+ been enabled to give very characteristic sketches, original
+ descriptions, correspondence, &amp;c. There are in it many
+ judiciously selected specimens of Elliott's poems, prose
+ productions, and lectures. Mr. Searle observes of him, that "he
+ was cradled into poetry by human wrong and misery; and was
+ emphatically the bard of poverty&mdash;singing of the poor
+ man's loves and sorrows, and denouncing his oppressors." Again:
+ "He has one central idea&mdash;terrible and awful in its
+ aspect, although beautiful and beneficent in
+ spirit&mdash;before which he tries all causes, and men, and
+ things. It is the Eternal Idea of Right; his synonyme of God.
+ And this idea is perpetually present in his mind, pervades all
+ his thoughts, will not be shuffled nor cheated, but demands a
+ full satisfaction from all violators of it."</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE LATE MRS. OSGOOD was in a very remarkable degree
+ respected and beloved by those who were admitted to her
+ acquaintance. Without envy or jealousy, or any of the
+ immoralities of the intellect which most commonly beset writers
+ of her sex, she occasioned no enmities and was a party to none,
+ but was regarded, especially by the literary women of this
+ country, with a feeling of tenderness and devotion probably
+ unparalleled in the annals of literature or of society.
+ Immediately after her death, therefore, a desire was manifested
+ to illustrate the common regard for her by some suitable
+ testimonial, and upon consultation, it was decided to publish a
+ splendid souvenir, to consist of the gratuitous contributions
+ of her friends, and with the profits accruing from its sale to
+ erect a monument to her memory in the cemetery of Mount Auburn.
+ This gift book, edited by Mrs. Osgood's most intimate friend,
+ Mary E. Hewitt, will be published by Mr. Putnam, on the first
+ of October, under the title of <i>The Cairn</i>, and it will
+ contain original articles by George Aubrey, Lord Bishop of
+ Jamaica: the Right Rev. George W. Doane, the Right Rev. Alonzo
+ Potter, the Hon. R.H. Walworth, the Hon. J. Leander Starr, the
+ Rev. C.S. Henry, D.D., G.P.R. James, Esq., N.P. Willis, Esq.,
+ W. Gilmore Simms, Esq., Bayard Taylor, Esq., J.H. Boker, Esq.,
+ Alfred B. Street, Esq., R. H. Stoddard, Esq., Miss Fredrika
+ Bremer, Mrs. Sigourney, Mrs. Oakes Smith, Mrs. Embury, Mrs.
+ Lewis, Mrs. Neal, Mrs. Willard, Mrs. Whitman, Miss Lynch, Miss
+ Hunter, Miss Cheesebro', and indeed nearly all the writers of
+ her sex who have attained any eminence in our literary world.
+ The volume will be illustrated with nine engravings on steel,
+ by Cheney and other eminent artists.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE REV. WALTER COLTON has just published through A.S.
+ Barnes &amp; Co. "Three Years in California," a journal of
+ experiences and observations in the gold region, from the
+ period when it first attracted the attention of the Atlantic
+ cities. Mr. Colton was some time alcade of Monterey, and he had
+ in every way abundant opportunity to acquire whatever facts are
+ deserving of preservation in history. His "Ship and Shore,"
+ "Constantinople and Athens," "Deck and Port," and other works,
+ have illustrated his genial temper, shrewdness, and skill in
+ description and character writing; and this book will increase
+ his reputation for these qualities. It contains portraits of
+ Capt. Sutter, Col. Fremont, Mr. Gwin, Mr. Wright, Mr. Larkin,
+ and Mr. Snyder, a map of the valley of the Sacramento, and
+ several other engravings, very spirited in design and
+ execution.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>MR. GEORGE STEPHENS, author of the "<i>Manuscripts of
+ Erdely</i>," has been struck by ill health and reduced to
+ poverty, and an amateur play has been prepared for his benefit
+ at the Soho Theater. He wrote "The Vampire," "Montezuma," and
+ "Martinuzzi."</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page267"
+ id="page267"></a>[pg 267]</span>
+
+ <p>The Gallery of Illustrious Americans, conducted by Mr.
+ Lester, continues with every number to increase in interest.
+ The work is designed to embrace folio portraits, engraved by
+ Davignon, from daguerreotypes by Brady, of twenty-four of the
+ most eminent American citizens who have lived since the time of
+ Washington. The portraits thus far have been admirable for
+ truthfulness and artistic effect. It may be said that the
+ <i>only</i> published pictures we have, deserving to be called
+ portraits, of the historian Prescott, or Mr. Calhoun, or
+ Colonel Fremont, are in this Gallery. The great artist,
+ naturalist, and man of letters, Audubon, is reflected here as
+ he appears at the close of the battle, receiving the reverence
+ of nations and ages. In the biographical department Mr. Lester
+ has evinced very eminent abilities for this kind of writing. He
+ seizes the prominent events of history and the strong points of
+ character, and presents them with such force and fullness, and
+ happy combination, as to make the letter-press as interesting
+ and valuable as the engraved portion of the work. We are
+ pleased to learn that the Gallery is remarkably successful. No
+ publication of equal splendor and expensiveness has ever before
+ been so well received in this country. The cost of it is but
+ one dollar per number, or twenty dollars for the series of
+ twenty-four numbers. It is now half completed.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>M. Max Schlesinger, author of "The War in Hungary, in
+ 1848-9,"&mdash;a work which, from what we read of it in the
+ foreign journals, is much the most striking and attractive of
+ all that have appeared upon its subject in English,&mdash;is
+ described in the <i>Athenæum</i>, as by birth a Hungarian, by
+ the accidents of fortune a German. For some time a resident in
+ Prague, and more recently settled in Berlin, he has had
+ excellent opportunities of seeing the men and studying the
+ questions connected both in the literary and political sense
+ with the present movement of ideas and races in Eastern Europe.
+ His acquaintance with the aspects of nature in his native
+ land&mdash;his knowledge of the peculiar character of its
+ inhabitants, their manners, modes of thought and habits of
+ life&mdash;his familiarity with past history&mdash;his right
+ conception of the leading men in the recent struggle&mdash;are
+ all vouched for as "essentially accurate" by no less an
+ authority than Count Pulszky. It would be an injustice merely
+ to say that M. Schlesinger has given in an original and
+ picturesque way a general view of the course of events in the
+ late war, more complete and connected than is afforded in any
+ account hitherto presented to the public. He has done more: he
+ has enabled the German and English reader to understand the
+ miracle of a nation of four or five millions of men rising up
+ at the command of a great statesman, and doing successful
+ battle with the elaborately organized power of a first-class
+ European state, shaking it to its very foundations, and
+ contending, not without hope, against two mighty military
+ empires,&mdash;until the treachery from within paralyzed its
+ power of resistance.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Dr. Mayo's new novel, "The Berber, or the Mountaineer of the
+ Atlas," published by Putnam, promises to be scarcely less
+ popular than his "Kaloolah." The <i>Evening Post</i> says of
+ it: "Kaloolah was a sprightly narrative of the wanderings of a
+ Yankee, who seemed to combine in his person the characteristics
+ of Robinson Crusoe with those of Baron Munchausen; but the
+ Berber professes to be nothing more than a novel; or, as the
+ author says in his preface, his principal object has been to
+ tell an agreeable story in an agreeable way. In doing so,
+ however, an eye has been had to the illustration of Moorish
+ manners, customs, history, and geography; to the
+ exemplification of Moorish life as it actually is in Barbary in
+ the present day, and not as it usually appears in the vague and
+ poetic glamour of the common Moorish romance. It has also been
+ an object to introduce to the acquaintance of the reader a
+ people who have played a most important part in the world's
+ history, but of whom very few educated people know anything
+ more than the name. As Dr. Mayo has traveled extensively over
+ the regions he describes, we presume that his descriptions may
+ be taken as true. His account of the Berbers, a tribe of
+ ancient Asiatic origin, who inhabit a range of the Atlas, and
+ who live a semi-savage life like the Arabs, is minute, and to
+ the intelligent reader quite as interesting as the more
+ narrative parts of the work. It is, perhaps, the best evidence
+ of the merits of the book, that the whole first edition was
+ exhausted by orders from the country before the first number
+ had appeared in the city."</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Col. Forbes, who was in Italy during the revolution, and
+ many years previous, and who was himself, both in a military
+ and civic capacity, one of the actors in that event, the
+ <i>Evening Post</i> informs us, is about to give public
+ lectures on the subject of Italy in the various cities and
+ towns of the United States. Col. Forbes was intimately
+ connected with the revolutionary chiefs during the brief
+ existence of the Roman Republic, and was directly and
+ confidently employed by Mazzini. His knowledge of the country,
+ its people, its politics, and its recent history, will supply
+ him with materials for making his lectures highly interesting
+ and instructive.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The Gem of the Western World, edited by Mrs. Hewitt, and
+ published by Cornish &amp; Co., Fulton street, is a very
+ beautiful gift-book, and in its literary character is deserving
+ of a place with the most splendid and; tasteful annuals of the
+ season. Mrs. Hewitt's own contributions to it embrace some of
+ her finest compositions, and are of course among its most
+ brilliant contents.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page268"
+ id="page268"></a>[pg 268]</span>
+
+ <p>FRENCH PERIODICALS.&mdash;A Parisian correspondent of the
+ London <i>Literary Gazette</i> observes, that if we exclude the
+ <i>Revue des Deux Mondes</i>&mdash;a, sort of cross between the
+ English <i>Quarterly</i> and the monthlies,&mdash;if we exclude
+ also a few dry scientific periodicals, and one or two
+ theatrical or musical newspapers, we shall seek in vain for any
+ <i>Quarterly</i>, or <i>Blackwood</i>, or <i>Art Union</i>, or
+ <i>Literary Gazette</i>; and that even the periodicals and
+ journals which make the nearest approach to the weekly,
+ monthly, or quarterly publications of England, are either
+ wretched compilations, or abominably ill-written and
+ ill-printed. The <i>feuilleton</i> system of the newspapers is
+ no doubt the principal cause of the periodical literature being
+ in such an extremely low condition. But though literary and
+ scientific periodicals be, generally speaking, vile in quality,
+ they can at least boast of quantity. There are, it seems, not
+ fewer than 300 of one kind or another published in Paris alone.
+ Among them are 44 devoted to medicine, chemistry, natural
+ science, &amp;c.; 42, trade, commerce, railways,
+ advertisements; 34, fashions; 30, law; 22, administration,
+ public works, roads, bridges, mines; 19, archæology, history,
+ biography, geography, numismatics; 19, public instruction and
+ education; 15, agriculture and horticulture; 8, bibliography
+ and typography; 10, army and navy; 7, literary; the rest
+ theatrical, musical, or of a character too hybrid to be
+ classified.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE ILLUSTRATED DOMESTIC BIBLE, edited by the Rev. Ingram
+ Cobbin, seems to us decidedly the best family Bible ever
+ offered to the trade in this country. It is printed with
+ remarkable correctness and beauty; illustrated with a very
+ large number of maps and engravings on wood; and its notes,
+ written with much condensation and perspicuity, are such as are
+ necessary for the understanding of the text. Indeed, all that
+ is added to the letter of the Bible is legitimate and necessary
+ <i>illustration</i>. It is being published in a series of
+ twenty-five numbers, at twenty-five cents each, by S. Hueston,
+ publisher of <i>The Knickerbocker</i>, Nassau-street.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE VIENNA UNIVERSITY, long one of the best in Europe, has
+ not been reopened since the insurrection of November, 1848, its
+ principal edifice having been occupied as barracks for a
+ regiment of soldiers. It is now proposed to restore it to its
+ proper use, but great difficulty is experienced in finding
+ professors. The old ones are scattered, some as exiles in
+ foreign countries, on account of democratic
+ opinions,&mdash;some in prison for the same reason, others
+ employed elsewhere. Wackernagel, the eminent professor of the
+ German Language and Literature at Basle, Switzerland, tempted
+ by liberal offers, had promised to come to Vienna, and lend the
+ aid of his reputation and talents to the restoration of the
+ University, but being lately at Milan, on a wedding tour, as he
+ and his wife were passing through the <i>Piazza d'Armi</i>,
+ their ears were saluted by cries of pain, which on inquiry they
+ found to proceed from sundry rebellious Italians, of both
+ sexes, who were receiving each from twenty-five to fifty blows
+ of the military baton, or cane, employed by the Austrians in
+ flogging soldiers. Madame Wackernagel at once declared that she
+ would never willingly inhabit a country whose laws and habits
+ suffered women to be so brutally punished for patriotism, and
+ her husband could only agree with her. He has accordingly
+ broken off the engagement, and the Government cannot hope to
+ supply his place.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>HINCKS ON LITERARY LARCENY.&mdash;A Canadian friend sends us
+ the following extract from a speech by Francis Hincks, a
+ leading member of the Canadian Ministry, touching the
+ International Copyright question:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"The American publisher steals the works of British
+ authors, because he is immoral enough to do it, because he
+ is scoundrel enough, and the nation is scoundrel enough to
+ permit it. (Ironical cheers.) Yes, because the nation is
+ scoundrel enough to permit it."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>Our unknown friend who sends us this wants us to give Hincks
+ a thorough roasting for it, and evidently expects every hair on
+ our head to bristle with indignation. Now we have not the least
+ objection to roasting the Minister aforesaid, and will do it
+ when a fair chance presents itself, but we don't consider this
+ such a chance. In fact, though we think Francis has drawn
+ rather a strong draught from "the well of English undefiled,"
+ yet essentially we regard his observations above quoted as
+ rather more than half right. It <i>is</i> rascally to steal a
+ man's book, print it, sell it, read it, and refuse him any pay
+ for the labor of writing it; and we don't see that his being an
+ Englishman makes any material difference. There may be a
+ cheaper way to get the proceeds of another man's toil than by
+ paying for it, but we don't think there is any other strictly
+ honest way.&mdash;<i>Tribune</i>.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>HERR SCHUMANN's opera, "Généviève," was produced at Leipsic
+ on the 28th ultimo. "This work," says the <i>Gazette
+ Musicale</i>, "after having been much recommended beforehand,
+ does not seem to have satisfied public expectation, being
+ concert music, without any dramatic force." For the verdict
+ which will finally be passed on "Généviève" every one must be
+ curious who has at all followed the journals of Young Germany
+ in the recent crusades which they nave made, not so much to
+ establish Schumann as a great composer, as to prove him greater
+ than Mendelssohn.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE GRAND LITERARY TRADE SALES are now in progress in New
+ York: and the catalogues of the rival houses are the largest
+ ever printed. Cooley &amp; Keese at their splendid hall in
+ Broadway present this year a richer and more extensive series
+ of invoices than has ever before been sold in America.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page269"
+ id="page269"></a>[pg 269]</span>
+
+ <h2>The Fine Arts.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Bavaria is a sort of artists' paradise, both the late King
+ Louis and the present Maximilian being determined to leave
+ behind them the glory of munificent patrons of art. In this
+ they have so far succeeded, that Munich, which before their
+ time was by no means among German cities the most worthy a
+ traveler's attention, may now dispute the palm even with
+ Dresden, notwithstanding the unrivaled gallery of paintings,
+ possessed by the latter. For students of modern art, and
+ especially of the German schools, Munich is incomparable, while
+ its collection of ancient sculptures cannot be equaled out of
+ Italy. We now learn that King Maximilian has conceived the plan
+ of a grand series of pictures to comprehend the prominent
+ epochs and events of history. The most eminent German and
+ foreign artists are to be invited to assist in carrying out
+ this immense undertaking; so that thus the series will not only
+ represent the great experiences of mankind, but will, it is
+ hoped, contain specimens of all the great schools of modern
+ painting.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>An exhibition of indisputable works by the old painters is
+ now open at Valenciennes, in France. It consists of pictures
+ belonging to the family of the Belgian general Rottiers. They
+ are for sale, either single or together. Among them is a St.
+ Denis, bearing his Head, by Rubens, said to have been painted
+ by order of Pope Urban VIII. It was deposited in the Convent of
+ the <i>Annunciades</i>, at Antioch; in 1747, Louis XV. offered
+ 100,000 francs for it, but was refused, the convent having no
+ right to dispose of it. Afterward, on the suppression of the
+ convent, it fell into the hands of the family to which it now
+ belongs. The exhibition also contains a landscape by Salvator
+ Rosa, representing a scene in the Appenines; a Magdalen
+ kneeling in a Cavern, by Kneller; two Allegories, by Giulio
+ Romano; several portraits by Rubens and Van Dyke, besides other
+ works of less value.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Darley's "Sleepy Hollow."&mdash;The London Art Journal, for
+ July, has the following notice of Mr. Darley's illustrations of
+ Irving's "Legends of Sleepy Hollow," published by the
+ <i>American Art Union</i>: "The charmingly quaint original
+ legend told with so much quiet humor by Washington Irving, is
+ here illustrated by a native artist in a congenial spirit, and
+ his scenes realized in a manner which must give its author
+ satisfaction, and redound to the credit of the designer. We
+ have before noticed the great ability exhibited by Mr. Darley
+ for the mode of illustration he adopts, which we may add is
+ that rendered famous by Retzsh. The series we are now noticing
+ are quite as meritorious as that designed by the same artist to
+ Rip Van Winkle; but the subject matter is not equally capable
+ of such broad contrasts in drollery as that legend presents.
+ Nevertheless, Mr. Darley has executed his task in the truest
+ appreciation of his author; and his hero is the veritable
+ Ichabod Crane of Irving; his love-making scene with "the
+ peerless daughter of Van Tassel" is exquisite in its quiet
+ humor; so also is the merry-making in the Dutch Farmer's home.
+ Altogether, the series is extremely good, and does the greatest
+ credit to the designer. American literature thus illustrated by
+ American artists cannot fail to achieve honor to that country
+ in the old world as well as the new. We believe Mr. Darley, in
+ his line, to be as great as any American artist whose works
+ have fallen under our notice."</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Chaucer's Monument.&mdash;The <i>Athenæum</i> says, "One of
+ the objections formerly urged against taking steps to restore
+ the perishing memorial of the Father of English Poetry in
+ Poet's Corner was, that it was not really his tomb, but a
+ monument erected to do honor to his memory a century and a half
+ after his death. An examination, however, of the tomb itself,
+ by competent authorities, has proved this objection to be
+ unfounded&mdash;inasmuch as there can exist no doubt, we hear,
+ from the difference of workmanship, material, &amp;c., that the
+ altar tomb is the original tomb of Geoffrey Chaucer,&mdash;and
+ that instead of Nicholas Brigham having erected an entirely new
+ monument, he only added to that which then existed the
+ overhanging canopy, &amp;c. So that the sympathy of Chaucer's
+ admirers is now invited to the restoration of what till now was
+ really not known to exist&mdash;<i>the original tomb</i> of the
+ Poet&mdash;as well as to the additions made to it by the
+ affectionate remembrance of Nicholas Brigham."</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Lessing's new picture.&mdash;A letter from Düsseldorf under
+ date of 9th July, in the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i>, says that
+ Lessing's great painting, "The Martyrdom of Huss," Sad just
+ been finished and had been exhibited for the last few days at
+ the Academy of Fine Arts, where it was visited by thousands.
+ When it became known that orders for its immediate shipment had
+ arrived from New York, the desire to obtain a last view of this
+ truly great work became so intense that it was found necessary
+ to put the Police in requisition to keep back the throng, and
+ the gates of the Academy had to be closed. It causes general
+ regret that it is to be sent out of the country. The <i>Cologne
+ Gazette</i> calls this picture the most sublime production of
+ the great artist, and expresses the conviction that a speedy
+ fortune might be realized by its exhibition in Europe.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Mr. George Flagg has just completed a portrait of Mrs. E.
+ Oakes Smith, which will be ranked among the first productions
+ of his pencil. We know of scarce a picture as beautiful or a
+ portrait as truthful. It is to be engraved, we believe, by
+ Cheney.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page270"
+ id="page270"></a>[pg 270]</span>
+
+ <p>Mlle. Rachel.&mdash;The wonderful accuracy of the
+ death-scene in "Adrienne Lecouvreur" has been the object of
+ universal praise in London, not merely from the thrilled and
+ thralled public, but from men of art and science. A physician,
+ it is said, was complimenting Mademoiselle on her amazing truth
+ to the symptoms of mortal agony: "You must have studied death
+ closely," said he. "Yes, I have," was the quiet reply; "my
+ maid's. I went up to her&mdash;I stayed with her&mdash;she
+ recommended her mother to me!&mdash;I was studying my part."
+ This is probably merely one of those cynical stories with which
+ the sharp people of Paris love to environ and encircle every
+ one who stands a dangerous chance of becoming too popular. But
+ smaller artists than Mademoiselle Rachel have sometimes had
+ recourse to curious expedients to give their dramatic
+ personations a show at reality. The French <i>prima donna</i>,
+ who not very long ago appeared in M. Clapisson's poor opera,
+ "Jeanne la Folle," is said to have shut herself up in the
+ <i>Salpêtrière</i>, by way of studying <i>her</i> part, and to
+ have been rewarded for her zealous curiosity by receiving a
+ basin of scalding soup dashed in her face by one of the poor
+ miserable objects of her examination.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>A Frankfort journal states that the colossal statue of
+ Bavaria, by SCHWANTHALER, which is to be placed on the hill of
+ Seudling, surpasses in its gigantic proportions all the works
+ of the moderns. It will have to be removed in pieces from the
+ foundry where it is cast to its place of destination,&mdash;and
+ each piece will require sixteen horses to draw it. The great
+ toes are each half a metre in length. In the head two persons
+ could dance a polka very conveniently,&mdash;while the nose
+ might lodge the musician. The thickness of the robe&mdash;which
+ forms a rich drapery descending to the ankles&mdash;is about
+ six inches, and its circumference at the bottom about two
+ hundred metres. The Crown of Victory which the figure holds in
+ her hands weighs one hundred quintals (a quintal is a
+ hundred-weight).</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The death of SIR ROBERT PEEL, says the <i>Literary
+ Gazette</i>, has awakened a busy competing spirit for the
+ production of articles relating to him, and especially in
+ connection with Literature and the Arta. In the one, Memoirs,
+ Speeches, Recollections, Anecdotes, &amp;c., have been
+ abundantly supplied; and in the other, every printshop window
+ in London displays its Peels of every style and every degree,
+ but mostly very indifferent, absolutely bad, or utter
+ caricature.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Goupil, Vibert &amp; Co. have published a series of
+ portraits of eminent Americans which is deserving of the
+ largest approval and sale. The head of Mr. Bryant is the best
+ ever published of that poet; it presents his fine features and
+ striking phrenology with great force and with pleasing as well
+ as just effect. A portrait of Mr. Willis is wonderfully
+ truthful, in detail, and is in an eminent degree
+ characteristic. The admirers of that author who have not seen
+ him will find in it their ideal, and all his acquaintances will
+ see in it as distinctly the real man who sits in the congress
+ of editors as the representative of the polite world. The head
+ of the artist Mount, after Elliott, is not by any means less
+ successful. Among the other portraits are those of Gen. Scott,
+ President Fillmore, Robert Fulton, J.Q. Adams, Mr. Clay, Mr.
+ Webster, and President Taylor. They are all on imperial sheets,
+ and are sold at $1 each.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The Paris papers tell a story of a young actor, who finding
+ no engagement in that city, came to America to try his fortune.
+ From New Orleans he went to California, was lucky as a digger,
+ embarked in business and got immensely rich. He is now building
+ in the Champs Elysées a magnificent hotel for his mother. All
+ actors are not so fortunate.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Expected arrivals from Nineveh.&mdash;The Great Bull, and
+ upward of one hundred tons of sculpture, excavated by Dr.
+ Layard, are now on their way to England, and may be expected in
+ the course of September. In addition-to the Elgin, Phigalian,
+ Lycian, and Boodroun marbles, the British Museum will soon be
+ enriched with a magnificent series of Assyrian sculptures.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Mr. Burt has nearly finished the "Anne Page and Slender" of
+ Leslie, which is to be the annual engraving of the Art Union.
+ It will be an admirable picture, but we cannot but regret that
+ the managers selected for this purpose a work so familiar.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The French Minister of the Interior has decided that marble
+ busts of M. Gay-Lussac and of M. Blainville shall be executed
+ at the expense of the government, and placed in the
+ Institute.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Mr. Powell, who is living in Paris, engaged upon his picture
+ for the capital, has been in ill health nearly all the
+ summer.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>Recent Deaths.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The French papers report the death, at Paris, of M. MORA,
+ the Mexican Minister Plenipotentiary at the Court of St. James.
+ M. Mora was the author of a History of Mexico and its
+ Revolutions since the establishment of its independence, and
+ editor-in-chief of several journals in Mexico.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>MR. B. SIMMONS, an amiable and accomplished writer, whose
+ name will be recollected as that of a frequent contributor of
+ lyrical poems of a high order to <i>Blackwood's Magazine</i>,
+ and to several of the Annuals, died in London on the 20th of
+ July.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page271"
+ id="page271"></a>[pg 271]</span>
+
+ <h4>[From Graham's Magazine.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>ON A PORTRAIT OF CROMWELL.</h2>
+
+ <h4>BY JAMES T. FIELD.</h4>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"Paint me as I am," said Cromwell,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Rough with age, and gashed with
+ wars&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Show my visage as you find it&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Less than truth my soul abhors!"</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>This was he whose mustering phalanx</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Swept the foe at Marston Moor;</p>
+
+ <p>This was he whose arm uplifted</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From the dust the fainting poor.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>God had made his face uncomely&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">"Paint me as I am," he said.</p>
+
+ <p>So he lives upon the canvas</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Whom they chronicled as <i>dead</i>!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Simple justice he requested</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">At the artist's glowing hands,</p>
+
+ <p>"Simple justice!" from his ashes</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Cries a voice that still commands.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And, behold! the page of History,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Centuries dark with Cromwell's name,</p>
+
+ <p>Shines to-day with thrilling luster</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From the light of Cromwell's fame!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From the Examiner.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>WORDSWORTH'S POSTHUMOUS POEM.<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a></h2>
+
+ <p>This is a voice that speaks to us across a gulf of nearly
+ fifty years. A few months ago Wordsworth was taken from us at
+ the ripe age of fourscore, yet here we have him addressing the
+ public, as for the first time, with all the fervor, the unworn
+ freshness, the hopeful confidence of thirty. We are carried
+ back to the period when Coleridge, Byron, Scott, Rogers, and
+ Moore were in their youthful prime. We live again in the
+ stirring days when the poets who divided public attention and
+ interest with the Fabian struggle in Portugal and Spain, with
+ the wild and terrible events of the Russian campaign, with the
+ uprising of the Teutonic nations and the overthrow of Napoleon,
+ were in a manner but commencing their cycle of songs. This is
+ to renew, to antedate, the youth of a majority of the living
+ generation. But only those whose memory still carries them so
+ far back, can feel within them any reflex of that eager
+ excitement with which the news of battles fought and won, or
+ mailcoach copies of some new work of Scott, or Byron, or the
+ <i>Edinburgh Review</i>, were looked for and received in those
+ already old days.</p>
+
+ <p>We need not remind the readers of the <i>Excursion</i> that
+ when Wordsworth was enabled by the generous enthusiasm of
+ Raisley Calvert to retire with a slender independence to his
+ native mountains, there to devote himself exclusively to his
+ art, his first step was to review and record in verse the
+ origin and progress of his own powers, as far as he was
+ acquainted with them. This was at once an exercise in
+ versification, and a test for the kind of poetry for which he
+ was by temperament fitted. The result was a determination to
+ compose a philosophical poem containing views of man, of
+ nature, and of society. This, ambitious conception has been
+ doomed to share the fate of so many other colossal
+ undertakings. Of the three parts of his <i>Recluse</i>, thus
+ planned, only the second, (the <i>Excursion</i>, published in
+ 1814,) has been completed. Of the other two there exists only
+ the first book of the first, and the plan of the third. The
+ <i>Recluse</i> will remain in fragmentary greatness, a poetical
+ Cathedral of Cologne.</p>
+
+ <p>Matters standing thus, it has not been without a melancholy
+ sense of the uncertainty of human projects, and of the contrast
+ between the sanguine enterprise and its silent evaporation (so
+ often the "history of an individual mind"), that we have
+ perused this <i>Prelude</i> which no completed strain was
+ destined to follow. Yet in the poem itself there is nothing to
+ inspire depression. It is animated throughout with the hopeful
+ confidence in the poet's own powers, so natural to the time of
+ life at which it was composed; it evinces a power and soar of
+ imagination unsurpassed in any of his writings; and its images
+ and incidents have a freshness and distinctness which they not
+ seldom lost, when they came to be elaborated, as many of them
+ were, in his minor poems of a later date.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>Prelude</i>, as the title-page indicates, is a
+ poetical autobiography, commencing with the earliest
+ reminiscences of the author, and continued to the time at which
+ it was composed. We are told that it was begun in 1799 and
+ completed, in 1805. It consists of fourteen books. Two are
+ devoted to the infancy and school-time of the poet; four to the
+ period of his University life; two to a brief residence in
+ London immediately subsequent to his leaving Cambridge, and a
+ retrospect of the progress his mind had then made; and three to
+ a residence in France, chiefly in the Loire, but partly in
+ Paris, during the stormy period of Louis the Sixteenth's flight
+ and capture, and the fierce contest between the Girondins and
+ Robespierre. Five books are then occupied with an analysis of
+ the internal struggle occasioned by the contradictory
+ influences of rural and secluded nature in boyhood, and of
+ society when the young man first mingles with the world. The
+ surcease of the strife is recorded in the fourteenth book,
+ entitled "Conclusion."</p>
+
+ <p>The poem is addressed to Coleridge; and apart from its
+ poetical merits, is interesting as at once a counterpart and a
+ supplement to that author's philosophical and beautiful
+ criticism of the <i>Lyrical Ballads</i> in his <i>Biographia
+ Literaria</i>. It completes the explanation, there given, of
+ the peculiar constitution of Wordsworth's mind, and of his
+ poetical theory. It confirms and justifies our opinion that
+ that theory was essentially partial and erroneous; but at the
+ same time it establishes the fact that Wordsworth was a true
+ and a great poet in despite of his theory.</p>
+
+ <p>The great defect of Wordsworth, in our judgment, was want of
+ sympathy with and knowledge of men. From his birth till his
+ entry at college, he lived in a region where he met with none
+ whose minds might awaken his sympathies, and where life was
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page272"
+ id="page272"></a>[pg 272]</span> altogether uneventful. On
+ the other hand, that region abounded with the inert,
+ striking, and most impressive objects of natural scenery.
+ The elementary grandeur and beauty of external nature came
+ thus to fill up his mind to the exclusion of human
+ interests. To such a result his individual constitution
+ powerfully contributed. The sensuous element was singularly
+ deficient in his nature. He never seems to have passed
+ through that erotic period out of which some poets have
+ never emerged. A soaring, speculative imagination, and an
+ impetuous, resistless self-will, were his distinguishing
+ characteristics. From first to last he concentrated himself
+ within himself; brooding over his own fancies and
+ imaginations to the comparative disregard of the incidents
+ and impressions which suggested them; and was little
+ susceptible of ideas originating in other minds. We behold
+ the result. He lives alone in a world of mountains, streams,
+ and atmospheric phenomena, dealing with moral abstractions,
+ and rarely encountered by even shadowy specters of beings
+ outwardly resembling himself. There is measureless grandeur
+ and power in his moral speculations. There is intense
+ reality in his pictures of external nature. But though his
+ human characters are presented with great skill of
+ metaphysical analysis, they have rarely life or animation.
+ He is always the prominent, often the exclusive, object of
+ his own song.</p>
+
+ <p>Upon a mind so constituted, with its psychological
+ peculiarities so cherished and confirmed, the fortunes and
+ fates of others, and the stirring events of his time, made
+ vivid but very transient impressions. The conversation and
+ writing of contemporaries trained among books, and with the
+ faculty of speech more fully developed than that of thought,
+ seemed colorless and empty to one with&mdash;whom natural
+ objects and grandeurs were always present in such overpowering
+ force. Excluded by his social position from taking an active
+ part in the public events of the day, and repelled by the
+ emptiness of the then fashionable literature, he turned to
+ private and humble life as possessing at least a reality. But
+ he thus withheld himself from the contemplation of those great
+ mental excitements which only great public struggles can
+ awaken. He contracted a habit of exaggerating the importance of
+ every-day incidents and emotions. He accustomed himself to see
+ in men and in social relations only what he was predetermined
+ to see there, and to impute to them a value and importance
+ derived mainly from his own self-will. Even his natural good
+ taste contributed to confirm him in his error. The two
+ prevailing schools of literature in England, at that time, were
+ the trashy and mouthing writers who adopted the sounding
+ language of Johnson and Darwin, unenlivened by the vigorous
+ thought of either; and the "dead-sea apes" of that inflated,
+ sentimental, revolutionary style which Diderot had
+ unconsciously originated, and Kotzebue carried beyond the verge
+ of caricature. The right feeling and manly thought of
+ Wordsworth were disgusted by these shallow word-mongers, and he
+ flew to the other extreme. Under the influences&mdash;repulsive
+ and attractive&mdash;we have thus attempted to indicate, he
+ adopted the theory that as much of grandeur and profound
+ emotion was to be found in mere domestic incidents and
+ feelings, as on the more conspicuous stage of public life; and
+ that a bald and naked simplicity of language was the perfection
+ of style. Singularly enough, he was confirmed in these notions
+ by the very writer of the day whose own natural genius, more
+ than any of his contemporaries, impelled him to revel in great,
+ wild, supernatural conceptions; and to give utterance to them
+ in gorgeous language. Coleridge was perhaps the only
+ contemporary from whom Wordsworth ever took an opinion; and
+ that he did so from him, is mainly attributable to the fact
+ that Coleridge did little more than reproduce to him his own
+ notions, sometimes rectified by a subtler logic, but always
+ rendered more attractive by new and dazzling illustrations.</p>
+
+ <p>Fortunately it is out of the power of the most perverse
+ theory to spoil the true poet. The poems of Wordsworth must
+ continue to charm and elevate mankind, in defiance of his
+ crotchets, just as Luther, Henri Quatre, and other living
+ impersonations of poetry do, despite all quaint peculiarities
+ of the attire, the customs, or the opinions of their respective
+ ages, with which they were imbued. The spirit of truth and
+ poetry redeems, ennobles, hallows, every external form in which
+ it may be lodged. We may "pshaw" and "pooh" at Harry Gill and
+ the Idiot Boy; but the deep and tremulous tenderness of
+ sentiment, the strong-winged flight of fancy, the excelling and
+ unvarying purity, which pervade all the writings of Wordsworth,
+ and the exquisite melody of his lyrical poems, must ever
+ continue to attract and purify the mind. The very excesses into
+ which his one-sided theory betrayed him, acted as a useful
+ counter-agent to the prevailing bad taste of his time.</p>
+
+ <p>The Prelude may take a permanent place as one of the most
+ perfect of his compositions. It has much of the fearless
+ felicity of youth; and its imagery has the sharp and vivid
+ outline of ideas fresh from the brain. The subject&mdash;the
+ development of his own great powers&mdash;raises him above that
+ willful dallying with trivialties which repels us in some of
+ his other works. And there is real vitality in the theme, both
+ from our anxiety to know the course of such a mind, and from
+ the effect of an absorbing interest in himself excluding that
+ languor which sometimes seized him in his efforts to impart or
+ attribute interest to themes possessing little or none in
+ themselves. Its mere narrative, though often very homely, and
+ dealing in too many words, is often characterized also by
+ elevated imagination, and always by eloquence. The bustle of
+ London life, the prosaic uncouthness of its exterior, the
+ earnest heart that beats beneath it, the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page273"
+ id="page273"></a>[pg 273]</span> details even of its
+ commonest amusements, from Bartholomew Fair to Sadler's
+ Wells, are portrayed with simple force and delicate
+ discrimination; and for the most part skillfully contrasted
+ with the rural life of the poet's native home. There are
+ some truthful and powerful sketches of French character and
+ life, in the early revolutionary era. But above all, as
+ might have been anticipated, Wordsworth's heart revels in
+ the elementary beauty and grandeur of his mountain theme;
+ while his own simple history is traced with minute fidelity,
+ and is full of unflagging interest.</p>
+
+ <p>We have already adverted to the fact that this Prelude was
+ but the overture to a grander song which the poet has left, in
+ a great measure, unsung. Reverting to this consideration an
+ important fact seems to force itself upon our notice. The
+ creative power of Wordsworth would appear to have been
+ paralyzed after the publication of his Excursion. All his most
+ finished works precede that period. His later writings
+ generally lack the strength and freshness which we find in
+ those of an earlier date. Some may attribute this to his want
+ of the stimulus which the necessity of writing for a livelihood
+ imparts, and in part they may be right; but this is not the
+ whole secret. That his isolation from the stirring contact of
+ competition, that his utter disregard of contemporary events,
+ allowed his mind, which for perfect health's sake requires
+ constantly-renewed impulses from without, to subside into
+ comparative hebetude, there can be no doubt whatever. But the
+ main secret of the freezing up of his fountain of poetical
+ inspiration, we really take to have been his change of
+ politics. Wordsworth's muse was essentially liberal&mdash;one
+ may say, Jacobinical. That he was unconscious of any sordid
+ motive for his change, we sincerely believe; but as certainly
+ his conforming was the result less of reasonable conviction
+ than of willfulness. It was by a determined effort of his will
+ that he brought himself, to believe in the Church-and-State
+ notions which he latterly promulgated. Hence the want of
+ definite views, and of a living interest, which characterizes
+ all his writings subsequent to that change, when compared with
+ those of an earlier time. It was Wordsworth's wayward fate to
+ be patronized and puffed into notice by the champions of old
+ abuses, by the advocates of the pedantry of Oxford, and by the
+ maintainers of the despotism not even of Pitt but of
+ Castlereagh. It is already felt, however, that the poet whom
+ these men were mainly instrumental in bringing into notice,
+ will live in men's memories by exactly those of his writings
+ most powerful to undermine and overthrow their dull and faded
+ bigotries. Despite his own efforts, Wordsworth (as has been
+ said of Napoleon) is the child and champion of Jacobinism.
+ Though clothed in ecclesiastical formulas, his religion is
+ little more than the simple worship of nature; his noblest
+ moral flights are struggles to emancipate himself from
+ conventional usage; and the strong ground of his thoughts, as
+ of his style, is nature stripped of the gauds with which the
+ pupils of courts and circles would bedeck and be-ribbon it.
+ Even in the ranks of our opponents Wordsworth has been laboring
+ in our behalf.</p>
+
+ <p>It is in the record of his extra-academic life that the poet
+ soars his freest flight, in passages where we have a very echo
+ of the emotions of an emancipated worshiper of nature flying
+ back to his loved resorts. Apart from its poetic value, the
+ book is a graphical and interesting portraiture of the
+ struggles of an ingenuous and impetuous mind to arrive at a
+ clear insight into its own interior constitution and external
+ relations, and to secure the composure of self-knowledge and of
+ equally adjusted aspirations. As a poem it is likely to lay
+ fast and enduring hold on pure and aspiring intellects, and to
+ strengthen the claim of Wordsworth to endure with his land's
+ language.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE MONUMENT TO SIR ROBERT PEEL.</h2>
+
+ <h3>A LETTER FROM WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR,</h3>
+
+ <h4>TO THE EDITOR OF THE 'EXAMINER.'</h4>
+
+ <p>Now the fever hath somewhat subsided which came over the
+ people from the grave of Sir Robert Peel, there is room for a
+ few observations on his decease and on its consequences. All
+ public writers, I believe, have expatiated on his character,
+ comparing him with others who, within our times, have occupied
+ the same position. My own opinion has invariably been that he
+ was the wisest of all our statesmen; and certainly, though he
+ found reason to change his sentiments and his measures, he
+ changed them honestly, well weighed, always from conviction,
+ and always for the better. He has been compared, and seemingly
+ in no spirit of hostility or derision, with a Castlereagh, a
+ Perceval, an Addington. a Canning. Only one of these is worthy
+ of notice, namely Canning, whose brilliancy made his
+ shallowness less visible, and whose graces, of style and
+ elocution threw a vail over his unsoundness and lubricity. Sir
+ Robert Peel was no satirist or epigrammatist: he was only a
+ statesman in public life: only a virtuous and friendly man in
+ private. <i>Par negotiis, nee supra</i>. Walpole alone
+ possessed his talents for business. But neither Peel nor his
+ family was enriched from the spoils of his country; Walpole
+ spent in building and pictures more than double the value of
+ his hereditary estate, and left the quadruple to his
+ descendants.</p>
+
+ <p>Dissimilar from Walpole, and from commoner and coarser men
+ who occupied the same office, Peel forbade that a name which he
+ had made illustrious should be degraded and stigmatized by any
+ title of nobility. For he knew that all those titles had their
+ origin and nomenclature from military services, and belong to
+ military men, like their epaulets and spurs and chargers. They
+ sound well enough against the sword and helmet, but strangely
+ in law-courts and cathedrals: but, reformer as he
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page274"
+ id="page274"></a>[pg 274]</span> was, he could not reform
+ all this; he could only keep clear of it in his own
+ person.</p>
+
+ <p>I now come to the main object of my letter.</p>
+
+ <p>Subscriptions are advertised for the purpose of raising
+ monuments to Sir Robert Peel; and a motion has been made in
+ Parliament for one in Westminster Abbey at the public expense,
+ Whatever may be the precedents, surely the house of God should
+ contain no object but such as may remind us of His presence and
+ our duty to Him. Long ago I proposed that ranges of statues and
+ busts should commemorate the great worthies of our country. All
+ the lower part of our National Gallery might be laid open for
+ this purpose. Even the best monuments in Westminster Abbey and
+ St. Paul's are deformities to the edifice. Let us not continue
+ this disgrace. Deficient as we are in architects, we have many
+ good statuaries, and we might well employ them on the statues
+ of illustrious commanders, and the busts of illustrious
+ statesmen and writers. Meanwhile our cities, and especially the
+ commercial, would, I am convinced, act more wisely, and more
+ satisfactorily to the relict of the deceased, if, instead of
+ statues, they erected schools and almshouses, with an
+ inscription to his memory.</p>
+
+ <p>We glory in about sixty whose busts and statues may occupy
+ what are now the "deep solitudes and awful cells" in our
+ national gallery. Our literary men of eminence are happily more
+ numerous than the political or the warlike, or both together.
+ There is only one class of them which might be advantageously
+ excluded, namely, the theological; and my reasons are these.
+ First, their great talents were chiefly employed on
+ controversy; secondly, and consequently, their images would
+ excite dogmatical discord. Every sect of the Anglican Church,
+ and every class of dissenters, complaining of undue
+ preferences. Painture and sculpture lived in the midst of
+ corruption, lived throughout it, and seemed indeed to draw
+ vitality from it, as flowers the most delicate from noxious
+ air; but they collapsed at the searching breath of free
+ inquiry, and could not abide persecution. The torch of
+ Philosophy never kindled the suffocating fagot, under whose
+ smoke Theology was mistaken for Religion. Theology had, until
+ now, been speculative and quiescent: she abandoned to
+ Philosophy these humbler qualities: instead of allaying and
+ dissipating, as Philosophy had always done, she excited and she
+ directed animosities. Oriental in her parentage, and keeping up
+ her wide connections in that country, she acquired there all
+ the artifices most necessary to the furtherance of her designs:
+ among the rest was ventriloquism, which she quite perfected,
+ making her words seem to sound from above and from below and
+ from every side around. Ultimately, when men had fallen on
+ their faces at this miracle, she assumed the supreme power.
+ Kings were her lackeys, and nations the dust under her
+ palfrey's hoof. By her sentence Truth was gagged, scourged,
+ branded, cast down on the earth in manacles; and Fortitude, who
+ had stood at Truth's side, was fastened with nails and pulleys
+ to the stake. I would not revive by any images, in the abode of
+ the graceful and the gentle Arts, these sorrowful
+ reminiscences. The vicissitudes of the world appear to be
+ bringing round again the spectral Past. Let us place great men
+ between it and ourselves: they all are tutelar: not the warrior
+ and the statesman only; not only the philosopher; but also the
+ historian who follows them step by step, and the poet who
+ secures us from peril and dejection by his counter-charm.
+ Philosophers in most places are unwelcome: but there is no
+ better reason why Shaftesbury and Hobbes should be excluded
+ from our gallery, than why Epicurus should have been from
+ Cicero's or Zeno from Lucullus's. Of our sovereigns, I think
+ Alfred, Cromwell, and William III alone are eligible; and they,
+ because they opposed successfully the subverters of the laws.
+ Three viceroys of Ireland will deservedly be placed in the same
+ receptacle; Sir John Perrot, Lord Chesterfield, and (in due
+ time) the last Lord-Deputy. One Speaker, one only, of the
+ Parliament; he without whom no Parliament would be now
+ existing; he who declared to Henry IV. that until all public
+ grievances were removed, no subsidy should be granted. The name
+ of this Speaker may be found in Rapin; English historians talk
+ about facts, forgetting men.</p>
+
+ <p>Admirals and generals are numerous and conspicuous. Drake,
+ Blake, Rodney, Jervis, Nelson, Collingwood; the subduer of
+ Algiers beaten down for the French to occupy: and the defender
+ of Acre, the first who defeated, discomfited, routed, broke,
+ and threw into shameful flight, Bonaparte. Our generals are
+ Marlborough, Peterborough, Wellington, and that successor to
+ his fame in India, who established the empire that was falling
+ from us, who achieved in a few days two arduous victories, who
+ never failed in any enterprise, who accomplished the most
+ difficult with the smallest expenditure of blood, who corrected
+ the disorders of the military, who gave the soldier an example
+ of temperance, the civilian of simplicity and frugality, and
+ whose sole (but exceedingly great) reward, was the approbation
+ of our greatest man.</p>
+
+ <p>With these come the statesmen of the Commonwealth, the
+ students of Bacon, the readers of Philip Sidney, the companions
+ of Algernon, the precursors of Locke and Newton. Opposite to
+ them are Chaucer, Spenser, Shakspeare, Milton; lower in
+ dignity, Dryden, Pope, Gray, Goldsmith, Cowper, Scott, Burns,
+ Shelley, Southey, Byron, Wordsworth; the author of
+ <i>Hohenlinden</i> and the <i>Battle of the Baltic</i>; and the
+ glorious woman who equaled these, two animated works in her
+ <i>Ivan</i> and <i>Casabianca</i>. Historians have but recently
+ risen up among us: and long be it before, by command of
+ Parliament, the chisel grates on the brow of a Napier, a Grote,
+ and Macaulay!</p>
+
+ <p class="author">WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page275"
+ id="page275"></a>[pg 275]</span>
+
+ <h4>[From the Spectator.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>JURISPRUDENCE OF THE MOGULS: THE PANDECTS OF
+ AURUNGZEBE.<a id="footnotetag4"
+ name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a></h2>
+
+ <p>THE Government of British India have not neglected to
+ countenance the study of the indigenous and other systems of
+ law which they found established on acquiring possession of the
+ country. Warren Hastings was the first to recognize the value
+ of such knowledge; and to his encouragement, if not to his
+ incitement, we are indebted for the compilation of Hindoo law
+ translated by Halbed, Jones, Colebrooke, Macnaghten, Hamilton,
+ and a pretty numerous body of accomplished men, of whom Mr.
+ Baillie is the most recently enrolled laborer in the vineyard,
+ have carried on the good work. More comprehensive and accurate
+ views of Hindoo law have gradually been developed, and the more
+ advanced and more influential system of Mahometan jurisprudence
+ has also shared in the attention of European students. There
+ is, however, still much to be done in this field of inquiry; as
+ a few remarks on the nature of the present publication, and the
+ source whence its materials are derived, will show.</p>
+
+ <p>The law of Mahometan jurists is for India pretty much what
+ the Roman law is for Scotland and the Continental nations of
+ Europe. Savigny has shown how, throughout all the territories
+ formerly included within the limits of the Roman Empire, a
+ large amount of Roman legal doctrines and forms of procedure
+ continued to be operative after the Empire's subversion. The
+ revival of the study of the Roman law, as embodied in the
+ compilations of Justinian, by the doctors of the school of
+ Bologna, augmented and systematized these remnants of Roman
+ jurisprudence, and extended their application to countries
+ which (like great part of Germany) had never been subjected to
+ the sway of Rome. In like manner, throughout that part of India
+ which was permanently subdued and organized by the Mogul
+ dynasty, and also those parts in which minor Islamitic states
+ were established, the organization of the courts of justice,
+ and the legal opinions of the individuals who officiated in
+ them, necessarily introduced a large amount of Mahometan
+ jurisprudence. This element of the law of India was augmented
+ and systematized by the writings of private jurists, and by
+ compilations undertaken by command of princes. As with the
+ Roman jurisprudence in Europe, so with Mahometan jurisprudence
+ in India, only so much of its doctrines and forms could at any
+ time be considered to possess legal force as had been reenacted
+ by the local sovereigns, or introduced by judges in the form of
+ decisions. A systematic knowledge of the whole body of
+ Mahometan law was important to the Indian lawyer, as enabling
+ him more thoroughly to understand the system, and its various
+ isolated doctrines; but the whole body of that law was at no
+ time binding in India. Since the establishment of British sway,
+ only so much of the Mahometan law as has kept its ground in the
+ practice of the courts, or has been reenacted by the
+ "regulations" or "ordinances" of the Anglo-Indian Government,
+ <i>is law</i>; the rest is only valuable as the "antiquities of
+ the law," which help to trace the origin of what survives, and
+ thereby throw light upon what in it is obscure or doubtful.</p>
+
+ <p>Among the most valuable, if not indeed the most valuable of
+ the compilations from which we may obtain a knowledge of
+ Mahometan jurisprudence, is the "Futawa Alumgeeree," mentioned
+ in Mr. Baillie's title-page. Its value is not confined to the
+ purposes of those who would make themselves acquainted with
+ Mahometan jurisprudence in the peculiar form it assumed in
+ India. It is highly esteemed throughout Islam, and is quoted
+ even by the doctors of Mecca as the Futawa-i-hind, or the
+ Indian <i>responsa prudentum</i>. It was compiled by the orders
+ of the Emperor Aurungzebe. It is a digest of the "Futawa" of
+ the most celebrated jurists of the Hanifeh (or, as Mr. Baillie
+ spells it, <i>Hunefeeah</i>) sect or school. Mr. Baillie
+ informs us in his preface, that "<i>futawa</i> is the plural
+ form of <i>futwa</i>, a term in common use in Mahometan
+ countries to signify an exposition of law by a public officer
+ called the <i>mooftee</i>, or a case submitted to him by the
+ <i>kazee</i> or judge." The "futwa," therefore, seems to
+ correspond not so much with our English "decisions" or
+ "precedents" as with the "responsa prudentum," that fertile
+ source of doctrines in the Roman law. The "Futawa Alumgeeree"
+ consequently resembles the Pandects of Justinian in being a
+ systematical arrangement of selections from juridical
+ authorities&mdash;compiled by Imperial authority; but differs
+ from it in this, that the selections are made exclusively from
+ the "responsa prudentum," and a few legal treatises, whereas
+ Justinian's digest combined with those excerpts from judicial
+ decisions, prætorian edicts, &amp;c. With this distinction, we
+ may regard the "Futawa Alumgeeree" as the Pandects or Digest of
+ Mahometan Law. As in the Roman work of that name, to each
+ extract is appended the name of the original work from which it
+ is taken; and the whole of them are so arranged as to form a
+ complete digest of Mahometan law.</p>
+
+ <p>A work of this kind is invaluable to the student who would
+ make himself master of Mahometan jurisprudence as a system. But
+ great care must be taken not to misapprehend the exact nature
+ of the knowledge to be obtained from it. The "Futawa
+ Alumgeeree" is a systematic exposition of the principles of
+ Mahometan law; it assuredly does not enable us to ascertain
+ what doctrines of that law are
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page276"
+ id="page276"></a>[pg 276]</span> now of legal force in
+ India, or even what doctrines have at any time had force in
+ India. It does not appear to have been Aurungzebe's
+ intention to promulgate it as a code, but to present it to
+ lawyers as a complete text-book. Even if he did by ordinance
+ attribute to it the power of law, such ordinance was only
+ effectual at any time in the provinces of the Mogul Empire;
+ and since the disruption of that empire, it has been
+ superseded and modified by laws and the practice of
+ law-courts in the various independent states erected on its
+ ruins.</p>
+
+ <p>Again the general scholar must be on his guard against the
+ delusion that he will find in this digest materials
+ illustrative of the social condition of India under the Mogul
+ dynasty. The juridical works excerpted in it are almost all
+ foreign to Hindostan; the special cases illustrative of
+ abstract doctrines are taken from other countries, and many of
+ them from ages antecedent to the invasion of India by the
+ Moguls.</p>
+
+ <p>Though Persian was the court language of the Mogul dynasty,
+ there is scarcely any Persian element in Aurungzebe's legal
+ compilation. The Shiite views of jurisprudence, as of theology,
+ prevailed in Persia; the "Futawa Alumgeeree" is strictly
+ Sunnite. It is not difficult to account for this.&mdash;The
+ Mahometan conquerors of India were mainly of Turkish or Tartar
+ race; they came from Turan, a region which from time immemorial
+ has stood in antagonistic relations to Iran or Persia. This may
+ account for the fact that the races of Turan which have
+ embraced Mahometanism have uniformly adhered to the Sunnite
+ sect&mdash;the sect most hostile to the Persian Shias&mdash;not
+ only when they settled in the countries where the Sunnite sect
+ originated, but when they remained in their native regions. The
+ views of the Sunnites were first promulgated and have prevailed
+ most extensively in those regions of Islam which were once part
+ of the Roman empire, which nominally at least was Christian;
+ those of the Shiites, in the countries where, under the
+ Sassanides and Arsacidæ, the doctrines of Zoroaster
+ predominated. The Euphrates forms pretty nearly the line of
+ demarkation between them.</p>
+
+ <p>The Caliphs dominated over both countries and over both
+ sects. Under their orthodox protection the Sunnite doctrines
+ were able to strike root in Balkh and Samarkand&mdash;the
+ ancient Turan, and therefore hostile to Iran and Persia. When
+ Islam was reorganized after the anarchy which ensued upon the
+ overthrow of the Caliphs, Persia became the appanage of the
+ Sophis or Shiite dynasty; the regions to the West of the
+ Euphrates&mdash;the ci-devant Roman Empire&mdash;acknowledged
+ the rule of the Turkish dynasties, which were Sunnite. On the
+ Oxus and further East&mdash;the old Turan&mdash;the Sunnite
+ sect was sufficiently strong to defy the efforts of the Shiite
+ sovereigns of Persia to eradicate it. The doctors of Samarkand
+ and Bokhara continued (and continue) as orthodox Sunnites as
+ those of Kufah, Mecca, and Stamboul.</p>
+
+ <p>Accordingly, we find the authorities excerpted in the
+ "Futawa Alumgeeree" consist almost exclusively of two classes;
+ they are either the immediate disciples of Hanifa at Kufah and
+ Bagdad, or the jurists of Samarkand and Bokhara. The law-cases
+ they expounded are such as had originated, or might have
+ originated, in those countries&mdash;in Babylonia or Turan. And
+ they are for the most part taken from a state of society, and
+ illustrative of social relations, which prevailed in these
+ countries at a period long antecedent to that of Aurunzebe. To
+ attempt to illustrate the civil and social condition of India,
+ under that Emperor by their aid, would be as preposterous as to
+ attempt to illustrate the civil and social condition of those
+ parts of Germany where the Roman law still possesses authority
+ from cases recorded in the Pandects of Justinian.</p>
+
+ <p>The real use and value of the "Futawa Alumgeeree" may be
+ briefly explained. In every country in Europe where the Roman
+ law is still recognized as more or less authoritative&mdash;and
+ indeed in every country where the common law has borrowed more
+ or less from the Roman&mdash;an acquaintance with the system of
+ Roman jurisprudence as it is embodied in the law-books of
+ Justinian has its value for the scientific lawyer. In like
+ manner a knowledge of Mahometan jurisprudence as embodied in
+ the "Futawa Alumgeeree" cannot fail to be instructive for the
+ lawyers of all the countries of Islam, and the lawyers of
+ India, where so much of the existing practical law has been
+ derived from that source. To the general scholar who wishes to
+ master the civil history of Arabia and Babylonia, in which the
+ Sunnite sect, and more particularly the Hanifite subdivision of
+ it, originated, or to familiarize himself with the moral
+ theories which regulate the judgments and actions of the modern
+ Turks, Turcomans, Arabians, and Egyptians, the digest of
+ Aurungzeebee is also a valuable repertory of facts and
+ illustrations.</p>
+
+ <p>For this reason we incline to be of opinion that Mr. Baillie
+ is mistaken in thinking that a selection from the two books of
+ the "Futawa Alumgeeree," which embrace the subject of "sale"
+ can have much utility for Indian practitioners. It does not
+ follow, because a legal doctrine is declared sound in this
+ work, that it is or ever has been practically applicable in
+ India. As an authoritative declaration of legal doctrines, the
+ book is as likely to mislead as to guide aright. On the other
+ hand, as an exposition of the general principles of Mahometan
+ law, even with regard to sale, it is necessarily imperfect. The
+ work from which it is taken is a collection of legal opinions,
+ which had in their day the force of judicial decisions&mdash;of
+ something equivalent to the "responsa prudentum" of Roman
+ jurisprudence. Each is expounded on its own merits; and all the
+ special doctrines involved
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page277"
+ id="page277"></a>[pg 277]</span> in it are laid down. Hence
+ it comes, that much that is calculated to throw light on the
+ principles of the law of sale must be sought under other
+ heads; and that much included in the chapters ostensibly
+ treating of sale refers to other topics. As part of an
+ entire digest of the law compiled on the same principle as
+ that of Justinian, the two books relating to sale are
+ sufficient; but for an isolated treatise on "sale," they
+ contain at once too much and too little.</p>
+
+ <p>Nevertheless, we welcome Mr. Baillie's publication as a
+ valuable addition to juridical and even to general literature.
+ The translation, though not by any means free from defects, is
+ the best specimen of a really good Mahometan law-book that has
+ yet been published. The defects to which we allude are twofold.
+ In the first place, though Mr. Baillie mentions that in the
+ original the name of the treatise from which it is taken is
+ appended to every excerpt, he has not in his translation given
+ those references. His work is not therefore what the original
+ is, a Chrestomathia of the best Arabian jurists&mdash;a
+ succedaneum for their complete works&mdash;an illustration of
+ Arabic legal literature. Again, he is often loose and
+ vacillating in the use of the English words he has selected as
+ corresponding to the technical phraseology of the Arabian
+ jurists, and sometimes infelicitous in the selection of his
+ English terms. It has occurred to us that he would have
+ succeeded better in rendering the exact meaning of his
+ originals, had he availed himself more of technical phrases of
+ the Roman law which are familiar to all European jurists. Is
+ does not occur to us that he would by doing so have been in
+ danger of Romanizing the Mahometan to an extent that might
+ mislead. Mill, in his History of British India, has noticed how
+ closely the classification of the Mahometan approaches to that
+ of the Roman jurists. An attentive perusal of Mr. Baillie's
+ volume has convinced us that the analogy in the substance is
+ quite as strong as in the arrangements. This fact seems
+ susceptible of being accounted for on historical grounds.
+ Mahometanism is in fact a sect or heresy of Christianity. The
+ views and sentiments, the aggregate of which make up the body
+ of Christian opinion, are not all of Jewish or Christian
+ origin. They are the moral creed of societies whose opinions
+ and civilization have been derived in part from other sources.
+ The philosophy of Greece and the law of Rome have contributed
+ in nearly equal proportions to the theosophy of the Hebrews.
+ The jurisprudence of all Christian nations is mainly referable
+ to Rome for its origin, and the same is the case with at least
+ the Sunnite Mahometans. The nations of Islam took only their
+ religious creed from their Prophet; the jurists of Kufah
+ retained and expounded the civil law which prevailed among them
+ before his time. That law was the law of the Greek Empire,
+ developed in the same way as that of the Western Empire under
+ the judicial and legislative auspices of Roman Prætors and
+ Pro-Consuls, aided by Roman jurists. Theophilus, one of the
+ jurists employed by Justinian for his compilations, lectured in
+ Greek on the Institutions; and the substance of his lectures
+ still survives under the name of the Paraphrase of Theophilus.
+ The Greek edicts and novels of Justinian's successors are
+ mainly Roman law. Throughout the Byzantine Empire (within which
+ Kufah and the region where Bagdad now stands were included)
+ Roman law was paramount, and Roman jurists were numerous. The
+ arrangement, the subdivisions, and the substance of Mahometan
+ jurisprudence, show that it has been principally derived from
+ this source. Some of its doctrines are doubtless aboriginal
+ engrafted on the law of the Empire; and it has been modified in
+ some respects to reconcile it to the religious dictates of
+ Islam, just as the law of Pagan Rome was modified after
+ Christianity became the religion of the Empire. But still
+ Mahometan jurisprudence retains undeniably the lineaments of
+ its parentage.</p>
+
+ <p>This consideration places in a strong light the importance
+ of the study of Mahometan law. The increasing intimacy of our
+ relations with independent Mahometan states makes it of the
+ utmost consequence that we should entertain correct views of
+ their opinions and institutions; and no better key to the
+ knowledge of both can be found than in the historical study of
+ their law. Again, we are called upon to legislate and supply
+ judges for British India, a large proportion of the inhabitants
+ of which are Mahometans. Even the Hindoos of the former Mogul
+ Empire have adopted many legal forms and doctrines from their
+ conquerors. A minute and accurate acquaintance with Mahometan
+ jurisprudence is an indispensable preliminary to judicious
+ legislation for British India. For these reasons, it could be
+ wished that Mr. Baillie, or some other equally accomplished
+ laborer in that field, would set himself to do for the "Futawa
+ Alumgeeree" what Heineccius and other modern civilians have
+ done for the law-books of Justinian&mdash;present the European
+ public with an elegant and exact abstract of its contents.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>The following, from Southey's "Gridiron," now first
+ published in his Memoirs, ought to be set to music for the
+ Beef-Steak Club:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"Now the perfect Steak prepare!</p>
+
+ <p>Now the appointed rites begin!</p>
+
+ <p>Cut it from the pinguid rump.</p>
+
+ <p>Not too thick and not too thin;</p>
+
+ <p>Somewhat to the thick inclining,</p>
+
+ <p>Yet the thick and thin between,</p>
+
+ <p>That the gods, when they are dining,</p>
+
+ <p>May comment the golden mean.</p>
+
+ <p>Ne'er till now have they been blest</p>
+
+ <p>With a beef-steak daily drest:</p>
+
+ <p>Ne'er till this auspicious morn</p>
+
+ <p>When the Gridiron was born."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>The most ignorant of the world's fools are those called
+ "knowing ones," a phrase satirical with the very glee of
+ irony.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page278"
+ id="page278"></a>[pg 278]</span>
+
+ <h2>THE MYSTERIOUS COMPACT.</h2>
+
+ <h3>A FREE TRANSLATION FROM THE GERMAN.</h3>
+
+ <h4>PART II&mdash;CONCLUSION</h4>
+
+ <h4>(Concluded from page 192.)</h4>
+
+ <p>Several weeks passed away. Edward spared no pains to
+ discover some trace of the lady in question, but all in vain.
+ No one in the neighborhood knew the family; and he had already
+ determined, as soon as the spring began, to ask for leave of
+ absence, and to travel through the country where Ferdinand had
+ formed his unfortunate attachment, when a circumstance occurred
+ which coincided strangely with his wishes. His
+ commanding-officer gave him a commission to purchase some
+ horses, which, to his great consolation, led him exactly into
+ that part of the country where Ferdinand had been quartered. It
+ was a market-town of some importance. He was to remain there
+ some time, which suited his plans exactly; and he made use of
+ every leisure hour to cultivate the acquaintance of the
+ officers, to inquire into Ferdinand's connections and
+ acquaintance, to trace the mysterious name if possible, and
+ thus fulfill a sacred duty. For to him it appeared a sacred
+ duty to execute the commission of his departed friend&mdash;to
+ get possession of the ring, and to be the means, as he hoped,
+ of giving rest to the troubled spirit of Ferdinand.</p>
+
+ <p>Already, on the evening of the second day, he was sitting in
+ the coffee-room with burghers of the place and officers of
+ different regiments.</p>
+
+ <p>A newly-arrived cornet was inquiring whether the
+ neighborhood were a pleasant one, of an infantry officer, one
+ of Hallberg's corps. "For," said he, "I come from charming
+ quarters."</p>
+
+ <p>"There is not much to boast of," replied the captain. "There
+ is no good fellowship, no harmony among the people."</p>
+
+ <p>"I will tell you why that is," cried an animated lieutenant;
+ "that is because there is no house as a point of reunion, where
+ one is sure to find and make acquaintances, and to be amused,
+ and where each individual ascertains his own merits by the
+ effect they produce on society at large."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, we have had nothing of that kind since the Varniers
+ left us," said the captain.</p>
+
+ <p>"Varniers!" cried Edward, with an eagerness he could ill
+ conceal. "The name sounds foreign."</p>
+
+ <p>"They were not Germans&mdash;they were emigrants from the
+ Netherlands, who had left their country on account of political
+ troubles," replied the captain.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, that was a charming house," cried the lieutenant,
+ "cultivation, refinement, a sufficient competency, the whole
+ style of establishment free from ostentation, yet most
+ comfortable; and Emily&mdash;Emily was the soul of the whole
+ house."</p>
+
+ <p>"Emily Varnier!" echoed Edward, while his heart beat fast
+ and loud.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, yes! that was the name of the prettiest, most
+ graceful, most amiable girl in the world," said the
+ lieutenant.</p>
+
+ <p>"You seem bewitched by the fair Emily," observed the
+ cornet.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think you would have been too, had you known her,"
+ rejoined the lieutenant; "she was the jewel of the whole
+ society. Since she went away there is no bearing their stupid
+ balls and assemblies."</p>
+
+ <p>"But you must not forget," the captain resumed once more,
+ "when you attribute everything to the charms of the fair girl,
+ that not only she but the whole family has disappeared, and we
+ have lost that house which formed, as you say, so charming a
+ point of reunion in our neighborhood."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, yes; exactly so," said an old gentleman, a civilian,
+ who had been silent hitherto; "the Varniers' house is a great
+ loss in the country, where such losses are not so easily
+ replaced as in a large town. First, the father died, then came
+ the cousin and carried the daughter away."</p>
+
+ <p>"And did this cousin marry the young lady?" inquired Edward,
+ in a tone tremulous with agitation.</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly," answered the old gentleman; "it was a very
+ great match for her; he bought land to the value of half a
+ million about here."</p>
+
+ <p>"And he was an agreeable, handsome man, we must all allow,"
+ remarked the captain.</p>
+
+ <p>"But she would never have married him," exclaimed the
+ lieutenant, "if poor Hallberg had not died."</p>
+
+ <p>Edward was breathless, but he did not speak a word.</p>
+
+ <p>"She would have been compelled to do so in any case," said
+ the old man; "the father had destined them for each other from
+ infancy, and people say he made his daughter take a vow as he
+ lay on his death-bed."</p>
+
+ <p>"That sounds terrible," said Edward; "and does not speak
+ much for the good feeling of the cousin."</p>
+
+ <p>"She could not have fulfilled her father's wish," interposed
+ the lieutenant; "her heart was bound up in Hallberg, and
+ Hallberg's in her. Few people, perhaps, know this, for the
+ lovers were prudent and discreet; I, however, knew it all."</p>
+
+ <p>"And why was she not allowed to follow the inclination of
+ her heart?" asked Edward.</p>
+
+ <p>"Because her father had promised her," replied the captain:
+ "you used just now the word terrible; it is a fitting
+ expression, according to my version of the matter. It appears
+ that one of the branches of the house of Varnier had committed
+ an act of injustice toward another, and Emily's father
+ considered it a point of conscience to make reparation. Only
+ through the marriage of his daughter with a member of the
+ ill-used branch could that act be obliterated and made up for,
+ and, therefore, he pressed the matter sorely."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, and the headlong passion which Emily inspired her
+ cousin with abetted his
+ designs."</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page279"
+ id="page279"></a>[pg 279]</span>
+
+ <p>"Then her cousin loved Emily?" inquired Edward.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, to desperation," was the reply. "He was a rival to her
+ shadow, who followed her not more closely than he did. He was
+ jealous of the rose that she placed on her bosom."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then poor Emily is not likely to have a calm life with such
+ a man," said Edward.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come," interposed the old gentleman, with en authoritative
+ tone, "I think you, gentlemen, go a little too far. I know
+ D'Effernay; he is an honest, talented man, very rich, indeed,
+ and generous; he anticipates his wife in every wish. She has
+ the most brilliant house in the neighborhood, and lives like a
+ princess."</p>
+
+ <p>"And trembles," insisted the lieutenant, "when she hears her
+ husband's footstep. What good can riches be to her? She would
+ have been happier with Hallberg."</p>
+
+ <p>"I do not know," rejoined the captain, "why you always
+ looked upon that attachment as something so decided. It never
+ appeared so to me; and you yourself say that D'Effernay is very
+ jealous, which I believe him to be, for he is a man of strong
+ passions; and this very circumstance causes me to doubt the
+ rest of your story. Jealousy has sharp eyes, and D'Effernay
+ would have discovered a rival in Hallberg, and not proved
+ himself the friend he always was to our poor comrade."</p>
+
+ <p>"That does not follow at all," replied the lieutenant, "it
+ only proves that the lovers were very cautious. So far,
+ however, I agree with you. I believe that if D'Effernay had
+ suspected anything of the kind he would have murdered
+ Hallberg."</p>
+
+ <p>A shudder passed through Edward's veins.</p>
+
+ <p>"Murdered!" he repeated, in a hollow voice; "do you not
+ judge too harshly of this man when you hint the possibility of
+ such a thing?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That does he, indeed," said the old man; "these gentlemen
+ are all angry with D'Effernay, because he has carried off the
+ prettiest girl in the country. But I am told he does not intend
+ remaining where he now lives. He wishes to sell his
+ estates."</p>
+
+ <p>"Really," inquired the captain, "and where is he going?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I have no idea," replied the other; "but he is selling
+ everything off. One manor is already disposed of, and there
+ have been people already in negotiation for the place where he
+ resides."</p>
+
+ <p>The conversation now turned on the value of D'Effernay's
+ property, and of land in general, &amp;c.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward had gained materials enough for reflection; he rose
+ soon, took leave of the company, and gave himself up, in the
+ solitude of his own room, to the torrent of thought and feeling
+ which that night's conversation had let loose. So, then, it was
+ true; Emily Varnier was no fabulous being! Hallberg had loved
+ her, his love had been returned, but a cruel destiny had
+ separated them. How wonderfully did all he had heard explain
+ the dream at the Castle, and how completely did that supply
+ what had remained doubtful, or had been omitted in the
+ officers' narrative. Emily Varnier, doubtless, possessed that
+ ring, to gain possession of which now seemed his bounden duty.
+ He resolved not to delay its fulfillment a moment, however
+ difficult it might prove, and he only reflected on the best
+ manner in which he should perform the task allotted to him. The
+ sale of the property appeared to him a favorable opening. The
+ fame of his father's wealth made it probable that the son might
+ wish to be purchaser of a fine estate, like the one in
+ question. He spoke openly of such a project, made inquiries of
+ the old gentleman, and the captain, who seemed to him to know
+ most about the matter; and as his duties permitted a trip for a
+ week or so, he started immediately, and arrived on the second
+ day at the place of his destination. He stopped in the public
+ house in the village to inquire if the estate lay near, and
+ whether visitors were allowed to see the house and grounds.
+ Mine host, who doubtless had had his directions, sent a
+ messenger immediately to the Castle, who returned before long,
+ accompanied by a chasseur, in a splendid livery, who invited
+ the stranger to the Castle in the name of M. D'Effernay.</p>
+
+ <p>This was exactly what Edward wished, and expected. Escorted
+ by the chasseur he soon arrived at the Castle, and was shown up
+ a spacious staircase into a modern, almost, one might say, a
+ magnificently-furnished room, where the master of the house
+ received him. It was evening, toward the end of winter, the
+ shades of twilight had already fallen, and Edward found himself
+ suddenly in a room quite illuminated with wax candles.
+ D'Effernay stood in the middle of the saloon, a tall, thin
+ young man. A proud bearing seemed to bespeak a consciousness of
+ his own merit, or at least of his position. His features were
+ finely formed, but the traces of strong passion, or of internal
+ discontent, had lined them prematurely.</p>
+
+ <p>In figure he was very slender, and the deep-sunken eye, the
+ gloomy frown which was fixed between his brows, and the thin
+ lips, had no very prepossessing expression, and yet there was
+ something imposing in the whole appearance of the man.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward thanked him civilly for his invitation, spoke of his
+ idea of being a purchaser as a motive for his visit, and gave
+ his own, and his father's name. D'Effernay seemed pleased with
+ all he said. He had known Edward's family in the metropolis; he
+ regretted that the late hour would render it impossible for
+ them to visit the property to-day, and concluded by pressing
+ the lieutenant to pass the night at the Castle. On the morrow
+ they would proceed to business, and now he would have the
+ pleasure of presenting his wife to the visitor. Edward's heart
+ beat violently&mdash;at length then he would see her! Had he
+ loved <span class="pagenum"><a name="page280"
+ id="page280"></a>[pg 280]</span> her himself he could not
+ have gone to meet her with more agitation. D'Effernay led
+ his guest through many rooms, which were all as well
+ furnished, and as brilliantly lighted as the first he had
+ entered. At length he opened the door of a small boudoir,
+ where there was no light, save that which the faint, gray
+ twilight imparted through the windows.</p>
+
+ <p>The simple arrangement of this little room, with dark green
+ walls, only relieved by some engravings and coats of arms,
+ formed a pleasing contrast to Edward's eyes, after the glaring
+ splendor of the other apartments. From behind a piano-forte, at
+ which she had been seated in a recess, rose a tall, slender
+ female form, in a white dress of extreme simplicity.</p>
+
+ <p>"My love," said D'Effernay, "I bring you a welcome guest,
+ Lieutenant Wensleben, who is willing to purchase the
+ estate."</p>
+
+ <p>Emily courtesied; the friendly twilight concealed the
+ shudder that passed over her whole frame, as she heard the
+ familiar name which aroused so many recollections.</p>
+
+ <p>She bade the stranger welcome, in a low, sweet voice, whose
+ tremulous accents were not unobserved by Edward; and while the
+ husband made some further observation, he had leisure to
+ remark, as well as the fading light would allow, the fair
+ outline of her oval face, the modest grace of her movements,
+ her pretty, nymph-like figure&mdash;in fact, all those charms
+ which seemed familiar to him through the impassioned
+ descriptions of his friend.</p>
+
+ <p>"But what can this fancy be, to sit in the dark?" asked
+ D'Effernay, in no mild tone; "you know that is a thing I cannot
+ bear." and with these words, and without waiting his wife's
+ answer, he rang the bell over her sofa, and ordered lights.</p>
+
+ <p>While these were placed on the table the company sat down by
+ the fire, and conversation commenced. By the full light Edward
+ could perceive all Emily's real beauty&mdash;her pale, but
+ lovely face, the sad expression of her large blue eyes, so
+ often concealed by their dark lashes, and then raised, with a
+ look full of feeling, a sad, pensive, intellectual expression;
+ and he admired the simplicity of her dress, and of every object
+ that surrounded her: all appeared to him to bespeak a superior
+ mind.</p>
+
+ <p>They had not sat long, before D'Effernay was called away.
+ One of his people had something important, something urgent to
+ communicate to him, which admitted of no delay. A look of
+ fierce anger almost distorted his features; in an instant his
+ thin lips moved rapidly, and Edward thought he muttered some
+ curses between his teeth. He left the room, but in so doing, he
+ cast a glance of mistrust and ill-temper on the handsome
+ stranger with whom he was compelled to leave his wife alone.
+ Edward observed it all. All that he had seen to-day, all that
+ he had heard from his comrades of the man's passionate and
+ suspicious disposition, convinced him that his stay here would
+ not be long, and that perhaps a second opportunity of speaking
+ alone with Emily might not offer itself.</p>
+
+ <p>He determined, therefore, to profit by the present moment;
+ and no sooner had D'Effernay left the room, than he began to
+ tell Emily she was not so complete a stranger to him as it
+ might seem; that long before he had had the pleasure of seeing
+ her&mdash;even before he had heard her name&mdash;she was known
+ to him, so to speak, in spirit.</p>
+
+ <p>Madame D'Effernay was moved. She was silent for a time, and
+ gazed fixedly on the ground; then she looked up; the mist of
+ unshed tears dimmed her blue eyes, and her bosom heaved with
+ the sigh she could not suppress.</p>
+
+ <p>"To me also the name of Wensleben is familiar. There is a
+ link between our souls. Your friend has often spoken of you to
+ me."</p>
+
+ <p>But she could say no more; tears checked her speech.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward's eyes were glistening also, and the two companions
+ were silent; at length he began once more:</p>
+
+ <p>"My dear lady," he said, "my time is short, and I have a
+ solemn message to deliver to you. Will you allow me to do so
+ now?"</p>
+
+ <p>"To me?" she asked, in a tone of astonishment.</p>
+
+ <p>"From my departed friend," answered Edward,
+ emphatically.</p>
+
+ <p>"From Ferdinand?&mdash;and that now&mdash;after&mdash;" she
+ shrunk back, as if in terror.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now that he is no longer with us, do you mean? I found the
+ message in his papers, which have been intrusted to me only
+ lately, since I have been in the neighborhood. Among them was a
+ token which I was to restore to you." He produced the ring.
+ Emily seized it wildly, and trembled as she looked upon it.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is indeed my ring," she said at length, "the same which
+ I gave him when we plighted our troth in secret. You are
+ acquainted with everything, I perceive; I shall therefore risk
+ nothing if I speak openly."</p>
+
+ <p>She wept, and pressed the ring to her lips.</p>
+
+ <p>"I see that my friend's memory is dear to you," continued
+ Edward. You will forgive the prayer I am about to make to you:
+ my visit to you concerns his ring."</p>
+
+ <p>"How&mdash;what is it you wish?" cried Emily; terrified.</p>
+
+ <p>"It was <i>his</i> wish," replied Edward. "He evinced an
+ earnest desire to have this pledge of an unfortunate and
+ unfulfilled engagement restored."</p>
+
+ <p>"How is that possible? You did not speak with him before his
+ death; and this happened so suddenly after, that, to give you
+ the commission&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"There was no time for it! that is true," answered Edward,
+ with an inward shudder, although outwardly he was calm.
+ "Perhaps this wish was awakened immediately before his death. I
+ found it, as I told you, expressed in those
+ papers."</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page281"
+ id="page281"></a>[pg 281]</span>
+
+ <p>"Incomprehensible!" she exclaimed. "Only a short time before
+ his death, we cherished&mdash;deceitful, indeed, they proved,
+ but, oh, what blessed hopes! we reckoned on casualties, on what
+ might possibly occur to assist as. Neither of us could endure
+ to dwell on the idea of separation; and yet&mdash;yet
+ since&mdash;Oh, my God," she cried, overcome by sorrow, and she
+ hid her face between her hands.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward was lost in confused thought. For a time both again
+ were silent: at length Emily started up&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Forgive me, M. de Wensleben. What you have related to me,
+ what you have asked of me, has produced so much excitement, so
+ much agitation, that it is necessary that I should be alone for
+ a few moments, to recover my composure."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am gone," cried Edward, springing from his chair.</p>
+
+ <p>"No! no!" she replied, "you are my guest; remain here. I
+ have a household duty which calls me away." She laid a stress
+ on these words.</p>
+
+ <p>She leant forward, and with a sad, sweet smile, she gave her
+ hand to the friend of her lost Ferdinand, pressing his gently,
+ and disappeared through the inner door.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward stood stunned, bewildered; then he paced the room
+ with hasty steps, threw himself on the sofa, and took up one of
+ the books that lay on the table, rather to have something in
+ his hand, than to read. It proved to be Young's "Night
+ Thoughts." He looked through it, and was attracted by many
+ passages, which seemed, in his present frame of mind, fraught
+ with peculiar meaning; yet his thoughts wandered constantly
+ from the page to his dead friend. The candles, unheeded both by
+ Emily and him, burned on with long wicks, giving little light
+ in the silent room, over which the red glare from the hearth
+ shed a lurid glow. Hurried footsteps sounded in the anteroom;
+ the door was thrown open.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward looked up, and saw D'Effernay staring at him, and
+ round the room, in an angry, restless manner.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward could not but think there was something almost
+ unearthly in those dark looks and that towering form.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where is my wife?" was D'Effernay's first question.</p>
+
+ <p>"She is gone to fulfill some household duty," replied the
+ other.</p>
+
+ <p>"And leaves you here alone in this miserable darkness! Most
+ extraordinary!&mdash;indeed, most unaccountable!" and as he
+ spoke he approached the table and snuffed the candles, with a
+ movement of impatience.</p>
+
+ <p>"She left me here with old friends," said Edward, with a
+ forced smile. "I have been reading."</p>
+
+ <p>"What, in the dark?" inquired D'Effernay, with a look of
+ mistrust. "It was so dark when I came in, that you could not
+ possibly have distinguished a letter."</p>
+
+ <p>"I read for some time, and then I fell into a train of
+ thought, which is usually the result of reading Young's 'Night
+ Thoughts.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"Young! I cannot bear that author. He is so gloomy."</p>
+
+ <p>"But you are fortunately so happy, that the lamentations of
+ the lonely mourner can find no echo in your breast."</p>
+
+ <p>"You think so!" said D'Effernay, in a churlish tone, and he
+ pressed his lips together tightly, as Emily came into the room:
+ he went to meet her.</p>
+
+ <p>"You have been a long time away," was his observation, as he
+ looked into her eyes, where the trace of tears might easily be
+ detected. "I found our guest alone."</p>
+
+ <p>"M. de Wensleben was good enough to excuse me," she replied;
+ "and then I thought you would be back immediately."</p>
+
+ <p>They sat down to the table; coffee was brought, and the past
+ appeared to be forgotten.</p>
+
+ <p>The conversation at first was broken by constant pauses.
+ Edward saw that Emily did all she could to play the hostess
+ agreeably, and to pacify her husband's ill-humor.</p>
+
+ <p>In this attempt the young man assisted her, and at last they
+ were successful. D'Effernay became more cheerful; the
+ conversation more animated; and Edward found that his host
+ could be a very agreeable member of society when he pleased,
+ combining a good deal of information with great natural powers.
+ The evening passed away more pleasantly than it promised at one
+ time; and after an excellent and well-served supper, the young
+ officer was shown into a comfortable room, fitted up with every
+ modern luxury; and weary in mind and body, he soon fell asleep.
+ He dreamed of all that had occupied his waking thoughts-of his
+ friend, and his friend's history.</p>
+
+ <p>But in that species of confusion which often characterizes
+ dreams, he fancied that he was Ferdinand, or at least, his own
+ individuality seemed mixed up with that of Hallberg. He felt
+ that he was ill. He lay in an unknown room, and by his bedside
+ stood a small table, covered with glasses and phials,
+ containing medicines, as is usual in a sick room.</p>
+
+ <p>The door opened, and D'Effernay came in, in his
+ dressing-gown, as if he had just left his bed: and now in
+ Edward's mind dreams and realities were mingled together, and
+ he thought that D'Effernay came, perhaps, to speak with him on
+ the occurrences of the preceding day. But no! he approached the
+ table on which the medicines stood, looked at the watch, took
+ up one of the phials and a cup, measured the draught, drop by
+ drop, then he turned and looked round him stealthily, and then
+ he drew from his breast a pale blue, coiling serpent, which he
+ threw into the cup, and held it to the patient's lips, who
+ drank, and instantly felt a numbness creep over his frame which
+ ended in death. Edward fancied that he was dead; he saw the
+ coffin brought, but the terror lest he
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page282"
+ id="page282"></a>[pg 282]</span> should be buried alive,
+ made him start up with a sudden effort, and he opened his
+ eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>The dream had passed away; he sat in his bed safe and well;
+ but it was long ere he could in any degree recover his
+ composure, or get rid of the impression which the frightful
+ apparition had made on him. They brought his breakfast, with a
+ message from the master of the house to inquire whether he
+ would like to visit the park, farms, &amp;c. He dressed
+ quickly, and descended to the court, where he found his host in
+ a riding dress, by the side of two fine horses, already
+ saddled. D'Effernay greeted the young man courteously; but
+ Edward felt an inward repugnance as he looked on that gloomy
+ though handsome countenance, now lighted up by the beams of the
+ morning sun, yet recalling vividly the dark visions of the
+ night. D'Effernay was full of attentions to his new friend.
+ They started on their ride, in spite of some threatening
+ clouds, and began the inspection of meadows, shrubberies,
+ farms, &amp;c. After a couple of hours, which were consumed in
+ this manner, it began to rain a few drops, and at last burst
+ out into a heavy shower. It was soon impossible even to ride
+ through the woods for the torrents that were pouring down, and
+ so they returned to the castle.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward retired to his room to change his dress, and to write
+ some letters, he said, but more particularly to avoid Emily, in
+ order not to excite her husband's jealousy. As the bell rang
+ for dinner he saw her again, and found to his surprise that the
+ captain, whom he had first seen in the coffee-room, and who had
+ given him so much information, was one of the party. He was
+ much pleased, for they had taken a mutual fancy to each other.
+ The captain was not at quarters the day Edward had left them,
+ but as soon as he heard where his friend had gone, he put
+ horses to his carriage and followed him, for he said he also
+ should like to see these famous estates. D'Effernay seemed in
+ high good humor to-day, Emily far more silent than yesterday,
+ and taking little part in the conversation of the men, which
+ turned on political economy. After coffee she found an
+ opportunity to give Edward (unobserved) a little packet. The
+ look with which she did so, told plainly what it contained, and
+ the young man hurried to his room as soon as he fancied he
+ could do so without remark or comment. The continued rain
+ precluded all idea of leaving the house any more that day. He
+ unfolded the packet; there were a couple of sheets, written
+ closely in a woman's fair hand, and something wrapped carefully
+ in a paper, which he knew to be the ring. It was the fellow to
+ that which he had given the day before to Emily, only
+ Ferdinand's name was engraved inside instead of hers. Such were
+ the contents of the papers:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Secrecy would be misplaced with the friend of the dead.
+ Therefore, will I speak to you of things which I have never
+ uttered to a human being until now. Jules D'Effernay is nearly
+ related to me. We knew each other in the Netherlands, where our
+ estates joined. The boy loved me already with a love that
+ amounted to passion; this love was my father's greatest joy,
+ for there was an old and crying injustice which the ancestors
+ of D'Effernay had suffered from ours, that could alone, he
+ thought, be made up by the marriage of the only children of the
+ two branches. So we were destined for each other almost from
+ our cradles; and I was content it should be so, for Jules's
+ handsome face and decided preference for me were agreeable to
+ me, although I felt no great affection for him. We were
+ separated: Jules traveled in France, England, and America, and
+ made money as a merchant, which profession he had taken up
+ suddenly. My father, who had a place under government, left his
+ country in consequence of political troubles, and came into
+ this part of the world where some distant relations of my
+ mother's lived. He liked the neighborhood; he bought land; we
+ lived very happily; I was quite contented in Jules's absence; I
+ had no yearning of the heart toward him, yet I thought kindly
+ of him, and troubled myself little about my future.
+ Then&mdash;then I learned to know your friend. Oh, then! I
+ felt, when I looked upon him, when I listened to him, when we
+ conversed together, I felt, I acknowledged that there might be
+ happiness on earth, of which I had hitherto never dreamed. Then
+ I loved for the first time, ardently, passionately, and was
+ beloved in return. Acquainted with the family engagements, he
+ did not dare openly to proclaim his love, and I knew I ought
+ not to foster the feeling; but, alas! how seldom does passion
+ listen to the voice of reason and of duty. Your friend and I
+ met in secret; in secret we plighted our troth, and exchanged
+ those rings, and hoped and believed that by showing a bold
+ front to our destiny we should subdue it to our will. The
+ commencement was sinful, it has met with a dire retribution,
+ Jules's letters announced his speedy return. He had sold
+ everything in his own country, had given up all his mercantile
+ affairs, through which he had greatly increased an already
+ considerable fortune, and now he was about to join us, or
+ rather me, without whom he could not live. This appeared to me
+ like the demand for payment of a heavy debt. This debt I owed
+ to Jules, who loved me with all his heart, who was in
+ possession of my father's promised word and mine also. Yet I
+ could not give up your friend. In a state of distraction I told
+ him all; we meditated flight. Yes, I was so far guilty, and I
+ make the confession in hopes that some portion of my errors may
+ be expiated by repentance. My father, who had long been in a
+ declining state, suddenly grew worse, and this delayed and
+ hindered the fulfillment of our designs. Jules arrived. During
+ the five years he had been away he was much changed in
+ appearance, and that advantageously. I was struck
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page283"
+ id="page283"></a>[pg 283]</span> when I first saw him, but
+ it was also easy to detect in those handsome features and
+ manly bearing, a spirit of restlessness and violence which
+ had already shown itself in him as a boy, and which passing
+ years, with their bitter experience and strong passions, had
+ greatly developed. The hope that we had cherished of
+ D'Effernay's possible indifference to me, of the change
+ which time might have wrought in his attachment, now seemed
+ idle and absurd. His love was indeed impassioned. He
+ embraced me in a manner that made me shrink from him, and
+ altogether his deportment toward me was a strange contrast
+ to the gentle, tender, refined affection of our dear friend.
+ I trembled whenever Jules entered the room, and all that I
+ had prepared to say to him, all the plans which I had
+ revolved in my mind respecting him, vanished in an instant
+ before the power of his presence, and the almost imperative
+ manner in which he claimed my hand. My father's illness
+ increased; he was now in a very precarious state, hopeless
+ indeed. Jules rivaled me in filial attentions to him, that I
+ can never cease to thank him for; but this illness made my
+ situation more and more critical, and it accelerated the
+ fulfillment of the contract. I was now to renew my promise
+ to him by the death-bed of my father. Alas, alas! I fell
+ senseless to the ground when this announcement was made to
+ me. Jules began to suspect. Already my cold, embarrassed
+ manner toward him since his return had struck him as
+ strange. He began to suspect, I repeat, and the effect that
+ this suspicion had on him, it would be impossible to
+ describe to you. Even now, after so long a time, now that I
+ am accustomed to his ways, and more reconciled to my fate by
+ the side of a noble, though somewhat impetuous man, it makes
+ me tremble to think of those paroxysms, which the idea that
+ I did not love him called forth. They were fearful; he
+ nearly sank under them. During two days his life was in
+ danger. At last the storm passed, my father died; Jules
+ watched over me with the tenderness of a brother, the
+ solicitude of a parent; for that indeed I shall ever be
+ grateful. His suspicion once awakened, he gazed round with
+ penetrating looks to discover the cause of my altered
+ feelings. But your friend never came to our house; we met in
+ an unfrequented spot, and my father's illness had
+ interrupted these interviews. Altogether I cannot tell if
+ Jules discovered anything. A fearful circumstance rendered
+ all our precautions useless, and cut the knot of our secret
+ connection, to loose which voluntarily I felt I had no
+ power. A wedding feast, at a neighboring castle, assembled
+ all the nobility and gentry, and officers quartered near,
+ together; my deep mourning was an excuse for my absence.
+ Jules, though he usually was happiest by my side, could not
+ resist the invitation, and your friend resolved to go,
+ although he was unwell; he feared to raise suspicion by
+ remaining away, when I was left at home. With great
+ difficulty he contrived the first day to make one at a
+ splendid hunt, the second day he could not leave his bed. A
+ physician, who was in the house, pronounced his complaint to
+ be violent fever, and Jules, whose room joined that of the
+ sick man, offered him every little service and kindness
+ which compassion and good feeling prompted; and I cannot but
+ praise him all the more for it, as who can tell, perhaps,
+ his suspicion might have taken the right direction? On the
+ morning of the second day&mdash;but let me glance quickly at
+ that terrible time, the memory of which can never pass from
+ my mind&mdash;a fit of apoplexy most unexpectedly, but
+ gently, ended the noblest life, and separated us forever!
+ Now you know all. I inclose the ring. I cannot write more.
+ Farewell!"</p>
+
+ <p>The conclusion of the letter made a deep impression on
+ Edward. His dream rose up before his remembrance, the slight
+ indisposition, the sudden death, the fearful nursetender, all
+ arranged themselves in order before his mind, and an awful
+ whole rose out of all these reflections, a terrible suspicion
+ which he tried to throw off. But he could not do so, and when
+ he met the captain and D'Effernay in the evening, and the
+ latter challenged his visitors to a game of billiards, Edward
+ glanced from time to time at his host in a scrutinizing manner,
+ and could not but feel that the restless discontent which was
+ visible in his countenance, and the unsteady glare of his eyes,
+ which shunned the fixed look of others, only fitted too well
+ into the shape of the dark thoughts which were crossing his own
+ mind. Late in the evening, after supper, they played whist in
+ Emily's boudoir. On the morrow, if the weather permitted, they
+ were to conclude their inspection of the surrounding property,
+ and the next day they were to visit the iron foundries, which,
+ although distant from the Castle several miles, formed a very
+ important item in the rent-roll of the estates. The company
+ separated for the night. Edward fell asleep; and the same
+ dream, with the same circumstances, recurred, only with the
+ full consciousness that the sick man was Ferdinand. Edward felt
+ overpowered, a species of horror took possession of his mind,
+ as he found himself now in regular communication with the
+ beings of the invisible world.</p>
+
+ <p>The weather favored D'Effernay's projects. The whole day was
+ passed in the open air. Emily only appeared at meals, and in
+ the evening when they played at cards. Both she and Edward
+ avoided, as if by mutual consent, every word, every look that
+ could awaken the slightest suspicion or jealous feeling in
+ D'Effernay's mind. She thanked him in her heart for this
+ forbearance, but her thoughts were in another world; she took
+ little heed of what passed around her. Her husband was in an
+ excellent temper; he played the part of host to perfection; and
+ when the two officers were established comfortably by the fire,
+ in the captain's room, smoking together, they could not but do
+ justice to his courteous
+ manners.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page284"
+ id="page284"></a>[pg 284]</span>
+
+ <p>"He appears to be a man of general information," remarked
+ Edward.</p>
+
+ <p>"He has traveled a great deal, and read a great deal, as I
+ told you when we first met: he is a remarkable man, but one of
+ uncontrolled passions, and desperately jealous."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yet he appears very attentive to his wife."</p>
+
+ <p>"Undoubtedly he is wildly in love with her; yet he makes her
+ unhappy, and himself too."</p>
+
+ <p>"He certainly does not appear happy, there is so much
+ restlessness."</p>
+
+ <p>"He can never bear to remain in one place for any length of
+ time together. He is now going to sell the property he only
+ bought last year. There is an instability about him; everything
+ palls on him."</p>
+
+ <p>"That is the complaint of many who are rich and well to do
+ in the world."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes; only not in the same degree. I assure you it has often
+ struck me that man must have a bad conscience."</p>
+
+ <p>"What an idea!" rejoined Edward, with a forced laugh, for
+ the captain's remark struck him forcibly. "He seems a man of
+ honor."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, one may be a man of honor, as it is called, and yet
+ have something quite bad enough to reproach yourself with. But
+ I know nothing about it, and would not breathe such a thing
+ except to you. His wife, too, looks so pale and so
+ oppressed."</p>
+
+ <p>"But, perhaps, that is her natural complexion and
+ expression."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, no! no! the year before D'Effernay came from Paris, she
+ was as fresh as a rose. Many people declare that your poor
+ friend loved her. The affair was wrapped in mystery, and I
+ never believed the report, for Hallberg was a steady man, and
+ the whole country knew that Emily had been engaged a long
+ time."</p>
+
+ <p>"Hallberg never mentioned the name in his letters," answered
+ Edward, with less candor than usual.</p>
+
+ <p>"I thought not. Besides D'Effernay was very much attached to
+ him, and mourned his death."</p>
+
+ <p>"Indeed!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I assure you the morning that Hallberg was found dead in
+ his bed so unexpectedly, D'Effernay was like one beside
+ himself."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very extraordinary. But as we are on the subject, tell me,
+ I pray you, all the circumstances of my poor Ferdinand's
+ illness, and awful sudden death."</p>
+
+ <p>"I can tell you all about it, as well as any one, for I was
+ one of the guests at that melancholy wedding. Your friend, and
+ I, and many others were invited. Hallberg had some idea of not
+ going; he was unwell, with violent headache and giddiness. But
+ we persuaded him, and he consented to go with us. The first day
+ he felt tolerably well. We hunted in the open field; we were
+ all on horseback, the day hot. Hallberg felt worse. The second
+ day he had a great deal of fever; he could not stay up. The
+ physician (for fortunately there was one in the company)
+ ordered rest, cooling medicine, neither of which seemed to do
+ him good. The rest of the men dispersed, to amuse themselves in
+ various ways. Only D'Effernay remained at home; he was never
+ very fond of large societies, and we voted that he was
+ discontented and out of humor because his betrothed bride was
+ not with him. His room was next to the sick man's, to whom he
+ gave all possible care and attention, for poor Hallberg,
+ besides being ill, was in despair at giving so much trouble in
+ a strange house. D'Effernay tried to calm him on this point; he
+ nursed him, amused him with conversation, mixed his medicines,
+ and, in fact, showed more kindness and tenderness, than any of
+ us would have given him credit for. Before I went to bed I
+ visited Hallberg, and found him much better, and more cheerful;
+ the doctor had promised that he should leave his bed next day.
+ So I left him and retired with the rest of the world, rather
+ late, and very tired, to rest. The next morning I was awoke by
+ the fatal tidings. I did not wait to dress, I ran to his room,
+ it was full of people."</p>
+
+ <p>"And how, how was the death first discovered?" inquired
+ Edward, in breathless eagerness.</p>
+
+ <p>"The servant, who came in to attend on him, thought he was
+ asleep, for he lay in his usual position, his head upon his
+ hand. He went away and waited for some time; but hours passed,
+ and he thought he ought to wake his master to give him his
+ medicine. Then the awful discovery was made. He must have died
+ peacefully, for his countenance was so calm, his limbs
+ undisturbed. A fit of apoplexy had terminated his life, but in
+ the most tranquil manner."</p>
+
+ <p>"Incomprehensible," said Edward, with a deep sigh. "Did they
+ take no measures to restore animation?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly; all that could be done was done, bleeding,
+ fomentation, friction; the physician superintended, but there
+ was no hope, it was all too late. He must have been dead some
+ hours, for he was already cold and stiff. If there had been a
+ spark of life in him he would have been saved. It was all over;
+ I had lost my good lieutenant, and the regiment one of its
+ finest officers."</p>
+
+ <p>He was silent, and appeared lost in thought. Edward, for his
+ part, felt overwhelmed by terrible suspicions and sad memories.
+ After a long pause he recovered himself: "and where was
+ D'Effernay?" he inquired.</p>
+
+ <p>"D'Effernay," answered the Captain, rather surprised at the
+ question; "oh! he was not in the Castle when we made the
+ dreadful discovery: he had gone out for an early walk, and when
+ he came back late, not before noon, he learned the truth, and
+ was like one out of his senses. It seemed so awful to him,
+ because he had been so much, the very day before, with poor
+ Hallberg."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aye," answered Edward, whose suspicions were being more and
+ more confirmed every moment. "And did he see the corpse, did he
+ go into the chamber of death?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No," replied the captain; "he assured us
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page285"
+ id="page285"></a>[pg 285]</span> it was out of his power to
+ do so; he could not bear the sight; and I believe it. People
+ with such uncontrolled feelings as this D'Effernay, are
+ incapable of performing those duties which others think it
+ necessary and incumbent on them to fulfill."</p>
+
+ <p>"And where was Hallberg buried?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not far from the castle where the mournful event took
+ place. To-morrow, if we go to the iron foundry, we shall be
+ near the spot."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am glad of it," cried Edward eagerly, while a host of
+ projects rose up in his mind. "But now, captain, I will not
+ trespass any longer on your kindness. It is late, and we must
+ be up betimes to-morrow. How far have we to go?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not less than four leagues certainly. D'Effernay has
+ arranged that we shall drive there, and see it all at our
+ leisure: then we shall return in the evening. Good night,
+ Wensleben."</p>
+
+ <p>They separated: Edward hurried to his room; his heart
+ overflowed. Sorrow on the one hand, horror and even hatred on
+ the other, agitated him by turns. It was long before he could
+ sleep. For the third time the vision haunted him; but now it
+ was clearer than before; now he saw plainly the features of him
+ who lay in bed, and of him who stood beside the bed&mdash;they
+ were those of Hallberg and of D'Effernay.</p>
+
+ <p>This third apparition, the exact counterpart of the two
+ former (only more vivid), all that he had gathered from
+ conversations on the subject, and the contents of Emily's
+ letter, left scarcely the shadow of a doubt remaining as to how
+ his friend had left the world.</p>
+
+ <p>D'Effernay's jealous and passionate nature seemed to allow
+ of the possibility of such a crime, and it could scarcely be
+ wondered at, if Edward regarded him with a feeling akin to
+ hatred. Indeed the desire of visiting Hallberg's grave, in
+ order to place the ring in the coffin, could alone reconcile
+ Wensleben to the idea of remaining any longer beneath the roof
+ of a man whom he now considered the murderer of his friend. His
+ mind was a prey to conflicting doubts; detestation for the
+ culprit, and grief for the victim, pointed out one line of
+ conduct, while the difficulty of proving D'Effernay's guilt,
+ and still more, pity and consideration for Emily, determined
+ him at length to let the matter rest, and to leave the
+ murderer, if such he really were, to the retribution which his
+ own conscience and the justice of God would award him. He would
+ seek his friend's grave, and then he would separate from
+ D'Effernay, and never see him more. In the midst of these
+ reflections the servant came to tell him that the carriage was
+ ready. A shudder passed over his frame as D'Effernay greeted
+ him; but he commanded himself, and they started on their
+ expedition.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward spoke but little, and that only when it was
+ necessary, and the conversation was kept up by his two
+ companions; he had made every inquiry, before he set out,
+ respecting the place of his friend's interment, the exact
+ situation of the tomb, the name of the village, and its
+ distance from the main road. On their way home, he requested
+ that D'Effernay would give orders to the coachman to make a
+ round of a mile or two as far as the village of &mdash;&mdash;,
+ with whose rector he was particularly desirous to speak. A
+ momentary cloud gathered on D'Effernay's brow, yet it seemed no
+ more than his usual expression of vexation at any delay or
+ hindrance; and he was so anxious to propitiate his rich
+ visitor, who appeared likely to take the estate off his hands,
+ that he complied with all possible courtesy. The coachman was
+ directed to turn down a by-road, and a very bad one it was. The
+ captain stood up in the carriage and pointed out the village to
+ him, at some distance off; it lay in a deep ravine at the foot
+ of the mountains.</p>
+
+ <p>They arrived in the course of time, and inquired for the
+ clergyman's house, which, as well as the church, was situated
+ on rising ground. The three companions alighted from the
+ carriage, which they left at the bottom of the hill, and walked
+ up together in the direction of the rectory. Edward knocked at
+ the door and was admitted, while the two others sat on a bench
+ outside. He had promised to return speedily, but to
+ D'Effernay's restless spirit, one-quarter of an hour appeared
+ interminable.</p>
+
+ <p>He turned to the captain and said, in a tone of impatience,
+ "M. de Wensleben must have a great deal of business with the
+ rector: we have been here an immense time, and he does not seem
+ inclined to make his appearance.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I dare say he will come soon. The matter cannot detain
+ him long."</p>
+
+ <p>"What on earth can he have to do here?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps you would call it a mere fancy&mdash;the enthusiasm
+ of youth."</p>
+
+ <p>"It has a name, I suppose?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Is it sufficiently important, think you, to make us run the
+ risk of being benighted on such roads as these?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, it is quite early in the day."</p>
+
+ <p>"But we have more than two leagues to go. Why will you not
+ speak?&mdash;there cannot any great mystery."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, perhaps not a mystery, exactly, but just one of those
+ subjects on which we are usually reserved with others."</p>
+
+ <p>"So! so!" rejoined D'Effernay, with a little sneer. "Some
+ love affair; some girl or another who pursues him, that he
+ wants to get rid of."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing of the kind, I can assure you," replied the captain
+ drily. "It could scarcely be more innocent. He wishes, in fact,
+ to visit his friend's grave."</p>
+
+ <p>The listener's expression was one of scorn and anger. "It is
+ worth the trouble certainly," he exclaimed, with a mocking
+ laugh. "A charming sentimental pilgrimage, truly; and pray who
+ is this beloved friend, over whose resting-place he must shed a
+ tear and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page286"
+ id="page286"></a>[pg 286]</span> plant a forget-me-not? He
+ told me he had never been in the neighborhood before."</p>
+
+ <p>"No more he had; neither did he know where poor Hallberg was
+ buried until I told him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Hallberg!" echoed the other in a tone that startled the
+ captain, and caused him to turn and look fixedly in the
+ speaker's face. It was deadly pale, and the captain observed
+ the effort which D'Effernay made to recover his composure.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hallberg!" he repeated again, in a calmer tone, "and was
+ Wensleben a friend of his?"</p>
+
+ <p>"His bosom friend from childhood. They were brought up
+ together at the academy. Hallberg left it a year earlier than
+ his friend."</p>
+
+ <p>"Indeed!" said D'Effernay, scowling as he spoke, and working
+ himself up into a passion. "And this lieutenant came here on
+ this account, then, and the purchase of the estates was a mere
+ excuse."</p>
+
+ <p>"I beg your pardon," observed the captain, in a decided tone
+ of voice; "I have already told you that it was I who informed
+ him of the place where his friend lies buried."</p>
+
+ <p>"That may be, but it was owing to his friendship, to the
+ wish to learn something further of his fate, that we are
+ indebted for the visit of this romantic knight-errant."</p>
+
+ <p>"That does not appear likely," replied the captain, who
+ thought it better to avert, if possible, the rising storm of
+ his companion's fury. "Why should he seek for news of Hallberg
+ here, when he comes from the place where he was quartered for a
+ long time, and where all his comrades now are."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I don't know," cried D'Effernay, whose passion was
+ increasing every moment. "Perhaps you have heard what was once
+ gossiped about the neighborhood, that Hallberg was an admirer
+ of my wife before she married."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes, I have heard that report, but never believed it.
+ Hallberg was a prudent, steady man, and every one knew that
+ Mademoiselle Varnier's hand had been promised for some
+ time."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes! yes! but you do not know to what lengths passion and
+ avarice may lead: for Emily was rich. We must not forget that,
+ when we discuss the matter; an elopement with the rich heiress
+ would have been a fine thing for a poor, beggarly
+ lieutenant."</p>
+
+ <p>"Shame! shame! M. D'Effernay. How can you slander the
+ character of that upright young man? If Hallberg were so
+ unhappy as to love Mademoiselle Varnier&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"That he did! you may believe me so far, I had reason to
+ know it, and I did know it."</p>
+
+ <p>"We had better change the conversation altogether, as it has
+ taken so unpleasant a turn, Hallberg is dead; his errors, be
+ they what they may, lie buried with him. His name stands high
+ with all who knew him Even you, M. D'Effernay&mdash;you were
+ his friend."</p>
+
+ <p>"I his friend? I hated him!&mdash;I loathed him!" D'Effernay
+ could not proceed; he foamed at the mouth with rage.</p>
+
+ <p>"Compose yourself!" said the Captain, rising as he spoke;
+ "you look and speak like a madman."</p>
+
+ <p>A madman! Who says I am mad? Now I see it all&mdash;the
+ connection of the whole&mdash;the shameful conspiracy."</p>
+
+ <p>"Your conduct is perfectly incomprehensible to me," answered
+ the captain, with perfect coolness. "Did you not attend
+ Hallberg in his last illness, and give him his medicines with
+ your own hand?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I!" stammered D'Effernay. "No! no! no!" he cried, while the
+ captain's growing suspicions increased every moment, on account
+ of the perturbation which his companion displayed. "I never
+ gave his medicines; whoever says that is a liar."</p>
+
+ <p>"I say it!" exclaimed the officer, in a loud tone, for his
+ patience was exhausted. "I say it, because I know that it was
+ so, and I will maintain that fact against any one at any time.
+ If you choose to contradict the evidence of my senses, it is
+ you who are a liar!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ha! you shall give me satisfaction for this insult. Depend
+ upon it, I am not one to be trifled with, as you shall find.
+ You shall retract your words."</p>
+
+ <p>"Never! I am ready to defend every word I have uttered here
+ on this spot, at this moment, if you please. You have your
+ pistols in the carriage, you know."</p>
+
+ <p>D'Effernay cast a look of hatred on the speaker, and then
+ dashing down the little hill, to the surprise of the servants,
+ he dragged the pistols from the sword-case, and was by the
+ captain's side in a moment. But the loud voices of the
+ disputants had attracted Edward to the spot, and there he stood
+ on D'Effernay's return; and by his side a venerable old man,
+ who carried a large bunch of keys in his hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"In heaven's name, what has happened?" cried Wensleben.</p>
+
+ <p>"What are you about to do?" interposed the rector, in a tone
+ of authority, though his countenance was expressive of horror.
+ "Are you going to commit murder on this sacred spot, close to
+ the precincts of the church?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Murder! who speaks of murder?" cried D'Effernay. "Who can
+ prove it?" and as he spoke, the captain turned a fierce,
+ penetrating look upon him, beneath which he quailed.</p>
+
+ <p>"But, I repeat the question," Edward began once more, "what
+ does all this mean? I left you a short time ago in friendly
+ conversation. I come back and find you both armed&mdash;both
+ violently agitated&mdash;and M. D'Effernay, at least, speaking
+ incoherently. What do you mean by 'proving it?'&mdash;to what
+ do you allude?" At this moment, before any answer could be
+ made, a man came out of the house with a pick-axe and shovel on
+ his shoulder, and advancing toward the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page287"
+ id="page287"></a>[pg 287]</span> rector, said respectfully,
+ "I am quite ready, sir, if you have the key of the
+ churchyard."</p>
+
+ <p>It was now the captain's turn to look anxious: "What are you
+ going to do, you surely don't intend&mdash;?" but as he spoke,
+ the rector interrupted him.</p>
+
+ <p>"This gentleman is very desirous to see the place where his
+ friend lies buried."</p>
+
+ <p>"But these preparations, what do they mean?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I will tell you," said Edward, in a voice and tone that
+ betrayed the deepest emotion, "I have a holy duty to perform. I
+ must cause the coffin to be opened."</p>
+
+ <p>"How, what!" screamed D'Effernay, once again. "Never&mdash;I
+ will never permit such a thing."</p>
+
+ <p>"But, sir," the old man spoke, in a tone of calm decision,
+ contrasting wonderfully with the violence of him whom he
+ addressed, "you have no possible right to interfere. If this
+ gentleman wishes it, and I accede to the proposition, no one
+ can prevent us from doing as we would."</p>
+
+ <p>"I tell you I will not suffer it," continued D'Effernay,
+ with the same frightful agitation. "Stir at your peril," he
+ cried, turning sharply round upon the grave-digger, and holding
+ a pistol to his head; but the captain pulled his arm away, to
+ the relief of the frightened peasant.</p>
+
+ <p>"M. D'Effernay," he said, "your conduct for the last
+ half-hour has been most unaccountable&mdash;most
+ unreasonable."</p>
+
+ <p>"Come, come," interposed Edward, "Let us say no more on the
+ subject; but let us be going," he addressed the rector; "we
+ will not detain these gentlemen much longer."</p>
+
+ <p>He made a step toward the churchyard, but D'Effernay
+ clutched his arm, and, with an impious oath, "you shall not
+ stir," he said; "that grave shall not be opened."</p>
+
+ <p>Edward shook him off, with a look of silent hatred, for now
+ indeed all his doubts were confirmed.</p>
+
+ <p>D'Effernay saw that Wensleben was resolved, and a deadly
+ pallor spread itself over his features, and a shudder passed
+ visibly over his frame.</p>
+
+ <p>"You are going!" he cried, with every gesture and appearance
+ of insanity. "Go, then;" ... and he pointed the muzzle of the
+ pistol to his mouth, and before any one could prevent him, he
+ drew the trigger, and fell back a corpse. The spectators were
+ motionless with surprise and horror; the captain was the first
+ to recover himself in some degree. He bent over the body with
+ the faint hope of detecting some sign of life. The old man
+ turned pale and dizzy with a sense of terror, and he looked as
+ if he would have swooned, had not Edward led him gently into
+ his house, while the two others busied themselves with vain
+ attempts to restore life.</p>
+
+ <p>The spirit of D'Effernay had gone to its last account!</p>
+
+ <p>It was, indeed, an awful moment. Death in its worst shape
+ was before them, and a terrible duty still remained to be
+ performed.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward's cheek was blanched; his eye had a fixed look, yet
+ he moved and spoke with a species of mechanical action, which
+ had something almost ghastly in it. Causing the body to be
+ removed into the house, he bade the captain summon the servants
+ of the deceased, and then motioning with his hand to the
+ awe-struck sexton, he proceeded with him to the churchyard. A
+ few clods of earth alone were removed ere the captain stood by
+ his friend's side.</p>
+
+ <p>Here we must pause. Perhaps it were better altogether to
+ emulate the silence that was maintained then and afterward by
+ the two comrades. But the sexton could not be bribed to entire
+ secrecy, and it was a story he loved to tell, with details we
+ gladly omit, of how Wensleben solemnly performed his
+ task&mdash;of how no doubt could any longer exist as to the
+ cause of Hallberg's death. Those who love the horrible must
+ draw on their own imaginations to supply what we resolutely
+ withhold.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward, we believe, never alluded to D'Effernay's death, and
+ all the awful circumstances attending it, but twice&mdash;once,
+ when, with every necessary detail, he and the captain gave
+ their evidence to the legal authorities; and once, with as few
+ details as possible, when he had an interview with the widow of
+ the murderer, the beloved of the victim. The particulars of
+ this interview he never divulged, for he considered Emily's
+ grief too sacred to be exposed to the prying eyes of the
+ curious and the unfeeling. She left the neighborhood
+ immediately, leaving her worldly affairs in Wensleben's hands,
+ who soon disposed of the property for her. She returned to her
+ native country, with the resolution of spending the greater
+ part of her wealth in relieving the distresses of others,
+ wisely seeking, in the exercise of piety and benevolence, the
+ only possible alleviation of her own deep and many-sided
+ griefs. For Edward, he was soon pronounced to have recovered
+ entirely from the shock of these terrible events. Of a
+ courageous and energetic disposition, he pursued the duties of
+ his profession with a firm step, and hid his mighty sorrow deep
+ in the recesses of his heart. To the superficial observer,
+ tears, groans, and lamentations are the only proofs of sorrow:
+ and when they subside, the sorrow is said to have passed away
+ also. Thus the captive, immured within the walls of his
+ prison-house, is as one dead to the outward world, though the
+ gaoler be a daily witness to the vitality of affliction.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Paris has been again emptied of its citizens to see M.
+ Poitevin make his second ascent on horseback from the Champ de
+ Mars. To show that he was not fastened to his saddle, the
+ idiot, when some hundred yards up in the air, stood upright on
+ his horse, and saluted the multitude below with both his
+ hands.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page288"
+ id="page288"></a>[pg 288]</span>
+
+ <h2>PEASANT LIFE IN GERMANY.</h2>
+
+ <p>We copy the following interesting paragraph from a work just
+ issued in London on "The Social Condition and Education of the
+ People of England and Europe," by Joseph Kay, of Cambridge
+ University.</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"As I have already said, the <i>moral, intellectual and
+ physical condition of the peasants and operatives</i> of
+ Prussia, Saxony and other parts of Germany, of Holland, and
+ of the Protestant cantons of Switzerland, and the social
+ condition of the peasants in the greater part of France,
+ <i>is very much higher and happier, and very much more
+ satisfactory, than that of the peasants and operatives of
+ England</i>; the condition of the <i>poor</i> in the North
+ German, Swiss and Dutch <i>towns</i>, is as remarkable a
+ contrast to that of the poor of the <i>English towns</i> as
+ can well be imagined; and that the condition of the
+ <i>poorer classes</i> of Germany, Switzerland, Holland and
+ France is <i>rapidly improving</i>. The great
+ <i>superiority</i> of the <i>preparation</i> for life which
+ a <i>poor man</i> receives in those countries I have
+ mentioned, to that which a peasant or operative receives
+ <i>in England</i>, and the difference of the social
+ position of a poor man in those countries to that of a
+ peasant or operative in England, seem sufficient to explain
+ the difference which exists between the moral and social
+ condition of the poor of our own country and of the other
+ countries I have named. In Germany, Holland, and
+ Switzerland, a child begins its life in the society of
+ parents who have been educated and brought up for years in
+ the company of learned and gentlemanly professors, and in
+ the society and under the direction of a father who has
+ been exercised in military arts, and who has acquired the
+ bearing, the clean and orderly habits, and the taste for
+ respectable attire, which characterize the soldier. The
+ children of these countries spend the first six years of
+ their lives in homes which are well regulated. They are
+ during this time accustomed to orderly habits, to neat and
+ clean clothes, and to ideas of the value of instruction, of
+ the respect due to the teachers, and of the excellence of
+ the schools, by parents who have, by their training in
+ early life, acquired such tastes and ideas themselves. Each
+ child at the age of six begins to attend a school, which is
+ perfectly clean, well ventilated, directed by an able and
+ well-educated gentleman, and superintended by the religious
+ ministers and by the inspectors of the Government. Until
+ the completion of its <i>fourteenth</i> year, each child
+ continues regular daily attendance at one of these schools,
+ daily strengthening its habits of cleanliness and order,
+ learning the rudiments of useful knowledge, receiving the
+ principles of religion and morality, and gaining confirmed
+ health and physical energy by the exercise and drill of the
+ school playground. <i>No children are left idle in the
+ streets of the towns; no children are allowed to grovel in
+ the gutters; no children are allowed to make</i> their
+ appearance at the schools dirty, or in ragged clothes; and
+ the local authorities are obliged to clothe all whose
+ parents cannot afford to clothe them. The children of the
+ <i>poor</i> of Germany, Holland and Switzerland acquire
+ stronger habits of cleanliness, neatness and industry at
+ the <i>primary</i> schools, than the children of the
+ <i>small shopkeeping</i> classes of England do at the
+ private schools of England; and they leave the <i>primary
+ schools</i> of these countries <i>much better
+ instructed</i> than those who leave our <i>middle class
+ private schools</i>. After having learnt reading, writing,
+ arithmetic, singing, geography, history and the Scriptures,
+ the children leave the schools, carrying with them into
+ life habits of cleanliness, neatness, order and industry,
+ and awakened intellect, capable of collecting truths and
+ reasoning upon them."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From the Dublin University Magazine.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>SUMMER PASTIME.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Do you ask how I'd amuse me</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When the long bright summer comes,</p>
+
+ <p>And welcome leisure woos me</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To shun life's crowded homes;</p>
+
+ <p>To shun the sultry city,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Whose dense, oppressive air</p>
+
+ <p>Might make one weep with pity</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">For those who must be there.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>I'll tell you then&mdash;I would not</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To foreign countries roam,</p>
+
+ <p>As though my fancy could not</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Find occupance at home;</p>
+
+ <p>Nor to home-haunts of fashion</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Would I, least of all, repair,</p>
+
+ <p>For guilt, and pride, and passion,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Have summer-quarters there.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Far, far from watering-places</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of note and name I'd keep,</p>
+
+ <p>For there would vapid faces</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Still throng me in my sleep;</p>
+
+ <p>Then contact with the foolish,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The arrogant, the vain,</p>
+
+ <p>The meaningless&mdash;the mulish,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Would sicken heart and brain.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>No&mdash;I'd seek some shore of ocean</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Where nothing comes to mar</p>
+
+ <p>The ever-fresh commotion</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of sea and land at war;</p>
+
+ <p>Save the gentle evening only</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As it steals along the deep,</p>
+
+ <p>So spirit-like and lonely,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To still the waves to sleep.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>There long hours I'd spend in viewing</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The elemental strife,</p>
+
+ <p>My soul the while subduing</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With the littleness of life;</p>
+
+ <p>Of life, with all its paltry plans,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Its conflicts and its cares&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>The feebleness of all that's man's&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The might that's God's and theirs!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And when eve came I'd listen</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To the stilling of that war,</p>
+
+ <p>Till o'er my head should glisten</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The first pure silver star;</p>
+
+ <p>Then, wandering homeward slowly,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I'd learn my heart the tune</p>
+
+ <p>Which the dreaming billows lowly,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Were murmuring to the moon!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author">R.C.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>True genius is perpetual youth, health, serenity, and
+ strength. The eye is bright with a fine fire that is undimmed
+ by time, and the mind, not sharing the body's decline from the
+ prime of middle age, continues on with illimitable accession of
+ spiritual power.</p>
+
+ <p>Our convictions should be based on conceptions got from
+ insight of principles, and not upon opinions spawned of
+ authority and expediency. Every man shall influence me, no man
+ can decide for me.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page289"
+ id="page289"></a>[pg 289]</span>
+
+ <h4>[From the Spirit of the Times]</h4>
+
+ <h2>REMINISCENCES OF SARGENT S. PRENTISS, OF MISSISSIPPI.</h2>
+
+ <h3>BY T.B. THORPE.</h3>
+
+ <h4>AUTHOR OF "TOM OWEN, THE BEE HUNTER."</h4>
+
+ <p>The death of Sargeant S. Prentiss has called forth an
+ universal feeling of sorrow; the consciousness that "a great
+ man has fallen" is depicted upon the faces of the
+ multitude.</p>
+
+ <p>The eloquent offerings to his virtues and to his genius that
+ everywhere follow the news of his demise, are but slight tokens
+ of that sorrow that fills the heart of all who knew the gifted
+ Prentiss. Having known him long, and having had frequent
+ occasions to witness exhibitions of his great mental powers, I
+ cannot refrain from paying an imperfect tribute to his
+ memory.</p>
+
+ <p>I first met Mr. Prentiss when he was in the full maturity of
+ his power, but I have the pleasure of knowing hundreds who were
+ well acquainted with his early history and early triumphs.
+ Volumes of interest might be written upon the life of Mr.
+ Prentiss. And then his high sense of honor, his brave spirit,
+ his nobleness of soul, his intense but commendable pride, his
+ classical attainments, and his deep knowledge of the law, can
+ scarcely be illustrated, so universal and superior were his
+ accomplishments and acquirements.</p>
+
+ <p>In his early career, I consider Mr. Prentiss both fortunate
+ and unfortunate. I have often imagined the shrinking but proud
+ boy, living unnoticed and unknown among the wealthiest citizens
+ of the south. Buried in the obscurity of his humble school, he
+ looked out upon the busy world, and measured the mighty
+ capacities of his own soul with those whom society had placed
+ above him. I think I see him brooding over his position, and
+ longing to be free, as the suffocating man longs for the
+ boundless air of heaven. His hour of triumph came, and
+ surpassed, perhaps, his own aspirations. From the schoolroom he
+ entered that of the court&mdash;a chance offered&mdash;a
+ position gained&mdash;the law his theme, he at once not only
+ equaled, but soared even beyond the aim of the most favored of
+ his compeers.</p>
+
+ <p>The era was one of extravagance. The virgin soil of
+ Mississippi was pouring into the laps of her generous sons
+ untold abundance. There were thousands of her citizens, full of
+ health and talent, who adorned excesses of living by the
+ tasteful procurements of wealth, and the highest
+ accomplishments of mind. Into this world Prentiss entered,
+ heralded by naught save his own genius. The heirs of princely
+ fortunes, the descendants of heroes, men of power and place, of
+ family pride, of national associations, were not more proud,
+ more gallant, than was Prentiss, for "he was reckoned among the
+ noblest Romans of them all."</p>
+
+ <p>Each step in his new fortune seemed only to elicit new
+ qualities for admiration. At the forum he dazzled&mdash;the
+ jury and the judge were confounded&mdash;the crowd carried him
+ to the stump, and the multitude listened as to one inspired.
+ Fair ladies vied with each other in waving tiny hands in token
+ of admiration&mdash;the stolid judges of the Supreme Court
+ wondered at the mind of the apparent boy&mdash;even the walls
+ of Congress echoed forth pæans to his praise. His course was as
+ rapid and brilliant as that of the meteor that suddenly springs
+ athwart the heavens, but he was human and accomplished his
+ task, herculean as he was, at the price of an injured
+ constitution.</p>
+
+ <p>In personal appearance Prentiss was eminently handsome, and
+ yet eminently manly. Although of medium height, there was that
+ in the carriage of his head that was astonishingly impressive.
+ I shall never forget him on one occasion, "in '44," when he
+ rose at a public meeting to reply to an antagonist worthy of
+ his steel. His whole soul was roused, his high smooth forehead
+ fairly coruscated. He remained silent for some seconds, and
+ only <i>looked</i>. The bald eagle never glanced so fiercely
+ from his eyry. It seemed as if his deep blue eye would distend
+ until it swallowed up the thousands of his audience. For an
+ instant the effect was painful; he saw it and smiled, when a
+ cheer burst from the admiring multitude that fairly shook the
+ earth.</p>
+
+ <p>His voice was clear and sweet, and could be heard at an
+ immense distance, and yet, to be all like Demosthenes, he had a
+ perceptible impediment in his speech. As a reader he had no
+ superior. His narration was clear and unadorned, proper
+ sentences were subduedly humorous, but the impressive parts
+ were delivered with an effect that reminded me of the elder
+ Kean.</p>
+
+ <p>His imagination was unsurpassed, and the rich stores of his
+ mind supplied him with never-ending material, quoted and
+ original. The slightest allusion to anything gave him the key
+ to all its peculiarities if he had occasion to allude to the
+ diamond, its bed in the Golconda, its discovery by some poor
+ native, its being associated with commerce, its polish by the
+ lapidary, its adorning the neck of beauty, its rays brilliant
+ and serene, its birth, its life, its history, all flashed upon
+ him. So with every idea in the vast storehouse of his mind. He
+ seemed to know all things, in mass and in particulars, never
+ confused, never at a loss&mdash;the hearer listened, wondered,
+ and dreamed. Thoughts of moment came forth as demanded, but ten
+ thousand other thoughts rare and beautiful, continued to bubble
+ up, after all effort ceased.</p>
+
+ <p>No man had a more delicate or subtle wit than Prentiss, or a
+ more Falstaffian humor when it suited his purpose. Who will
+ ever forget the spending of a social dinner hour with him, when
+ his health was high and his mind at ease? Who so
+ lovely?&mdash;who so refined? What delight was exhibited by
+ sweet ladies who listened to his words! Who could so eloquently
+ discourse of roses and buds, of
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page290"
+ id="page290"></a>[pg 290]</span> lilies and pearls, of eyes
+ and graces, of robes and angels, and yet never offend the
+ most sensitive of the sex, or call other than the blush of
+ pleasure and joy to the cheek? Who could, on the "public
+ day," ascend so gracefully from the associations of tariffs,
+ and banks, and cotton, and sugar, to greet the fair ladies
+ that honored him with their presence? How he would lean
+ toward them, as he dwelt upon "the blessed of all God's
+ handiwork," compared their bright eyes to "day-stars" that
+ lit up the dark recesses of his own clouded imagination; and
+ how he would revel, like another Puck, among the rays and
+ beams of smiles called forth by his own happy
+ compliments&mdash;and how he would change from all this, and
+ in an instant seemingly arm himself with the thunderbolts of
+ Jove, which he would dash with appalling sound among his
+ antagonists, or at principles he opposed, and yet with such
+ a charm, with such a manner, that these very daughters of
+ the sunny South who had listened to his syren-song so
+ admiringly, would now stare, and wonder, and pallor, and yet
+ listen, even as one gazes over the precipice, and is
+ fascinated at the very nearness to destruction.</p>
+
+ <p>Prentiss had originally a constitution of iron; his frame
+ was so perfect in its organization, that, in spite of the most
+ extraordinary negligence of health, his muscles had all the
+ compactness, glossiness, and distinctiveness of one who had
+ specially trained by diet and exercise. It was this
+ constitution that enabled him to accomplish so much in so short
+ a time. He could almost wholly discard sleep for weeks, with
+ apparent impunity; he could eat or starve; do anything that
+ would kill ordinary men, yet never feel a twinge of pain. I saw
+ him once amidst a tremendous political excitement; he had been
+ talking, arguing, dining, visiting, and traveling, without rest
+ for three whole days. His companions would steal away at times
+ for sleep, but Prentiss was like an ever-busy spirit, here, and
+ there, and everywhere. The morning of the fourth day came, and
+ he was to appear before an audience familiar with his fame, but
+ one that had never heard him speak; an audience critical in the
+ last degree, he desired to succeed, for more was depending than
+ he had ever before had cause to stake upon such an occasion.
+ Many felt a fear that he would be unprepared. I mingled in the
+ expecting crowd: I saw ladies who had never honored the stump
+ with their presence struggling for seats, counselors,
+ statesmen, and professional men, the elite of a great city,
+ were gathered together. An hour before I had seen Prentiss,
+ still apparently ignorant of his engagement.</p>
+
+ <p>The time of trial came, and the remarkable man presented
+ himself, the very picture of buoyant health, of unbroken rest.
+ All this had been done <i>by the unyielding resolve of his
+ will</i>&mdash;his triumph was complete; high-wrought
+ expectations were more than realized, prejudice was demolished,
+ professional jealousy silenced, and he descended from the
+ rostrum, freely accorded his proper place among the orators and
+ statesmen of the "Southern Metropolis."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Clay visited the South in the fall of '44, and, as he
+ was then candidate for the Presidency, he attracted in New
+ Orleans, if possible, more than usual notice. His hotel was the
+ St. Charles; toward noon he reached that magnificent palace.
+ The streets presented a vast ocean of heads, and every building
+ commanding a view was literally covered with human beings. The
+ great "Statesman of the West" presented himself to the
+ multitude between the tall columns of the finest portico in the
+ world. The scene was beyond description, and of vast interest.
+ As the crowd swayed to and fro, a universal shout was raised
+ for Mr. Clay to speak; he uttered a sentence or two, waved his
+ hand in adieu, and escaped amidst the prevailing confusion.
+ Prentiss meanwhile was at a side window, evidently unconscious
+ of being himself noticed, gazing upon what was passing with all
+ the delight of the humblest spectator. Suddenly his name was
+ announced. He attempted to withdraw from public gaze, but his
+ friends pushed him forward. Again his name was shouted, hats
+ and caps were thrown in the air, and he was finally compelled
+ to show himself on the portico. With remarkable delicacy, he
+ chose a less prominent place than that previously occupied by
+ Mr. Clay, although perfectly visible. He thanked his friends
+ for their kindness by repeated bows, and by such smiles as he
+ alone could give. "A speech! A speech!" thundered a thousand
+ voices. Prentiss lifted his hand; in an instant everything was
+ still&mdash;then pointing to the group that surrounded Mr.
+ Clay, he said, "Fellow-citizens, when the eagle is soaring in
+ the sky, the owls and the bats retire to their holes." And long
+ before the shout that followed this remark had ceased, Prentiss
+ had disappeared amid the multitude.</p>
+
+ <p>But the most extraordinary exhibition of Prentiss' powers of
+ mind and endurance of body, was shown while he was running for
+ Congress. He had the whole State to canvass, and the magnitude
+ of the work was just what he desired. From what I have learned
+ from anecdotes, that canvass must have presented some scenes
+ combining the highest mental and physical exertion that was
+ ever witnessed in the world. Prentiss was in perfect health,
+ and in the first blush of success, and it cannot be doubted but
+ that his best efforts of oratory were then made, and now live
+ recorded only in the fading memories of his hearers. An
+ incident illustrative of the time is remembered, that may hear
+ repeating.</p>
+
+ <p>The whole state of Mississippi was alive with excitement;
+ for the moment, she felt that her sovereign dignity had been
+ trifled with, and that her reputation demanded the return of
+ Prentiss to Congress. Crowds followed him from place to place,
+ making a gala time of weeks together. Among the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page291"
+ id="page291"></a>[pg 291]</span> shrewd worldlings who take
+ advantage of such times "to coin money," was the proprietor
+ of a traveling menagerie, and he soon found out that the
+ multitude followed Prentiss. Getting the list of that
+ remarkable man's "appointments," he filled up his own, and
+ it was soon noticed as a remarkable coincidence, that the
+ orator always "arrived along with the other 'lions.'" The
+ reason of this meeting was discovered, and the "boys"
+ decided that Prentiss should "next time" speak from the top
+ of the lion's cage. Never was the menagerie more crowded. At
+ the proper time, the candidate gratified his constituents,
+ and mounted his singular rostrum. I was told by a person,
+ who professed to be an eye witness, that the whole affair
+ presented a singular mixture of the terrible and the
+ comical. Prentiss was, as usual, eloquent, and, as if
+ ignorant of the novel circumstances with which he was
+ surrounded, went deeply into the matter in hand, his
+ election. For a while the audience and the animals were
+ quiet, the former listening, the latter eyeing the speaker
+ with grave intensity. The first burst of applause
+ electrified the menagerie; the elephant threw his trunk into
+ the air and echoed back the noise, while the tigers and
+ bears significantly growled. On went Prentiss, and as each
+ peculiar animal vented his rage or approbation, he most
+ ingeniously wrought in its habits, as a facsimile of some
+ man or passion. In the meanwhile, the stately king of
+ beasts, who had been quietly treading the mazes of his
+ prison, became alarmed at the footsteps over his head, and
+ placing his mouth upon the floor of his cage, made
+ everything shake by his terrible roar. This, joined with the
+ already excited feelings of the audience, caused the ladies
+ to shriek, and a fearful commotion for a moment followed.
+ Prentiss, equal to every occasion, changed his tone and
+ manner; he commenced a playful strain, and introduced the
+ fox, the jackal, and hyena, and capped the climax by
+ likening some well known political opponent to a grave
+ baboon that presided over the "cage with monkeys"; the
+ resemblance was instantly recognized, and bursts of laughter
+ followed, that literally set many into convulsions. The
+ baboon, all unconscious of the attention he was attracting,
+ suddenly assumed a grimace, and then a serious face, when
+ Prentiss exclaimed&mdash;"I see, my fine fellow, that your
+ feelings are hurt by my unjust comparison, and I humbly beg
+ your pardon." The effect of all this may be vaguely
+ imagined, but it cannot be described.</p>
+
+ <p>Of Prentiss' power before a jury too much cannot be said.
+ Innumerable illustrations might be gathered up, showing that he
+ far surpassed any living advocate. "The trial of the
+ Wilkinsons" might be cited, although it was far from being one
+ of his best efforts. Two young men, only sons, and deeply
+ attached as friends, quarreled, and in the mad excitement of
+ the moment, one of them was killed. Upon the trial, the
+ testimony of the mother of the deceased was so direct, that it
+ seemed to render "the clearing of the prisoner" hopeless.
+ Prentiss spoke to the witness in the blandest manner and most
+ courtly style. The mother, arrayed in weeds, and bowed down
+ with sorrow, turned toward Prentiss, and answered his inquiries
+ with all the dignity of a perfectly accomplished lady&mdash;she
+ calmly uttered the truth, and every word she spoke rendered the
+ defense apparently more hopeless.</p>
+
+ <p>"Would you punish that young man with death?" said Prentiss,
+ pointing to the prisoner.</p>
+
+ <p>The questioned looked, and answered&mdash;"He has made me
+ childless, let the law take its course."</p>
+
+ <p>"And would wringing his mother's heart and hurrying her gray
+ hairs with sorrow into the grave, by rendering her childless,
+ assuage your grief?"</p>
+
+ <p>All present were dissolved in tears&mdash;even convulsive
+ sobbing was heard in the courtroom.</p>
+
+ <p>"No!" said the witness, with all the gushing tenderness of a
+ mother&mdash;"No! I would not add a sorrow to her heart, nor
+ that of her son!"</p>
+
+ <p>Admissions in the evidence followed, and hopes were uttered
+ for the prisoner's acquittal, that changed the whole character
+ of the testimony. What was a few moments before so dark, grew
+ light, and without the slightest act that might be construed
+ into an unfair advantage, in the hands of Prentiss, the witness
+ pleaded for the accused.</p>
+
+ <p>Soon after Mr. Prentiss settled in New Orleans, a meeting
+ was held to raise funds for the erection of a suitable monument
+ to Franklin. On that occasion, the lamented Wilde and the
+ accomplished McCaleb delivered ornate and chaste addresses upon
+ the value of art, and the policy of enriching New Orleans with
+ its exhibition. At the close of the meeting, as the audience
+ rose to depart, some one discovered Prentiss, and calling his
+ name, it was echoed from all sides&mdash;he tried to escape,
+ but was literally carried on the stand.</p>
+
+ <p>As a rich specimen of off-hand eloquence, I think the
+ address he delivered on that occasion was unequaled. Unlike any
+ other speech, he had the arts to deal with, and of course the
+ associations were of surpassing splendor. I knew that he was
+ ignorant of the technicalities of art, and had paid but little
+ attention to their study, and my surprise was unbounded to see
+ him, thus unexpectedly called upon, instantly arrange in his
+ mind ideas, and expressing facts and illustrations that would
+ have done honor to Burke, when dwelling upon the sublime and
+ beautiful. Had he been bred to the easel, or confined to the
+ sculptor's room, he could not have been more familiar with the
+ details of the studio&mdash;he painted with all the brilliancy
+ of Titian, and with the correctness of Raphael, while his
+ images in marble combined the softness of Praxiteles, and the
+ nervous energy of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page292"
+ id="page292"></a>[pg 292]</span> Michael Angelo. All this
+ with Prentiss was intuition&mdash;I believe that the whole
+ was the spontaneous thought of the moment, the crude
+ outlines that floated through his mind being filled up by
+ the intuitive teachings of his surpassing genius. His
+ conclusion was gorgeous&mdash;he passed Napoleon to the
+ summit of the Alps&mdash;his hearers saw him and his steel
+ clad warriors threading the snows of Mount St. Bernard, and
+ having gained the dizzy height, Prentiss represented "the
+ man of destiny" looking down upon the sunny plains of Italy,
+ and then with a mighty swoop, descending from the clouds and
+ making the grasp of Empire secondary to that of Art.</p>
+
+ <p>I had the melancholy pleasure of hearing his last, and, it
+ would seem to me, his greatest speech. Toward the close of the
+ last Presidential campaign, I found him in the interior of the
+ State, endeavoring to recruit his declining health. He had been
+ obliged to avoid all public speaking, and had gone far into the
+ country to get away from excitement. But there was a
+ "gathering" near by his temporary home, and he consented to be
+ present. It was late in the evening when he ascended the
+ "stand," which was supported by the trunks of two magnificent
+ forest trees, through which the setting sun poured with
+ picturesque effect. The ravages of ill health were apparent
+ upon his face, and his high massive forehead was paler, and
+ seemingly more transparent than usual. His audience, some three
+ or four hundred, was composed in a large degree of his old and
+ early friends. He seemed to feel deeply, and as there was
+ nothing to oppose, he assumed the style of the mild and
+ beautiful&mdash;he casually alluded to the days of his early
+ coming among his Southern friends&mdash;of hours of pleasure he
+ had massed, and of the hopes of the future. In a few moments
+ the bustle and confusion natural to a fatiguing day of
+ political wrangling ceased&mdash;one straggler after another
+ suspended his noisy demonstration, and gathered near the
+ speaker. Soon a mass of silent but heart-heaving humanity was
+ crowded compactly before him. Had Prentiss, on that occasion,
+ held the very heart-strings of his auditors in his hand, he
+ could not have had them more in his power. For an hour he
+ continued, rising from one important subject to another, until
+ the breath was fairly suspended in the excitement. An
+ uninterested spectator would have supposed that he had used
+ sorcery in thus transfixing his auditors. While all others
+ forgot, he noticed the day was drawing to a close, he turned
+ and looked toward the setting sun, and apostrophized its fading
+ glory&mdash;then in his most touching voice and manner,
+ concluded as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Friends&mdash;That glorious orb reminds me that the day is
+ spent, and that I too must close. Ere we part, let me hope that
+ it may be our good fortune to end our days in the same
+ splendor, and that when the evening of life comes, we may sink
+ to rest with the clouds that close in on our departure,
+ gold-tipped with the glorious effulgence of a well-spent
+ life!"</p>
+
+ <p>In conclusion, I would ask, will some historian, who can
+ sympathize with the noble dead, gather up the now fleeting
+ memorials that still live in memory, and combine them together,
+ that future generations may know something of the mighty mind
+ of Prentiss.</p>
+
+ <p>The remains of the orator must ever be imperfect&mdash;the
+ tone of voice&mdash;the flashing eye&mdash;the occasion, and
+ the mighty shout of the multitude, cannot be impressed; but
+ still Prentiss has left enough in his brilliant career, if
+ treasured up, to show posterity that he was every inch a man.
+ Let his fragmentary printed speeches&mdash;let the
+ reminiscences of his friends that treat of his power as an
+ orator, be brought together, and unsatisfactory as they may be,
+ there will be found left intrinsic value enough to accomplish
+ the object. There will be in the fluted column, though
+ shattered and defaced, an Ionian beauty that will tell
+ unerringly of the magnificent temple that it once adorned.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">BATON ROUGE, July 9, 1850.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From Household Words.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>THE CHEMISTRY OF A CANDLE.</h2>
+
+ <p>The Wilkinsons were having a small party,&mdash;it consisted
+ of themselves and Uncle Bagges&mdash;at which the younger
+ members of the family, home for the holidays, had been just
+ admitted to assist after dinner. Uncle Bagges was a gentleman
+ from whom his affectionate relatives cherished expectations of
+ a testamentary nature. Hence the greatest attention was paid by
+ them to the wishes of Mr. Bagges, as well as to every
+ observation which he might be pleased to make.</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh! what? you sir," said Mr. Bagges, facetiously addressing
+ himself to his eldest nephew, Harry,&mdash;"Eh! what? I am glad
+ to hear, sir, that you are doing well at school. Now&mdash;eh?
+ now, are you clever enough to tell where was Moses when he put
+ the candle out?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That depends, uncle," said the young gentleman, "on whether
+ he had lighted the candle to see with at night, or by daylight,
+ to seal a letter."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh! Very good, now! 'Pon my word, very good," exclaimed
+ Uncle Bagges. "You must be Lord Chancellor, sir&mdash;Lord
+ Chancellor, one of these days."</p>
+
+ <p>"And now, uncle," asked Harry, who was a favorite with his
+ uncle, "can you tell me what you do when you put a candle
+ out?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Clap an extinguisher on it, you young rogue, to be
+ sure."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh! but I mean, you cut off its supply of oxygen," said
+ Master Harry.</p>
+
+ <p>"Cut off its ox's&mdash;eh? what? I shall cut off your nose,
+ you young dog, one of these fine days."</p>
+
+ <p>"He means something he heard at the Royal Institution,"
+ observed Mrs. Wilkinson. "He reads a great deal about
+ chemistry, and he attended Professor Faraday's lectures there
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page293"
+ id="page293"></a>[pg 293]</span> on the chemical history of
+ a candle, and has been full of it ever since."</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, you sir," said Uncle Bagges, "come you here to me, and
+ tell me what you have to say about this chemical, eh?&mdash;or
+ comical: which?&mdash;this comical chemical history of a
+ candle."</p>
+
+ <p>"He'll bore you, Bagges," said Mr. Wilkinson. "Harry, don't
+ be troublesome to your uncle."</p>
+
+ <p>"Troublesome! Oh, not at all. He amuses me. I like to hear
+ him. So let him teach his old uncle the comicality and
+ chemicality of a farthing rushlight."</p>
+
+ <p>"A wax candle will be nicer and cleaner, uncle, and answer
+ the same purpose. There's one on the mantel-shelf. Let me light
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Take care you don't burn your fingers, Or set anything on
+ fire," said Mrs. Wilkinson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, uncle," commenced Harry, having drawn his chair to the
+ side of Mr. Bagges, "we have got our candle burning. What do
+ you see?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Let me put on my spectacles," answered the uncle.</p>
+
+ <p>"Look down on the top of the candle around the wick. See, it
+ is a little cup full of melted wax. The heat of the flame has
+ melted the wax just round the wick. The cold air keeps the
+ outside of it hard, so as to make the rim of it. The melted wax
+ in the little cup goes up through the wick to be burnt, just as
+ oil does in the wick of a lamp. What do you think makes it go
+ up, uncle?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why&mdash;why, the flame draws it up, doesn't it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not exactly, uncle. It goes up through little tiny passages
+ in the cotton wick, because very, very small channels, or
+ pipes, or pores, have the power in themselves of sucking up
+ liquids. What they do it by is called cap&mdash;something."</p>
+
+ <p>"Capillary attraction, Harry," suggested Mr. Wilkinson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, that's it; just as a sponge sucks up water, or a bit
+ of lump-sugar the little drop of tea or coffee left in the
+ bottom of a cup. But I mustn't say much more about this, or
+ else you will tell me I am doing something very much like
+ teaching my grandmother to&mdash;you know what."</p>
+
+ <p>"Your grandmother, eh, young sharp-shins?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No&mdash;I mean my uncle. Now, I'll blow the candle out,
+ like Moses; not to be in the dark, though, but to see into what
+ it is. Look at the smoke rising from the wick. I'll hold a bit
+ of lighted paper in the smoke, so as not to touch the wick. But
+ see, for all that, the candle lights again. So this shows that
+ the melted wax sucked up through the wick is turned into vapor;
+ and the vapor burns. The heat of the burning vapor keeps on
+ melting more wax, and that is sucked up too within the flame,
+ and turned into vapor, and burnt, and so on till the was is all
+ used up, and the candle is gone. So the flame, uncle, you see,
+ is the last of the candle, and the candle seems to go through
+ the flame into nothing&mdash;although it doesn't, but goes into
+ several things, and isn't it curious, as Professor Faraday
+ said, that the candle should look so splendid and glorious in
+ going away?"</p>
+
+ <p>"How well he remembers, doesn't he?" observed Mrs.
+ Wilkinson.</p>
+
+ <p>"I dare say," proceeded Harry, "that the flame of the candle
+ looks flat to you; but if we were to put a lamp glass over it,
+ so as to shelter it from the draught, you would see it is
+ round,&mdash;round sideways and running up to a peak. It is
+ drawn up by the hot air; you know that hot air always rises,
+ and that is the way smoke is taken up the chimney. What should
+ you think was in the middle of the flame?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I should say fire," replied Uncle Bagges.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, no! The flame is hollow. The bright flame we see is
+ something no thicker than a thin peel, or skin; and it doesn't
+ touch the wick. Inside of it is the vapor I told you of just
+ now. If you put one end of a bent pipe into the middle of the
+ flame, and let the other end of the pipe dip into a bottle, the
+ vapor or gas from the candle will mix with the air there; and
+ if you set fire to the mixture of gas from the candle and air
+ in the bottle, it would go off with a bang."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wish you'd do that, Harry," said Master Tom, the younger
+ brother of the juvenile lecturer.</p>
+
+ <p>"I want the proper things," answered Harry. "Well, uncle,
+ the flame of the candle is a little shining case, with gas in
+ the inside of it, and air on the outside, so that the case of
+ flame is between the air and the gas. The gas keeps going into
+ the flame to burn, and when the candle burns properly, none of
+ it ever passes out through the flame; and none of the air ever
+ gets in through the flame to the gas. The greatest heat of the
+ candle is in this skin, or peel, or case of flame."</p>
+
+ <p>"Case of flame!" repeated Mr. Bagges. "Live and learn. I
+ should have thought a candle-flame was as thick as my poor old
+ noddle."</p>
+
+ <p>"I can show you the contrary," said Harry. "I take this
+ piece of white paper, look, and hold it a second or two down
+ upon the candle-flame, keeping the flame very steady. Now I'll
+ rub off the black of the smoke, and&mdash;there&mdash;you find
+ that the paper is scorched in the shape of a ring; but inside
+ the ring it is only dirtied, and not singed at all."</p>
+
+ <p>"Seeing is believing," remarked the uncle.</p>
+
+ <p>"But," proceeded Harry, "there is more in the candle-flame
+ than the gas that comes out of the candle. You know a candle
+ won't burn without air. There must be always air around the
+ gas, and touching it like, to make it burn. If a candle hasn't
+ got enough air, it goes out, or burns badly, so that some of
+ the vapor inside of the flame comes out through it in the form
+ of smoke, and this is the reason of a candle smoking. So now
+ you know why a great clumsy dip smokes more than a neat wax
+ candle; it is because the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page294"
+ id="page294"></a>[pg 294]</span> thick wick of the dip makes
+ too much fuel in proportion to the air that can get to
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Dear me! Well, I suppose there is a reason for everything,"
+ exclaimed the young philosopher's mamma.</p>
+
+ <p>"What should you say now," continued Harry, "if I told you
+ that the smoke that comes out of a candle is the very thing
+ that makes a candle light? Yes; a candle shines by consuming
+ its own smoke. The smoke of a candle is a cloud of small dust,
+ and the little grains of the dust are bits of charcoal, or
+ carbon, as chemists call it. They are made in the flame, and
+ burnt in the flame, and, while burning, make the flame bright.
+ They are burnt the moment they are made; but the flame goes on
+ making more of them as fast as it burns them: and that is how
+ it keeps bright. The place they are made in, is in the ease of
+ flame itself, where the strong heat is. The great heat
+ separates them from the gas which conies from the melted wax,
+ and, as soon as they touch the air on the outside of the thin
+ case of flame, they burn."</p>
+
+ <p>"Can you tell how it is that the little bits of carbon came
+ the brightness of the flame?" asked Mr. Wilkinson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Because they are pieces of solid matter," answered Harry.
+ "To make a flame shine, there must always be some
+ solid&mdash;or at least liquid-matter in it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very good." said Mr. Bagges,&mdash;"solid stuff necessary
+ to brightness."</p>
+
+ <p>"Some gases and other things," resumed Harry, "that burn
+ with a flame you can hardly see, burn splendidly when something
+ solid is put into them. Oxygen and hydrogen&mdash;tell me if I
+ use too hard words, uncle&mdash;oxygen and hydrogen gases, if
+ mixed together and blown through a pipe, burn with plenty of
+ heat but with very little light. But if their flame is blown
+ upon a piece of quick-lime, it gets so bright as to be quite
+ dazzling, Make the smoke of oil of turpentine pass through the
+ same flame, and it gives the flame a beautiful brightness
+ directly."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wonder," observed Uncle Bagges, "what has made you such a
+ bright youth."</p>
+
+ <p>"Taking after uncle, perhaps," retorted his nephew. "Don't
+ put my candle and me out. Well, carbon, or charcoal is what
+ causes the brightness of all lamps, and candles, and other
+ common lights; so, of course, there is carbon in what they are
+ all made of."</p>
+
+ <p>"So carbon is smoke, eh? and light is owing to your carbon.
+ Giving light out of smoke, eh? as they say in the classics,"
+ observed Mr. Bagges.</p>
+
+ <p>"But what becomes of the candle," pursued Harry, "as it
+ burns away? where does it go?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Nowhere," said his mamma, "I should think. It burns to
+ nothing."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, dear, no!" said Harry, "everything&mdash;everybody goes
+ somewhere."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh!&mdash;rather an important consideration, that," Mr.
+ Bagges moralized.</p>
+
+ <p>"You can see it goes into smoke, which makes soot, for one
+ thing," pursued Harry. "There are other things it goes into,
+ not to be seen by only looking, but you can get to see them by
+ taking the right means,&mdash;just put your hand over the
+ candle, uncle."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you, young gentleman, I had rather be excused."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not close enough down to burn you, uncle; higher up.
+ There&mdash;you feel a stream of hot air; so something seems to
+ rise from the candle. Suppose you were to put a very long
+ slender gas-burner over the flame, and let the flame burn just
+ within the end of it, as if it were a chimney,&mdash;some of
+ the hot steam would go up and come out at the top, but a sort
+ of dew would be left behind in the glass chimney, if the
+ chimney was cold enough when you put it on. There are ways of
+ collecting this sort of dew, and when it is collected it turns
+ out to be really water. I am not joking, uncle. Water is one of
+ the things which the candle turns into in burning,&mdash;water
+ coming out of fire. A jet of oil gives above a pint of water in
+ burning. In some lighthouses they burn, Professor Faraday says,
+ up to two gallons of oil in a night, and if the windows are
+ cold the steam from the oil clouds the inside of the windows,
+ and, in frosty weather, freezes into ice."</p>
+
+ <p>"Water out of a candle, eh?" exclaimed Mr. Bagges. "As hard
+ to get, I should have thought, as blood out of a post. Where
+ does it come from?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Part from the wax, and part from the air, and yet not a
+ drop of it comes either from the air or the wax. What do you
+ make of that, uncle?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh? Oh! I'm no hand at riddles. Give it up."</p>
+
+ <p>"No riddle at all, uncle. The part that comes from the wax
+ isn't water, and the part that comes from the air isn't water,
+ but when put together they become water. Water is a mixture of
+ two things then. This can be shown. Put some iron wire or
+ turnings into a gun barrel open at both ends. Heat the middle
+ of the barrel red-hot in a little furnace. Keep the heat up,
+ and send the steam of boiling water through the red-hot gun
+ barrel. What will come out at the other end of the barrel won't
+ be steam; it will be gas, which doesn't turn to water again
+ when it gets cold, and which burns if you put a light to it.
+ Take the turnings out of the gun-barrel, and you will find them
+ changed to rust, and heavier than when they were put in. Part
+ of the water is the gas that comes out of the barrel, the other
+ part is what mixes with the iron turnings, and changes them to
+ rust, and makes them heavier. You can fill a Wadder with the
+ gas that comes out of the gun-barrel, or you can pass bubbles
+ of it up into a jar of water turned upside down in a trough,
+ and, as I said, you can make this part of the water burn."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" cried Mr. Bagges. "Upon my word! One of these day, we
+ shall have you setting the Thames on
+ fire."</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page295"
+ id="page295"></a>[pg 295]</span>
+
+ <p>"Nothing more easy," said Harry, "than to burn part of the
+ Thames, or of any other water; I mean the gas that I have just
+ told you about, which is called hydrogen. In burning, hydrogen
+ produces water again, like the flame of a candle. Indeed,
+ hydrogen is that part of the water formed by a candle burning,
+ that comes from the wax. All things that have hydrogen in them
+ produce water in burning, and the more there is in them the
+ more they produce. When pure hydrogen burns, nothing comes from
+ it but water, no smoke or soot at all. If you were to burn one
+ ounce of it, the water you would get would be just nine ounces.
+ There are many ways of making hydrogen besides out of steam by
+ the hot gun-barrel. I could show it you in a moment by pouring
+ a little sulphuric acid mixed with water into a bottle upon a
+ few zinc or steel filings, and putting a cork in the bottle
+ with a little pipe through it, and setting fire to the gas that
+ would come from the mouth of the pipe. We should find the flame
+ very hot, but having scarcely any brightness. I should like you
+ to see the curious qualities of hydrogen, particularly how
+ light it is, so as to carry things up in the air; and I wish I
+ had a small balloon to fill with it, and make go up to the
+ ceiling, or a bag-pipe full of it to blow soap-bubbles with,
+ and show how much faster they rise than common ones, blown with
+ the breath."</p>
+
+ <p>"So do I," interposed Master Tom.</p>
+
+ <p>"And so," resumed Harry, "hydrogen, you know, uncle, is part
+ of water, and just one-ninth part."</p>
+
+ <p>"As hydrogen is to water, so is a tailor to an ordinary
+ individual, eh?" Mr. Bagges remarked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, now then, uncle, if hydrogen is the tailor's part of
+ the water, what are the other eight parts? The iron turnings
+ used to make hydrogen in the gun-barrel, and rusted, take just
+ those eight parts from the water in the shape of steam, and are
+ so much the heavier. Burn iron turnings in the air, and they
+ make the same rust, and gain just the same in weight. So the
+ other eight parts must be found in the air for one thing, and
+ in the rusted iron turnings for another, and they must also be
+ in the water; and now the question is, how to get at them?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Out of the water? Fish for them, I should say," suggested
+ Mr. Bagges.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, so we can," said Harry. "Only, instead of hooks and
+ lines, we must use wires&mdash;two wires, one from one end, the
+ other from the other, of a galvanic battery. Put the points of
+ these wires into water, a little distance apart, and they
+ instantly take the water to pieces. If they are of copper, or a
+ metal that will rust easily, one of them begins to rust, and
+ air-bubbles come up from the other. These bubbles are hydrogen.
+ The other part of the water mixes with the end of the wire and
+ makes rust. But if the wires are of gold, or a metal that does
+ not rust easily, air-bubbles rise from the ends of both wires.
+ Collect the bubbles from both wires in a tube, and fire them,
+ and they turn to water again; and this water is exactly the
+ same weight as the quantity that has been changed into the two
+ gases. Now then, uncle, what should you think water was
+ composed of?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh? well&mdash;I suppose of those very identical two gases,
+ young gentleman."</p>
+
+ <p>"Right, uncle. Recollect that the gas from one of the wires
+ was hydrogen, the one-ninth of water. What should you guess the
+ gas from the other wire to be?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Stop&mdash;eh?&mdash;wait a bit&mdash;eh?&mdash;oh! why,
+ the other eight-ninths, to be sure."</p>
+
+ <p>"Good again, uncle. Now this gas that is eight-ninths of
+ water is the gas called oxygen that I mentioned just now. This
+ is a very curious gas. It won't burn in air at all itself, like
+ gas from a lamp, but it has a wonderful power of making things
+ burn that are lighted and put into it. If you fill a jar with
+ it&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"How do you manage that?" Mr. Bagges inquired.</p>
+
+ <p>"You fill the jar with water," answered Harry, "and you
+ stand it upside down in a vessel full of water too. Then you
+ let bubbles of the gas up into the jar, and they turn out the
+ water and take its place. Put a stopper in the neck of the jar,
+ or hold a glass plate against the mouth of it, and you can take
+ it out of the water and so have bottled oxygen. A lighted
+ candle put into a jar of oxygen blazes up directly, and is
+ consumed before you can say Jack Robinson. Charcoal burns away
+ in it as fast, with beautiful bright sparks&mdash;phosphorus
+ with a light that dazzles you to look at&mdash;and a piece of
+ iron or steel just made red-hot at the end first, is burnt in
+ oxygen quicker than a stick would be in common air. The
+ experiment of burning things in oxygen beats any
+ fire-works."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, how jolly!" exclaimed Tom.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now we see, uncle," Harry continued, "that water is
+ hydrogen and oxygen united together, that water is got wherever
+ hydrogen is burnt in common air, that a candle won't burn
+ without air, and that when a candle burns there is hydrogen in
+ it burning, and forming water. Now, then, where does the
+ hydrogen of the candle get the oxygen from, to turn into water
+ with it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"From the air, eh?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Just so. I can't stop to tell you of the other things which
+ there is oxygen in, and the many beautiful and amusing ways of
+ getting it. But as there is oxygen in the air, and as oxygen
+ makes things burn at such a rate, perhaps you wonder why air
+ does not make things burn as fast as oxygen. The reason is,
+ that there is something else in the air that mixes with the
+ oxygen and weakens it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Makes a sort of gaseous grog of it, eh?" said Mr. Bagges.
+ "But how is that proved?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, there is a gas, called nitrous gas, which, if you mix
+ it with oxygen, takes all the oxygen into itself, and the
+ mixture of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page296"
+ id="page296"></a>[pg 296]</span> nitrous gas and oxygen, if
+ you put water with it, goes into the water. Mix nitrous gas
+ and air together in a jar over water, and the nitrous gas
+ takes away the oxygen, and then the water sucks up the mixed
+ oxygen and nitrous gas, and that part of the air which
+ weakens the oxygen is left behind. Burning phosphorus in
+ confined air will also take all the oxygen from it, and
+ there are other ways of doing the same thing. The portion of
+ the air left behind is called nitrogen. You wouldn't know it
+ from common air by the look; it has no color, taste, nor
+ smell, and it won't burn. But things won't burn in it,
+ either; and anything on fire put into it goes out directly.
+ It isn't fit to breathe, and a mouse, or any animal, shut up
+ in it, dies. It isn't poisonous, though; creatures only die
+ in it for want of oxygen. We breathe it with oxygen, and
+ then it does no harm, but good: for if we breathed pure
+ oxygen, we should breathe away so violently, that we should
+ soon breathe our life out. In the same way, if the air were
+ nothing but oxygen, a candle would not last above a
+ minute.</p>
+
+ <p>"What a tallow-chandler's bill we should have!" remarked
+ Mrs. Wilkinson.</p>
+
+ <p>"'If a house were on fire in oxygen,' as Professor Faraday
+ said, 'every iron bar, or rafter, or pillar, every nail and
+ iron tool, and the fire-place itself; all the zinc and copper
+ roofs, and leaden coverings, and gutters, and pipes, would
+ consume and burn, increasing the combustion.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"That would be, indeed, burning 'like a house on fire,'"
+ observed Mr. Bagges.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Think,'" said Harry, continuing his quotation, "'of the
+ Houses of Parliament, or a steam-engine manufactory. Think of
+ an iron proof-chest no proof against oxygen. Think of a
+ locomotive and its train,&mdash;every engine, every carriage,
+ and even every rail would be set on fire and burnt up.' So now,
+ uncle, I think you see what the use of nitrogen is, and
+ especially how it prevents a candle from burning out too
+ fast."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" said Mr. Bagges. "Well, I will say I do think we are
+ under considerable obligations to nitrogen."</p>
+
+ <p>"I have explained to you, uncle," pursued Harry, "how a
+ candle, in burning, turns into water. But it turns into
+ something else. besides that. There is a stream of hot air
+ going up from it that won't condense into dew; some of that is
+ the nitrogen of the air which the candle has taken all the
+ oxygen from. But there is more in it than nitrogen. Hold a long
+ glass tube over a candle, so that the stream of hot air from it
+ may go up through the tube. Hold a jar over the end of the tube
+ to collect some of the stream of hot air. Put some lime-water,
+ which looks quite clear, into the jar; stop the jar, and shake
+ it up. The lime-water, which was quite clear before, turns
+ milky. Then there is something made by the burning of the
+ candle that changes the color of the lime-water. That is a gas,
+ too, and you can collect it, and examine it. It is to be got
+ from several things, and is a part of all chalk, marble, and
+ the shells of eggs or of shell-fish. The easiest way to make it
+ is by pouring muriatic or sulphuric acid on chalk or marble.
+ The marble or chalk begins to hiss or bubble, and you can
+ collect the bubbles in the same way that you can oxygen. The
+ gas made by the candle in burning, and which also is got out of
+ the chalk and marble, is called carbonic acid. It puts out a
+ light in a moment; it kills any animal that breathes it, and it
+ is really poisonous to breathe, because it destroys life even
+ when mixed with a pretty large quantity of common air. The
+ bubbles made by beer when it ferments, are carbonic acid, so is
+ the air that fizzes out of soda-water, and it is good to
+ swallow though it is deadly to breathe. It is got from chalk by
+ burning the chalk as well as by putting acid to it, and burning
+ the carbonic acid out of chalk makes the chalk lime. This is
+ why people are killed sometimes by getting in the way of the
+ wind that blows from lime-kilns."</p>
+
+ <p>"Of which it is advisable carefully to keep to the
+ windward." Mr. Wilkinson observed.</p>
+
+ <p>"The most curious thing about carbonic acid gas," proceeded
+ Harry, "is its weight. Although it is only a sort of air, it is
+ so heavy that you can pour it from one vessel into another. You
+ may dip a cup of it and pour it down upon a candle, and it will
+ put the candle out, which would astonish an ignorant person;
+ because carbonic acid gas is as invisible as the air, and the
+ candle seems to be put out by nothing. A soap-bubble or common
+ air floats on it like wood on water. Its weight is what makes
+ it collect in brewers' vats; and also in wells, where it is
+ produced naturally; and owing to its collecting in such places
+ it causes the deaths we so often hear about of those who go
+ down into them without proper care. It is found in many springs
+ of water, more or less; and a great deal of it comes out of the
+ earth in some places. Carbonic acid gas is what stupefies the
+ dogs in the Grotto del Cane. Well, but how is carbonic acid gas
+ made by the candle?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope with your candle you'll throw some light upon the
+ subject," said Uncle Bagges.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope so," answered Harry. "Recollect it is the burning of
+ the smoke, or soot, or carbon of the candle, that makes the
+ candle-flame bright. Also that the candle won't burn without
+ air. Likewise that it will not burn in nitrogen, or air that
+ has been deprived of oxygen. So the carbon of the candle
+ mingles with oxygen, in burning, to make carbonic acid gas;
+ just as the hydrogen does to form water. Carbonic acid gas,
+ then, is carbon or charcoal dissolved in oxygen. Here is black
+ soot getting invisible and changing into air; and this seems
+ strange, uncle, doesn't it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ahem! Strange, if true," answered Mr. Bagges. "Eh? Well! I
+ suppose it's all right."</p>
+
+ <p>"Quite so, uncle. Burn carbon or charcoal either in the air
+ or in oxygen, and it is sure always to make carbonic acid, and
+ nothing <span class="pagenum"><a name="page297"
+ id="page297"></a>[pg 297]</span> else, if it is dry. No dew
+ or mist gathers in a cold glass jar if you burn dry charcoal
+ in it. The charcoal goes entirely into carbonic acid gas,
+ and leaves nothing behind but ashes, which are only earthy
+ stuff that was in the charcoal, but not part of the charcoal
+ itself. And now, shall I tell you something about
+ carbon?"</p>
+
+ <p>"With all my heart," assented Mr. Bagges.</p>
+
+ <p>"I said that there was carbon or charcoal in all common
+ lights, so there is in every common kind of fuel. If you heat
+ coal or wood away from the air, some gas comes away, and leaves
+ behind coke from coal, and charcoal from wood; both carbon,
+ though not pure. Heat carbon as much as you will in a close
+ vessel, and it does not change in the least; but let the air
+ get to it, and then it burns and flies off in carbonic acid
+ gas. This makes carbon so convenient for fuel. But it is
+ ornamental as well as useful, uncle. The diamond is nothing
+ else than carbon."</p>
+
+ <p>"The diamond, eh! You mean the black diamond."</p>
+
+ <p>"No: the diamond, really and truly. The diamond is only
+ carbon in the shape of a crystal."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh? and can't some of your clever chemists crystalize a
+ little bit of carbon, and make a Koh-i-noor?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, uncle, perhaps we shall, some day. In the mean time I
+ suppose we must be content with making carbon so brilliant as
+ it is in the flame of a candle. Well; now you see that a
+ candle-flame is vapor burning, and the vapor, in burning, turns
+ into water and carbonic acid gas. The oxygen of both the
+ carbonic acid gas and the water comes from the air, and the
+ hydrogen and carbon together are the vapor. They are distilled
+ out of the melted was by the heat. But, you know, carbon alone
+ can't be distilled by any heat. It can be distilled, though,
+ when it is joined with hydrogen, as it is in the wax, and then
+ the mixed hydrogen and carbon rise in gas of the same kind as
+ the gas in the streets, and that also is distilled by heat from
+ coal. So a candle is a little gas manufactory in itself, that
+ burns the gas as fast as it makes it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Haven't you pretty nearly come to your candle's end'!" said
+ Mr. Wilkinson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nearly. I only want to tell uncle, that the burning of a
+ candle is almost exactly like our breathing. Breathing is
+ consuming oxygen, only not so fast as burning. In breathing we
+ throw out water in vapor and carbonic acid from our lungs, and
+ take oxygen in. Oxygen is as necessary to support the life of
+ the body, as it is to keep up the flame of a candle."</p>
+
+ <p>"So," said Mr. Bagges, "man is a candle, eh? and Shakspeare
+ knew that, I suppose, (as he did most things,) when he
+ wrote</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>'Out, out, brief candle!'</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"Well, well; we old ones are moulds, and you young squires
+ are dips and rushlights, eh? Any more to tell us about the
+ candle?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I could tell you a great deal more about oxygen, and
+ hydrogen, and carbon, and water, and breathing, that Professor
+ Faraday said, if I had time; but you should go and hear him
+ yourself, uncle."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh? well! I think I will. Some of us seniors may learn
+ something from a juvenile lecture, at any rate, if given by a
+ Faraday. And now, my boy. I will tell you what," added Mr.
+ Bagges, "I am very glad to find you so fond of study and
+ science; and you deserve to be encouraged: and so I'll give you
+ a what-d'ye-call-it'?&mdash;a Galvanic Battery, on your next
+ birth-day; and so much for your teaching your old uncle the
+ chemistry of a candle."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From a Review of Griswold's <i>Prose Writers of
+ America</i>, in the Southern Literary Messenger.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>DANIEL WEBSTER,</h2>
+
+ <h3>AS A STATESMAN, AND AS A MAN OF LETTERS.</h3>
+
+ <p>Mr. Webster is properly selected as the representative of
+ the best sense, and highest wisdom, and most consummate
+ dignity, of the politics and oratory of the present times,
+ because his great intelligence has continued to be so finely
+ sensitive to all the influences that stir the action and
+ speculation of the country.</p>
+
+ <p>With elements of reason, definite, absolute, and emphatic;
+ with principles settled, strenuous, deep and unchangeable as
+ his being; his wisdom is yet exquisitely practical: with
+ subtlest sagacity it apprehends every change in the
+ circumstances in which it is to act, and can accommodate its
+ action without loss of vigor, or alteration of its general
+ purpose. Its theories always "lean and hearken" to the actual.
+ By a sympathy of the mind, almost transcendental in its
+ delicacy, its speculations are attracted into a parallelism
+ with the logic of life and nature. In most men, that
+ intellectual susceptibility by which they are capable of being
+ reacted upon by the outer world, and having their principles
+ and views expanded, modified or quickened, does not outlast the
+ first period of life; from that time they remain fixed and
+ rigid in their policy, temper and characteristics; if a new
+ phase of society is developed, it must find its exponent in
+ other men. But in Webster this fresh suggestive sensibility of
+ the judgment has been carried on into the matured and
+ determined wisdom of manhood. His perceptions, feelings,
+ reasonings, tone, are always up to the level of the hour, or in
+ advance of it; sometimes far, very far in advance, as in the
+ views thrown out in his speech at Baltimore, on an
+ international commercial system, in which he showed that he
+ then foresaw both the fate of the tariff and the fallacy of
+ free-trade. No man has ever been able to say, or now can say,
+ that he is before Webster. The youngest men in the nation look
+ to him, not as representing the past, but as leading in the
+ future.</p>
+
+ <p>This practicalness and readiness of adaptation are
+ instinctive, not voluntary and designed. They are united with
+ the most decided preference for certain opinions and the most
+ earnest averseness to others. Nothing
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page298"
+ id="page298"></a>[pg 298]</span> can be less like
+ Talleyrand's system of waiting for events. He has never, in
+ view of a change which he saw to be inevitable, held himself
+ in reserve and uncommitted. What Webster is at any time,
+ that he is strenuously, entirely, openly. He has first
+ opposed, with every energy of his mind and temper, that
+ which, when it has actually come, he is ready to accept, and
+ make the best of. He never surrenders in advance a position
+ which knows will be carried; he takes his place, and
+ delivers battle; he fights as one who is fighting the last
+ battle of his country's hopes; he fires the last shot. When
+ the smoke and tumult are cleared off, where is Webster! Look
+ around for the nearest rallying point which the view
+ presents; there he stands, with his hand upon his heart, in
+ grim composure; calm, dignified, resolute; neither
+ disheartened nor surprised by defeat. "Leaving the things
+ that are behind," is now the trumpet-sound by which he
+ rallies his friends to a new confidence, and stimulates them
+ to fresh efforts. It is obvious that Webster, when
+ contending with all his force for or against some particular
+ measure, has not been contemplating the probability of being
+ compelled to oppose or defend a different policy, and, so,
+ choosing his words warily, in reference to future
+ possibilities of a personal kind: yet when the time has come
+ that he has been obliged to fight with his face in another
+ direction, it has always been found that no one principle
+ had been asserted, no one sentiment displayed, incompatible
+ with his new positions. This union of consistency with
+ practicability has arisen naturally from the extent and
+ comprehensiveness of his views, from the breadth and
+ generality with which the analytical power of his
+ understanding has always led him to state his principles and
+ define his position. From the particular scheme or special
+ maxim which his party was insisting upon, his mind rose to a
+ higher and more general formula of truth.</p>
+
+ <p>Owing to the same superior penetration and reach of thought,
+ the gloom of successive repulses has never been able to
+ paralyze the power which it has saddened. The constitution has
+ been so often invaded and trampled upon, that to a common eye
+ it might well seem to have lost all the resentments of
+ vitality. But Webster has distinguished between the
+ constitution and its administration. He has seen that the
+ constitution, though in bondage, is not killed; that the
+ channels of its life-giving wisdom are stuffed up with rubbish,
+ but not obliterated. He has been determined that if the rulers
+ of the country will deny the truth, they shall not debauch it;
+ if they depart from the constitution, they shall not deprave
+ it. He has been resolved, that when this tyranny of corruption
+ shall be overpast, and the constitution draws again its own
+ free breath of virtue, truth and wisdom, it shall be found
+ perfect of limb and feature, prepared to rise like a giant
+ refreshed by sleep.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Griswold, we suppose, is quite right in suggesting that
+ the only name in modern times to which reference can with any
+ fitness be made for purposes of analogy or comparison with
+ Webster is that of Burke. In many respects there is a
+ correspondence between their characters; in some others they
+ differ widely. As a prophet of the truth of political morals,
+ as a revealer of those essential elements in the constitution
+ of life, upon which, or of which, society is constructed and
+ government evolved, Burke had no peer. In that department he
+ rises into the distance and grandeur of inspiration; <i>nil
+ mortote sonans</i>. Nor do we doubt that the Providence of God
+ had raised him up for the purposes of public safety and
+ guidance, any more than we doubt the mission of Jeremiah or
+ Elisha, or any other of the school of the Lord's prophets. But
+ leaving Burke unapproached in this region of the nature and
+ philosophy of government, and looking at him, in his general
+ career, as a man of intellect and action, we might indicate an
+ analogy of this kind, that the character, temper and reason of
+ Burke seem to be almost an image of the English constitution,
+ and Webster's of the American. To get the key to Burke's
+ somewhat irregular and startling career, it is necessary, to
+ study the idea of the old whig constitution of the English
+ monarchy: viewing his course from that point of view, we
+ comprehend his almost countenancing and encouraging rebellion
+ in the case of the American colonies; his intense hostility to
+ Warren Hastings' imperial system; his unchastised earnestness
+ in opposition to French maxims in the decline of his life. The
+ constitution of the United States, that most wonderful of the
+ emanations of providential wisdom, seems to be not only the
+ home of Webster's affections and seat of his proudest hopes,
+ but the very type of his understanding and fountain of his
+ intellectual strength:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">&mdash;&mdash;"hic illius
+ arma;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">Hic currus."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The genius of Burke, like the one, was inexhaustible in
+ resources, so composite and so averse from theory as to appear
+ incongruous, but justified in the result; not formal, not
+ always entirely perspicuous. Webster's mind, like the other, is
+ eminently logical, reduced into principles, orderly, distinct,
+ reconciling abstraction with convenience, various in
+ manifestation, yet pervaded by an unity of character.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Webster has not merely illustrated a great range of
+ mental powers and accomplishments, but has filled, in the eye
+ of the nation, on a great scale, and to the farthest reach of
+ their exigency, a diversity of intellectual characters; while
+ the manner in which Burke's wisdom displayed itself was usually
+ the same. We cannot suppose that Burke could have been a great
+ lawyer. Webster possesses a consummate legal judgment and
+ prodigious powers of legal logic, and is felt to be the highest
+ authority on a great question of law in this country. The
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page299"
+ id="page299"></a>[pg 299]</span> demonstrative faculty; the
+ capacity to analyze and open any proposition so as to
+ identify its separate elements with the very consciousness
+ of the reader's or hearer's mind; this, which is the
+ lawyer's peculiar power, had not been particularly developed
+ in Burke, but exists in Webster in greater expansion and
+ force than in any one since Doctor Johnson, who, it always
+ appeared to us, had he been educated for the bar, would have
+ made the greatest lawyer that ever led the decisions of
+ Westminster-Hall. We should hardly be justified in saying
+ that Burke would have made a great First Lord of the
+ Treasury. Mr. Webster, as Secretary of State, proved himself
+ to be a practical statesman of the highest; finest,
+ promptest sagacity and foresight that this or any nation
+ ever witnessed. Who now doubts the surpassing wisdom, who
+ now but reverences the exalted patriotism, of the advice and
+ the example which he gave, but gave in vain, to the Whig
+ party at the beginning of Mr. Tyler's administration? His
+ official correspondence would be lowered by a comparison
+ with any state papers since the secretaryship of John
+ Marshall. Does the public generally know what has become of
+ that portentous difficulty about the Right of Search, upon
+ which England and America, five years ago, were on the point
+ of being "<i>lento collisæ duello</i>." Mr. Webster settled
+ it by mere force of mind: he dissipated the Question, <i>by
+ seeing through it</i>, and by compelling others to see a
+ fallacy in its terms which before had imposed upon the
+ understanding of two nations. In the essential and universal
+ philosophy of politics, Webster is second only to Burke.
+ After Burke, there is no statesman whose writings might be
+ read with greater advantage by foreign nations, or would
+ have been studied with so much respect by antiquity, as
+ Webster's.</p>
+
+ <p>In a merely literary point of view, this perhaps may be said
+ of Mr. Webster, that he is the only powerful and fervid orator,
+ since the glorious days of Greece, whose style is so
+ disciplined that any of his great public harangues might be
+ used as models of composition. His language is beautifully
+ pure, and his combinations of it exhibit more knowledge of the
+ genius, spirit, and classic vigor of the English tongue, than
+ it has entered the mind of any professor of rhetoric to
+ apprehend. As the most impetuous sweeps of passion in him are
+ pervaded and informed and guided by intellect, so the most
+ earnest struggles of intellect seem to be calmed and made
+ gentle in their vehemence, by a more essential rationality of
+ taste. That imperious mind, which seems fit to defy the
+ universe, is ever subordinate, by a kind of fascination, to the
+ perfect law of grace. In the highest of his intellectual
+ flights&mdash;and who can follow the winged rush of that eagle
+ mind?&mdash;in the widest of his mental ranges-and who shall
+ measure their extent?&mdash;he is ever moving within the
+ severest line of beauty. No one would think of saying that Mr.
+ Webster's speeches are thrown off with ease, and cost him but
+ little effort; they are clearly the result of the intensest
+ stress of mental energy; yet the manner is never discomposed;
+ the decency and propriety of the display never interfered with;
+ he is always greater than his genius; you see "the depth out
+ not the tumult" of the mind. Whether, with extended arm, he
+ strangles the "reluctantes dracones" of democracy, or with
+ every faculty called home, concentrates the light and heat of
+ his being in developing into principles those great sentiments
+ and great instincts which are his inspiration; in all, the
+ orator stands forth with the majesty and chastened grace of
+ Pericles himself. In the fiercest of encounters with the
+ deadliest of foes, the mind, which is enraged, is never
+ perturbed; the style, which leaps like the fire of heaven, is
+ never disordered. As in Guido's picture of St. Michael piercing
+ the dragon, while the gnarled muscles of the arms and hands
+ attest the utmost strain of the strength, the countenance
+ remains placid, serene, and undisturbed. In this great quality
+ of mental dignity, Mr. Webster's speeches have become more and
+ more eminent. The glow and luster which set his earlier
+ speeches a-blaze with splendor, is in his later discourses
+ rarely let forth; but they have gained more, in the increase of
+ dignity, than they have parted with in the diminution of
+ brilliancy. We regard his speech before the shop-keepers,
+ calling themselves merchants, of Philadelphia, as one of the
+ most weighty and admirable of the intellectual efforts of his
+ life. The range of profound and piercing wisdom; the exquisite
+ and faultless taste; but above all, the august and indefectible
+ dignity, that are illustrated from the beginning to the end of
+ that great display of matured and finished strength, leave us
+ in mingled wonder and reverence. There is one sentence there
+ which seems to us almost to reach the <i>intellectual</i>
+ sublime; and while it stirs within us the depths of sympathy
+ and admiration, we could heartily wish that the young men of
+ America would inhale the almost supra-mortal spirit which it
+ breathes: "I would not with any idolatrous admiration regard
+ the Constitution of the United States, nor any other work of
+ man; but this side of idolatry, I hold it in profound respect.
+ I believe that no human working on such a subject, no human
+ ability exerted for such an end, has ever produced so much
+ happiness, or holds out now to so many millions of people the
+ prospect, through such a succession of ages and ages, of so
+ much happiness, as the Constitution of the United States. We
+ who are here for one generation, for a single life, and yet in
+ our several stations and relations in society intrusted in some
+ degree with its protection and support, what duty does it
+ devolve, what duty does it <i>not</i> devolve, upon us!" In the
+ name of distant ages, and a remote posterity, we hail the
+ author of this and similar orations, as Webster the
+ <i>Olympian</i>.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page300"
+ id="page300"></a>[pg 300]</span>
+
+ <p>But we leave a subject which we have incidentally touched,
+ sincerely disclaiming any attempt to estimate the character or
+ define the greatness of Webster. In reference to him we feel,
+ as Cicero said to Cæsar, "<i>Nil vulgare te dignum videri
+ possit.</i>"</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From the Athenæum.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>THE NEW PROPHET IN THE EAST.<a id="footnotetag5"
+ name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a></h2>
+
+ <p>The vicissitudes of the war in the Caucasus of late have
+ been surprising enough to awaken the interest of Western
+ Europe, even amidst her own nearer anxieties. Last year it was
+ said that the conquest of Achulgo, the stronghold of the
+ redoubtable Schamyl, had effectually broken the power of that
+ daring leader. In direct contradiction to such reports, later
+ accounts from Daghestan tell of the reappearance of the notable
+ partisan amidst the lines of the Russians, and of a defeat of
+ the latter, the most severe, if the details of the event be
+ true, that they have yet suffered in the Caucasus. In any case,
+ these exciting changes of fortune would be in favor of a book
+ professing to describe this interesting region, and to add to
+ our knowledge of its brave inhabitants. The main interest of
+ Herr Bodenstedt's work will now be enhanced by its undertaking
+ to give a more precise account than had previously appeared of
+ the priest-warrior of Daghestan. and of the new sect as the
+ prophet of which he succeeded in arraying the independent
+ mountain clans against their common enemy with a kind of
+ combination unknown in earlier periods of the struggle.</p>
+
+ <p>The author has evidently lived for some time in the region
+ which he describes, or in the bordering districts along the
+ Caspian, both in Georgia and in North Daghestan, His
+ acquaintance with Asiatic and Russian languages and customs
+ appears to have been gained both by study and from intercourse
+ with the natives of the south-eastern frontier. He is not
+ ignorant of Oriental writings that refer to his subject; and
+ his Russian statistics prove an access to official authorities
+ which are not to be found in print. These, however obtained,
+ can scarcely have been imparted to him as one of those writers
+ whom the Court of St. Petersburg hires to promote its views
+ through the press of Western Europe. His sympathies are
+ declared against Russian usurpation; and the tendency of his
+ essay is to prove how little real progress it has yet made in
+ subduing the Caucasus, the enormous waste of money and life
+ with which its fluctuating successes have been bought, and the
+ fallacy of expecting a better result hereafter.</p>
+
+ <p>What it has cost in life on the Russian side to
+ attack-hitherto with no lasting effect&mdash;the handful of
+ Caucasian mountaineers, may be guessed from a single note,
+ dated 1847: "The present Russian force in the
+ Caucasus"&mdash;including of course, the armed Cossacks of the
+ Kuban and Terek&mdash;"amounts to two hundred thousand." Taking
+ into account the numbers yearly cut off by disease, more fatal
+ even than the mountain war, every step of which must be won by
+ the most reckless waste of life,&mdash;the "Russian Officer"
+ may perhaps truly affirm that the <i>annual</i> expenditure of
+ life by Russia, in her warfare with Schamyl, has for many years
+ past exceeded the whole number of the population at any one
+ time directly under the rule of that chieftain.</p>
+
+ <p>We have said that the most instructive part of Herr
+ Bodenstedt's essay is his sketch of that politico-religious
+ scheme which made Schamyl formidable to the Russians. This
+ system, it is to be observed, arose and has since been fully
+ developed only in the Eastern Caucasus, where of late the main
+ stress of the war has been. The western tribes (our
+ "Circassians") who took the lead at an earlier stage of the
+ contest, were not then, nor have they since been, inspired by
+ the fanatic zeal which united the tribes of Daghestan. They
+ fought from a mere love of independence, each little republic
+ by itself; and their efforts, however heroic, being without
+ concert, gradually declined before the vast force of the
+ invader. In the region looking westward from the Georgian
+ frontier on the Euxine, on the one side of the Caucasian range,
+ and along the lower Kuban on the other, the Russian posts are
+ now seldom threatened but by small predatory bands; the
+ natives, retired to their mountain villages, have for some time
+ made but few more formidable incursions. The war is transferred
+ to the region spreading eastward from the Elbrus to the
+ Caspian; where the strife for free existence is animated not
+ less by the hatred of Russian slavery than by a fresh outbreak
+ of Mohammedan zeal against infidel invasion,&mdash;a revival,
+ in fact, of that war-like fanaticism which made the Moslem name
+ terrible from the eighth to the sixteenth century.</p>
+
+ <p>It dates from the years 1823-4; at which period a "new
+ doctrine" began to be preached, secretly at first, to the
+ select Uléma, afterward to greater numbers, in word and
+ writing, by one Mullah Mohammed, a famous teacher and a judge
+ (or <i>kadi</i>) of Jarach, in the Kurin district of Daghestan.
+ He professed to have learnt it from Hadis-Ismail, an Alim of
+ Kurdomir, highly famed for wisdom and sanctity. It laid bare
+ the degradation into which his countrymen had sunk by
+ irreligion and by the jealousy of sect; their danger, in
+ consequence, from enemies of the true faith; and urged the
+ necessity of reform in creed and practice, in order to regain
+ the invincible character promised by the Prophet to believers.
+ The theoretical part of the reformed doctrine seems to be a
+ kind of Sufism,&mdash;the general character of which mode of
+ Islam, long prevalent in the adjacent kingdom of Persia, has
+ been described <span class="pagenum"><a name="page301"
+ id="page301"></a>[pg 301]</span> by our own orientalists.
+ Disputed questions as to its origin, whether in Brahmin
+ philosophy or in the reveries of Moslem mystics, cannot be
+ discussed here; it must suffice to indicate those points
+ which appear to connect it with the hieratic policy that has
+ given a new aspect to the war in the Caucasus.</p>
+
+ <p>Proceeding nominally on the basis of the Koran, it
+ inculcates or expounds a kind of spiritual transcendentalism;
+ in which the adept is raised above the necessity of formal
+ laws, which are only requisite for those who are not capable of
+ rising to a full intelligence of the supreme power. To gain
+ this height, by devout contemplation, must be the personal work
+ and endeavor of each individual. The revelation of divine
+ truth, once attained, supersedes specific moral injunctions;
+ ceremonies and systems, even, of religion, become indifferent
+ to the mind illuminated by the sacred idea. A higher degree is
+ the perfect conception or ecstatic vision of the
+ Deity;&mdash;the highest-reserved only for the prophetic
+ few&mdash;a real immediate union with his essence. Here, it
+ will be seen, are four steps or stages, each of which has its
+ sacred manual or appropriate system of teaching. In the
+ hieratic system, of which Schamyl is the head, the divisions
+ seem to correspond pretty nearly with this arrangement, as
+ follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>first</i> includes the mass of the armed people;
+ whose zeal it promotes by strict religious and moral
+ injunctions enjoining purity of life, exact regard to the
+ ritual of the Koran, teaching pilgrimages, fasting, ablutions;
+ the duty of implacable war against the Infidel, the sin of
+ enduring his tyranny.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>second</i> is composed of those, who, in virtue of
+ striving upward to a higher Divine intelligence, are elevated
+ above ceremonial religion. Of these the <i>Murids</i>
+ (<i>seekers</i> or <i>strugglers</i>,) are formed: a body of
+ religious warriors attached to the Imam, whose courage in
+ battle, raised to a kind of frenzy, despises numbers and laughs
+ at death. To accept quarter, or to fly from the Infidel, is
+ forbidden to this class.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>third</i> includes the more perfect acolytes, who are
+ presumed to have risen to the ecstatic view of the Deity. These
+ are the elect, whom the Imam makes <i>Naibs</i> or
+ vice-regents,&mdash;invested with nearly absolute power in his
+ absence.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>fourth</i>, or highest, implying entire union with
+ the Divine essence, is held by Schamyl alone. In virtue of this
+ elevation and spiritual endowment, the Imam, as an immediate
+ organ of the Supreme Will, is himself the source of all law to
+ his followers, unerring, impeccable; to question or disobey his
+ behests is a sin against religion, as well as a political
+ crime. It may be seen what advantage this system must have
+ given to Schamyl in his conflict with the Russians. The
+ doctrine of the indifference of sects and forms enabled him to
+ unite the divided followers of Omar and of Ali, in a region
+ where both abound, and where the schism had formerly been one
+ of the most effectual instruments of the enemy. The belief in a
+ Divine mission and spiritual powers sustains his adherents in
+ all reverses; while it invites to defection from the Russian
+ side those of the Mohammedan tribes who have submitted to the
+ invader. Among these, however, Schamyl, like his predecessors
+ in the same priestly office, by no means confides the progress
+ of his sect to spiritual influences only. The work of
+ conversion, where exhortation fails, is carried on
+ remorselessly by fire and sword; and the Imam is as terrible to
+ those of his countrymen whom fear or interest retains in
+ alliance with Russia, as to the soldiers of the Czar. With a
+ character in which extreme daring is allied with coolness,
+ cunning, and military genius, with a good fortune which has
+ hitherto preserved his life in many circumstances where escape
+ seemed impossible,&mdash;it may be seen that the belief in his
+ supernatural gifts and privileges, once created, must always
+ tend to increase in intensity and effect among the imaginative
+ and credulous Mohammedans of the Caucasus; and that this apt
+ combination of the warrior with the politician and prophet
+ accounts for his success in combining against the Russians a
+ force of the once discordant tribes of Daghestan, possessing
+ more of the character of a national resistance than had been
+ ever known before in the Caucasus,&mdash;and compelling the
+ invaders to purchase every one of their few, trifling, and
+ dubious advances by the terrible sacrifice of life already
+ noticed.</p>
+
+ <p>In this formidable movement the highlander's natural freedom
+ is fanned into a blaze by a religious zeal like that which once
+ led the armies of Islam over one half of Asia and Europe.
+ Although it reached its highest energy and a more consummate
+ development under Schamyl, it was begun by his predecessors. Of
+ the Mullah Mohammed, who first preached the duty of casting off
+ the yoke of the Giaour, and the necessity of a religious reform
+ and union of rival sects, as a means to that end, we have
+ already spoken. This founder of the new system, an aged man,
+ untrained in arms, never himself drew the sword in the cause;
+ but was active in diffusing its principles and preparing a
+ warlike rising by exhortations and letters circulated through
+ all Daghestan. Suspected of these designs, he was seized, in
+ 1826, by the orders of Jermoloff; and although be
+ escaped,&mdash;by the connivance, it is said, of the native
+ prince employed to capture him,&mdash;he afterward lived, in a
+ kind of concealment, for some years. The post of Imam was
+ thereupon assumed by a priest who was able to fight for the new
+ doctrine as well as to preach it. The first armed outbreak took
+ place under Kasi-Mullah, about the year 1829; from which time,
+ until his death in a battle at Himry, in 1831, he waged a
+ terrible, and, although often defeated, a virtually
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page302"
+ id="page302"></a>[pg 302]</span> successful warfare, against
+ the Russians, while he prosecuted the work of conversion
+ among the tribes of Islam who delayed to acknowledge his
+ mission, and to join in his enmity to the Russians, by the
+ extremities of bloodshed and rapine. His death, after an
+ heroic resistance, was hailed as a triumph by the Russians.
+ They counted on the extinction of the new sect in the defeat
+ of its leader, whose dead body they carried about the
+ country to prove the imposture of his pretensions. This
+ piece of barbarism produced an effect the reverse of what
+ they expected. The venerable face of the Imam, the attitude
+ in which he had expired, with one hand pointed as if to
+ heaven, was more impressive to those who crowded round the
+ body than his fearless enthusiasm had been,&mdash;and
+ thousands who till then had held aloof, now joined his
+ followers in venerating him as a prophet. Of this first
+ warrior-priest of Daghestan, Schamyl was the favorite
+ disciple and the most trusted soldier. Kasi-Mullah was not
+ killed until Schamyl had already fallen as it seemed, under
+ several deadly wounds:&mdash;his reappearance after this
+ bloody scene was but the first of many similar escapes, the
+ report of which sounds like a fable. He did not, however, at
+ once succeed to the dignity of Imam: the office was usurped
+ for more than a year by Hamsad Beg (Bey), whose rapacious
+ and savage treatment of some of the princely families of
+ Daghestan nearly caused a fatal reaction against the new
+ sect, and the destruction of its main support, the Murids.
+ Hamsad Beg performed no action of consequence against the
+ Russians; but expended his rage upon the natives allied with
+ them, or reluctant to obey his mandates. He was assassinated
+ in 1834, by some kinsmen of a princely house whose
+ territories he had usurped after a massacre of its princes.
+ In the affray which took place on this occasion, there
+ perished with him many of the fanatic Murids, who had become
+ odious as instruments of the cruelties of their Imam. On his
+ death, Schamyl was raised to the dignity,&mdash;but it was
+ some time before the mischief done by his predecessor was so
+ far repaired as to allow him to act with energy as the
+ prophet of the new doctrine. One of the ill effects of
+ Hamsad Beg's iniquities had been the defection to the
+ Russians of n notable partisan&mdash;Hadjii Murad&mdash;for
+ many years a fatal thorn in the side of the independent
+ party.<a id="footnotetag6"
+ name="footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a>
+ This and other difficulties, among which was the
+ unpopularity of the Murids under Hamsad Beg, were removed by
+ new alliances and precautions, while all that eloquence and
+ skill could perform was applied to restore the credit of the
+ religious system, before Schamyl could hazard a direct
+ attack of the Russian enemy, who meanwhile had taken
+ advantage of the delay and disunion to gain ground in many
+ parts of Daghestan. From the year 1839, however, the tide
+ rapidly turned; and the result, from that date until the
+ period at which the account closes (1845)&mdash;when
+ Woronzow was appointed to command in the Caucasus, with
+ nearly unlimited powers,&mdash;has been, that the Russians,
+ in spite of tremendous sacrifices, were constantly losing
+ ground and influence, while Schamyl gained both in equal
+ proportion. The details of the campaigns during this
+ interval are highly interesting; and we regret that
+ conditions of space forbid us to translate some of the
+ exciting episodes recorded by Herr Bodenstedt. We may,
+ however, extract the following account of the Caucasian
+ hero,&mdash;whose portrait, we believe, has never before
+ been so fully exhibited to European readers;&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Schamyl is of middle stature; he has light hair, gray eyes,
+ shaded by bushy and well-arched eyebrows,&mdash;a nose finely
+ moulded, and a small mouth. His features are distinguished from
+ those of his race by a peculiar fairness of complexion and
+ delicacy of skin: the elegant form of his hands and feet is not
+ less remarkable. The apparent stiffness of his arms, when he
+ walks, is a sign of his stern and impenetrable character. His
+ address is thoroughly noble and dignified. Of himself he is
+ completely master; and he exerts a tacit supremacy over all who
+ approach him. An immovable stony calmness, which never forsakes
+ him, even in moments of the utmost danger, broods over his
+ countenance. He passes a sentence of death with the same
+ composure with which he distributes "the sabre of honor" to his
+ bravest Murids, after a bloody encounter. With traitors or
+ criminals whom he has resolved to destroy, he will converse
+ without betraying the least sign of anger or vengeance. He
+ regards himself as a mere instrument in the hands of a higher
+ Being; and holds, according to the Sufi doctrine, that all his
+ thoughts and determinations are immediate inspirations from
+ God. The flow of his speech is as animating and irresistible as
+ his outward appearance is awful and commanding. "He shoots
+ flames from his eyes, and scatters flowers from his
+ lips,"&mdash;said Bersek Bey, who sheltered him for some days
+ after the fall of Achulgo,&mdash;when Schamyl dwelt for some
+ time among the princes of the Djighetes and Ubiches, for the
+ purpose of inciting the tribes on the Black Sea to rise against
+ the Russians. Schamyl is now (<i>circa</i> 1847?) fifty years
+ old, but still full of vigor and strength: it is however said,
+ that he has for some years past suffered from an obstinate
+ disease of the eyes, which is constantly growing worse. He
+ fills the intervals of leisure which his public charges allow
+ him, in reading the Koran, fasting, and prayer. Of late years
+ he has but seldom, and then only on critical occasions, taken a
+ personal share in warlike encounters. In spite of his almost
+ supernatural activity, Schamyl is excessively
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page303"
+ id="page303"></a>[pg 303]</span> severe and temperate in his
+ habits. A few hours of sleep are enough for him: at times he
+ will watch for the whole night, without Showing the least
+ trace of fatigue on the following day. He eats little, and
+ water is his only beverage. According to Mohammedan custom,
+ he keeps several wives&mdash;[this contradicts Wagner, who
+ affirms that Schamyl always confined himself to one]; in
+ 1844 he had <i>three</i>, of which his favorite, <i>Dur
+ Heremen</i>, (Pearl of the Harem) as she was called, was an
+ Armenian, of exquisite beauty."</p>
+
+ <p>Will Russian arms prevail in the end? The following is Herr
+ Bodenstedt's answer; after noticing the arrival of Woronzow,
+ and the expectations raised by his talents, by the immense
+ resources at his command, as well as by such events as the
+ storm of Schamyl's stronghold of Cargo:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"He who believes that the issue of this contest hangs on the
+ destruction of stone fortresses, on the devastation of tracts
+ of forest, has not yet conceived the essential nature of the
+ war in the Caucasus. This is not merely a war of men against
+ men&mdash;it is a strife between the mountain and the steppe.
+ The population of the Caucasus may be changed; the air of
+ liberty wafted from its heights will ever remain the same.
+ Invigorated by this atmosphere, even Russian hirelings would
+ grow into men eager for freedom: and among their descendants a
+ new race of heroes would arise, to point their weapons against
+ that servile constitution, to extend which their fathers had
+ once fought, as blind, unquestioning slaves."</p>
+
+ <p>To this answer of Herr Bodenstedt's we will add nothing of
+ our own. We are weary with waiting for the events of history
+ such as we would have them.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>COOLING A BURNING SPIRIT.</h2>
+
+ <p>An incident which occurred soon after the accession of the
+ present Sultan, shows that, in some respects, at least, he is
+ not indisposed to follow up the strong traditions of his race.
+ At the beginning of his reign, the Ulema was resolved, if
+ possible, to prevent the new Sultan from carrying on those
+ reforms which had ever been so distasteful to the Turks,
+ grating at once against their religious associations and their
+ pride of race, and which recent events had certainly proved not
+ to be productive of those good results anticipated by Sultan
+ Mamoud. To attain this object, the Muftis adopted the expedient
+ of working on the religious fears of the youthful prince. One
+ day as he was praying, according to his custom, at his father's
+ tomb, he heard a voice from beneath reiterating, in a stifled
+ tone, the words, "I burn." The next time that he prayed there
+ the same words assailed his ears. "I burn" was repeated again
+ and again, and no word beside. He applied to the chief of the
+ Imams to know what this prodigy might mean; and was informed in
+ reply, that his father, though a great man, had also been,
+ unfortunately, a great reformer, and that as such it was too
+ much to be feared that he had a terrible penance to undergo in
+ the other world. The Sultan sent for his brother-in-law to pray
+ at the same place, and afterward several others of his
+ household; and on each occasion the same portentous words were
+ heard. One day he announced his intention of going in state to
+ his father's tomb, and was attended thither by a splendid
+ retinue, including the chief doctors of the Mahometan law.
+ Again, during his devotions, were heard the words, "I burn,"
+ and all except the Sultan trembled. Rising from his
+ prayer-carpet, he called in his guards, and commanded them to
+ dig up the pavement and remove the tomb. It was in vain that
+ the Muftis interposed, reprobating so great a profanation, and
+ uttering warnings as to its consequences. The Sultan persisted,
+ the foundations of the tomb were laid bare, and in a cavity
+ skillfully left among them was found&mdash;not a burning
+ Sultan, but a Dervise. The young monarch regarded him for a
+ time fixedly and in silence, and then said, without any further
+ remark or the slightest expression of anger, "You
+ burn?&mdash;We must cool you in the Bosphorus." In a few
+ minutes more the dervise was in a bag, and the bag immediately
+ after was in the Bosphorus.&mdash;<i>De Vere's
+ Sketches</i>.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From Household Words.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>AN OLD HAUNT.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The rippling water, with its drowsy tone,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The tall elms, tow 'ring in their stately
+ pride,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>And&mdash;sorrow's type&mdash;the willow sad and
+ lone,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Kissing in graceful woe the murmuring
+ tide;&mdash;</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The grey church-tower,&mdash;and dimly seen
+ beyond,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The faint hills gilded by the parting
+ sun,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>All were the same, and seem'd with greeting fond</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To welcome me as they of old had
+ done.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And for a while I stood as in a trance,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">On that loved spot, forgetting toil and
+ pain;&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Buoyant my limbs, and keen and bright my glance,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">For that brief space I was a boy
+ again!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Again with giddy mates I careless play'd,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or plied the quiv'ring oar, on conquest
+ bent:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Again, beneath the tall elms' silent shade,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I woo'd the fair, and won the sweet
+ consent.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>But brief, alas! the spell,&mdash;for suddenly</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Peal'd from the tower the old familiar
+ chimes,</p>
+
+ <p>And with their clear, heart-thrilling melody,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Awaked the spectral forms of darker
+ times</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And I remember'd all that years had
+ wrought&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">How bow'd my care-worn frame, how dimm'd
+ my eye,</p>
+
+ <p>How poor the gauds by Youth so keenly sought,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">How quench'd and dull Youth's aspirations
+ high!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And in half mournful, half upbraiding host,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Duties neglected&mdash;high resolves
+ unkept&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>And many a heart by death or falsehood lost,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In lightning current o'er my bosom
+ swept.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Then bow'd the stubborn knees, as backward sped</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The self-accusing thoughts in dread
+ array,</p>
+
+ <p>And, slowly, from their long-congealed bed,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Forced the remorseful tears their silent
+ way.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Bitter yet healing drops in mercy sent,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Like soft dews tailing on a thirsty
+ plain,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>And ere those chimes their last faint notes had
+ spent,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Strengthen'd and calm'd, I stood erect
+ again.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Strengthen'd, the tasks allotted to
+ fulfill;&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Calm'd the thick-coming sorrows to
+ endure;</p>
+
+ <p>Fearful of nought but of my own frail
+ will,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In His Almighty strength and aid
+ secure.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>For a sweet voice had whisper'd hope to
+ me,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Had through my darkness shed a kindly
+ ray;&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>It said: "The past is fix'd immutably,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Yet is there comfort in the coming
+ day!"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page304"
+ id="page304"></a>[pg 304]</span>
+
+ <h2>KILLING A GIRAFFE.</h2>
+
+ <p>At every stride I gained upon the giraffes, and, after a
+ short burst at a swingeing gallop, I was in the middle of them,
+ and turned the finest cow out of the herd. On finding herself
+ driven from her comrades and hotly pursued, she increased her
+ pace, and cantered along with tremendous strides, clearing an
+ amazing extent of ground at every bound; while her neck and
+ breast, coming in contact with the dead old branches of the
+ trees, were continually strewing them in my path. In a few
+ minutes I was riding within five yards of her stern, and,
+ firing at a gallop, I sent a bullet into her back. Increasing
+ my pace, I next rode alongside, and, placing the muzzle of my
+ rifle within a few feet of her, I fired my second shot behind
+ the shoulder; the ball, however, seemed to have little effect.
+ I then placed myself directly in front, when she came to a
+ walk. Dismounting, I hastily loaded both barrels, putting in
+ double charges of powder. Before this was accomplished, she was
+ off at a canter. In a short time I brought her to a stand in
+ the dry bed of a watercourse, where I fired at fifteen yards,
+ aiming where I thought the heart lay, upon which she again made
+ off. Having loaded, I followed, and had very nearly lost her;
+ she had turned abruptly to the left, and was far out of sight
+ among the trees. Once more I brought her to a stand, and
+ dismounted from my horse. There we stood together alone in the
+ wild wood. I gazed in wonder at her extreme beauty, while her
+ soft dark eye, with its silky fringe, looked down imploringly
+ at me, and I really felt a pang of sorrow in this moment of
+ triumph for the blood I was shedding. Pointing my rifle toward
+ the skies, I sent a bullet through her neck. On receiving it
+ she reared high on her hind legs and fell back with a heavy
+ crash, making the earth shake around her. A thick stream of
+ dark blood spouted out from the wound, her colossal limbs
+ quivered for a moment, and she expired.&mdash;<i>Cummings'
+ Adventures</i>.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE VETERAN KOLOMBESKI.</h2>
+
+ <p>Several journals have spoken of the entry into the Hotel des
+ Invalides of a soldier, stated to be 126 years of age. This is
+ not quite correct. The following are some precise details
+ respecting this extraordinary man, who arrived at the Hotel on
+ the 21st inst.:&mdash;Jean Kolombeski, born at Astrona
+ (Poland), on the 1st of March, 1730, entered the service of
+ France, as a volunteer in the Bourbon regiment of infantry, in
+ 1774, at the age of forty-four. He was made corporal in 1790,
+ at the age of sixty. He made all the campaigns of the
+ Revolution and of the Empire, in different regiments of
+ infantry, and was incorporated, in 1808, in the 3d regiment of
+ the Vistula. He was wounded in 1814, and entered the hospital
+ at Poitiers, which he soon afterward left to be placed <i>en
+ subsistence</i> in the 2d regiment of light infantry. On the
+ 11th of October of the same year he was admitted into the 1st
+ company of <i>sous-officiers sedentaires</i>, and, in 1846,
+ into the 5th company of Veteran Sub-Officers. The last three of
+ these companies having just been suppressed by the Minister of
+ War, Kolombeski was placed <i>en subsistence</i> in the 61st
+ regiment of the line, received a retiring pension by decree of
+ May 17, 1850, and the Minister authorized his admission into
+ the Invalides. Kolombeski is, therefore, more than 120 years of
+ age; he reckons seventy-five and a half years of service, and
+ twenty-nine campaigns. He enjoys good health, is strong and
+ well made, and does not appear to be more than seventy or
+ eighty. He performed every duty with big comrades of the 5th
+ company of Veterans, When King Louis Philippe visited Dreus,
+ Kolombeski was presented to him, who, taking the decoration
+ from his breast, presented it to the veteran soldier. This is
+ the most astonishing instance of longevity that has, perhaps,
+ been ever known in the army. The Marshal Governor of the
+ Invalides ordered that Kolombeski should be brought to him on
+ his arrival; but, as the old soldier was fatigued, he was taken
+ to the infirmary, and the Governor, informed of it, went to his
+ bedside with General Petit, the commandant of the hotel, and
+ addressed the veteran in the kindest manner. The Governor has
+ issued an order that, for the future, all centenarian soldiers
+ admitted into the hospital shall mess with the officers, in
+ order to show his respect for their age, and for the long
+ services they have rendered to the state.&mdash;<i>Galignani's
+ Messenger</i>.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>ANECDOTE OF LORD BROUGHAM.</h2>
+
+ <p>The "Life of the Rev. Dr. Hugh Heugh" has a description of
+ an interview which a deputation of Scotch dissenters had some
+ years ago with Lord Brougham. The <i>Scotsman</i> adds, from
+ its private knowledge, some odd incidents of the affair.</p>
+
+ <p>His lordship, on coming out of the court to meet the
+ deputation, immediately on being informed of their object,
+ burst out in a volley of exclamations to the effect that, but
+ for dissent, there would be "No vital religion&mdash;no vital
+ religion, gentlemen, no vital religion." While pouring forth
+ this in a most solemn tone, he was all the while shaking
+ violently the locked doors of a lobby full of committee rooms,
+ into one of which he wished to find entrance, and calling for
+ an absent official not only in passionate tones, but in
+ phraseology which the reverend deputation, at first unwilling
+ to trust their own ears, were at last forced to believe was
+ nothing better than profane swearing. At last, he suddenly drew
+ himself up to the wall opposite a locked door, and with a
+ tremendous kick, smashed the lock, and entered (exclaiming,
+ first in a vehement and then in a solemn tone, but without
+ pause) "&mdash;that fellow! where the &mdash;&mdash; does he
+ always go to! No vital religion, gentlemen, no vital
+ religion&mdash;no, no, no."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1"
+ name="footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>Trésor de Numismatique et de Glyptique; ou, Recueil
+ Général de Médailles, Monnaies, Pierres Gravées, Sceaux,
+ Bas-reliefs, Ornements, &amp;c. Paris, 1850.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2"
+ name="footnote2"></a><b>Footnote 2:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>"Lachrymis oculos effusa nitentes."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3"
+ name="footnote3"></a><b>Footnote 3:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The Prelude, or Growth of a Poet's Mind; an
+ Autobiographical Poem. By William Wordsworth. London,
+ Moxon. [New York, Appletons.]</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4"
+ name="footnote4"></a><b>Footnote 4:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The Moohummadan Law of Sale, according to the Hunefeea
+ Code: from the Futawa Alumgeeree, a Digest of the whole
+ Law, prepared by command of the Emperor Aurungzebe
+ Alumgeer. Selected and translated from the original Arabic,
+ with an Introduction and explanatory Notes, by Neil B.E.
+ Baillie, Author of "The Moohummadan Law of inheritance."
+ Published by Smith and Elder.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote5"
+ name="footnote5"></a><b>Footnote 5:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag5">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The people of the Caucasus, and their Struggle for
+ Liberty with the Russians&mdash;(<i>Die Volker des
+ Caucasus, &amp;c.</i>) By Friedrich Bodenstedt. Second
+ Edition. Frankfurt am Main, Lizius; London, Nutt.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote6"
+ name="footnote6"></a><b>Footnote 6:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag6">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>It is worth noting&mdash;as a characteristic of Russian
+ misrule and of its consequences&mdash;that this chieftain,
+ after having been a devoted soldier of the Emperor for
+ seven years, was goaded by the ill treatment of his
+ officers into abjuring the service; make the offer of his
+ sword to Schamyl, against whom he had fought with the
+ utmost animosity; was heartily welcomed by that prudent
+ leader, and became one of his principal lieutenants.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 13797 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #13797 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/13797)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The International Weekly Miscellany, Volume
+I. No. 9., 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, Volume I. No. 9.
+ Of Literature, Art, and Science, August 26, 1850
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 19, 2004 [EBook #13797]
+
+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 26, 1850. No. 9.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+NUMISMATIC ARCHÆOLOGY.
+
+A magnificent work[1] upon this subject has just been completed in
+Paris, where it was commenced fifteen years ago. It was begun under
+the auspices of M. Paul Delaroche and M.C. Lenormand, member of the
+Institute, and well known already as one of the first authorities in
+the numismatic branch of archæology. Some faint idea of the greatness
+of the task may be given by stating that it embraces the whole range
+of art, from the regal coins of Syracuse and of the Ptolemies, down to
+those of our day; that such a stupendous scheme should ever have been
+carried into execution is not solely due to the admirable ease and
+fidelity, with which the "Collas machine" renders the smallest and the
+largest gems of the antique: but to him who first felt, appreciated,
+and afterward promoted its capabilities in this labor of love, M.A.
+Lachevardiere. Comparisons and contrasts, which are the life of art,
+though generally confined to the mental vision, are not the least of
+the recommendations of this vast work. For the first time have the
+minor treasures of each country been brought together, and not the
+least conspicuous portion are those from the British Museum and the
+Bank of England.
+
+[Footnote 1: Trésor de Numismatique et de Glyptique; ou, Recueil
+Général de Médailles, Monnaies, Pierres Gravées, Sceaux, Bas-reliefs,
+Ornements, &c. Paris, 1850.]
+
+Whether we consider the selection of these monumental relics, the
+explanatory letterpress, or the engravings which reproduce them, we
+are struck by the admirable taste, science, and fidelity with which
+the largest as well as the smallest gems have each and every one been
+made to tally in size with the originals.
+
+The collection of the "Trésor de Numismatique et Glyptique,"
+consisting of twenty volumes in folio, and containing a thousand
+engraved plates in folio, reproduces upward of 15,000 specimens, and
+is divided into three classes--1st. The coins, medals, cameos, &c.
+of antiquity; 2d. Those of the middle ages; lastly, those of modern
+times. The details of this immense mass of artistic wealth would be
+endless; but these three classes seem to be arranged according to the
+latest classification of numismatists.
+
+In the first class may be noticed--1. The regal coins of Greece,
+which contains, beside the portraits of the Greek Kings, to be found
+in Visconti's "Iconographie," copied from medals and engraved gems,
+all the coins bearing the Greek name of either a king, a prince, or
+a tyrant, and every variety of these types, whether they bear the
+effigy of a prince, or only reproduce his name. To the medals of each
+sovereign are joined the most authentic and celebrated engraved gems
+of European cabinets. Next come the series of portraits of the Roman
+emperors and their families, with all the important varieties of Roman
+numismatics, amongst which will be found the most celebrated coins
+of France, Vienna, Dresden, Munich, Florence, Naples, St. Petersburg,
+Weimar, &c.; and, moreover, those medallions which perpetuate great
+events. These two volumes contain eight-fold more matter than the
+great work of Visconti.
+
+In the second class, containing the works of the middle ages, and
+showing the uninterrupted progress of the numismatic art down to
+modern times, and forming alone fourteen volumes, we find the source
+which the French artists and men of letters have studied with such
+predilection. First in order are the Italian medals of the fifteenth
+and sixteenth centuries, chiefly by the famous Victor Pisano, a
+Veronese, whom Nasari has so much lauded. The scholars and imitators
+of Pisano also produced works as interesting as historical documents
+as they are admirable in workmanship. Here also will be found the
+French and English seals, in which the balance of skill in design and
+execution is acknowledged to be in our favor.
+
+Less barbarous, and indeed perfect works of art, in character of
+costume and visage, are the medals struck in Germany during the
+sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, when the influence of Albert
+Durer and his school was strongly felt. And finally, relics of
+ornamental art of different nations and epochs.
+
+In the third class, two parts only are devoted to contemporary art;
+the medals illustrative of the French revolution of 1789; those of
+the "Empire" and of the Emperor "Napoleon;" generally smacking of the
+florid and corrupt taste of that period, they are nevertheless curious
+as being often the sole evidence of the facts commemorated. There is,
+however, a manifest improvement in the late ones, and in them may be
+traced the transition from the independent ideas of the revolution
+to the subsequent submission to one man: and not less striking is
+the transition from a slip-shod style of art to a pedantic imitation
+of the antique. The "Trésor de Numismatique et de Glyptique" is the
+most scientific and important work of art which has been executed and
+achieved of late years in France. Our great public libraries may be
+proud of possessing so rich, so valuable, and so curious a collection,
+
+Most lovers of art have their favorite periods and well-beloved
+masters, but in this varied range of excellence it is difficult which
+to select for preference and admiration. The cameos have a beauty and
+_finesse_ which far surpass that of busts and statues; they evince the
+skill of grouping, which, with rare exceptions, such as the Niobe and
+Laocoon, is seldom aimed at in the more important pieces of sculpture.
+Cameos, moreover, let us, as it were, into the secrets of indoor
+life. To these considerations we may add that these gems have had an
+immense influence on French modern art. The "Apotheosis of Augustus"
+especially, known to antiquarians as the "Agate of Tiberius," the
+largest cameo in the world, and beautifully engraved the size of the
+original in this collection, may be traced in more than one of their
+late compositions.
+
+It is said that large medallions are a sign of taste either in the
+medalist or the monarch he is supposed to honor; if so, Dupré and
+Varin have drawn a thick vail over the effulgence of Louis XIV.
+We would not, however, lose their wigs and smiles for a world of
+historiettes.
+
+But it is to be remembered that the more names are blazoned on works
+of art, the more art becomes deteriorated. In this respect the present
+collection shows the rapidly progressive march of this evil through
+twenty-five centuries--a most instructive subject of contemplation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE CSIKOS OF HUNGARY.
+
+Of the chivalry, the gallantry, the splendor, the hospitality, the
+courage, and the love of liberty of the Hungarian noble or gentleman,
+no one doubts. Of his ideas of true constitutional freedom, or the
+zeal with which that or Hungarian independence has been maintained
+first through Turkish, and then German domination for some hundred
+years past, doubts may be entertained. Neither do the Hungarian
+peasantry or people reflect high credit on their "natural superiors."
+Something should be deducted for the forced vivacity and straining
+after effect of the littérateur; but this sketch of a large class of
+peasantry from Max Schlesinger's "War in Hungary," just published
+in London, must have some foundation in truth--and very like the Red
+Indians or half-breeds of Spanish America the people look.
+
+"The Csikos is a man who from his birth, somehow or other, finds
+himself seated upon a foal. Instinctively the boy remains fixed upon
+the animal's back, and grows up in his seat as other children do in
+the cradle.
+
+"The boy grows by degrees to a big horse-herd. To earn his livelihood,
+he enters the service of some nobleman, or of the Government, who
+possess in Hungary immense herds of wild horses. These herds range
+over a tract of many German square miles, for the most part some level
+plain, with wood, marsh, heath, and moorland; they rove about where
+they please, multiply, and enjoy freedom of existence. Nevertheless,
+it is a common error to imagine that these horses, like a pack of
+wolves in the mountains, are left to themselves and nature, without
+any care or thought of man. Wild horses, in the proper sense of the
+term, are in Europe at the present day only met with in Bessarabia;
+whereas the so-called wild herds in Hungary may rather be compared
+to the animals ranging in our large parks, which are attended to and
+watched. The deer are left to the illusion that they enjoy the most
+unbounded freedom; and the deer-stalker, when in pursuit of his game,
+readily gives in to the same illusion. Or, to take another simile, the
+reader has only to picture to himself a well-constituted free state,
+whether a republic or a monarchy is all one.
+
+"The Csikos has the difficult task of keeping a watchful eye upon
+these herds. He knows their strength, their habits, the spots they
+frequent; he knows the birthday of every foal, and when the animal,
+fit for training, should be taken out of the herd. He has then a hard
+task upon his hands, compared with which a Grand-Ducal wild-boar hunt
+is child's play; for the horse has not only to be taken alive from the
+midst of the herd, but of course safe and sound in wind and limb. For
+this purpose, the celebrated whip of the Csikos serves him; probably
+at some future time a few splendid specimens of this instrument will
+be exhibited in the Imperial Arsenal at Vienna, beside the sword of
+Scanderberg and the Swiss 'morning-stars.'
+
+"This whip has a stout handle from one and a half to two feet long,
+and a cord which measures not less than from eighteen to twenty-four
+feet in length. The cord is attached to a short iron chain, fixed
+to the top of the handle by an iron ring. A large leaden button is
+fastened to the end of the cord, and similar smaller buttons are
+distributed along it at distances, according to certain rules
+derived from experience, of which we are ignorant. Armed with this
+weapon, which the Csikos carries in his belt, together with a short
+grappling-iron or hook, he sets out on his horse-chase. Thus mounted
+and equipped without saddle or stirrup, he flies like the storm-wind
+over the heath, with such velocity that the grass scarcely bends
+under the horse's hoof; the step of his horse is not heard, and the
+whirling cloud of dust above his head alone marks his approach and
+disappearance. Although familiar with the use of a bridle, he despises
+such a troublesome article of luxury, and guides his horse with his
+voice, hands, and feet--nay, it almost seems as if he directed it by
+the mere exercise of the will, as we move our feet to the right or
+left, backward or forward, without its ever coming into our head to
+regulate our movements by a leather strap.
+
+"In this manner for hours he chases the flying herd, until at length
+he succeeds in approaching the animal which he is bent on catching.
+He then swings his whip round in immense circles, and throws the cord
+with such dexterity and precision that it twines around the neck of
+his victim. The leaden button at the end, and the knots along the
+cord, form a noose, which draws closer and tighter the faster the
+horse hastens on.
+
+"See how he flies along with outstretched legs, his mane whistling
+in the wind, his eye darting fire, his mouth covered with foam, and
+the dust whirling aloft on all sides! But the noble animal breathes
+shorter, his eye grows wild and staring, his nostrils are reddened
+with blood, the veins of his neck are distended like cords, his legs
+refuse longer service--he sinks exhausted and powerless, a picture
+of death. But at the same instant the pursuing steed likewise stands
+still and fixed as if turned to stone. An instant, and the Csikos has
+flung himself off his horse upon the ground, and inclining his body
+backward, to keep the noose tight, he seizes the cord alternately with
+the right and left hand, shorter and shorter, drawing himself by it
+nearer and nearer to the panting and prostrate animal, till at last
+coming up to it he flings his legs across its back. He now begins to
+slacken the noose gently, allowing the creature to recover breath: but
+hardly does the horse feel this relief, before he leaps up, and darts
+off again in a wild course, as if still able to escape from his enemy.
+But the man is already bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh; he
+sits fixed upon his neck as if grown to it, and makes the horse feel
+his power at will, by tightening or slackening the cord. A second time
+the hunted animal sinks upon the ground; again he rises, and again
+breaks down, until at length, overpowered with exhaustion, he can no
+longer stir a limb....
+
+"The foot-soldier who has discharged his musket is lost when opposed
+to the Csikos. His bayonet, with which he can defend himself against
+the Uhlans and Hussars, is here of no use to him; all his practiced
+maneuvers and skill are unavailing against the long whip of his enemy,
+which drags him to the ground, or beats him to death with his leaden
+buttons; nay, even if he had still a charge in his musket, he could
+sooner hit a bird on the wing than the Csikos, who, riding round and
+round him in wild bounds, dashes with his steed first to one side then
+to another, with the speed of lightning, so as to frustrate any aim.
+The horse-soldier, armed in the usual manner, fares not much better;
+and wo to him if he meets a Csikos singly! better to fall in with a
+pack of ravenous wolves."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE PRESENT RELIGION OF PERSIA.
+
+An account of the Expedition for the survey of the rivers Euphrates
+and Tigris, carried on by order of the British Government, in the
+years 1835, 1836, and 1837; preceded by geographical and historical
+notices of the regions situated between the Nile and the Indus, with
+fourteen maps and charts, and ninety-seven plates, besides numerous
+woodcuts, has just appeared in London, in four large volumes, from the
+pen of Lieutenant-Colonel Chesney, R.A., F.R.S., &c., commander of
+the Expedition. It is too comprehensive a work ever to be reprinted
+here, or to be much read, even in England, but it is undoubtedly very
+valuable as an authority. The following paragraphs from it describe
+the present state of religion in Persia:
+
+"The title of Múlla is conferred on a candidate by some member of the
+order, after the requisite examination in theology and law; and the
+person is then intrusted with the education of youth, as well as
+the administration of justice, and the practice of law. The Múllas
+sometimes possess sufficient power not only to influence the people at
+large, but even the King himself.
+
+"Of this class of priests, those who have been successful in life are
+either placed in mosques or private families, waiting for advancement;
+but a greater number are nominally attached to colleges, and live
+by the practice of astrology, fortune-telling, the sale of charms,
+talismans, &c. They who are not possessed of the requisite ingenuity
+to subsist by the credulity of others, take charge of an inferior
+school, or write letters, and draw up marriage and other engagements,
+for those who are unequal to the task. They mix at the same time
+largely in the domestic concerns of families. But in addition to
+these and other vocations, a considerable number of the lowest priests
+derive a scanty support from that charity which no one denies to
+the true believer. These men wander as fakirs from place to place,
+carrying news, and repeating poems, tales, &c., mixed with verses from
+the Koran. The heterodox religions are very numerous; nor is Irián
+without her free-thinkers, as the Kamúrs and Mu'tazelís, (Mitaulis,)
+who deny everything which they cannot prove by natural reason. A third
+sect, the Mahadelis, or Molochadis, still maintain the Magian belief
+that the stars and the planets govern all things. Another, the Ehl
+el Tabkwid, (men of truth,) hold that there is no God except the four
+elements, and no rational soul or life after this one. They maintain
+also, that all living bodies, being mixtures of the elements, will
+after death return to their first principles. They also affirm that
+paradise and hell belong to this world, into which every man returns
+in the form of a beast, a plant, or again as a man; and that in this
+second state, he is great, powerful, and happy, or poor, despicable,
+and unhappy, according to his former merits or demerits. In practice
+they inculcate kindness to and respect for each other, with implicit
+obedience to their chiefs, who are called Pir, (old men,) and are
+furnished with all kinds of provisions for their subsistence. This
+sect is found in the provinces of Irák and Fárs.
+
+"The Táríkh Zenádikah (way of the covetous) are directly opposed to
+the last on the subject of transmigration; and they believe that God
+is in all places, and performs all things. They likewise maintain
+that the whole visible universe is only a manifestation of the
+Supreme Being; the soul itself being a portion of the Divine essence.
+Therefore, they consider, that whatever appears to the eye is God, and
+that all religious rites should be comprised in the contemplation of
+God's goodness and greatness.
+
+"On these various creeds the different branches of Suffeeism seem to
+have been founded. One of the most extraordinary of these sects is the
+Rasháníyah; the followers of which believe in the transmigration of
+souls, and the manifestation of the Divinity in the persons of holy
+men. They maintain likewise, that all men who do not join their
+sect are to be considered as dead, and that their goods belong, in
+consequence, to the true believers, as the only survivors."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE "OLD DUKE OF QUEENSBURY."
+
+Mr. Burke gives in his gossiping book about the English aristocracy,
+the following anecdotes of this once famous person:
+
+"Few men occupied a more conspicuous place about the court and town
+for nearly seventy years, during the reigns of the Second and Third
+Georges. Like Wilmot Earl of Rochester, he pursued pleasure under
+every shape, and with as much ardor at fourscore as he had done at
+twenty. At the decease of his father, in 1731, he became Earl of
+March; and he subsequently, in 1748, inherited his mother's earldom
+of Ruglen, together with the family's estates in the counties of
+Edinburgh and Linlithgow. These rich endowments of fortune, and a
+handsome person, of which he was especially careful, combined to
+invest the youthful Earl with no ordinary attractions, and the
+ascendency they acquired he retained for a longer period than any one
+of his contemporaries; from his first appearance in the fashionable
+world in the year 1746, to the year he left it forever, in 1810,
+at the age of eighty-five, he was always an object of comparative
+notoriety. There was no interregnum in the public course of his
+existence. His first distinction he achieved on the turf; his
+knowledge of which, both in theory and practice, equaled that of the
+most accomplished adepts of Newmarket. In all his principal matches
+he rode himself, and in that branch of equitation rivaled the most
+professional jockeys. Properly accoutered in his velvet cap, red
+silken jacket, buckskin breeches, and long spurs, his Lordship bore
+away the prize on many a well-contested field. His famous match with
+the Duke of Hamilton was long remembered in sporting annals. Both
+noblemen rode their own horses, and each was supported by numerous
+partisans. The contest took place on the race-ground at Newmarket, and
+attracted all the fashionables of the period. Lord March, thin, agile,
+and admirably qualified for exertion, was the victor. Still more
+celebrated was his Lordship's wager with the famous Count O'Taafe.
+During a conversation at a convivial meeting on the subject of
+'running against time,' it was suggested by Lord March, that it
+was possible for a carriage to be drawn with a degree of celerity
+previously unexampled, and believed to be impossible. Being desired to
+name his maximum, he undertook, provided choice of ground were given
+him and a certain period for training, to draw a carriage with four
+wheels not less than nineteen miles within the space of sixty minutes.
+The accomplishment of such rapidity staggered the belief of his
+hearers; and a heavy wager was the consequence. Success mainly
+depending on the lightness of the carriage, Wright of Long Acre, the
+most ingenious coach-builder of the day, devoted the whole resources
+of his skill to its construction, and produced a vehicle formed partly
+of wood and partly of whale-bone, with silk harness, that came up
+to the wishes of his employer. Four blood horses of approved speed
+were then selected, and the course at Newmarket chosen as the ground
+of contest. On the day appointed, 29th of August, 1750, noble and
+ignoble gamesters journeyed from far and near to witness the wonderful
+experiment; excitement reached the highest point, and bets to an
+enormous amount were made. At length the jockeys mounted; the carriage
+was put in motion, and rushing on with a velocity marvelous in those
+times of coach traveling, but easily conceived by us railway travelers
+of the nineteenth century, gained within the stipulated hour the goal
+of victory."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE DECAY OF GREAT FAMILIES.
+
+Not the least valuable parts of Burke's just published "Anecdotes of
+the Aristocracy," are a species of essay on the fortunes of families.
+The following is from a chapter on their decadence:
+
+"It has often occurred to us that a very interesting paper might
+be written on the rise and fall of English families. Truly does Dr.
+Borlase remark that 'the most lasting houses have only their seasons,
+more or less, of a certain constitutional strength. They have their
+spring and summer sunshine glare, their wane, decline, and death.'
+Take, for example, the Plantagenets, the Staffords, and the Nevills,
+the three most illustrious names on the roll of England's nobility.
+What race in Europe surpassed in royal position, in personal
+achievement, our Henries and our Edwards? and yet we find the
+great-great-grandson of Margaret Plantagenet, daughter and heiress
+of George Duke of Clarence, following the craft of a cobbler at the
+little town of Newport in Shropshire, in the year 1637. Beside, if
+we were to investigate the fortunes of many of the inheritors of the
+royal arms, it would soon be discovered that
+
+ 'The aspiring blood of Lancaster'
+
+had sunk into the ground. The princely stream at the present time
+flows through very humble veins. Among the lineal descendants of
+Edmund of Woodstock, Earl of Kent, sixth son of Edward I., King
+of England, entitled to quarter the Royal arms, occur Mr. Joseph
+Smart, of Hales Owen, butcher, and Mr. George Wilmot, keeper of the
+turnpike-gate at Cooper's Bank, near Dudley; and among the descendants
+of Thomas Plantagenet, Duke of Gloucester, fifth son of Edward
+III., we may mention Mr. Stephen James Penny, the late sexton at St.
+George's, Hanover Square.
+
+"The story of the Gargraves is a melancholy chapter in the romance
+of real life. For full two centuries, or more, scarcely a family in
+Yorkshire enjoyed a higher position. Its chiefs earned distinction
+in peace and war; one died in France, Master of the Ordnance to King
+Henry V.; another, a soldier, too, fell with Salisbury, at the siege
+of Orleans; and a third filled the Speaker's chair of the House of
+Commons. What an awful contrast to this fair picture does the sequel
+offer. Thomas Gargrave, the Speaker's eldest son, was hung at York,
+for murder; and his half-brother, Sir Richard, endured a fate only
+less miserable. The splendid estate he inherited he wasted by the most
+wanton extravagance, and at length reduced himself to abject want.
+'His excesses,' says Mr. Hunter, in his 'History of Doncaster,' 'are
+still, at the expiration of two centuries, the subject of village
+tradition; and his attachment to gaming is commemorated in an old
+painting, long preserved in the neighboring mansion of Badsworth, in
+which he is represented as playing at the old game of put, the right
+hand against the left, for the stake of a cup of ale.
+
+"The close of Sir Richard's story is as lamentable as its course.
+An utter bankrupt in means and reputation, he is stated to have been
+reduced to travel with the pack-horses to London, and was at last
+found dead in an old hostelry! He had married Catherine, sister of
+Lord Danvers, and by her left three daughters. Of the descendants of
+his brothers few particulars can be ascertained. Not many years since,
+a Mr. Gargrave, believed to be one of them, filled the mean employment
+of parish-clerk of Kippax.
+
+"A similar melancholy narrative applies to another great Yorkshire
+house. Sir William Reresby, Bart., son and heir of the celebrated
+author, succeeded, at the death of his father, in 1689, to the
+beautiful estate of Thrybergh, in Yorkshire, where his ancestors had
+been seated uninterruptedly from the time of the Conquest; and he
+lived to see himself denuded of every acre of his broad lands. Le Neve
+states, in his MSS. preserved in the Heralds' College, that he became
+a tapster in the King's Bench Prison, and was tried and imprisoned for
+cheating in 1711. He was alive in 1727, when Wootton's account of the
+Baronets was published. In that work he is said to be reduced to a low
+condition. At length he died in great obscurity, a melancholy instance
+how low pursuits and base pleasures may sully the noblest name, and
+waste an estate gathered with labor and preserved by the care of a
+race of distinguished progenitors. Gaming was amongst Sir William's
+follies--particularly that lowest specimen of the folly, the fights
+of game-cocks. The tradition at Thrybergh is (for his name is not
+quite forgotten) that the fine estate of Dennaby was staked and lost
+on a single main. Sir William Reresby was not the only baronet who
+disgraced his order at that period. In 1722, Sir Charles Burton was
+tried at the Old Bailey for stealing a seal; pleaded poverty, but
+was found guilty, and sentenced to transportation; which sentence was
+afterward commuted for a milder punishment."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MADRID AND THE SPANISH SENATE.
+
+Gazpacho; or, Summer Months in Spain, is the title of a new book by W.
+George Clark, published in London. Gazpacho, it seems, is the name of
+a dish peculiar to Spain, but of universal use there, a sort of cold
+soup, made up of familiars and handy things, as bread, pot-herbs, oil,
+and water. "My Gazpacho," says the author, "has been prepared after
+a similar receipt. I know not how it will please the more refined
+and fastidious palates to which it will be submitted; indeed, amid
+the multitude of dainties wherewith the table is loaded, it may well
+remain untasted." It at least deserves a better fate than that. The
+volume relates, in a pleasant, intelligent, and gossiping way, a
+summer's ramble through Spain, describing with considerable force the
+peculiarities of its people, and the romantic features by which it
+is marked. The clever painter could not have better materials. The
+party-colored costumes of the peasants, like dahlias at a Chiswick
+show; the somber garments of the priests, the fine old churches, the
+queer rambling houses, looking centuries old, the dull, gloomy streets
+of Madrid, the life and activity of the market-place. Such are the
+objects upon which the eye rests, and of which Mr. Clark was too
+observant to neglect any. The following passages will give an idea of
+the materials of which the Gazpacho is made up:--
+
+MADRID.
+
+"I left, I suppose, scarcely a street in Madrid which I did not
+traverse, or a church which I did not enter. The result is hardly
+worth the trouble. One street and church are exactly like another
+street and church. In the latter, one always finds the same profusion
+of wooden Christs, and Madonnas in real petticoats, on the walls, and
+the same scanty sprinkling of worshipers, also in petticoats, on the
+floor. The images outnumber the devotees here, as in all other Roman
+Catholic countries (except Ireland, which is an exception to every
+rule.) To a stranger, the markets are always the most interesting
+haunts. A Spaniard, he or she, talks more while making the daily
+bargain than in all the rest of the twenty-four hours. The fruit and
+vegetable market was my especial lounge. There is such a fresh, sweet
+smell of the country, and the groups throw themselves, or are thrown,
+into such pretty tableaux after the Rubens and Snyders fashion. The
+shambles one avoids instinctively, and fish-market there is none,
+for Madrid is fifty hours' journey from the nearest sea, and the
+Manzanares has every requisite for a fine trout stream, but water.
+
+"Madrid has one peculiarity which conduces very much to the visitor's
+comfort, namely, that there are very few inevitable 'sights' to be
+gone through. The armory said to be the finest in the world; the
+palace, ditto (which people who are addicted to upholstering may
+go and see, if they don't mind breaking the tenth commandment); the
+museum of natural history, where is the largest loadstone in active
+operation between this and Medina; and the Academia, nearly complete
+the list. Everybody should devote a morning to the last-named, were it
+only for the sake of the Murillos. The famous picture of 'St. Isabel
+giving alms to the sick' has been arrested at Madrid on its return
+from Paris to Seville. As the Sevilians have instituted a 'process'
+for its recovery, it is likely to stay there for some time longer.
+'The Patrician's Dream' is quite cheering to look upon, so rich and
+glowing it is. Shut your eyes to the semi-ludicrous effect of husband,
+wife, and dog, in a decreasing series, like the three genders in
+Lindley Murray, all asleep.
+
+"The gardens of the queen, sunk in a deep hollow below the palace,
+deserve a visit. The head-gardener, of course a Frenchman, struggles
+gallantly against all kinds of difficulties of soil, climate, and lack
+of water. By a series of ingenious artifices he has concocted a plot
+of grass, some ten feet square, to the great astonishment of all
+natives."
+
+NARVAEZ IN THE SENATE.
+
+"One day my kind friend Colonel S. took me to hear a debate in the
+_Senado_, the Spanish Chamber of Peers, which holds its sittings in
+the chapel of a suppressed convent, near the palace. By dint of paint,
+gilding, and carpets, the room has been divested of its sanctified
+aspect, and made to look like a handsome modern room. They have not
+thought it necessary that a place in which a hundred gentlemen in
+surtouts meet to discuss secular matters in this nineteenth century,
+should be made to resemble a chapel of the fifteenth. Antiquity is
+here represented in the person of two halberdiers, who stand to guard
+the door, dressed in extravagant costume, like beefeaters in full
+bloom. Rows of raised seats extend on each side of the room; in
+the center, facing the beef-eaters, are the chair and desk of the
+president, and on each side a little tribune, from which the clerks
+read out documents from time to time. The spectators are accommodated
+in niches round the walls. Each member speaks from his place, and the
+voting is by ballot. First a footman hands round a tray of beans, and
+then each advances, when his name is called, to a table in the center,
+where he drops his bean into the box. The beans are then counted, and
+the result proclaimed by the president. On the right of the chair, in
+the front, is the bench assigned to the ministers; and there I had
+the good luck to see Narvaez, otherwise called Duke of Valencia, and
+a great many fine names besides, and, in reality, master of all the
+Spains. His face wears a fixed expression of inflexible resolve, very
+effective, and garnished with a fierce dyed mustache, and a somewhat
+palpable wig to match. His style of dress was what, in an inferior
+man, one would have called 'dandified.' An unexceptionable surtout,
+opened to display a white waistcoat with sundry chains, and the
+extremities terminated, respectively, in patent leather and primrose
+kid. During the discussion he alternately fondled a neat riding-whip
+and aired a snowy pocket-handkerchief. Those who know him give him
+credit for good intentions and great courage, but do not expect
+that he will ever set the Thames on fire, whatever he may do to
+the Manzanares. He is a mixture, they say, of the chivalric and the
+asinine: a kind of moral mule. His personal weakness is a wish to be
+thought young, and hence he was naturally angry when Lord Palmerston
+wanted to give him a 'wrinkle.' I saw, likewise, Mon, the Minister of
+Finance, smiling complacently, like a shopkeeper on his customers;
+and the venerable Castanos, Duke of Bailen, who, as he tottered in,
+stooping under the weight of ninety years, was affectionately greeted
+by Narvaez and others. On the whole, the debate seemed to be languid,
+and to be listened to with little interest; but that is the general
+fate of debates in July."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE KANASZ.
+
+Of the Servian swineherd we have heard something of late, both in
+history and romance; because this was the vocation of Kara George, the
+Servian Liberator. In Hungary the swine-keeper does not seem to be so
+respectable a person. Here is a sketch of him from Max Schlesinger's
+new book on the Hungarian war:
+
+"The Kanasz is a swineherd, whose occupation, everywhere unpoetical
+and dirty, is doubly troublesome and dirty in Hungary. Large droves
+of pigs migrate annually into the latter country from Serbia, where
+they still live in a half-wild state. In Hungary they fatten in the
+extensive oak-forests, and are sent to market in the large towns, even
+to Vienna, and still further....
+
+"It is a true enjoyment to live in these shady forests. The oak
+attains a finer and more luxuriant growth on the Hungarian soil than
+in any part of Germany. The hogs find food in profusion, and commonly
+stuff themselves to such a degree that they lose all desire for roving
+about: so that dog, master, and ass, lead a comparatively easy life,
+and are left to the quiet enjoyment of nature. But the lot of the
+Kanasz is a pitiable one when, at the close of summer, he has to
+drive his swine to market. From Debreczin, nay even from the Serbian
+frontier, he has to make a journey on foot more toilsome than was ever
+undertaken by the most adventurous traveler, pacing slowly over the
+interminable heaths in rain, storm, or under a burning sun, behind
+his pigs, which drive into his face hot clouds of dust. Every now and
+then a hog has stuffed itself so full as to be unable to stir from the
+spot; and there it lies on the road without moving, whilst the whole
+caravan is obliged to wait for half a day or longer, until the glutted
+animal can get on his legs again; and when at length this feat is
+accomplished, frequently his neighbor begins the same trick. There
+is truly not a more toilsome business in the wide world than that of
+a Kanasz.... The fokos is a hatchet, with a long handle, which the
+Kanasz hurls with great dexterity. Whenever he desires to pick out
+and slaughter one of his hogs, either for his own use or for sale,
+the attempt would be attended with danger, in the half-savage state
+of these animals, without such a weapon. The fokos here assists him;
+which he flings with such force and precision, that the sharp iron
+strikes exactly into the center of the frontal bone of the animal
+he has marked out; the victim sinks on the earth without uttering a
+sound, and the drove quietly proceeds on its way. That he can strike
+down a man with equal precision at eighty to a hundred paces, is
+proved by the gallows at the entrance of the forest--the three-legged
+monument of his dexterity. During recent events, too, the surgeons
+of the Austrian army will readily furnish the Kanasz and Csikos with
+certificates of their ability and skill."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE "WILD HUSSAR" OF HUNGARY.
+
+France, Russia, Prussia, and other countries, have introduced the
+Hussars into their armies; but these soldiers are merely Russian,
+French, and Prussian cavalry, dressed in the Hungarian laced jacket:
+they want the spirit, the horse, and--the 'Magyar Isten.' For this
+reason, the Hungarian Hussar will not acknowledge them as brethren;
+and whenever he comes in contact with foreign Hussars, he lets them
+feel in battle the full force of his contempt. A story is told, that
+during a campaign against the French in the war with Napoleon, the
+bivouacs of the Prussian and Hungarian Hussars were near to one
+another. A Prussian came over to his neighbors in a familiar way with
+a glass of wine, and drank it to the health of his 'brother hussar.'
+But the Hungarian gently pushed the glass back, and stroked his beard,
+saying, 'What brother?--no brother--I hussar--you jack-pudding.'
+
+This expression is not to be mistaken for a brag. The Hungarian hussar
+is no fanfaron like the French chasseur, but he is conscious of his
+own powers, like a Grenadier of the Old Imperial Guard. The dolmany,
+the csako, and the csizma, have grown to his body; they form his
+holyday dress even when off duty--the national costume transferred
+into the army; and as he is aware that this is not the case in other
+countries, the foreign Hussar's dress is in his eyes a mere servant's
+livery; and logically the man is not altogether wrong.
+
+The Hussar, like the Magyars in general, is naturally good-tempered.
+The finest man in the service, he is at the same time the most jovial
+companion in the tavern, and will not sit by and empty his glass by
+himself when a Bohemian or German comrade at his side has spent all
+his money. There is only one biped under the sun who is in his eyes
+more contemptible and hateful than any animal of marsh or forest. This
+is the Banderial Hussar--that half-breed between Croat and Magyar,
+that caricature of the true Hussar, who serves in the cavalry, as
+the Croat in the infantry, of the Military Frontier. Never was an
+Hungarian Hussar known to drink with a Banderial Hussar; never will he
+sit at the same table: if he meets a snake he crushes it under foot--a
+wolf he will hunt in the mountains--with a buffalo he will fight on
+the open heath--with a miserable horse-stealer he will wrestle for a
+halter; but as for the Banderial Hussar, he spits in his face wherever
+he meets him.
+
+It was at Hatvan, or at Tapjo-Bicske, that Hungarian and Banderial
+Hussars were for the first time in this war--the first time perhaps
+in the recollection of man--opposed to one another in battle. If looks
+could slay, there would have been no need of a conflict, for the eyes
+of the Magyars shot death and contempt at their unworthy adversaries.
+The signal of attack sounded; and at the same instant, as if seized by
+one common thought, the Hungarian Hussars clattered their heavy sabres
+back into the scabbard, and with a fearful imprecation, such as no
+German tongue could echo, charged weaponless and at full speed their
+mimic caricatures whom fate had thrown in their way. The shock was so
+irresistible, that the poor Croats could make no use of their sabers
+against the furious onset of their unarmed foe: they were beaten down
+from their saddles with the fist, and dragged off their horses by
+their dolmanys; those who could save themselves fled. The Hussars
+disdained to pursue them; but they complained to their Colonel at
+having been opposed to 'such a rabble.'--_Schlesinger_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ORIGINAL POETRY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A HOROSCOPE.
+
+BY ELIZABETH OAKES SMITH.
+
+"Quorum pars magna fui."
+
+ Oh! loveliest of the stars of Heaven,
+ Thus did ye walk the crystal dome,
+ When to the earth a child was given,
+ Within a love-lit, northern home;
+ Thus leading up the starry train,
+ With aspect still benign,
+ Ye move in your fair orbs again
+ As on that birth long syne.
+
+ Within her curtained room apart,
+ The pale young mother faintly smiled;
+ While warmly to a father's heart
+ With love and prayer was pressed the child;
+ And, softly to the lattice led,
+ In whispers grandams show
+ How those presaging stars have shed
+ Around the child a glow.
+
+ Born in the glowing summer prime,
+ With planets thus conjoined in space
+ As if they watched the natal time,
+ And came to bless the infant face;
+ Oh! there was gladness in that bower,
+ And beauty in the sky;
+ And Hope and Love foretold a dower
+ Of brightest destiny.
+
+ Unconscious child! that smiling lay
+ Where love's fond eyes, and bright stars gleamed,
+ How long and toilsome grew the way
+ O'er which those brilliant orbs had beamed;
+ How oft the faltering step drew back
+ In terror of the path,
+ When giddy steep, and wildering track
+ Seemed fraught with only wrath!
+
+ How oft recoiled the woman foot,
+ With tears that shamed the path she trod.
+ To find a canker at the root
+ Of every hope, save that in God!
+ And long, oh! long, and weary long,
+ Ere she had learned to feel
+ That Love, unselfish, deep, and strong,
+ Repays its own wild zeal.
+
+ Bright Hesperus! who on the eyes
+ Of Milton poured thy brightest ray!
+ Effulgent dweller of the skies,
+ Take not from me thy light away--
+ I look on thee, and I recall
+ The dreams of by-gone years--
+ O'er many a hope I lay the pall
+ With its becoming tears;
+
+ Yet turn to thee with thy full beam,
+ And bless thee, Oh love-giving star!
+ For life's sweet, sad, illusive dream
+ Fruition, though in Heaven afar--
+ "A silver lining" hath the cloud
+ Through dark and stormiest night,
+ And there are eyes to pierce the shroud
+ And see the hidden light.
+
+ Thou movest side by side with Jove,
+ And, 'tis a quaint conceit, perchance--
+ Thou seem'st in humid light to move
+ As tears concealed thy burning glance--
+ Such Virgil saw thee, when thine eyes,
+ More lovely through their glow,[2]
+ Won from the Thunderer of the skies
+ An accent soft and low.
+
+ And Mars is there with his red beams,
+ Tumultuous, earnest, unsubdued--
+ And silver-footed Dian gleams
+ Faint as when she, on Latmos stood--
+ God help the child! such night brought forth
+ When Love to Power appeals,
+ And strong-willed Mars at frozen north
+ Beside Diana steals.
+
+BROOKLYN, August, 1850.
+
+[Footnote 2: "Lachrymis oculos effusa nitentes."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FRIENDSHIP.
+
+ How oft the burdened heart would sink
+ In fathomless despair
+ But for an angel on the brink--
+ In mercy standing there:
+ An angel bright with heavenly light--
+ And born of loftiest skies,
+ Who shows her face to mortal race,
+ In Friendship's holy guise.
+
+ Upon the brink of dark despair,
+ With smiling face she stands;
+ And to the victim shrinking there,
+ Outspreads her eager hands:
+ In accents low that sweetly flow
+ To his awakening ear,
+ She woos him back--his deathward track.
+ Toward Hope's effulgent sphere.
+
+ Sweet Friendship! let me daily give
+ Thanks to my God for thee!
+ Without thy smiles t'were death to live,
+ And joy to cease to be:
+ Oh, bitterest drop in woe's full cup--
+ To have no friend in need!
+ To struggle on, with grief alone--
+ Were agony indeed!
+
+August. WILLIAM C. RICHARDS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BALANCE OF LIFE.
+
+ All daring sympathy--clear-sighted love--
+ Is, from its source, a ray of endless bliss;
+ Self has no place in the pure world above,
+ Its shadows vanish in the strife of this.
+
+ The toil--the tumult--the sharp struggle o'er,--
+ The casket breaks;--men say, "A martyr dies!"
+ The death--the martyrdom--has past before:
+ The soul, transfigured, finds its native skies.
+
+ The good--the ill--we vainly strive to weigh
+ With Reason's scales, hung in the mists of Time:
+ Yet child-like Faith the balance doth survey,
+ Held high in ether, by a hand sublime.
+
+May, 1850. HERMA.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SCIENCE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The SPANISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES have announced the following subject
+for competition: "An experimental investigation and explanation of
+the theory of nitrification, the causes which most influence the
+production of this phenomenon, and the means most conducive in Spain
+to natural nitrification." The prize, to be awarded in May 1851, is to
+be a gold medal and 6000 copper reals--about seventy pounds sterling;
+and a second similar medal will be given to the second best paper. The
+papers, written in Spanish or Latin, are to be sent in before the 1st
+May, with, as usual, the author's name under seal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IMPROVEMENTS IN THE TELEGRAPH.--The _Presse_ gives some account of
+experiments made at the house of M. de Girardin, in Paris, with a
+new telegraphic dictionary, the invention of M. Gonon. Dispatches
+in French, English, Portuguese, Russian, and Latin, including proper
+names of men and places, and also figures, were transmitted and
+translated, says this account, with a rapidity and fidelity alike
+marvelous, by an officer who knew nothing of any one of the languages
+used except his own. Dots, commas, accents, and breaks were all in
+their places. This dictionary of M. Gonon is applicable alike to
+electric and aerial telegraphy, to transmissions by night and by day,
+to maritime and to military telegraphing. The same paper speaks of
+the great interest excited in the European capitals by the approaching
+experiment of submarine telegraphic communication between England
+and France. The wires, it says, on the English side are deposited
+and ready for laying down. It is probable that in a very few days the
+experiment will be complete.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+AUTHORS AND BOOKS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NEW ORLEANS AS SEEN BY A GERMAN PRINCE is very naturally not quite
+the same city as in the opinion of her own pleasure-loving citizens,
+nor can the republic whose South-western metropolis is condemned with
+the rigidity of a merciless judge and the jaundice of an unfriendly
+traveler, hope to get clear of censure from the same super-royal pen.
+It seems that his serenest highness Major-General Duke Paul William,
+of Wirtemburg, is traveling in America, and that the _Ausland_, a
+weekly paper, of Stuttgart, is from time to time favored with the
+results of his experience on the way. From some recent portions of his
+correspondence _The International_ translates the subjoined _morceau_,
+which, however, despite its great exaggeration, is not altogether
+devoid of truth: "It is not necessary here to mention how much
+New Orleans has altered, increased, and deteriorated, for it is an
+established thing that cities which grow to such gigantic proportions
+gain nothing in respect to the morals of their inhabitants. Here
+drunkenness and gambling, two vices of which the Americans were
+ignorant in the time of the founders of their great federation,
+have taken very deep root. The decrease of the inflexible spirit of
+religion, and the increase of vice and luxury, gnaw the powerful tree,
+and are fearful enemies, which cannot be resisted by a structure that
+might resist with scorn all foreign foes, and would have played a
+mighty part in the world's history had the spirit of Washington and
+Franklin remained with it. The annexation of Texas, the war with
+Mexico, and now the gold of California, have transformed the United
+States. A people which makes conquests, loses inward power in
+proportion to the aggrandizement of its volume, and the increase of
+its external enemies."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN ARABIAN NEWSPAPER, with the title _Mobacher_. has lately been
+commenced in Algiers, at the expense of the French Government. It
+is edited in the cabinet of the Governor-General, issued weekly, and
+lithographed, as less expensive than printing, which in Arabic types
+would be quite costly. It contains political news from Europe and
+Africa, the latest advices from Constantinople, all those laws and
+decrees of the Government which in any way concern the Arabs, and
+descriptions of such new discoveries and inventions as can be made
+intelligible to the readers for whom it is designed. A thousand copies
+are printed weekly and sent to the chiefs and headmen of all the
+tribes that are under French rule or influence. At first it was not
+read much, but now the vanity of the Arabs has been excited by it as a
+mark of special attention from the Governor-General, so that they take
+it as an honor, and a degree of curiosity has been excited to obtain
+news from other parts of the world.
+
+Within a short time, also, an additional importance has been given to
+the paper by the publication in it of the amount of the tribute which
+each tribe is required to pay to France. Formerly this was known only
+to the chiefs who would accordingly exact from their people whatever
+amount they deemed best, under the pretense that it was for the
+government, while the greater part was retained by themselves. These
+tribes have profited greatly by the French conquest; it is estimated
+that of the eighty millions of francs which the army in Algeria costs
+yearly, from twenty to twenty-five millions remain in the hands of the
+Arabs. The Arab sells his corn, dates, horses, sheep, the baskets he
+weaves, &c., to the European population, but never buys anything from
+them in turn, except it be arms and powder. The rest of his money he
+carries home and buries where no one knows but himself, so that, if
+he dies suddenly, it is lost. Only the chiefs of the tribe know how to
+extort anything of these hidden sums. According to the most moderate
+estimates the tribes must have from two to three hundred millions
+of French money. The gains which the chiefs draw from this wealth is
+considerable; some of them have from a hundred to a hundred and fifty
+thousand francs income. They are beginning to build large houses,
+and cultivate gardens around them, a disposition which the government
+favors, because it is easier to keep tribes in order that are
+settled and have dwellings to lose which they cannot take with them.
+The publication of the tribute in the _Mobacher_, is, under these
+circumstances, of great value for the Arabs, because it enables them,
+as it were, to supervise their chiefs, and to refuse to pay exorbitant
+taxes laid under pretense of a high tribute. This has increased the
+respect generally felt for the paper, though it has not rendered it
+more a favorite with the chiefs. The power of these leaders is very
+great in the various tribes, having been in most cases hereditary, at
+least since the tenth century, and although not always inherited in
+direct line, the tribes have never suffered it to pass into the hands
+of new families. Hitherto nothing has diminished it; the war rather
+gave it new strength, and it is only by means of the chiefs that the
+French can keep Algiers quiet. It would be a remarkable fact if the
+dissolving power of publicity through the press should be manifested
+here as elsewhere, and begin the overthrow of the long standing
+influence exercised by the great Arabian families.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. M. ST. LEON LOUD, of Philadelphia, has in the press of Ticknor,
+Reed & Fields, of Boston, a collection of her poems, entitled,
+"Wayside Flowers." Mrs. Loud is a writer of much grace and elegance,
+and occasionally of a rich and delicate fancy. The late Mr. Poe was
+accustomed to praise her works very highly, and was to have edited
+this edition of them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LITERATURE OF SOCIALISM occupies the press in France. The subject
+is warmly debated, _pro_ and _con_. In a pamphlet called _Despotisme
+ou Socialisme_, M. Pompery rapidly sketches the alternative which, he
+says, lies open to those who rise against despotism. There are but two
+religious doctrines according to him: the one absolutist, represented
+by De Maistre, and the Catholic school, which is, logically enough,
+desirous of reestablishing the Inquisition; the other professed by all
+the illustrious teachers of mankind, by Pythagoras, Jesus, Socrates,
+Pascal, &c., which, believing in the goodness of the Creator and the
+perfectibility of man, endeavors to found upon earth the reign of
+justice, fraternity, and equality. A more important work on Socialism
+is that of Dr. Guepin, of Nantes, _Philosophie du Socialisme_; and M.
+Lecouturier announces a _Science du Socialisme_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. G.P.R. JAMES has taken a cottage at Jamaica, Long Island, and
+is domiciliated as an American--we hope for a long time. He has made
+troops of friends since his arrival here, and is likely to be as
+popular in society as he has long been in literature. We are sure
+we communicate a very pleasing fact when we state that it is his
+intention to give in two or three of our principal cities, during the
+autumn and fall, a series of lectures--probably upon the chivalric
+ages, with which no one is more profoundly familiar, and of which
+no one can discourse more wisely or agreeably. His abilities, his
+reputation, and the almost universal acquaintance with his works,
+insure for him the largest success. We are indebted to no other living
+author for so much enjoyment, and by his proposed lectures he will not
+only add to our obligations, but furnish an opportunity to repair
+in some degree the wrong he has suffered from the imperfection and
+injustice of our copyright system.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"THE LIFE, CHARACTER, AND GENIUS OF EBENEZER ELLIOTT," is a volume
+by January Searle, author of _Leaves from Sherwood Forest_, &c., who
+knew the corn-law rhymer well, and has been enabled to give very
+characteristic sketches, original descriptions, correspondence, &c.
+There are in it many judiciously selected specimens of Elliott's
+poems, prose productions, and lectures. Mr. Searle observes of him,
+that "he was cradled into poetry by human wrong and misery; and was
+emphatically the bard of poverty--singing of the poor man's loves and
+sorrows, and denouncing his oppressors." Again: "He has one central
+idea--terrible and awful in its aspect, although beautiful and
+beneficent in spirit--before which he tries all causes, and men, and
+things. It is the Eternal Idea of Right; his synonyme of God. And this
+idea is perpetually present in his mind, pervades all his thoughts,
+will not be shuffled nor cheated, but demands a full satisfaction from
+all violators of it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LATE MRS. OSGOOD was in a very remarkable degree respected and
+beloved by those who were admitted to her acquaintance. Without envy
+or jealousy, or any of the immoralities of the intellect which most
+commonly beset writers of her sex, she occasioned no enmities and was
+a party to none, but was regarded, especially by the literary women
+of this country, with a feeling of tenderness and devotion probably
+unparalleled in the annals of literature or of society. Immediately
+after her death, therefore, a desire was manifested to illustrate
+the common regard for her by some suitable testimonial, and upon
+consultation, it was decided to publish a splendid souvenir, to
+consist of the gratuitous contributions of her friends, and with the
+profits accruing from its sale to erect a monument to her memory in
+the cemetery of Mount Auburn. This gift book, edited by Mrs. Osgood's
+most intimate friend, Mary E. Hewitt, will be published by Mr. Putnam,
+on the first of October, under the title of _The Cairn_, and it will
+contain original articles by George Aubrey, Lord Bishop of Jamaica:
+the Right Rev. George W. Doane, the Right Rev. Alonzo Potter, the
+Hon. R.H. Walworth, the Hon. J. Leander Starr, the Rev. C.S. Henry,
+D.D., G.P.R. James, Esq., N.P. Willis, Esq., W. Gilmore Simms, Esq.,
+Bayard Taylor, Esq., J.H. Boker, Esq., Alfred B. Street, Esq., R.
+H. Stoddard, Esq., Miss Fredrika Bremer, Mrs. Sigourney, Mrs. Oakes
+Smith, Mrs. Embury, Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. Neal, Mrs. Willard, Mrs. Whitman,
+Miss Lynch, Miss Hunter, Miss Cheesebro', and indeed nearly all the
+writers of her sex who have attained any eminence in our literary
+world. The volume will be illustrated with nine engravings on steel,
+by Cheney and other eminent artists.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE REV. WALTER COLTON has just published through A.S. Barnes & Co.
+"Three Years in California," a journal of experiences and observations
+in the gold region, from the period when it first attracted the
+attention of the Atlantic cities. Mr. Colton was some time alcade
+of Monterey, and he had in every way abundant opportunity to acquire
+whatever facts are deserving of preservation in history. His "Ship
+and Shore," "Constantinople and Athens," "Deck and Port," and other
+works, have illustrated his genial temper, shrewdness, and skill in
+description and character writing; and this book will increase his
+reputation for these qualities. It contains portraits of Capt. Sutter,
+Col. Fremont, Mr. Gwin, Mr. Wright, Mr. Larkin, and Mr. Snyder, a map
+of the valley of the Sacramento, and several other engravings, very
+spirited in design and execution.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. GEORGE STEPHENS, author of the "_Manuscripts of Erdely_," has
+been struck by ill health and reduced to poverty, and an amateur play
+has been prepared for his benefit at the Soho Theater. He wrote "The
+Vampire," "Montezuma," and "Martinuzzi."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Gallery of Illustrious Americans, conducted by Mr. Lester,
+continues with every number to increase in interest. The work is
+designed to embrace folio portraits, engraved by Davignon, from
+daguerreotypes by Brady, of twenty-four of the most eminent American
+citizens who have lived since the time of Washington. The portraits
+thus far have been admirable for truthfulness and artistic effect. It
+may be said that the _only_ published pictures we have, deserving to
+be called portraits, of the historian Prescott, or Mr. Calhoun, or
+Colonel Fremont, are in this Gallery. The great artist, naturalist,
+and man of letters, Audubon, is reflected here as he appears at the
+close of the battle, receiving the reverence of nations and ages.
+In the biographical department Mr. Lester has evinced very eminent
+abilities for this kind of writing. He seizes the prominent events
+of history and the strong points of character, and presents them
+with such force and fullness, and happy combination, as to make the
+letter-press as interesting and valuable as the engraved portion
+of the work. We are pleased to learn that the Gallery is remarkably
+successful. No publication of equal splendor and expensiveness has
+ever before been so well received in this country. The cost of it
+is but one dollar per number, or twenty dollars for the series of
+twenty-four numbers. It is now half completed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+M. Max Schlesinger, author of "The War in Hungary, in 1848-9,"--a
+work which, from what we read of it in the foreign journals, is much
+the most striking and attractive of all that have appeared upon its
+subject in English,--is described in the _Athenæum_, as by birth
+a Hungarian, by the accidents of fortune a German. For some time a
+resident in Prague, and more recently settled in Berlin, he has had
+excellent opportunities of seeing the men and studying the questions
+connected both in the literary and political sense with the present
+movement of ideas and races in Eastern Europe. His acquaintance
+with the aspects of nature in his native land--his knowledge of the
+peculiar character of its inhabitants, their manners, modes of thought
+and habits of life--his familiarity with past history--his right
+conception of the leading men in the recent struggle--are all vouched
+for as "essentially accurate" by no less an authority than Count
+Pulszky. It would be an injustice merely to say that M. Schlesinger
+has given in an original and picturesque way a general view of the
+course of events in the late war, more complete and connected than is
+afforded in any account hitherto presented to the public. He has done
+more: he has enabled the German and English reader to understand the
+miracle of a nation of four or five millions of men rising up at the
+command of a great statesman, and doing successful battle with the
+elaborately organized power of a first-class European state, shaking
+it to its very foundations, and contending, not without hope,
+against two mighty military empires,--until the treachery from within
+paralyzed its power of resistance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Mayo's new novel, "The Berber, or the Mountaineer of the Atlas,"
+published by Putnam, promises to be scarcely less popular than his
+"Kaloolah." The _Evening Post_ says of it: "Kaloolah was a sprightly
+narrative of the wanderings of a Yankee, who seemed to combine in
+his person the characteristics of Robinson Crusoe with those of Baron
+Munchausen; but the Berber professes to be nothing more than a novel;
+or, as the author says in his preface, his principal object has been
+to tell an agreeable story in an agreeable way. In doing so, however,
+an eye has been had to the illustration of Moorish manners, customs,
+history, and geography; to the exemplification of Moorish life as
+it actually is in Barbary in the present day, and not as it usually
+appears in the vague and poetic glamour of the common Moorish romance.
+It has also been an object to introduce to the acquaintance of the
+reader a people who have played a most important part in the world's
+history, but of whom very few educated people know anything more than
+the name. As Dr. Mayo has traveled extensively over the regions he
+describes, we presume that his descriptions may be taken as true. His
+account of the Berbers, a tribe of ancient Asiatic origin, who inhabit
+a range of the Atlas, and who live a semi-savage life like the Arabs,
+is minute, and to the intelligent reader quite as interesting as the
+more narrative parts of the work. It is, perhaps, the best evidence of
+the merits of the book, that the whole first edition was exhausted by
+orders from the country before the first number had appeared in the
+city."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Col. Forbes, who was in Italy during the revolution, and many years
+previous, and who was himself, both in a military and civic capacity,
+one of the actors in that event, the _Evening Post_ informs us, is
+about to give public lectures on the subject of Italy in the various
+cities and towns of the United States. Col. Forbes was intimately
+connected with the revolutionary chiefs during the brief existence
+of the Roman Republic, and was directly and confidently employed by
+Mazzini. His knowledge of the country, its people, its politics, and
+its recent history, will supply him with materials for making his
+lectures highly interesting and instructive.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Gem of the Western World, edited by Mrs. Hewitt, and published by
+Cornish & Co., Fulton street, is a very beautiful gift-book, and in
+its literary character is deserving of a place with the most splendid
+and; tasteful annuals of the season. Mrs. Hewitt's own contributions
+to it embrace some of her finest compositions, and are of course among
+its most brilliant contents.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FRENCH PERIODICALS.--A Parisian correspondent of the London _Literary
+Gazette_ observes, that if we exclude the _Revue des Deux Mondes_--a,
+sort of cross between the English _Quarterly_ and the monthlies,--if
+we exclude also a few dry scientific periodicals, and one or two
+theatrical or musical newspapers, we shall seek in vain for any
+_Quarterly_, or _Blackwood_, or _Art Union_, or _Literary Gazette_;
+and that even the periodicals and journals which make the nearest
+approach to the weekly, monthly, or quarterly publications of England,
+are either wretched compilations, or abominably ill-written and
+ill-printed. The _feuilleton_ system of the newspapers is no doubt
+the principal cause of the periodical literature being in such
+an extremely low condition. But though literary and scientific
+periodicals be, generally speaking, vile in quality, they can at least
+boast of quantity. There are, it seems, not fewer than 300 of one
+kind or another published in Paris alone. Among them are 44 devoted
+to medicine, chemistry, natural science, &c.; 42, trade, commerce,
+railways, advertisements; 34, fashions; 30, law; 22, administration,
+public works, roads, bridges, mines; 19, archæology, history,
+biography, geography, numismatics; 19, public instruction and
+education; 15, agriculture and horticulture; 8, bibliography and
+typography; 10, army and navy; 7, literary; the rest theatrical,
+musical, or of a character too hybrid to be classified.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ILLUSTRATED DOMESTIC BIBLE, edited by the Rev. Ingram Cobbin,
+seems to us decidedly the best family Bible ever offered to the trade
+in this country. It is printed with remarkable correctness and beauty;
+illustrated with a very large number of maps and engravings on wood;
+and its notes, written with much condensation and perspicuity, are
+such as are necessary for the understanding of the text. Indeed, all
+that is added to the letter of the Bible is legitimate and necessary
+_illustration_. It is being published in a series of twenty-five
+numbers, at twenty-five cents each, by S. Hueston, publisher of _The
+Knickerbocker_, Nassau-street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE VIENNA UNIVERSITY, long one of the best in Europe, has not been
+reopened since the insurrection of November, 1848, its principal
+edifice having been occupied as barracks for a regiment of soldiers.
+It is now proposed to restore it to its proper use, but great
+difficulty is experienced in finding professors. The old ones
+are scattered, some as exiles in foreign countries, on account of
+democratic opinions,--some in prison for the same reason, others
+employed elsewhere. Wackernagel, the eminent professor of the German
+Language and Literature at Basle, Switzerland, tempted by liberal
+offers, had promised to come to Vienna, and lend the aid of his
+reputation and talents to the restoration of the University, but being
+lately at Milan, on a wedding tour, as he and his wife were passing
+through the _Piazza d'Armi_, their ears were saluted by cries of
+pain, which on inquiry they found to proceed from sundry rebellious
+Italians, of both sexes, who were receiving each from twenty-five to
+fifty blows of the military baton, or cane, employed by the Austrians
+in flogging soldiers. Madame Wackernagel at once declared that she
+would never willingly inhabit a country whose laws and habits suffered
+women to be so brutally punished for patriotism, and her husband could
+only agree with her. He has accordingly broken off the engagement, and
+the Government cannot hope to supply his place.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HINCKS ON LITERARY LARCENY.--A Canadian friend sends us the following
+extract from a speech by Francis Hincks, a leading member of the
+Canadian Ministry, touching the International Copyright question:
+
+ "The American publisher steals the works of British authors,
+ because he is immoral enough to do it, because he is scoundrel
+ enough, and the nation is scoundrel enough to permit it.
+ (Ironical cheers.) Yes, because the nation is scoundrel enough
+ to permit it."
+
+Our unknown friend who sends us this wants us to give Hincks a
+thorough roasting for it, and evidently expects every hair on our head
+to bristle with indignation. Now we have not the least objection to
+roasting the Minister aforesaid, and will do it when a fair chance
+presents itself, but we don't consider this such a chance. In fact,
+though we think Francis has drawn rather a strong draught from "the
+well of English undefiled," yet essentially we regard his observations
+above quoted as rather more than half right. It _is_ rascally to steal
+a man's book, print it, sell it, read it, and refuse him any pay for
+the labor of writing it; and we don't see that his being an Englishman
+makes any material difference. There may be a cheaper way to get the
+proceeds of another man's toil than by paying for it, but we don't
+think there is any other strictly honest way.--_Tribune_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HERR SCHUMANN's opera, "Généviève," was produced at Leipsic on the
+28th ultimo. "This work," says the _Gazette Musicale_, "after having
+been much recommended beforehand, does not seem to have satisfied
+public expectation, being concert music, without any dramatic force."
+For the verdict which will finally be passed on "Généviève" every
+one must be curious who has at all followed the journals of Young
+Germany in the recent crusades which they nave made, not so much to
+establish Schumann as a great composer, as to prove him greater than
+Mendelssohn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GRAND LITERARY TRADE SALES are now in progress in New York: and
+the catalogues of the rival houses are the largest ever printed.
+Cooley & Keese at their splendid hall in Broadway present this year a
+richer and more extensive series of invoices than has ever before been
+sold in America.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE FINE ARTS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bavaria is a sort of artists' paradise, both the late King Louis and
+the present Maximilian being determined to leave behind them the glory
+of munificent patrons of art. In this they have so far succeeded, that
+Munich, which before their time was by no means among German cities
+the most worthy a traveler's attention, may now dispute the palm even
+with Dresden, notwithstanding the unrivaled gallery of paintings,
+possessed by the latter. For students of modern art, and especially
+of the German schools, Munich is incomparable, while its collection of
+ancient sculptures cannot be equaled out of Italy. We now learn that
+King Maximilian has conceived the plan of a grand series of pictures
+to comprehend the prominent epochs and events of history. The most
+eminent German and foreign artists are to be invited to assist in
+carrying out this immense undertaking; so that thus the series will
+not only represent the great experiences of mankind, but will, it is
+hoped, contain specimens of all the great schools of modern painting.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An exhibition of indisputable works by the old painters is now open
+at Valenciennes, in France. It consists of pictures belonging to the
+family of the Belgian general Rottiers. They are for sale, either
+single or together. Among them is a St. Denis, bearing his Head, by
+Rubens, said to have been painted by order of Pope Urban VIII. It was
+deposited in the Convent of the _Annunciades_, at Antioch; in 1747,
+Louis XV. offered 100,000 francs for it, but was refused, the convent
+having no right to dispose of it. Afterward, on the suppression
+of the convent, it fell into the hands of the family to which it
+now belongs. The exhibition also contains a landscape by Salvator
+Rosa, representing a scene in the Appenines; a Magdalen kneeling
+in a Cavern, by Kneller; two Allegories, by Giulio Romano; several
+portraits by Rubens and Van Dyke, besides other works of less value.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Darley's "Sleepy Hollow."--The London Art Journal, for July, has the
+following notice of Mr. Darley's illustrations of Irving's "Legends of
+Sleepy Hollow," published by the _American Art Union_: "The charmingly
+quaint original legend told with so much quiet humor by Washington
+Irving, is here illustrated by a native artist in a congenial spirit,
+and his scenes realized in a manner which must give its author
+satisfaction, and redound to the credit of the designer. We have
+before noticed the great ability exhibited by Mr. Darley for the mode
+of illustration he adopts, which we may add is that rendered famous
+by Retzsh. The series we are now noticing are quite as meritorious as
+that designed by the same artist to Rip Van Winkle; but the subject
+matter is not equally capable of such broad contrasts in drollery
+as that legend presents. Nevertheless, Mr. Darley has executed his
+task in the truest appreciation of his author; and his hero is the
+veritable Ichabod Crane of Irving; his love-making scene with "the
+peerless daughter of Van Tassel" is exquisite in its quiet humor;
+so also is the merry-making in the Dutch Farmer's home. Altogether,
+the series is extremely good, and does the greatest credit to the
+designer. American literature thus illustrated by American artists
+cannot fail to achieve honor to that country in the old world as well
+as the new. We believe Mr. Darley, in his line, to be as great as any
+American artist whose works have fallen under our notice."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Chaucer's Monument.--The _Athenæum_ says, "One of the objections
+formerly urged against taking steps to restore the perishing memorial
+of the Father of English Poetry in Poet's Corner was, that it was not
+really his tomb, but a monument erected to do honor to his memory a
+century and a half after his death. An examination, however, of the
+tomb itself, by competent authorities, has proved this objection to
+be unfounded--inasmuch as there can exist no doubt, we hear, from
+the difference of workmanship, material, &c., that the altar tomb is
+the original tomb of Geoffrey Chaucer,--and that instead of Nicholas
+Brigham having erected an entirely new monument, he only added to that
+which then existed the overhanging canopy, &c. So that the sympathy of
+Chaucer's admirers is now invited to the restoration of what till now
+was really not known to exist--_the original tomb_ of the Poet--as
+well as to the additions made to it by the affectionate remembrance of
+Nicholas Brigham."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lessing's new picture.--A letter from Düsseldorf under date of
+9th July, in the _Courier and Enquirer_, says that Lessing's great
+painting, "The Martyrdom of Huss," Sad just been finished and had been
+exhibited for the last few days at the Academy of Fine Arts, where
+it was visited by thousands. When it became known that orders for its
+immediate shipment had arrived from New York, the desire to obtain a
+last view of this truly great work became so intense that it was found
+necessary to put the Police in requisition to keep back the throng,
+and the gates of the Academy had to be closed. It causes general
+regret that it is to be sent out of the country. The _Cologne Gazette_
+calls this picture the most sublime production of the great artist,
+and expresses the conviction that a speedy fortune might be realized
+by its exhibition in Europe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. George Flagg has just completed a portrait of Mrs. E. Oakes Smith,
+which will be ranked among the first productions of his pencil. We
+know of scarce a picture as beautiful or a portrait as truthful. It is
+to be engraved, we believe, by Cheney.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mlle. Rachel.--The wonderful accuracy of the death-scene in "Adrienne
+Lecouvreur" has been the object of universal praise in London, not
+merely from the thrilled and thralled public, but from men of art
+and science. A physician, it is said, was complimenting Mademoiselle
+on her amazing truth to the symptoms of mortal agony: "You must have
+studied death closely," said he. "Yes, I have," was the quiet reply;
+"my maid's. I went up to her--I stayed with her--she recommended her
+mother to me!--I was studying my part." This is probably merely one
+of those cynical stories with which the sharp people of Paris love
+to environ and encircle every one who stands a dangerous chance of
+becoming too popular. But smaller artists than Mademoiselle Rachel
+have sometimes had recourse to curious expedients to give their
+dramatic personations a show at reality. The French _prima donna_, who
+not very long ago appeared in M. Clapisson's poor opera, "Jeanne la
+Folle," is said to have shut herself up in the _Salpêtrière_, by way
+of studying _her_ part, and to have been rewarded for her zealous
+curiosity by receiving a basin of scalding soup dashed in her face by
+one of the poor miserable objects of her examination.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Frankfort journal states that the colossal statue of Bavaria, by
+SCHWANTHALER, which is to be placed on the hill of Seudling, surpasses
+in its gigantic proportions all the works of the moderns. It will have
+to be removed in pieces from the foundry where it is cast to its place
+of destination,--and each piece will require sixteen horses to draw
+it. The great toes are each half a metre in length. In the head two
+persons could dance a polka very conveniently,--while the nose might
+lodge the musician. The thickness of the robe--which forms a rich
+drapery descending to the ankles--is about six inches, and its
+circumference at the bottom about two hundred metres. The Crown
+of Victory which the figure holds in her hands weighs one hundred
+quintals (a quintal is a hundred-weight).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The death of SIR ROBERT PEEL, says the _Literary Gazette_, has
+awakened a busy competing spirit for the production of articles
+relating to him, and especially in connection with Literature and the
+Arta. In the one, Memoirs, Speeches, Recollections, Anecdotes, &c.,
+have been abundantly supplied; and in the other, every printshop
+window in London displays its Peels of every style and every degree,
+but mostly very indifferent, absolutely bad, or utter caricature.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Goupil, Vibert & Co. have published a series of portraits of eminent
+Americans which is deserving of the largest approval and sale.
+The head of Mr. Bryant is the best ever published of that poet; it
+presents his fine features and striking phrenology with great force
+and with pleasing as well as just effect. A portrait of Mr. Willis
+is wonderfully truthful, in detail, and is in an eminent degree
+characteristic. The admirers of that author who have not seen him will
+find in it their ideal, and all his acquaintances will see in it as
+distinctly the real man who sits in the congress of editors as the
+representative of the polite world. The head of the artist Mount,
+after Elliott, is not by any means less successful. Among the other
+portraits are those of Gen. Scott, President Fillmore, Robert Fulton,
+J.Q. Adams, Mr. Clay, Mr. Webster, and President Taylor. They are all
+on imperial sheets, and are sold at $1 each.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Paris papers tell a story of a young actor, who finding no
+engagement in that city, came to America to try his fortune. From
+New Orleans he went to California, was lucky as a digger, embarked
+in business and got immensely rich. He is now building in the Champs
+Elysées a magnificent hotel for his mother. All actors are not so
+fortunate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Expected arrivals from Nineveh.--The Great Bull, and upward of one
+hundred tons of sculpture, excavated by Dr. Layard, are now on their
+way to England, and may be expected in the course of September. In
+addition-to the Elgin, Phigalian, Lycian, and Boodroun marbles, the
+British Museum will soon be enriched with a magnificent series of
+Assyrian sculptures.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. Burt has nearly finished the "Anne Page and Slender" of Leslie,
+which is to be the annual engraving of the Art Union. It will be an
+admirable picture, but we cannot but regret that the managers selected
+for this purpose a work so familiar.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The French Minister of the Interior has decided that marble busts of
+M. Gay-Lussac and of M. Blainville shall be executed at the expense of
+the government, and placed in the Institute.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Mr. Powell, who is living in Paris, engaged upon his picture for the
+capital, has been in ill health nearly all the summer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+RECENT DEATHS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The French papers report the death, at Paris, of M. MORA, the Mexican
+Minister Plenipotentiary at the Court of St. James. M. Mora was
+the author of a History of Mexico and its Revolutions since the
+establishment of its independence, and editor-in-chief of several
+journals in Mexico.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. B. SIMMONS, an amiable and accomplished writer, whose name will
+be recollected as that of a frequent contributor of lyrical poems of
+a high order to _Blackwood's Magazine_, and to several of the Annuals,
+died in London on the 20th of July.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM GRAHAM'S MAGAZINE.]
+
+ON A PORTRAIT OF CROMWELL.
+
+BY JAMES T. FIELD.
+
+ "Paint me as I am," said Cromwell,
+ Rough with age, and gashed with wars--
+ "Show my visage as you find it--
+ Less than truth my soul abhors!"
+
+ This was he whose mustering phalanx
+ Swept the foe at Marston Moor;
+ This was he whose arm uplifted
+ From the dust the fainting poor.
+
+ God had made his face uncomely--
+ "Paint me as I am," he said.
+ So he lives upon the canvas
+ Whom they chronicled as _dead_!
+
+ Simple justice he requested
+ At the artist's glowing hands,
+ "Simple justice!" from his ashes
+ Cries a voice that still commands.
+
+ And, behold! the page of History,
+ Centuries dark with Cromwell's name,
+ Shines to-day with thrilling luster
+ From the light of Cromwell's fame!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE EXAMINER.]
+
+WORDSWORTH'S POSTHUMOUS POEM.[3]
+
+This is a voice that speaks to us across a gulf of nearly fifty years.
+A few months ago Wordsworth was taken from us at the ripe age of
+fourscore, yet here we have him addressing the public, as for the
+first time, with all the fervor, the unworn freshness, the hopeful
+confidence of thirty. We are carried back to the period when
+Coleridge, Byron, Scott, Rogers, and Moore were in their youthful
+prime. We live again in the stirring days when the poets who divided
+public attention and interest with the Fabian struggle in Portugal and
+Spain, with the wild and terrible events of the Russian campaign, with
+the uprising of the Teutonic nations and the overthrow of Napoleon,
+were in a manner but commencing their cycle of songs. This is to
+renew, to antedate, the youth of a majority of the living generation.
+But only those whose memory still carries them so far back, can feel
+within them any reflex of that eager excitement with which the news of
+battles fought and won, or mailcoach copies of some new work of Scott,
+or Byron, or the _Edinburgh Review_, were looked for and received in
+those already old days.
+
+[Footnote 3: The Prelude, or Growth of a Poet's Mind; an
+Autobiographical Poem. By William Wordsworth. London, Moxon. [New
+York, Appletons.]]
+
+We need not remind the readers of the _Excursion_ that when Wordsworth
+was enabled by the generous enthusiasm of Raisley Calvert to retire
+with a slender independence to his native mountains, there to devote
+himself exclusively to his art, his first step was to review and
+record in verse the origin and progress of his own powers, as far
+as he was acquainted with them. This was at once an exercise in
+versification, and a test for the kind of poetry for which he was
+by temperament fitted. The result was a determination to compose a
+philosophical poem containing views of man, of nature, and of society.
+This, ambitious conception has been doomed to share the fate of so
+many other colossal undertakings. Of the three parts of his _Recluse_,
+thus planned, only the second, (the _Excursion_, published in 1814,)
+has been completed. Of the other two there exists only the first book
+of the first, and the plan of the third. The _Recluse_ will remain in
+fragmentary greatness, a poetical Cathedral of Cologne.
+
+Matters standing thus, it has not been without a melancholy sense of
+the uncertainty of human projects, and of the contrast between the
+sanguine enterprise and its silent evaporation (so often the "history
+of an individual mind"), that we have perused this _Prelude_ which no
+completed strain was destined to follow. Yet in the poem itself there
+is nothing to inspire depression. It is animated throughout with the
+hopeful confidence in the poet's own powers, so natural to the time
+of life at which it was composed; it evinces a power and soar of
+imagination unsurpassed in any of his writings; and its images and
+incidents have a freshness and distinctness which they not seldom
+lost, when they came to be elaborated, as many of them were, in his
+minor poems of a later date.
+
+The _Prelude_, as the title-page indicates, is a poetical
+autobiography, commencing with the earliest reminiscences of the
+author, and continued to the time at which it was composed. We are
+told that it was begun in 1799 and completed, in 1805. It consists
+of fourteen books. Two are devoted to the infancy and school-time of
+the poet; four to the period of his University life; two to a brief
+residence in London immediately subsequent to his leaving Cambridge,
+and a retrospect of the progress his mind had then made; and three
+to a residence in France, chiefly in the Loire, but partly in Paris,
+during the stormy period of Louis the Sixteenth's flight and capture,
+and the fierce contest between the Girondins and Robespierre. Five
+books are then occupied with an analysis of the internal struggle
+occasioned by the contradictory influences of rural and secluded
+nature in boyhood, and of society when the young man first mingles
+with the world. The surcease of the strife is recorded in the
+fourteenth book, entitled "Conclusion."
+
+The poem is addressed to Coleridge; and apart from its poetical
+merits, is interesting as at once a counterpart and a supplement to
+that author's philosophical and beautiful criticism of the _Lyrical
+Ballads_ in his _Biographia Literaria_. It completes the explanation,
+there given, of the peculiar constitution of Wordsworth's mind, and of
+his poetical theory. It confirms and justifies our opinion that that
+theory was essentially partial and erroneous; but at the same time it
+establishes the fact that Wordsworth was a true and a great poet in
+despite of his theory.
+
+The great defect of Wordsworth, in our judgment, was want of sympathy
+with and knowledge of men. From his birth till his entry at college,
+he lived in a region where he met with none whose minds might awaken
+his sympathies, and where life was altogether uneventful. On the
+other hand, that region abounded with the inert, striking, and most
+impressive objects of natural scenery. The elementary grandeur
+and beauty of external nature came thus to fill up his mind to
+the exclusion of human interests. To such a result his individual
+constitution powerfully contributed. The sensuous element was
+singularly deficient in his nature. He never seems to have passed
+through that erotic period out of which some poets have never emerged.
+A soaring, speculative imagination, and an impetuous, resistless
+self-will, were his distinguishing characteristics. From first to last
+he concentrated himself within himself; brooding over his own fancies
+and imaginations to the comparative disregard of the incidents and
+impressions which suggested them; and was little susceptible of ideas
+originating in other minds. We behold the result. He lives alone in a
+world of mountains, streams, and atmospheric phenomena, dealing with
+moral abstractions, and rarely encountered by even shadowy specters
+of beings outwardly resembling himself. There is measureless grandeur
+and power in his moral speculations. There is intense reality in
+his pictures of external nature. But though his human characters are
+presented with great skill of metaphysical analysis, they have rarely
+life or animation. He is always the prominent, often the exclusive,
+object of his own song.
+
+Upon a mind so constituted, with its psychological peculiarities
+so cherished and confirmed, the fortunes and fates of others, and
+the stirring events of his time, made vivid but very transient
+impressions. The conversation and writing of contemporaries trained
+among books, and with the faculty of speech more fully developed than
+that of thought, seemed colorless and empty to one with--whom natural
+objects and grandeurs were always present in such overpowering force.
+Excluded by his social position from taking an active part in the
+public events of the day, and repelled by the emptiness of the then
+fashionable literature, he turned to private and humble life as
+possessing at least a reality. But he thus withheld himself from
+the contemplation of those great mental excitements which only great
+public struggles can awaken. He contracted a habit of exaggerating the
+importance of every-day incidents and emotions. He accustomed himself
+to see in men and in social relations only what he was predetermined
+to see there, and to impute to them a value and importance derived
+mainly from his own self-will. Even his natural good taste contributed
+to confirm him in his error. The two prevailing schools of literature
+in England, at that time, were the trashy and mouthing writers who
+adopted the sounding language of Johnson and Darwin, unenlivened
+by the vigorous thought of either; and the "dead-sea apes" of
+that inflated, sentimental, revolutionary style which Diderot had
+unconsciously originated, and Kotzebue carried beyond the verge of
+caricature. The right feeling and manly thought of Wordsworth were
+disgusted by these shallow word-mongers, and he flew to the other
+extreme. Under the influences--repulsive and attractive--we have thus
+attempted to indicate, he adopted the theory that as much of grandeur
+and profound emotion was to be found in mere domestic incidents and
+feelings, as on the more conspicuous stage of public life; and that
+a bald and naked simplicity of language was the perfection of style.
+Singularly enough, he was confirmed in these notions by the very
+writer of the day whose own natural genius, more than any of his
+contemporaries, impelled him to revel in great, wild, supernatural
+conceptions; and to give utterance to them in gorgeous language.
+Coleridge was perhaps the only contemporary from whom Wordsworth ever
+took an opinion; and that he did so from him, is mainly attributable
+to the fact that Coleridge did little more than reproduce to him
+his own notions, sometimes rectified by a subtler logic, but always
+rendered more attractive by new and dazzling illustrations.
+
+Fortunately it is out of the power of the most perverse theory to
+spoil the true poet. The poems of Wordsworth must continue to charm
+and elevate mankind, in defiance of his crotchets, just as Luther,
+Henri Quatre, and other living impersonations of poetry do, despite
+all quaint peculiarities of the attire, the customs, or the opinions
+of their respective ages, with which they were imbued. The spirit of
+truth and poetry redeems, ennobles, hallows, every external form in
+which it may be lodged. We may "pshaw" and "pooh" at Harry Gill and
+the Idiot Boy; but the deep and tremulous tenderness of sentiment,
+the strong-winged flight of fancy, the excelling and unvarying purity,
+which pervade all the writings of Wordsworth, and the exquisite melody
+of his lyrical poems, must ever continue to attract and purify the
+mind. The very excesses into which his one-sided theory betrayed him,
+acted as a useful counter-agent to the prevailing bad taste of his
+time.
+
+The Prelude may take a permanent place as one of the most perfect of
+his compositions. It has much of the fearless felicity of youth; and
+its imagery has the sharp and vivid outline of ideas fresh from the
+brain. The subject--the development of his own great powers--raises
+him above that willful dallying with trivialties which repels us in
+some of his other works. And there is real vitality in the theme,
+both from our anxiety to know the course of such a mind, and from
+the effect of an absorbing interest in himself excluding that languor
+which sometimes seized him in his efforts to impart or attribute
+interest to themes possessing little or none in themselves. Its mere
+narrative, though often very homely, and dealing in too many words,
+is often characterized also by elevated imagination, and always by
+eloquence. The bustle of London life, the prosaic uncouthness of its
+exterior, the earnest heart that beats beneath it, the details even of
+its commonest amusements, from Bartholomew Fair to Sadler's Wells, are
+portrayed with simple force and delicate discrimination; and for the
+most part skillfully contrasted with the rural life of the poet's
+native home. There are some truthful and powerful sketches of French
+character and life, in the early revolutionary era. But above all,
+as might have been anticipated, Wordsworth's heart revels in the
+elementary beauty and grandeur of his mountain theme; while his
+own simple history is traced with minute fidelity, and is full of
+unflagging interest.
+
+We have already adverted to the fact that this Prelude was but
+the overture to a grander song which the poet has left, in a great
+measure, unsung. Reverting to this consideration an important
+fact seems to force itself upon our notice. The creative power of
+Wordsworth would appear to have been paralyzed after the publication
+of his Excursion. All his most finished works precede that period. His
+later writings generally lack the strength and freshness which we find
+in those of an earlier date. Some may attribute this to his want of
+the stimulus which the necessity of writing for a livelihood imparts,
+and in part they may be right; but this is not the whole secret. That
+his isolation from the stirring contact of competition, that his utter
+disregard of contemporary events, allowed his mind, which for perfect
+health's sake requires constantly-renewed impulses from without, to
+subside into comparative hebetude, there can be no doubt whatever.
+But the main secret of the freezing up of his fountain of poetical
+inspiration, we really take to have been his change of politics.
+Wordsworth's muse was essentially liberal--one may say, Jacobinical.
+That he was unconscious of any sordid motive for his change, we
+sincerely believe; but as certainly his conforming was the result less
+of reasonable conviction than of willfulness. It was by a determined
+effort of his will that he brought himself, to believe in the
+Church-and-State notions which he latterly promulgated. Hence the want
+of definite views, and of a living interest, which characterizes all
+his writings subsequent to that change, when compared with those of
+an earlier time. It was Wordsworth's wayward fate to be patronized and
+puffed into notice by the champions of old abuses, by the advocates
+of the pedantry of Oxford, and by the maintainers of the despotism not
+even of Pitt but of Castlereagh. It is already felt, however, that the
+poet whom these men were mainly instrumental in bringing into notice,
+will live in men's memories by exactly those of his writings most
+powerful to undermine and overthrow their dull and faded bigotries.
+Despite his own efforts, Wordsworth (as has been said of Napoleon) is
+the child and champion of Jacobinism. Though clothed in ecclesiastical
+formulas, his religion is little more than the simple worship of
+nature; his noblest moral flights are struggles to emancipate himself
+from conventional usage; and the strong ground of his thoughts, as of
+his style, is nature stripped of the gauds with which the pupils of
+courts and circles would bedeck and be-ribbon it. Even in the ranks of
+our opponents Wordsworth has been laboring in our behalf.
+
+It is in the record of his extra-academic life that the poet soars his
+freest flight, in passages where we have a very echo of the emotions
+of an emancipated worshiper of nature flying back to his loved
+resorts. Apart from its poetic value, the book is a graphical and
+interesting portraiture of the struggles of an ingenuous and impetuous
+mind to arrive at a clear insight into its own interior constitution
+and external relations, and to secure the composure of self-knowledge
+and of equally adjusted aspirations. As a poem it is likely to
+lay fast and enduring hold on pure and aspiring intellects, and to
+strengthen the claim of Wordsworth to endure with his land's language.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE MONUMENT TO SIR ROBERT PEEL.
+
+A LETTER FROM WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR,
+
+TO THE EDITOR OF THE 'EXAMINER.'
+
+Now the fever hath somewhat subsided which came over the people from
+the grave of Sir Robert Peel, there is room for a few observations on
+his decease and on its consequences. All public writers, I believe,
+have expatiated on his character, comparing him with others who,
+within our times, have occupied the same position. My own opinion
+has invariably been that he was the wisest of all our statesmen;
+and certainly, though he found reason to change his sentiments and
+his measures, he changed them honestly, well weighed, always from
+conviction, and always for the better. He has been compared, and
+seemingly in no spirit of hostility or derision, with a Castlereagh,
+a Perceval, an Addington. a Canning. Only one of these is worthy of
+notice, namely Canning, whose brilliancy made his shallowness less
+visible, and whose graces, of style and elocution threw a vail over
+his unsoundness and lubricity. Sir Robert Peel was no satirist or
+epigrammatist: he was only a statesman in public life: only a virtuous
+and friendly man in private. _Par negotiis, nee supra_. Walpole alone
+possessed his talents for business. But neither Peel nor his family
+was enriched from the spoils of his country; Walpole spent in building
+and pictures more than double the value of his hereditary estate, and
+left the quadruple to his descendants.
+
+Dissimilar from Walpole, and from commoner and coarser men who
+occupied the same office, Peel forbade that a name which he had
+made illustrious should be degraded and stigmatized by any title
+of nobility. For he knew that all those titles had their origin and
+nomenclature from military services, and belong to military men, like
+their epaulets and spurs and chargers. They sound well enough against
+the sword and helmet, but strangely in law-courts and cathedrals: but,
+reformer as he was, he could not reform all this; he could only keep
+clear of it in his own person.
+
+I now come to the main object of my letter.
+
+Subscriptions are advertised for the purpose of raising monuments
+to Sir Robert Peel; and a motion has been made in Parliament for
+one in Westminster Abbey at the public expense, Whatever may be the
+precedents, surely the house of God should contain no object but
+such as may remind us of His presence and our duty to Him. Long ago I
+proposed that ranges of statues and busts should commemorate the great
+worthies of our country. All the lower part of our National Gallery
+might be laid open for this purpose. Even the best monuments in
+Westminster Abbey and St. Paul's are deformities to the edifice. Let
+us not continue this disgrace. Deficient as we are in architects,
+we have many good statuaries, and we might well employ them on the
+statues of illustrious commanders, and the busts of illustrious
+statesmen and writers. Meanwhile our cities, and especially the
+commercial, would, I am convinced, act more wisely, and more
+satisfactorily to the relict of the deceased, if, instead of statues,
+they erected schools and almshouses, with an inscription to his
+memory.
+
+We glory in about sixty whose busts and statues may occupy what are
+now the "deep solitudes and awful cells" in our national gallery. Our
+literary men of eminence are happily more numerous than the political
+or the warlike, or both together. There is only one class of them
+which might be advantageously excluded, namely, the theological; and
+my reasons are these. First, their great talents were chiefly employed
+on controversy; secondly, and consequently, their images would excite
+dogmatical discord. Every sect of the Anglican Church, and every
+class of dissenters, complaining of undue preferences. Painture and
+sculpture lived in the midst of corruption, lived throughout it, and
+seemed indeed to draw vitality from it, as flowers the most delicate
+from noxious air; but they collapsed at the searching breath of free
+inquiry, and could not abide persecution. The torch of Philosophy
+never kindled the suffocating fagot, under whose smoke Theology was
+mistaken for Religion. Theology had, until now, been speculative
+and quiescent: she abandoned to Philosophy these humbler qualities:
+instead of allaying and dissipating, as Philosophy had always done,
+she excited and she directed animosities. Oriental in her parentage,
+and keeping up her wide connections in that country, she acquired
+there all the artifices most necessary to the furtherance of her
+designs: among the rest was ventriloquism, which she quite perfected,
+making her words seem to sound from above and from below and from
+every side around. Ultimately, when men had fallen on their faces at
+this miracle, she assumed the supreme power. Kings were her lackeys,
+and nations the dust under her palfrey's hoof. By her sentence Truth
+was gagged, scourged, branded, cast down on the earth in manacles; and
+Fortitude, who had stood at Truth's side, was fastened with nails and
+pulleys to the stake. I would not revive by any images, in the abode
+of the graceful and the gentle Arts, these sorrowful reminiscences.
+The vicissitudes of the world appear to be bringing round again the
+spectral Past. Let us place great men between it and ourselves: they
+all are tutelar: not the warrior and the statesman only; not only the
+philosopher; but also the historian who follows them step by step, and
+the poet who secures us from peril and dejection by his counter-charm.
+Philosophers in most places are unwelcome: but there is no better
+reason why Shaftesbury and Hobbes should be excluded from our
+gallery, than why Epicurus should have been from Cicero's or Zeno from
+Lucullus's. Of our sovereigns, I think Alfred, Cromwell, and William
+III alone are eligible; and they, because they opposed successfully
+the subverters of the laws. Three viceroys of Ireland will deservedly
+be placed in the same receptacle; Sir John Perrot, Lord Chesterfield,
+and (in due time) the last Lord-Deputy. One Speaker, one only, of the
+Parliament; he without whom no Parliament would be now existing;
+he who declared to Henry IV. that until all public grievances were
+removed, no subsidy should be granted. The name of this Speaker may be
+found in Rapin; English historians talk about facts, forgetting men.
+
+Admirals and generals are numerous and conspicuous. Drake, Blake,
+Rodney, Jervis, Nelson, Collingwood; the subduer of Algiers beaten
+down for the French to occupy: and the defender of Acre, the first who
+defeated, discomfited, routed, broke, and threw into shameful flight,
+Bonaparte. Our generals are Marlborough, Peterborough, Wellington, and
+that successor to his fame in India, who established the empire that
+was falling from us, who achieved in a few days two arduous victories,
+who never failed in any enterprise, who accomplished the most
+difficult with the smallest expenditure of blood, who corrected
+the disorders of the military, who gave the soldier an example of
+temperance, the civilian of simplicity and frugality, and whose sole
+(but exceedingly great) reward, was the approbation of our greatest
+man.
+
+With these come the statesmen of the Commonwealth, the students of
+Bacon, the readers of Philip Sidney, the companions of Algernon, the
+precursors of Locke and Newton. Opposite to them are Chaucer, Spenser,
+Shakspeare, Milton; lower in dignity, Dryden, Pope, Gray, Goldsmith,
+Cowper, Scott, Burns, Shelley, Southey, Byron, Wordsworth; the author
+of _Hohenlinden_ and the _Battle of the Baltic_; and the glorious
+woman who equaled these, two animated works in her _Ivan_ and
+_Casabianca_. Historians have but recently risen up among us: and long
+be it before, by command of Parliament, the chisel grates on the brow
+of a Napier, a Grote, and Macaulay!
+
+WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE SPECTATOR.]
+
+JURISPRUDENCE OF THE MOGULS: THE PANDECTS OF AURUNGZEBE.[4]
+
+THE Government of British India have not neglected to countenance
+the study of the indigenous and other systems of law which they found
+established on acquiring possession of the country. Warren Hastings
+was the first to recognize the value of such knowledge; and to his
+encouragement, if not to his incitement, we are indebted for the
+compilation of Hindoo law translated by Halbed, Jones, Colebrooke,
+Macnaghten, Hamilton, and a pretty numerous body of accomplished
+men, of whom Mr. Baillie is the most recently enrolled laborer in
+the vineyard, have carried on the good work. More comprehensive and
+accurate views of Hindoo law have gradually been developed, and the
+more advanced and more influential system of Mahometan jurisprudence
+has also shared in the attention of European students. There is,
+however, still much to be done in this field of inquiry; as a few
+remarks on the nature of the present publication, and the source
+whence its materials are derived, will show.
+
+[Footnote 4: The Moohummadan Law of Sale, according to the Hunefeea
+Code: from the Futawa Alumgeeree, a Digest of the whole Law, prepared
+by command of the Emperor Aurungzebe Alumgeer. Selected and translated
+from the original Arabic, with an Introduction and explanatory Notes,
+by Neil B.E. Baillie, Author of "The Moohummadan Law of inheritance."
+Published by Smith and Elder.]
+
+The law of Mahometan jurists is for India pretty much what the Roman
+law is for Scotland and the Continental nations of Europe. Savigny has
+shown how, throughout all the territories formerly included within the
+limits of the Roman Empire, a large amount of Roman legal doctrines
+and forms of procedure continued to be operative after the Empire's
+subversion. The revival of the study of the Roman law, as embodied
+in the compilations of Justinian, by the doctors of the school
+of Bologna, augmented and systematized these remnants of Roman
+jurisprudence, and extended their application to countries which (like
+great part of Germany) had never been subjected to the sway of Rome.
+In like manner, throughout that part of India which was permanently
+subdued and organized by the Mogul dynasty, and also those parts in
+which minor Islamitic states were established, the organization of
+the courts of justice, and the legal opinions of the individuals who
+officiated in them, necessarily introduced a large amount of Mahometan
+jurisprudence. This element of the law of India was augmented and
+systematized by the writings of private jurists, and by compilations
+undertaken by command of princes. As with the Roman jurisprudence in
+Europe, so with Mahometan jurisprudence in India, only so much of its
+doctrines and forms could at any time be considered to possess legal
+force as had been reenacted by the local sovereigns, or introduced by
+judges in the form of decisions. A systematic knowledge of the whole
+body of Mahometan law was important to the Indian lawyer, as enabling
+him more thoroughly to understand the system, and its various isolated
+doctrines; but the whole body of that law was at no time binding in
+India. Since the establishment of British sway, only so much of the
+Mahometan law as has kept its ground in the practice of the courts,
+or has been reenacted by the "regulations" or "ordinances" of the
+Anglo-Indian Government, _is law_; the rest is only valuable as the
+"antiquities of the law," which help to trace the origin of what
+survives, and thereby throw light upon what in it is obscure or
+doubtful.
+
+Among the most valuable, if not indeed the most valuable of the
+compilations from which we may obtain a knowledge of Mahometan
+jurisprudence, is the "Futawa Alumgeeree," mentioned in Mr. Baillie's
+title-page. Its value is not confined to the purposes of those
+who would make themselves acquainted with Mahometan jurisprudence
+in the peculiar form it assumed in India. It is highly esteemed
+throughout Islam, and is quoted even by the doctors of Mecca as the
+Futawa-i-hind, or the Indian _responsa prudentum_. It was compiled by
+the orders of the Emperor Aurungzebe. It is a digest of the "Futawa"
+of the most celebrated jurists of the Hanifeh (or, as Mr. Baillie
+spells it, _Hunefeeah_) sect or school. Mr. Baillie informs us in
+his preface, that "_futawa_ is the plural form of _futwa_, a term in
+common use in Mahometan countries to signify an exposition of law by a
+public officer called the _mooftee_, or a case submitted to him by the
+_kazee_ or judge." The "futwa," therefore, seems to correspond not
+so much with our English "decisions" or "precedents" as with the
+"responsa prudentum," that fertile source of doctrines in the Roman
+law. The "Futawa Alumgeeree" consequently resembles the Pandects
+of Justinian in being a systematical arrangement of selections from
+juridical authorities--compiled by Imperial authority; but differs
+from it in this, that the selections are made exclusively from the
+"responsa prudentum," and a few legal treatises, whereas Justinian's
+digest combined with those excerpts from judicial decisions,
+prætorian edicts, &c. With this distinction, we may regard the "Futawa
+Alumgeeree" as the Pandects or Digest of Mahometan Law. As in the
+Roman work of that name, to each extract is appended the name of the
+original work from which it is taken; and the whole of them are so
+arranged as to form a complete digest of Mahometan law.
+
+A work of this kind is invaluable to the student who would make
+himself master of Mahometan jurisprudence as a system. But great care
+must be taken not to misapprehend the exact nature of the knowledge
+to be obtained from it. The "Futawa Alumgeeree" is a systematic
+exposition of the principles of Mahometan law; it assuredly does not
+enable us to ascertain what doctrines of that law are now of legal
+force in India, or even what doctrines have at any time had force
+in India. It does not appear to have been Aurungzebe's intention to
+promulgate it as a code, but to present it to lawyers as a complete
+text-book. Even if he did by ordinance attribute to it the power of
+law, such ordinance was only effectual at any time in the provinces of
+the Mogul Empire; and since the disruption of that empire, it has been
+superseded and modified by laws and the practice of law-courts in the
+various independent states erected on its ruins.
+
+Again the general scholar must be on his guard against the delusion
+that he will find in this digest materials illustrative of the social
+condition of India under the Mogul dynasty. The juridical works
+excerpted in it are almost all foreign to Hindostan; the special cases
+illustrative of abstract doctrines are taken from other countries,
+and many of them from ages antecedent to the invasion of India by the
+Moguls.
+
+Though Persian was the court language of the Mogul dynasty, there is
+scarcely any Persian element in Aurungzebe's legal compilation. The
+Shiite views of jurisprudence, as of theology, prevailed in Persia;
+the "Futawa Alumgeeree" is strictly Sunnite. It is not difficult to
+account for this.--The Mahometan conquerors of India were mainly of
+Turkish or Tartar race; they came from Turan, a region which from time
+immemorial has stood in antagonistic relations to Iran or Persia. This
+may account for the fact that the races of Turan which have embraced
+Mahometanism have uniformly adhered to the Sunnite sect--the sect
+most hostile to the Persian Shias--not only when they settled in the
+countries where the Sunnite sect originated, but when they remained in
+their native regions. The views of the Sunnites were first promulgated
+and have prevailed most extensively in those regions of Islam which
+were once part of the Roman empire, which nominally at least was
+Christian; those of the Shiites, in the countries where, under the
+Sassanides and Arsacidæ, the doctrines of Zoroaster predominated. The
+Euphrates forms pretty nearly the line of demarkation between them.
+
+The Caliphs dominated over both countries and over both sects. Under
+their orthodox protection the Sunnite doctrines were able to strike
+root in Balkh and Samarkand--the ancient Turan, and therefore hostile
+to Iran and Persia. When Islam was reorganized after the anarchy which
+ensued upon the overthrow of the Caliphs, Persia became the appanage
+of the Sophis or Shiite dynasty; the regions to the West of the
+Euphrates--the ci-devant Roman Empire--acknowledged the rule of
+the Turkish dynasties, which were Sunnite. On the Oxus and further
+East--the old Turan--the Sunnite sect was sufficiently strong to defy
+the efforts of the Shiite sovereigns of Persia to eradicate it. The
+doctors of Samarkand and Bokhara continued (and continue) as orthodox
+Sunnites as those of Kufah, Mecca, and Stamboul.
+
+Accordingly, we find the authorities excerpted in the "Futawa
+Alumgeeree" consist almost exclusively of two classes; they are either
+the immediate disciples of Hanifa at Kufah and Bagdad, or the jurists
+of Samarkand and Bokhara. The law-cases they expounded are such as had
+originated, or might have originated, in those countries--in Babylonia
+or Turan. And they are for the most part taken from a state of
+society, and illustrative of social relations, which prevailed in
+these countries at a period long antecedent to that of Aurunzebe. To
+attempt to illustrate the civil and social condition of India, under
+that Emperor by their aid, would be as preposterous as to attempt to
+illustrate the civil and social condition of those parts of Germany
+where the Roman law still possesses authority from cases recorded in
+the Pandects of Justinian.
+
+The real use and value of the "Futawa Alumgeeree" may be briefly
+explained. In every country in Europe where the Roman law is still
+recognized as more or less authoritative--and indeed in every country
+where the common law has borrowed more or less from the Roman--an
+acquaintance with the system of Roman jurisprudence as it is embodied
+in the law-books of Justinian has its value for the scientific lawyer.
+In like manner a knowledge of Mahometan jurisprudence as embodied in
+the "Futawa Alumgeeree" cannot fail to be instructive for the lawyers
+of all the countries of Islam, and the lawyers of India, where so much
+of the existing practical law has been derived from that source. To
+the general scholar who wishes to master the civil history of Arabia
+and Babylonia, in which the Sunnite sect, and more particularly the
+Hanifite subdivision of it, originated, or to familiarize himself
+with the moral theories which regulate the judgments and actions of
+the modern Turks, Turcomans, Arabians, and Egyptians, the digest of
+Aurungzeebee is also a valuable repertory of facts and illustrations.
+
+For this reason we incline to be of opinion that Mr. Baillie is
+mistaken in thinking that a selection from the two books of the
+"Futawa Alumgeeree," which embrace the subject of "sale" can have much
+utility for Indian practitioners. It does not follow, because a legal
+doctrine is declared sound in this work, that it is or ever has been
+practically applicable in India. As an authoritative declaration of
+legal doctrines, the book is as likely to mislead as to guide aright.
+On the other hand, as an exposition of the general principles of
+Mahometan law, even with regard to sale, it is necessarily imperfect.
+The work from which it is taken is a collection of legal opinions,
+which had in their day the force of judicial decisions--of something
+equivalent to the "responsa prudentum" of Roman jurisprudence. Each is
+expounded on its own merits; and all the special doctrines involved
+in it are laid down. Hence it comes, that much that is calculated
+to throw light on the principles of the law of sale must be sought
+under other heads; and that much included in the chapters ostensibly
+treating of sale refers to other topics. As part of an entire digest
+of the law compiled on the same principle as that of Justinian,
+the two books relating to sale are sufficient; but for an isolated
+treatise on "sale," they contain at once too much and too little.
+
+Nevertheless, we welcome Mr. Baillie's publication as a valuable
+addition to juridical and even to general literature. The translation,
+though not by any means free from defects, is the best specimen of
+a really good Mahometan law-book that has yet been published. The
+defects to which we allude are twofold. In the first place, though Mr.
+Baillie mentions that in the original the name of the treatise from
+which it is taken is appended to every excerpt, he has not in his
+translation given those references. His work is not therefore what
+the original is, a Chrestomathia of the best Arabian jurists--a
+succedaneum for their complete works--an illustration of Arabic legal
+literature. Again, he is often loose and vacillating in the use of
+the English words he has selected as corresponding to the technical
+phraseology of the Arabian jurists, and sometimes infelicitous in the
+selection of his English terms. It has occurred to us that he would
+have succeeded better in rendering the exact meaning of his originals,
+had he availed himself more of technical phrases of the Roman law
+which are familiar to all European jurists. Is does not occur to
+us that he would by doing so have been in danger of Romanizing the
+Mahometan to an extent that might mislead. Mill, in his History of
+British India, has noticed how closely the classification of the
+Mahometan approaches to that of the Roman jurists. An attentive
+perusal of Mr. Baillie's volume has convinced us that the analogy in
+the substance is quite as strong as in the arrangements. This fact
+seems susceptible of being accounted for on historical grounds.
+Mahometanism is in fact a sect or heresy of Christianity. The views
+and sentiments, the aggregate of which make up the body of Christian
+opinion, are not all of Jewish or Christian origin. They are the moral
+creed of societies whose opinions and civilization have been derived
+in part from other sources. The philosophy of Greece and the law of
+Rome have contributed in nearly equal proportions to the theosophy
+of the Hebrews. The jurisprudence of all Christian nations is mainly
+referable to Rome for its origin, and the same is the case with at
+least the Sunnite Mahometans. The nations of Islam took only their
+religious creed from their Prophet; the jurists of Kufah retained and
+expounded the civil law which prevailed among them before his time.
+That law was the law of the Greek Empire, developed in the same way as
+that of the Western Empire under the judicial and legislative auspices
+of Roman Prætors and Pro-Consuls, aided by Roman jurists. Theophilus,
+one of the jurists employed by Justinian for his compilations,
+lectured in Greek on the Institutions; and the substance of
+his lectures still survives under the name of the Paraphrase of
+Theophilus. The Greek edicts and novels of Justinian's successors are
+mainly Roman law. Throughout the Byzantine Empire (within which Kufah
+and the region where Bagdad now stands were included) Roman law was
+paramount, and Roman jurists were numerous. The arrangement, the
+subdivisions, and the substance of Mahometan jurisprudence, show
+that it has been principally derived from this source. Some of its
+doctrines are doubtless aboriginal engrafted on the law of the
+Empire; and it has been modified in some respects to reconcile it to
+the religious dictates of Islam, just as the law of Pagan Rome was
+modified after Christianity became the religion of the Empire. But
+still Mahometan jurisprudence retains undeniably the lineaments of its
+parentage.
+
+This consideration places in a strong light the importance of the
+study of Mahometan law. The increasing intimacy of our relations with
+independent Mahometan states makes it of the utmost consequence that
+we should entertain correct views of their opinions and institutions;
+and no better key to the knowledge of both can be found than in the
+historical study of their law. Again, we are called upon to legislate
+and supply judges for British India, a large proportion of the
+inhabitants of which are Mahometans. Even the Hindoos of the former
+Mogul Empire have adopted many legal forms and doctrines from
+their conquerors. A minute and accurate acquaintance with Mahometan
+jurisprudence is an indispensable preliminary to judicious legislation
+for British India. For these reasons, it could be wished that Mr.
+Baillie, or some other equally accomplished laborer in that field,
+would set himself to do for the "Futawa Alumgeeree" what Heineccius
+and other modern civilians have done for the law-books of
+Justinian--present the European public with an elegant and exact
+abstract of its contents.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The following, from Southey's "Gridiron," now first published in his
+Memoirs, ought to be set to music for the Beef-Steak Club:--
+
+ "Now the perfect Steak prepare!
+ Now the appointed rites begin!
+ Cut it from the pinguid rump.
+ Not too thick and not too thin;
+ Somewhat to the thick inclining,
+ Yet the thick and thin between,
+ That the gods, when they are dining,
+ May comment the golden mean.
+ Ne'er till now have they been blest
+ With a beef-steak daily drest:
+ Ne'er till this auspicious morn
+ When the Gridiron was born."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The most ignorant of the world's fools are those called "knowing
+ones," a phrase satirical with the very glee of irony.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE MYSTERIOUS COMPACT.
+
+A FREE TRANSLATION FROM THE GERMAN.
+
+PART II--CONCLUSION
+
+(CONCLUDED FROM PAGE 192.)
+
+Several weeks passed away. Edward spared no pains to discover
+some trace of the lady in question, but all in vain. No one in the
+neighborhood knew the family; and he had already determined, as
+soon as the spring began, to ask for leave of absence, and to travel
+through the country where Ferdinand had formed his unfortunate
+attachment, when a circumstance occurred which coincided strangely
+with his wishes. His commanding-officer gave him a commission to
+purchase some horses, which, to his great consolation, led him exactly
+into that part of the country where Ferdinand had been quartered.
+It was a market-town of some importance. He was to remain there some
+time, which suited his plans exactly; and he made use of every leisure
+hour to cultivate the acquaintance of the officers, to inquire into
+Ferdinand's connections and acquaintance, to trace the mysterious name
+if possible, and thus fulfill a sacred duty. For to him it appeared a
+sacred duty to execute the commission of his departed friend--to get
+possession of the ring, and to be the means, as he hoped, of giving
+rest to the troubled spirit of Ferdinand.
+
+Already, on the evening of the second day, he was sitting in the
+coffee-room with burghers of the place and officers of different
+regiments.
+
+A newly-arrived cornet was inquiring whether the neighborhood were a
+pleasant one, of an infantry officer, one of Hallberg's corps. "For,"
+said he, "I come from charming quarters."
+
+"There is not much to boast of," replied the captain. "There is no
+good fellowship, no harmony among the people."
+
+"I will tell you why that is," cried an animated lieutenant; "that is
+because there is no house as a point of reunion, where one is sure
+to find and make acquaintances, and to be amused, and where each
+individual ascertains his own merits by the effect they produce on
+society at large."
+
+"Yes, we have had nothing of that kind since the Varniers left us,"
+said the captain.
+
+"Varniers!" cried Edward, with an eagerness he could ill conceal. "The
+name sounds foreign."
+
+"They were not Germans--they were emigrants from the Netherlands, who
+had left their country on account of political troubles," replied the
+captain.
+
+"Ah, that was a charming house," cried the lieutenant, "cultivation,
+refinement, a sufficient competency, the whole style of establishment
+free from ostentation, yet most comfortable; and Emily--Emily was the
+soul of the whole house."
+
+"Emily Varnier!" echoed Edward, while his heart beat fast and loud.
+
+"Yes, yes! that was the name of the prettiest, most graceful, most
+amiable girl in the world," said the lieutenant.
+
+"You seem bewitched by the fair Emily," observed the cornet.
+
+"I think you would have been too, had you known her," rejoined the
+lieutenant; "she was the jewel of the whole society. Since she went
+away there is no bearing their stupid balls and assemblies."
+
+"But you must not forget," the captain resumed once more, "when you
+attribute everything to the charms of the fair girl, that not only
+she but the whole family has disappeared, and we have lost that
+house which formed, as you say, so charming a point of reunion in our
+neighborhood."
+
+"Yes, yes; exactly so," said an old gentleman, a civilian, who had
+been silent hitherto; "the Varniers' house is a great loss in the
+country, where such losses are not so easily replaced as in a large
+town. First, the father died, then came the cousin and carried the
+daughter away."
+
+"And did this cousin marry the young lady?" inquired Edward, in a tone
+tremulous with agitation.
+
+"Certainly," answered the old gentleman; "it was a very great match
+for her; he bought land to the value of half a million about here."
+
+"And he was an agreeable, handsome man, we must all allow," remarked
+the captain.
+
+"But she would never have married him," exclaimed the lieutenant, "if
+poor Hallberg had not died."
+
+Edward was breathless, but he did not speak a word.
+
+"She would have been compelled to do so in any case," said the old
+man; "the father had destined them for each other from infancy,
+and people say he made his daughter take a vow as he lay on his
+death-bed."
+
+"That sounds terrible," said Edward; "and does not speak much for the
+good feeling of the cousin."
+
+"She could not have fulfilled her father's wish," interposed the
+lieutenant; "her heart was bound up in Hallberg, and Hallberg's in
+her. Few people, perhaps, know this, for the lovers were prudent and
+discreet; I, however, knew it all."
+
+"And why was she not allowed to follow the inclination of her heart?"
+asked Edward.
+
+"Because her father had promised her," replied the captain: "you used
+just now the word terrible; it is a fitting expression, according to
+my version of the matter. It appears that one of the branches of the
+house of Varnier had committed an act of injustice toward another, and
+Emily's father considered it a point of conscience to make reparation.
+Only through the marriage of his daughter with a member of the
+ill-used branch could that act be obliterated and made up for, and,
+therefore, he pressed the matter sorely."
+
+"Yes, and the headlong passion which Emily inspired her cousin with
+abetted his designs."
+
+"Then her cousin loved Emily?" inquired Edward.
+
+"Oh, to desperation," was the reply. "He was a rival to her shadow,
+who followed her not more closely than he did. He was jealous of the
+rose that she placed on her bosom."
+
+"Then poor Emily is not likely to have a calm life with such a man,"
+said Edward.
+
+"Come," interposed the old gentleman, with en authoritative tone, "I
+think you, gentlemen, go a little too far. I know D'Effernay; he is an
+honest, talented man, very rich, indeed, and generous; he anticipates
+his wife in every wish. She has the most brilliant house in the
+neighborhood, and lives like a princess."
+
+"And trembles," insisted the lieutenant, "when she hears her husband's
+footstep. What good can riches be to her? She would have been happier
+with Hallberg."
+
+"I do not know," rejoined the captain, "why you always looked upon
+that attachment as something so decided. It never appeared so to
+me; and you yourself say that D'Effernay is very jealous, which I
+believe him to be, for he is a man of strong passions; and this very
+circumstance causes me to doubt the rest of your story. Jealousy has
+sharp eyes, and D'Effernay would have discovered a rival in Hallberg,
+and not proved himself the friend he always was to our poor comrade."
+
+"That does not follow at all," replied the lieutenant, "it only proves
+that the lovers were very cautious. So far, however, I agree with you.
+I believe that if D'Effernay had suspected anything of the kind he
+would have murdered Hallberg."
+
+A shudder passed through Edward's veins.
+
+"Murdered!" he repeated, in a hollow voice; "do you not judge too
+harshly of this man when you hint the possibility of such a thing?"
+
+"That does he, indeed," said the old man; "these gentlemen are all
+angry with D'Effernay, because he has carried off the prettiest girl
+in the country. But I am told he does not intend remaining where he
+now lives. He wishes to sell his estates."
+
+"Really," inquired the captain, "and where is he going?"
+
+"I have no idea," replied the other; "but he is selling everything
+off. One manor is already disposed of, and there have been people
+already in negotiation for the place where he resides."
+
+The conversation now turned on the value of D'Effernay's property, and
+of land in general, &c.
+
+Edward had gained materials enough for reflection; he rose soon, took
+leave of the company, and gave himself up, in the solitude of his
+own room, to the torrent of thought and feeling which that night's
+conversation had let loose. So, then, it was true; Emily Varnier was
+no fabulous being! Hallberg had loved her, his love had been returned,
+but a cruel destiny had separated them. How wonderfully did all he
+had heard explain the dream at the Castle, and how completely did
+that supply what had remained doubtful, or had been omitted in the
+officers' narrative. Emily Varnier, doubtless, possessed that ring, to
+gain possession of which now seemed his bounden duty. He resolved not
+to delay its fulfillment a moment, however difficult it might prove,
+and he only reflected on the best manner in which he should perform
+the task allotted to him. The sale of the property appeared to him a
+favorable opening. The fame of his father's wealth made it probable
+that the son might wish to be purchaser of a fine estate, like the one
+in question. He spoke openly of such a project, made inquiries of the
+old gentleman, and the captain, who seemed to him to know most about
+the matter; and as his duties permitted a trip for a week or so, he
+started immediately, and arrived on the second day at the place of his
+destination. He stopped in the public house in the village to inquire
+if the estate lay near, and whether visitors were allowed to see the
+house and grounds. Mine host, who doubtless had had his directions,
+sent a messenger immediately to the Castle, who returned before long,
+accompanied by a chasseur, in a splendid livery, who invited the
+stranger to the Castle in the name of M. D'Effernay.
+
+This was exactly what Edward wished, and expected. Escorted by
+the chasseur he soon arrived at the Castle, and was shown up
+a spacious staircase into a modern, almost, one might say, a
+magnificently-furnished room, where the master of the house received
+him. It was evening, toward the end of winter, the shades of twilight
+had already fallen, and Edward found himself suddenly in a room quite
+illuminated with wax candles. D'Effernay stood in the middle of the
+saloon, a tall, thin young man. A proud bearing seemed to bespeak
+a consciousness of his own merit, or at least of his position. His
+features were finely formed, but the traces of strong passion, or of
+internal discontent, had lined them prematurely.
+
+In figure he was very slender, and the deep-sunken eye, the gloomy
+frown which was fixed between his brows, and the thin lips, had no
+very prepossessing expression, and yet there was something imposing in
+the whole appearance of the man.
+
+Edward thanked him civilly for his invitation, spoke of his idea of
+being a purchaser as a motive for his visit, and gave his own, and
+his father's name. D'Effernay seemed pleased with all he said. He had
+known Edward's family in the metropolis; he regretted that the late
+hour would render it impossible for them to visit the property to-day,
+and concluded by pressing the lieutenant to pass the night at the
+Castle. On the morrow they would proceed to business, and now he would
+have the pleasure of presenting his wife to the visitor. Edward's
+heart beat violently--at length then he would see her! Had he loved
+her himself he could not have gone to meet her with more agitation.
+D'Effernay led his guest through many rooms, which were all as well
+furnished, and as brilliantly lighted as the first he had entered.
+At length he opened the door of a small boudoir, where there was no
+light, save that which the faint, gray twilight imparted through the
+windows.
+
+The simple arrangement of this little room, with dark green walls,
+only relieved by some engravings and coats of arms, formed a pleasing
+contrast to Edward's eyes, after the glaring splendor of the other
+apartments. From behind a piano-forte, at which she had been seated
+in a recess, rose a tall, slender female form, in a white dress of
+extreme simplicity.
+
+"My love," said D'Effernay, "I bring you a welcome guest, Lieutenant
+Wensleben, who is willing to purchase the estate."
+
+Emily courtesied; the friendly twilight concealed the shudder that
+passed over her whole frame, as she heard the familiar name which
+aroused so many recollections.
+
+She bade the stranger welcome, in a low, sweet voice, whose tremulous
+accents were not unobserved by Edward; and while the husband made some
+further observation, he had leisure to remark, as well as the fading
+light would allow, the fair outline of her oval face, the modest
+grace of her movements, her pretty, nymph-like figure--in fact, all
+those charms which seemed familiar to him through the impassioned
+descriptions of his friend.
+
+"But what can this fancy be, to sit in the dark?" asked D'Effernay, in
+no mild tone; "you know that is a thing I cannot bear." and with these
+words, and without waiting his wife's answer, he rang the bell over
+her sofa, and ordered lights.
+
+While these were placed on the table the company sat down by the fire,
+and conversation commenced. By the full light Edward could perceive
+all Emily's real beauty--her pale, but lovely face, the sad expression
+of her large blue eyes, so often concealed by their dark lashes, and
+then raised, with a look full of feeling, a sad, pensive, intellectual
+expression; and he admired the simplicity of her dress, and of every
+object that surrounded her: all appeared to him to bespeak a superior
+mind.
+
+They had not sat long, before D'Effernay was called away. One of
+his people had something important, something urgent to communicate
+to him, which admitted of no delay. A look of fierce anger almost
+distorted his features; in an instant his thin lips moved rapidly, and
+Edward thought he muttered some curses between his teeth. He left the
+room, but in so doing, he cast a glance of mistrust and ill-temper
+on the handsome stranger with whom he was compelled to leave his wife
+alone. Edward observed it all. All that he had seen to-day, all that
+he had heard from his comrades of the man's passionate and suspicious
+disposition, convinced him that his stay here would not be long, and
+that perhaps a second opportunity of speaking alone with Emily might
+not offer itself.
+
+He determined, therefore, to profit by the present moment; and no
+sooner had D'Effernay left the room, than he began to tell Emily she
+was not so complete a stranger to him as it might seem; that long
+before he had had the pleasure of seeing her--even before he had heard
+her name--she was known to him, so to speak, in spirit.
+
+Madame D'Effernay was moved. She was silent for a time, and gazed
+fixedly on the ground; then she looked up; the mist of unshed tears
+dimmed her blue eyes, and her bosom heaved with the sigh she could not
+suppress.
+
+"To me also the name of Wensleben is familiar. There is a link between
+our souls. Your friend has often spoken of you to me."
+
+But she could say no more; tears checked her speech.
+
+Edward's eyes were glistening also, and the two companions were
+silent; at length he began once more:
+
+"My dear lady," he said, "my time is short, and I have a solemn
+message to deliver to you. Will you allow me to do so now?"
+
+"To me?" she asked, in a tone of astonishment.
+
+"From my departed friend," answered Edward, emphatically.
+
+"From Ferdinand?--and that now--after--" she shrunk back, as if in
+terror.
+
+"Now that he is no longer with us, do you mean? I found the message
+in his papers, which have been intrusted to me only lately, since I
+have been in the neighborhood. Among them was a token which I was to
+restore to you." He produced the ring. Emily seized it wildly, and
+trembled as she looked upon it.
+
+"It is indeed my ring," she said at length, "the same which I gave
+him when we plighted our troth in secret. You are acquainted with
+everything, I perceive; I shall therefore risk nothing if I speak
+openly."
+
+She wept, and pressed the ring to her lips.
+
+"I see that my friend's memory is dear to you," continued Edward. You
+will forgive the prayer I am about to make to you: my visit to you
+concerns his ring."
+
+"How--what is it you wish?" cried Emily; terrified.
+
+"It was _his_ wish," replied Edward. "He evinced an earnest desire
+to have this pledge of an unfortunate and unfulfilled engagement
+restored."
+
+"How is that possible? You did not speak with him before his
+death; and this happened so suddenly after, that, to give you the
+commission--"
+
+"There was no time for it! that is true," answered Edward, with an
+inward shudder, although outwardly he was calm. "Perhaps this wish
+was awakened immediately before his death. I found it, as I told you,
+expressed in those papers."
+
+"Incomprehensible!" she exclaimed. "Only a short time before his
+death, we cherished--deceitful, indeed, they proved, but, oh, what
+blessed hopes! we reckoned on casualties, on what might possibly
+occur to assist as. Neither of us could endure to dwell on the idea
+of separation; and yet--yet since--Oh, my God," she cried, overcome by
+sorrow, and she hid her face between her hands.
+
+Edward was lost in confused thought. For a time both again were
+silent: at length Emily started up--
+
+"Forgive me, M. de Wensleben. What you have related to me, what you
+have asked of me, has produced so much excitement, so much agitation,
+that it is necessary that I should be alone for a few moments, to
+recover my composure."
+
+"I am gone," cried Edward, springing from his chair.
+
+"No! no!" she replied, "you are my guest; remain here. I have a
+household duty which calls me away." She laid a stress on these words.
+
+She leant forward, and with a sad, sweet smile, she gave her hand to
+the friend of her lost Ferdinand, pressing his gently, and disappeared
+through the inner door.
+
+Edward stood stunned, bewildered; then he paced the room with hasty
+steps, threw himself on the sofa, and took up one of the books that
+lay on the table, rather to have something in his hand, than to read.
+It proved to be Young's "Night Thoughts." He looked through it, and
+was attracted by many passages, which seemed, in his present frame
+of mind, fraught with peculiar meaning; yet his thoughts wandered
+constantly from the page to his dead friend. The candles, unheeded
+both by Emily and him, burned on with long wicks, giving little light
+in the silent room, over which the red glare from the hearth shed a
+lurid glow. Hurried footsteps sounded in the anteroom; the door was
+thrown open.
+
+Edward looked up, and saw D'Effernay staring at him, and round the
+room, in an angry, restless manner.
+
+Edward could not but think there was something almost unearthly in
+those dark looks and that towering form.
+
+"Where is my wife?" was D'Effernay's first question.
+
+"She is gone to fulfill some household duty," replied the other.
+
+"And leaves you here alone in this miserable darkness! Most
+extraordinary!--indeed, most unaccountable!" and as he spoke he
+approached the table and snuffed the candles, with a movement of
+impatience.
+
+"She left me here with old friends," said Edward, with a forced smile.
+"I have been reading."
+
+"What, in the dark?" inquired D'Effernay, with a look of mistrust.
+"It was so dark when I came in, that you could not possibly have
+distinguished a letter."
+
+"I read for some time, and then I fell into a train of thought, which
+is usually the result of reading Young's 'Night Thoughts.'"
+
+"Young! I cannot bear that author. He is so gloomy."
+
+"But you are fortunately so happy, that the lamentations of the lonely
+mourner can find no echo in your breast."
+
+"You think so!" said D'Effernay, in a churlish tone, and he pressed
+his lips together tightly, as Emily came into the room: he went to
+meet her.
+
+"You have been a long time away," was his observation, as he looked
+into her eyes, where the trace of tears might easily be detected. "I
+found our guest alone."
+
+"M. de Wensleben was good enough to excuse me," she replied; "and then
+I thought you would be back immediately."
+
+They sat down to the table; coffee was brought, and the past appeared
+to be forgotten.
+
+The conversation at first was broken by constant pauses. Edward saw
+that Emily did all she could to play the hostess agreeably, and to
+pacify her husband's ill-humor.
+
+In this attempt the young man assisted her, and at last they were
+successful. D'Effernay became more cheerful; the conversation more
+animated; and Edward found that his host could be a very agreeable
+member of society when he pleased, combining a good deal of
+information with great natural powers. The evening passed away more
+pleasantly than it promised at one time; and after an excellent and
+well-served supper, the young officer was shown into a comfortable
+room, fitted up with every modern luxury; and weary in mind and body,
+he soon fell asleep. He dreamed of all that had occupied his waking
+thoughts-of his friend, and his friend's history.
+
+But in that species of confusion which often characterizes dreams,
+he fancied that he was Ferdinand, or at least, his own individuality
+seemed mixed up with that of Hallberg. He felt that he was ill. He lay
+in an unknown room, and by his bedside stood a small table, covered
+with glasses and phials, containing medicines, as is usual in a sick
+room.
+
+The door opened, and D'Effernay came in, in his dressing-gown, as
+if he had just left his bed: and now in Edward's mind dreams and
+realities were mingled together, and he thought that D'Effernay came,
+perhaps, to speak with him on the occurrences of the preceding day.
+But no! he approached the table on which the medicines stood, looked
+at the watch, took up one of the phials and a cup, measured the
+draught, drop by drop, then he turned and looked round him stealthily,
+and then he drew from his breast a pale blue, coiling serpent, which
+he threw into the cup, and held it to the patient's lips, who drank,
+and instantly felt a numbness creep over his frame which ended in
+death. Edward fancied that he was dead; he saw the coffin brought, but
+the terror lest he should be buried alive, made him start up with a
+sudden effort, and he opened his eyes.
+
+The dream had passed away; he sat in his bed safe and well; but it was
+long ere he could in any degree recover his composure, or get rid of
+the impression which the frightful apparition had made on him. They
+brought his breakfast, with a message from the master of the house
+to inquire whether he would like to visit the park, farms, &c. He
+dressed quickly, and descended to the court, where he found his host
+in a riding dress, by the side of two fine horses, already saddled.
+D'Effernay greeted the young man courteously; but Edward felt
+an inward repugnance as he looked on that gloomy though handsome
+countenance, now lighted up by the beams of the morning sun, yet
+recalling vividly the dark visions of the night. D'Effernay was full
+of attentions to his new friend. They started on their ride, in spite
+of some threatening clouds, and began the inspection of meadows,
+shrubberies, farms, &c. After a couple of hours, which were consumed
+in this manner, it began to rain a few drops, and at last burst out
+into a heavy shower. It was soon impossible even to ride through the
+woods for the torrents that were pouring down, and so they returned to
+the castle.
+
+Edward retired to his room to change his dress, and to write some
+letters, he said, but more particularly to avoid Emily, in order not
+to excite her husband's jealousy. As the bell rang for dinner he
+saw her again, and found to his surprise that the captain, whom he
+had first seen in the coffee-room, and who had given him so much
+information, was one of the party. He was much pleased, for they had
+taken a mutual fancy to each other. The captain was not at quarters
+the day Edward had left them, but as soon as he heard where his friend
+had gone, he put horses to his carriage and followed him, for he said
+he also should like to see these famous estates. D'Effernay seemed
+in high good humor to-day, Emily far more silent than yesterday,
+and taking little part in the conversation of the men, which turned
+on political economy. After coffee she found an opportunity to give
+Edward (unobserved) a little packet. The look with which she did so,
+told plainly what it contained, and the young man hurried to his room
+as soon as he fancied he could do so without remark or comment. The
+continued rain precluded all idea of leaving the house any more that
+day. He unfolded the packet; there were a couple of sheets, written
+closely in a woman's fair hand, and something wrapped carefully in a
+paper, which he knew to be the ring. It was the fellow to that which
+he had given the day before to Emily, only Ferdinand's name was
+engraved inside instead of hers. Such were the contents of the
+papers:--
+
+"Secrecy would be misplaced with the friend of the dead. Therefore,
+will I speak to you of things which I have never uttered to a human
+being until now. Jules D'Effernay is nearly related to me. We knew
+each other in the Netherlands, where our estates joined. The boy loved
+me already with a love that amounted to passion; this love was my
+father's greatest joy, for there was an old and crying injustice which
+the ancestors of D'Effernay had suffered from ours, that could alone,
+he thought, be made up by the marriage of the only children of the two
+branches. So we were destined for each other almost from our cradles;
+and I was content it should be so, for Jules's handsome face and
+decided preference for me were agreeable to me, although I felt no
+great affection for him. We were separated: Jules traveled in France,
+England, and America, and made money as a merchant, which profession
+he had taken up suddenly. My father, who had a place under government,
+left his country in consequence of political troubles, and came into
+this part of the world where some distant relations of my mother's
+lived. He liked the neighborhood; he bought land; we lived very
+happily; I was quite contented in Jules's absence; I had no yearning
+of the heart toward him, yet I thought kindly of him, and troubled
+myself little about my future. Then--then I learned to know your
+friend. Oh, then! I felt, when I looked upon him, when I listened to
+him, when we conversed together, I felt, I acknowledged that there
+might be happiness on earth, of which I had hitherto never dreamed.
+Then I loved for the first time, ardently, passionately, and was
+beloved in return. Acquainted with the family engagements, he did not
+dare openly to proclaim his love, and I knew I ought not to foster
+the feeling; but, alas! how seldom does passion listen to the voice
+of reason and of duty. Your friend and I met in secret; in secret we
+plighted our troth, and exchanged those rings, and hoped and believed
+that by showing a bold front to our destiny we should subdue it to our
+will. The commencement was sinful, it has met with a dire retribution,
+Jules's letters announced his speedy return. He had sold everything
+in his own country, had given up all his mercantile affairs, through
+which he had greatly increased an already considerable fortune, and
+now he was about to join us, or rather me, without whom he could not
+live. This appeared to me like the demand for payment of a heavy debt.
+This debt I owed to Jules, who loved me with all his heart, who was
+in possession of my father's promised word and mine also. Yet I could
+not give up your friend. In a state of distraction I told him all; we
+meditated flight. Yes, I was so far guilty, and I make the confession
+in hopes that some portion of my errors may be expiated by repentance.
+My father, who had long been in a declining state, suddenly grew
+worse, and this delayed and hindered the fulfillment of our designs.
+Jules arrived. During the five years he had been away he was much
+changed in appearance, and that advantageously. I was struck when
+I first saw him, but it was also easy to detect in those handsome
+features and manly bearing, a spirit of restlessness and violence
+which had already shown itself in him as a boy, and which passing
+years, with their bitter experience and strong passions, had greatly
+developed. The hope that we had cherished of D'Effernay's possible
+indifference to me, of the change which time might have wrought in
+his attachment, now seemed idle and absurd. His love was indeed
+impassioned. He embraced me in a manner that made me shrink from him,
+and altogether his deportment toward me was a strange contrast to
+the gentle, tender, refined affection of our dear friend. I trembled
+whenever Jules entered the room, and all that I had prepared to say
+to him, all the plans which I had revolved in my mind respecting
+him, vanished in an instant before the power of his presence, and
+the almost imperative manner in which he claimed my hand. My father's
+illness increased; he was now in a very precarious state, hopeless
+indeed. Jules rivaled me in filial attentions to him, that I can never
+cease to thank him for; but this illness made my situation more and
+more critical, and it accelerated the fulfillment of the contract.
+I was now to renew my promise to him by the death-bed of my father.
+Alas, alas! I fell senseless to the ground when this announcement
+was made to me. Jules began to suspect. Already my cold, embarrassed
+manner toward him since his return had struck him as strange. He began
+to suspect, I repeat, and the effect that this suspicion had on him,
+it would be impossible to describe to you. Even now, after so long a
+time, now that I am accustomed to his ways, and more reconciled to my
+fate by the side of a noble, though somewhat impetuous man, it makes
+me tremble to think of those paroxysms, which the idea that I did not
+love him called forth. They were fearful; he nearly sank under them.
+During two days his life was in danger. At last the storm passed, my
+father died; Jules watched over me with the tenderness of a brother,
+the solicitude of a parent; for that indeed I shall ever be grateful.
+His suspicion once awakened, he gazed round with penetrating looks
+to discover the cause of my altered feelings. But your friend never
+came to our house; we met in an unfrequented spot, and my father's
+illness had interrupted these interviews. Altogether I cannot tell
+if Jules discovered anything. A fearful circumstance rendered all
+our precautions useless, and cut the knot of our secret connection,
+to loose which voluntarily I felt I had no power. A wedding feast,
+at a neighboring castle, assembled all the nobility and gentry, and
+officers quartered near, together; my deep mourning was an excuse for
+my absence. Jules, though he usually was happiest by my side, could
+not resist the invitation, and your friend resolved to go, although he
+was unwell; he feared to raise suspicion by remaining away, when I was
+left at home. With great difficulty he contrived the first day to make
+one at a splendid hunt, the second day he could not leave his bed.
+A physician, who was in the house, pronounced his complaint to be
+violent fever, and Jules, whose room joined that of the sick man,
+offered him every little service and kindness which compassion and
+good feeling prompted; and I cannot but praise him all the more for
+it, as who can tell, perhaps, his suspicion might have taken the right
+direction? On the morning of the second day--but let me glance quickly
+at that terrible time, the memory of which can never pass from my
+mind--a fit of apoplexy most unexpectedly, but gently, ended the
+noblest life, and separated us forever! Now you know all. I inclose
+the ring. I cannot write more. Farewell!"
+
+The conclusion of the letter made a deep impression on Edward. His
+dream rose up before his remembrance, the slight indisposition, the
+sudden death, the fearful nursetender, all arranged themselves in
+order before his mind, and an awful whole rose out of all these
+reflections, a terrible suspicion which he tried to throw off. But
+he could not do so, and when he met the captain and D'Effernay
+in the evening, and the latter challenged his visitors to a game
+of billiards, Edward glanced from time to time at his host in
+a scrutinizing manner, and could not but feel that the restless
+discontent which was visible in his countenance, and the unsteady
+glare of his eyes, which shunned the fixed look of others, only fitted
+too well into the shape of the dark thoughts which were crossing his
+own mind. Late in the evening, after supper, they played whist in
+Emily's boudoir. On the morrow, if the weather permitted, they were
+to conclude their inspection of the surrounding property, and the next
+day they were to visit the iron foundries, which, although distant
+from the Castle several miles, formed a very important item in the
+rent-roll of the estates. The company separated for the night.
+Edward fell asleep; and the same dream, with the same circumstances,
+recurred, only with the full consciousness that the sick man
+was Ferdinand. Edward felt overpowered, a species of horror
+took possession of his mind, as he found himself now in regular
+communication with the beings of the invisible world.
+
+The weather favored D'Effernay's projects. The whole day was passed
+in the open air. Emily only appeared at meals, and in the evening when
+they played at cards. Both she and Edward avoided, as if by mutual
+consent, every word, every look that could awaken the slightest
+suspicion or jealous feeling in D'Effernay's mind. She thanked him
+in her heart for this forbearance, but her thoughts were in another
+world; she took little heed of what passed around her. Her husband was
+in an excellent temper; he played the part of host to perfection; and
+when the two officers were established comfortably by the fire, in the
+captain's room, smoking together, they could not but do justice to his
+courteous manners.
+
+"He appears to be a man of general information," remarked Edward.
+
+"He has traveled a great deal, and read a great deal, as I told you
+when we first met: he is a remarkable man, but one of uncontrolled
+passions, and desperately jealous."
+
+"Yet he appears very attentive to his wife."
+
+"Undoubtedly he is wildly in love with her; yet he makes her unhappy,
+and himself too."
+
+"He certainly does not appear happy, there is so much restlessness."
+
+"He can never bear to remain in one place for any length of time
+together. He is now going to sell the property he only bought last
+year. There is an instability about him; everything palls on him."
+
+"That is the complaint of many who are rich and well to do in the
+world."
+
+"Yes; only not in the same degree. I assure you it has often struck me
+that man must have a bad conscience."
+
+"What an idea!" rejoined Edward, with a forced laugh, for the
+captain's remark struck him forcibly. "He seems a man of honor."
+
+"Oh, one may be a man of honor, as it is called, and yet have
+something quite bad enough to reproach yourself with. But I know
+nothing about it, and would not breathe such a thing except to you.
+His wife, too, looks so pale and so oppressed."
+
+"But, perhaps, that is her natural complexion and expression."
+
+"Oh, no! no! the year before D'Effernay came from Paris, she was as
+fresh as a rose. Many people declare that your poor friend loved her.
+The affair was wrapped in mystery, and I never believed the report,
+for Hallberg was a steady man, and the whole country knew that Emily
+had been engaged a long time."
+
+"Hallberg never mentioned the name in his letters," answered Edward,
+with less candor than usual.
+
+"I thought not. Besides D'Effernay was very much attached to him, and
+mourned his death."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"I assure you the morning that Hallberg was found dead in his bed so
+unexpectedly, D'Effernay was like one beside himself."
+
+"Very extraordinary. But as we are on the subject, tell me, I pray
+you, all the circumstances of my poor Ferdinand's illness, and awful
+sudden death."
+
+"I can tell you all about it, as well as any one, for I was one of the
+guests at that melancholy wedding. Your friend, and I, and many others
+were invited. Hallberg had some idea of not going; he was unwell, with
+violent headache and giddiness. But we persuaded him, and he consented
+to go with us. The first day he felt tolerably well. We hunted in
+the open field; we were all on horseback, the day hot. Hallberg felt
+worse. The second day he had a great deal of fever; he could not
+stay up. The physician (for fortunately there was one in the company)
+ordered rest, cooling medicine, neither of which seemed to do him
+good. The rest of the men dispersed, to amuse themselves in various
+ways. Only D'Effernay remained at home; he was never very fond of
+large societies, and we voted that he was discontented and out of
+humor because his betrothed bride was not with him. His room was next
+to the sick man's, to whom he gave all possible care and attention,
+for poor Hallberg, besides being ill, was in despair at giving so
+much trouble in a strange house. D'Effernay tried to calm him on
+this point; he nursed him, amused him with conversation, mixed his
+medicines, and, in fact, showed more kindness and tenderness, than any
+of us would have given him credit for. Before I went to bed I visited
+Hallberg, and found him much better, and more cheerful; the doctor
+had promised that he should leave his bed next day. So I left him and
+retired with the rest of the world, rather late, and very tired, to
+rest. The next morning I was awoke by the fatal tidings. I did not
+wait to dress, I ran to his room, it was full of people."
+
+"And how, how was the death first discovered?" inquired Edward, in
+breathless eagerness.
+
+"The servant, who came in to attend on him, thought he was asleep, for
+he lay in his usual position, his head upon his hand. He went away
+and waited for some time; but hours passed, and he thought he ought to
+wake his master to give him his medicine. Then the awful discovery was
+made. He must have died peacefully, for his countenance was so calm,
+his limbs undisturbed. A fit of apoplexy had terminated his life, but
+in the most tranquil manner."
+
+"Incomprehensible," said Edward, with a deep sigh. "Did they take no
+measures to restore animation?"
+
+"Certainly; all that could be done was done, bleeding, fomentation,
+friction; the physician superintended, but there was no hope, it was
+all too late. He must have been dead some hours, for he was already
+cold and stiff. If there had been a spark of life in him he would have
+been saved. It was all over; I had lost my good lieutenant, and the
+regiment one of its finest officers."
+
+He was silent, and appeared lost in thought. Edward, for his part,
+felt overwhelmed by terrible suspicions and sad memories. After a long
+pause he recovered himself: "and where was D'Effernay?" he inquired.
+
+"D'Effernay," answered the Captain, rather surprised at the question;
+"oh! he was not in the Castle when we made the dreadful discovery: he
+had gone out for an early walk, and when he came back late, not before
+noon, he learned the truth, and was like one out of his senses. It
+seemed so awful to him, because he had been so much, the very day
+before, with poor Hallberg."
+
+"Aye," answered Edward, whose suspicions were being more and more
+confirmed every moment. "And did he see the corpse, did he go into the
+chamber of death?"
+
+"No," replied the captain; "he assured us it was out of his power to
+do so; he could not bear the sight; and I believe it. People with such
+uncontrolled feelings as this D'Effernay, are incapable of performing
+those duties which others think it necessary and incumbent on them to
+fulfill."
+
+"And where was Hallberg buried?"
+
+"Not far from the castle where the mournful event took place.
+To-morrow, if we go to the iron foundry, we shall be near the spot."
+
+"I am glad of it," cried Edward eagerly, while a host of projects rose
+up in his mind. "But now, captain, I will not trespass any longer on
+your kindness. It is late, and we must be up betimes to-morrow. How
+far have we to go?"
+
+"Not less than four leagues certainly. D'Effernay has arranged that we
+shall drive there, and see it all at our leisure: then we shall return
+in the evening. Good night, Wensleben."
+
+They separated: Edward hurried to his room; his heart overflowed.
+Sorrow on the one hand, horror and even hatred on the other, agitated
+him by turns. It was long before he could sleep. For the third time
+the vision haunted him; but now it was clearer than before; now he
+saw plainly the features of him who lay in bed, and of him who stood
+beside the bed--they were those of Hallberg and of D'Effernay.
+
+This third apparition, the exact counterpart of the two former (only
+more vivid), all that he had gathered from conversations on the
+subject, and the contents of Emily's letter, left scarcely the shadow
+of a doubt remaining as to how his friend had left the world.
+
+D'Effernay's jealous and passionate nature seemed to allow of the
+possibility of such a crime, and it could scarcely be wondered at, if
+Edward regarded him with a feeling akin to hatred. Indeed the desire
+of visiting Hallberg's grave, in order to place the ring in the
+coffin, could alone reconcile Wensleben to the idea of remaining any
+longer beneath the roof of a man whom he now considered the murderer
+of his friend. His mind was a prey to conflicting doubts; detestation
+for the culprit, and grief for the victim, pointed out one line of
+conduct, while the difficulty of proving D'Effernay's guilt, and still
+more, pity and consideration for Emily, determined him at length to
+let the matter rest, and to leave the murderer, if such he really
+were, to the retribution which his own conscience and the justice of
+God would award him. He would seek his friend's grave, and then he
+would separate from D'Effernay, and never see him more. In the midst
+of these reflections the servant came to tell him that the carriage
+was ready. A shudder passed over his frame as D'Effernay greeted him;
+but he commanded himself, and they started on their expedition.
+
+Edward spoke but little, and that only when it was necessary, and
+the conversation was kept up by his two companions; he had made every
+inquiry, before he set out, respecting the place of his friend's
+interment, the exact situation of the tomb, the name of the village,
+and its distance from the main road. On their way home, he requested
+that D'Effernay would give orders to the coachman to make a round of
+a mile or two as far as the village of ----, with whose rector he
+was particularly desirous to speak. A momentary cloud gathered on
+D'Effernay's brow, yet it seemed no more than his usual expression
+of vexation at any delay or hindrance; and he was so anxious to
+propitiate his rich visitor, who appeared likely to take the estate
+off his hands, that he complied with all possible courtesy. The
+coachman was directed to turn down a by-road, and a very bad one it
+was. The captain stood up in the carriage and pointed out the village
+to him, at some distance off; it lay in a deep ravine at the foot of
+the mountains.
+
+They arrived in the course of time, and inquired for the clergyman's
+house, which, as well as the church, was situated on rising ground.
+The three companions alighted from the carriage, which they left at
+the bottom of the hill, and walked up together in the direction of the
+rectory. Edward knocked at the door and was admitted, while the two
+others sat on a bench outside. He had promised to return speedily,
+but to D'Effernay's restless spirit, one-quarter of an hour appeared
+interminable.
+
+He turned to the captain and said, in a tone of impatience, "M. de
+Wensleben must have a great deal of business with the rector: we have
+been here an immense time, and he does not seem inclined to make his
+appearance.
+
+"Oh, I dare say he will come soon. The matter cannot detain him long."
+
+"What on earth can he have to do here?"
+
+"Perhaps you would call it a mere fancy--the enthusiasm of youth."
+
+"It has a name, I suppose?"
+
+"Certainly, but--"
+
+"Is it sufficiently important, think you, to make us run the risk of
+being benighted on such roads as these?"
+
+"Why, it is quite early in the day."
+
+"But we have more than two leagues to go. Why will you not
+speak?--there cannot any great mystery."
+
+"Well, perhaps not a mystery, exactly, but just one of those subjects
+on which we are usually reserved with others."
+
+"So! so!" rejoined D'Effernay, with a little sneer. "Some love affair;
+some girl or another who pursues him, that he wants to get rid of."
+
+"Nothing of the kind, I can assure you," replied the captain drily.
+"It could scarcely be more innocent. He wishes, in fact, to visit his
+friend's grave."
+
+The listener's expression was one of scorn and anger. "It is worth the
+trouble certainly," he exclaimed, with a mocking laugh. "A charming
+sentimental pilgrimage, truly; and pray who is this beloved
+friend, over whose resting-place he must shed a tear and plant a
+forget-me-not? He told me he had never been in the neighborhood
+before."
+
+"No more he had; neither did he know where poor Hallberg was buried
+until I told him."
+
+"Hallberg!" echoed the other in a tone that startled the captain,
+and caused him to turn and look fixedly in the speaker's face. It was
+deadly pale, and the captain observed the effort which D'Effernay made
+to recover his composure.
+
+"Hallberg!" he repeated again, in a calmer tone, "and was Wensleben a
+friend of his?"
+
+"His bosom friend from childhood. They were brought up together at the
+academy. Hallberg left it a year earlier than his friend."
+
+"Indeed!" said D'Effernay, scowling as he spoke, and working himself
+up into a passion. "And this lieutenant came here on this account,
+then, and the purchase of the estates was a mere excuse."
+
+"I beg your pardon," observed the captain, in a decided tone of voice;
+"I have already told you that it was I who informed him of the place
+where his friend lies buried."
+
+"That may be, but it was owing to his friendship, to the wish to learn
+something further of his fate, that we are indebted for the visit of
+this romantic knight-errant."
+
+"That does not appear likely," replied the captain, who thought it
+better to avert, if possible, the rising storm of his companion's
+fury. "Why should he seek for news of Hallberg here, when he comes
+from the place where he was quartered for a long time, and where all
+his comrades now are."
+
+"Well, I don't know," cried D'Effernay, whose passion was increasing
+every moment. "Perhaps you have heard what was once gossiped about
+the neighborhood, that Hallberg was an admirer of my wife before she
+married."
+
+"Oh yes, I have heard that report, but never believed it. Hallberg was
+a prudent, steady man, and every one knew that Mademoiselle Varnier's
+hand had been promised for some time."
+
+"Yes! yes! but you do not know to what lengths passion and avarice may
+lead: for Emily was rich. We must not forget that, when we discuss
+the matter; an elopement with the rich heiress would have been a fine
+thing for a poor, beggarly lieutenant."
+
+"Shame! shame! M. D'Effernay. How can you slander the character
+of that upright young man? If Hallberg were so unhappy as to love
+Mademoiselle Varnier--"
+
+"That he did! you may believe me so far, I had reason to know it, and
+I did know it."
+
+"We had better change the conversation altogether, as it has taken
+so unpleasant a turn, Hallberg is dead; his errors, be they what they
+may, lie buried with him. His name stands high with all who knew him
+Even you, M. D'Effernay--you were his friend."
+
+"I his friend? I hated him!--I loathed him!" D'Effernay could not
+proceed; he foamed at the mouth with rage.
+
+"Compose yourself!" said the Captain, rising as he spoke; "you look
+and speak like a madman."
+
+A madman! Who says I am mad? Now I see it all--the connection of the
+whole--the shameful conspiracy."
+
+"Your conduct is perfectly incomprehensible to me," answered the
+captain, with perfect coolness. "Did you not attend Hallberg in his
+last illness, and give him his medicines with your own hand?"
+
+"I!" stammered D'Effernay. "No! no! no!" he cried, while the
+captain's growing suspicions increased every moment, on account of
+the perturbation which his companion displayed. "I never gave his
+medicines; whoever says that is a liar."
+
+"I say it!" exclaimed the officer, in a loud tone, for his patience
+was exhausted. "I say it, because I know that it was so, and I will
+maintain that fact against any one at any time. If you choose to
+contradict the evidence of my senses, it is you who are a liar!"
+
+"Ha! you shall give me satisfaction for this insult. Depend upon it,
+I am not one to be trifled with, as you shall find. You shall retract
+your words."
+
+"Never! I am ready to defend every word I have uttered here on this
+spot, at this moment, if you please. You have your pistols in the
+carriage, you know."
+
+D'Effernay cast a look of hatred on the speaker, and then dashing
+down the little hill, to the surprise of the servants, he dragged
+the pistols from the sword-case, and was by the captain's side in a
+moment. But the loud voices of the disputants had attracted Edward to
+the spot, and there he stood on D'Effernay's return; and by his side a
+venerable old man, who carried a large bunch of keys in his hand.
+
+"In heaven's name, what has happened?" cried Wensleben.
+
+"What are you about to do?" interposed the rector, in a tone of
+authority, though his countenance was expressive of horror. "Are you
+going to commit murder on this sacred spot, close to the precincts of
+the church?"
+
+"Murder! who speaks of murder?" cried D'Effernay. "Who can prove it?"
+and as he spoke, the captain turned a fierce, penetrating look upon
+him, beneath which he quailed.
+
+"But, I repeat the question," Edward began once more, "what does all
+this mean? I left you a short time ago in friendly conversation. I
+come back and find you both armed--both violently agitated--and M.
+D'Effernay, at least, speaking incoherently. What do you mean by
+'proving it?'--to what do you allude?" At this moment, before any
+answer could be made, a man came out of the house with a pick-axe
+and shovel on his shoulder, and advancing toward the rector, said
+respectfully, "I am quite ready, sir, if you have the key of the
+churchyard."
+
+It was now the captain's turn to look anxious: "What are you going
+to do, you surely don't intend--?" but as he spoke, the rector
+interrupted him.
+
+"This gentleman is very desirous to see the place where his friend
+lies buried."
+
+"But these preparations, what do they mean?"
+
+"I will tell you," said Edward, in a voice and tone that betrayed
+the deepest emotion, "I have a holy duty to perform. I must cause the
+coffin to be opened."
+
+"How, what!" screamed D'Effernay, once again. "Never--I will never
+permit such a thing."
+
+"But, sir," the old man spoke, in a tone of calm decision, contrasting
+wonderfully with the violence of him whom he addressed, "you have no
+possible right to interfere. If this gentleman wishes it, and I accede
+to the proposition, no one can prevent us from doing as we would."
+
+"I tell you I will not suffer it," continued D'Effernay, with the same
+frightful agitation. "Stir at your peril," he cried, turning sharply
+round upon the grave-digger, and holding a pistol to his head; but the
+captain pulled his arm away, to the relief of the frightened peasant.
+
+"M. D'Effernay," he said, "your conduct for the last half-hour has
+been most unaccountable--most unreasonable."
+
+"Come, come," interposed Edward, "Let us say no more on the subject;
+but let us be going," he addressed the rector; "we will not detain
+these gentlemen much longer."
+
+He made a step toward the churchyard, but D'Effernay clutched his arm,
+and, with an impious oath, "you shall not stir," he said; "that grave
+shall not be opened."
+
+Edward shook him off, with a look of silent hatred, for now indeed all
+his doubts were confirmed.
+
+D'Effernay saw that Wensleben was resolved, and a deadly pallor spread
+itself over his features, and a shudder passed visibly over his frame.
+
+"You are going!" he cried, with every gesture and appearance of
+insanity. "Go, then;" ... and he pointed the muzzle of the pistol to
+his mouth, and before any one could prevent him, he drew the trigger,
+and fell back a corpse. The spectators were motionless with surprise
+and horror; the captain was the first to recover himself in some
+degree. He bent over the body with the faint hope of detecting some
+sign of life. The old man turned pale and dizzy with a sense of
+terror, and he looked as if he would have swooned, had not Edward led
+him gently into his house, while the two others busied themselves with
+vain attempts to restore life.
+
+The spirit of D'Effernay had gone to its last account!
+
+It was, indeed, an awful moment. Death in its worst shape was before
+them, and a terrible duty still remained to be performed.
+
+Edward's cheek was blanched; his eye had a fixed look, yet he moved
+and spoke with a species of mechanical action, which had something
+almost ghastly in it. Causing the body to be removed into the house,
+he bade the captain summon the servants of the deceased, and then
+motioning with his hand to the awe-struck sexton, he proceeded with
+him to the churchyard. A few clods of earth alone were removed ere the
+captain stood by his friend's side.
+
+Here we must pause. Perhaps it were better altogether to emulate the
+silence that was maintained then and afterward by the two comrades.
+But the sexton could not be bribed to entire secrecy, and it was a
+story he loved to tell, with details we gladly omit, of how Wensleben
+solemnly performed his task--of how no doubt could any longer exist
+as to the cause of Hallberg's death. Those who love the horrible must
+draw on their own imaginations to supply what we resolutely withhold.
+
+Edward, we believe, never alluded to D'Effernay's death, and all the
+awful circumstances attending it, but twice--once, when, with every
+necessary detail, he and the captain gave their evidence to the legal
+authorities; and once, with as few details as possible, when he had an
+interview with the widow of the murderer, the beloved of the victim.
+The particulars of this interview he never divulged, for he considered
+Emily's grief too sacred to be exposed to the prying eyes of the
+curious and the unfeeling. She left the neighborhood immediately,
+leaving her worldly affairs in Wensleben's hands, who soon disposed
+of the property for her. She returned to her native country, with the
+resolution of spending the greater part of her wealth in relieving
+the distresses of others, wisely seeking, in the exercise of piety
+and benevolence, the only possible alleviation of her own deep
+and many-sided griefs. For Edward, he was soon pronounced to have
+recovered entirely from the shock of these terrible events. Of a
+courageous and energetic disposition, he pursued the duties of his
+profession with a firm step, and hid his mighty sorrow deep in the
+recesses of his heart. To the superficial observer, tears, groans, and
+lamentations are the only proofs of sorrow: and when they subside,
+the sorrow is said to have passed away also. Thus the captive, immured
+within the walls of his prison-house, is as one dead to the outward
+world, though the gaoler be a daily witness to the vitality of
+affliction.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Paris has been again emptied of its citizens to see M. Poitevin make
+his second ascent on horseback from the Champ de Mars. To show that he
+was not fastened to his saddle, the idiot, when some hundred yards
+up in the air, stood upright on his horse, and saluted the multitude
+below with both his hands.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PEASANT LIFE IN GERMANY.
+
+We copy the following interesting paragraph from a work just issued in
+London on "The Social Condition and Education of the People of England
+and Europe," by Joseph Kay, of Cambridge University.
+
+ "As I have already said, the _moral, intellectual and physical
+ condition of the peasants and operatives_ of Prussia, Saxony
+ and other parts of Germany, of Holland, and of the Protestant
+ cantons of Switzerland, and the social condition of the
+ peasants in the greater part of France, _is very much higher
+ and happier, and very much more satisfactory, than that of
+ the peasants and operatives of England_; the condition of the
+ _poor_ in the North German, Swiss and Dutch _towns_, is as
+ remarkable a contrast to that of the poor of the _English
+ towns_ as can well be imagined; and that the condition of the
+ _poorer classes_ of Germany, Switzerland, Holland and France
+ is _rapidly improving_. The great _superiority_ of the
+ _preparation_ for life which a _poor man_ receives in those
+ countries I have mentioned, to that which a peasant or
+ operative receives _in England_, and the difference of the
+ social position of a poor man in those countries to that of
+ a peasant or operative in England, seem sufficient to explain
+ the difference which exists between the moral and social
+ condition of the poor of our own country and of the other
+ countries I have named. In Germany, Holland, and Switzerland,
+ a child begins its life in the society of parents who have
+ been educated and brought up for years in the company of
+ learned and gentlemanly professors, and in the society and
+ under the direction of a father who has been exercised in
+ military arts, and who has acquired the bearing, the clean and
+ orderly habits, and the taste for respectable attire, which
+ characterize the soldier. The children of these countries
+ spend the first six years of their lives in homes which
+ are well regulated. They are during this time accustomed to
+ orderly habits, to neat and clean clothes, and to ideas of the
+ value of instruction, of the respect due to the teachers,
+ and of the excellence of the schools, by parents who have, by
+ their training in early life, acquired such tastes and ideas
+ themselves. Each child at the age of six begins to attend a
+ school, which is perfectly clean, well ventilated, directed by
+ an able and well-educated gentleman, and superintended by the
+ religious ministers and by the inspectors of the Government.
+ Until the completion of its _fourteenth_ year, each child
+ continues regular daily attendance at one of these schools,
+ daily strengthening its habits of cleanliness and order,
+ learning the rudiments of useful knowledge, receiving the
+ principles of religion and morality, and gaining confirmed
+ health and physical energy by the exercise and drill of the
+ school playground. _No children are left idle in the streets
+ of the towns; no children are allowed to grovel in the
+ gutters; no children are allowed to make_ their appearance
+ at the schools dirty, or in ragged clothes; and the local
+ authorities are obliged to clothe all whose parents cannot
+ afford to clothe them. The children of the _poor_ of
+ Germany, Holland and Switzerland acquire stronger habits of
+ cleanliness, neatness and industry at the _primary_ schools,
+ than the children of the _small shopkeeping_ classes of
+ England do at the private schools of England; and they
+ leave the _primary schools_ of these countries _much better
+ instructed_ than those who leave our _middle class private
+ schools_. After having learnt reading, writing, arithmetic,
+ singing, geography, history and the Scriptures, the children
+ leave the schools, carrying with them into life habits of
+ cleanliness, neatness, order and industry, and awakened
+ intellect, capable of collecting truths and reasoning upon
+ them."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE.]
+
+SUMMER PASTIME.
+
+ Do you ask how I'd amuse me
+ When the long bright summer comes,
+ And welcome leisure woos me
+ To shun life's crowded homes;
+ To shun the sultry city,
+ Whose dense, oppressive air
+ Might make one weep with pity
+ For those who must be there.
+
+ I'll tell you then--I would not
+ To foreign countries roam,
+ As though my fancy could not
+ Find occupance at home;
+ Nor to home-haunts of fashion
+ Would I, least of all, repair,
+ For guilt, and pride, and passion,
+ Have summer-quarters there.
+
+ Far, far from watering-places
+ Of note and name I'd keep,
+ For there would vapid faces
+ Still throng me in my sleep;
+ Then contact with the foolish,
+ The arrogant, the vain,
+ The meaningless--the mulish,
+ Would sicken heart and brain.
+
+ No--I'd seek some shore of ocean
+ Where nothing comes to mar
+ The ever-fresh commotion
+ Of sea and land at war;
+ Save the gentle evening only
+ As it steals along the deep,
+ So spirit-like and lonely,
+ To still the waves to sleep.
+
+ There long hours I'd spend in viewing
+ The elemental strife,
+ My soul the while subduing
+ With the littleness of life;
+ Of life, with all its paltry plans,
+ Its conflicts and its cares--
+ The feebleness of all that's man's--
+ The might that's God's and theirs!
+
+ And when eve came I'd listen
+ To the stilling of that war,
+ Till o'er my head should glisten
+ The first pure silver star;
+ Then, wandering homeward slowly,
+ I'd learn my heart the tune
+ Which the dreaming billows lowly,
+ Were murmuring to the moon!
+
+R.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+True genius is perpetual youth, health, serenity, and strength. The
+eye is bright with a fine fire that is undimmed by time, and the mind,
+not sharing the body's decline from the prime of middle age, continues
+on with illimitable accession of spiritual power.
+
+Our convictions should be based on conceptions got from insight of
+principles, and not upon opinions spawned of authority and expediency.
+Every man shall influence me, no man can decide for me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE SPIRIT OF THE TIMES]
+
+REMINISCENCES OF SARGENT S. PRENTISS, OF MISSISSIPPI.
+
+BY T.B. THORPE.
+
+AUTHOR OF "TOM OWEN, THE BEE HUNTER."
+
+The death of Sargeant S. Prentiss has called forth an universal
+feeling of sorrow; the consciousness that "a great man has fallen" is
+depicted upon the faces of the multitude.
+
+The eloquent offerings to his virtues and to his genius that
+everywhere follow the news of his demise, are but slight tokens of
+that sorrow that fills the heart of all who knew the gifted Prentiss.
+Having known him long, and having had frequent occasions to witness
+exhibitions of his great mental powers, I cannot refrain from paying
+an imperfect tribute to his memory.
+
+I first met Mr. Prentiss when he was in the full maturity of his
+power, but I have the pleasure of knowing hundreds who were well
+acquainted with his early history and early triumphs. Volumes of
+interest might be written upon the life of Mr. Prentiss. And then
+his high sense of honor, his brave spirit, his nobleness of soul, his
+intense but commendable pride, his classical attainments, and his deep
+knowledge of the law, can scarcely be illustrated, so universal and
+superior were his accomplishments and acquirements.
+
+In his early career, I consider Mr. Prentiss both fortunate and
+unfortunate. I have often imagined the shrinking but proud boy, living
+unnoticed and unknown among the wealthiest citizens of the south.
+Buried in the obscurity of his humble school, he looked out upon the
+busy world, and measured the mighty capacities of his own soul with
+those whom society had placed above him. I think I see him brooding
+over his position, and longing to be free, as the suffocating man
+longs for the boundless air of heaven. His hour of triumph came,
+and surpassed, perhaps, his own aspirations. From the schoolroom he
+entered that of the court--a chance offered--a position gained--the
+law his theme, he at once not only equaled, but soared even beyond the
+aim of the most favored of his compeers.
+
+The era was one of extravagance. The virgin soil of Mississippi was
+pouring into the laps of her generous sons untold abundance. There
+were thousands of her citizens, full of health and talent, who adorned
+excesses of living by the tasteful procurements of wealth, and the
+highest accomplishments of mind. Into this world Prentiss entered,
+heralded by naught save his own genius. The heirs of princely
+fortunes, the descendants of heroes, men of power and place, of family
+pride, of national associations, were not more proud, more gallant,
+than was Prentiss, for "he was reckoned among the noblest Romans of
+them all."
+
+Each step in his new fortune seemed only to elicit new qualities
+for admiration. At the forum he dazzled--the jury and the judge were
+confounded--the crowd carried him to the stump, and the multitude
+listened as to one inspired. Fair ladies vied with each other in
+waving tiny hands in token of admiration--the stolid judges of the
+Supreme Court wondered at the mind of the apparent boy--even the walls
+of Congress echoed forth pæans to his praise. His course was as rapid
+and brilliant as that of the meteor that suddenly springs athwart the
+heavens, but he was human and accomplished his task, herculean as he
+was, at the price of an injured constitution.
+
+In personal appearance Prentiss was eminently handsome, and yet
+eminently manly. Although of medium height, there was that in the
+carriage of his head that was astonishingly impressive. I shall never
+forget him on one occasion, "in '44," when he rose at a public meeting
+to reply to an antagonist worthy of his steel. His whole soul was
+roused, his high smooth forehead fairly coruscated. He remained silent
+for some seconds, and only _looked_. The bald eagle never glanced
+so fiercely from his eyry. It seemed as if his deep blue eye would
+distend until it swallowed up the thousands of his audience. For an
+instant the effect was painful; he saw it and smiled, when a cheer
+burst from the admiring multitude that fairly shook the earth.
+
+His voice was clear and sweet, and could be heard at an immense
+distance, and yet, to be all like Demosthenes, he had a perceptible
+impediment in his speech. As a reader he had no superior. His
+narration was clear and unadorned, proper sentences were subduedly
+humorous, but the impressive parts were delivered with an effect that
+reminded me of the elder Kean.
+
+His imagination was unsurpassed, and the rich stores of his mind
+supplied him with never-ending material, quoted and original.
+The slightest allusion to anything gave him the key to all its
+peculiarities if he had occasion to allude to the diamond, its bed in
+the Golconda, its discovery by some poor native, its being associated
+with commerce, its polish by the lapidary, its adorning the neck
+of beauty, its rays brilliant and serene, its birth, its life,
+its history, all flashed upon him. So with every idea in the vast
+storehouse of his mind. He seemed to know all things, in mass and in
+particulars, never confused, never at a loss--the hearer listened,
+wondered, and dreamed. Thoughts of moment came forth as demanded, but
+ten thousand other thoughts rare and beautiful, continued to bubble
+up, after all effort ceased.
+
+No man had a more delicate or subtle wit than Prentiss, or a more
+Falstaffian humor when it suited his purpose. Who will ever forget the
+spending of a social dinner hour with him, when his health was high
+and his mind at ease? Who so lovely?--who so refined? What delight
+was exhibited by sweet ladies who listened to his words! Who could
+so eloquently discourse of roses and buds, of lilies and pearls, of
+eyes and graces, of robes and angels, and yet never offend the most
+sensitive of the sex, or call other than the blush of pleasure and
+joy to the cheek? Who could, on the "public day," ascend so gracefully
+from the associations of tariffs, and banks, and cotton, and sugar,
+to greet the fair ladies that honored him with their presence? How
+he would lean toward them, as he dwelt upon "the blessed of all God's
+handiwork," compared their bright eyes to "day-stars" that lit up the
+dark recesses of his own clouded imagination; and how he would revel,
+like another Puck, among the rays and beams of smiles called forth by
+his own happy compliments--and how he would change from all this, and
+in an instant seemingly arm himself with the thunderbolts of Jove,
+which he would dash with appalling sound among his antagonists, or at
+principles he opposed, and yet with such a charm, with such a manner,
+that these very daughters of the sunny South who had listened to his
+syren-song so admiringly, would now stare, and wonder, and pallor, and
+yet listen, even as one gazes over the precipice, and is fascinated at
+the very nearness to destruction.
+
+Prentiss had originally a constitution of iron; his frame was so
+perfect in its organization, that, in spite of the most extraordinary
+negligence of health, his muscles had all the compactness, glossiness,
+and distinctiveness of one who had specially trained by diet and
+exercise. It was this constitution that enabled him to accomplish
+so much in so short a time. He could almost wholly discard sleep for
+weeks, with apparent impunity; he could eat or starve; do anything
+that would kill ordinary men, yet never feel a twinge of pain. I
+saw him once amidst a tremendous political excitement; he had been
+talking, arguing, dining, visiting, and traveling, without rest for
+three whole days. His companions would steal away at times for sleep,
+but Prentiss was like an ever-busy spirit, here, and there, and
+everywhere. The morning of the fourth day came, and he was to appear
+before an audience familiar with his fame, but one that had never
+heard him speak; an audience critical in the last degree, he desired
+to succeed, for more was depending than he had ever before had cause
+to stake upon such an occasion. Many felt a fear that he would be
+unprepared. I mingled in the expecting crowd: I saw ladies who had
+never honored the stump with their presence struggling for seats,
+counselors, statesmen, and professional men, the elite of a great
+city, were gathered together. An hour before I had seen Prentiss,
+still apparently ignorant of his engagement.
+
+The time of trial came, and the remarkable man presented himself,
+the very picture of buoyant health, of unbroken rest. All this had
+been done _by the unyielding resolve of his will_--his triumph was
+complete; high-wrought expectations were more than realized, prejudice
+was demolished, professional jealousy silenced, and he descended from
+the rostrum, freely accorded his proper place among the orators and
+statesmen of the "Southern Metropolis."
+
+Mr. Clay visited the South in the fall of '44, and, as he was
+then candidate for the Presidency, he attracted in New Orleans, if
+possible, more than usual notice. His hotel was the St. Charles;
+toward noon he reached that magnificent palace. The streets presented
+a vast ocean of heads, and every building commanding a view was
+literally covered with human beings. The great "Statesman of the West"
+presented himself to the multitude between the tall columns of the
+finest portico in the world. The scene was beyond description, and of
+vast interest. As the crowd swayed to and fro, a universal shout was
+raised for Mr. Clay to speak; he uttered a sentence or two, waved his
+hand in adieu, and escaped amidst the prevailing confusion. Prentiss
+meanwhile was at a side window, evidently unconscious of being himself
+noticed, gazing upon what was passing with all the delight of the
+humblest spectator. Suddenly his name was announced. He attempted to
+withdraw from public gaze, but his friends pushed him forward. Again
+his name was shouted, hats and caps were thrown in the air, and he
+was finally compelled to show himself on the portico. With remarkable
+delicacy, he chose a less prominent place than that previously
+occupied by Mr. Clay, although perfectly visible. He thanked his
+friends for their kindness by repeated bows, and by such smiles as he
+alone could give. "A speech! A speech!" thundered a thousand voices.
+Prentiss lifted his hand; in an instant everything was still--then
+pointing to the group that surrounded Mr. Clay, he said,
+"Fellow-citizens, when the eagle is soaring in the sky, the owls
+and the bats retire to their holes." And long before the shout that
+followed this remark had ceased, Prentiss had disappeared amid the
+multitude.
+
+But the most extraordinary exhibition of Prentiss' powers of mind and
+endurance of body, was shown while he was running for Congress. He
+had the whole State to canvass, and the magnitude of the work was just
+what he desired. From what I have learned from anecdotes, that canvass
+must have presented some scenes combining the highest mental and
+physical exertion that was ever witnessed in the world. Prentiss was
+in perfect health, and in the first blush of success, and it cannot be
+doubted but that his best efforts of oratory were then made, and now
+live recorded only in the fading memories of his hearers. An incident
+illustrative of the time is remembered, that may hear repeating.
+
+The whole state of Mississippi was alive with excitement; for the
+moment, she felt that her sovereign dignity had been trifled with,
+and that her reputation demanded the return of Prentiss to Congress.
+Crowds followed him from place to place, making a gala time of weeks
+together. Among the shrewd worldlings who take advantage of such times
+"to coin money," was the proprietor of a traveling menagerie, and he
+soon found out that the multitude followed Prentiss. Getting the list
+of that remarkable man's "appointments," he filled up his own, and it
+was soon noticed as a remarkable coincidence, that the orator always
+"arrived along with the other 'lions.'" The reason of this meeting was
+discovered, and the "boys" decided that Prentiss should "next time"
+speak from the top of the lion's cage. Never was the menagerie more
+crowded. At the proper time, the candidate gratified his constituents,
+and mounted his singular rostrum. I was told by a person, who
+professed to be an eye witness, that the whole affair presented a
+singular mixture of the terrible and the comical. Prentiss was, as
+usual, eloquent, and, as if ignorant of the novel circumstances with
+which he was surrounded, went deeply into the matter in hand, his
+election. For a while the audience and the animals were quiet, the
+former listening, the latter eyeing the speaker with grave intensity.
+The first burst of applause electrified the menagerie; the elephant
+threw his trunk into the air and echoed back the noise, while the
+tigers and bears significantly growled. On went Prentiss, and as each
+peculiar animal vented his rage or approbation, he most ingeniously
+wrought in its habits, as a facsimile of some man or passion. In the
+meanwhile, the stately king of beasts, who had been quietly treading
+the mazes of his prison, became alarmed at the footsteps over
+his head, and placing his mouth upon the floor of his cage, made
+everything shake by his terrible roar. This, joined with the already
+excited feelings of the audience, caused the ladies to shriek, and
+a fearful commotion for a moment followed. Prentiss, equal to every
+occasion, changed his tone and manner; he commenced a playful strain,
+and introduced the fox, the jackal, and hyena, and capped the climax
+by likening some well known political opponent to a grave baboon that
+presided over the "cage with monkeys"; the resemblance was instantly
+recognized, and bursts of laughter followed, that literally set many
+into convulsions. The baboon, all unconscious of the attention he
+was attracting, suddenly assumed a grimace, and then a serious face,
+when Prentiss exclaimed--"I see, my fine fellow, that your feelings
+are hurt by my unjust comparison, and I humbly beg your pardon."
+The effect of all this may be vaguely imagined, but it cannot be
+described.
+
+Of Prentiss' power before a jury too much cannot be said. Innumerable
+illustrations might be gathered up, showing that he far surpassed
+any living advocate. "The trial of the Wilkinsons" might be cited,
+although it was far from being one of his best efforts. Two young men,
+only sons, and deeply attached as friends, quarreled, and in the mad
+excitement of the moment, one of them was killed. Upon the trial, the
+testimony of the mother of the deceased was so direct, that it seemed
+to render "the clearing of the prisoner" hopeless. Prentiss spoke to
+the witness in the blandest manner and most courtly style. The mother,
+arrayed in weeds, and bowed down with sorrow, turned toward Prentiss,
+and answered his inquiries with all the dignity of a perfectly
+accomplished lady--she calmly uttered the truth, and every word she
+spoke rendered the defense apparently more hopeless.
+
+"Would you punish that young man with death?" said Prentiss, pointing
+to the prisoner.
+
+The questioned looked, and answered--"He has made me childless, let
+the law take its course."
+
+"And would wringing his mother's heart and hurrying her gray hairs
+with sorrow into the grave, by rendering her childless, assuage your
+grief?"
+
+All present were dissolved in tears--even convulsive sobbing was heard
+in the courtroom.
+
+"No!" said the witness, with all the gushing tenderness of a
+mother--"No! I would not add a sorrow to her heart, nor that of her
+son!"
+
+Admissions in the evidence followed, and hopes were uttered for
+the prisoner's acquittal, that changed the whole character of the
+testimony. What was a few moments before so dark, grew light, and
+without the slightest act that might be construed into an unfair
+advantage, in the hands of Prentiss, the witness pleaded for the
+accused.
+
+Soon after Mr. Prentiss settled in New Orleans, a meeting was held
+to raise funds for the erection of a suitable monument to Franklin.
+On that occasion, the lamented Wilde and the accomplished McCaleb
+delivered ornate and chaste addresses upon the value of art, and the
+policy of enriching New Orleans with its exhibition. At the close
+of the meeting, as the audience rose to depart, some one discovered
+Prentiss, and calling his name, it was echoed from all sides--he tried
+to escape, but was literally carried on the stand.
+
+As a rich specimen of off-hand eloquence, I think the address he
+delivered on that occasion was unequaled. Unlike any other speech,
+he had the arts to deal with, and of course the associations were of
+surpassing splendor. I knew that he was ignorant of the technicalities
+of art, and had paid but little attention to their study, and my
+surprise was unbounded to see him, thus unexpectedly called upon,
+instantly arrange in his mind ideas, and expressing facts and
+illustrations that would have done honor to Burke, when dwelling upon
+the sublime and beautiful. Had he been bred to the easel, or confined
+to the sculptor's room, he could not have been more familiar with the
+details of the studio--he painted with all the brilliancy of Titian,
+and with the correctness of Raphael, while his images in marble
+combined the softness of Praxiteles, and the nervous energy of Michael
+Angelo. All this with Prentiss was intuition--I believe that the whole
+was the spontaneous thought of the moment, the crude outlines that
+floated through his mind being filled up by the intuitive teachings of
+his surpassing genius. His conclusion was gorgeous--he passed Napoleon
+to the summit of the Alps--his hearers saw him and his steel clad
+warriors threading the snows of Mount St. Bernard, and having gained
+the dizzy height, Prentiss represented "the man of destiny" looking
+down upon the sunny plains of Italy, and then with a mighty swoop,
+descending from the clouds and making the grasp of Empire secondary to
+that of Art.
+
+I had the melancholy pleasure of hearing his last, and, it would seem
+to me, his greatest speech. Toward the close of the last Presidential
+campaign, I found him in the interior of the State, endeavoring
+to recruit his declining health. He had been obliged to avoid all
+public speaking, and had gone far into the country to get away from
+excitement. But there was a "gathering" near by his temporary home,
+and he consented to be present. It was late in the evening when
+he ascended the "stand," which was supported by the trunks of two
+magnificent forest trees, through which the setting sun poured with
+picturesque effect. The ravages of ill health were apparent upon his
+face, and his high massive forehead was paler, and seemingly more
+transparent than usual. His audience, some three or four hundred, was
+composed in a large degree of his old and early friends. He seemed to
+feel deeply, and as there was nothing to oppose, he assumed the style
+of the mild and beautiful--he casually alluded to the days of his
+early coming among his Southern friends--of hours of pleasure he had
+massed, and of the hopes of the future. In a few moments the bustle
+and confusion natural to a fatiguing day of political wrangling
+ceased--one straggler after another suspended his noisy demonstration,
+and gathered near the speaker. Soon a mass of silent but heart-heaving
+humanity was crowded compactly before him. Had Prentiss, on that
+occasion, held the very heart-strings of his auditors in his hand, he
+could not have had them more in his power. For an hour he continued,
+rising from one important subject to another, until the breath was
+fairly suspended in the excitement. An uninterested spectator would
+have supposed that he had used sorcery in thus transfixing his
+auditors. While all others forgot, he noticed the day was drawing to a
+close, he turned and looked toward the setting sun, and apostrophized
+its fading glory--then in his most touching voice and manner,
+concluded as follows:--
+
+"Friends--That glorious orb reminds me that the day is spent, and
+that I too must close. Ere we part, let me hope that it may be our
+good fortune to end our days in the same splendor, and that when the
+evening of life comes, we may sink to rest with the clouds that close
+in on our departure, gold-tipped with the glorious effulgence of a
+well-spent life!"
+
+In conclusion, I would ask, will some historian, who can sympathize
+with the noble dead, gather up the now fleeting memorials that still
+live in memory, and combine them together, that future generations may
+know something of the mighty mind of Prentiss.
+
+The remains of the orator must ever be imperfect--the tone of
+voice--the flashing eye--the occasion, and the mighty shout of the
+multitude, cannot be impressed; but still Prentiss has left enough
+in his brilliant career, if treasured up, to show posterity that he
+was every inch a man. Let his fragmentary printed speeches--let the
+reminiscences of his friends that treat of his power as an orator,
+be brought together, and unsatisfactory as they may be, there will
+be found left intrinsic value enough to accomplish the object. There
+will be in the fluted column, though shattered and defaced, an Ionian
+beauty that will tell unerringly of the magnificent temple that it
+once adorned.
+
+BATON ROUGE, July 9, 1850.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM HOUSEHOLD WORDS.]
+
+THE CHEMISTRY OF A CANDLE.
+
+The Wilkinsons were having a small party,--it consisted of themselves
+and Uncle Bagges--at which the younger members of the family, home
+for the holidays, had been just admitted to assist after dinner. Uncle
+Bagges was a gentleman from whom his affectionate relatives cherished
+expectations of a testamentary nature. Hence the greatest attention
+was paid by them to the wishes of Mr. Bagges, as well as to every
+observation which he might be pleased to make.
+
+"Eh! what? you sir," said Mr. Bagges, facetiously addressing himself
+to his eldest nephew, Harry,--"Eh! what? I am glad to hear, sir, that
+you are doing well at school. Now--eh? now, are you clever enough to
+tell where was Moses when he put the candle out?"
+
+"That depends, uncle," said the young gentleman, "on whether he had
+lighted the candle to see with at night, or by daylight, to seal a
+letter."
+
+"Eh! Very good, now! 'Pon my word, very good," exclaimed Uncle Bagges.
+"You must be Lord Chancellor, sir--Lord Chancellor, one of these
+days."
+
+"And now, uncle," asked Harry, who was a favorite with his uncle, "can
+you tell me what you do when you put a candle out?"
+
+"Clap an extinguisher on it, you young rogue, to be sure."
+
+"Oh! but I mean, you cut off its supply of oxygen," said Master Harry.
+
+"Cut off its ox's--eh? what? I shall cut off your nose, you young dog,
+one of these fine days."
+
+"He means something he heard at the Royal Institution," observed Mrs.
+Wilkinson. "He reads a great deal about chemistry, and he attended
+Professor Faraday's lectures there on the chemical history of a
+candle, and has been full of it ever since."
+
+"Now, you sir," said Uncle Bagges, "come you here to me, and tell
+me what you have to say about this chemical, eh?--or comical:
+which?--this comical chemical history of a candle."
+
+"He'll bore you, Bagges," said Mr. Wilkinson. "Harry, don't be
+troublesome to your uncle."
+
+"Troublesome! Oh, not at all. He amuses me. I like to hear him. So let
+him teach his old uncle the comicality and chemicality of a farthing
+rushlight."
+
+"A wax candle will be nicer and cleaner, uncle, and answer the same
+purpose. There's one on the mantel-shelf. Let me light it.
+
+"Take care you don't burn your fingers, Or set anything on fire," said
+Mrs. Wilkinson.
+
+"Now, uncle," commenced Harry, having drawn his chair to the side of
+Mr. Bagges, "we have got our candle burning. What do you see?"
+
+"Let me put on my spectacles," answered the uncle.
+
+"Look down on the top of the candle around the wick. See, it is a
+little cup full of melted wax. The heat of the flame has melted the
+wax just round the wick. The cold air keeps the outside of it hard,
+so as to make the rim of it. The melted wax in the little cup goes up
+through the wick to be burnt, just as oil does in the wick of a lamp.
+What do you think makes it go up, uncle?"
+
+"Why--why, the flame draws it up, doesn't it?"
+
+"Not exactly, uncle. It goes up through little tiny passages in the
+cotton wick, because very, very small channels, or pipes, or pores,
+have the power in themselves of sucking up liquids. What they do it by
+is called cap--something."
+
+"Capillary attraction, Harry," suggested Mr. Wilkinson.
+
+"Yes, that's it; just as a sponge sucks up water, or a bit of
+lump-sugar the little drop of tea or coffee left in the bottom of a
+cup. But I mustn't say much more about this, or else you will tell me
+I am doing something very much like teaching my grandmother to--you
+know what."
+
+"Your grandmother, eh, young sharp-shins?"
+
+"No--I mean my uncle. Now, I'll blow the candle out, like Moses; not
+to be in the dark, though, but to see into what it is. Look at the
+smoke rising from the wick. I'll hold a bit of lighted paper in the
+smoke, so as not to touch the wick. But see, for all that, the candle
+lights again. So this shows that the melted wax sucked up through
+the wick is turned into vapor; and the vapor burns. The heat of the
+burning vapor keeps on melting more wax, and that is sucked up too
+within the flame, and turned into vapor, and burnt, and so on till the
+was is all used up, and the candle is gone. So the flame, uncle, you
+see, is the last of the candle, and the candle seems to go through the
+flame into nothing--although it doesn't, but goes into several things,
+and isn't it curious, as Professor Faraday said, that the candle
+should look so splendid and glorious in going away?"
+
+"How well he remembers, doesn't he?" observed Mrs. Wilkinson.
+
+"I dare say," proceeded Harry, "that the flame of the candle looks
+flat to you; but if we were to put a lamp glass over it, so as
+to shelter it from the draught, you would see it is round,--round
+sideways and running up to a peak. It is drawn up by the hot air; you
+know that hot air always rises, and that is the way smoke is taken up
+the chimney. What should you think was in the middle of the flame?"
+
+"I should say fire," replied Uncle Bagges.
+
+"Oh, no! The flame is hollow. The bright flame we see is something
+no thicker than a thin peel, or skin; and it doesn't touch the wick.
+Inside of it is the vapor I told you of just now. If you put one end
+of a bent pipe into the middle of the flame, and let the other end of
+the pipe dip into a bottle, the vapor or gas from the candle will mix
+with the air there; and if you set fire to the mixture of gas from the
+candle and air in the bottle, it would go off with a bang."
+
+"I wish you'd do that, Harry," said Master Tom, the younger brother of
+the juvenile lecturer.
+
+"I want the proper things," answered Harry. "Well, uncle, the flame
+of the candle is a little shining case, with gas in the inside of it,
+and air on the outside, so that the case of flame is between the air
+and the gas. The gas keeps going into the flame to burn, and when the
+candle burns properly, none of it ever passes out through the flame;
+and none of the air ever gets in through the flame to the gas. The
+greatest heat of the candle is in this skin, or peel, or case of
+flame."
+
+"Case of flame!" repeated Mr. Bagges. "Live and learn. I should have
+thought a candle-flame was as thick as my poor old noddle."
+
+"I can show you the contrary," said Harry. "I take this piece of white
+paper, look, and hold it a second or two down upon the candle-flame,
+keeping the flame very steady. Now I'll rub off the black of the
+smoke, and--there--you find that the paper is scorched in the shape
+of a ring; but inside the ring it is only dirtied, and not singed at
+all."
+
+"Seeing is believing," remarked the uncle.
+
+"But," proceeded Harry, "there is more in the candle-flame than the
+gas that comes out of the candle. You know a candle won't burn without
+air. There must be always air around the gas, and touching it like, to
+make it burn. If a candle hasn't got enough air, it goes out, or burns
+badly, so that some of the vapor inside of the flame comes out through
+it in the form of smoke, and this is the reason of a candle smoking.
+So now you know why a great clumsy dip smokes more than a neat wax
+candle; it is because the thick wick of the dip makes too much fuel in
+proportion to the air that can get to it."
+
+"Dear me! Well, I suppose there is a reason for everything," exclaimed
+the young philosopher's mamma.
+
+"What should you say now," continued Harry, "if I told you that the
+smoke that comes out of a candle is the very thing that makes a candle
+light? Yes; a candle shines by consuming its own smoke. The smoke of
+a candle is a cloud of small dust, and the little grains of the dust
+are bits of charcoal, or carbon, as chemists call it. They are made in
+the flame, and burnt in the flame, and, while burning, make the flame
+bright. They are burnt the moment they are made; but the flame goes on
+making more of them as fast as it burns them: and that is how it keeps
+bright. The place they are made in, is in the ease of flame itself,
+where the strong heat is. The great heat separates them from the gas
+which conies from the melted wax, and, as soon as they touch the air
+on the outside of the thin case of flame, they burn."
+
+"Can you tell how it is that the little bits of carbon came the
+brightness of the flame?" asked Mr. Wilkinson.
+
+"Because they are pieces of solid matter," answered Harry. "To make
+a flame shine, there must always be some solid--or at least
+liquid-matter in it."
+
+"Very good." said Mr. Bagges,--"solid stuff necessary to brightness."
+
+"Some gases and other things," resumed Harry, "that burn with a
+flame you can hardly see, burn splendidly when something solid is
+put into them. Oxygen and hydrogen--tell me if I use too hard words,
+uncle--oxygen and hydrogen gases, if mixed together and blown through
+a pipe, burn with plenty of heat but with very little light. But if
+their flame is blown upon a piece of quick-lime, it gets so bright
+as to be quite dazzling, Make the smoke of oil of turpentine pass
+through the same flame, and it gives the flame a beautiful brightness
+directly."
+
+"I wonder," observed Uncle Bagges, "what has made you such a bright
+youth."
+
+"Taking after uncle, perhaps," retorted his nephew. "Don't put my
+candle and me out. Well, carbon, or charcoal is what causes the
+brightness of all lamps, and candles, and other common lights; so, of
+course, there is carbon in what they are all made of."
+
+"So carbon is smoke, eh? and light is owing to your carbon. Giving
+light out of smoke, eh? as they say in the classics," observed Mr.
+Bagges.
+
+"But what becomes of the candle," pursued Harry, "as it burns away?
+where does it go?"
+
+"Nowhere," said his mamma, "I should think. It burns to nothing."
+
+"Oh, dear, no!" said Harry, "everything--everybody goes somewhere."
+
+"Eh!--rather an important consideration, that," Mr. Bagges moralized.
+
+"You can see it goes into smoke, which makes soot, for one thing,"
+pursued Harry. "There are other things it goes into, not to be seen
+by only looking, but you can get to see them by taking the right
+means,--just put your hand over the candle, uncle."
+
+"Thank you, young gentleman, I had rather be excused."
+
+"Not close enough down to burn you, uncle; higher up. There--you
+feel a stream of hot air; so something seems to rise from the candle.
+Suppose you were to put a very long slender gas-burner over the flame,
+and let the flame burn just within the end of it, as if it were a
+chimney,--some of the hot steam would go up and come out at the top,
+but a sort of dew would be left behind in the glass chimney, if
+the chimney was cold enough when you put it on. There are ways of
+collecting this sort of dew, and when it is collected it turns out to
+be really water. I am not joking, uncle. Water is one of the things
+which the candle turns into in burning,--water coming out of fire. A
+jet of oil gives above a pint of water in burning. In some lighthouses
+they burn, Professor Faraday says, up to two gallons of oil in a
+night, and if the windows are cold the steam from the oil clouds the
+inside of the windows, and, in frosty weather, freezes into ice."
+
+"Water out of a candle, eh?" exclaimed Mr. Bagges. "As hard to get, I
+should have thought, as blood out of a post. Where does it come from?"
+
+"Part from the wax, and part from the air, and yet not a drop of
+it comes either from the air or the wax. What do you make of that,
+uncle?"
+
+"Eh? Oh! I'm no hand at riddles. Give it up."
+
+"No riddle at all, uncle. The part that comes from the wax isn't
+water, and the part that comes from the air isn't water, but when put
+together they become water. Water is a mixture of two things then.
+This can be shown. Put some iron wire or turnings into a gun barrel
+open at both ends. Heat the middle of the barrel red-hot in a little
+furnace. Keep the heat up, and send the steam of boiling water through
+the red-hot gun barrel. What will come out at the other end of the
+barrel won't be steam; it will be gas, which doesn't turn to water
+again when it gets cold, and which burns if you put a light to it.
+Take the turnings out of the gun-barrel, and you will find them
+changed to rust, and heavier than when they were put in. Part of the
+water is the gas that comes out of the barrel, the other part is what
+mixes with the iron turnings, and changes them to rust, and makes
+them heavier. You can fill a Wadder with the gas that comes out of
+the gun-barrel, or you can pass bubbles of it up into a jar of water
+turned upside down in a trough, and, as I said, you can make this part
+of the water burn."
+
+"Eh?" cried Mr. Bagges. "Upon my word! One of these day, we shall have
+you setting the Thames on fire."
+
+"Nothing more easy," said Harry, "than to burn part of the Thames, or
+of any other water; I mean the gas that I have just told you about,
+which is called hydrogen. In burning, hydrogen produces water again,
+like the flame of a candle. Indeed, hydrogen is that part of the water
+formed by a candle burning, that comes from the wax. All things that
+have hydrogen in them produce water in burning, and the more there
+is in them the more they produce. When pure hydrogen burns, nothing
+comes from it but water, no smoke or soot at all. If you were to burn
+one ounce of it, the water you would get would be just nine ounces.
+There are many ways of making hydrogen besides out of steam by the
+hot gun-barrel. I could show it you in a moment by pouring a little
+sulphuric acid mixed with water into a bottle upon a few zinc or steel
+filings, and putting a cork in the bottle with a little pipe through
+it, and setting fire to the gas that would come from the mouth of
+the pipe. We should find the flame very hot, but having scarcely
+any brightness. I should like you to see the curious qualities of
+hydrogen, particularly how light it is, so as to carry things up in
+the air; and I wish I had a small balloon to fill with it, and make go
+up to the ceiling, or a bag-pipe full of it to blow soap-bubbles with,
+and show how much faster they rise than common ones, blown with the
+breath."
+
+"So do I," interposed Master Tom.
+
+"And so," resumed Harry, "hydrogen, you know, uncle, is part of water,
+and just one-ninth part."
+
+"As hydrogen is to water, so is a tailor to an ordinary individual,
+eh?" Mr. Bagges remarked.
+
+"Well, now then, uncle, if hydrogen is the tailor's part of the
+water, what are the other eight parts? The iron turnings used to make
+hydrogen in the gun-barrel, and rusted, take just those eight parts
+from the water in the shape of steam, and are so much the heavier.
+Burn iron turnings in the air, and they make the same rust, and gain
+just the same in weight. So the other eight parts must be found in the
+air for one thing, and in the rusted iron turnings for another, and
+they must also be in the water; and now the question is, how to get at
+them?"
+
+"Out of the water? Fish for them, I should say," suggested Mr. Bagges.
+
+"Why, so we can," said Harry. "Only, instead of hooks and lines, we
+must use wires--two wires, one from one end, the other from the other,
+of a galvanic battery. Put the points of these wires into water, a
+little distance apart, and they instantly take the water to pieces.
+If they are of copper, or a metal that will rust easily, one of them
+begins to rust, and air-bubbles come up from the other. These bubbles
+are hydrogen. The other part of the water mixes with the end of the
+wire and makes rust. But if the wires are of gold, or a metal that
+does not rust easily, air-bubbles rise from the ends of both wires.
+Collect the bubbles from both wires in a tube, and fire them, and they
+turn to water again; and this water is exactly the same weight as the
+quantity that has been changed into the two gases. Now then, uncle,
+what should you think water was composed of?"
+
+"Eh? well--I suppose of those very identical two gases, young
+gentleman."
+
+"Right, uncle. Recollect that the gas from one of the wires was
+hydrogen, the one-ninth of water. What should you guess the gas from
+the other wire to be?"
+
+"Stop--eh?--wait a bit--eh?--oh! why, the other eight-ninths, to be
+sure."
+
+"Good again, uncle. Now this gas that is eight-ninths of water is the
+gas called oxygen that I mentioned just now. This is a very curious
+gas. It won't burn in air at all itself, like gas from a lamp, but it
+has a wonderful power of making things burn that are lighted and put
+into it. If you fill a jar with it--"
+
+"How do you manage that?" Mr. Bagges inquired.
+
+"You fill the jar with water," answered Harry, "and you stand it
+upside down in a vessel full of water too. Then you let bubbles of the
+gas up into the jar, and they turn out the water and take its place.
+Put a stopper in the neck of the jar, or hold a glass plate against
+the mouth of it, and you can take it out of the water and so have
+bottled oxygen. A lighted candle put into a jar of oxygen blazes up
+directly, and is consumed before you can say Jack Robinson. Charcoal
+burns away in it as fast, with beautiful bright sparks--phosphorus
+with a light that dazzles you to look at--and a piece of iron or steel
+just made red-hot at the end first, is burnt in oxygen quicker than
+a stick would be in common air. The experiment of burning things in
+oxygen beats any fire-works."
+
+"Oh, how jolly!" exclaimed Tom.
+
+"Now we see, uncle," Harry continued, "that water is hydrogen and
+oxygen united together, that water is got wherever hydrogen is burnt
+in common air, that a candle won't burn without air, and that when a
+candle burns there is hydrogen in it burning, and forming water. Now,
+then, where does the hydrogen of the candle get the oxygen from, to
+turn into water with it?"
+
+"From the air, eh?"
+
+"Just so. I can't stop to tell you of the other things which there is
+oxygen in, and the many beautiful and amusing ways of getting it. But
+as there is oxygen in the air, and as oxygen makes things burn at such
+a rate, perhaps you wonder why air does not make things burn as fast
+as oxygen. The reason is, that there is something else in the air that
+mixes with the oxygen and weakens it."
+
+"Makes a sort of gaseous grog of it, eh?" said Mr. Bagges. "But how is
+that proved?"
+
+"Why, there is a gas, called nitrous gas, which, if you mix it with
+oxygen, takes all the oxygen into itself, and the mixture of the
+nitrous gas and oxygen, if you put water with it, goes into the water.
+Mix nitrous gas and air together in a jar over water, and the nitrous
+gas takes away the oxygen, and then the water sucks up the mixed
+oxygen and nitrous gas, and that part of the air which weakens the
+oxygen is left behind. Burning phosphorus in confined air will also
+take all the oxygen from it, and there are other ways of doing the
+same thing. The portion of the air left behind is called nitrogen. You
+wouldn't know it from common air by the look; it has no color, taste,
+nor smell, and it won't burn. But things won't burn in it, either;
+and anything on fire put into it goes out directly. It isn't fit to
+breathe, and a mouse, or any animal, shut up in it, dies. It isn't
+poisonous, though; creatures only die in it for want of oxygen. We
+breathe it with oxygen, and then it does no harm, but good: for if
+we breathed pure oxygen, we should breathe away so violently, that
+we should soon breathe our life out. In the same way, if the air were
+nothing but oxygen, a candle would not last above a minute.
+
+"What a tallow-chandler's bill we should have!" remarked Mrs.
+Wilkinson.
+
+"'If a house were on fire in oxygen,' as Professor Faraday said,
+'every iron bar, or rafter, or pillar, every nail and iron tool,
+and the fire-place itself; all the zinc and copper roofs, and leaden
+coverings, and gutters, and pipes, would consume and burn, increasing
+the combustion.'"
+
+"That would be, indeed, burning 'like a house on fire,'" observed Mr.
+Bagges.
+
+"'Think,'" said Harry, continuing his quotation, "'of the Houses
+of Parliament, or a steam-engine manufactory. Think of an iron
+proof-chest no proof against oxygen. Think of a locomotive and its
+train,--every engine, every carriage, and even every rail would be set
+on fire and burnt up.' So now, uncle, I think you see what the use of
+nitrogen is, and especially how it prevents a candle from burning out
+too fast."
+
+"Eh?" said Mr. Bagges. "Well, I will say I do think we are under
+considerable obligations to nitrogen."
+
+"I have explained to you, uncle," pursued Harry, "how a candle, in
+burning, turns into water. But it turns into something else. besides
+that. There is a stream of hot air going up from it that won't
+condense into dew; some of that is the nitrogen of the air which the
+candle has taken all the oxygen from. But there is more in it than
+nitrogen. Hold a long glass tube over a candle, so that the stream
+of hot air from it may go up through the tube. Hold a jar over the
+end of the tube to collect some of the stream of hot air. Put some
+lime-water, which looks quite clear, into the jar; stop the jar,
+and shake it up. The lime-water, which was quite clear before, turns
+milky. Then there is something made by the burning of the candle that
+changes the color of the lime-water. That is a gas, too, and you can
+collect it, and examine it. It is to be got from several things,
+and is a part of all chalk, marble, and the shells of eggs or of
+shell-fish. The easiest way to make it is by pouring muriatic or
+sulphuric acid on chalk or marble. The marble or chalk begins to hiss
+or bubble, and you can collect the bubbles in the same way that you
+can oxygen. The gas made by the candle in burning, and which also is
+got out of the chalk and marble, is called carbonic acid. It puts out
+a light in a moment; it kills any animal that breathes it, and it is
+really poisonous to breathe, because it destroys life even when mixed
+with a pretty large quantity of common air. The bubbles made by beer
+when it ferments, are carbonic acid, so is the air that fizzes out of
+soda-water, and it is good to swallow though it is deadly to breathe.
+It is got from chalk by burning the chalk as well as by putting acid
+to it, and burning the carbonic acid out of chalk makes the chalk
+lime. This is why people are killed sometimes by getting in the way of
+the wind that blows from lime-kilns."
+
+"Of which it is advisable carefully to keep to the windward." Mr.
+Wilkinson observed.
+
+"The most curious thing about carbonic acid gas," proceeded Harry, "is
+its weight. Although it is only a sort of air, it is so heavy that
+you can pour it from one vessel into another. You may dip a cup of it
+and pour it down upon a candle, and it will put the candle out, which
+would astonish an ignorant person; because carbonic acid gas is as
+invisible as the air, and the candle seems to be put out by nothing. A
+soap-bubble or common air floats on it like wood on water. Its weight
+is what makes it collect in brewers' vats; and also in wells, where
+it is produced naturally; and owing to its collecting in such places
+it causes the deaths we so often hear about of those who go down into
+them without proper care. It is found in many springs of water, more
+or less; and a great deal of it comes out of the earth in some places.
+Carbonic acid gas is what stupefies the dogs in the Grotto del Cane.
+Well, but how is carbonic acid gas made by the candle?"
+
+"I hope with your candle you'll throw some light upon the subject,"
+said Uncle Bagges.
+
+"I hope so," answered Harry. "Recollect it is the burning of the
+smoke, or soot, or carbon of the candle, that makes the candle-flame
+bright. Also that the candle won't burn without air. Likewise that it
+will not burn in nitrogen, or air that has been deprived of oxygen.
+So the carbon of the candle mingles with oxygen, in burning, to make
+carbonic acid gas; just as the hydrogen does to form water. Carbonic
+acid gas, then, is carbon or charcoal dissolved in oxygen. Here is
+black soot getting invisible and changing into air; and this seems
+strange, uncle, doesn't it?"
+
+"Ahem! Strange, if true," answered Mr. Bagges. "Eh? Well! I suppose
+it's all right."
+
+"Quite so, uncle. Burn carbon or charcoal either in the air or in
+oxygen, and it is sure always to make carbonic acid, and nothing else,
+if it is dry. No dew or mist gathers in a cold glass jar if you burn
+dry charcoal in it. The charcoal goes entirely into carbonic acid gas,
+and leaves nothing behind but ashes, which are only earthy stuff that
+was in the charcoal, but not part of the charcoal itself. And now,
+shall I tell you something about carbon?"
+
+"With all my heart," assented Mr. Bagges.
+
+"I said that there was carbon or charcoal in all common lights, so
+there is in every common kind of fuel. If you heat coal or wood away
+from the air, some gas comes away, and leaves behind coke from coal,
+and charcoal from wood; both carbon, though not pure. Heat carbon
+as much as you will in a close vessel, and it does not change in the
+least; but let the air get to it, and then it burns and flies off in
+carbonic acid gas. This makes carbon so convenient for fuel. But it is
+ornamental as well as useful, uncle. The diamond is nothing else than
+carbon."
+
+"The diamond, eh! You mean the black diamond."
+
+"No: the diamond, really and truly. The diamond is only carbon in the
+shape of a crystal."
+
+"Eh? and can't some of your clever chemists crystalize a little bit of
+carbon, and make a Koh-i-noor?"
+
+"Ah, uncle, perhaps we shall, some day. In the mean time I suppose we
+must be content with making carbon so brilliant as it is in the flame
+of a candle. Well; now you see that a candle-flame is vapor burning,
+and the vapor, in burning, turns into water and carbonic acid gas. The
+oxygen of both the carbonic acid gas and the water comes from the air,
+and the hydrogen and carbon together are the vapor. They are distilled
+out of the melted was by the heat. But, you know, carbon alone can't
+be distilled by any heat. It can be distilled, though, when it is
+joined with hydrogen, as it is in the wax, and then the mixed hydrogen
+and carbon rise in gas of the same kind as the gas in the streets, and
+that also is distilled by heat from coal. So a candle is a little gas
+manufactory in itself, that burns the gas as fast as it makes it."
+
+"Haven't you pretty nearly come to your candle's end'!" said Mr.
+Wilkinson.
+
+"Nearly. I only want to tell uncle, that the burning of a candle is
+almost exactly like our breathing. Breathing is consuming oxygen,
+only not so fast as burning. In breathing we throw out water in vapor
+and carbonic acid from our lungs, and take oxygen in. Oxygen is as
+necessary to support the life of the body, as it is to keep up the
+flame of a candle."
+
+"So," said Mr. Bagges, "man is a candle, eh? and Shakspeare knew that,
+I suppose, (as he did most things,) when he wrote
+
+ 'Out, out, brief candle!'
+
+"Well, well; we old ones are moulds, and you young squires are dips
+and rushlights, eh? Any more to tell us about the candle?"
+
+"I could tell you a great deal more about oxygen, and hydrogen, and
+carbon, and water, and breathing, that Professor Faraday said, if I
+had time; but you should go and hear him yourself, uncle."
+
+"Eh? well! I think I will. Some of us seniors may learn something from
+a juvenile lecture, at any rate, if given by a Faraday. And now, my
+boy. I will tell you what," added Mr. Bagges, "I am very glad to find
+you so fond of study and science; and you deserve to be encouraged:
+and so I'll give you a what-d'ye-call-it'?--a Galvanic Battery, on
+your next birth-day; and so much for your teaching your old uncle the
+chemistry of a candle."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM A REVIEW OF GRISWOLD'S _PROSE WRITERS OF AMERICA_, IN THE
+SOUTHERN LITERARY MESSENGER.]
+
+DANIEL WEBSTER,
+
+AS A STATESMAN, AND AS A MAN OF LETTERS.
+
+Mr. Webster is properly selected as the representative of the
+best sense, and highest wisdom, and most consummate dignity, of
+the politics and oratory of the present times, because his great
+intelligence has continued to be so finely sensitive to all the
+influences that stir the action and speculation of the country.
+
+With elements of reason, definite, absolute, and emphatic; with
+principles settled, strenuous, deep and unchangeable as his being;
+his wisdom is yet exquisitely practical: with subtlest sagacity it
+apprehends every change in the circumstances in which it is to act,
+and can accommodate its action without loss of vigor, or alteration
+of its general purpose. Its theories always "lean and hearken" to
+the actual. By a sympathy of the mind, almost transcendental in
+its delicacy, its speculations are attracted into a parallelism
+with the logic of life and nature. In most men, that intellectual
+susceptibility by which they are capable of being reacted upon by the
+outer world, and having their principles and views expanded, modified
+or quickened, does not outlast the first period of life; from
+that time they remain fixed and rigid in their policy, temper and
+characteristics; if a new phase of society is developed, it must
+find its exponent in other men. But in Webster this fresh suggestive
+sensibility of the judgment has been carried on into the matured and
+determined wisdom of manhood. His perceptions, feelings, reasonings,
+tone, are always up to the level of the hour, or in advance of it;
+sometimes far, very far in advance, as in the views thrown out in his
+speech at Baltimore, on an international commercial system, in which
+he showed that he then foresaw both the fate of the tariff and the
+fallacy of free-trade. No man has ever been able to say, or now can
+say, that he is before Webster. The youngest men in the nation look to
+him, not as representing the past, but as leading in the future.
+
+This practicalness and readiness of adaptation are instinctive,
+not voluntary and designed. They are united with the most decided
+preference for certain opinions and the most earnest averseness to
+others. Nothing can be less like Talleyrand's system of waiting
+for events. He has never, in view of a change which he saw to be
+inevitable, held himself in reserve and uncommitted. What Webster is
+at any time, that he is strenuously, entirely, openly. He has first
+opposed, with every energy of his mind and temper, that which, when
+it has actually come, he is ready to accept, and make the best of. He
+never surrenders in advance a position which knows will be carried; he
+takes his place, and delivers battle; he fights as one who is fighting
+the last battle of his country's hopes; he fires the last shot. When
+the smoke and tumult are cleared off, where is Webster! Look around
+for the nearest rallying point which the view presents; there he
+stands, with his hand upon his heart, in grim composure; calm,
+dignified, resolute; neither disheartened nor surprised by defeat.
+"Leaving the things that are behind," is now the trumpet-sound by
+which he rallies his friends to a new confidence, and stimulates them
+to fresh efforts. It is obvious that Webster, when contending with
+all his force for or against some particular measure, has not been
+contemplating the probability of being compelled to oppose or defend a
+different policy, and, so, choosing his words warily, in reference to
+future possibilities of a personal kind: yet when the time has come
+that he has been obliged to fight with his face in another direction,
+it has always been found that no one principle had been asserted, no
+one sentiment displayed, incompatible with his new positions. This
+union of consistency with practicability has arisen naturally from
+the extent and comprehensiveness of his views, from the breadth and
+generality with which the analytical power of his understanding has
+always led him to state his principles and define his position. From
+the particular scheme or special maxim which his party was insisting
+upon, his mind rose to a higher and more general formula of truth.
+
+Owing to the same superior penetration and reach of thought, the gloom
+of successive repulses has never been able to paralyze the power
+which it has saddened. The constitution has been so often invaded
+and trampled upon, that to a common eye it might well seem to have
+lost all the resentments of vitality. But Webster has distinguished
+between the constitution and its administration. He has seen that the
+constitution, though in bondage, is not killed; that the channels
+of its life-giving wisdom are stuffed up with rubbish, but not
+obliterated. He has been determined that if the rulers of the country
+will deny the truth, they shall not debauch it; if they depart from
+the constitution, they shall not deprave it. He has been resolved,
+that when this tyranny of corruption shall be overpast, and the
+constitution draws again its own free breath of virtue, truth and
+wisdom, it shall be found perfect of limb and feature, prepared to
+rise like a giant refreshed by sleep.
+
+Mr. Griswold, we suppose, is quite right in suggesting that the only
+name in modern times to which reference can with any fitness be made
+for purposes of analogy or comparison with Webster is that of Burke.
+In many respects there is a correspondence between their characters;
+in some others they differ widely. As a prophet of the truth of
+political morals, as a revealer of those essential elements in the
+constitution of life, upon which, or of which, society is constructed
+and government evolved, Burke had no peer. In that department he rises
+into the distance and grandeur of inspiration; _nil mortote sonans_.
+Nor do we doubt that the Providence of God had raised him up for the
+purposes of public safety and guidance, any more than we doubt the
+mission of Jeremiah or Elisha, or any other of the school of the
+Lord's prophets. But leaving Burke unapproached in this region of
+the nature and philosophy of government, and looking at him, in his
+general career, as a man of intellect and action, we might indicate an
+analogy of this kind, that the character, temper and reason of Burke
+seem to be almost an image of the English constitution, and Webster's
+of the American. To get the key to Burke's somewhat irregular and
+startling career, it is necessary, to study the idea of the old whig
+constitution of the English monarchy: viewing his course from that
+point of view, we comprehend his almost countenancing and encouraging
+rebellion in the case of the American colonies; his intense hostility
+to Warren Hastings' imperial system; his unchastised earnestness
+in opposition to French maxims in the decline of his life. The
+constitution of the United States, that most wonderful of the
+emanations of providential wisdom, seems to be not only the home of
+Webster's affections and seat of his proudest hopes, but the very type
+of his understanding and fountain of his intellectual strength:
+
+ ----"hic illius arma;----
+ Hic currus."
+
+The genius of Burke, like the one, was inexhaustible in resources,
+so composite and so averse from theory as to appear incongruous, but
+justified in the result; not formal, not always entirely perspicuous.
+Webster's mind, like the other, is eminently logical, reduced
+into principles, orderly, distinct, reconciling abstraction with
+convenience, various in manifestation, yet pervaded by an unity of
+character.
+
+Mr. Webster has not merely illustrated a great range of mental powers
+and accomplishments, but has filled, in the eye of the nation, on a
+great scale, and to the farthest reach of their exigency, a diversity
+of intellectual characters; while the manner in which Burke's wisdom
+displayed itself was usually the same. We cannot suppose that Burke
+could have been a great lawyer. Webster possesses a consummate legal
+judgment and prodigious powers of legal logic, and is felt to be
+the highest authority on a great question of law in this country.
+The demonstrative faculty; the capacity to analyze and open any
+proposition so as to identify its separate elements with the very
+consciousness of the reader's or hearer's mind; this, which is the
+lawyer's peculiar power, had not been particularly developed in Burke,
+but exists in Webster in greater expansion and force than in any
+one since Doctor Johnson, who, it always appeared to us, had he been
+educated for the bar, would have made the greatest lawyer that ever
+led the decisions of Westminster-Hall. We should hardly be justified
+in saying that Burke would have made a great First Lord of the
+Treasury. Mr. Webster, as Secretary of State, proved himself to be
+a practical statesman of the highest; finest, promptest sagacity and
+foresight that this or any nation ever witnessed. Who now doubts the
+surpassing wisdom, who now but reverences the exalted patriotism,
+of the advice and the example which he gave, but gave in vain, to
+the Whig party at the beginning of Mr. Tyler's administration? His
+official correspondence would be lowered by a comparison with any
+state papers since the secretaryship of John Marshall. Does the public
+generally know what has become of that portentous difficulty about the
+Right of Search, upon which England and America, five years ago, were
+on the point of being "_lento collisæ duello_." Mr. Webster settled it
+by mere force of mind: he dissipated the Question, _by seeing through
+it_, and by compelling others to see a fallacy in its terms which
+before had imposed upon the understanding of two nations. In the
+essential and universal philosophy of politics, Webster is second only
+to Burke. After Burke, there is no statesman whose writings might be
+read with greater advantage by foreign nations, or would have been
+studied with so much respect by antiquity, as Webster's.
+
+In a merely literary point of view, this perhaps may be said of Mr.
+Webster, that he is the only powerful and fervid orator, since the
+glorious days of Greece, whose style is so disciplined that any of
+his great public harangues might be used as models of composition. His
+language is beautifully pure, and his combinations of it exhibit more
+knowledge of the genius, spirit, and classic vigor of the English
+tongue, than it has entered the mind of any professor of rhetoric to
+apprehend. As the most impetuous sweeps of passion in him are pervaded
+and informed and guided by intellect, so the most earnest struggles
+of intellect seem to be calmed and made gentle in their vehemence,
+by a more essential rationality of taste. That imperious mind, which
+seems fit to defy the universe, is ever subordinate, by a kind of
+fascination, to the perfect law of grace. In the highest of his
+intellectual flights--and who can follow the winged rush of that eagle
+mind?--in the widest of his mental ranges-and who shall measure their
+extent?--he is ever moving within the severest line of beauty. No one
+would think of saying that Mr. Webster's speeches are thrown off with
+ease, and cost him but little effort; they are clearly the result
+of the intensest stress of mental energy; yet the manner is never
+discomposed; the decency and propriety of the display never interfered
+with; he is always greater than his genius; you see "the depth out not
+the tumult" of the mind. Whether, with extended arm, he strangles
+the "reluctantes dracones" of democracy, or with every faculty called
+home, concentrates the light and heat of his being in developing into
+principles those great sentiments and great instincts which are his
+inspiration; in all, the orator stands forth with the majesty and
+chastened grace of Pericles himself. In the fiercest of encounters
+with the deadliest of foes, the mind, which is enraged, is never
+perturbed; the style, which leaps like the fire of heaven, is never
+disordered. As in Guido's picture of St. Michael piercing the dragon,
+while the gnarled muscles of the arms and hands attest the utmost
+strain of the strength, the countenance remains placid, serene, and
+undisturbed. In this great quality of mental dignity, Mr. Webster's
+speeches have become more and more eminent. The glow and luster
+which set his earlier speeches a-blaze with splendor, is in his
+later discourses rarely let forth; but they have gained more, in the
+increase of dignity, than they have parted with in the diminution
+of brilliancy. We regard his speech before the shop-keepers, calling
+themselves merchants, of Philadelphia, as one of the most weighty
+and admirable of the intellectual efforts of his life. The range of
+profound and piercing wisdom; the exquisite and faultless taste; but
+above all, the august and indefectible dignity, that are illustrated
+from the beginning to the end of that great display of matured
+and finished strength, leave us in mingled wonder and reverence.
+There is one sentence there which seems to us almost to reach the
+_intellectual_ sublime; and while it stirs within us the depths of
+sympathy and admiration, we could heartily wish that the young men of
+America would inhale the almost supra-mortal spirit which it breathes:
+"I would not with any idolatrous admiration regard the Constitution
+of the United States, nor any other work of man; but this side of
+idolatry, I hold it in profound respect. I believe that no human
+working on such a subject, no human ability exerted for such an end,
+has ever produced so much happiness, or holds out now to so many
+millions of people the prospect, through such a succession of ages and
+ages, of so much happiness, as the Constitution of the United States.
+We who are here for one generation, for a single life, and yet in our
+several stations and relations in society intrusted in some degree
+with its protection and support, what duty does it devolve, what duty
+does it _not_ devolve, upon us!" In the name of distant ages, and a
+remote posterity, we hail the author of this and similar orations, as
+Webster the _Olympian_.
+
+But we leave a subject which we have incidentally touched, sincerely
+disclaiming any attempt to estimate the character or define the
+greatness of Webster. In reference to him we feel, as Cicero said to
+Cæsar, "_Nil vulgare te dignum videri possit._"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE ATHENÆUM.]
+
+THE NEW PROPHET IN THE EAST.[5]
+
+The vicissitudes of the war in the Caucasus of late have been
+surprising enough to awaken the interest of Western Europe, even
+amidst her own nearer anxieties. Last year it was said that the
+conquest of Achulgo, the stronghold of the redoubtable Schamyl,
+had effectually broken the power of that daring leader. In direct
+contradiction to such reports, later accounts from Daghestan tell
+of the reappearance of the notable partisan amidst the lines of the
+Russians, and of a defeat of the latter, the most severe, if the
+details of the event be true, that they have yet suffered in the
+Caucasus. In any case, these exciting changes of fortune would be in
+favor of a book professing to describe this interesting region, and
+to add to our knowledge of its brave inhabitants. The main interest
+of Herr Bodenstedt's work will now be enhanced by its undertaking
+to give a more precise account than had previously appeared of the
+priest-warrior of Daghestan. and of the new sect as the prophet of
+which he succeeded in arraying the independent mountain clans against
+their common enemy with a kind of combination unknown in earlier
+periods of the struggle.
+
+[Footnote 5: The people of the Caucasus, and their Struggle for
+Liberty with the Russians--(_Die Volker des Caucasus, &c._) By
+Friedrich Bodenstedt. Second Edition. Frankfurt am Main, Lizius;
+London, Nutt.]
+
+The author has evidently lived for some time in the region which he
+describes, or in the bordering districts along the Caspian, both in
+Georgia and in North Daghestan, His acquaintance with Asiatic and
+Russian languages and customs appears to have been gained both by
+study and from intercourse with the natives of the south-eastern
+frontier. He is not ignorant of Oriental writings that refer to
+his subject; and his Russian statistics prove an access to official
+authorities which are not to be found in print. These, however
+obtained, can scarcely have been imparted to him as one of those
+writers whom the Court of St. Petersburg hires to promote its views
+through the press of Western Europe. His sympathies are declared
+against Russian usurpation; and the tendency of his essay is to prove
+how little real progress it has yet made in subduing the Caucasus, the
+enormous waste of money and life with which its fluctuating successes
+have been bought, and the fallacy of expecting a better result
+hereafter.
+
+What it has cost in life on the Russian side to attack-hitherto with
+no lasting effect--the handful of Caucasian mountaineers, may be
+guessed from a single note, dated 1847: "The present Russian force in
+the Caucasus"--including of course, the armed Cossacks of the Kuban
+and Terek--"amounts to two hundred thousand." Taking into account the
+numbers yearly cut off by disease, more fatal even than the mountain
+war, every step of which must be won by the most reckless waste
+of life,--the "Russian Officer" may perhaps truly affirm that the
+_annual_ expenditure of life by Russia, in her warfare with Schamyl,
+has for many years past exceeded the whole number of the population at
+any one time directly under the rule of that chieftain.
+
+We have said that the most instructive part of Herr Bodenstedt's essay
+is his sketch of that politico-religious scheme which made Schamyl
+formidable to the Russians. This system, it is to be observed, arose
+and has since been fully developed only in the Eastern Caucasus, where
+of late the main stress of the war has been. The western tribes (our
+"Circassians") who took the lead at an earlier stage of the contest,
+were not then, nor have they since been, inspired by the fanatic zeal
+which united the tribes of Daghestan. They fought from a mere love
+of independence, each little republic by itself; and their efforts,
+however heroic, being without concert, gradually declined before the
+vast force of the invader. In the region looking westward from the
+Georgian frontier on the Euxine, on the one side of the Caucasian
+range, and along the lower Kuban on the other, the Russian posts
+are now seldom threatened but by small predatory bands; the natives,
+retired to their mountain villages, have for some time made but few
+more formidable incursions. The war is transferred to the region
+spreading eastward from the Elbrus to the Caspian; where the strife
+for free existence is animated not less by the hatred of Russian
+slavery than by a fresh outbreak of Mohammedan zeal against infidel
+invasion,--a revival, in fact, of that war-like fanaticism which made
+the Moslem name terrible from the eighth to the sixteenth century.
+
+It dates from the years 1823-4; at which period a "new doctrine" began
+to be preached, secretly at first, to the select Uléma, afterward to
+greater numbers, in word and writing, by one Mullah Mohammed, a famous
+teacher and a judge (or _kadi_) of Jarach, in the Kurin district of
+Daghestan. He professed to have learnt it from Hadis-Ismail, an Alim
+of Kurdomir, highly famed for wisdom and sanctity. It laid bare the
+degradation into which his countrymen had sunk by irreligion and by
+the jealousy of sect; their danger, in consequence, from enemies
+of the true faith; and urged the necessity of reform in creed and
+practice, in order to regain the invincible character promised by the
+Prophet to believers. The theoretical part of the reformed doctrine
+seems to be a kind of Sufism,--the general character of which mode
+of Islam, long prevalent in the adjacent kingdom of Persia, has
+been described by our own orientalists. Disputed questions as to its
+origin, whether in Brahmin philosophy or in the reveries of Moslem
+mystics, cannot be discussed here; it must suffice to indicate those
+points which appear to connect it with the hieratic policy that has
+given a new aspect to the war in the Caucasus.
+
+Proceeding nominally on the basis of the Koran, it inculcates or
+expounds a kind of spiritual transcendentalism; in which the adept is
+raised above the necessity of formal laws, which are only requisite
+for those who are not capable of rising to a full intelligence of the
+supreme power. To gain this height, by devout contemplation, must be
+the personal work and endeavor of each individual. The revelation of
+divine truth, once attained, supersedes specific moral injunctions;
+ceremonies and systems, even, of religion, become indifferent to the
+mind illuminated by the sacred idea. A higher degree is the perfect
+conception or ecstatic vision of the Deity;--the highest-reserved
+only for the prophetic few--a real immediate union with his essence.
+Here, it will be seen, are four steps or stages, each of which has
+its sacred manual or appropriate system of teaching. In the hieratic
+system, of which Schamyl is the head, the divisions seem to correspond
+pretty nearly with this arrangement, as follows:--
+
+The _first_ includes the mass of the armed people; whose zeal it
+promotes by strict religious and moral injunctions enjoining purity of
+life, exact regard to the ritual of the Koran, teaching pilgrimages,
+fasting, ablutions; the duty of implacable war against the Infidel,
+the sin of enduring his tyranny.
+
+The _second_ is composed of those, who, in virtue of striving upward
+to a higher Divine intelligence, are elevated above ceremonial
+religion. Of these the _Murids_ (_seekers_ or _strugglers_,) are
+formed: a body of religious warriors attached to the Imam, whose
+courage in battle, raised to a kind of frenzy, despises numbers and
+laughs at death. To accept quarter, or to fly from the Infidel, is
+forbidden to this class.
+
+The _third_ includes the more perfect acolytes, who are presumed to
+have risen to the ecstatic view of the Deity. These are the elect,
+whom the Imam makes _Naibs_ or vice-regents,--invested with nearly
+absolute power in his absence.
+
+The _fourth_, or highest, implying entire union with the Divine
+essence, is held by Schamyl alone. In virtue of this elevation and
+spiritual endowment, the Imam, as an immediate organ of the Supreme
+Will, is himself the source of all law to his followers, unerring,
+impeccable; to question or disobey his behests is a sin against
+religion, as well as a political crime. It may be seen what advantage
+this system must have given to Schamyl in his conflict with the
+Russians. The doctrine of the indifference of sects and forms enabled
+him to unite the divided followers of Omar and of Ali, in a region
+where both abound, and where the schism had formerly been one of
+the most effectual instruments of the enemy. The belief in a Divine
+mission and spiritual powers sustains his adherents in all reverses;
+while it invites to defection from the Russian side those of the
+Mohammedan tribes who have submitted to the invader. Among these,
+however, Schamyl, like his predecessors in the same priestly office,
+by no means confides the progress of his sect to spiritual influences
+only. The work of conversion, where exhortation fails, is carried on
+remorselessly by fire and sword; and the Imam is as terrible to those
+of his countrymen whom fear or interest retains in alliance with
+Russia, as to the soldiers of the Czar. With a character in which
+extreme daring is allied with coolness, cunning, and military genius,
+with a good fortune which has hitherto preserved his life in many
+circumstances where escape seemed impossible,--it may be seen that the
+belief in his supernatural gifts and privileges, once created, must
+always tend to increase in intensity and effect among the imaginative
+and credulous Mohammedans of the Caucasus; and that this apt
+combination of the warrior with the politician and prophet accounts
+for his success in combining against the Russians a force of the once
+discordant tribes of Daghestan, possessing more of the character
+of a national resistance than had been ever known before in the
+Caucasus,--and compelling the invaders to purchase every one of their
+few, trifling, and dubious advances by the terrible sacrifice of life
+already noticed.
+
+In this formidable movement the highlander's natural freedom is fanned
+into a blaze by a religious zeal like that which once led the armies
+of Islam over one half of Asia and Europe. Although it reached its
+highest energy and a more consummate development under Schamyl, it was
+begun by his predecessors. Of the Mullah Mohammed, who first preached
+the duty of casting off the yoke of the Giaour, and the necessity of
+a religious reform and union of rival sects, as a means to that end,
+we have already spoken. This founder of the new system, an aged man,
+untrained in arms, never himself drew the sword in the cause; but was
+active in diffusing its principles and preparing a warlike rising by
+exhortations and letters circulated through all Daghestan. Suspected
+of these designs, he was seized, in 1826, by the orders of Jermoloff;
+and although be escaped,--by the connivance, it is said, of the native
+prince employed to capture him,--he afterward lived, in a kind of
+concealment, for some years. The post of Imam was thereupon assumed
+by a priest who was able to fight for the new doctrine as well as
+to preach it. The first armed outbreak took place under Kasi-Mullah,
+about the year 1829; from which time, until his death in a battle at
+Himry, in 1831, he waged a terrible, and, although often defeated,
+a virtually successful warfare, against the Russians, while he
+prosecuted the work of conversion among the tribes of Islam who
+delayed to acknowledge his mission, and to join in his enmity to the
+Russians, by the extremities of bloodshed and rapine. His death, after
+an heroic resistance, was hailed as a triumph by the Russians. They
+counted on the extinction of the new sect in the defeat of its leader,
+whose dead body they carried about the country to prove the imposture
+of his pretensions. This piece of barbarism produced an effect the
+reverse of what they expected. The venerable face of the Imam, the
+attitude in which he had expired, with one hand pointed as if to
+heaven, was more impressive to those who crowded round the body than
+his fearless enthusiasm had been,--and thousands who till then had
+held aloof, now joined his followers in venerating him as a prophet.
+Of this first warrior-priest of Daghestan, Schamyl was the favorite
+disciple and the most trusted soldier. Kasi-Mullah was not killed
+until Schamyl had already fallen as it seemed, under several deadly
+wounds:--his reappearance after this bloody scene was but the first of
+many similar escapes, the report of which sounds like a fable. He did
+not, however, at once succeed to the dignity of Imam: the office was
+usurped for more than a year by Hamsad Beg (Bey), whose rapacious and
+savage treatment of some of the princely families of Daghestan nearly
+caused a fatal reaction against the new sect, and the destruction
+of its main support, the Murids. Hamsad Beg performed no action of
+consequence against the Russians; but expended his rage upon the
+natives allied with them, or reluctant to obey his mandates. He
+was assassinated in 1834, by some kinsmen of a princely house whose
+territories he had usurped after a massacre of its princes. In the
+affray which took place on this occasion, there perished with him
+many of the fanatic Murids, who had become odious as instruments of
+the cruelties of their Imam. On his death, Schamyl was raised to
+the dignity,--but it was some time before the mischief done by his
+predecessor was so far repaired as to allow him to act with energy
+as the prophet of the new doctrine. One of the ill effects of Hamsad
+Beg's iniquities had been the defection to the Russians of n notable
+partisan--Hadjii Murad--for many years a fatal thorn in the side of
+the independent party.[6] This and other difficulties, among which was
+the unpopularity of the Murids under Hamsad Beg, were removed by new
+alliances and precautions, while all that eloquence and skill could
+perform was applied to restore the credit of the religious system,
+before Schamyl could hazard a direct attack of the Russian enemy,
+who meanwhile had taken advantage of the delay and disunion to gain
+ground in many parts of Daghestan. From the year 1839, however, the
+tide rapidly turned; and the result, from that date until the period
+at which the account closes (1845)--when Woronzow was appointed to
+command in the Caucasus, with nearly unlimited powers,--has been,
+that the Russians, in spite of tremendous sacrifices, were constantly
+losing ground and influence, while Schamyl gained both in equal
+proportion. The details of the campaigns during this interval are
+highly interesting; and we regret that conditions of space forbid
+us to translate some of the exciting episodes recorded by Herr
+Bodenstedt. We may, however, extract the following account of the
+Caucasian hero,--whose portrait, we believe, has never before been so
+fully exhibited to European readers;--
+
+[Footnote 6: It is worth noting--as a characteristic of Russian
+misrule and of its consequences--that this chieftain, after having
+been a devoted soldier of the Emperor for seven years, was goaded by
+the ill treatment of his officers into abjuring the service; make the
+offer of his sword to Schamyl, against whom he had fought with the
+utmost animosity; was heartily welcomed by that prudent leader, and
+became one of his principal lieutenants.]
+
+"Schamyl is of middle stature; he has light hair, gray eyes, shaded
+by bushy and well-arched eyebrows,--a nose finely moulded, and a small
+mouth. His features are distinguished from those of his race by a
+peculiar fairness of complexion and delicacy of skin: the elegant form
+of his hands and feet is not less remarkable. The apparent stiffness
+of his arms, when he walks, is a sign of his stern and impenetrable
+character. His address is thoroughly noble and dignified. Of himself
+he is completely master; and he exerts a tacit supremacy over all who
+approach him. An immovable stony calmness, which never forsakes him,
+even in moments of the utmost danger, broods over his countenance.
+He passes a sentence of death with the same composure with which
+he distributes "the sabre of honor" to his bravest Murids, after a
+bloody encounter. With traitors or criminals whom he has resolved to
+destroy, he will converse without betraying the least sign of anger or
+vengeance. He regards himself as a mere instrument in the hands of a
+higher Being; and holds, according to the Sufi doctrine, that all his
+thoughts and determinations are immediate inspirations from God. The
+flow of his speech is as animating and irresistible as his outward
+appearance is awful and commanding. "He shoots flames from his eyes,
+and scatters flowers from his lips,"--said Bersek Bey, who sheltered
+him for some days after the fall of Achulgo,--when Schamyl dwelt for
+some time among the princes of the Djighetes and Ubiches, for the
+purpose of inciting the tribes on the Black Sea to rise against the
+Russians. Schamyl is now (_circa_ 1847?) fifty years old, but still
+full of vigor and strength: it is however said, that he has for some
+years past suffered from an obstinate disease of the eyes, which is
+constantly growing worse. He fills the intervals of leisure which his
+public charges allow him, in reading the Koran, fasting, and prayer.
+Of late years he has but seldom, and then only on critical occasions,
+taken a personal share in warlike encounters. In spite of his almost
+supernatural activity, Schamyl is excessively severe and temperate in
+his habits. A few hours of sleep are enough for him: at times he will
+watch for the whole night, without Showing the least trace of fatigue
+on the following day. He eats little, and water is his only beverage.
+According to Mohammedan custom, he keeps several wives--[this
+contradicts Wagner, who affirms that Schamyl always confined himself
+to one]; in 1844 he had _three_, of which his favorite, _Dur Heremen_,
+(Pearl of the Harem) as she was called, was an Armenian, of exquisite
+beauty."
+
+Will Russian arms prevail in the end? The following is Herr
+Bodenstedt's answer; after noticing the arrival of Woronzow, and the
+expectations raised by his talents, by the immense resources at
+his command, as well as by such events as the storm of Schamyl's
+stronghold of Cargo:--
+
+"He who believes that the issue of this contest hangs on the
+destruction of stone fortresses, on the devastation of tracts of
+forest, has not yet conceived the essential nature of the war in the
+Caucasus. This is not merely a war of men against men--it is a strife
+between the mountain and the steppe. The population of the Caucasus
+may be changed; the air of liberty wafted from its heights will
+ever remain the same. Invigorated by this atmosphere, even Russian
+hirelings would grow into men eager for freedom: and among their
+descendants a new race of heroes would arise, to point their weapons
+against that servile constitution, to extend which their fathers had
+once fought, as blind, unquestioning slaves."
+
+To this answer of Herr Bodenstedt's we will add nothing of our own. We
+are weary with waiting for the events of history such as we would have
+them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+COOLING A BURNING SPIRIT.
+
+An incident which occurred soon after the accession of the present
+Sultan, shows that, in some respects, at least, he is not indisposed
+to follow up the strong traditions of his race. At the beginning
+of his reign, the Ulema was resolved, if possible, to prevent the
+new Sultan from carrying on those reforms which had ever been so
+distasteful to the Turks, grating at once against their religious
+associations and their pride of race, and which recent events
+had certainly proved not to be productive of those good results
+anticipated by Sultan Mamoud. To attain this object, the Muftis
+adopted the expedient of working on the religious fears of the
+youthful prince. One day as he was praying, according to his custom,
+at his father's tomb, he heard a voice from beneath reiterating, in a
+stifled tone, the words, "I burn." The next time that he prayed there
+the same words assailed his ears. "I burn" was repeated again and
+again, and no word beside. He applied to the chief of the Imams to
+know what this prodigy might mean; and was informed in reply, that
+his father, though a great man, had also been, unfortunately, a great
+reformer, and that as such it was too much to be feared that he had
+a terrible penance to undergo in the other world. The Sultan sent for
+his brother-in-law to pray at the same place, and afterward several
+others of his household; and on each occasion the same portentous
+words were heard. One day he announced his intention of going in state
+to his father's tomb, and was attended thither by a splendid retinue,
+including the chief doctors of the Mahometan law. Again, during his
+devotions, were heard the words, "I burn," and all except the Sultan
+trembled. Rising from his prayer-carpet, he called in his guards, and
+commanded them to dig up the pavement and remove the tomb. It was in
+vain that the Muftis interposed, reprobating so great a profanation,
+and uttering warnings as to its consequences. The Sultan persisted,
+the foundations of the tomb were laid bare, and in a cavity skillfully
+left among them was found--not a burning Sultan, but a Dervise. The
+young monarch regarded him for a time fixedly and in silence, and then
+said, without any further remark or the slightest expression of anger,
+"You burn?--We must cool you in the Bosphorus." In a few minutes more
+the dervise was in a bag, and the bag immediately after was in the
+Bosphorus.--_De Vere's Sketches_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM HOUSEHOLD WORDS.]
+
+AN OLD HAUNT.
+
+ The rippling water, with its drowsy tone,--
+ The tall elms, tow 'ring in their stately pride,--
+ And--sorrow's type--the willow sad and lone,
+ Kissing in graceful woe the murmuring tide;--
+
+ The grey church-tower,--and dimly seen beyond,
+ The faint hills gilded by the parting sun,--
+ All were the same, and seem'd with greeting fond
+ To welcome me as they of old had done.
+
+ And for a while I stood as in a trance,
+ On that loved spot, forgetting toil and pain;--
+ Buoyant my limbs, and keen and bright my glance,
+ For that brief space I was a boy again!
+
+ Again with giddy mates I careless play'd,
+ Or plied the quiv'ring oar, on conquest bent:--
+ Again, beneath the tall elms' silent shade,
+ I woo'd the fair, and won the sweet consent.
+
+ But brief, alas! the spell,--for suddenly
+ Peal'd from the tower the old familiar chimes,
+ And with their clear, heart-thrilling melody,
+ Awaked the spectral forms of darker times
+
+ And I remember'd all that years had wrought--
+ How bow'd my care-worn frame, how dimm'd my eye,
+ How poor the gauds by Youth so keenly sought,
+ How quench'd and dull Youth's aspirations high!
+
+ And in half mournful, half upbraiding host,
+ Duties neglected--high resolves unkept--
+ And many a heart by death or falsehood lost,
+ In lightning current o'er my bosom swept.
+
+ Then bow'd the stubborn knees, as backward sped
+ The self-accusing thoughts in dread array,
+ And, slowly, from their long-congealed bed,
+ Forced the remorseful tears their silent way.
+
+ Bitter yet healing drops in mercy sent,
+ Like soft dews tailing on a thirsty plain,--
+ And ere those chimes their last faint notes had spent,
+ Strengthen'd and calm'd, I stood erect again.
+
+ Strengthen'd, the tasks allotted to fulfill;--
+ Calm'd the thick-coming sorrows to endure;
+ Fearful of nought but of my own frail will,--
+ In His Almighty strength and aid secure.
+
+ For a sweet voice had whisper'd hope to me,--
+ Had through my darkness shed a kindly ray;--
+ It said: "The past is fix'd immutably,
+ Yet is there comfort in the coming day!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+KILLING A GIRAFFE.
+
+At every stride I gained upon the giraffes, and, after a short burst
+at a swingeing gallop, I was in the middle of them, and turned
+the finest cow out of the herd. On finding herself driven from her
+comrades and hotly pursued, she increased her pace, and cantered along
+with tremendous strides, clearing an amazing extent of ground at every
+bound; while her neck and breast, coming in contact with the dead old
+branches of the trees, were continually strewing them in my path. In
+a few minutes I was riding within five yards of her stern, and, firing
+at a gallop, I sent a bullet into her back. Increasing my pace, I next
+rode alongside, and, placing the muzzle of my rifle within a few feet
+of her, I fired my second shot behind the shoulder; the ball, however,
+seemed to have little effect. I then placed myself directly in front,
+when she came to a walk. Dismounting, I hastily loaded both barrels,
+putting in double charges of powder. Before this was accomplished, she
+was off at a canter. In a short time I brought her to a stand in the
+dry bed of a watercourse, where I fired at fifteen yards, aiming where
+I thought the heart lay, upon which she again made off. Having loaded,
+I followed, and had very nearly lost her; she had turned abruptly
+to the left, and was far out of sight among the trees. Once more I
+brought her to a stand, and dismounted from my horse. There we stood
+together alone in the wild wood. I gazed in wonder at her extreme
+beauty, while her soft dark eye, with its silky fringe, looked down
+imploringly at me, and I really felt a pang of sorrow in this moment
+of triumph for the blood I was shedding. Pointing my rifle toward the
+skies, I sent a bullet through her neck. On receiving it she reared
+high on her hind legs and fell back with a heavy crash, making the
+earth shake around her. A thick stream of dark blood spouted out
+from the wound, her colossal limbs quivered for a moment, and she
+expired.--_Cummings' Adventures_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE VETERAN KOLOMBESKI.
+
+Several journals have spoken of the entry into the Hotel des Invalides
+of a soldier, stated to be 126 years of age. This is not quite
+correct. The following are some precise details respecting this
+extraordinary man, who arrived at the Hotel on the 21st inst.:--Jean
+Kolombeski, born at Astrona (Poland), on the 1st of March, 1730,
+entered the service of France, as a volunteer in the Bourbon regiment
+of infantry, in 1774, at the age of forty-four. He was made corporal
+in 1790, at the age of sixty. He made all the campaigns of the
+Revolution and of the Empire, in different regiments of infantry,
+and was incorporated, in 1808, in the 3d regiment of the Vistula. He
+was wounded in 1814, and entered the hospital at Poitiers, which he
+soon afterward left to be placed _en subsistence_ in the 2d regiment
+of light infantry. On the 11th of October of the same year he was
+admitted into the 1st company of _sous-officiers sedentaires_, and, in
+1846, into the 5th company of Veteran Sub-Officers. The last three of
+these companies having just been suppressed by the Minister of War,
+Kolombeski was placed _en subsistence_ in the 61st regiment of the
+line, received a retiring pension by decree of May 17, 1850, and the
+Minister authorized his admission into the Invalides. Kolombeski is,
+therefore, more than 120 years of age; he reckons seventy-five and
+a half years of service, and twenty-nine campaigns. He enjoys good
+health, is strong and well made, and does not appear to be more than
+seventy or eighty. He performed every duty with big comrades of the
+5th company of Veterans, When King Louis Philippe visited Dreus,
+Kolombeski was presented to him, who, taking the decoration from
+his breast, presented it to the veteran soldier. This is the most
+astonishing instance of longevity that has, perhaps, been ever known
+in the army. The Marshal Governor of the Invalides ordered that
+Kolombeski should be brought to him on his arrival; but, as the old
+soldier was fatigued, he was taken to the infirmary, and the Governor,
+informed of it, went to his bedside with General Petit, the commandant
+of the hotel, and addressed the veteran in the kindest manner. The
+Governor has issued an order that, for the future, all centenarian
+soldiers admitted into the hospital shall mess with the officers, in
+order to show his respect for their age, and for the long services
+they have rendered to the state.--_Galignani's Messenger_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ANECDOTE OF LORD BROUGHAM.
+
+The "Life of the Rev. Dr. Hugh Heugh" has a description of an
+interview which a deputation of Scotch dissenters had some years ago
+with Lord Brougham. The _Scotsman_ adds, from its private knowledge,
+some odd incidents of the affair.
+
+His lordship, on coming out of the court to meet the deputation,
+immediately on being informed of their object, burst out in a volley
+of exclamations to the effect that, but for dissent, there would be
+"No vital religion--no vital religion, gentlemen, no vital religion."
+While pouring forth this in a most solemn tone, he was all the while
+shaking violently the locked doors of a lobby full of committee rooms,
+into one of which he wished to find entrance, and calling for an
+absent official not only in passionate tones, but in phraseology
+which the reverend deputation, at first unwilling to trust their own
+ears, were at last forced to believe was nothing better than profane
+swearing. At last, he suddenly drew himself up to the wall opposite a
+locked door, and with a tremendous kick, smashed the lock, and entered
+(exclaiming, first in a vehement and then in a solemn tone, but
+without pause) "--that fellow! where the ---- does he always go to! No
+vital religion, gentlemen, no vital religion--no, no, no."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The International Weekly Miscellany,
+Volume I. No. 9., by Various
+
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The International Weekly Miscellany, Volume
+I. No. 9., 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, Volume I. No. 9.
+ Of Literature, Art, and Science, August 26, 1850
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 19, 2004 [EBook #13797]
+
+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 26,
+ 1850.</b></td>
+
+ <td align="right"><b>No. 9.</b></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ <hr class="full" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page257"
+ id="page257"></a>[pg 257]</span>
+
+ <h2>NUMISMATIC ARCHÆOLOGY.</h2>
+
+ <p>A magnificent work<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ upon this subject has just been completed in Paris, where it
+ was commenced fifteen years ago. It was begun under the
+ auspices of M. Paul Delaroche and M.C. Lenormand, member of
+ the Institute, and well known already as one of the first
+ authorities in the numismatic branch of archæology. Some
+ faint idea of the greatness of the task may be given by
+ stating that it embraces the whole range of art, from the
+ regal coins of Syracuse and of the Ptolemies, down to those
+ of our day; that such a stupendous scheme should ever have
+ been carried into execution is not solely due to the
+ admirable ease and fidelity, with which the "Collas machine"
+ renders the smallest and the largest gems of the antique:
+ but to him who first felt, appreciated, and afterward
+ promoted its capabilities in this labor of love, M.A.
+ Lachevardiere. Comparisons and contrasts, which are the life
+ of art, though generally confined to the mental vision, are
+ not the least of the recommendations of this vast work. For
+ the first time have the minor treasures of each country been
+ brought together, and not the least conspicuous portion are
+ those from the British Museum and the Bank of England.</p>
+
+ <p>Whether we consider the selection of these monumental
+ relics, the explanatory letterpress, or the engravings which
+ reproduce them, we are struck by the admirable taste, science,
+ and fidelity with which the largest as well as the smallest
+ gems have each and every one been made to tally in size with
+ the originals.</p>
+
+ <p>The collection of the "Trésor de Numismatique et Glyptique,"
+ consisting of twenty volumes in folio, and containing a
+ thousand engraved plates in folio, reproduces upward of 15,000
+ specimens, and is divided into three classes&mdash;1st. The
+ coins, medals, cameos, &amp;c. of antiquity; 2d. Those of the
+ middle ages; lastly, those of modern times. The details of this
+ immense mass of artistic wealth would be endless; but these
+ three classes seem to be arranged according to the latest
+ classification of numismatists.</p>
+
+ <p>In the first class may be noticed&mdash;1. The regal coins
+ of Greece, which contains, beside the portraits of the Greek
+ Kings, to be found in Visconti's "Iconographie," copied from
+ medals and engraved gems, all the coins bearing the Greek name
+ of either a king, a prince, or a tyrant, and every variety of
+ these types, whether they bear the effigy of a prince, or only
+ reproduce his name. To the medals of each sovereign are joined
+ the most authentic and celebrated engraved gems of European
+ cabinets. Next come the series of portraits of the Roman
+ emperors and their families, with all the important varieties
+ of Roman numismatics, amongst which will be found the most
+ celebrated coins of France, Vienna, Dresden, Munich, Florence,
+ Naples, St. Petersburg, Weimar, &amp;c.; and, moreover, those
+ medallions which perpetuate great events. These two volumes
+ contain eight-fold more matter than the great work of
+ Visconti.</p>
+
+ <p>In the second class, containing the works of the middle
+ ages, and showing the uninterrupted progress of the numismatic
+ art down to modern times, and forming alone fourteen volumes,
+ we find the source which the French artists and men of letters
+ have studied with such predilection. First in order are the
+ Italian medals of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries,
+ chiefly by the famous Victor Pisano, a Veronese, whom Nasari
+ has so much lauded. The scholars and imitators of Pisano also
+ produced works as interesting as historical documents as they
+ are admirable in workmanship. Here also will be found the
+ French and English seals, in which the balance of skill in
+ design and execution is acknowledged to be in our favor.</p>
+
+ <p>Less barbarous, and indeed perfect works of art, in
+ character of costume and visage, are the medals struck in
+ Germany during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, when
+ the influence of Albert Durer and his school was strongly felt.
+ And finally, relics of ornamental art of different nations and
+ epochs.</p>
+
+ <p>In the third class, two parts only are devoted to
+ contemporary art; the medals illustrative of the French
+ revolution of 1789; those of the "Empire" and of the Emperor
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page258"
+ id="page258"></a>[pg 258]</span> "Napoleon;" generally
+ smacking of the florid and corrupt taste of that period,
+ they are nevertheless curious as being often the sole
+ evidence of the facts commemorated. There is, however, a
+ manifest improvement in the late ones, and in them may be
+ traced the transition from the independent ideas of the
+ revolution to the subsequent submission to one man: and not
+ less striking is the transition from a slip-shod style of
+ art to a pedantic imitation of the antique. The "Trésor de
+ Numismatique et de Glyptique" is the most scientific and
+ important work of art which has been executed and achieved
+ of late years in France. Our great public libraries may be
+ proud of possessing so rich, so valuable, and so curious a
+ collection,</p>
+
+ <p>Most lovers of art have their favorite periods and
+ well-beloved masters, but in this varied range of excellence it
+ is difficult which to select for preference and admiration. The
+ cameos have a beauty and <i>finesse</i> which far surpass that
+ of busts and statues; they evince the skill of grouping, which,
+ with rare exceptions, such as the Niobe and Laocoon, is seldom
+ aimed at in the more important pieces of sculpture. Cameos,
+ moreover, let us, as it were, into the secrets of indoor life.
+ To these considerations we may add that these gems have had an
+ immense influence on French modern art. The "Apotheosis of
+ Augustus" especially, known to antiquarians as the "Agate of
+ Tiberius," the largest cameo in the world, and beautifully
+ engraved the size of the original in this collection, may be
+ traced in more than one of their late compositions.</p>
+
+ <p>It is said that large medallions are a sign of taste either
+ in the medalist or the monarch he is supposed to honor; if so,
+ Dupré and Varin have drawn a thick vail over the effulgence of
+ Louis XIV. We would not, however, lose their wigs and smiles
+ for a world of historiettes.</p>
+
+ <p>But it is to be remembered that the more names are blazoned
+ on works of art, the more art becomes deteriorated. In this
+ respect the present collection shows the rapidly progressive
+ march of this evil through twenty-five centuries&mdash;a most
+ instructive subject of contemplation.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE CSIKOS OF HUNGARY.</h2>
+
+ <p>Of the chivalry, the gallantry, the splendor, the
+ hospitality, the courage, and the love of liberty of the
+ Hungarian noble or gentleman, no one doubts. Of his ideas of
+ true constitutional freedom, or the zeal with which that or
+ Hungarian independence has been maintained first through
+ Turkish, and then German domination for some hundred years
+ past, doubts may be entertained. Neither do the Hungarian
+ peasantry or people reflect high credit on their "natural
+ superiors." Something should be deducted for the forced
+ vivacity and straining after effect of the littérateur; but
+ this sketch of a large class of peasantry from Max
+ Schlesinger's "War in Hungary," just published in London, must
+ have some foundation in truth&mdash;and very like the Red
+ Indians or half-breeds of Spanish America the people look.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Csikos is a man who from his birth, somehow or other,
+ finds himself seated upon a foal. Instinctively the boy remains
+ fixed upon the animal's back, and grows up in his seat as other
+ children do in the cradle.</p>
+
+ <p>"The boy grows by degrees to a big horse-herd. To earn his
+ livelihood, he enters the service of some nobleman, or of the
+ Government, who possess in Hungary immense herds of wild
+ horses. These herds range over a tract of many German square
+ miles, for the most part some level plain, with wood, marsh,
+ heath, and moorland; they rove about where they please,
+ multiply, and enjoy freedom of existence. Nevertheless, it is a
+ common error to imagine that these horses, like a pack of
+ wolves in the mountains, are left to themselves and nature,
+ without any care or thought of man. Wild horses, in the proper
+ sense of the term, are in Europe at the present day only met
+ with in Bessarabia; whereas the so-called wild herds in Hungary
+ may rather be compared to the animals ranging in our large
+ parks, which are attended to and watched. The deer are left to
+ the illusion that they enjoy the most unbounded freedom; and
+ the deer-stalker, when in pursuit of his game, readily gives in
+ to the same illusion. Or, to take another simile, the reader
+ has only to picture to himself a well-constituted free state,
+ whether a republic or a monarchy is all one.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Csikos has the difficult task of keeping a watchful eye
+ upon these herds. He knows their strength, their habits, the
+ spots they frequent; he knows the birthday of every foal, and
+ when the animal, fit for training, should be taken out of the
+ herd. He has then a hard task upon his hands, compared with
+ which a Grand-Ducal wild-boar hunt is child's play; for the
+ horse has not only to be taken alive from the midst of the
+ herd, but of course safe and sound in wind and limb. For this
+ purpose, the celebrated whip of the Csikos serves him; probably
+ at some future time a few splendid specimens of this instrument
+ will be exhibited in the Imperial Arsenal at Vienna, beside the
+ sword of Scanderberg and the Swiss 'morning-stars.'</p>
+
+ <p>"This whip has a stout handle from one and a half to two
+ feet long, and a cord which measures not less than from
+ eighteen to twenty-four feet in length. The cord is attached to
+ a short iron chain, fixed to the top of the handle by an iron
+ ring. A large leaden button is fastened to the end of the cord,
+ and similar smaller buttons are distributed along it at
+ distances, according to certain rules derived from experience,
+ of which we are ignorant. Armed with this weapon, which the
+ Csikos carries in his belt, together with a short
+ grappling-iron or hook, he sets out on his horse-chase. Thus
+ mounted and equipped without saddle or stirrup, he flies like
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page259"
+ id="page259"></a>[pg 259]</span> the storm-wind over the
+ heath, with such velocity that the grass scarcely bends
+ under the horse's hoof; the step of his horse is not heard,
+ and the whirling cloud of dust above his head alone marks
+ his approach and disappearance. Although familiar with the
+ use of a bridle, he despises such a troublesome article of
+ luxury, and guides his horse with his voice, hands, and
+ feet&mdash;nay, it almost seems as if he directed it by the
+ mere exercise of the will, as we move our feet to the right
+ or left, backward or forward, without its ever coming into
+ our head to regulate our movements by a leather strap.</p>
+
+ <p>"In this manner for hours he chases the flying herd, until
+ at length he succeeds in approaching the animal which he is
+ bent on catching. He then swings his whip round in immense
+ circles, and throws the cord with such dexterity and precision
+ that it twines around the neck of his victim. The leaden button
+ at the end, and the knots along the cord, form a noose, which
+ draws closer and tighter the faster the horse hastens on.</p>
+
+ <p>"See how he flies along with outstretched legs, his mane
+ whistling in the wind, his eye darting fire, his mouth covered
+ with foam, and the dust whirling aloft on all sides! But the
+ noble animal breathes shorter, his eye grows wild and staring,
+ his nostrils are reddened with blood, the veins of his neck are
+ distended like cords, his legs refuse longer service&mdash;he
+ sinks exhausted and powerless, a picture of death. But at the
+ same instant the pursuing steed likewise stands still and fixed
+ as if turned to stone. An instant, and the Csikos has flung
+ himself off his horse upon the ground, and inclining his body
+ backward, to keep the noose tight, he seizes the cord
+ alternately with the right and left hand, shorter and shorter,
+ drawing himself by it nearer and nearer to the panting and
+ prostrate animal, till at last coming up to it he flings his
+ legs across its back. He now begins to slacken the noose
+ gently, allowing the creature to recover breath: but hardly
+ does the horse feel this relief, before he leaps up, and darts
+ off again in a wild course, as if still able to escape from his
+ enemy. But the man is already bone of his bone and flesh of his
+ flesh; he sits fixed upon his neck as if grown to it, and makes
+ the horse feel his power at will, by tightening or slackening
+ the cord. A second time the hunted animal sinks upon the
+ ground; again he rises, and again breaks down, until at length,
+ overpowered with exhaustion, he can no longer stir a
+ limb....</p>
+
+ <p>"The foot-soldier who has discharged his musket is lost when
+ opposed to the Csikos. His bayonet, with which he can defend
+ himself against the Uhlans and Hussars, is here of no use to
+ him; all his practiced maneuvers and skill are unavailing
+ against the long whip of his enemy, which drags him to the
+ ground, or beats him to death with his leaden buttons; nay,
+ even if he had still a charge in his musket, he could sooner
+ hit a bird on the wing than the Csikos, who, riding round and
+ round him in wild bounds, dashes with his steed first to one
+ side then to another, with the speed of lightning, so as to
+ frustrate any aim. The horse-soldier, armed in the usual
+ manner, fares not much better; and wo to him if he meets a
+ Csikos singly! better to fall in with a pack of ravenous
+ wolves."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE PRESENT RELIGION OF PERSIA.</h2>
+
+ <p>An account of the Expedition for the survey of the rivers
+ Euphrates and Tigris, carried on by order of the British
+ Government, in the years 1835, 1836, and 1837; preceded by
+ geographical and historical notices of the regions situated
+ between the Nile and the Indus, with fourteen maps and charts,
+ and ninety-seven plates, besides numerous woodcuts, has just
+ appeared in London, in four large volumes, from the pen of
+ Lieutenant-Colonel Chesney, R.A., F.R.S., &amp;c., commander of
+ the Expedition. It is too comprehensive a work ever to be
+ reprinted here, or to be much read, even in England, but it is
+ undoubtedly very valuable as an authority. The following
+ paragraphs from it describe the present state of religion in
+ Persia:</p>
+
+ <p>"The title of Múlla is conferred on a candidate by some
+ member of the order, after the requisite examination in
+ theology and law; and the person is then intrusted with the
+ education of youth, as well as the administration of justice,
+ and the practice of law. The Múllas sometimes possess
+ sufficient power not only to influence the people at large, but
+ even the King himself.</p>
+
+ <p>"Of this class of priests, those who have been successful in
+ life are either placed in mosques or private families, waiting
+ for advancement; but a greater number are nominally attached to
+ colleges, and live by the practice of astrology,
+ fortune-telling, the sale of charms, talismans, &amp;c. They
+ who are not possessed of the requisite ingenuity to subsist by
+ the credulity of others, take charge of an inferior school, or
+ write letters, and draw up marriage and other engagements, for
+ those who are unequal to the task. They mix at the same time
+ largely in the domestic concerns of families. But in addition
+ to these and other vocations, a considerable number of the
+ lowest priests derive a scanty support from that charity which
+ no one denies to the true believer. These men wander as fakirs
+ from place to place, carrying news, and repeating poems, tales,
+ &amp;c., mixed with verses from the Koran. The heterodox
+ religions are very numerous; nor is Irián without her
+ free-thinkers, as the Kamúrs and Mu'tazelís, (Mitaulis,) who
+ deny everything which they cannot prove by natural reason. A
+ third sect, the Mahadelis, or Molochadis, still maintain the
+ Magian belief that the stars and the planets govern all things.
+ Another, the Ehl el Tabkwid, (men of truth,) hold that there is
+ no God except the four elements, and no rational soul or life
+ after this one. They maintain also, that all living bodies,
+ being mixtures of the elements, will
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page260"
+ id="page260"></a>[pg 260]</span> after death return to their
+ first principles. They also affirm that paradise and hell
+ belong to this world, into which every man returns in the
+ form of a beast, a plant, or again as a man; and that in
+ this second state, he is great, powerful, and happy, or
+ poor, despicable, and unhappy, according to his former
+ merits or demerits. In practice they inculcate kindness to
+ and respect for each other, with implicit obedience to their
+ chiefs, who are called Pir, (old men,) and are furnished
+ with all kinds of provisions for their subsistence. This
+ sect is found in the provinces of Irák and Fárs.</p>
+
+ <p>"The Táríkh Zenádikah (way of the covetous) are directly
+ opposed to the last on the subject of transmigration; and they
+ believe that God is in all places, and performs all things.
+ They likewise maintain that the whole visible universe is only
+ a manifestation of the Supreme Being; the soul itself being a
+ portion of the Divine essence. Therefore, they consider, that
+ whatever appears to the eye is God, and that all religious
+ rites should be comprised in the contemplation of God's
+ goodness and greatness.</p>
+
+ <p>"On these various creeds the different branches of Suffeeism
+ seem to have been founded. One of the most extraordinary of
+ these sects is the Rasháníyah; the followers of which believe
+ in the transmigration of souls, and the manifestation of the
+ Divinity in the persons of holy men. They maintain likewise,
+ that all men who do not join their sect are to be considered as
+ dead, and that their goods belong, in consequence, to the true
+ believers, as the only survivors."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE "OLD DUKE OF QUEENSBURY."</h2>
+
+ <p>Mr. Burke gives in his gossiping book about the English
+ aristocracy, the following anecdotes of this once famous
+ person:</p>
+
+ <p>"Few men occupied a more conspicuous place about the court
+ and town for nearly seventy years, during the reigns of the
+ Second and Third Georges. Like Wilmot Earl of Rochester, he
+ pursued pleasure under every shape, and with as much ardor at
+ fourscore as he had done at twenty. At the decease of his
+ father, in 1731, he became Earl of March; and he subsequently,
+ in 1748, inherited his mother's earldom of Ruglen, together
+ with the family's estates in the counties of Edinburgh and
+ Linlithgow. These rich endowments of fortune, and a handsome
+ person, of which he was especially careful, combined to invest
+ the youthful Earl with no ordinary attractions, and the
+ ascendency they acquired he retained for a longer period than
+ any one of his contemporaries; from his first appearance in the
+ fashionable world in the year 1746, to the year he left it
+ forever, in 1810, at the age of eighty-five, he was always an
+ object of comparative notoriety. There was no interregnum in
+ the public course of his existence. His first distinction he
+ achieved on the turf; his knowledge of which, both in theory
+ and practice, equaled that of the most accomplished adepts of
+ Newmarket. In all his principal matches he rode himself, and in
+ that branch of equitation rivaled the most professional
+ jockeys. Properly accoutered in his velvet cap, red silken
+ jacket, buckskin breeches, and long spurs, his Lordship bore
+ away the prize on many a well-contested field. His famous match
+ with the Duke of Hamilton was long remembered in sporting
+ annals. Both noblemen rode their own horses, and each was
+ supported by numerous partisans. The contest took place on the
+ race-ground at Newmarket, and attracted all the fashionables of
+ the period. Lord March, thin, agile, and admirably qualified
+ for exertion, was the victor. Still more celebrated was his
+ Lordship's wager with the famous Count O'Taafe. During a
+ conversation at a convivial meeting on the subject of 'running
+ against time,' it was suggested by Lord March, that it was
+ possible for a carriage to be drawn with a degree of celerity
+ previously unexampled, and believed to be impossible. Being
+ desired to name his maximum, he undertook, provided choice of
+ ground were given him and a certain period for training, to
+ draw a carriage with four wheels not less than nineteen miles
+ within the space of sixty minutes. The accomplishment of such
+ rapidity staggered the belief of his hearers; and a heavy wager
+ was the consequence. Success mainly depending on the lightness
+ of the carriage, Wright of Long Acre, the most ingenious
+ coach-builder of the day, devoted the whole resources of his
+ skill to its construction, and produced a vehicle formed partly
+ of wood and partly of whale-bone, with silk harness, that came
+ up to the wishes of his employer. Four blood horses of approved
+ speed were then selected, and the course at Newmarket chosen as
+ the ground of contest. On the day appointed, 29th of August,
+ 1750, noble and ignoble gamesters journeyed from far and near
+ to witness the wonderful experiment; excitement reached the
+ highest point, and bets to an enormous amount were made. At
+ length the jockeys mounted; the carriage was put in motion, and
+ rushing on with a velocity marvelous in those times of coach
+ traveling, but easily conceived by us railway travelers of the
+ nineteenth century, gained within the stipulated hour the goal
+ of victory."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE DECAY OF GREAT FAMILIES.</h2>
+
+ <p>Not the least valuable parts of Burke's just published
+ "Anecdotes of the Aristocracy," are a species of essay on the
+ fortunes of families. The following is from a chapter on their
+ decadence:</p>
+
+ <p>"It has often occurred to us that a very interesting paper
+ might be written on the rise and fall of English families.
+ Truly does Dr. Borlase remark that 'the most lasting houses
+ have only their seasons, more or less, of a certain
+ constitutional strength. They have their spring and summer
+ sunshine glare, their wane, decline, and death.' Take, for
+ example, the Plantagenets, the Staffords, and the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page261"
+ id="page261"></a>[pg 261]</span> Nevills, the three most
+ illustrious names on the roll of England's nobility. What
+ race in Europe surpassed in royal position, in personal
+ achievement, our Henries and our Edwards? and yet we find
+ the great-great-grandson of Margaret Plantagenet, daughter
+ and heiress of George Duke of Clarence, following the craft
+ of a cobbler at the little town of Newport in Shropshire, in
+ the year 1637. Beside, if we were to investigate the
+ fortunes of many of the inheritors of the royal arms, it
+ would soon be discovered that</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>'The aspiring blood of Lancaster'</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>had sunk into the ground. The princely stream at the present
+ time flows through very humble veins. Among the lineal
+ descendants of Edmund of Woodstock, Earl of Kent, sixth son of
+ Edward I., King of England, entitled to quarter the Royal arms,
+ occur Mr. Joseph Smart, of Hales Owen, butcher, and Mr. George
+ Wilmot, keeper of the turnpike-gate at Cooper's Bank, near
+ Dudley; and among the descendants of Thomas Plantagenet, Duke
+ of Gloucester, fifth son of Edward III., we may mention Mr.
+ Stephen James Penny, the late sexton at St. George's, Hanover
+ Square.</p>
+
+ <p>"The story of the Gargraves is a melancholy chapter in the
+ romance of real life. For full two centuries, or more, scarcely
+ a family in Yorkshire enjoyed a higher position. Its chiefs
+ earned distinction in peace and war; one died in France, Master
+ of the Ordnance to King Henry V.; another, a soldier, too, fell
+ with Salisbury, at the siege of Orleans; and a third filled the
+ Speaker's chair of the House of Commons. What an awful contrast
+ to this fair picture does the sequel offer. Thomas Gargrave,
+ the Speaker's eldest son, was hung at York, for murder; and his
+ half-brother, Sir Richard, endured a fate only less miserable.
+ The splendid estate he inherited he wasted by the most wanton
+ extravagance, and at length reduced himself to abject want.
+ 'His excesses,' says Mr. Hunter, in his 'History of Doncaster,'
+ 'are still, at the expiration of two centuries, the subject of
+ village tradition; and his attachment to gaming is commemorated
+ in an old painting, long preserved in the neighboring mansion
+ of Badsworth, in which he is represented as playing at the old
+ game of put, the right hand against the left, for the stake of
+ a cup of ale.</p>
+
+ <p>"The close of Sir Richard's story is as lamentable as its
+ course. An utter bankrupt in means and reputation, he is stated
+ to have been reduced to travel with the pack-horses to London,
+ and was at last found dead in an old hostelry! He had married
+ Catherine, sister of Lord Danvers, and by her left three
+ daughters. Of the descendants of his brothers few particulars
+ can be ascertained. Not many years since, a Mr. Gargrave,
+ believed to be one of them, filled the mean employment of
+ parish-clerk of Kippax.</p>
+
+ <p>"A similar melancholy narrative applies to another great
+ Yorkshire house. Sir William Reresby, Bart., son and heir of
+ the celebrated author, succeeded, at the death of his father,
+ in 1689, to the beautiful estate of Thrybergh, in Yorkshire,
+ where his ancestors had been seated uninterruptedly from the
+ time of the Conquest; and he lived to see himself denuded of
+ every acre of his broad lands. Le Neve states, in his MSS.
+ preserved in the Heralds' College, that he became a tapster in
+ the King's Bench Prison, and was tried and imprisoned for
+ cheating in 1711. He was alive in 1727, when Wootton's account
+ of the Baronets was published. In that work he is said to be
+ reduced to a low condition. At length he died in great
+ obscurity, a melancholy instance how low pursuits and base
+ pleasures may sully the noblest name, and waste an estate
+ gathered with labor and preserved by the care of a race of
+ distinguished progenitors. Gaming was amongst Sir William's
+ follies&mdash;particularly that lowest specimen of the folly,
+ the fights of game-cocks. The tradition at Thrybergh is (for
+ his name is not quite forgotten) that the fine estate of
+ Dennaby was staked and lost on a single main. Sir William
+ Reresby was not the only baronet who disgraced his order at
+ that period. In 1722, Sir Charles Burton was tried at the Old
+ Bailey for stealing a seal; pleaded poverty, but was found
+ guilty, and sentenced to transportation; which sentence was
+ afterward commuted for a milder punishment."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>MADRID AND THE SPANISH SENATE.</h2>
+
+ <p>Gazpacho; or, Summer Months in Spain, is the title of a new
+ book by W. George Clark, published in London. Gazpacho, it
+ seems, is the name of a dish peculiar to Spain, but of
+ universal use there, a sort of cold soup, made up of familiars
+ and handy things, as bread, pot-herbs, oil, and water. "My
+ Gazpacho," says the author, "has been prepared after a similar
+ receipt. I know not how it will please the more refined and
+ fastidious palates to which it will be submitted; indeed, amid
+ the multitude of dainties wherewith the table is loaded, it may
+ well remain untasted." It at least deserves a better fate than
+ that. The volume relates, in a pleasant, intelligent, and
+ gossiping way, a summer's ramble through Spain, describing with
+ considerable force the peculiarities of its people, and the
+ romantic features by which it is marked. The clever painter
+ could not have better materials. The party-colored costumes of
+ the peasants, like dahlias at a Chiswick show; the somber
+ garments of the priests, the fine old churches, the queer
+ rambling houses, looking centuries old, the dull, gloomy
+ streets of Madrid, the life and activity of the market-place.
+ Such are the objects upon which the eye rests, and of which Mr.
+ Clark was too observant to neglect any. The following passages
+ will give an idea of the materials of which the Gazpacho is
+ made up:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <h4>MADRID.</h4>
+
+ <p>"I left, I suppose, scarcely a street in Madrid which I did
+ not traverse, or a church which I did not enter. The result is
+ hardly worth the trouble. One street and church
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page262"
+ id="page262"></a>[pg 262]</span> are exactly like another
+ street and church. In the latter, one always finds the same
+ profusion of wooden Christs, and Madonnas in real
+ petticoats, on the walls, and the same scanty sprinkling of
+ worshipers, also in petticoats, on the floor. The images
+ outnumber the devotees here, as in all other Roman Catholic
+ countries (except Ireland, which is an exception to every
+ rule.) To a stranger, the markets are always the most
+ interesting haunts. A Spaniard, he or she, talks more while
+ making the daily bargain than in all the rest of the
+ twenty-four hours. The fruit and vegetable market was my
+ especial lounge. There is such a fresh, sweet smell of the
+ country, and the groups throw themselves, or are thrown,
+ into such pretty tableaux after the Rubens and Snyders
+ fashion. The shambles one avoids instinctively, and
+ fish-market there is none, for Madrid is fifty hours'
+ journey from the nearest sea, and the Manzanares has every
+ requisite for a fine trout stream, but water.</p>
+
+ <p>"Madrid has one peculiarity which conduces very much to the
+ visitor's comfort, namely, that there are very few inevitable
+ 'sights' to be gone through. The armory said to be the finest
+ in the world; the palace, ditto (which people who are addicted
+ to upholstering may go and see, if they don't mind breaking the
+ tenth commandment); the museum of natural history, where is the
+ largest loadstone in active operation between this and Medina;
+ and the Academia, nearly complete the list. Everybody should
+ devote a morning to the last-named, were it only for the sake
+ of the Murillos. The famous picture of 'St. Isabel giving alms
+ to the sick' has been arrested at Madrid on its return from
+ Paris to Seville. As the Sevilians have instituted a 'process'
+ for its recovery, it is likely to stay there for some time
+ longer. 'The Patrician's Dream' is quite cheering to look upon,
+ so rich and glowing it is. Shut your eyes to the semi-ludicrous
+ effect of husband, wife, and dog, in a decreasing series, like
+ the three genders in Lindley Murray, all asleep.</p>
+
+ <p>"The gardens of the queen, sunk in a deep hollow below the
+ palace, deserve a visit. The head-gardener, of course a
+ Frenchman, struggles gallantly against all kinds of
+ difficulties of soil, climate, and lack of water. By a series
+ of ingenious artifices he has concocted a plot of grass, some
+ ten feet square, to the great astonishment of all natives."</p>
+
+ <h4>NARVAEZ IN THE SENATE.</h4>
+
+ <p>"One day my kind friend Colonel S. took me to hear a debate
+ in the <i>Senado</i>, the Spanish Chamber of Peers, which holds
+ its sittings in the chapel of a suppressed convent, near the
+ palace. By dint of paint, gilding, and carpets, the room has
+ been divested of its sanctified aspect, and made to look like a
+ handsome modern room. They have not thought it necessary that a
+ place in which a hundred gentlemen in surtouts meet to discuss
+ secular matters in this nineteenth century, should be made to
+ resemble a chapel of the fifteenth. Antiquity is here
+ represented in the person of two halberdiers, who stand to
+ guard the door, dressed in extravagant costume, like beefeaters
+ in full bloom. Rows of raised seats extend on each side of the
+ room; in the center, facing the beef-eaters, are the chair and
+ desk of the president, and on each side a little tribune, from
+ which the clerks read out documents from time to time. The
+ spectators are accommodated in niches round the walls. Each
+ member speaks from his place, and the voting is by ballot.
+ First a footman hands round a tray of beans, and then each
+ advances, when his name is called, to a table in the center,
+ where he drops his bean into the box. The beans are then
+ counted, and the result proclaimed by the president. On the
+ right of the chair, in the front, is the bench assigned to the
+ ministers; and there I had the good luck to see Narvaez,
+ otherwise called Duke of Valencia, and a great many fine names
+ besides, and, in reality, master of all the Spains. His face
+ wears a fixed expression of inflexible resolve, very effective,
+ and garnished with a fierce dyed mustache, and a somewhat
+ palpable wig to match. His style of dress was what, in an
+ inferior man, one would have called 'dandified.' An
+ unexceptionable surtout, opened to display a white waistcoat
+ with sundry chains, and the extremities terminated,
+ respectively, in patent leather and primrose kid. During the
+ discussion he alternately fondled a neat riding-whip and aired
+ a snowy pocket-handkerchief. Those who know him give him credit
+ for good intentions and great courage, but do not expect that
+ he will ever set the Thames on fire, whatever he may do to the
+ Manzanares. He is a mixture, they say, of the chivalric and the
+ asinine: a kind of moral mule. His personal weakness is a wish
+ to be thought young, and hence he was naturally angry when Lord
+ Palmerston wanted to give him a 'wrinkle.' I saw, likewise,
+ Mon, the Minister of Finance, smiling complacently, like a
+ shopkeeper on his customers; and the venerable Castanos, Duke
+ of Bailen, who, as he tottered in, stooping under the weight of
+ ninety years, was affectionately greeted by Narvaez and others.
+ On the whole, the debate seemed to be languid, and to be
+ listened to with little interest; but that is the general fate
+ of debates in July."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE KANASZ.</h2>
+
+ <p>Of the Servian swineherd we have heard something of late,
+ both in history and romance; because this was the vocation of
+ Kara George, the Servian Liberator. In Hungary the swine-keeper
+ does not seem to be so respectable a person. Here is a sketch
+ of him from Max Schlesinger's new book on the Hungarian
+ war:</p>
+
+ <p>"The Kanasz is a swineherd, whose occupation, everywhere
+ unpoetical and dirty, is doubly troublesome and dirty in
+ Hungary. Large droves of pigs migrate annually into the latter
+ country from Serbia, where they still live in a half-wild
+ state. In Hungary <span class="pagenum"><a name="page263"
+ id="page263"></a>[pg 263]</span> they fatten in the
+ extensive oak-forests, and are sent to market in the large
+ towns, even to Vienna, and still further....</p>
+
+ <p>"It is a true enjoyment to live in these shady forests. The
+ oak attains a finer and more luxuriant growth on the Hungarian
+ soil than in any part of Germany. The hogs find food in
+ profusion, and commonly stuff themselves to such a degree that
+ they lose all desire for roving about: so that dog, master, and
+ ass, lead a comparatively easy life, and are left to the quiet
+ enjoyment of nature. But the lot of the Kanasz is a pitiable
+ one when, at the close of summer, he has to drive his swine to
+ market. From Debreczin, nay even from the Serbian frontier, he
+ has to make a journey on foot more toilsome than was ever
+ undertaken by the most adventurous traveler, pacing slowly over
+ the interminable heaths in rain, storm, or under a burning sun,
+ behind his pigs, which drive into his face hot clouds of dust.
+ Every now and then a hog has stuffed itself so full as to be
+ unable to stir from the spot; and there it lies on the road
+ without moving, whilst the whole caravan is obliged to wait for
+ half a day or longer, until the glutted animal can get on his
+ legs again; and when at length this feat is accomplished,
+ frequently his neighbor begins the same trick. There is truly
+ not a more toilsome business in the wide world than that of a
+ Kanasz.... The fokos is a hatchet, with a long handle, which
+ the Kanasz hurls with great dexterity. Whenever he desires to
+ pick out and slaughter one of his hogs, either for his own use
+ or for sale, the attempt would be attended with danger, in the
+ half-savage state of these animals, without such a weapon. The
+ fokos here assists him; which he flings with such force and
+ precision, that the sharp iron strikes exactly into the center
+ of the frontal bone of the animal he has marked out; the victim
+ sinks on the earth without uttering a sound, and the drove
+ quietly proceeds on its way. That he can strike down a man with
+ equal precision at eighty to a hundred paces, is proved by the
+ gallows at the entrance of the forest&mdash;the three-legged
+ monument of his dexterity. During recent events, too, the
+ surgeons of the Austrian army will readily furnish the Kanasz
+ and Csikos with certificates of their ability and skill."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE "WILD HUSSAR" OF HUNGARY.</h2>
+
+ <p>France, Russia, Prussia, and other countries, have
+ introduced the Hussars into their armies; but these soldiers
+ are merely Russian, French, and Prussian cavalry, dressed in
+ the Hungarian laced jacket: they want the spirit, the horse,
+ and&mdash;the 'Magyar Isten.' For this reason, the Hungarian
+ Hussar will not acknowledge them as brethren; and whenever he
+ comes in contact with foreign Hussars, he lets them feel in
+ battle the full force of his contempt. A story is told, that
+ during a campaign against the French in the war with Napoleon,
+ the bivouacs of the Prussian and Hungarian Hussars were near to
+ one another. A Prussian came over to his neighbors in a
+ familiar way with a glass of wine, and drank it to the health
+ of his 'brother hussar.' But the Hungarian gently pushed the
+ glass back, and stroked his beard, saying, 'What
+ brother?&mdash;no brother&mdash;I hussar&mdash;you
+ jack-pudding.'</p>
+
+ <p>This expression is not to be mistaken for a brag. The
+ Hungarian hussar is no fanfaron like the French chasseur, but
+ he is conscious of his own powers, like a Grenadier of the Old
+ Imperial Guard. The dolmany, the csako, and the csizma, have
+ grown to his body; they form his holyday dress even when off
+ duty&mdash;the national costume transferred into the army; and
+ as he is aware that this is not the case in other countries,
+ the foreign Hussar's dress is in his eyes a mere servant's
+ livery; and logically the man is not altogether wrong.</p>
+
+ <p>The Hussar, like the Magyars in general, is naturally
+ good-tempered. The finest man in the service, he is at the same
+ time the most jovial companion in the tavern, and will not sit
+ by and empty his glass by himself when a Bohemian or German
+ comrade at his side has spent all his money. There is only one
+ biped under the sun who is in his eyes more contemptible and
+ hateful than any animal of marsh or forest. This is the
+ Banderial Hussar&mdash;that half-breed between Croat and
+ Magyar, that caricature of the true Hussar, who serves in the
+ cavalry, as the Croat in the infantry, of the Military
+ Frontier. Never was an Hungarian Hussar known to drink with a
+ Banderial Hussar; never will he sit at the same table: if he
+ meets a snake he crushes it under foot&mdash;a wolf he will
+ hunt in the mountains&mdash;with a buffalo he will fight on the
+ open heath&mdash;with a miserable horse-stealer he will wrestle
+ for a halter; but as for the Banderial Hussar, he spits in his
+ face wherever he meets him.</p>
+
+ <p>It was at Hatvan, or at Tapjo-Bicske, that Hungarian and
+ Banderial Hussars were for the first time in this war&mdash;the
+ first time perhaps in the recollection of man&mdash;opposed to
+ one another in battle. If looks could slay, there would have
+ been no need of a conflict, for the eyes of the Magyars shot
+ death and contempt at their unworthy adversaries. The signal of
+ attack sounded; and at the same instant, as if seized by one
+ common thought, the Hungarian Hussars clattered their heavy
+ sabres back into the scabbard, and with a fearful imprecation,
+ such as no German tongue could echo, charged weaponless and at
+ full speed their mimic caricatures whom fate had thrown in
+ their way. The shock was so irresistible, that the poor Croats
+ could make no use of their sabers against the furious onset of
+ their unarmed foe: they were beaten down from their saddles
+ with the fist, and dragged off their horses by their dolmanys;
+ those who could save themselves fled. The Hussars disdained to
+ pursue them; but they complained to their Colonel at having
+ been opposed to 'such a rabble.'&mdash;<i>Schlesinger</i>.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page264"
+ id="page264"></a>[pg 264]</span>
+
+ <h2>Original Poetry.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h3>A HOROSCOPE.</h3>
+
+ <h4>BY ELIZABETH OAKES SMITH.</h4>
+
+ <center>
+ "Quorum pars magna fui."
+ </center>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Oh! loveliest of the stars of Heaven,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Thus did ye walk the crystal dome,</p>
+
+ <p>When to the earth a child was given,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Within a love-lit, northern home;</p>
+
+ <p>Thus leading up the starry train,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With aspect still benign,</p>
+
+ <p>Ye move in your fair orbs again</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As on that birth long syne.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Within her curtained room apart,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The pale young mother faintly smiled;</p>
+
+ <p>While warmly to a father's heart</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With love and prayer was pressed the
+ child;</p>
+
+ <p>And, softly to the lattice led,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In whispers grandams show</p>
+
+ <p>How those presaging stars have shed</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Around the child a glow.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Born in the glowing summer prime,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With planets thus conjoined in space</p>
+
+ <p>As if they watched the natal time,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And came to bless the infant face;</p>
+
+ <p>Oh! there was gladness in that bower,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And beauty in the sky;</p>
+
+ <p>And Hope and Love foretold a dower</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of brightest destiny.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Unconscious child! that smiling lay</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Where love's fond eyes, and bright stars
+ gleamed,</p>
+
+ <p>How long and toilsome grew the way</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">O'er which those brilliant orbs had
+ beamed;</p>
+
+ <p>How oft the faltering step drew back</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In terror of the path,</p>
+
+ <p>When giddy steep, and wildering track</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Seemed fraught with only wrath!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>How oft recoiled the woman foot,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With tears that shamed the path she
+ trod.</p>
+
+ <p>To find a canker at the root</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of every hope, save that in God!</p>
+
+ <p>And long, oh! long, and weary long,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Ere she had learned to feel</p>
+
+ <p>That Love, unselfish, deep, and strong,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Repays its own wild zeal.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Bright Hesperus! who on the eyes</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of Milton poured thy brightest ray!</p>
+
+ <p>Effulgent dweller of the skies,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Take not from me thy light
+ away&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>I look on thee, and I recall</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The dreams of by-gone years&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>O'er many a hope I lay the pall</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With its becoming tears;</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Yet turn to thee with thy full beam,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And bless thee, Oh love-giving star!</p>
+
+ <p>For life's sweet, sad, illusive dream</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Fruition, though in Heaven
+ afar&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"A silver lining" hath the cloud</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Through dark and stormiest night,</p>
+
+ <p>And there are eyes to pierce the shroud</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And see the hidden light.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Thou movest side by side with Jove,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And, 'tis a quaint conceit,
+ perchance&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Thou seem'st in humid light to move</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As tears concealed thy burning
+ glance&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Such Virgil saw thee, when thine eyes,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">More lovely through their
+ glow,<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Won from the Thunderer of the skies</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">An accent soft and low.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And Mars is there with his red beams,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Tumultuous, earnest, unsubdued&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>And silver-footed Dian gleams</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Faint as when she, on Latmos
+ stood&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>God help the child! such night brought forth</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When Love to Power appeals,</p>
+
+ <p>And strong-willed Mars at frozen north</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Beside Diana steals.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author">BROOKLYN, August, 1850.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h3>FRIENDSHIP.</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>How oft the burdened heart would sink</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In fathomless despair</p>
+
+ <p>But for an angel on the brink&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In mercy standing there:</p>
+
+ <p>An angel bright with heavenly light&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And born of loftiest skies,</p>
+
+ <p>Who shows her face to mortal race,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In Friendship's holy guise.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Upon the brink of dark despair,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With smiling face she stands;</p>
+
+ <p>And to the victim shrinking there,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Outspreads her eager hands:</p>
+
+ <p>In accents low that sweetly flow</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To his awakening ear,</p>
+
+ <p>She woos him back&mdash;his deathward track.</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Toward Hope's effulgent sphere.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Sweet Friendship! let me daily give</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Thanks to my God for thee!</p>
+
+ <p>Without thy smiles t'were death to live,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And joy to cease to be:</p>
+
+ <p>Oh, bitterest drop in woe's full cup&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To have no friend in need!</p>
+
+ <p>To struggle on, with grief alone&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Were agony indeed!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author">August. WILLIAM C. RICHARDS.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h3>THE BALANCE OF LIFE.</h3>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>All daring sympathy&mdash;clear-sighted
+ love&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Is, from its source, a ray of endless
+ bliss;</p>
+
+ <p>Self has no place in the pure world above,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Its shadows vanish in the strife of
+ this.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The toil&mdash;the tumult&mdash;the sharp struggle
+ o'er,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The casket breaks;&mdash;men say, "A
+ martyr dies!"</p>
+
+ <p>The death&mdash;the martyrdom&mdash;has past
+ before:</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The soul, transfigured, finds its native
+ skies.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The good&mdash;the ill&mdash;we vainly strive to
+ weigh</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With Reason's scales, hung in the mists
+ of Time:</p>
+
+ <p>Yet child-like Faith the balance doth survey,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Held high in ether, by a hand
+ sublime.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author">May, 1850. HERMA.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>Science.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The SPANISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES have announced the following
+ subject for competition: "An experimental investigation and
+ explanation of the theory of nitrification, the causes which
+ most influence the production of this phenomenon, and the means
+ most conducive in Spain to natural nitrification." The prize,
+ to be awarded in May 1851, is to be a gold medal and 6000
+ copper reals&mdash;about seventy pounds sterling; and a second
+ similar medal will be given to the second best paper. The
+ papers, written in Spanish or Latin, are to be sent in before
+ the 1st May, with, as usual, the author's name under seal.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>IMPROVEMENTS IN THE TELEGRAPH.&mdash;The <i>Presse</i> gives
+ some account of experiments made at the house of M. de
+ Girardin, in Paris, with a new telegraphic dictionary, the
+ invention of M. Gonon. Dispatches in French, English,
+ Portuguese, Russian, and Latin, including proper names of men
+ and places, and also figures, were transmitted and translated,
+ says this account, with a rapidity and fidelity alike
+ marvelous, by an officer who knew nothing of any one of the
+ languages used except his own. Dots, commas, accents, and
+ breaks were all in their places. This dictionary of M. Gonon is
+ applicable alike to electric and aerial telegraphy, to
+ transmissions by night and by day, to maritime and to military
+ telegraphing. The same paper speaks of the great interest
+ excited in the European capitals by the approaching experiment
+ of submarine telegraphic communication between England and
+ France. The wires, it says, on the English side are deposited
+ and ready for laying down. It is probable that in a very few
+ days the experiment will be complete.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page265"
+ id="page265"></a>[pg 265]</span>
+
+ <h2>Authors and Books.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>NEW ORLEANS AS SEEN BY A GERMAN PRINCE is very naturally not
+ quite the same city as in the opinion of her own
+ pleasure-loving citizens, nor can the republic whose
+ South-western metropolis is condemned with the rigidity of a
+ merciless judge and the jaundice of an unfriendly traveler,
+ hope to get clear of censure from the same super-royal pen. It
+ seems that his serenest highness Major-General Duke Paul
+ William, of Wirtemburg, is traveling in America, and that the
+ <i>Ausland</i>, a weekly paper, of Stuttgart, is from time to
+ time favored with the results of his experience on the way.
+ From some recent portions of his correspondence <i>The
+ International</i> translates the subjoined <i>morceau</i>,
+ which, however, despite its great exaggeration, is not
+ altogether devoid of truth: "It is not necessary here to
+ mention how much New Orleans has altered, increased, and
+ deteriorated, for it is an established thing that cities which
+ grow to such gigantic proportions gain nothing in respect to
+ the morals of their inhabitants. Here drunkenness and gambling,
+ two vices of which the Americans were ignorant in the time of
+ the founders of their great federation, have taken very deep
+ root. The decrease of the inflexible spirit of religion, and
+ the increase of vice and luxury, gnaw the powerful tree, and
+ are fearful enemies, which cannot be resisted by a structure
+ that might resist with scorn all foreign foes, and would have
+ played a mighty part in the world's history had the spirit of
+ Washington and Franklin remained with it. The annexation of
+ Texas, the war with Mexico, and now the gold of California,
+ have transformed the United States. A people which makes
+ conquests, loses inward power in proportion to the
+ aggrandizement of its volume, and the increase of its external
+ enemies."</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>AN ARABIAN NEWSPAPER, with the title <i>Mobacher</i>. has
+ lately been commenced in Algiers, at the expense of the French
+ Government. It is edited in the cabinet of the
+ Governor-General, issued weekly, and lithographed, as less
+ expensive than printing, which in Arabic types would be quite
+ costly. It contains political news from Europe and Africa, the
+ latest advices from Constantinople, all those laws and decrees
+ of the Government which in any way concern the Arabs, and
+ descriptions of such new discoveries and inventions as can be
+ made intelligible to the readers for whom it is designed. A
+ thousand copies are printed weekly and sent to the chiefs and
+ headmen of all the tribes that are under French rule or
+ influence. At first it was not read much, but now the vanity of
+ the Arabs has been excited by it as a mark of special attention
+ from the Governor-General, so that they take it as an honor,
+ and a degree of curiosity has been excited to obtain news from
+ other parts of the world.</p>
+
+ <p>Within a short time, also, an additional importance has been
+ given to the paper by the publication in it of the amount of
+ the tribute which each tribe is required to pay to France.
+ Formerly this was known only to the chiefs who would
+ accordingly exact from their people whatever amount they deemed
+ best, under the pretense that it was for the government, while
+ the greater part was retained by themselves. These tribes have
+ profited greatly by the French conquest; it is estimated that
+ of the eighty millions of francs which the army in Algeria
+ costs yearly, from twenty to twenty-five millions remain in the
+ hands of the Arabs. The Arab sells his corn, dates, horses,
+ sheep, the baskets he weaves, &amp;c., to the European
+ population, but never buys anything from them in turn, except
+ it be arms and powder. The rest of his money he carries home
+ and buries where no one knows but himself, so that, if he dies
+ suddenly, it is lost. Only the chiefs of the tribe know how to
+ extort anything of these hidden sums. According to the most
+ moderate estimates the tribes must have from two to three
+ hundred millions of French money. The gains which the chiefs
+ draw from this wealth is considerable; some of them have from a
+ hundred to a hundred and fifty thousand francs income. They are
+ beginning to build large houses, and cultivate gardens around
+ them, a disposition which the government favors, because it is
+ easier to keep tribes in order that are settled and have
+ dwellings to lose which they cannot take with them. The
+ publication of the tribute in the <i>Mobacher</i>, is, under
+ these circumstances, of great value for the Arabs, because it
+ enables them, as it were, to supervise their chiefs, and to
+ refuse to pay exorbitant taxes laid under pretense of a high
+ tribute. This has increased the respect generally felt for the
+ paper, though it has not rendered it more a favorite with the
+ chiefs. The power of these leaders is very great in the various
+ tribes, having been in most cases hereditary, at least since
+ the tenth century, and although not always inherited in direct
+ line, the tribes have never suffered it to pass into the hands
+ of new families. Hitherto nothing has diminished it; the war
+ rather gave it new strength, and it is only by means of the
+ chiefs that the French can keep Algiers quiet. It would be a
+ remarkable fact if the dissolving power of publicity through
+ the press should be manifested here as elsewhere, and begin the
+ overthrow of the long standing influence exercised by the great
+ Arabian families.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>MRS. M. ST. LEON LOUD, of Philadelphia, has in the press of
+ Ticknor, Reed &amp; Fields, of Boston, a collection of her
+ poems, entitled, "Wayside Flowers." Mrs. Loud is a writer of
+ much grace and elegance, and occasionally of a rich and
+ delicate fancy. The late Mr. Poe was accustomed to praise her
+ works very highly, and was to have edited this edition of
+ them.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page266"
+ id="page266"></a>[pg 266]</span>
+
+ <p>THE LITERATURE OF SOCIALISM occupies the press in France.
+ The subject is warmly debated, <i>pro</i> and <i>con</i>. In a
+ pamphlet called <i>Despotisme ou Socialisme</i>, M. Pompery
+ rapidly sketches the alternative which, he says, lies open to
+ those who rise against despotism. There are but two religious
+ doctrines according to him: the one absolutist, represented by
+ De Maistre, and the Catholic school, which is, logically
+ enough, desirous of reestablishing the Inquisition; the other
+ professed by all the illustrious teachers of mankind, by
+ Pythagoras, Jesus, Socrates, Pascal, &amp;c., which, believing
+ in the goodness of the Creator and the perfectibility of man,
+ endeavors to found upon earth the reign of justice, fraternity,
+ and equality. A more important work on Socialism is that of Dr.
+ Guepin, of Nantes, <i>Philosophie du Socialisme</i>; and M.
+ Lecouturier announces a <i>Science du Socialisme</i>.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>MR. G.P.R. JAMES has taken a cottage at Jamaica, Long
+ Island, and is domiciliated as an American&mdash;we hope for a
+ long time. He has made troops of friends since his arrival
+ here, and is likely to be as popular in society as he has long
+ been in literature. We are sure we communicate a very pleasing
+ fact when we state that it is his intention to give in two or
+ three of our principal cities, during the autumn and fall, a
+ series of lectures&mdash;probably upon the chivalric ages, with
+ which no one is more profoundly familiar, and of which no one
+ can discourse more wisely or agreeably. His abilities, his
+ reputation, and the almost universal acquaintance with his
+ works, insure for him the largest success. We are indebted to
+ no other living author for so much enjoyment, and by his
+ proposed lectures he will not only add to our obligations, but
+ furnish an opportunity to repair in some degree the wrong he
+ has suffered from the imperfection and injustice of our
+ copyright system.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>"THE LIFE, CHARACTER, AND GENIUS OF EBENEZER ELLIOTT," is a
+ volume by January Searle, author of <i>Leaves from Sherwood
+ Forest</i>, &amp;c., who knew the corn-law rhymer well, and has
+ been enabled to give very characteristic sketches, original
+ descriptions, correspondence, &amp;c. There are in it many
+ judiciously selected specimens of Elliott's poems, prose
+ productions, and lectures. Mr. Searle observes of him, that "he
+ was cradled into poetry by human wrong and misery; and was
+ emphatically the bard of poverty&mdash;singing of the poor
+ man's loves and sorrows, and denouncing his oppressors." Again:
+ "He has one central idea&mdash;terrible and awful in its
+ aspect, although beautiful and beneficent in
+ spirit&mdash;before which he tries all causes, and men, and
+ things. It is the Eternal Idea of Right; his synonyme of God.
+ And this idea is perpetually present in his mind, pervades all
+ his thoughts, will not be shuffled nor cheated, but demands a
+ full satisfaction from all violators of it."</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE LATE MRS. OSGOOD was in a very remarkable degree
+ respected and beloved by those who were admitted to her
+ acquaintance. Without envy or jealousy, or any of the
+ immoralities of the intellect which most commonly beset writers
+ of her sex, she occasioned no enmities and was a party to none,
+ but was regarded, especially by the literary women of this
+ country, with a feeling of tenderness and devotion probably
+ unparalleled in the annals of literature or of society.
+ Immediately after her death, therefore, a desire was manifested
+ to illustrate the common regard for her by some suitable
+ testimonial, and upon consultation, it was decided to publish a
+ splendid souvenir, to consist of the gratuitous contributions
+ of her friends, and with the profits accruing from its sale to
+ erect a monument to her memory in the cemetery of Mount Auburn.
+ This gift book, edited by Mrs. Osgood's most intimate friend,
+ Mary E. Hewitt, will be published by Mr. Putnam, on the first
+ of October, under the title of <i>The Cairn</i>, and it will
+ contain original articles by George Aubrey, Lord Bishop of
+ Jamaica: the Right Rev. George W. Doane, the Right Rev. Alonzo
+ Potter, the Hon. R.H. Walworth, the Hon. J. Leander Starr, the
+ Rev. C.S. Henry, D.D., G.P.R. James, Esq., N.P. Willis, Esq.,
+ W. Gilmore Simms, Esq., Bayard Taylor, Esq., J.H. Boker, Esq.,
+ Alfred B. Street, Esq., R. H. Stoddard, Esq., Miss Fredrika
+ Bremer, Mrs. Sigourney, Mrs. Oakes Smith, Mrs. Embury, Mrs.
+ Lewis, Mrs. Neal, Mrs. Willard, Mrs. Whitman, Miss Lynch, Miss
+ Hunter, Miss Cheesebro', and indeed nearly all the writers of
+ her sex who have attained any eminence in our literary world.
+ The volume will be illustrated with nine engravings on steel,
+ by Cheney and other eminent artists.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE REV. WALTER COLTON has just published through A.S.
+ Barnes &amp; Co. "Three Years in California," a journal of
+ experiences and observations in the gold region, from the
+ period when it first attracted the attention of the Atlantic
+ cities. Mr. Colton was some time alcade of Monterey, and he had
+ in every way abundant opportunity to acquire whatever facts are
+ deserving of preservation in history. His "Ship and Shore,"
+ "Constantinople and Athens," "Deck and Port," and other works,
+ have illustrated his genial temper, shrewdness, and skill in
+ description and character writing; and this book will increase
+ his reputation for these qualities. It contains portraits of
+ Capt. Sutter, Col. Fremont, Mr. Gwin, Mr. Wright, Mr. Larkin,
+ and Mr. Snyder, a map of the valley of the Sacramento, and
+ several other engravings, very spirited in design and
+ execution.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>MR. GEORGE STEPHENS, author of the "<i>Manuscripts of
+ Erdely</i>," has been struck by ill health and reduced to
+ poverty, and an amateur play has been prepared for his benefit
+ at the Soho Theater. He wrote "The Vampire," "Montezuma," and
+ "Martinuzzi."</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page267"
+ id="page267"></a>[pg 267]</span>
+
+ <p>The Gallery of Illustrious Americans, conducted by Mr.
+ Lester, continues with every number to increase in interest.
+ The work is designed to embrace folio portraits, engraved by
+ Davignon, from daguerreotypes by Brady, of twenty-four of the
+ most eminent American citizens who have lived since the time of
+ Washington. The portraits thus far have been admirable for
+ truthfulness and artistic effect. It may be said that the
+ <i>only</i> published pictures we have, deserving to be called
+ portraits, of the historian Prescott, or Mr. Calhoun, or
+ Colonel Fremont, are in this Gallery. The great artist,
+ naturalist, and man of letters, Audubon, is reflected here as
+ he appears at the close of the battle, receiving the reverence
+ of nations and ages. In the biographical department Mr. Lester
+ has evinced very eminent abilities for this kind of writing. He
+ seizes the prominent events of history and the strong points of
+ character, and presents them with such force and fullness, and
+ happy combination, as to make the letter-press as interesting
+ and valuable as the engraved portion of the work. We are
+ pleased to learn that the Gallery is remarkably successful. No
+ publication of equal splendor and expensiveness has ever before
+ been so well received in this country. The cost of it is but
+ one dollar per number, or twenty dollars for the series of
+ twenty-four numbers. It is now half completed.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>M. Max Schlesinger, author of "The War in Hungary, in
+ 1848-9,"&mdash;a work which, from what we read of it in the
+ foreign journals, is much the most striking and attractive of
+ all that have appeared upon its subject in English,&mdash;is
+ described in the <i>Athenæum</i>, as by birth a Hungarian, by
+ the accidents of fortune a German. For some time a resident in
+ Prague, and more recently settled in Berlin, he has had
+ excellent opportunities of seeing the men and studying the
+ questions connected both in the literary and political sense
+ with the present movement of ideas and races in Eastern Europe.
+ His acquaintance with the aspects of nature in his native
+ land&mdash;his knowledge of the peculiar character of its
+ inhabitants, their manners, modes of thought and habits of
+ life&mdash;his familiarity with past history&mdash;his right
+ conception of the leading men in the recent struggle&mdash;are
+ all vouched for as "essentially accurate" by no less an
+ authority than Count Pulszky. It would be an injustice merely
+ to say that M. Schlesinger has given in an original and
+ picturesque way a general view of the course of events in the
+ late war, more complete and connected than is afforded in any
+ account hitherto presented to the public. He has done more: he
+ has enabled the German and English reader to understand the
+ miracle of a nation of four or five millions of men rising up
+ at the command of a great statesman, and doing successful
+ battle with the elaborately organized power of a first-class
+ European state, shaking it to its very foundations, and
+ contending, not without hope, against two mighty military
+ empires,&mdash;until the treachery from within paralyzed its
+ power of resistance.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Dr. Mayo's new novel, "The Berber, or the Mountaineer of the
+ Atlas," published by Putnam, promises to be scarcely less
+ popular than his "Kaloolah." The <i>Evening Post</i> says of
+ it: "Kaloolah was a sprightly narrative of the wanderings of a
+ Yankee, who seemed to combine in his person the characteristics
+ of Robinson Crusoe with those of Baron Munchausen; but the
+ Berber professes to be nothing more than a novel; or, as the
+ author says in his preface, his principal object has been to
+ tell an agreeable story in an agreeable way. In doing so,
+ however, an eye has been had to the illustration of Moorish
+ manners, customs, history, and geography; to the
+ exemplification of Moorish life as it actually is in Barbary in
+ the present day, and not as it usually appears in the vague and
+ poetic glamour of the common Moorish romance. It has also been
+ an object to introduce to the acquaintance of the reader a
+ people who have played a most important part in the world's
+ history, but of whom very few educated people know anything
+ more than the name. As Dr. Mayo has traveled extensively over
+ the regions he describes, we presume that his descriptions may
+ be taken as true. His account of the Berbers, a tribe of
+ ancient Asiatic origin, who inhabit a range of the Atlas, and
+ who live a semi-savage life like the Arabs, is minute, and to
+ the intelligent reader quite as interesting as the more
+ narrative parts of the work. It is, perhaps, the best evidence
+ of the merits of the book, that the whole first edition was
+ exhausted by orders from the country before the first number
+ had appeared in the city."</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Col. Forbes, who was in Italy during the revolution, and
+ many years previous, and who was himself, both in a military
+ and civic capacity, one of the actors in that event, the
+ <i>Evening Post</i> informs us, is about to give public
+ lectures on the subject of Italy in the various cities and
+ towns of the United States. Col. Forbes was intimately
+ connected with the revolutionary chiefs during the brief
+ existence of the Roman Republic, and was directly and
+ confidently employed by Mazzini. His knowledge of the country,
+ its people, its politics, and its recent history, will supply
+ him with materials for making his lectures highly interesting
+ and instructive.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The Gem of the Western World, edited by Mrs. Hewitt, and
+ published by Cornish &amp; Co., Fulton street, is a very
+ beautiful gift-book, and in its literary character is deserving
+ of a place with the most splendid and; tasteful annuals of the
+ season. Mrs. Hewitt's own contributions to it embrace some of
+ her finest compositions, and are of course among its most
+ brilliant contents.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page268"
+ id="page268"></a>[pg 268]</span>
+
+ <p>FRENCH PERIODICALS.&mdash;A Parisian correspondent of the
+ London <i>Literary Gazette</i> observes, that if we exclude the
+ <i>Revue des Deux Mondes</i>&mdash;a, sort of cross between the
+ English <i>Quarterly</i> and the monthlies,&mdash;if we exclude
+ also a few dry scientific periodicals, and one or two
+ theatrical or musical newspapers, we shall seek in vain for any
+ <i>Quarterly</i>, or <i>Blackwood</i>, or <i>Art Union</i>, or
+ <i>Literary Gazette</i>; and that even the periodicals and
+ journals which make the nearest approach to the weekly,
+ monthly, or quarterly publications of England, are either
+ wretched compilations, or abominably ill-written and
+ ill-printed. The <i>feuilleton</i> system of the newspapers is
+ no doubt the principal cause of the periodical literature being
+ in such an extremely low condition. But though literary and
+ scientific periodicals be, generally speaking, vile in quality,
+ they can at least boast of quantity. There are, it seems, not
+ fewer than 300 of one kind or another published in Paris alone.
+ Among them are 44 devoted to medicine, chemistry, natural
+ science, &amp;c.; 42, trade, commerce, railways,
+ advertisements; 34, fashions; 30, law; 22, administration,
+ public works, roads, bridges, mines; 19, archæology, history,
+ biography, geography, numismatics; 19, public instruction and
+ education; 15, agriculture and horticulture; 8, bibliography
+ and typography; 10, army and navy; 7, literary; the rest
+ theatrical, musical, or of a character too hybrid to be
+ classified.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE ILLUSTRATED DOMESTIC BIBLE, edited by the Rev. Ingram
+ Cobbin, seems to us decidedly the best family Bible ever
+ offered to the trade in this country. It is printed with
+ remarkable correctness and beauty; illustrated with a very
+ large number of maps and engravings on wood; and its notes,
+ written with much condensation and perspicuity, are such as are
+ necessary for the understanding of the text. Indeed, all that
+ is added to the letter of the Bible is legitimate and necessary
+ <i>illustration</i>. It is being published in a series of
+ twenty-five numbers, at twenty-five cents each, by S. Hueston,
+ publisher of <i>The Knickerbocker</i>, Nassau-street.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE VIENNA UNIVERSITY, long one of the best in Europe, has
+ not been reopened since the insurrection of November, 1848, its
+ principal edifice having been occupied as barracks for a
+ regiment of soldiers. It is now proposed to restore it to its
+ proper use, but great difficulty is experienced in finding
+ professors. The old ones are scattered, some as exiles in
+ foreign countries, on account of democratic
+ opinions,&mdash;some in prison for the same reason, others
+ employed elsewhere. Wackernagel, the eminent professor of the
+ German Language and Literature at Basle, Switzerland, tempted
+ by liberal offers, had promised to come to Vienna, and lend the
+ aid of his reputation and talents to the restoration of the
+ University, but being lately at Milan, on a wedding tour, as he
+ and his wife were passing through the <i>Piazza d'Armi</i>,
+ their ears were saluted by cries of pain, which on inquiry they
+ found to proceed from sundry rebellious Italians, of both
+ sexes, who were receiving each from twenty-five to fifty blows
+ of the military baton, or cane, employed by the Austrians in
+ flogging soldiers. Madame Wackernagel at once declared that she
+ would never willingly inhabit a country whose laws and habits
+ suffered women to be so brutally punished for patriotism, and
+ her husband could only agree with her. He has accordingly
+ broken off the engagement, and the Government cannot hope to
+ supply his place.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>HINCKS ON LITERARY LARCENY.&mdash;A Canadian friend sends us
+ the following extract from a speech by Francis Hincks, a
+ leading member of the Canadian Ministry, touching the
+ International Copyright question:</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"The American publisher steals the works of British
+ authors, because he is immoral enough to do it, because he
+ is scoundrel enough, and the nation is scoundrel enough to
+ permit it. (Ironical cheers.) Yes, because the nation is
+ scoundrel enough to permit it."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <p>Our unknown friend who sends us this wants us to give Hincks
+ a thorough roasting for it, and evidently expects every hair on
+ our head to bristle with indignation. Now we have not the least
+ objection to roasting the Minister aforesaid, and will do it
+ when a fair chance presents itself, but we don't consider this
+ such a chance. In fact, though we think Francis has drawn
+ rather a strong draught from "the well of English undefiled,"
+ yet essentially we regard his observations above quoted as
+ rather more than half right. It <i>is</i> rascally to steal a
+ man's book, print it, sell it, read it, and refuse him any pay
+ for the labor of writing it; and we don't see that his being an
+ Englishman makes any material difference. There may be a
+ cheaper way to get the proceeds of another man's toil than by
+ paying for it, but we don't think there is any other strictly
+ honest way.&mdash;<i>Tribune</i>.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>HERR SCHUMANN's opera, "Généviève," was produced at Leipsic
+ on the 28th ultimo. "This work," says the <i>Gazette
+ Musicale</i>, "after having been much recommended beforehand,
+ does not seem to have satisfied public expectation, being
+ concert music, without any dramatic force." For the verdict
+ which will finally be passed on "Généviève" every one must be
+ curious who has at all followed the journals of Young Germany
+ in the recent crusades which they nave made, not so much to
+ establish Schumann as a great composer, as to prove him greater
+ than Mendelssohn.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>THE GRAND LITERARY TRADE SALES are now in progress in New
+ York: and the catalogues of the rival houses are the largest
+ ever printed. Cooley &amp; Keese at their splendid hall in
+ Broadway present this year a richer and more extensive series
+ of invoices than has ever before been sold in America.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page269"
+ id="page269"></a>[pg 269]</span>
+
+ <h2>The Fine Arts.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Bavaria is a sort of artists' paradise, both the late King
+ Louis and the present Maximilian being determined to leave
+ behind them the glory of munificent patrons of art. In this
+ they have so far succeeded, that Munich, which before their
+ time was by no means among German cities the most worthy a
+ traveler's attention, may now dispute the palm even with
+ Dresden, notwithstanding the unrivaled gallery of paintings,
+ possessed by the latter. For students of modern art, and
+ especially of the German schools, Munich is incomparable, while
+ its collection of ancient sculptures cannot be equaled out of
+ Italy. We now learn that King Maximilian has conceived the plan
+ of a grand series of pictures to comprehend the prominent
+ epochs and events of history. The most eminent German and
+ foreign artists are to be invited to assist in carrying out
+ this immense undertaking; so that thus the series will not only
+ represent the great experiences of mankind, but will, it is
+ hoped, contain specimens of all the great schools of modern
+ painting.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>An exhibition of indisputable works by the old painters is
+ now open at Valenciennes, in France. It consists of pictures
+ belonging to the family of the Belgian general Rottiers. They
+ are for sale, either single or together. Among them is a St.
+ Denis, bearing his Head, by Rubens, said to have been painted
+ by order of Pope Urban VIII. It was deposited in the Convent of
+ the <i>Annunciades</i>, at Antioch; in 1747, Louis XV. offered
+ 100,000 francs for it, but was refused, the convent having no
+ right to dispose of it. Afterward, on the suppression of the
+ convent, it fell into the hands of the family to which it now
+ belongs. The exhibition also contains a landscape by Salvator
+ Rosa, representing a scene in the Appenines; a Magdalen
+ kneeling in a Cavern, by Kneller; two Allegories, by Giulio
+ Romano; several portraits by Rubens and Van Dyke, besides other
+ works of less value.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Darley's "Sleepy Hollow."&mdash;The London Art Journal, for
+ July, has the following notice of Mr. Darley's illustrations of
+ Irving's "Legends of Sleepy Hollow," published by the
+ <i>American Art Union</i>: "The charmingly quaint original
+ legend told with so much quiet humor by Washington Irving, is
+ here illustrated by a native artist in a congenial spirit, and
+ his scenes realized in a manner which must give its author
+ satisfaction, and redound to the credit of the designer. We
+ have before noticed the great ability exhibited by Mr. Darley
+ for the mode of illustration he adopts, which we may add is
+ that rendered famous by Retzsh. The series we are now noticing
+ are quite as meritorious as that designed by the same artist to
+ Rip Van Winkle; but the subject matter is not equally capable
+ of such broad contrasts in drollery as that legend presents.
+ Nevertheless, Mr. Darley has executed his task in the truest
+ appreciation of his author; and his hero is the veritable
+ Ichabod Crane of Irving; his love-making scene with "the
+ peerless daughter of Van Tassel" is exquisite in its quiet
+ humor; so also is the merry-making in the Dutch Farmer's home.
+ Altogether, the series is extremely good, and does the greatest
+ credit to the designer. American literature thus illustrated by
+ American artists cannot fail to achieve honor to that country
+ in the old world as well as the new. We believe Mr. Darley, in
+ his line, to be as great as any American artist whose works
+ have fallen under our notice."</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Chaucer's Monument.&mdash;The <i>Athenæum</i> says, "One of
+ the objections formerly urged against taking steps to restore
+ the perishing memorial of the Father of English Poetry in
+ Poet's Corner was, that it was not really his tomb, but a
+ monument erected to do honor to his memory a century and a half
+ after his death. An examination, however, of the tomb itself,
+ by competent authorities, has proved this objection to be
+ unfounded&mdash;inasmuch as there can exist no doubt, we hear,
+ from the difference of workmanship, material, &amp;c., that the
+ altar tomb is the original tomb of Geoffrey Chaucer,&mdash;and
+ that instead of Nicholas Brigham having erected an entirely new
+ monument, he only added to that which then existed the
+ overhanging canopy, &amp;c. So that the sympathy of Chaucer's
+ admirers is now invited to the restoration of what till now was
+ really not known to exist&mdash;<i>the original tomb</i> of the
+ Poet&mdash;as well as to the additions made to it by the
+ affectionate remembrance of Nicholas Brigham."</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Lessing's new picture.&mdash;A letter from Düsseldorf under
+ date of 9th July, in the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i>, says that
+ Lessing's great painting, "The Martyrdom of Huss," Sad just
+ been finished and had been exhibited for the last few days at
+ the Academy of Fine Arts, where it was visited by thousands.
+ When it became known that orders for its immediate shipment had
+ arrived from New York, the desire to obtain a last view of this
+ truly great work became so intense that it was found necessary
+ to put the Police in requisition to keep back the throng, and
+ the gates of the Academy had to be closed. It causes general
+ regret that it is to be sent out of the country. The <i>Cologne
+ Gazette</i> calls this picture the most sublime production of
+ the great artist, and expresses the conviction that a speedy
+ fortune might be realized by its exhibition in Europe.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Mr. George Flagg has just completed a portrait of Mrs. E.
+ Oakes Smith, which will be ranked among the first productions
+ of his pencil. We know of scarce a picture as beautiful or a
+ portrait as truthful. It is to be engraved, we believe, by
+ Cheney.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page270"
+ id="page270"></a>[pg 270]</span>
+
+ <p>Mlle. Rachel.&mdash;The wonderful accuracy of the
+ death-scene in "Adrienne Lecouvreur" has been the object of
+ universal praise in London, not merely from the thrilled and
+ thralled public, but from men of art and science. A physician,
+ it is said, was complimenting Mademoiselle on her amazing truth
+ to the symptoms of mortal agony: "You must have studied death
+ closely," said he. "Yes, I have," was the quiet reply; "my
+ maid's. I went up to her&mdash;I stayed with her&mdash;she
+ recommended her mother to me!&mdash;I was studying my part."
+ This is probably merely one of those cynical stories with which
+ the sharp people of Paris love to environ and encircle every
+ one who stands a dangerous chance of becoming too popular. But
+ smaller artists than Mademoiselle Rachel have sometimes had
+ recourse to curious expedients to give their dramatic
+ personations a show at reality. The French <i>prima donna</i>,
+ who not very long ago appeared in M. Clapisson's poor opera,
+ "Jeanne la Folle," is said to have shut herself up in the
+ <i>Salpêtrière</i>, by way of studying <i>her</i> part, and to
+ have been rewarded for her zealous curiosity by receiving a
+ basin of scalding soup dashed in her face by one of the poor
+ miserable objects of her examination.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>A Frankfort journal states that the colossal statue of
+ Bavaria, by SCHWANTHALER, which is to be placed on the hill of
+ Seudling, surpasses in its gigantic proportions all the works
+ of the moderns. It will have to be removed in pieces from the
+ foundry where it is cast to its place of destination,&mdash;and
+ each piece will require sixteen horses to draw it. The great
+ toes are each half a metre in length. In the head two persons
+ could dance a polka very conveniently,&mdash;while the nose
+ might lodge the musician. The thickness of the robe&mdash;which
+ forms a rich drapery descending to the ankles&mdash;is about
+ six inches, and its circumference at the bottom about two
+ hundred metres. The Crown of Victory which the figure holds in
+ her hands weighs one hundred quintals (a quintal is a
+ hundred-weight).</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The death of SIR ROBERT PEEL, says the <i>Literary
+ Gazette</i>, has awakened a busy competing spirit for the
+ production of articles relating to him, and especially in
+ connection with Literature and the Arta. In the one, Memoirs,
+ Speeches, Recollections, Anecdotes, &amp;c., have been
+ abundantly supplied; and in the other, every printshop window
+ in London displays its Peels of every style and every degree,
+ but mostly very indifferent, absolutely bad, or utter
+ caricature.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Goupil, Vibert &amp; Co. have published a series of
+ portraits of eminent Americans which is deserving of the
+ largest approval and sale. The head of Mr. Bryant is the best
+ ever published of that poet; it presents his fine features and
+ striking phrenology with great force and with pleasing as well
+ as just effect. A portrait of Mr. Willis is wonderfully
+ truthful, in detail, and is in an eminent degree
+ characteristic. The admirers of that author who have not seen
+ him will find in it their ideal, and all his acquaintances will
+ see in it as distinctly the real man who sits in the congress
+ of editors as the representative of the polite world. The head
+ of the artist Mount, after Elliott, is not by any means less
+ successful. Among the other portraits are those of Gen. Scott,
+ President Fillmore, Robert Fulton, J.Q. Adams, Mr. Clay, Mr.
+ Webster, and President Taylor. They are all on imperial sheets,
+ and are sold at $1 each.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The Paris papers tell a story of a young actor, who finding
+ no engagement in that city, came to America to try his fortune.
+ From New Orleans he went to California, was lucky as a digger,
+ embarked in business and got immensely rich. He is now building
+ in the Champs Elysées a magnificent hotel for his mother. All
+ actors are not so fortunate.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Expected arrivals from Nineveh.&mdash;The Great Bull, and
+ upward of one hundred tons of sculpture, excavated by Dr.
+ Layard, are now on their way to England, and may be expected in
+ the course of September. In addition-to the Elgin, Phigalian,
+ Lycian, and Boodroun marbles, the British Museum will soon be
+ enriched with a magnificent series of Assyrian sculptures.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Mr. Burt has nearly finished the "Anne Page and Slender" of
+ Leslie, which is to be the annual engraving of the Art Union.
+ It will be an admirable picture, but we cannot but regret that
+ the managers selected for this purpose a work so familiar.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The French Minister of the Interior has decided that marble
+ busts of M. Gay-Lussac and of M. Blainville shall be executed
+ at the expense of the government, and placed in the
+ Institute.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>Mr. Powell, who is living in Paris, engaged upon his picture
+ for the capital, has been in ill health nearly all the
+ summer.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>Recent Deaths.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The French papers report the death, at Paris, of M. MORA,
+ the Mexican Minister Plenipotentiary at the Court of St. James.
+ M. Mora was the author of a History of Mexico and its
+ Revolutions since the establishment of its independence, and
+ editor-in-chief of several journals in Mexico.</p>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>MR. B. SIMMONS, an amiable and accomplished writer, whose
+ name will be recollected as that of a frequent contributor of
+ lyrical poems of a high order to <i>Blackwood's Magazine</i>,
+ and to several of the Annuals, died in London on the 20th of
+ July.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page271"
+ id="page271"></a>[pg 271]</span>
+
+ <h4>[From Graham's Magazine.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>ON A PORTRAIT OF CROMWELL.</h2>
+
+ <h4>BY JAMES T. FIELD.</h4>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"Paint me as I am," said Cromwell,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Rough with age, and gashed with
+ wars&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Show my visage as you find it&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Less than truth my soul abhors!"</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>This was he whose mustering phalanx</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Swept the foe at Marston Moor;</p>
+
+ <p>This was he whose arm uplifted</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From the dust the fainting poor.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>God had made his face uncomely&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">"Paint me as I am," he said.</p>
+
+ <p>So he lives upon the canvas</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Whom they chronicled as <i>dead</i>!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Simple justice he requested</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">At the artist's glowing hands,</p>
+
+ <p>"Simple justice!" from his ashes</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Cries a voice that still commands.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And, behold! the page of History,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Centuries dark with Cromwell's name,</p>
+
+ <p>Shines to-day with thrilling luster</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">From the light of Cromwell's fame!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From the Examiner.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>WORDSWORTH'S POSTHUMOUS POEM.<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a></h2>
+
+ <p>This is a voice that speaks to us across a gulf of nearly
+ fifty years. A few months ago Wordsworth was taken from us at
+ the ripe age of fourscore, yet here we have him addressing the
+ public, as for the first time, with all the fervor, the unworn
+ freshness, the hopeful confidence of thirty. We are carried
+ back to the period when Coleridge, Byron, Scott, Rogers, and
+ Moore were in their youthful prime. We live again in the
+ stirring days when the poets who divided public attention and
+ interest with the Fabian struggle in Portugal and Spain, with
+ the wild and terrible events of the Russian campaign, with the
+ uprising of the Teutonic nations and the overthrow of Napoleon,
+ were in a manner but commencing their cycle of songs. This is
+ to renew, to antedate, the youth of a majority of the living
+ generation. But only those whose memory still carries them so
+ far back, can feel within them any reflex of that eager
+ excitement with which the news of battles fought and won, or
+ mailcoach copies of some new work of Scott, or Byron, or the
+ <i>Edinburgh Review</i>, were looked for and received in those
+ already old days.</p>
+
+ <p>We need not remind the readers of the <i>Excursion</i> that
+ when Wordsworth was enabled by the generous enthusiasm of
+ Raisley Calvert to retire with a slender independence to his
+ native mountains, there to devote himself exclusively to his
+ art, his first step was to review and record in verse the
+ origin and progress of his own powers, as far as he was
+ acquainted with them. This was at once an exercise in
+ versification, and a test for the kind of poetry for which he
+ was by temperament fitted. The result was a determination to
+ compose a philosophical poem containing views of man, of
+ nature, and of society. This, ambitious conception has been
+ doomed to share the fate of so many other colossal
+ undertakings. Of the three parts of his <i>Recluse</i>, thus
+ planned, only the second, (the <i>Excursion</i>, published in
+ 1814,) has been completed. Of the other two there exists only
+ the first book of the first, and the plan of the third. The
+ <i>Recluse</i> will remain in fragmentary greatness, a poetical
+ Cathedral of Cologne.</p>
+
+ <p>Matters standing thus, it has not been without a melancholy
+ sense of the uncertainty of human projects, and of the contrast
+ between the sanguine enterprise and its silent evaporation (so
+ often the "history of an individual mind"), that we have
+ perused this <i>Prelude</i> which no completed strain was
+ destined to follow. Yet in the poem itself there is nothing to
+ inspire depression. It is animated throughout with the hopeful
+ confidence in the poet's own powers, so natural to the time of
+ life at which it was composed; it evinces a power and soar of
+ imagination unsurpassed in any of his writings; and its images
+ and incidents have a freshness and distinctness which they not
+ seldom lost, when they came to be elaborated, as many of them
+ were, in his minor poems of a later date.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>Prelude</i>, as the title-page indicates, is a
+ poetical autobiography, commencing with the earliest
+ reminiscences of the author, and continued to the time at which
+ it was composed. We are told that it was begun in 1799 and
+ completed, in 1805. It consists of fourteen books. Two are
+ devoted to the infancy and school-time of the poet; four to the
+ period of his University life; two to a brief residence in
+ London immediately subsequent to his leaving Cambridge, and a
+ retrospect of the progress his mind had then made; and three to
+ a residence in France, chiefly in the Loire, but partly in
+ Paris, during the stormy period of Louis the Sixteenth's flight
+ and capture, and the fierce contest between the Girondins and
+ Robespierre. Five books are then occupied with an analysis of
+ the internal struggle occasioned by the contradictory
+ influences of rural and secluded nature in boyhood, and of
+ society when the young man first mingles with the world. The
+ surcease of the strife is recorded in the fourteenth book,
+ entitled "Conclusion."</p>
+
+ <p>The poem is addressed to Coleridge; and apart from its
+ poetical merits, is interesting as at once a counterpart and a
+ supplement to that author's philosophical and beautiful
+ criticism of the <i>Lyrical Ballads</i> in his <i>Biographia
+ Literaria</i>. It completes the explanation, there given, of
+ the peculiar constitution of Wordsworth's mind, and of his
+ poetical theory. It confirms and justifies our opinion that
+ that theory was essentially partial and erroneous; but at the
+ same time it establishes the fact that Wordsworth was a true
+ and a great poet in despite of his theory.</p>
+
+ <p>The great defect of Wordsworth, in our judgment, was want of
+ sympathy with and knowledge of men. From his birth till his
+ entry at college, he lived in a region where he met with none
+ whose minds might awaken his sympathies, and where life was
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page272"
+ id="page272"></a>[pg 272]</span> altogether uneventful. On
+ the other hand, that region abounded with the inert,
+ striking, and most impressive objects of natural scenery.
+ The elementary grandeur and beauty of external nature came
+ thus to fill up his mind to the exclusion of human
+ interests. To such a result his individual constitution
+ powerfully contributed. The sensuous element was singularly
+ deficient in his nature. He never seems to have passed
+ through that erotic period out of which some poets have
+ never emerged. A soaring, speculative imagination, and an
+ impetuous, resistless self-will, were his distinguishing
+ characteristics. From first to last he concentrated himself
+ within himself; brooding over his own fancies and
+ imaginations to the comparative disregard of the incidents
+ and impressions which suggested them; and was little
+ susceptible of ideas originating in other minds. We behold
+ the result. He lives alone in a world of mountains, streams,
+ and atmospheric phenomena, dealing with moral abstractions,
+ and rarely encountered by even shadowy specters of beings
+ outwardly resembling himself. There is measureless grandeur
+ and power in his moral speculations. There is intense
+ reality in his pictures of external nature. But though his
+ human characters are presented with great skill of
+ metaphysical analysis, they have rarely life or animation.
+ He is always the prominent, often the exclusive, object of
+ his own song.</p>
+
+ <p>Upon a mind so constituted, with its psychological
+ peculiarities so cherished and confirmed, the fortunes and
+ fates of others, and the stirring events of his time, made
+ vivid but very transient impressions. The conversation and
+ writing of contemporaries trained among books, and with the
+ faculty of speech more fully developed than that of thought,
+ seemed colorless and empty to one with&mdash;whom natural
+ objects and grandeurs were always present in such overpowering
+ force. Excluded by his social position from taking an active
+ part in the public events of the day, and repelled by the
+ emptiness of the then fashionable literature, he turned to
+ private and humble life as possessing at least a reality. But
+ he thus withheld himself from the contemplation of those great
+ mental excitements which only great public struggles can
+ awaken. He contracted a habit of exaggerating the importance of
+ every-day incidents and emotions. He accustomed himself to see
+ in men and in social relations only what he was predetermined
+ to see there, and to impute to them a value and importance
+ derived mainly from his own self-will. Even his natural good
+ taste contributed to confirm him in his error. The two
+ prevailing schools of literature in England, at that time, were
+ the trashy and mouthing writers who adopted the sounding
+ language of Johnson and Darwin, unenlivened by the vigorous
+ thought of either; and the "dead-sea apes" of that inflated,
+ sentimental, revolutionary style which Diderot had
+ unconsciously originated, and Kotzebue carried beyond the verge
+ of caricature. The right feeling and manly thought of
+ Wordsworth were disgusted by these shallow word-mongers, and he
+ flew to the other extreme. Under the influences&mdash;repulsive
+ and attractive&mdash;we have thus attempted to indicate, he
+ adopted the theory that as much of grandeur and profound
+ emotion was to be found in mere domestic incidents and
+ feelings, as on the more conspicuous stage of public life; and
+ that a bald and naked simplicity of language was the perfection
+ of style. Singularly enough, he was confirmed in these notions
+ by the very writer of the day whose own natural genius, more
+ than any of his contemporaries, impelled him to revel in great,
+ wild, supernatural conceptions; and to give utterance to them
+ in gorgeous language. Coleridge was perhaps the only
+ contemporary from whom Wordsworth ever took an opinion; and
+ that he did so from him, is mainly attributable to the fact
+ that Coleridge did little more than reproduce to him his own
+ notions, sometimes rectified by a subtler logic, but always
+ rendered more attractive by new and dazzling illustrations.</p>
+
+ <p>Fortunately it is out of the power of the most perverse
+ theory to spoil the true poet. The poems of Wordsworth must
+ continue to charm and elevate mankind, in defiance of his
+ crotchets, just as Luther, Henri Quatre, and other living
+ impersonations of poetry do, despite all quaint peculiarities
+ of the attire, the customs, or the opinions of their respective
+ ages, with which they were imbued. The spirit of truth and
+ poetry redeems, ennobles, hallows, every external form in which
+ it may be lodged. We may "pshaw" and "pooh" at Harry Gill and
+ the Idiot Boy; but the deep and tremulous tenderness of
+ sentiment, the strong-winged flight of fancy, the excelling and
+ unvarying purity, which pervade all the writings of Wordsworth,
+ and the exquisite melody of his lyrical poems, must ever
+ continue to attract and purify the mind. The very excesses into
+ which his one-sided theory betrayed him, acted as a useful
+ counter-agent to the prevailing bad taste of his time.</p>
+
+ <p>The Prelude may take a permanent place as one of the most
+ perfect of his compositions. It has much of the fearless
+ felicity of youth; and its imagery has the sharp and vivid
+ outline of ideas fresh from the brain. The subject&mdash;the
+ development of his own great powers&mdash;raises him above that
+ willful dallying with trivialties which repels us in some of
+ his other works. And there is real vitality in the theme, both
+ from our anxiety to know the course of such a mind, and from
+ the effect of an absorbing interest in himself excluding that
+ languor which sometimes seized him in his efforts to impart or
+ attribute interest to themes possessing little or none in
+ themselves. Its mere narrative, though often very homely, and
+ dealing in too many words, is often characterized also by
+ elevated imagination, and always by eloquence. The bustle of
+ London life, the prosaic uncouthness of its exterior, the
+ earnest heart that beats beneath it, the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page273"
+ id="page273"></a>[pg 273]</span> details even of its
+ commonest amusements, from Bartholomew Fair to Sadler's
+ Wells, are portrayed with simple force and delicate
+ discrimination; and for the most part skillfully contrasted
+ with the rural life of the poet's native home. There are
+ some truthful and powerful sketches of French character and
+ life, in the early revolutionary era. But above all, as
+ might have been anticipated, Wordsworth's heart revels in
+ the elementary beauty and grandeur of his mountain theme;
+ while his own simple history is traced with minute fidelity,
+ and is full of unflagging interest.</p>
+
+ <p>We have already adverted to the fact that this Prelude was
+ but the overture to a grander song which the poet has left, in
+ a great measure, unsung. Reverting to this consideration an
+ important fact seems to force itself upon our notice. The
+ creative power of Wordsworth would appear to have been
+ paralyzed after the publication of his Excursion. All his most
+ finished works precede that period. His later writings
+ generally lack the strength and freshness which we find in
+ those of an earlier date. Some may attribute this to his want
+ of the stimulus which the necessity of writing for a livelihood
+ imparts, and in part they may be right; but this is not the
+ whole secret. That his isolation from the stirring contact of
+ competition, that his utter disregard of contemporary events,
+ allowed his mind, which for perfect health's sake requires
+ constantly-renewed impulses from without, to subside into
+ comparative hebetude, there can be no doubt whatever. But the
+ main secret of the freezing up of his fountain of poetical
+ inspiration, we really take to have been his change of
+ politics. Wordsworth's muse was essentially liberal&mdash;one
+ may say, Jacobinical. That he was unconscious of any sordid
+ motive for his change, we sincerely believe; but as certainly
+ his conforming was the result less of reasonable conviction
+ than of willfulness. It was by a determined effort of his will
+ that he brought himself, to believe in the Church-and-State
+ notions which he latterly promulgated. Hence the want of
+ definite views, and of a living interest, which characterizes
+ all his writings subsequent to that change, when compared with
+ those of an earlier time. It was Wordsworth's wayward fate to
+ be patronized and puffed into notice by the champions of old
+ abuses, by the advocates of the pedantry of Oxford, and by the
+ maintainers of the despotism not even of Pitt but of
+ Castlereagh. It is already felt, however, that the poet whom
+ these men were mainly instrumental in bringing into notice,
+ will live in men's memories by exactly those of his writings
+ most powerful to undermine and overthrow their dull and faded
+ bigotries. Despite his own efforts, Wordsworth (as has been
+ said of Napoleon) is the child and champion of Jacobinism.
+ Though clothed in ecclesiastical formulas, his religion is
+ little more than the simple worship of nature; his noblest
+ moral flights are struggles to emancipate himself from
+ conventional usage; and the strong ground of his thoughts, as
+ of his style, is nature stripped of the gauds with which the
+ pupils of courts and circles would bedeck and be-ribbon it.
+ Even in the ranks of our opponents Wordsworth has been laboring
+ in our behalf.</p>
+
+ <p>It is in the record of his extra-academic life that the poet
+ soars his freest flight, in passages where we have a very echo
+ of the emotions of an emancipated worshiper of nature flying
+ back to his loved resorts. Apart from its poetic value, the
+ book is a graphical and interesting portraiture of the
+ struggles of an ingenuous and impetuous mind to arrive at a
+ clear insight into its own interior constitution and external
+ relations, and to secure the composure of self-knowledge and of
+ equally adjusted aspirations. As a poem it is likely to lay
+ fast and enduring hold on pure and aspiring intellects, and to
+ strengthen the claim of Wordsworth to endure with his land's
+ language.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE MONUMENT TO SIR ROBERT PEEL.</h2>
+
+ <h3>A LETTER FROM WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR,</h3>
+
+ <h4>TO THE EDITOR OF THE 'EXAMINER.'</h4>
+
+ <p>Now the fever hath somewhat subsided which came over the
+ people from the grave of Sir Robert Peel, there is room for a
+ few observations on his decease and on its consequences. All
+ public writers, I believe, have expatiated on his character,
+ comparing him with others who, within our times, have occupied
+ the same position. My own opinion has invariably been that he
+ was the wisest of all our statesmen; and certainly, though he
+ found reason to change his sentiments and his measures, he
+ changed them honestly, well weighed, always from conviction,
+ and always for the better. He has been compared, and seemingly
+ in no spirit of hostility or derision, with a Castlereagh, a
+ Perceval, an Addington. a Canning. Only one of these is worthy
+ of notice, namely Canning, whose brilliancy made his
+ shallowness less visible, and whose graces, of style and
+ elocution threw a vail over his unsoundness and lubricity. Sir
+ Robert Peel was no satirist or epigrammatist: he was only a
+ statesman in public life: only a virtuous and friendly man in
+ private. <i>Par negotiis, nee supra</i>. Walpole alone
+ possessed his talents for business. But neither Peel nor his
+ family was enriched from the spoils of his country; Walpole
+ spent in building and pictures more than double the value of
+ his hereditary estate, and left the quadruple to his
+ descendants.</p>
+
+ <p>Dissimilar from Walpole, and from commoner and coarser men
+ who occupied the same office, Peel forbade that a name which he
+ had made illustrious should be degraded and stigmatized by any
+ title of nobility. For he knew that all those titles had their
+ origin and nomenclature from military services, and belong to
+ military men, like their epaulets and spurs and chargers. They
+ sound well enough against the sword and helmet, but strangely
+ in law-courts and cathedrals: but, reformer as he
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page274"
+ id="page274"></a>[pg 274]</span> was, he could not reform
+ all this; he could only keep clear of it in his own
+ person.</p>
+
+ <p>I now come to the main object of my letter.</p>
+
+ <p>Subscriptions are advertised for the purpose of raising
+ monuments to Sir Robert Peel; and a motion has been made in
+ Parliament for one in Westminster Abbey at the public expense,
+ Whatever may be the precedents, surely the house of God should
+ contain no object but such as may remind us of His presence and
+ our duty to Him. Long ago I proposed that ranges of statues and
+ busts should commemorate the great worthies of our country. All
+ the lower part of our National Gallery might be laid open for
+ this purpose. Even the best monuments in Westminster Abbey and
+ St. Paul's are deformities to the edifice. Let us not continue
+ this disgrace. Deficient as we are in architects, we have many
+ good statuaries, and we might well employ them on the statues
+ of illustrious commanders, and the busts of illustrious
+ statesmen and writers. Meanwhile our cities, and especially the
+ commercial, would, I am convinced, act more wisely, and more
+ satisfactorily to the relict of the deceased, if, instead of
+ statues, they erected schools and almshouses, with an
+ inscription to his memory.</p>
+
+ <p>We glory in about sixty whose busts and statues may occupy
+ what are now the "deep solitudes and awful cells" in our
+ national gallery. Our literary men of eminence are happily more
+ numerous than the political or the warlike, or both together.
+ There is only one class of them which might be advantageously
+ excluded, namely, the theological; and my reasons are these.
+ First, their great talents were chiefly employed on
+ controversy; secondly, and consequently, their images would
+ excite dogmatical discord. Every sect of the Anglican Church,
+ and every class of dissenters, complaining of undue
+ preferences. Painture and sculpture lived in the midst of
+ corruption, lived throughout it, and seemed indeed to draw
+ vitality from it, as flowers the most delicate from noxious
+ air; but they collapsed at the searching breath of free
+ inquiry, and could not abide persecution. The torch of
+ Philosophy never kindled the suffocating fagot, under whose
+ smoke Theology was mistaken for Religion. Theology had, until
+ now, been speculative and quiescent: she abandoned to
+ Philosophy these humbler qualities: instead of allaying and
+ dissipating, as Philosophy had always done, she excited and she
+ directed animosities. Oriental in her parentage, and keeping up
+ her wide connections in that country, she acquired there all
+ the artifices most necessary to the furtherance of her designs:
+ among the rest was ventriloquism, which she quite perfected,
+ making her words seem to sound from above and from below and
+ from every side around. Ultimately, when men had fallen on
+ their faces at this miracle, she assumed the supreme power.
+ Kings were her lackeys, and nations the dust under her
+ palfrey's hoof. By her sentence Truth was gagged, scourged,
+ branded, cast down on the earth in manacles; and Fortitude, who
+ had stood at Truth's side, was fastened with nails and pulleys
+ to the stake. I would not revive by any images, in the abode of
+ the graceful and the gentle Arts, these sorrowful
+ reminiscences. The vicissitudes of the world appear to be
+ bringing round again the spectral Past. Let us place great men
+ between it and ourselves: they all are tutelar: not the warrior
+ and the statesman only; not only the philosopher; but also the
+ historian who follows them step by step, and the poet who
+ secures us from peril and dejection by his counter-charm.
+ Philosophers in most places are unwelcome: but there is no
+ better reason why Shaftesbury and Hobbes should be excluded
+ from our gallery, than why Epicurus should have been from
+ Cicero's or Zeno from Lucullus's. Of our sovereigns, I think
+ Alfred, Cromwell, and William III alone are eligible; and they,
+ because they opposed successfully the subverters of the laws.
+ Three viceroys of Ireland will deservedly be placed in the same
+ receptacle; Sir John Perrot, Lord Chesterfield, and (in due
+ time) the last Lord-Deputy. One Speaker, one only, of the
+ Parliament; he without whom no Parliament would be now
+ existing; he who declared to Henry IV. that until all public
+ grievances were removed, no subsidy should be granted. The name
+ of this Speaker may be found in Rapin; English historians talk
+ about facts, forgetting men.</p>
+
+ <p>Admirals and generals are numerous and conspicuous. Drake,
+ Blake, Rodney, Jervis, Nelson, Collingwood; the subduer of
+ Algiers beaten down for the French to occupy: and the defender
+ of Acre, the first who defeated, discomfited, routed, broke,
+ and threw into shameful flight, Bonaparte. Our generals are
+ Marlborough, Peterborough, Wellington, and that successor to
+ his fame in India, who established the empire that was falling
+ from us, who achieved in a few days two arduous victories, who
+ never failed in any enterprise, who accomplished the most
+ difficult with the smallest expenditure of blood, who corrected
+ the disorders of the military, who gave the soldier an example
+ of temperance, the civilian of simplicity and frugality, and
+ whose sole (but exceedingly great) reward, was the approbation
+ of our greatest man.</p>
+
+ <p>With these come the statesmen of the Commonwealth, the
+ students of Bacon, the readers of Philip Sidney, the companions
+ of Algernon, the precursors of Locke and Newton. Opposite to
+ them are Chaucer, Spenser, Shakspeare, Milton; lower in
+ dignity, Dryden, Pope, Gray, Goldsmith, Cowper, Scott, Burns,
+ Shelley, Southey, Byron, Wordsworth; the author of
+ <i>Hohenlinden</i> and the <i>Battle of the Baltic</i>; and the
+ glorious woman who equaled these, two animated works in her
+ <i>Ivan</i> and <i>Casabianca</i>. Historians have but recently
+ risen up among us: and long be it before, by command of
+ Parliament, the chisel grates on the brow of a Napier, a Grote,
+ and Macaulay!</p>
+
+ <p class="author">WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page275"
+ id="page275"></a>[pg 275]</span>
+
+ <h4>[From the Spectator.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>JURISPRUDENCE OF THE MOGULS: THE PANDECTS OF
+ AURUNGZEBE.<a id="footnotetag4"
+ name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a></h2>
+
+ <p>THE Government of British India have not neglected to
+ countenance the study of the indigenous and other systems of
+ law which they found established on acquiring possession of the
+ country. Warren Hastings was the first to recognize the value
+ of such knowledge; and to his encouragement, if not to his
+ incitement, we are indebted for the compilation of Hindoo law
+ translated by Halbed, Jones, Colebrooke, Macnaghten, Hamilton,
+ and a pretty numerous body of accomplished men, of whom Mr.
+ Baillie is the most recently enrolled laborer in the vineyard,
+ have carried on the good work. More comprehensive and accurate
+ views of Hindoo law have gradually been developed, and the more
+ advanced and more influential system of Mahometan jurisprudence
+ has also shared in the attention of European students. There
+ is, however, still much to be done in this field of inquiry; as
+ a few remarks on the nature of the present publication, and the
+ source whence its materials are derived, will show.</p>
+
+ <p>The law of Mahometan jurists is for India pretty much what
+ the Roman law is for Scotland and the Continental nations of
+ Europe. Savigny has shown how, throughout all the territories
+ formerly included within the limits of the Roman Empire, a
+ large amount of Roman legal doctrines and forms of procedure
+ continued to be operative after the Empire's subversion. The
+ revival of the study of the Roman law, as embodied in the
+ compilations of Justinian, by the doctors of the school of
+ Bologna, augmented and systematized these remnants of Roman
+ jurisprudence, and extended their application to countries
+ which (like great part of Germany) had never been subjected to
+ the sway of Rome. In like manner, throughout that part of India
+ which was permanently subdued and organized by the Mogul
+ dynasty, and also those parts in which minor Islamitic states
+ were established, the organization of the courts of justice,
+ and the legal opinions of the individuals who officiated in
+ them, necessarily introduced a large amount of Mahometan
+ jurisprudence. This element of the law of India was augmented
+ and systematized by the writings of private jurists, and by
+ compilations undertaken by command of princes. As with the
+ Roman jurisprudence in Europe, so with Mahometan jurisprudence
+ in India, only so much of its doctrines and forms could at any
+ time be considered to possess legal force as had been reenacted
+ by the local sovereigns, or introduced by judges in the form of
+ decisions. A systematic knowledge of the whole body of
+ Mahometan law was important to the Indian lawyer, as enabling
+ him more thoroughly to understand the system, and its various
+ isolated doctrines; but the whole body of that law was at no
+ time binding in India. Since the establishment of British sway,
+ only so much of the Mahometan law as has kept its ground in the
+ practice of the courts, or has been reenacted by the
+ "regulations" or "ordinances" of the Anglo-Indian Government,
+ <i>is law</i>; the rest is only valuable as the "antiquities of
+ the law," which help to trace the origin of what survives, and
+ thereby throw light upon what in it is obscure or doubtful.</p>
+
+ <p>Among the most valuable, if not indeed the most valuable of
+ the compilations from which we may obtain a knowledge of
+ Mahometan jurisprudence, is the "Futawa Alumgeeree," mentioned
+ in Mr. Baillie's title-page. Its value is not confined to the
+ purposes of those who would make themselves acquainted with
+ Mahometan jurisprudence in the peculiar form it assumed in
+ India. It is highly esteemed throughout Islam, and is quoted
+ even by the doctors of Mecca as the Futawa-i-hind, or the
+ Indian <i>responsa prudentum</i>. It was compiled by the orders
+ of the Emperor Aurungzebe. It is a digest of the "Futawa" of
+ the most celebrated jurists of the Hanifeh (or, as Mr. Baillie
+ spells it, <i>Hunefeeah</i>) sect or school. Mr. Baillie
+ informs us in his preface, that "<i>futawa</i> is the plural
+ form of <i>futwa</i>, a term in common use in Mahometan
+ countries to signify an exposition of law by a public officer
+ called the <i>mooftee</i>, or a case submitted to him by the
+ <i>kazee</i> or judge." The "futwa," therefore, seems to
+ correspond not so much with our English "decisions" or
+ "precedents" as with the "responsa prudentum," that fertile
+ source of doctrines in the Roman law. The "Futawa Alumgeeree"
+ consequently resembles the Pandects of Justinian in being a
+ systematical arrangement of selections from juridical
+ authorities&mdash;compiled by Imperial authority; but differs
+ from it in this, that the selections are made exclusively from
+ the "responsa prudentum," and a few legal treatises, whereas
+ Justinian's digest combined with those excerpts from judicial
+ decisions, prætorian edicts, &amp;c. With this distinction, we
+ may regard the "Futawa Alumgeeree" as the Pandects or Digest of
+ Mahometan Law. As in the Roman work of that name, to each
+ extract is appended the name of the original work from which it
+ is taken; and the whole of them are so arranged as to form a
+ complete digest of Mahometan law.</p>
+
+ <p>A work of this kind is invaluable to the student who would
+ make himself master of Mahometan jurisprudence as a system. But
+ great care must be taken not to misapprehend the exact nature
+ of the knowledge to be obtained from it. The "Futawa
+ Alumgeeree" is a systematic exposition of the principles of
+ Mahometan law; it assuredly does not enable us to ascertain
+ what doctrines of that law are
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page276"
+ id="page276"></a>[pg 276]</span> now of legal force in
+ India, or even what doctrines have at any time had force in
+ India. It does not appear to have been Aurungzebe's
+ intention to promulgate it as a code, but to present it to
+ lawyers as a complete text-book. Even if he did by ordinance
+ attribute to it the power of law, such ordinance was only
+ effectual at any time in the provinces of the Mogul Empire;
+ and since the disruption of that empire, it has been
+ superseded and modified by laws and the practice of
+ law-courts in the various independent states erected on its
+ ruins.</p>
+
+ <p>Again the general scholar must be on his guard against the
+ delusion that he will find in this digest materials
+ illustrative of the social condition of India under the Mogul
+ dynasty. The juridical works excerpted in it are almost all
+ foreign to Hindostan; the special cases illustrative of
+ abstract doctrines are taken from other countries, and many of
+ them from ages antecedent to the invasion of India by the
+ Moguls.</p>
+
+ <p>Though Persian was the court language of the Mogul dynasty,
+ there is scarcely any Persian element in Aurungzebe's legal
+ compilation. The Shiite views of jurisprudence, as of theology,
+ prevailed in Persia; the "Futawa Alumgeeree" is strictly
+ Sunnite. It is not difficult to account for this.&mdash;The
+ Mahometan conquerors of India were mainly of Turkish or Tartar
+ race; they came from Turan, a region which from time immemorial
+ has stood in antagonistic relations to Iran or Persia. This may
+ account for the fact that the races of Turan which have
+ embraced Mahometanism have uniformly adhered to the Sunnite
+ sect&mdash;the sect most hostile to the Persian Shias&mdash;not
+ only when they settled in the countries where the Sunnite sect
+ originated, but when they remained in their native regions. The
+ views of the Sunnites were first promulgated and have prevailed
+ most extensively in those regions of Islam which were once part
+ of the Roman empire, which nominally at least was Christian;
+ those of the Shiites, in the countries where, under the
+ Sassanides and Arsacidæ, the doctrines of Zoroaster
+ predominated. The Euphrates forms pretty nearly the line of
+ demarkation between them.</p>
+
+ <p>The Caliphs dominated over both countries and over both
+ sects. Under their orthodox protection the Sunnite doctrines
+ were able to strike root in Balkh and Samarkand&mdash;the
+ ancient Turan, and therefore hostile to Iran and Persia. When
+ Islam was reorganized after the anarchy which ensued upon the
+ overthrow of the Caliphs, Persia became the appanage of the
+ Sophis or Shiite dynasty; the regions to the West of the
+ Euphrates&mdash;the ci-devant Roman Empire&mdash;acknowledged
+ the rule of the Turkish dynasties, which were Sunnite. On the
+ Oxus and further East&mdash;the old Turan&mdash;the Sunnite
+ sect was sufficiently strong to defy the efforts of the Shiite
+ sovereigns of Persia to eradicate it. The doctors of Samarkand
+ and Bokhara continued (and continue) as orthodox Sunnites as
+ those of Kufah, Mecca, and Stamboul.</p>
+
+ <p>Accordingly, we find the authorities excerpted in the
+ "Futawa Alumgeeree" consist almost exclusively of two classes;
+ they are either the immediate disciples of Hanifa at Kufah and
+ Bagdad, or the jurists of Samarkand and Bokhara. The law-cases
+ they expounded are such as had originated, or might have
+ originated, in those countries&mdash;in Babylonia or Turan. And
+ they are for the most part taken from a state of society, and
+ illustrative of social relations, which prevailed in these
+ countries at a period long antecedent to that of Aurunzebe. To
+ attempt to illustrate the civil and social condition of India,
+ under that Emperor by their aid, would be as preposterous as to
+ attempt to illustrate the civil and social condition of those
+ parts of Germany where the Roman law still possesses authority
+ from cases recorded in the Pandects of Justinian.</p>
+
+ <p>The real use and value of the "Futawa Alumgeeree" may be
+ briefly explained. In every country in Europe where the Roman
+ law is still recognized as more or less authoritative&mdash;and
+ indeed in every country where the common law has borrowed more
+ or less from the Roman&mdash;an acquaintance with the system of
+ Roman jurisprudence as it is embodied in the law-books of
+ Justinian has its value for the scientific lawyer. In like
+ manner a knowledge of Mahometan jurisprudence as embodied in
+ the "Futawa Alumgeeree" cannot fail to be instructive for the
+ lawyers of all the countries of Islam, and the lawyers of
+ India, where so much of the existing practical law has been
+ derived from that source. To the general scholar who wishes to
+ master the civil history of Arabia and Babylonia, in which the
+ Sunnite sect, and more particularly the Hanifite subdivision of
+ it, originated, or to familiarize himself with the moral
+ theories which regulate the judgments and actions of the modern
+ Turks, Turcomans, Arabians, and Egyptians, the digest of
+ Aurungzeebee is also a valuable repertory of facts and
+ illustrations.</p>
+
+ <p>For this reason we incline to be of opinion that Mr. Baillie
+ is mistaken in thinking that a selection from the two books of
+ the "Futawa Alumgeeree," which embrace the subject of "sale"
+ can have much utility for Indian practitioners. It does not
+ follow, because a legal doctrine is declared sound in this
+ work, that it is or ever has been practically applicable in
+ India. As an authoritative declaration of legal doctrines, the
+ book is as likely to mislead as to guide aright. On the other
+ hand, as an exposition of the general principles of Mahometan
+ law, even with regard to sale, it is necessarily imperfect. The
+ work from which it is taken is a collection of legal opinions,
+ which had in their day the force of judicial decisions&mdash;of
+ something equivalent to the "responsa prudentum" of Roman
+ jurisprudence. Each is expounded on its own merits; and all the
+ special doctrines involved
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page277"
+ id="page277"></a>[pg 277]</span> in it are laid down. Hence
+ it comes, that much that is calculated to throw light on the
+ principles of the law of sale must be sought under other
+ heads; and that much included in the chapters ostensibly
+ treating of sale refers to other topics. As part of an
+ entire digest of the law compiled on the same principle as
+ that of Justinian, the two books relating to sale are
+ sufficient; but for an isolated treatise on "sale," they
+ contain at once too much and too little.</p>
+
+ <p>Nevertheless, we welcome Mr. Baillie's publication as a
+ valuable addition to juridical and even to general literature.
+ The translation, though not by any means free from defects, is
+ the best specimen of a really good Mahometan law-book that has
+ yet been published. The defects to which we allude are twofold.
+ In the first place, though Mr. Baillie mentions that in the
+ original the name of the treatise from which it is taken is
+ appended to every excerpt, he has not in his translation given
+ those references. His work is not therefore what the original
+ is, a Chrestomathia of the best Arabian jurists&mdash;a
+ succedaneum for their complete works&mdash;an illustration of
+ Arabic legal literature. Again, he is often loose and
+ vacillating in the use of the English words he has selected as
+ corresponding to the technical phraseology of the Arabian
+ jurists, and sometimes infelicitous in the selection of his
+ English terms. It has occurred to us that he would have
+ succeeded better in rendering the exact meaning of his
+ originals, had he availed himself more of technical phrases of
+ the Roman law which are familiar to all European jurists. Is
+ does not occur to us that he would by doing so have been in
+ danger of Romanizing the Mahometan to an extent that might
+ mislead. Mill, in his History of British India, has noticed how
+ closely the classification of the Mahometan approaches to that
+ of the Roman jurists. An attentive perusal of Mr. Baillie's
+ volume has convinced us that the analogy in the substance is
+ quite as strong as in the arrangements. This fact seems
+ susceptible of being accounted for on historical grounds.
+ Mahometanism is in fact a sect or heresy of Christianity. The
+ views and sentiments, the aggregate of which make up the body
+ of Christian opinion, are not all of Jewish or Christian
+ origin. They are the moral creed of societies whose opinions
+ and civilization have been derived in part from other sources.
+ The philosophy of Greece and the law of Rome have contributed
+ in nearly equal proportions to the theosophy of the Hebrews.
+ The jurisprudence of all Christian nations is mainly referable
+ to Rome for its origin, and the same is the case with at least
+ the Sunnite Mahometans. The nations of Islam took only their
+ religious creed from their Prophet; the jurists of Kufah
+ retained and expounded the civil law which prevailed among them
+ before his time. That law was the law of the Greek Empire,
+ developed in the same way as that of the Western Empire under
+ the judicial and legislative auspices of Roman Prætors and
+ Pro-Consuls, aided by Roman jurists. Theophilus, one of the
+ jurists employed by Justinian for his compilations, lectured in
+ Greek on the Institutions; and the substance of his lectures
+ still survives under the name of the Paraphrase of Theophilus.
+ The Greek edicts and novels of Justinian's successors are
+ mainly Roman law. Throughout the Byzantine Empire (within which
+ Kufah and the region where Bagdad now stands were included)
+ Roman law was paramount, and Roman jurists were numerous. The
+ arrangement, the subdivisions, and the substance of Mahometan
+ jurisprudence, show that it has been principally derived from
+ this source. Some of its doctrines are doubtless aboriginal
+ engrafted on the law of the Empire; and it has been modified in
+ some respects to reconcile it to the religious dictates of
+ Islam, just as the law of Pagan Rome was modified after
+ Christianity became the religion of the Empire. But still
+ Mahometan jurisprudence retains undeniably the lineaments of
+ its parentage.</p>
+
+ <p>This consideration places in a strong light the importance
+ of the study of Mahometan law. The increasing intimacy of our
+ relations with independent Mahometan states makes it of the
+ utmost consequence that we should entertain correct views of
+ their opinions and institutions; and no better key to the
+ knowledge of both can be found than in the historical study of
+ their law. Again, we are called upon to legislate and supply
+ judges for British India, a large proportion of the inhabitants
+ of which are Mahometans. Even the Hindoos of the former Mogul
+ Empire have adopted many legal forms and doctrines from their
+ conquerors. A minute and accurate acquaintance with Mahometan
+ jurisprudence is an indispensable preliminary to judicious
+ legislation for British India. For these reasons, it could be
+ wished that Mr. Baillie, or some other equally accomplished
+ laborer in that field, would set himself to do for the "Futawa
+ Alumgeeree" what Heineccius and other modern civilians have
+ done for the law-books of Justinian&mdash;present the European
+ public with an elegant and exact abstract of its contents.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>The following, from Southey's "Gridiron," now first
+ published in his Memoirs, ought to be set to music for the
+ Beef-Steak Club:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>"Now the perfect Steak prepare!</p>
+
+ <p>Now the appointed rites begin!</p>
+
+ <p>Cut it from the pinguid rump.</p>
+
+ <p>Not too thick and not too thin;</p>
+
+ <p>Somewhat to the thick inclining,</p>
+
+ <p>Yet the thick and thin between,</p>
+
+ <p>That the gods, when they are dining,</p>
+
+ <p>May comment the golden mean.</p>
+
+ <p>Ne'er till now have they been blest</p>
+
+ <p>With a beef-steak daily drest:</p>
+
+ <p>Ne'er till this auspicious morn</p>
+
+ <p>When the Gridiron was born."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>The most ignorant of the world's fools are those called
+ "knowing ones," a phrase satirical with the very glee of
+ irony.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page278"
+ id="page278"></a>[pg 278]</span>
+
+ <h2>THE MYSTERIOUS COMPACT.</h2>
+
+ <h3>A FREE TRANSLATION FROM THE GERMAN.</h3>
+
+ <h4>PART II&mdash;CONCLUSION</h4>
+
+ <h4>(Concluded from page 192.)</h4>
+
+ <p>Several weeks passed away. Edward spared no pains to
+ discover some trace of the lady in question, but all in vain.
+ No one in the neighborhood knew the family; and he had already
+ determined, as soon as the spring began, to ask for leave of
+ absence, and to travel through the country where Ferdinand had
+ formed his unfortunate attachment, when a circumstance occurred
+ which coincided strangely with his wishes. His
+ commanding-officer gave him a commission to purchase some
+ horses, which, to his great consolation, led him exactly into
+ that part of the country where Ferdinand had been quartered. It
+ was a market-town of some importance. He was to remain there
+ some time, which suited his plans exactly; and he made use of
+ every leisure hour to cultivate the acquaintance of the
+ officers, to inquire into Ferdinand's connections and
+ acquaintance, to trace the mysterious name if possible, and
+ thus fulfill a sacred duty. For to him it appeared a sacred
+ duty to execute the commission of his departed friend&mdash;to
+ get possession of the ring, and to be the means, as he hoped,
+ of giving rest to the troubled spirit of Ferdinand.</p>
+
+ <p>Already, on the evening of the second day, he was sitting in
+ the coffee-room with burghers of the place and officers of
+ different regiments.</p>
+
+ <p>A newly-arrived cornet was inquiring whether the
+ neighborhood were a pleasant one, of an infantry officer, one
+ of Hallberg's corps. "For," said he, "I come from charming
+ quarters."</p>
+
+ <p>"There is not much to boast of," replied the captain. "There
+ is no good fellowship, no harmony among the people."</p>
+
+ <p>"I will tell you why that is," cried an animated lieutenant;
+ "that is because there is no house as a point of reunion, where
+ one is sure to find and make acquaintances, and to be amused,
+ and where each individual ascertains his own merits by the
+ effect they produce on society at large."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, we have had nothing of that kind since the Varniers
+ left us," said the captain.</p>
+
+ <p>"Varniers!" cried Edward, with an eagerness he could ill
+ conceal. "The name sounds foreign."</p>
+
+ <p>"They were not Germans&mdash;they were emigrants from the
+ Netherlands, who had left their country on account of political
+ troubles," replied the captain.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, that was a charming house," cried the lieutenant,
+ "cultivation, refinement, a sufficient competency, the whole
+ style of establishment free from ostentation, yet most
+ comfortable; and Emily&mdash;Emily was the soul of the whole
+ house."</p>
+
+ <p>"Emily Varnier!" echoed Edward, while his heart beat fast
+ and loud.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, yes! that was the name of the prettiest, most
+ graceful, most amiable girl in the world," said the
+ lieutenant.</p>
+
+ <p>"You seem bewitched by the fair Emily," observed the
+ cornet.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think you would have been too, had you known her,"
+ rejoined the lieutenant; "she was the jewel of the whole
+ society. Since she went away there is no bearing their stupid
+ balls and assemblies."</p>
+
+ <p>"But you must not forget," the captain resumed once more,
+ "when you attribute everything to the charms of the fair girl,
+ that not only she but the whole family has disappeared, and we
+ have lost that house which formed, as you say, so charming a
+ point of reunion in our neighborhood."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, yes; exactly so," said an old gentleman, a civilian,
+ who had been silent hitherto; "the Varniers' house is a great
+ loss in the country, where such losses are not so easily
+ replaced as in a large town. First, the father died, then came
+ the cousin and carried the daughter away."</p>
+
+ <p>"And did this cousin marry the young lady?" inquired Edward,
+ in a tone tremulous with agitation.</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly," answered the old gentleman; "it was a very
+ great match for her; he bought land to the value of half a
+ million about here."</p>
+
+ <p>"And he was an agreeable, handsome man, we must all allow,"
+ remarked the captain.</p>
+
+ <p>"But she would never have married him," exclaimed the
+ lieutenant, "if poor Hallberg had not died."</p>
+
+ <p>Edward was breathless, but he did not speak a word.</p>
+
+ <p>"She would have been compelled to do so in any case," said
+ the old man; "the father had destined them for each other from
+ infancy, and people say he made his daughter take a vow as he
+ lay on his death-bed."</p>
+
+ <p>"That sounds terrible," said Edward; "and does not speak
+ much for the good feeling of the cousin."</p>
+
+ <p>"She could not have fulfilled her father's wish," interposed
+ the lieutenant; "her heart was bound up in Hallberg, and
+ Hallberg's in her. Few people, perhaps, know this, for the
+ lovers were prudent and discreet; I, however, knew it all."</p>
+
+ <p>"And why was she not allowed to follow the inclination of
+ her heart?" asked Edward.</p>
+
+ <p>"Because her father had promised her," replied the captain:
+ "you used just now the word terrible; it is a fitting
+ expression, according to my version of the matter. It appears
+ that one of the branches of the house of Varnier had committed
+ an act of injustice toward another, and Emily's father
+ considered it a point of conscience to make reparation. Only
+ through the marriage of his daughter with a member of the
+ ill-used branch could that act be obliterated and made up for,
+ and, therefore, he pressed the matter sorely."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, and the headlong passion which Emily inspired her
+ cousin with abetted his
+ designs."</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page279"
+ id="page279"></a>[pg 279]</span>
+
+ <p>"Then her cousin loved Emily?" inquired Edward.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, to desperation," was the reply. "He was a rival to her
+ shadow, who followed her not more closely than he did. He was
+ jealous of the rose that she placed on her bosom."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then poor Emily is not likely to have a calm life with such
+ a man," said Edward.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come," interposed the old gentleman, with en authoritative
+ tone, "I think you, gentlemen, go a little too far. I know
+ D'Effernay; he is an honest, talented man, very rich, indeed,
+ and generous; he anticipates his wife in every wish. She has
+ the most brilliant house in the neighborhood, and lives like a
+ princess."</p>
+
+ <p>"And trembles," insisted the lieutenant, "when she hears her
+ husband's footstep. What good can riches be to her? She would
+ have been happier with Hallberg."</p>
+
+ <p>"I do not know," rejoined the captain, "why you always
+ looked upon that attachment as something so decided. It never
+ appeared so to me; and you yourself say that D'Effernay is very
+ jealous, which I believe him to be, for he is a man of strong
+ passions; and this very circumstance causes me to doubt the
+ rest of your story. Jealousy has sharp eyes, and D'Effernay
+ would have discovered a rival in Hallberg, and not proved
+ himself the friend he always was to our poor comrade."</p>
+
+ <p>"That does not follow at all," replied the lieutenant, "it
+ only proves that the lovers were very cautious. So far,
+ however, I agree with you. I believe that if D'Effernay had
+ suspected anything of the kind he would have murdered
+ Hallberg."</p>
+
+ <p>A shudder passed through Edward's veins.</p>
+
+ <p>"Murdered!" he repeated, in a hollow voice; "do you not
+ judge too harshly of this man when you hint the possibility of
+ such a thing?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That does he, indeed," said the old man; "these gentlemen
+ are all angry with D'Effernay, because he has carried off the
+ prettiest girl in the country. But I am told he does not intend
+ remaining where he now lives. He wishes to sell his
+ estates."</p>
+
+ <p>"Really," inquired the captain, "and where is he going?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I have no idea," replied the other; "but he is selling
+ everything off. One manor is already disposed of, and there
+ have been people already in negotiation for the place where he
+ resides."</p>
+
+ <p>The conversation now turned on the value of D'Effernay's
+ property, and of land in general, &amp;c.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward had gained materials enough for reflection; he rose
+ soon, took leave of the company, and gave himself up, in the
+ solitude of his own room, to the torrent of thought and feeling
+ which that night's conversation had let loose. So, then, it was
+ true; Emily Varnier was no fabulous being! Hallberg had loved
+ her, his love had been returned, but a cruel destiny had
+ separated them. How wonderfully did all he had heard explain
+ the dream at the Castle, and how completely did that supply
+ what had remained doubtful, or had been omitted in the
+ officers' narrative. Emily Varnier, doubtless, possessed that
+ ring, to gain possession of which now seemed his bounden duty.
+ He resolved not to delay its fulfillment a moment, however
+ difficult it might prove, and he only reflected on the best
+ manner in which he should perform the task allotted to him. The
+ sale of the property appeared to him a favorable opening. The
+ fame of his father's wealth made it probable that the son might
+ wish to be purchaser of a fine estate, like the one in
+ question. He spoke openly of such a project, made inquiries of
+ the old gentleman, and the captain, who seemed to him to know
+ most about the matter; and as his duties permitted a trip for a
+ week or so, he started immediately, and arrived on the second
+ day at the place of his destination. He stopped in the public
+ house in the village to inquire if the estate lay near, and
+ whether visitors were allowed to see the house and grounds.
+ Mine host, who doubtless had had his directions, sent a
+ messenger immediately to the Castle, who returned before long,
+ accompanied by a chasseur, in a splendid livery, who invited
+ the stranger to the Castle in the name of M. D'Effernay.</p>
+
+ <p>This was exactly what Edward wished, and expected. Escorted
+ by the chasseur he soon arrived at the Castle, and was shown up
+ a spacious staircase into a modern, almost, one might say, a
+ magnificently-furnished room, where the master of the house
+ received him. It was evening, toward the end of winter, the
+ shades of twilight had already fallen, and Edward found himself
+ suddenly in a room quite illuminated with wax candles.
+ D'Effernay stood in the middle of the saloon, a tall, thin
+ young man. A proud bearing seemed to bespeak a consciousness of
+ his own merit, or at least of his position. His features were
+ finely formed, but the traces of strong passion, or of internal
+ discontent, had lined them prematurely.</p>
+
+ <p>In figure he was very slender, and the deep-sunken eye, the
+ gloomy frown which was fixed between his brows, and the thin
+ lips, had no very prepossessing expression, and yet there was
+ something imposing in the whole appearance of the man.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward thanked him civilly for his invitation, spoke of his
+ idea of being a purchaser as a motive for his visit, and gave
+ his own, and his father's name. D'Effernay seemed pleased with
+ all he said. He had known Edward's family in the metropolis; he
+ regretted that the late hour would render it impossible for
+ them to visit the property to-day, and concluded by pressing
+ the lieutenant to pass the night at the Castle. On the morrow
+ they would proceed to business, and now he would have the
+ pleasure of presenting his wife to the visitor. Edward's heart
+ beat violently&mdash;at length then he would see her! Had he
+ loved <span class="pagenum"><a name="page280"
+ id="page280"></a>[pg 280]</span> her himself he could not
+ have gone to meet her with more agitation. D'Effernay led
+ his guest through many rooms, which were all as well
+ furnished, and as brilliantly lighted as the first he had
+ entered. At length he opened the door of a small boudoir,
+ where there was no light, save that which the faint, gray
+ twilight imparted through the windows.</p>
+
+ <p>The simple arrangement of this little room, with dark green
+ walls, only relieved by some engravings and coats of arms,
+ formed a pleasing contrast to Edward's eyes, after the glaring
+ splendor of the other apartments. From behind a piano-forte, at
+ which she had been seated in a recess, rose a tall, slender
+ female form, in a white dress of extreme simplicity.</p>
+
+ <p>"My love," said D'Effernay, "I bring you a welcome guest,
+ Lieutenant Wensleben, who is willing to purchase the
+ estate."</p>
+
+ <p>Emily courtesied; the friendly twilight concealed the
+ shudder that passed over her whole frame, as she heard the
+ familiar name which aroused so many recollections.</p>
+
+ <p>She bade the stranger welcome, in a low, sweet voice, whose
+ tremulous accents were not unobserved by Edward; and while the
+ husband made some further observation, he had leisure to
+ remark, as well as the fading light would allow, the fair
+ outline of her oval face, the modest grace of her movements,
+ her pretty, nymph-like figure&mdash;in fact, all those charms
+ which seemed familiar to him through the impassioned
+ descriptions of his friend.</p>
+
+ <p>"But what can this fancy be, to sit in the dark?" asked
+ D'Effernay, in no mild tone; "you know that is a thing I cannot
+ bear." and with these words, and without waiting his wife's
+ answer, he rang the bell over her sofa, and ordered lights.</p>
+
+ <p>While these were placed on the table the company sat down by
+ the fire, and conversation commenced. By the full light Edward
+ could perceive all Emily's real beauty&mdash;her pale, but
+ lovely face, the sad expression of her large blue eyes, so
+ often concealed by their dark lashes, and then raised, with a
+ look full of feeling, a sad, pensive, intellectual expression;
+ and he admired the simplicity of her dress, and of every object
+ that surrounded her: all appeared to him to bespeak a superior
+ mind.</p>
+
+ <p>They had not sat long, before D'Effernay was called away.
+ One of his people had something important, something urgent to
+ communicate to him, which admitted of no delay. A look of
+ fierce anger almost distorted his features; in an instant his
+ thin lips moved rapidly, and Edward thought he muttered some
+ curses between his teeth. He left the room, but in so doing, he
+ cast a glance of mistrust and ill-temper on the handsome
+ stranger with whom he was compelled to leave his wife alone.
+ Edward observed it all. All that he had seen to-day, all that
+ he had heard from his comrades of the man's passionate and
+ suspicious disposition, convinced him that his stay here would
+ not be long, and that perhaps a second opportunity of speaking
+ alone with Emily might not offer itself.</p>
+
+ <p>He determined, therefore, to profit by the present moment;
+ and no sooner had D'Effernay left the room, than he began to
+ tell Emily she was not so complete a stranger to him as it
+ might seem; that long before he had had the pleasure of seeing
+ her&mdash;even before he had heard her name&mdash;she was known
+ to him, so to speak, in spirit.</p>
+
+ <p>Madame D'Effernay was moved. She was silent for a time, and
+ gazed fixedly on the ground; then she looked up; the mist of
+ unshed tears dimmed her blue eyes, and her bosom heaved with
+ the sigh she could not suppress.</p>
+
+ <p>"To me also the name of Wensleben is familiar. There is a
+ link between our souls. Your friend has often spoken of you to
+ me."</p>
+
+ <p>But she could say no more; tears checked her speech.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward's eyes were glistening also, and the two companions
+ were silent; at length he began once more:</p>
+
+ <p>"My dear lady," he said, "my time is short, and I have a
+ solemn message to deliver to you. Will you allow me to do so
+ now?"</p>
+
+ <p>"To me?" she asked, in a tone of astonishment.</p>
+
+ <p>"From my departed friend," answered Edward,
+ emphatically.</p>
+
+ <p>"From Ferdinand?&mdash;and that now&mdash;after&mdash;" she
+ shrunk back, as if in terror.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now that he is no longer with us, do you mean? I found the
+ message in his papers, which have been intrusted to me only
+ lately, since I have been in the neighborhood. Among them was a
+ token which I was to restore to you." He produced the ring.
+ Emily seized it wildly, and trembled as she looked upon it.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is indeed my ring," she said at length, "the same which
+ I gave him when we plighted our troth in secret. You are
+ acquainted with everything, I perceive; I shall therefore risk
+ nothing if I speak openly."</p>
+
+ <p>She wept, and pressed the ring to her lips.</p>
+
+ <p>"I see that my friend's memory is dear to you," continued
+ Edward. You will forgive the prayer I am about to make to you:
+ my visit to you concerns his ring."</p>
+
+ <p>"How&mdash;what is it you wish?" cried Emily; terrified.</p>
+
+ <p>"It was <i>his</i> wish," replied Edward. "He evinced an
+ earnest desire to have this pledge of an unfortunate and
+ unfulfilled engagement restored."</p>
+
+ <p>"How is that possible? You did not speak with him before his
+ death; and this happened so suddenly after, that, to give you
+ the commission&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"There was no time for it! that is true," answered Edward,
+ with an inward shudder, although outwardly he was calm.
+ "Perhaps this wish was awakened immediately before his death. I
+ found it, as I told you, expressed in those
+ papers."</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page281"
+ id="page281"></a>[pg 281]</span>
+
+ <p>"Incomprehensible!" she exclaimed. "Only a short time before
+ his death, we cherished&mdash;deceitful, indeed, they proved,
+ but, oh, what blessed hopes! we reckoned on casualties, on what
+ might possibly occur to assist as. Neither of us could endure
+ to dwell on the idea of separation; and yet&mdash;yet
+ since&mdash;Oh, my God," she cried, overcome by sorrow, and she
+ hid her face between her hands.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward was lost in confused thought. For a time both again
+ were silent: at length Emily started up&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Forgive me, M. de Wensleben. What you have related to me,
+ what you have asked of me, has produced so much excitement, so
+ much agitation, that it is necessary that I should be alone for
+ a few moments, to recover my composure."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am gone," cried Edward, springing from his chair.</p>
+
+ <p>"No! no!" she replied, "you are my guest; remain here. I
+ have a household duty which calls me away." She laid a stress
+ on these words.</p>
+
+ <p>She leant forward, and with a sad, sweet smile, she gave her
+ hand to the friend of her lost Ferdinand, pressing his gently,
+ and disappeared through the inner door.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward stood stunned, bewildered; then he paced the room
+ with hasty steps, threw himself on the sofa, and took up one of
+ the books that lay on the table, rather to have something in
+ his hand, than to read. It proved to be Young's "Night
+ Thoughts." He looked through it, and was attracted by many
+ passages, which seemed, in his present frame of mind, fraught
+ with peculiar meaning; yet his thoughts wandered constantly
+ from the page to his dead friend. The candles, unheeded both by
+ Emily and him, burned on with long wicks, giving little light
+ in the silent room, over which the red glare from the hearth
+ shed a lurid glow. Hurried footsteps sounded in the anteroom;
+ the door was thrown open.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward looked up, and saw D'Effernay staring at him, and
+ round the room, in an angry, restless manner.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward could not but think there was something almost
+ unearthly in those dark looks and that towering form.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where is my wife?" was D'Effernay's first question.</p>
+
+ <p>"She is gone to fulfill some household duty," replied the
+ other.</p>
+
+ <p>"And leaves you here alone in this miserable darkness! Most
+ extraordinary!&mdash;indeed, most unaccountable!" and as he
+ spoke he approached the table and snuffed the candles, with a
+ movement of impatience.</p>
+
+ <p>"She left me here with old friends," said Edward, with a
+ forced smile. "I have been reading."</p>
+
+ <p>"What, in the dark?" inquired D'Effernay, with a look of
+ mistrust. "It was so dark when I came in, that you could not
+ possibly have distinguished a letter."</p>
+
+ <p>"I read for some time, and then I fell into a train of
+ thought, which is usually the result of reading Young's 'Night
+ Thoughts.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"Young! I cannot bear that author. He is so gloomy."</p>
+
+ <p>"But you are fortunately so happy, that the lamentations of
+ the lonely mourner can find no echo in your breast."</p>
+
+ <p>"You think so!" said D'Effernay, in a churlish tone, and he
+ pressed his lips together tightly, as Emily came into the room:
+ he went to meet her.</p>
+
+ <p>"You have been a long time away," was his observation, as he
+ looked into her eyes, where the trace of tears might easily be
+ detected. "I found our guest alone."</p>
+
+ <p>"M. de Wensleben was good enough to excuse me," she replied;
+ "and then I thought you would be back immediately."</p>
+
+ <p>They sat down to the table; coffee was brought, and the past
+ appeared to be forgotten.</p>
+
+ <p>The conversation at first was broken by constant pauses.
+ Edward saw that Emily did all she could to play the hostess
+ agreeably, and to pacify her husband's ill-humor.</p>
+
+ <p>In this attempt the young man assisted her, and at last they
+ were successful. D'Effernay became more cheerful; the
+ conversation more animated; and Edward found that his host
+ could be a very agreeable member of society when he pleased,
+ combining a good deal of information with great natural powers.
+ The evening passed away more pleasantly than it promised at one
+ time; and after an excellent and well-served supper, the young
+ officer was shown into a comfortable room, fitted up with every
+ modern luxury; and weary in mind and body, he soon fell asleep.
+ He dreamed of all that had occupied his waking thoughts-of his
+ friend, and his friend's history.</p>
+
+ <p>But in that species of confusion which often characterizes
+ dreams, he fancied that he was Ferdinand, or at least, his own
+ individuality seemed mixed up with that of Hallberg. He felt
+ that he was ill. He lay in an unknown room, and by his bedside
+ stood a small table, covered with glasses and phials,
+ containing medicines, as is usual in a sick room.</p>
+
+ <p>The door opened, and D'Effernay came in, in his
+ dressing-gown, as if he had just left his bed: and now in
+ Edward's mind dreams and realities were mingled together, and
+ he thought that D'Effernay came, perhaps, to speak with him on
+ the occurrences of the preceding day. But no! he approached the
+ table on which the medicines stood, looked at the watch, took
+ up one of the phials and a cup, measured the draught, drop by
+ drop, then he turned and looked round him stealthily, and then
+ he drew from his breast a pale blue, coiling serpent, which he
+ threw into the cup, and held it to the patient's lips, who
+ drank, and instantly felt a numbness creep over his frame which
+ ended in death. Edward fancied that he was dead; he saw the
+ coffin brought, but the terror lest he
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page282"
+ id="page282"></a>[pg 282]</span> should be buried alive,
+ made him start up with a sudden effort, and he opened his
+ eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>The dream had passed away; he sat in his bed safe and well;
+ but it was long ere he could in any degree recover his
+ composure, or get rid of the impression which the frightful
+ apparition had made on him. They brought his breakfast, with a
+ message from the master of the house to inquire whether he
+ would like to visit the park, farms, &amp;c. He dressed
+ quickly, and descended to the court, where he found his host in
+ a riding dress, by the side of two fine horses, already
+ saddled. D'Effernay greeted the young man courteously; but
+ Edward felt an inward repugnance as he looked on that gloomy
+ though handsome countenance, now lighted up by the beams of the
+ morning sun, yet recalling vividly the dark visions of the
+ night. D'Effernay was full of attentions to his new friend.
+ They started on their ride, in spite of some threatening
+ clouds, and began the inspection of meadows, shrubberies,
+ farms, &amp;c. After a couple of hours, which were consumed in
+ this manner, it began to rain a few drops, and at last burst
+ out into a heavy shower. It was soon impossible even to ride
+ through the woods for the torrents that were pouring down, and
+ so they returned to the castle.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward retired to his room to change his dress, and to write
+ some letters, he said, but more particularly to avoid Emily, in
+ order not to excite her husband's jealousy. As the bell rang
+ for dinner he saw her again, and found to his surprise that the
+ captain, whom he had first seen in the coffee-room, and who had
+ given him so much information, was one of the party. He was
+ much pleased, for they had taken a mutual fancy to each other.
+ The captain was not at quarters the day Edward had left them,
+ but as soon as he heard where his friend had gone, he put
+ horses to his carriage and followed him, for he said he also
+ should like to see these famous estates. D'Effernay seemed in
+ high good humor to-day, Emily far more silent than yesterday,
+ and taking little part in the conversation of the men, which
+ turned on political economy. After coffee she found an
+ opportunity to give Edward (unobserved) a little packet. The
+ look with which she did so, told plainly what it contained, and
+ the young man hurried to his room as soon as he fancied he
+ could do so without remark or comment. The continued rain
+ precluded all idea of leaving the house any more that day. He
+ unfolded the packet; there were a couple of sheets, written
+ closely in a woman's fair hand, and something wrapped carefully
+ in a paper, which he knew to be the ring. It was the fellow to
+ that which he had given the day before to Emily, only
+ Ferdinand's name was engraved inside instead of hers. Such were
+ the contents of the papers:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Secrecy would be misplaced with the friend of the dead.
+ Therefore, will I speak to you of things which I have never
+ uttered to a human being until now. Jules D'Effernay is nearly
+ related to me. We knew each other in the Netherlands, where our
+ estates joined. The boy loved me already with a love that
+ amounted to passion; this love was my father's greatest joy,
+ for there was an old and crying injustice which the ancestors
+ of D'Effernay had suffered from ours, that could alone, he
+ thought, be made up by the marriage of the only children of the
+ two branches. So we were destined for each other almost from
+ our cradles; and I was content it should be so, for Jules's
+ handsome face and decided preference for me were agreeable to
+ me, although I felt no great affection for him. We were
+ separated: Jules traveled in France, England, and America, and
+ made money as a merchant, which profession he had taken up
+ suddenly. My father, who had a place under government, left his
+ country in consequence of political troubles, and came into
+ this part of the world where some distant relations of my
+ mother's lived. He liked the neighborhood; he bought land; we
+ lived very happily; I was quite contented in Jules's absence; I
+ had no yearning of the heart toward him, yet I thought kindly
+ of him, and troubled myself little about my future.
+ Then&mdash;then I learned to know your friend. Oh, then! I
+ felt, when I looked upon him, when I listened to him, when we
+ conversed together, I felt, I acknowledged that there might be
+ happiness on earth, of which I had hitherto never dreamed. Then
+ I loved for the first time, ardently, passionately, and was
+ beloved in return. Acquainted with the family engagements, he
+ did not dare openly to proclaim his love, and I knew I ought
+ not to foster the feeling; but, alas! how seldom does passion
+ listen to the voice of reason and of duty. Your friend and I
+ met in secret; in secret we plighted our troth, and exchanged
+ those rings, and hoped and believed that by showing a bold
+ front to our destiny we should subdue it to our will. The
+ commencement was sinful, it has met with a dire retribution,
+ Jules's letters announced his speedy return. He had sold
+ everything in his own country, had given up all his mercantile
+ affairs, through which he had greatly increased an already
+ considerable fortune, and now he was about to join us, or
+ rather me, without whom he could not live. This appeared to me
+ like the demand for payment of a heavy debt. This debt I owed
+ to Jules, who loved me with all his heart, who was in
+ possession of my father's promised word and mine also. Yet I
+ could not give up your friend. In a state of distraction I told
+ him all; we meditated flight. Yes, I was so far guilty, and I
+ make the confession in hopes that some portion of my errors may
+ be expiated by repentance. My father, who had long been in a
+ declining state, suddenly grew worse, and this delayed and
+ hindered the fulfillment of our designs. Jules arrived. During
+ the five years he had been away he was much changed in
+ appearance, and that advantageously. I was struck
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page283"
+ id="page283"></a>[pg 283]</span> when I first saw him, but
+ it was also easy to detect in those handsome features and
+ manly bearing, a spirit of restlessness and violence which
+ had already shown itself in him as a boy, and which passing
+ years, with their bitter experience and strong passions, had
+ greatly developed. The hope that we had cherished of
+ D'Effernay's possible indifference to me, of the change
+ which time might have wrought in his attachment, now seemed
+ idle and absurd. His love was indeed impassioned. He
+ embraced me in a manner that made me shrink from him, and
+ altogether his deportment toward me was a strange contrast
+ to the gentle, tender, refined affection of our dear friend.
+ I trembled whenever Jules entered the room, and all that I
+ had prepared to say to him, all the plans which I had
+ revolved in my mind respecting him, vanished in an instant
+ before the power of his presence, and the almost imperative
+ manner in which he claimed my hand. My father's illness
+ increased; he was now in a very precarious state, hopeless
+ indeed. Jules rivaled me in filial attentions to him, that I
+ can never cease to thank him for; but this illness made my
+ situation more and more critical, and it accelerated the
+ fulfillment of the contract. I was now to renew my promise
+ to him by the death-bed of my father. Alas, alas! I fell
+ senseless to the ground when this announcement was made to
+ me. Jules began to suspect. Already my cold, embarrassed
+ manner toward him since his return had struck him as
+ strange. He began to suspect, I repeat, and the effect that
+ this suspicion had on him, it would be impossible to
+ describe to you. Even now, after so long a time, now that I
+ am accustomed to his ways, and more reconciled to my fate by
+ the side of a noble, though somewhat impetuous man, it makes
+ me tremble to think of those paroxysms, which the idea that
+ I did not love him called forth. They were fearful; he
+ nearly sank under them. During two days his life was in
+ danger. At last the storm passed, my father died; Jules
+ watched over me with the tenderness of a brother, the
+ solicitude of a parent; for that indeed I shall ever be
+ grateful. His suspicion once awakened, he gazed round with
+ penetrating looks to discover the cause of my altered
+ feelings. But your friend never came to our house; we met in
+ an unfrequented spot, and my father's illness had
+ interrupted these interviews. Altogether I cannot tell if
+ Jules discovered anything. A fearful circumstance rendered
+ all our precautions useless, and cut the knot of our secret
+ connection, to loose which voluntarily I felt I had no
+ power. A wedding feast, at a neighboring castle, assembled
+ all the nobility and gentry, and officers quartered near,
+ together; my deep mourning was an excuse for my absence.
+ Jules, though he usually was happiest by my side, could not
+ resist the invitation, and your friend resolved to go,
+ although he was unwell; he feared to raise suspicion by
+ remaining away, when I was left at home. With great
+ difficulty he contrived the first day to make one at a
+ splendid hunt, the second day he could not leave his bed. A
+ physician, who was in the house, pronounced his complaint to
+ be violent fever, and Jules, whose room joined that of the
+ sick man, offered him every little service and kindness
+ which compassion and good feeling prompted; and I cannot but
+ praise him all the more for it, as who can tell, perhaps,
+ his suspicion might have taken the right direction? On the
+ morning of the second day&mdash;but let me glance quickly at
+ that terrible time, the memory of which can never pass from
+ my mind&mdash;a fit of apoplexy most unexpectedly, but
+ gently, ended the noblest life, and separated us forever!
+ Now you know all. I inclose the ring. I cannot write more.
+ Farewell!"</p>
+
+ <p>The conclusion of the letter made a deep impression on
+ Edward. His dream rose up before his remembrance, the slight
+ indisposition, the sudden death, the fearful nursetender, all
+ arranged themselves in order before his mind, and an awful
+ whole rose out of all these reflections, a terrible suspicion
+ which he tried to throw off. But he could not do so, and when
+ he met the captain and D'Effernay in the evening, and the
+ latter challenged his visitors to a game of billiards, Edward
+ glanced from time to time at his host in a scrutinizing manner,
+ and could not but feel that the restless discontent which was
+ visible in his countenance, and the unsteady glare of his eyes,
+ which shunned the fixed look of others, only fitted too well
+ into the shape of the dark thoughts which were crossing his own
+ mind. Late in the evening, after supper, they played whist in
+ Emily's boudoir. On the morrow, if the weather permitted, they
+ were to conclude their inspection of the surrounding property,
+ and the next day they were to visit the iron foundries, which,
+ although distant from the Castle several miles, formed a very
+ important item in the rent-roll of the estates. The company
+ separated for the night. Edward fell asleep; and the same
+ dream, with the same circumstances, recurred, only with the
+ full consciousness that the sick man was Ferdinand. Edward felt
+ overpowered, a species of horror took possession of his mind,
+ as he found himself now in regular communication with the
+ beings of the invisible world.</p>
+
+ <p>The weather favored D'Effernay's projects. The whole day was
+ passed in the open air. Emily only appeared at meals, and in
+ the evening when they played at cards. Both she and Edward
+ avoided, as if by mutual consent, every word, every look that
+ could awaken the slightest suspicion or jealous feeling in
+ D'Effernay's mind. She thanked him in her heart for this
+ forbearance, but her thoughts were in another world; she took
+ little heed of what passed around her. Her husband was in an
+ excellent temper; he played the part of host to perfection; and
+ when the two officers were established comfortably by the fire,
+ in the captain's room, smoking together, they could not but do
+ justice to his courteous
+ manners.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page284"
+ id="page284"></a>[pg 284]</span>
+
+ <p>"He appears to be a man of general information," remarked
+ Edward.</p>
+
+ <p>"He has traveled a great deal, and read a great deal, as I
+ told you when we first met: he is a remarkable man, but one of
+ uncontrolled passions, and desperately jealous."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yet he appears very attentive to his wife."</p>
+
+ <p>"Undoubtedly he is wildly in love with her; yet he makes her
+ unhappy, and himself too."</p>
+
+ <p>"He certainly does not appear happy, there is so much
+ restlessness."</p>
+
+ <p>"He can never bear to remain in one place for any length of
+ time together. He is now going to sell the property he only
+ bought last year. There is an instability about him; everything
+ palls on him."</p>
+
+ <p>"That is the complaint of many who are rich and well to do
+ in the world."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes; only not in the same degree. I assure you it has often
+ struck me that man must have a bad conscience."</p>
+
+ <p>"What an idea!" rejoined Edward, with a forced laugh, for
+ the captain's remark struck him forcibly. "He seems a man of
+ honor."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, one may be a man of honor, as it is called, and yet
+ have something quite bad enough to reproach yourself with. But
+ I know nothing about it, and would not breathe such a thing
+ except to you. His wife, too, looks so pale and so
+ oppressed."</p>
+
+ <p>"But, perhaps, that is her natural complexion and
+ expression."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, no! no! the year before D'Effernay came from Paris, she
+ was as fresh as a rose. Many people declare that your poor
+ friend loved her. The affair was wrapped in mystery, and I
+ never believed the report, for Hallberg was a steady man, and
+ the whole country knew that Emily had been engaged a long
+ time."</p>
+
+ <p>"Hallberg never mentioned the name in his letters," answered
+ Edward, with less candor than usual.</p>
+
+ <p>"I thought not. Besides D'Effernay was very much attached to
+ him, and mourned his death."</p>
+
+ <p>"Indeed!"</p>
+
+ <p>"I assure you the morning that Hallberg was found dead in
+ his bed so unexpectedly, D'Effernay was like one beside
+ himself."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very extraordinary. But as we are on the subject, tell me,
+ I pray you, all the circumstances of my poor Ferdinand's
+ illness, and awful sudden death."</p>
+
+ <p>"I can tell you all about it, as well as any one, for I was
+ one of the guests at that melancholy wedding. Your friend, and
+ I, and many others were invited. Hallberg had some idea of not
+ going; he was unwell, with violent headache and giddiness. But
+ we persuaded him, and he consented to go with us. The first day
+ he felt tolerably well. We hunted in the open field; we were
+ all on horseback, the day hot. Hallberg felt worse. The second
+ day he had a great deal of fever; he could not stay up. The
+ physician (for fortunately there was one in the company)
+ ordered rest, cooling medicine, neither of which seemed to do
+ him good. The rest of the men dispersed, to amuse themselves in
+ various ways. Only D'Effernay remained at home; he was never
+ very fond of large societies, and we voted that he was
+ discontented and out of humor because his betrothed bride was
+ not with him. His room was next to the sick man's, to whom he
+ gave all possible care and attention, for poor Hallberg,
+ besides being ill, was in despair at giving so much trouble in
+ a strange house. D'Effernay tried to calm him on this point; he
+ nursed him, amused him with conversation, mixed his medicines,
+ and, in fact, showed more kindness and tenderness, than any of
+ us would have given him credit for. Before I went to bed I
+ visited Hallberg, and found him much better, and more cheerful;
+ the doctor had promised that he should leave his bed next day.
+ So I left him and retired with the rest of the world, rather
+ late, and very tired, to rest. The next morning I was awoke by
+ the fatal tidings. I did not wait to dress, I ran to his room,
+ it was full of people."</p>
+
+ <p>"And how, how was the death first discovered?" inquired
+ Edward, in breathless eagerness.</p>
+
+ <p>"The servant, who came in to attend on him, thought he was
+ asleep, for he lay in his usual position, his head upon his
+ hand. He went away and waited for some time; but hours passed,
+ and he thought he ought to wake his master to give him his
+ medicine. Then the awful discovery was made. He must have died
+ peacefully, for his countenance was so calm, his limbs
+ undisturbed. A fit of apoplexy had terminated his life, but in
+ the most tranquil manner."</p>
+
+ <p>"Incomprehensible," said Edward, with a deep sigh. "Did they
+ take no measures to restore animation?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly; all that could be done was done, bleeding,
+ fomentation, friction; the physician superintended, but there
+ was no hope, it was all too late. He must have been dead some
+ hours, for he was already cold and stiff. If there had been a
+ spark of life in him he would have been saved. It was all over;
+ I had lost my good lieutenant, and the regiment one of its
+ finest officers."</p>
+
+ <p>He was silent, and appeared lost in thought. Edward, for his
+ part, felt overwhelmed by terrible suspicions and sad memories.
+ After a long pause he recovered himself: "and where was
+ D'Effernay?" he inquired.</p>
+
+ <p>"D'Effernay," answered the Captain, rather surprised at the
+ question; "oh! he was not in the Castle when we made the
+ dreadful discovery: he had gone out for an early walk, and when
+ he came back late, not before noon, he learned the truth, and
+ was like one out of his senses. It seemed so awful to him,
+ because he had been so much, the very day before, with poor
+ Hallberg."</p>
+
+ <p>"Aye," answered Edward, whose suspicions were being more and
+ more confirmed every moment. "And did he see the corpse, did he
+ go into the chamber of death?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No," replied the captain; "he assured us
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page285"
+ id="page285"></a>[pg 285]</span> it was out of his power to
+ do so; he could not bear the sight; and I believe it. People
+ with such uncontrolled feelings as this D'Effernay, are
+ incapable of performing those duties which others think it
+ necessary and incumbent on them to fulfill."</p>
+
+ <p>"And where was Hallberg buried?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not far from the castle where the mournful event took
+ place. To-morrow, if we go to the iron foundry, we shall be
+ near the spot."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am glad of it," cried Edward eagerly, while a host of
+ projects rose up in his mind. "But now, captain, I will not
+ trespass any longer on your kindness. It is late, and we must
+ be up betimes to-morrow. How far have we to go?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not less than four leagues certainly. D'Effernay has
+ arranged that we shall drive there, and see it all at our
+ leisure: then we shall return in the evening. Good night,
+ Wensleben."</p>
+
+ <p>They separated: Edward hurried to his room; his heart
+ overflowed. Sorrow on the one hand, horror and even hatred on
+ the other, agitated him by turns. It was long before he could
+ sleep. For the third time the vision haunted him; but now it
+ was clearer than before; now he saw plainly the features of him
+ who lay in bed, and of him who stood beside the bed&mdash;they
+ were those of Hallberg and of D'Effernay.</p>
+
+ <p>This third apparition, the exact counterpart of the two
+ former (only more vivid), all that he had gathered from
+ conversations on the subject, and the contents of Emily's
+ letter, left scarcely the shadow of a doubt remaining as to how
+ his friend had left the world.</p>
+
+ <p>D'Effernay's jealous and passionate nature seemed to allow
+ of the possibility of such a crime, and it could scarcely be
+ wondered at, if Edward regarded him with a feeling akin to
+ hatred. Indeed the desire of visiting Hallberg's grave, in
+ order to place the ring in the coffin, could alone reconcile
+ Wensleben to the idea of remaining any longer beneath the roof
+ of a man whom he now considered the murderer of his friend. His
+ mind was a prey to conflicting doubts; detestation for the
+ culprit, and grief for the victim, pointed out one line of
+ conduct, while the difficulty of proving D'Effernay's guilt,
+ and still more, pity and consideration for Emily, determined
+ him at length to let the matter rest, and to leave the
+ murderer, if such he really were, to the retribution which his
+ own conscience and the justice of God would award him. He would
+ seek his friend's grave, and then he would separate from
+ D'Effernay, and never see him more. In the midst of these
+ reflections the servant came to tell him that the carriage was
+ ready. A shudder passed over his frame as D'Effernay greeted
+ him; but he commanded himself, and they started on their
+ expedition.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward spoke but little, and that only when it was
+ necessary, and the conversation was kept up by his two
+ companions; he had made every inquiry, before he set out,
+ respecting the place of his friend's interment, the exact
+ situation of the tomb, the name of the village, and its
+ distance from the main road. On their way home, he requested
+ that D'Effernay would give orders to the coachman to make a
+ round of a mile or two as far as the village of &mdash;&mdash;,
+ with whose rector he was particularly desirous to speak. A
+ momentary cloud gathered on D'Effernay's brow, yet it seemed no
+ more than his usual expression of vexation at any delay or
+ hindrance; and he was so anxious to propitiate his rich
+ visitor, who appeared likely to take the estate off his hands,
+ that he complied with all possible courtesy. The coachman was
+ directed to turn down a by-road, and a very bad one it was. The
+ captain stood up in the carriage and pointed out the village to
+ him, at some distance off; it lay in a deep ravine at the foot
+ of the mountains.</p>
+
+ <p>They arrived in the course of time, and inquired for the
+ clergyman's house, which, as well as the church, was situated
+ on rising ground. The three companions alighted from the
+ carriage, which they left at the bottom of the hill, and walked
+ up together in the direction of the rectory. Edward knocked at
+ the door and was admitted, while the two others sat on a bench
+ outside. He had promised to return speedily, but to
+ D'Effernay's restless spirit, one-quarter of an hour appeared
+ interminable.</p>
+
+ <p>He turned to the captain and said, in a tone of impatience,
+ "M. de Wensleben must have a great deal of business with the
+ rector: we have been here an immense time, and he does not seem
+ inclined to make his appearance.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I dare say he will come soon. The matter cannot detain
+ him long."</p>
+
+ <p>"What on earth can he have to do here?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps you would call it a mere fancy&mdash;the enthusiasm
+ of youth."</p>
+
+ <p>"It has a name, I suppose?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Is it sufficiently important, think you, to make us run the
+ risk of being benighted on such roads as these?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, it is quite early in the day."</p>
+
+ <p>"But we have more than two leagues to go. Why will you not
+ speak?&mdash;there cannot any great mystery."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, perhaps not a mystery, exactly, but just one of those
+ subjects on which we are usually reserved with others."</p>
+
+ <p>"So! so!" rejoined D'Effernay, with a little sneer. "Some
+ love affair; some girl or another who pursues him, that he
+ wants to get rid of."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing of the kind, I can assure you," replied the captain
+ drily. "It could scarcely be more innocent. He wishes, in fact,
+ to visit his friend's grave."</p>
+
+ <p>The listener's expression was one of scorn and anger. "It is
+ worth the trouble certainly," he exclaimed, with a mocking
+ laugh. "A charming sentimental pilgrimage, truly; and pray who
+ is this beloved friend, over whose resting-place he must shed a
+ tear and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page286"
+ id="page286"></a>[pg 286]</span> plant a forget-me-not? He
+ told me he had never been in the neighborhood before."</p>
+
+ <p>"No more he had; neither did he know where poor Hallberg was
+ buried until I told him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Hallberg!" echoed the other in a tone that startled the
+ captain, and caused him to turn and look fixedly in the
+ speaker's face. It was deadly pale, and the captain observed
+ the effort which D'Effernay made to recover his composure.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hallberg!" he repeated again, in a calmer tone, "and was
+ Wensleben a friend of his?"</p>
+
+ <p>"His bosom friend from childhood. They were brought up
+ together at the academy. Hallberg left it a year earlier than
+ his friend."</p>
+
+ <p>"Indeed!" said D'Effernay, scowling as he spoke, and working
+ himself up into a passion. "And this lieutenant came here on
+ this account, then, and the purchase of the estates was a mere
+ excuse."</p>
+
+ <p>"I beg your pardon," observed the captain, in a decided tone
+ of voice; "I have already told you that it was I who informed
+ him of the place where his friend lies buried."</p>
+
+ <p>"That may be, but it was owing to his friendship, to the
+ wish to learn something further of his fate, that we are
+ indebted for the visit of this romantic knight-errant."</p>
+
+ <p>"That does not appear likely," replied the captain, who
+ thought it better to avert, if possible, the rising storm of
+ his companion's fury. "Why should he seek for news of Hallberg
+ here, when he comes from the place where he was quartered for a
+ long time, and where all his comrades now are."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I don't know," cried D'Effernay, whose passion was
+ increasing every moment. "Perhaps you have heard what was once
+ gossiped about the neighborhood, that Hallberg was an admirer
+ of my wife before she married."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes, I have heard that report, but never believed it.
+ Hallberg was a prudent, steady man, and every one knew that
+ Mademoiselle Varnier's hand had been promised for some
+ time."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes! yes! but you do not know to what lengths passion and
+ avarice may lead: for Emily was rich. We must not forget that,
+ when we discuss the matter; an elopement with the rich heiress
+ would have been a fine thing for a poor, beggarly
+ lieutenant."</p>
+
+ <p>"Shame! shame! M. D'Effernay. How can you slander the
+ character of that upright young man? If Hallberg were so
+ unhappy as to love Mademoiselle Varnier&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"That he did! you may believe me so far, I had reason to
+ know it, and I did know it."</p>
+
+ <p>"We had better change the conversation altogether, as it has
+ taken so unpleasant a turn, Hallberg is dead; his errors, be
+ they what they may, lie buried with him. His name stands high
+ with all who knew him Even you, M. D'Effernay&mdash;you were
+ his friend."</p>
+
+ <p>"I his friend? I hated him!&mdash;I loathed him!" D'Effernay
+ could not proceed; he foamed at the mouth with rage.</p>
+
+ <p>"Compose yourself!" said the Captain, rising as he spoke;
+ "you look and speak like a madman."</p>
+
+ <p>A madman! Who says I am mad? Now I see it all&mdash;the
+ connection of the whole&mdash;the shameful conspiracy."</p>
+
+ <p>"Your conduct is perfectly incomprehensible to me," answered
+ the captain, with perfect coolness. "Did you not attend
+ Hallberg in his last illness, and give him his medicines with
+ your own hand?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I!" stammered D'Effernay. "No! no! no!" he cried, while the
+ captain's growing suspicions increased every moment, on account
+ of the perturbation which his companion displayed. "I never
+ gave his medicines; whoever says that is a liar."</p>
+
+ <p>"I say it!" exclaimed the officer, in a loud tone, for his
+ patience was exhausted. "I say it, because I know that it was
+ so, and I will maintain that fact against any one at any time.
+ If you choose to contradict the evidence of my senses, it is
+ you who are a liar!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ha! you shall give me satisfaction for this insult. Depend
+ upon it, I am not one to be trifled with, as you shall find.
+ You shall retract your words."</p>
+
+ <p>"Never! I am ready to defend every word I have uttered here
+ on this spot, at this moment, if you please. You have your
+ pistols in the carriage, you know."</p>
+
+ <p>D'Effernay cast a look of hatred on the speaker, and then
+ dashing down the little hill, to the surprise of the servants,
+ he dragged the pistols from the sword-case, and was by the
+ captain's side in a moment. But the loud voices of the
+ disputants had attracted Edward to the spot, and there he stood
+ on D'Effernay's return; and by his side a venerable old man,
+ who carried a large bunch of keys in his hand.</p>
+
+ <p>"In heaven's name, what has happened?" cried Wensleben.</p>
+
+ <p>"What are you about to do?" interposed the rector, in a tone
+ of authority, though his countenance was expressive of horror.
+ "Are you going to commit murder on this sacred spot, close to
+ the precincts of the church?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Murder! who speaks of murder?" cried D'Effernay. "Who can
+ prove it?" and as he spoke, the captain turned a fierce,
+ penetrating look upon him, beneath which he quailed.</p>
+
+ <p>"But, I repeat the question," Edward began once more, "what
+ does all this mean? I left you a short time ago in friendly
+ conversation. I come back and find you both armed&mdash;both
+ violently agitated&mdash;and M. D'Effernay, at least, speaking
+ incoherently. What do you mean by 'proving it?'&mdash;to what
+ do you allude?" At this moment, before any answer could be
+ made, a man came out of the house with a pick-axe and shovel on
+ his shoulder, and advancing toward the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page287"
+ id="page287"></a>[pg 287]</span> rector, said respectfully,
+ "I am quite ready, sir, if you have the key of the
+ churchyard."</p>
+
+ <p>It was now the captain's turn to look anxious: "What are you
+ going to do, you surely don't intend&mdash;?" but as he spoke,
+ the rector interrupted him.</p>
+
+ <p>"This gentleman is very desirous to see the place where his
+ friend lies buried."</p>
+
+ <p>"But these preparations, what do they mean?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I will tell you," said Edward, in a voice and tone that
+ betrayed the deepest emotion, "I have a holy duty to perform. I
+ must cause the coffin to be opened."</p>
+
+ <p>"How, what!" screamed D'Effernay, once again. "Never&mdash;I
+ will never permit such a thing."</p>
+
+ <p>"But, sir," the old man spoke, in a tone of calm decision,
+ contrasting wonderfully with the violence of him whom he
+ addressed, "you have no possible right to interfere. If this
+ gentleman wishes it, and I accede to the proposition, no one
+ can prevent us from doing as we would."</p>
+
+ <p>"I tell you I will not suffer it," continued D'Effernay,
+ with the same frightful agitation. "Stir at your peril," he
+ cried, turning sharply round upon the grave-digger, and holding
+ a pistol to his head; but the captain pulled his arm away, to
+ the relief of the frightened peasant.</p>
+
+ <p>"M. D'Effernay," he said, "your conduct for the last
+ half-hour has been most unaccountable&mdash;most
+ unreasonable."</p>
+
+ <p>"Come, come," interposed Edward, "Let us say no more on the
+ subject; but let us be going," he addressed the rector; "we
+ will not detain these gentlemen much longer."</p>
+
+ <p>He made a step toward the churchyard, but D'Effernay
+ clutched his arm, and, with an impious oath, "you shall not
+ stir," he said; "that grave shall not be opened."</p>
+
+ <p>Edward shook him off, with a look of silent hatred, for now
+ indeed all his doubts were confirmed.</p>
+
+ <p>D'Effernay saw that Wensleben was resolved, and a deadly
+ pallor spread itself over his features, and a shudder passed
+ visibly over his frame.</p>
+
+ <p>"You are going!" he cried, with every gesture and appearance
+ of insanity. "Go, then;" ... and he pointed the muzzle of the
+ pistol to his mouth, and before any one could prevent him, he
+ drew the trigger, and fell back a corpse. The spectators were
+ motionless with surprise and horror; the captain was the first
+ to recover himself in some degree. He bent over the body with
+ the faint hope of detecting some sign of life. The old man
+ turned pale and dizzy with a sense of terror, and he looked as
+ if he would have swooned, had not Edward led him gently into
+ his house, while the two others busied themselves with vain
+ attempts to restore life.</p>
+
+ <p>The spirit of D'Effernay had gone to its last account!</p>
+
+ <p>It was, indeed, an awful moment. Death in its worst shape
+ was before them, and a terrible duty still remained to be
+ performed.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward's cheek was blanched; his eye had a fixed look, yet
+ he moved and spoke with a species of mechanical action, which
+ had something almost ghastly in it. Causing the body to be
+ removed into the house, he bade the captain summon the servants
+ of the deceased, and then motioning with his hand to the
+ awe-struck sexton, he proceeded with him to the churchyard. A
+ few clods of earth alone were removed ere the captain stood by
+ his friend's side.</p>
+
+ <p>Here we must pause. Perhaps it were better altogether to
+ emulate the silence that was maintained then and afterward by
+ the two comrades. But the sexton could not be bribed to entire
+ secrecy, and it was a story he loved to tell, with details we
+ gladly omit, of how Wensleben solemnly performed his
+ task&mdash;of how no doubt could any longer exist as to the
+ cause of Hallberg's death. Those who love the horrible must
+ draw on their own imaginations to supply what we resolutely
+ withhold.</p>
+
+ <p>Edward, we believe, never alluded to D'Effernay's death, and
+ all the awful circumstances attending it, but twice&mdash;once,
+ when, with every necessary detail, he and the captain gave
+ their evidence to the legal authorities; and once, with as few
+ details as possible, when he had an interview with the widow of
+ the murderer, the beloved of the victim. The particulars of
+ this interview he never divulged, for he considered Emily's
+ grief too sacred to be exposed to the prying eyes of the
+ curious and the unfeeling. She left the neighborhood
+ immediately, leaving her worldly affairs in Wensleben's hands,
+ who soon disposed of the property for her. She returned to her
+ native country, with the resolution of spending the greater
+ part of her wealth in relieving the distresses of others,
+ wisely seeking, in the exercise of piety and benevolence, the
+ only possible alleviation of her own deep and many-sided
+ griefs. For Edward, he was soon pronounced to have recovered
+ entirely from the shock of these terrible events. Of a
+ courageous and energetic disposition, he pursued the duties of
+ his profession with a firm step, and hid his mighty sorrow deep
+ in the recesses of his heart. To the superficial observer,
+ tears, groans, and lamentations are the only proofs of sorrow:
+ and when they subside, the sorrow is said to have passed away
+ also. Thus the captive, immured within the walls of his
+ prison-house, is as one dead to the outward world, though the
+ gaoler be a daily witness to the vitality of affliction.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>Paris has been again emptied of its citizens to see M.
+ Poitevin make his second ascent on horseback from the Champ de
+ Mars. To show that he was not fastened to his saddle, the
+ idiot, when some hundred yards up in the air, stood upright on
+ his horse, and saluted the multitude below with both his
+ hands.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page288"
+ id="page288"></a>[pg 288]</span>
+
+ <h2>PEASANT LIFE IN GERMANY.</h2>
+
+ <p>We copy the following interesting paragraph from a work just
+ issued in London on "The Social Condition and Education of the
+ People of England and Europe," by Joseph Kay, of Cambridge
+ University.</p>
+
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>"As I have already said, the <i>moral, intellectual and
+ physical condition of the peasants and operatives</i> of
+ Prussia, Saxony and other parts of Germany, of Holland, and
+ of the Protestant cantons of Switzerland, and the social
+ condition of the peasants in the greater part of France,
+ <i>is very much higher and happier, and very much more
+ satisfactory, than that of the peasants and operatives of
+ England</i>; the condition of the <i>poor</i> in the North
+ German, Swiss and Dutch <i>towns</i>, is as remarkable a
+ contrast to that of the poor of the <i>English towns</i> as
+ can well be imagined; and that the condition of the
+ <i>poorer classes</i> of Germany, Switzerland, Holland and
+ France is <i>rapidly improving</i>. The great
+ <i>superiority</i> of the <i>preparation</i> for life which
+ a <i>poor man</i> receives in those countries I have
+ mentioned, to that which a peasant or operative receives
+ <i>in England</i>, and the difference of the social
+ position of a poor man in those countries to that of a
+ peasant or operative in England, seem sufficient to explain
+ the difference which exists between the moral and social
+ condition of the poor of our own country and of the other
+ countries I have named. In Germany, Holland, and
+ Switzerland, a child begins its life in the society of
+ parents who have been educated and brought up for years in
+ the company of learned and gentlemanly professors, and in
+ the society and under the direction of a father who has
+ been exercised in military arts, and who has acquired the
+ bearing, the clean and orderly habits, and the taste for
+ respectable attire, which characterize the soldier. The
+ children of these countries spend the first six years of
+ their lives in homes which are well regulated. They are
+ during this time accustomed to orderly habits, to neat and
+ clean clothes, and to ideas of the value of instruction, of
+ the respect due to the teachers, and of the excellence of
+ the schools, by parents who have, by their training in
+ early life, acquired such tastes and ideas themselves. Each
+ child at the age of six begins to attend a school, which is
+ perfectly clean, well ventilated, directed by an able and
+ well-educated gentleman, and superintended by the religious
+ ministers and by the inspectors of the Government. Until
+ the completion of its <i>fourteenth</i> year, each child
+ continues regular daily attendance at one of these schools,
+ daily strengthening its habits of cleanliness and order,
+ learning the rudiments of useful knowledge, receiving the
+ principles of religion and morality, and gaining confirmed
+ health and physical energy by the exercise and drill of the
+ school playground. <i>No children are left idle in the
+ streets of the towns; no children are allowed to grovel in
+ the gutters; no children are allowed to make</i> their
+ appearance at the schools dirty, or in ragged clothes; and
+ the local authorities are obliged to clothe all whose
+ parents cannot afford to clothe them. The children of the
+ <i>poor</i> of Germany, Holland and Switzerland acquire
+ stronger habits of cleanliness, neatness and industry at
+ the <i>primary</i> schools, than the children of the
+ <i>small shopkeeping</i> classes of England do at the
+ private schools of England; and they leave the <i>primary
+ schools</i> of these countries <i>much better
+ instructed</i> than those who leave our <i>middle class
+ private schools</i>. After having learnt reading, writing,
+ arithmetic, singing, geography, history and the Scriptures,
+ the children leave the schools, carrying with them into
+ life habits of cleanliness, neatness, order and industry,
+ and awakened intellect, capable of collecting truths and
+ reasoning upon them."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From the Dublin University Magazine.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>SUMMER PASTIME.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Do you ask how I'd amuse me</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When the long bright summer comes,</p>
+
+ <p>And welcome leisure woos me</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To shun life's crowded homes;</p>
+
+ <p>To shun the sultry city,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Whose dense, oppressive air</p>
+
+ <p>Might make one weep with pity</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">For those who must be there.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>I'll tell you then&mdash;I would not</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To foreign countries roam,</p>
+
+ <p>As though my fancy could not</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Find occupance at home;</p>
+
+ <p>Nor to home-haunts of fashion</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Would I, least of all, repair,</p>
+
+ <p>For guilt, and pride, and passion,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Have summer-quarters there.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Far, far from watering-places</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of note and name I'd keep,</p>
+
+ <p>For there would vapid faces</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Still throng me in my sleep;</p>
+
+ <p>Then contact with the foolish,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The arrogant, the vain,</p>
+
+ <p>The meaningless&mdash;the mulish,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Would sicken heart and brain.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>No&mdash;I'd seek some shore of ocean</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Where nothing comes to mar</p>
+
+ <p>The ever-fresh commotion</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Of sea and land at war;</p>
+
+ <p>Save the gentle evening only</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As it steals along the deep,</p>
+
+ <p>So spirit-like and lonely,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To still the waves to sleep.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>There long hours I'd spend in viewing</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The elemental strife,</p>
+
+ <p>My soul the while subduing</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">With the littleness of life;</p>
+
+ <p>Of life, with all its paltry plans,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Its conflicts and its cares&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>The feebleness of all that's man's&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The might that's God's and theirs!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And when eve came I'd listen</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To the stilling of that war,</p>
+
+ <p>Till o'er my head should glisten</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The first pure silver star;</p>
+
+ <p>Then, wandering homeward slowly,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I'd learn my heart the tune</p>
+
+ <p>Which the dreaming billows lowly,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Were murmuring to the moon!</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author">R.C.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <p>True genius is perpetual youth, health, serenity, and
+ strength. The eye is bright with a fine fire that is undimmed
+ by time, and the mind, not sharing the body's decline from the
+ prime of middle age, continues on with illimitable accession of
+ spiritual power.</p>
+
+ <p>Our convictions should be based on conceptions got from
+ insight of principles, and not upon opinions spawned of
+ authority and expediency. Every man shall influence me, no man
+ can decide for me.</p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page289"
+ id="page289"></a>[pg 289]</span>
+
+ <h4>[From the Spirit of the Times]</h4>
+
+ <h2>REMINISCENCES OF SARGENT S. PRENTISS, OF MISSISSIPPI.</h2>
+
+ <h3>BY T.B. THORPE.</h3>
+
+ <h4>AUTHOR OF "TOM OWEN, THE BEE HUNTER."</h4>
+
+ <p>The death of Sargeant S. Prentiss has called forth an
+ universal feeling of sorrow; the consciousness that "a great
+ man has fallen" is depicted upon the faces of the
+ multitude.</p>
+
+ <p>The eloquent offerings to his virtues and to his genius that
+ everywhere follow the news of his demise, are but slight tokens
+ of that sorrow that fills the heart of all who knew the gifted
+ Prentiss. Having known him long, and having had frequent
+ occasions to witness exhibitions of his great mental powers, I
+ cannot refrain from paying an imperfect tribute to his
+ memory.</p>
+
+ <p>I first met Mr. Prentiss when he was in the full maturity of
+ his power, but I have the pleasure of knowing hundreds who were
+ well acquainted with his early history and early triumphs.
+ Volumes of interest might be written upon the life of Mr.
+ Prentiss. And then his high sense of honor, his brave spirit,
+ his nobleness of soul, his intense but commendable pride, his
+ classical attainments, and his deep knowledge of the law, can
+ scarcely be illustrated, so universal and superior were his
+ accomplishments and acquirements.</p>
+
+ <p>In his early career, I consider Mr. Prentiss both fortunate
+ and unfortunate. I have often imagined the shrinking but proud
+ boy, living unnoticed and unknown among the wealthiest citizens
+ of the south. Buried in the obscurity of his humble school, he
+ looked out upon the busy world, and measured the mighty
+ capacities of his own soul with those whom society had placed
+ above him. I think I see him brooding over his position, and
+ longing to be free, as the suffocating man longs for the
+ boundless air of heaven. His hour of triumph came, and
+ surpassed, perhaps, his own aspirations. From the schoolroom he
+ entered that of the court&mdash;a chance offered&mdash;a
+ position gained&mdash;the law his theme, he at once not only
+ equaled, but soared even beyond the aim of the most favored of
+ his compeers.</p>
+
+ <p>The era was one of extravagance. The virgin soil of
+ Mississippi was pouring into the laps of her generous sons
+ untold abundance. There were thousands of her citizens, full of
+ health and talent, who adorned excesses of living by the
+ tasteful procurements of wealth, and the highest
+ accomplishments of mind. Into this world Prentiss entered,
+ heralded by naught save his own genius. The heirs of princely
+ fortunes, the descendants of heroes, men of power and place, of
+ family pride, of national associations, were not more proud,
+ more gallant, than was Prentiss, for "he was reckoned among the
+ noblest Romans of them all."</p>
+
+ <p>Each step in his new fortune seemed only to elicit new
+ qualities for admiration. At the forum he dazzled&mdash;the
+ jury and the judge were confounded&mdash;the crowd carried him
+ to the stump, and the multitude listened as to one inspired.
+ Fair ladies vied with each other in waving tiny hands in token
+ of admiration&mdash;the stolid judges of the Supreme Court
+ wondered at the mind of the apparent boy&mdash;even the walls
+ of Congress echoed forth pæans to his praise. His course was as
+ rapid and brilliant as that of the meteor that suddenly springs
+ athwart the heavens, but he was human and accomplished his
+ task, herculean as he was, at the price of an injured
+ constitution.</p>
+
+ <p>In personal appearance Prentiss was eminently handsome, and
+ yet eminently manly. Although of medium height, there was that
+ in the carriage of his head that was astonishingly impressive.
+ I shall never forget him on one occasion, "in '44," when he
+ rose at a public meeting to reply to an antagonist worthy of
+ his steel. His whole soul was roused, his high smooth forehead
+ fairly coruscated. He remained silent for some seconds, and
+ only <i>looked</i>. The bald eagle never glanced so fiercely
+ from his eyry. It seemed as if his deep blue eye would distend
+ until it swallowed up the thousands of his audience. For an
+ instant the effect was painful; he saw it and smiled, when a
+ cheer burst from the admiring multitude that fairly shook the
+ earth.</p>
+
+ <p>His voice was clear and sweet, and could be heard at an
+ immense distance, and yet, to be all like Demosthenes, he had a
+ perceptible impediment in his speech. As a reader he had no
+ superior. His narration was clear and unadorned, proper
+ sentences were subduedly humorous, but the impressive parts
+ were delivered with an effect that reminded me of the elder
+ Kean.</p>
+
+ <p>His imagination was unsurpassed, and the rich stores of his
+ mind supplied him with never-ending material, quoted and
+ original. The slightest allusion to anything gave him the key
+ to all its peculiarities if he had occasion to allude to the
+ diamond, its bed in the Golconda, its discovery by some poor
+ native, its being associated with commerce, its polish by the
+ lapidary, its adorning the neck of beauty, its rays brilliant
+ and serene, its birth, its life, its history, all flashed upon
+ him. So with every idea in the vast storehouse of his mind. He
+ seemed to know all things, in mass and in particulars, never
+ confused, never at a loss&mdash;the hearer listened, wondered,
+ and dreamed. Thoughts of moment came forth as demanded, but ten
+ thousand other thoughts rare and beautiful, continued to bubble
+ up, after all effort ceased.</p>
+
+ <p>No man had a more delicate or subtle wit than Prentiss, or a
+ more Falstaffian humor when it suited his purpose. Who will
+ ever forget the spending of a social dinner hour with him, when
+ his health was high and his mind at ease? Who so
+ lovely?&mdash;who so refined? What delight was exhibited by
+ sweet ladies who listened to his words! Who could so eloquently
+ discourse of roses and buds, of
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page290"
+ id="page290"></a>[pg 290]</span> lilies and pearls, of eyes
+ and graces, of robes and angels, and yet never offend the
+ most sensitive of the sex, or call other than the blush of
+ pleasure and joy to the cheek? Who could, on the "public
+ day," ascend so gracefully from the associations of tariffs,
+ and banks, and cotton, and sugar, to greet the fair ladies
+ that honored him with their presence? How he would lean
+ toward them, as he dwelt upon "the blessed of all God's
+ handiwork," compared their bright eyes to "day-stars" that
+ lit up the dark recesses of his own clouded imagination; and
+ how he would revel, like another Puck, among the rays and
+ beams of smiles called forth by his own happy
+ compliments&mdash;and how he would change from all this, and
+ in an instant seemingly arm himself with the thunderbolts of
+ Jove, which he would dash with appalling sound among his
+ antagonists, or at principles he opposed, and yet with such
+ a charm, with such a manner, that these very daughters of
+ the sunny South who had listened to his syren-song so
+ admiringly, would now stare, and wonder, and pallor, and yet
+ listen, even as one gazes over the precipice, and is
+ fascinated at the very nearness to destruction.</p>
+
+ <p>Prentiss had originally a constitution of iron; his frame
+ was so perfect in its organization, that, in spite of the most
+ extraordinary negligence of health, his muscles had all the
+ compactness, glossiness, and distinctiveness of one who had
+ specially trained by diet and exercise. It was this
+ constitution that enabled him to accomplish so much in so short
+ a time. He could almost wholly discard sleep for weeks, with
+ apparent impunity; he could eat or starve; do anything that
+ would kill ordinary men, yet never feel a twinge of pain. I saw
+ him once amidst a tremendous political excitement; he had been
+ talking, arguing, dining, visiting, and traveling, without rest
+ for three whole days. His companions would steal away at times
+ for sleep, but Prentiss was like an ever-busy spirit, here, and
+ there, and everywhere. The morning of the fourth day came, and
+ he was to appear before an audience familiar with his fame, but
+ one that had never heard him speak; an audience critical in the
+ last degree, he desired to succeed, for more was depending than
+ he had ever before had cause to stake upon such an occasion.
+ Many felt a fear that he would be unprepared. I mingled in the
+ expecting crowd: I saw ladies who had never honored the stump
+ with their presence struggling for seats, counselors,
+ statesmen, and professional men, the elite of a great city,
+ were gathered together. An hour before I had seen Prentiss,
+ still apparently ignorant of his engagement.</p>
+
+ <p>The time of trial came, and the remarkable man presented
+ himself, the very picture of buoyant health, of unbroken rest.
+ All this had been done <i>by the unyielding resolve of his
+ will</i>&mdash;his triumph was complete; high-wrought
+ expectations were more than realized, prejudice was demolished,
+ professional jealousy silenced, and he descended from the
+ rostrum, freely accorded his proper place among the orators and
+ statesmen of the "Southern Metropolis."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Clay visited the South in the fall of '44, and, as he
+ was then candidate for the Presidency, he attracted in New
+ Orleans, if possible, more than usual notice. His hotel was the
+ St. Charles; toward noon he reached that magnificent palace.
+ The streets presented a vast ocean of heads, and every building
+ commanding a view was literally covered with human beings. The
+ great "Statesman of the West" presented himself to the
+ multitude between the tall columns of the finest portico in the
+ world. The scene was beyond description, and of vast interest.
+ As the crowd swayed to and fro, a universal shout was raised
+ for Mr. Clay to speak; he uttered a sentence or two, waved his
+ hand in adieu, and escaped amidst the prevailing confusion.
+ Prentiss meanwhile was at a side window, evidently unconscious
+ of being himself noticed, gazing upon what was passing with all
+ the delight of the humblest spectator. Suddenly his name was
+ announced. He attempted to withdraw from public gaze, but his
+ friends pushed him forward. Again his name was shouted, hats
+ and caps were thrown in the air, and he was finally compelled
+ to show himself on the portico. With remarkable delicacy, he
+ chose a less prominent place than that previously occupied by
+ Mr. Clay, although perfectly visible. He thanked his friends
+ for their kindness by repeated bows, and by such smiles as he
+ alone could give. "A speech! A speech!" thundered a thousand
+ voices. Prentiss lifted his hand; in an instant everything was
+ still&mdash;then pointing to the group that surrounded Mr.
+ Clay, he said, "Fellow-citizens, when the eagle is soaring in
+ the sky, the owls and the bats retire to their holes." And long
+ before the shout that followed this remark had ceased, Prentiss
+ had disappeared amid the multitude.</p>
+
+ <p>But the most extraordinary exhibition of Prentiss' powers of
+ mind and endurance of body, was shown while he was running for
+ Congress. He had the whole State to canvass, and the magnitude
+ of the work was just what he desired. From what I have learned
+ from anecdotes, that canvass must have presented some scenes
+ combining the highest mental and physical exertion that was
+ ever witnessed in the world. Prentiss was in perfect health,
+ and in the first blush of success, and it cannot be doubted but
+ that his best efforts of oratory were then made, and now live
+ recorded only in the fading memories of his hearers. An
+ incident illustrative of the time is remembered, that may hear
+ repeating.</p>
+
+ <p>The whole state of Mississippi was alive with excitement;
+ for the moment, she felt that her sovereign dignity had been
+ trifled with, and that her reputation demanded the return of
+ Prentiss to Congress. Crowds followed him from place to place,
+ making a gala time of weeks together. Among the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page291"
+ id="page291"></a>[pg 291]</span> shrewd worldlings who take
+ advantage of such times "to coin money," was the proprietor
+ of a traveling menagerie, and he soon found out that the
+ multitude followed Prentiss. Getting the list of that
+ remarkable man's "appointments," he filled up his own, and
+ it was soon noticed as a remarkable coincidence, that the
+ orator always "arrived along with the other 'lions.'" The
+ reason of this meeting was discovered, and the "boys"
+ decided that Prentiss should "next time" speak from the top
+ of the lion's cage. Never was the menagerie more crowded. At
+ the proper time, the candidate gratified his constituents,
+ and mounted his singular rostrum. I was told by a person,
+ who professed to be an eye witness, that the whole affair
+ presented a singular mixture of the terrible and the
+ comical. Prentiss was, as usual, eloquent, and, as if
+ ignorant of the novel circumstances with which he was
+ surrounded, went deeply into the matter in hand, his
+ election. For a while the audience and the animals were
+ quiet, the former listening, the latter eyeing the speaker
+ with grave intensity. The first burst of applause
+ electrified the menagerie; the elephant threw his trunk into
+ the air and echoed back the noise, while the tigers and
+ bears significantly growled. On went Prentiss, and as each
+ peculiar animal vented his rage or approbation, he most
+ ingeniously wrought in its habits, as a facsimile of some
+ man or passion. In the meanwhile, the stately king of
+ beasts, who had been quietly treading the mazes of his
+ prison, became alarmed at the footsteps over his head, and
+ placing his mouth upon the floor of his cage, made
+ everything shake by his terrible roar. This, joined with the
+ already excited feelings of the audience, caused the ladies
+ to shriek, and a fearful commotion for a moment followed.
+ Prentiss, equal to every occasion, changed his tone and
+ manner; he commenced a playful strain, and introduced the
+ fox, the jackal, and hyena, and capped the climax by
+ likening some well known political opponent to a grave
+ baboon that presided over the "cage with monkeys"; the
+ resemblance was instantly recognized, and bursts of laughter
+ followed, that literally set many into convulsions. The
+ baboon, all unconscious of the attention he was attracting,
+ suddenly assumed a grimace, and then a serious face, when
+ Prentiss exclaimed&mdash;"I see, my fine fellow, that your
+ feelings are hurt by my unjust comparison, and I humbly beg
+ your pardon." The effect of all this may be vaguely
+ imagined, but it cannot be described.</p>
+
+ <p>Of Prentiss' power before a jury too much cannot be said.
+ Innumerable illustrations might be gathered up, showing that he
+ far surpassed any living advocate. "The trial of the
+ Wilkinsons" might be cited, although it was far from being one
+ of his best efforts. Two young men, only sons, and deeply
+ attached as friends, quarreled, and in the mad excitement of
+ the moment, one of them was killed. Upon the trial, the
+ testimony of the mother of the deceased was so direct, that it
+ seemed to render "the clearing of the prisoner" hopeless.
+ Prentiss spoke to the witness in the blandest manner and most
+ courtly style. The mother, arrayed in weeds, and bowed down
+ with sorrow, turned toward Prentiss, and answered his inquiries
+ with all the dignity of a perfectly accomplished lady&mdash;she
+ calmly uttered the truth, and every word she spoke rendered the
+ defense apparently more hopeless.</p>
+
+ <p>"Would you punish that young man with death?" said Prentiss,
+ pointing to the prisoner.</p>
+
+ <p>The questioned looked, and answered&mdash;"He has made me
+ childless, let the law take its course."</p>
+
+ <p>"And would wringing his mother's heart and hurrying her gray
+ hairs with sorrow into the grave, by rendering her childless,
+ assuage your grief?"</p>
+
+ <p>All present were dissolved in tears&mdash;even convulsive
+ sobbing was heard in the courtroom.</p>
+
+ <p>"No!" said the witness, with all the gushing tenderness of a
+ mother&mdash;"No! I would not add a sorrow to her heart, nor
+ that of her son!"</p>
+
+ <p>Admissions in the evidence followed, and hopes were uttered
+ for the prisoner's acquittal, that changed the whole character
+ of the testimony. What was a few moments before so dark, grew
+ light, and without the slightest act that might be construed
+ into an unfair advantage, in the hands of Prentiss, the witness
+ pleaded for the accused.</p>
+
+ <p>Soon after Mr. Prentiss settled in New Orleans, a meeting
+ was held to raise funds for the erection of a suitable monument
+ to Franklin. On that occasion, the lamented Wilde and the
+ accomplished McCaleb delivered ornate and chaste addresses upon
+ the value of art, and the policy of enriching New Orleans with
+ its exhibition. At the close of the meeting, as the audience
+ rose to depart, some one discovered Prentiss, and calling his
+ name, it was echoed from all sides&mdash;he tried to escape,
+ but was literally carried on the stand.</p>
+
+ <p>As a rich specimen of off-hand eloquence, I think the
+ address he delivered on that occasion was unequaled. Unlike any
+ other speech, he had the arts to deal with, and of course the
+ associations were of surpassing splendor. I knew that he was
+ ignorant of the technicalities of art, and had paid but little
+ attention to their study, and my surprise was unbounded to see
+ him, thus unexpectedly called upon, instantly arrange in his
+ mind ideas, and expressing facts and illustrations that would
+ have done honor to Burke, when dwelling upon the sublime and
+ beautiful. Had he been bred to the easel, or confined to the
+ sculptor's room, he could not have been more familiar with the
+ details of the studio&mdash;he painted with all the brilliancy
+ of Titian, and with the correctness of Raphael, while his
+ images in marble combined the softness of Praxiteles, and the
+ nervous energy of <span class="pagenum"><a name="page292"
+ id="page292"></a>[pg 292]</span> Michael Angelo. All this
+ with Prentiss was intuition&mdash;I believe that the whole
+ was the spontaneous thought of the moment, the crude
+ outlines that floated through his mind being filled up by
+ the intuitive teachings of his surpassing genius. His
+ conclusion was gorgeous&mdash;he passed Napoleon to the
+ summit of the Alps&mdash;his hearers saw him and his steel
+ clad warriors threading the snows of Mount St. Bernard, and
+ having gained the dizzy height, Prentiss represented "the
+ man of destiny" looking down upon the sunny plains of Italy,
+ and then with a mighty swoop, descending from the clouds and
+ making the grasp of Empire secondary to that of Art.</p>
+
+ <p>I had the melancholy pleasure of hearing his last, and, it
+ would seem to me, his greatest speech. Toward the close of the
+ last Presidential campaign, I found him in the interior of the
+ State, endeavoring to recruit his declining health. He had been
+ obliged to avoid all public speaking, and had gone far into the
+ country to get away from excitement. But there was a
+ "gathering" near by his temporary home, and he consented to be
+ present. It was late in the evening when he ascended the
+ "stand," which was supported by the trunks of two magnificent
+ forest trees, through which the setting sun poured with
+ picturesque effect. The ravages of ill health were apparent
+ upon his face, and his high massive forehead was paler, and
+ seemingly more transparent than usual. His audience, some three
+ or four hundred, was composed in a large degree of his old and
+ early friends. He seemed to feel deeply, and as there was
+ nothing to oppose, he assumed the style of the mild and
+ beautiful&mdash;he casually alluded to the days of his early
+ coming among his Southern friends&mdash;of hours of pleasure he
+ had massed, and of the hopes of the future. In a few moments
+ the bustle and confusion natural to a fatiguing day of
+ political wrangling ceased&mdash;one straggler after another
+ suspended his noisy demonstration, and gathered near the
+ speaker. Soon a mass of silent but heart-heaving humanity was
+ crowded compactly before him. Had Prentiss, on that occasion,
+ held the very heart-strings of his auditors in his hand, he
+ could not have had them more in his power. For an hour he
+ continued, rising from one important subject to another, until
+ the breath was fairly suspended in the excitement. An
+ uninterested spectator would have supposed that he had used
+ sorcery in thus transfixing his auditors. While all others
+ forgot, he noticed the day was drawing to a close, he turned
+ and looked toward the setting sun, and apostrophized its fading
+ glory&mdash;then in his most touching voice and manner,
+ concluded as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Friends&mdash;That glorious orb reminds me that the day is
+ spent, and that I too must close. Ere we part, let me hope that
+ it may be our good fortune to end our days in the same
+ splendor, and that when the evening of life comes, we may sink
+ to rest with the clouds that close in on our departure,
+ gold-tipped with the glorious effulgence of a well-spent
+ life!"</p>
+
+ <p>In conclusion, I would ask, will some historian, who can
+ sympathize with the noble dead, gather up the now fleeting
+ memorials that still live in memory, and combine them together,
+ that future generations may know something of the mighty mind
+ of Prentiss.</p>
+
+ <p>The remains of the orator must ever be imperfect&mdash;the
+ tone of voice&mdash;the flashing eye&mdash;the occasion, and
+ the mighty shout of the multitude, cannot be impressed; but
+ still Prentiss has left enough in his brilliant career, if
+ treasured up, to show posterity that he was every inch a man.
+ Let his fragmentary printed speeches&mdash;let the
+ reminiscences of his friends that treat of his power as an
+ orator, be brought together, and unsatisfactory as they may be,
+ there will be found left intrinsic value enough to accomplish
+ the object. There will be in the fluted column, though
+ shattered and defaced, an Ionian beauty that will tell
+ unerringly of the magnificent temple that it once adorned.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">BATON ROUGE, July 9, 1850.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From Household Words.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>THE CHEMISTRY OF A CANDLE.</h2>
+
+ <p>The Wilkinsons were having a small party,&mdash;it consisted
+ of themselves and Uncle Bagges&mdash;at which the younger
+ members of the family, home for the holidays, had been just
+ admitted to assist after dinner. Uncle Bagges was a gentleman
+ from whom his affectionate relatives cherished expectations of
+ a testamentary nature. Hence the greatest attention was paid by
+ them to the wishes of Mr. Bagges, as well as to every
+ observation which he might be pleased to make.</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh! what? you sir," said Mr. Bagges, facetiously addressing
+ himself to his eldest nephew, Harry,&mdash;"Eh! what? I am glad
+ to hear, sir, that you are doing well at school. Now&mdash;eh?
+ now, are you clever enough to tell where was Moses when he put
+ the candle out?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That depends, uncle," said the young gentleman, "on whether
+ he had lighted the candle to see with at night, or by daylight,
+ to seal a letter."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh! Very good, now! 'Pon my word, very good," exclaimed
+ Uncle Bagges. "You must be Lord Chancellor, sir&mdash;Lord
+ Chancellor, one of these days."</p>
+
+ <p>"And now, uncle," asked Harry, who was a favorite with his
+ uncle, "can you tell me what you do when you put a candle
+ out?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Clap an extinguisher on it, you young rogue, to be
+ sure."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh! but I mean, you cut off its supply of oxygen," said
+ Master Harry.</p>
+
+ <p>"Cut off its ox's&mdash;eh? what? I shall cut off your nose,
+ you young dog, one of these fine days."</p>
+
+ <p>"He means something he heard at the Royal Institution,"
+ observed Mrs. Wilkinson. "He reads a great deal about
+ chemistry, and he attended Professor Faraday's lectures there
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page293"
+ id="page293"></a>[pg 293]</span> on the chemical history of
+ a candle, and has been full of it ever since."</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, you sir," said Uncle Bagges, "come you here to me, and
+ tell me what you have to say about this chemical, eh?&mdash;or
+ comical: which?&mdash;this comical chemical history of a
+ candle."</p>
+
+ <p>"He'll bore you, Bagges," said Mr. Wilkinson. "Harry, don't
+ be troublesome to your uncle."</p>
+
+ <p>"Troublesome! Oh, not at all. He amuses me. I like to hear
+ him. So let him teach his old uncle the comicality and
+ chemicality of a farthing rushlight."</p>
+
+ <p>"A wax candle will be nicer and cleaner, uncle, and answer
+ the same purpose. There's one on the mantel-shelf. Let me light
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Take care you don't burn your fingers, Or set anything on
+ fire," said Mrs. Wilkinson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, uncle," commenced Harry, having drawn his chair to the
+ side of Mr. Bagges, "we have got our candle burning. What do
+ you see?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Let me put on my spectacles," answered the uncle.</p>
+
+ <p>"Look down on the top of the candle around the wick. See, it
+ is a little cup full of melted wax. The heat of the flame has
+ melted the wax just round the wick. The cold air keeps the
+ outside of it hard, so as to make the rim of it. The melted wax
+ in the little cup goes up through the wick to be burnt, just as
+ oil does in the wick of a lamp. What do you think makes it go
+ up, uncle?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why&mdash;why, the flame draws it up, doesn't it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not exactly, uncle. It goes up through little tiny passages
+ in the cotton wick, because very, very small channels, or
+ pipes, or pores, have the power in themselves of sucking up
+ liquids. What they do it by is called cap&mdash;something."</p>
+
+ <p>"Capillary attraction, Harry," suggested Mr. Wilkinson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, that's it; just as a sponge sucks up water, or a bit
+ of lump-sugar the little drop of tea or coffee left in the
+ bottom of a cup. But I mustn't say much more about this, or
+ else you will tell me I am doing something very much like
+ teaching my grandmother to&mdash;you know what."</p>
+
+ <p>"Your grandmother, eh, young sharp-shins?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No&mdash;I mean my uncle. Now, I'll blow the candle out,
+ like Moses; not to be in the dark, though, but to see into what
+ it is. Look at the smoke rising from the wick. I'll hold a bit
+ of lighted paper in the smoke, so as not to touch the wick. But
+ see, for all that, the candle lights again. So this shows that
+ the melted wax sucked up through the wick is turned into vapor;
+ and the vapor burns. The heat of the burning vapor keeps on
+ melting more wax, and that is sucked up too within the flame,
+ and turned into vapor, and burnt, and so on till the was is all
+ used up, and the candle is gone. So the flame, uncle, you see,
+ is the last of the candle, and the candle seems to go through
+ the flame into nothing&mdash;although it doesn't, but goes into
+ several things, and isn't it curious, as Professor Faraday
+ said, that the candle should look so splendid and glorious in
+ going away?"</p>
+
+ <p>"How well he remembers, doesn't he?" observed Mrs.
+ Wilkinson.</p>
+
+ <p>"I dare say," proceeded Harry, "that the flame of the candle
+ looks flat to you; but if we were to put a lamp glass over it,
+ so as to shelter it from the draught, you would see it is
+ round,&mdash;round sideways and running up to a peak. It is
+ drawn up by the hot air; you know that hot air always rises,
+ and that is the way smoke is taken up the chimney. What should
+ you think was in the middle of the flame?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I should say fire," replied Uncle Bagges.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, no! The flame is hollow. The bright flame we see is
+ something no thicker than a thin peel, or skin; and it doesn't
+ touch the wick. Inside of it is the vapor I told you of just
+ now. If you put one end of a bent pipe into the middle of the
+ flame, and let the other end of the pipe dip into a bottle, the
+ vapor or gas from the candle will mix with the air there; and
+ if you set fire to the mixture of gas from the candle and air
+ in the bottle, it would go off with a bang."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wish you'd do that, Harry," said Master Tom, the younger
+ brother of the juvenile lecturer.</p>
+
+ <p>"I want the proper things," answered Harry. "Well, uncle,
+ the flame of the candle is a little shining case, with gas in
+ the inside of it, and air on the outside, so that the case of
+ flame is between the air and the gas. The gas keeps going into
+ the flame to burn, and when the candle burns properly, none of
+ it ever passes out through the flame; and none of the air ever
+ gets in through the flame to the gas. The greatest heat of the
+ candle is in this skin, or peel, or case of flame."</p>
+
+ <p>"Case of flame!" repeated Mr. Bagges. "Live and learn. I
+ should have thought a candle-flame was as thick as my poor old
+ noddle."</p>
+
+ <p>"I can show you the contrary," said Harry. "I take this
+ piece of white paper, look, and hold it a second or two down
+ upon the candle-flame, keeping the flame very steady. Now I'll
+ rub off the black of the smoke, and&mdash;there&mdash;you find
+ that the paper is scorched in the shape of a ring; but inside
+ the ring it is only dirtied, and not singed at all."</p>
+
+ <p>"Seeing is believing," remarked the uncle.</p>
+
+ <p>"But," proceeded Harry, "there is more in the candle-flame
+ than the gas that comes out of the candle. You know a candle
+ won't burn without air. There must be always air around the
+ gas, and touching it like, to make it burn. If a candle hasn't
+ got enough air, it goes out, or burns badly, so that some of
+ the vapor inside of the flame comes out through it in the form
+ of smoke, and this is the reason of a candle smoking. So now
+ you know why a great clumsy dip smokes more than a neat wax
+ candle; it is because the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page294"
+ id="page294"></a>[pg 294]</span> thick wick of the dip makes
+ too much fuel in proportion to the air that can get to
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Dear me! Well, I suppose there is a reason for everything,"
+ exclaimed the young philosopher's mamma.</p>
+
+ <p>"What should you say now," continued Harry, "if I told you
+ that the smoke that comes out of a candle is the very thing
+ that makes a candle light? Yes; a candle shines by consuming
+ its own smoke. The smoke of a candle is a cloud of small dust,
+ and the little grains of the dust are bits of charcoal, or
+ carbon, as chemists call it. They are made in the flame, and
+ burnt in the flame, and, while burning, make the flame bright.
+ They are burnt the moment they are made; but the flame goes on
+ making more of them as fast as it burns them: and that is how
+ it keeps bright. The place they are made in, is in the ease of
+ flame itself, where the strong heat is. The great heat
+ separates them from the gas which conies from the melted wax,
+ and, as soon as they touch the air on the outside of the thin
+ case of flame, they burn."</p>
+
+ <p>"Can you tell how it is that the little bits of carbon came
+ the brightness of the flame?" asked Mr. Wilkinson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Because they are pieces of solid matter," answered Harry.
+ "To make a flame shine, there must always be some
+ solid&mdash;or at least liquid-matter in it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Very good." said Mr. Bagges,&mdash;"solid stuff necessary
+ to brightness."</p>
+
+ <p>"Some gases and other things," resumed Harry, "that burn
+ with a flame you can hardly see, burn splendidly when something
+ solid is put into them. Oxygen and hydrogen&mdash;tell me if I
+ use too hard words, uncle&mdash;oxygen and hydrogen gases, if
+ mixed together and blown through a pipe, burn with plenty of
+ heat but with very little light. But if their flame is blown
+ upon a piece of quick-lime, it gets so bright as to be quite
+ dazzling, Make the smoke of oil of turpentine pass through the
+ same flame, and it gives the flame a beautiful brightness
+ directly."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wonder," observed Uncle Bagges, "what has made you such a
+ bright youth."</p>
+
+ <p>"Taking after uncle, perhaps," retorted his nephew. "Don't
+ put my candle and me out. Well, carbon, or charcoal is what
+ causes the brightness of all lamps, and candles, and other
+ common lights; so, of course, there is carbon in what they are
+ all made of."</p>
+
+ <p>"So carbon is smoke, eh? and light is owing to your carbon.
+ Giving light out of smoke, eh? as they say in the classics,"
+ observed Mr. Bagges.</p>
+
+ <p>"But what becomes of the candle," pursued Harry, "as it
+ burns away? where does it go?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Nowhere," said his mamma, "I should think. It burns to
+ nothing."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, dear, no!" said Harry, "everything&mdash;everybody goes
+ somewhere."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh!&mdash;rather an important consideration, that," Mr.
+ Bagges moralized.</p>
+
+ <p>"You can see it goes into smoke, which makes soot, for one
+ thing," pursued Harry. "There are other things it goes into,
+ not to be seen by only looking, but you can get to see them by
+ taking the right means,&mdash;just put your hand over the
+ candle, uncle."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you, young gentleman, I had rather be excused."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not close enough down to burn you, uncle; higher up.
+ There&mdash;you feel a stream of hot air; so something seems to
+ rise from the candle. Suppose you were to put a very long
+ slender gas-burner over the flame, and let the flame burn just
+ within the end of it, as if it were a chimney,&mdash;some of
+ the hot steam would go up and come out at the top, but a sort
+ of dew would be left behind in the glass chimney, if the
+ chimney was cold enough when you put it on. There are ways of
+ collecting this sort of dew, and when it is collected it turns
+ out to be really water. I am not joking, uncle. Water is one of
+ the things which the candle turns into in burning,&mdash;water
+ coming out of fire. A jet of oil gives above a pint of water in
+ burning. In some lighthouses they burn, Professor Faraday says,
+ up to two gallons of oil in a night, and if the windows are
+ cold the steam from the oil clouds the inside of the windows,
+ and, in frosty weather, freezes into ice."</p>
+
+ <p>"Water out of a candle, eh?" exclaimed Mr. Bagges. "As hard
+ to get, I should have thought, as blood out of a post. Where
+ does it come from?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Part from the wax, and part from the air, and yet not a
+ drop of it comes either from the air or the wax. What do you
+ make of that, uncle?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh? Oh! I'm no hand at riddles. Give it up."</p>
+
+ <p>"No riddle at all, uncle. The part that comes from the wax
+ isn't water, and the part that comes from the air isn't water,
+ but when put together they become water. Water is a mixture of
+ two things then. This can be shown. Put some iron wire or
+ turnings into a gun barrel open at both ends. Heat the middle
+ of the barrel red-hot in a little furnace. Keep the heat up,
+ and send the steam of boiling water through the red-hot gun
+ barrel. What will come out at the other end of the barrel won't
+ be steam; it will be gas, which doesn't turn to water again
+ when it gets cold, and which burns if you put a light to it.
+ Take the turnings out of the gun-barrel, and you will find them
+ changed to rust, and heavier than when they were put in. Part
+ of the water is the gas that comes out of the barrel, the other
+ part is what mixes with the iron turnings, and changes them to
+ rust, and makes them heavier. You can fill a Wadder with the
+ gas that comes out of the gun-barrel, or you can pass bubbles
+ of it up into a jar of water turned upside down in a trough,
+ and, as I said, you can make this part of the water burn."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" cried Mr. Bagges. "Upon my word! One of these day, we
+ shall have you setting the Thames on
+ fire."</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page295"
+ id="page295"></a>[pg 295]</span>
+
+ <p>"Nothing more easy," said Harry, "than to burn part of the
+ Thames, or of any other water; I mean the gas that I have just
+ told you about, which is called hydrogen. In burning, hydrogen
+ produces water again, like the flame of a candle. Indeed,
+ hydrogen is that part of the water formed by a candle burning,
+ that comes from the wax. All things that have hydrogen in them
+ produce water in burning, and the more there is in them the
+ more they produce. When pure hydrogen burns, nothing comes from
+ it but water, no smoke or soot at all. If you were to burn one
+ ounce of it, the water you would get would be just nine ounces.
+ There are many ways of making hydrogen besides out of steam by
+ the hot gun-barrel. I could show it you in a moment by pouring
+ a little sulphuric acid mixed with water into a bottle upon a
+ few zinc or steel filings, and putting a cork in the bottle
+ with a little pipe through it, and setting fire to the gas that
+ would come from the mouth of the pipe. We should find the flame
+ very hot, but having scarcely any brightness. I should like you
+ to see the curious qualities of hydrogen, particularly how
+ light it is, so as to carry things up in the air; and I wish I
+ had a small balloon to fill with it, and make go up to the
+ ceiling, or a bag-pipe full of it to blow soap-bubbles with,
+ and show how much faster they rise than common ones, blown with
+ the breath."</p>
+
+ <p>"So do I," interposed Master Tom.</p>
+
+ <p>"And so," resumed Harry, "hydrogen, you know, uncle, is part
+ of water, and just one-ninth part."</p>
+
+ <p>"As hydrogen is to water, so is a tailor to an ordinary
+ individual, eh?" Mr. Bagges remarked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, now then, uncle, if hydrogen is the tailor's part of
+ the water, what are the other eight parts? The iron turnings
+ used to make hydrogen in the gun-barrel, and rusted, take just
+ those eight parts from the water in the shape of steam, and are
+ so much the heavier. Burn iron turnings in the air, and they
+ make the same rust, and gain just the same in weight. So the
+ other eight parts must be found in the air for one thing, and
+ in the rusted iron turnings for another, and they must also be
+ in the water; and now the question is, how to get at them?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Out of the water? Fish for them, I should say," suggested
+ Mr. Bagges.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, so we can," said Harry. "Only, instead of hooks and
+ lines, we must use wires&mdash;two wires, one from one end, the
+ other from the other, of a galvanic battery. Put the points of
+ these wires into water, a little distance apart, and they
+ instantly take the water to pieces. If they are of copper, or a
+ metal that will rust easily, one of them begins to rust, and
+ air-bubbles come up from the other. These bubbles are hydrogen.
+ The other part of the water mixes with the end of the wire and
+ makes rust. But if the wires are of gold, or a metal that does
+ not rust easily, air-bubbles rise from the ends of both wires.
+ Collect the bubbles from both wires in a tube, and fire them,
+ and they turn to water again; and this water is exactly the
+ same weight as the quantity that has been changed into the two
+ gases. Now then, uncle, what should you think water was
+ composed of?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh? well&mdash;I suppose of those very identical two gases,
+ young gentleman."</p>
+
+ <p>"Right, uncle. Recollect that the gas from one of the wires
+ was hydrogen, the one-ninth of water. What should you guess the
+ gas from the other wire to be?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Stop&mdash;eh?&mdash;wait a bit&mdash;eh?&mdash;oh! why,
+ the other eight-ninths, to be sure."</p>
+
+ <p>"Good again, uncle. Now this gas that is eight-ninths of
+ water is the gas called oxygen that I mentioned just now. This
+ is a very curious gas. It won't burn in air at all itself, like
+ gas from a lamp, but it has a wonderful power of making things
+ burn that are lighted and put into it. If you fill a jar with
+ it&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"How do you manage that?" Mr. Bagges inquired.</p>
+
+ <p>"You fill the jar with water," answered Harry, "and you
+ stand it upside down in a vessel full of water too. Then you
+ let bubbles of the gas up into the jar, and they turn out the
+ water and take its place. Put a stopper in the neck of the jar,
+ or hold a glass plate against the mouth of it, and you can take
+ it out of the water and so have bottled oxygen. A lighted
+ candle put into a jar of oxygen blazes up directly, and is
+ consumed before you can say Jack Robinson. Charcoal burns away
+ in it as fast, with beautiful bright sparks&mdash;phosphorus
+ with a light that dazzles you to look at&mdash;and a piece of
+ iron or steel just made red-hot at the end first, is burnt in
+ oxygen quicker than a stick would be in common air. The
+ experiment of burning things in oxygen beats any
+ fire-works."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, how jolly!" exclaimed Tom.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now we see, uncle," Harry continued, "that water is
+ hydrogen and oxygen united together, that water is got wherever
+ hydrogen is burnt in common air, that a candle won't burn
+ without air, and that when a candle burns there is hydrogen in
+ it burning, and forming water. Now, then, where does the
+ hydrogen of the candle get the oxygen from, to turn into water
+ with it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"From the air, eh?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Just so. I can't stop to tell you of the other things which
+ there is oxygen in, and the many beautiful and amusing ways of
+ getting it. But as there is oxygen in the air, and as oxygen
+ makes things burn at such a rate, perhaps you wonder why air
+ does not make things burn as fast as oxygen. The reason is,
+ that there is something else in the air that mixes with the
+ oxygen and weakens it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Makes a sort of gaseous grog of it, eh?" said Mr. Bagges.
+ "But how is that proved?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, there is a gas, called nitrous gas, which, if you mix
+ it with oxygen, takes all the oxygen into itself, and the
+ mixture of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page296"
+ id="page296"></a>[pg 296]</span> nitrous gas and oxygen, if
+ you put water with it, goes into the water. Mix nitrous gas
+ and air together in a jar over water, and the nitrous gas
+ takes away the oxygen, and then the water sucks up the mixed
+ oxygen and nitrous gas, and that part of the air which
+ weakens the oxygen is left behind. Burning phosphorus in
+ confined air will also take all the oxygen from it, and
+ there are other ways of doing the same thing. The portion of
+ the air left behind is called nitrogen. You wouldn't know it
+ from common air by the look; it has no color, taste, nor
+ smell, and it won't burn. But things won't burn in it,
+ either; and anything on fire put into it goes out directly.
+ It isn't fit to breathe, and a mouse, or any animal, shut up
+ in it, dies. It isn't poisonous, though; creatures only die
+ in it for want of oxygen. We breathe it with oxygen, and
+ then it does no harm, but good: for if we breathed pure
+ oxygen, we should breathe away so violently, that we should
+ soon breathe our life out. In the same way, if the air were
+ nothing but oxygen, a candle would not last above a
+ minute.</p>
+
+ <p>"What a tallow-chandler's bill we should have!" remarked
+ Mrs. Wilkinson.</p>
+
+ <p>"'If a house were on fire in oxygen,' as Professor Faraday
+ said, 'every iron bar, or rafter, or pillar, every nail and
+ iron tool, and the fire-place itself; all the zinc and copper
+ roofs, and leaden coverings, and gutters, and pipes, would
+ consume and burn, increasing the combustion.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"That would be, indeed, burning 'like a house on fire,'"
+ observed Mr. Bagges.</p>
+
+ <p>"'Think,'" said Harry, continuing his quotation, "'of the
+ Houses of Parliament, or a steam-engine manufactory. Think of
+ an iron proof-chest no proof against oxygen. Think of a
+ locomotive and its train,&mdash;every engine, every carriage,
+ and even every rail would be set on fire and burnt up.' So now,
+ uncle, I think you see what the use of nitrogen is, and
+ especially how it prevents a candle from burning out too
+ fast."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh?" said Mr. Bagges. "Well, I will say I do think we are
+ under considerable obligations to nitrogen."</p>
+
+ <p>"I have explained to you, uncle," pursued Harry, "how a
+ candle, in burning, turns into water. But it turns into
+ something else. besides that. There is a stream of hot air
+ going up from it that won't condense into dew; some of that is
+ the nitrogen of the air which the candle has taken all the
+ oxygen from. But there is more in it than nitrogen. Hold a long
+ glass tube over a candle, so that the stream of hot air from it
+ may go up through the tube. Hold a jar over the end of the tube
+ to collect some of the stream of hot air. Put some lime-water,
+ which looks quite clear, into the jar; stop the jar, and shake
+ it up. The lime-water, which was quite clear before, turns
+ milky. Then there is something made by the burning of the
+ candle that changes the color of the lime-water. That is a gas,
+ too, and you can collect it, and examine it. It is to be got
+ from several things, and is a part of all chalk, marble, and
+ the shells of eggs or of shell-fish. The easiest way to make it
+ is by pouring muriatic or sulphuric acid on chalk or marble.
+ The marble or chalk begins to hiss or bubble, and you can
+ collect the bubbles in the same way that you can oxygen. The
+ gas made by the candle in burning, and which also is got out of
+ the chalk and marble, is called carbonic acid. It puts out a
+ light in a moment; it kills any animal that breathes it, and it
+ is really poisonous to breathe, because it destroys life even
+ when mixed with a pretty large quantity of common air. The
+ bubbles made by beer when it ferments, are carbonic acid, so is
+ the air that fizzes out of soda-water, and it is good to
+ swallow though it is deadly to breathe. It is got from chalk by
+ burning the chalk as well as by putting acid to it, and burning
+ the carbonic acid out of chalk makes the chalk lime. This is
+ why people are killed sometimes by getting in the way of the
+ wind that blows from lime-kilns."</p>
+
+ <p>"Of which it is advisable carefully to keep to the
+ windward." Mr. Wilkinson observed.</p>
+
+ <p>"The most curious thing about carbonic acid gas," proceeded
+ Harry, "is its weight. Although it is only a sort of air, it is
+ so heavy that you can pour it from one vessel into another. You
+ may dip a cup of it and pour it down upon a candle, and it will
+ put the candle out, which would astonish an ignorant person;
+ because carbonic acid gas is as invisible as the air, and the
+ candle seems to be put out by nothing. A soap-bubble or common
+ air floats on it like wood on water. Its weight is what makes
+ it collect in brewers' vats; and also in wells, where it is
+ produced naturally; and owing to its collecting in such places
+ it causes the deaths we so often hear about of those who go
+ down into them without proper care. It is found in many springs
+ of water, more or less; and a great deal of it comes out of the
+ earth in some places. Carbonic acid gas is what stupefies the
+ dogs in the Grotto del Cane. Well, but how is carbonic acid gas
+ made by the candle?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope with your candle you'll throw some light upon the
+ subject," said Uncle Bagges.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope so," answered Harry. "Recollect it is the burning of
+ the smoke, or soot, or carbon of the candle, that makes the
+ candle-flame bright. Also that the candle won't burn without
+ air. Likewise that it will not burn in nitrogen, or air that
+ has been deprived of oxygen. So the carbon of the candle
+ mingles with oxygen, in burning, to make carbonic acid gas;
+ just as the hydrogen does to form water. Carbonic acid gas,
+ then, is carbon or charcoal dissolved in oxygen. Here is black
+ soot getting invisible and changing into air; and this seems
+ strange, uncle, doesn't it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ahem! Strange, if true," answered Mr. Bagges. "Eh? Well! I
+ suppose it's all right."</p>
+
+ <p>"Quite so, uncle. Burn carbon or charcoal either in the air
+ or in oxygen, and it is sure always to make carbonic acid, and
+ nothing <span class="pagenum"><a name="page297"
+ id="page297"></a>[pg 297]</span> else, if it is dry. No dew
+ or mist gathers in a cold glass jar if you burn dry charcoal
+ in it. The charcoal goes entirely into carbonic acid gas,
+ and leaves nothing behind but ashes, which are only earthy
+ stuff that was in the charcoal, but not part of the charcoal
+ itself. And now, shall I tell you something about
+ carbon?"</p>
+
+ <p>"With all my heart," assented Mr. Bagges.</p>
+
+ <p>"I said that there was carbon or charcoal in all common
+ lights, so there is in every common kind of fuel. If you heat
+ coal or wood away from the air, some gas comes away, and leaves
+ behind coke from coal, and charcoal from wood; both carbon,
+ though not pure. Heat carbon as much as you will in a close
+ vessel, and it does not change in the least; but let the air
+ get to it, and then it burns and flies off in carbonic acid
+ gas. This makes carbon so convenient for fuel. But it is
+ ornamental as well as useful, uncle. The diamond is nothing
+ else than carbon."</p>
+
+ <p>"The diamond, eh! You mean the black diamond."</p>
+
+ <p>"No: the diamond, really and truly. The diamond is only
+ carbon in the shape of a crystal."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh? and can't some of your clever chemists crystalize a
+ little bit of carbon, and make a Koh-i-noor?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, uncle, perhaps we shall, some day. In the mean time I
+ suppose we must be content with making carbon so brilliant as
+ it is in the flame of a candle. Well; now you see that a
+ candle-flame is vapor burning, and the vapor, in burning, turns
+ into water and carbonic acid gas. The oxygen of both the
+ carbonic acid gas and the water comes from the air, and the
+ hydrogen and carbon together are the vapor. They are distilled
+ out of the melted was by the heat. But, you know, carbon alone
+ can't be distilled by any heat. It can be distilled, though,
+ when it is joined with hydrogen, as it is in the wax, and then
+ the mixed hydrogen and carbon rise in gas of the same kind as
+ the gas in the streets, and that also is distilled by heat from
+ coal. So a candle is a little gas manufactory in itself, that
+ burns the gas as fast as it makes it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Haven't you pretty nearly come to your candle's end'!" said
+ Mr. Wilkinson.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nearly. I only want to tell uncle, that the burning of a
+ candle is almost exactly like our breathing. Breathing is
+ consuming oxygen, only not so fast as burning. In breathing we
+ throw out water in vapor and carbonic acid from our lungs, and
+ take oxygen in. Oxygen is as necessary to support the life of
+ the body, as it is to keep up the flame of a candle."</p>
+
+ <p>"So," said Mr. Bagges, "man is a candle, eh? and Shakspeare
+ knew that, I suppose, (as he did most things,) when he
+ wrote</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>'Out, out, brief candle!'</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"Well, well; we old ones are moulds, and you young squires
+ are dips and rushlights, eh? Any more to tell us about the
+ candle?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I could tell you a great deal more about oxygen, and
+ hydrogen, and carbon, and water, and breathing, that Professor
+ Faraday said, if I had time; but you should go and hear him
+ yourself, uncle."</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh? well! I think I will. Some of us seniors may learn
+ something from a juvenile lecture, at any rate, if given by a
+ Faraday. And now, my boy. I will tell you what," added Mr.
+ Bagges, "I am very glad to find you so fond of study and
+ science; and you deserve to be encouraged: and so I'll give you
+ a what-d'ye-call-it'?&mdash;a Galvanic Battery, on your next
+ birth-day; and so much for your teaching your old uncle the
+ chemistry of a candle."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From a Review of Griswold's <i>Prose Writers of
+ America</i>, in the Southern Literary Messenger.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>DANIEL WEBSTER,</h2>
+
+ <h3>AS A STATESMAN, AND AS A MAN OF LETTERS.</h3>
+
+ <p>Mr. Webster is properly selected as the representative of
+ the best sense, and highest wisdom, and most consummate
+ dignity, of the politics and oratory of the present times,
+ because his great intelligence has continued to be so finely
+ sensitive to all the influences that stir the action and
+ speculation of the country.</p>
+
+ <p>With elements of reason, definite, absolute, and emphatic;
+ with principles settled, strenuous, deep and unchangeable as
+ his being; his wisdom is yet exquisitely practical: with
+ subtlest sagacity it apprehends every change in the
+ circumstances in which it is to act, and can accommodate its
+ action without loss of vigor, or alteration of its general
+ purpose. Its theories always "lean and hearken" to the actual.
+ By a sympathy of the mind, almost transcendental in its
+ delicacy, its speculations are attracted into a parallelism
+ with the logic of life and nature. In most men, that
+ intellectual susceptibility by which they are capable of being
+ reacted upon by the outer world, and having their principles
+ and views expanded, modified or quickened, does not outlast the
+ first period of life; from that time they remain fixed and
+ rigid in their policy, temper and characteristics; if a new
+ phase of society is developed, it must find its exponent in
+ other men. But in Webster this fresh suggestive sensibility of
+ the judgment has been carried on into the matured and
+ determined wisdom of manhood. His perceptions, feelings,
+ reasonings, tone, are always up to the level of the hour, or in
+ advance of it; sometimes far, very far in advance, as in the
+ views thrown out in his speech at Baltimore, on an
+ international commercial system, in which he showed that he
+ then foresaw both the fate of the tariff and the fallacy of
+ free-trade. No man has ever been able to say, or now can say,
+ that he is before Webster. The youngest men in the nation look
+ to him, not as representing the past, but as leading in the
+ future.</p>
+
+ <p>This practicalness and readiness of adaptation are
+ instinctive, not voluntary and designed. They are united with
+ the most decided preference for certain opinions and the most
+ earnest averseness to others. Nothing
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page298"
+ id="page298"></a>[pg 298]</span> can be less like
+ Talleyrand's system of waiting for events. He has never, in
+ view of a change which he saw to be inevitable, held himself
+ in reserve and uncommitted. What Webster is at any time,
+ that he is strenuously, entirely, openly. He has first
+ opposed, with every energy of his mind and temper, that
+ which, when it has actually come, he is ready to accept, and
+ make the best of. He never surrenders in advance a position
+ which knows will be carried; he takes his place, and
+ delivers battle; he fights as one who is fighting the last
+ battle of his country's hopes; he fires the last shot. When
+ the smoke and tumult are cleared off, where is Webster! Look
+ around for the nearest rallying point which the view
+ presents; there he stands, with his hand upon his heart, in
+ grim composure; calm, dignified, resolute; neither
+ disheartened nor surprised by defeat. "Leaving the things
+ that are behind," is now the trumpet-sound by which he
+ rallies his friends to a new confidence, and stimulates them
+ to fresh efforts. It is obvious that Webster, when
+ contending with all his force for or against some particular
+ measure, has not been contemplating the probability of being
+ compelled to oppose or defend a different policy, and, so,
+ choosing his words warily, in reference to future
+ possibilities of a personal kind: yet when the time has come
+ that he has been obliged to fight with his face in another
+ direction, it has always been found that no one principle
+ had been asserted, no one sentiment displayed, incompatible
+ with his new positions. This union of consistency with
+ practicability has arisen naturally from the extent and
+ comprehensiveness of his views, from the breadth and
+ generality with which the analytical power of his
+ understanding has always led him to state his principles and
+ define his position. From the particular scheme or special
+ maxim which his party was insisting upon, his mind rose to a
+ higher and more general formula of truth.</p>
+
+ <p>Owing to the same superior penetration and reach of thought,
+ the gloom of successive repulses has never been able to
+ paralyze the power which it has saddened. The constitution has
+ been so often invaded and trampled upon, that to a common eye
+ it might well seem to have lost all the resentments of
+ vitality. But Webster has distinguished between the
+ constitution and its administration. He has seen that the
+ constitution, though in bondage, is not killed; that the
+ channels of its life-giving wisdom are stuffed up with rubbish,
+ but not obliterated. He has been determined that if the rulers
+ of the country will deny the truth, they shall not debauch it;
+ if they depart from the constitution, they shall not deprave
+ it. He has been resolved, that when this tyranny of corruption
+ shall be overpast, and the constitution draws again its own
+ free breath of virtue, truth and wisdom, it shall be found
+ perfect of limb and feature, prepared to rise like a giant
+ refreshed by sleep.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Griswold, we suppose, is quite right in suggesting that
+ the only name in modern times to which reference can with any
+ fitness be made for purposes of analogy or comparison with
+ Webster is that of Burke. In many respects there is a
+ correspondence between their characters; in some others they
+ differ widely. As a prophet of the truth of political morals,
+ as a revealer of those essential elements in the constitution
+ of life, upon which, or of which, society is constructed and
+ government evolved, Burke had no peer. In that department he
+ rises into the distance and grandeur of inspiration; <i>nil
+ mortote sonans</i>. Nor do we doubt that the Providence of God
+ had raised him up for the purposes of public safety and
+ guidance, any more than we doubt the mission of Jeremiah or
+ Elisha, or any other of the school of the Lord's prophets. But
+ leaving Burke unapproached in this region of the nature and
+ philosophy of government, and looking at him, in his general
+ career, as a man of intellect and action, we might indicate an
+ analogy of this kind, that the character, temper and reason of
+ Burke seem to be almost an image of the English constitution,
+ and Webster's of the American. To get the key to Burke's
+ somewhat irregular and startling career, it is necessary, to
+ study the idea of the old whig constitution of the English
+ monarchy: viewing his course from that point of view, we
+ comprehend his almost countenancing and encouraging rebellion
+ in the case of the American colonies; his intense hostility to
+ Warren Hastings' imperial system; his unchastised earnestness
+ in opposition to French maxims in the decline of his life. The
+ constitution of the United States, that most wonderful of the
+ emanations of providential wisdom, seems to be not only the
+ home of Webster's affections and seat of his proudest hopes,
+ but the very type of his understanding and fountain of his
+ intellectual strength:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i2">&mdash;&mdash;"hic illius
+ arma;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i6">Hic currus."</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The genius of Burke, like the one, was inexhaustible in
+ resources, so composite and so averse from theory as to appear
+ incongruous, but justified in the result; not formal, not
+ always entirely perspicuous. Webster's mind, like the other, is
+ eminently logical, reduced into principles, orderly, distinct,
+ reconciling abstraction with convenience, various in
+ manifestation, yet pervaded by an unity of character.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Webster has not merely illustrated a great range of
+ mental powers and accomplishments, but has filled, in the eye
+ of the nation, on a great scale, and to the farthest reach of
+ their exigency, a diversity of intellectual characters; while
+ the manner in which Burke's wisdom displayed itself was usually
+ the same. We cannot suppose that Burke could have been a great
+ lawyer. Webster possesses a consummate legal judgment and
+ prodigious powers of legal logic, and is felt to be the highest
+ authority on a great question of law in this country. The
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page299"
+ id="page299"></a>[pg 299]</span> demonstrative faculty; the
+ capacity to analyze and open any proposition so as to
+ identify its separate elements with the very consciousness
+ of the reader's or hearer's mind; this, which is the
+ lawyer's peculiar power, had not been particularly developed
+ in Burke, but exists in Webster in greater expansion and
+ force than in any one since Doctor Johnson, who, it always
+ appeared to us, had he been educated for the bar, would have
+ made the greatest lawyer that ever led the decisions of
+ Westminster-Hall. We should hardly be justified in saying
+ that Burke would have made a great First Lord of the
+ Treasury. Mr. Webster, as Secretary of State, proved himself
+ to be a practical statesman of the highest; finest,
+ promptest sagacity and foresight that this or any nation
+ ever witnessed. Who now doubts the surpassing wisdom, who
+ now but reverences the exalted patriotism, of the advice and
+ the example which he gave, but gave in vain, to the Whig
+ party at the beginning of Mr. Tyler's administration? His
+ official correspondence would be lowered by a comparison
+ with any state papers since the secretaryship of John
+ Marshall. Does the public generally know what has become of
+ that portentous difficulty about the Right of Search, upon
+ which England and America, five years ago, were on the point
+ of being "<i>lento collisæ duello</i>." Mr. Webster settled
+ it by mere force of mind: he dissipated the Question, <i>by
+ seeing through it</i>, and by compelling others to see a
+ fallacy in its terms which before had imposed upon the
+ understanding of two nations. In the essential and universal
+ philosophy of politics, Webster is second only to Burke.
+ After Burke, there is no statesman whose writings might be
+ read with greater advantage by foreign nations, or would
+ have been studied with so much respect by antiquity, as
+ Webster's.</p>
+
+ <p>In a merely literary point of view, this perhaps may be said
+ of Mr. Webster, that he is the only powerful and fervid orator,
+ since the glorious days of Greece, whose style is so
+ disciplined that any of his great public harangues might be
+ used as models of composition. His language is beautifully
+ pure, and his combinations of it exhibit more knowledge of the
+ genius, spirit, and classic vigor of the English tongue, than
+ it has entered the mind of any professor of rhetoric to
+ apprehend. As the most impetuous sweeps of passion in him are
+ pervaded and informed and guided by intellect, so the most
+ earnest struggles of intellect seem to be calmed and made
+ gentle in their vehemence, by a more essential rationality of
+ taste. That imperious mind, which seems fit to defy the
+ universe, is ever subordinate, by a kind of fascination, to the
+ perfect law of grace. In the highest of his intellectual
+ flights&mdash;and who can follow the winged rush of that eagle
+ mind?&mdash;in the widest of his mental ranges-and who shall
+ measure their extent?&mdash;he is ever moving within the
+ severest line of beauty. No one would think of saying that Mr.
+ Webster's speeches are thrown off with ease, and cost him but
+ little effort; they are clearly the result of the intensest
+ stress of mental energy; yet the manner is never discomposed;
+ the decency and propriety of the display never interfered with;
+ he is always greater than his genius; you see "the depth out
+ not the tumult" of the mind. Whether, with extended arm, he
+ strangles the "reluctantes dracones" of democracy, or with
+ every faculty called home, concentrates the light and heat of
+ his being in developing into principles those great sentiments
+ and great instincts which are his inspiration; in all, the
+ orator stands forth with the majesty and chastened grace of
+ Pericles himself. In the fiercest of encounters with the
+ deadliest of foes, the mind, which is enraged, is never
+ perturbed; the style, which leaps like the fire of heaven, is
+ never disordered. As in Guido's picture of St. Michael piercing
+ the dragon, while the gnarled muscles of the arms and hands
+ attest the utmost strain of the strength, the countenance
+ remains placid, serene, and undisturbed. In this great quality
+ of mental dignity, Mr. Webster's speeches have become more and
+ more eminent. The glow and luster which set his earlier
+ speeches a-blaze with splendor, is in his later discourses
+ rarely let forth; but they have gained more, in the increase of
+ dignity, than they have parted with in the diminution of
+ brilliancy. We regard his speech before the shop-keepers,
+ calling themselves merchants, of Philadelphia, as one of the
+ most weighty and admirable of the intellectual efforts of his
+ life. The range of profound and piercing wisdom; the exquisite
+ and faultless taste; but above all, the august and indefectible
+ dignity, that are illustrated from the beginning to the end of
+ that great display of matured and finished strength, leave us
+ in mingled wonder and reverence. There is one sentence there
+ which seems to us almost to reach the <i>intellectual</i>
+ sublime; and while it stirs within us the depths of sympathy
+ and admiration, we could heartily wish that the young men of
+ America would inhale the almost supra-mortal spirit which it
+ breathes: "I would not with any idolatrous admiration regard
+ the Constitution of the United States, nor any other work of
+ man; but this side of idolatry, I hold it in profound respect.
+ I believe that no human working on such a subject, no human
+ ability exerted for such an end, has ever produced so much
+ happiness, or holds out now to so many millions of people the
+ prospect, through such a succession of ages and ages, of so
+ much happiness, as the Constitution of the United States. We
+ who are here for one generation, for a single life, and yet in
+ our several stations and relations in society intrusted in some
+ degree with its protection and support, what duty does it
+ devolve, what duty does it <i>not</i> devolve, upon us!" In the
+ name of distant ages, and a remote posterity, we hail the
+ author of this and similar orations, as Webster the
+ <i>Olympian</i>.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page300"
+ id="page300"></a>[pg 300]</span>
+
+ <p>But we leave a subject which we have incidentally touched,
+ sincerely disclaiming any attempt to estimate the character or
+ define the greatness of Webster. In reference to him we feel,
+ as Cicero said to Cæsar, "<i>Nil vulgare te dignum videri
+ possit.</i>"</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From the Athenæum.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>THE NEW PROPHET IN THE EAST.<a id="footnotetag5"
+ name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a></h2>
+
+ <p>The vicissitudes of the war in the Caucasus of late have
+ been surprising enough to awaken the interest of Western
+ Europe, even amidst her own nearer anxieties. Last year it was
+ said that the conquest of Achulgo, the stronghold of the
+ redoubtable Schamyl, had effectually broken the power of that
+ daring leader. In direct contradiction to such reports, later
+ accounts from Daghestan tell of the reappearance of the notable
+ partisan amidst the lines of the Russians, and of a defeat of
+ the latter, the most severe, if the details of the event be
+ true, that they have yet suffered in the Caucasus. In any case,
+ these exciting changes of fortune would be in favor of a book
+ professing to describe this interesting region, and to add to
+ our knowledge of its brave inhabitants. The main interest of
+ Herr Bodenstedt's work will now be enhanced by its undertaking
+ to give a more precise account than had previously appeared of
+ the priest-warrior of Daghestan. and of the new sect as the
+ prophet of which he succeeded in arraying the independent
+ mountain clans against their common enemy with a kind of
+ combination unknown in earlier periods of the struggle.</p>
+
+ <p>The author has evidently lived for some time in the region
+ which he describes, or in the bordering districts along the
+ Caspian, both in Georgia and in North Daghestan, His
+ acquaintance with Asiatic and Russian languages and customs
+ appears to have been gained both by study and from intercourse
+ with the natives of the south-eastern frontier. He is not
+ ignorant of Oriental writings that refer to his subject; and
+ his Russian statistics prove an access to official authorities
+ which are not to be found in print. These, however obtained,
+ can scarcely have been imparted to him as one of those writers
+ whom the Court of St. Petersburg hires to promote its views
+ through the press of Western Europe. His sympathies are
+ declared against Russian usurpation; and the tendency of his
+ essay is to prove how little real progress it has yet made in
+ subduing the Caucasus, the enormous waste of money and life
+ with which its fluctuating successes have been bought, and the
+ fallacy of expecting a better result hereafter.</p>
+
+ <p>What it has cost in life on the Russian side to
+ attack-hitherto with no lasting effect&mdash;the handful of
+ Caucasian mountaineers, may be guessed from a single note,
+ dated 1847: "The present Russian force in the
+ Caucasus"&mdash;including of course, the armed Cossacks of the
+ Kuban and Terek&mdash;"amounts to two hundred thousand." Taking
+ into account the numbers yearly cut off by disease, more fatal
+ even than the mountain war, every step of which must be won by
+ the most reckless waste of life,&mdash;the "Russian Officer"
+ may perhaps truly affirm that the <i>annual</i> expenditure of
+ life by Russia, in her warfare with Schamyl, has for many years
+ past exceeded the whole number of the population at any one
+ time directly under the rule of that chieftain.</p>
+
+ <p>We have said that the most instructive part of Herr
+ Bodenstedt's essay is his sketch of that politico-religious
+ scheme which made Schamyl formidable to the Russians. This
+ system, it is to be observed, arose and has since been fully
+ developed only in the Eastern Caucasus, where of late the main
+ stress of the war has been. The western tribes (our
+ "Circassians") who took the lead at an earlier stage of the
+ contest, were not then, nor have they since been, inspired by
+ the fanatic zeal which united the tribes of Daghestan. They
+ fought from a mere love of independence, each little republic
+ by itself; and their efforts, however heroic, being without
+ concert, gradually declined before the vast force of the
+ invader. In the region looking westward from the Georgian
+ frontier on the Euxine, on the one side of the Caucasian range,
+ and along the lower Kuban on the other, the Russian posts are
+ now seldom threatened but by small predatory bands; the
+ natives, retired to their mountain villages, have for some time
+ made but few more formidable incursions. The war is transferred
+ to the region spreading eastward from the Elbrus to the
+ Caspian; where the strife for free existence is animated not
+ less by the hatred of Russian slavery than by a fresh outbreak
+ of Mohammedan zeal against infidel invasion,&mdash;a revival,
+ in fact, of that war-like fanaticism which made the Moslem name
+ terrible from the eighth to the sixteenth century.</p>
+
+ <p>It dates from the years 1823-4; at which period a "new
+ doctrine" began to be preached, secretly at first, to the
+ select Uléma, afterward to greater numbers, in word and
+ writing, by one Mullah Mohammed, a famous teacher and a judge
+ (or <i>kadi</i>) of Jarach, in the Kurin district of Daghestan.
+ He professed to have learnt it from Hadis-Ismail, an Alim of
+ Kurdomir, highly famed for wisdom and sanctity. It laid bare
+ the degradation into which his countrymen had sunk by
+ irreligion and by the jealousy of sect; their danger, in
+ consequence, from enemies of the true faith; and urged the
+ necessity of reform in creed and practice, in order to regain
+ the invincible character promised by the Prophet to believers.
+ The theoretical part of the reformed doctrine seems to be a
+ kind of Sufism,&mdash;the general character of which mode of
+ Islam, long prevalent in the adjacent kingdom of Persia, has
+ been described <span class="pagenum"><a name="page301"
+ id="page301"></a>[pg 301]</span> by our own orientalists.
+ Disputed questions as to its origin, whether in Brahmin
+ philosophy or in the reveries of Moslem mystics, cannot be
+ discussed here; it must suffice to indicate those points
+ which appear to connect it with the hieratic policy that has
+ given a new aspect to the war in the Caucasus.</p>
+
+ <p>Proceeding nominally on the basis of the Koran, it
+ inculcates or expounds a kind of spiritual transcendentalism;
+ in which the adept is raised above the necessity of formal
+ laws, which are only requisite for those who are not capable of
+ rising to a full intelligence of the supreme power. To gain
+ this height, by devout contemplation, must be the personal work
+ and endeavor of each individual. The revelation of divine
+ truth, once attained, supersedes specific moral injunctions;
+ ceremonies and systems, even, of religion, become indifferent
+ to the mind illuminated by the sacred idea. A higher degree is
+ the perfect conception or ecstatic vision of the
+ Deity;&mdash;the highest-reserved only for the prophetic
+ few&mdash;a real immediate union with his essence. Here, it
+ will be seen, are four steps or stages, each of which has its
+ sacred manual or appropriate system of teaching. In the
+ hieratic system, of which Schamyl is the head, the divisions
+ seem to correspond pretty nearly with this arrangement, as
+ follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>first</i> includes the mass of the armed people;
+ whose zeal it promotes by strict religious and moral
+ injunctions enjoining purity of life, exact regard to the
+ ritual of the Koran, teaching pilgrimages, fasting, ablutions;
+ the duty of implacable war against the Infidel, the sin of
+ enduring his tyranny.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>second</i> is composed of those, who, in virtue of
+ striving upward to a higher Divine intelligence, are elevated
+ above ceremonial religion. Of these the <i>Murids</i>
+ (<i>seekers</i> or <i>strugglers</i>,) are formed: a body of
+ religious warriors attached to the Imam, whose courage in
+ battle, raised to a kind of frenzy, despises numbers and laughs
+ at death. To accept quarter, or to fly from the Infidel, is
+ forbidden to this class.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>third</i> includes the more perfect acolytes, who are
+ presumed to have risen to the ecstatic view of the Deity. These
+ are the elect, whom the Imam makes <i>Naibs</i> or
+ vice-regents,&mdash;invested with nearly absolute power in his
+ absence.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>fourth</i>, or highest, implying entire union with
+ the Divine essence, is held by Schamyl alone. In virtue of this
+ elevation and spiritual endowment, the Imam, as an immediate
+ organ of the Supreme Will, is himself the source of all law to
+ his followers, unerring, impeccable; to question or disobey his
+ behests is a sin against religion, as well as a political
+ crime. It may be seen what advantage this system must have
+ given to Schamyl in his conflict with the Russians. The
+ doctrine of the indifference of sects and forms enabled him to
+ unite the divided followers of Omar and of Ali, in a region
+ where both abound, and where the schism had formerly been one
+ of the most effectual instruments of the enemy. The belief in a
+ Divine mission and spiritual powers sustains his adherents in
+ all reverses; while it invites to defection from the Russian
+ side those of the Mohammedan tribes who have submitted to the
+ invader. Among these, however, Schamyl, like his predecessors
+ in the same priestly office, by no means confides the progress
+ of his sect to spiritual influences only. The work of
+ conversion, where exhortation fails, is carried on
+ remorselessly by fire and sword; and the Imam is as terrible to
+ those of his countrymen whom fear or interest retains in
+ alliance with Russia, as to the soldiers of the Czar. With a
+ character in which extreme daring is allied with coolness,
+ cunning, and military genius, with a good fortune which has
+ hitherto preserved his life in many circumstances where escape
+ seemed impossible,&mdash;it may be seen that the belief in his
+ supernatural gifts and privileges, once created, must always
+ tend to increase in intensity and effect among the imaginative
+ and credulous Mohammedans of the Caucasus; and that this apt
+ combination of the warrior with the politician and prophet
+ accounts for his success in combining against the Russians a
+ force of the once discordant tribes of Daghestan, possessing
+ more of the character of a national resistance than had been
+ ever known before in the Caucasus,&mdash;and compelling the
+ invaders to purchase every one of their few, trifling, and
+ dubious advances by the terrible sacrifice of life already
+ noticed.</p>
+
+ <p>In this formidable movement the highlander's natural freedom
+ is fanned into a blaze by a religious zeal like that which once
+ led the armies of Islam over one half of Asia and Europe.
+ Although it reached its highest energy and a more consummate
+ development under Schamyl, it was begun by his predecessors. Of
+ the Mullah Mohammed, who first preached the duty of casting off
+ the yoke of the Giaour, and the necessity of a religious reform
+ and union of rival sects, as a means to that end, we have
+ already spoken. This founder of the new system, an aged man,
+ untrained in arms, never himself drew the sword in the cause;
+ but was active in diffusing its principles and preparing a
+ warlike rising by exhortations and letters circulated through
+ all Daghestan. Suspected of these designs, he was seized, in
+ 1826, by the orders of Jermoloff; and although be
+ escaped,&mdash;by the connivance, it is said, of the native
+ prince employed to capture him,&mdash;he afterward lived, in a
+ kind of concealment, for some years. The post of Imam was
+ thereupon assumed by a priest who was able to fight for the new
+ doctrine as well as to preach it. The first armed outbreak took
+ place under Kasi-Mullah, about the year 1829; from which time,
+ until his death in a battle at Himry, in 1831, he waged a
+ terrible, and, although often defeated, a virtually
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page302"
+ id="page302"></a>[pg 302]</span> successful warfare, against
+ the Russians, while he prosecuted the work of conversion
+ among the tribes of Islam who delayed to acknowledge his
+ mission, and to join in his enmity to the Russians, by the
+ extremities of bloodshed and rapine. His death, after an
+ heroic resistance, was hailed as a triumph by the Russians.
+ They counted on the extinction of the new sect in the defeat
+ of its leader, whose dead body they carried about the
+ country to prove the imposture of his pretensions. This
+ piece of barbarism produced an effect the reverse of what
+ they expected. The venerable face of the Imam, the attitude
+ in which he had expired, with one hand pointed as if to
+ heaven, was more impressive to those who crowded round the
+ body than his fearless enthusiasm had been,&mdash;and
+ thousands who till then had held aloof, now joined his
+ followers in venerating him as a prophet. Of this first
+ warrior-priest of Daghestan, Schamyl was the favorite
+ disciple and the most trusted soldier. Kasi-Mullah was not
+ killed until Schamyl had already fallen as it seemed, under
+ several deadly wounds:&mdash;his reappearance after this
+ bloody scene was but the first of many similar escapes, the
+ report of which sounds like a fable. He did not, however, at
+ once succeed to the dignity of Imam: the office was usurped
+ for more than a year by Hamsad Beg (Bey), whose rapacious
+ and savage treatment of some of the princely families of
+ Daghestan nearly caused a fatal reaction against the new
+ sect, and the destruction of its main support, the Murids.
+ Hamsad Beg performed no action of consequence against the
+ Russians; but expended his rage upon the natives allied with
+ them, or reluctant to obey his mandates. He was assassinated
+ in 1834, by some kinsmen of a princely house whose
+ territories he had usurped after a massacre of its princes.
+ In the affray which took place on this occasion, there
+ perished with him many of the fanatic Murids, who had become
+ odious as instruments of the cruelties of their Imam. On his
+ death, Schamyl was raised to the dignity,&mdash;but it was
+ some time before the mischief done by his predecessor was so
+ far repaired as to allow him to act with energy as the
+ prophet of the new doctrine. One of the ill effects of
+ Hamsad Beg's iniquities had been the defection to the
+ Russians of n notable partisan&mdash;Hadjii Murad&mdash;for
+ many years a fatal thorn in the side of the independent
+ party.<a id="footnotetag6"
+ name="footnotetag6"></a><a href="#footnote6"><sup>6</sup></a>
+ This and other difficulties, among which was the
+ unpopularity of the Murids under Hamsad Beg, were removed by
+ new alliances and precautions, while all that eloquence and
+ skill could perform was applied to restore the credit of the
+ religious system, before Schamyl could hazard a direct
+ attack of the Russian enemy, who meanwhile had taken
+ advantage of the delay and disunion to gain ground in many
+ parts of Daghestan. From the year 1839, however, the tide
+ rapidly turned; and the result, from that date until the
+ period at which the account closes (1845)&mdash;when
+ Woronzow was appointed to command in the Caucasus, with
+ nearly unlimited powers,&mdash;has been, that the Russians,
+ in spite of tremendous sacrifices, were constantly losing
+ ground and influence, while Schamyl gained both in equal
+ proportion. The details of the campaigns during this
+ interval are highly interesting; and we regret that
+ conditions of space forbid us to translate some of the
+ exciting episodes recorded by Herr Bodenstedt. We may,
+ however, extract the following account of the Caucasian
+ hero,&mdash;whose portrait, we believe, has never before
+ been so fully exhibited to European readers;&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"Schamyl is of middle stature; he has light hair, gray eyes,
+ shaded by bushy and well-arched eyebrows,&mdash;a nose finely
+ moulded, and a small mouth. His features are distinguished from
+ those of his race by a peculiar fairness of complexion and
+ delicacy of skin: the elegant form of his hands and feet is not
+ less remarkable. The apparent stiffness of his arms, when he
+ walks, is a sign of his stern and impenetrable character. His
+ address is thoroughly noble and dignified. Of himself he is
+ completely master; and he exerts a tacit supremacy over all who
+ approach him. An immovable stony calmness, which never forsakes
+ him, even in moments of the utmost danger, broods over his
+ countenance. He passes a sentence of death with the same
+ composure with which he distributes "the sabre of honor" to his
+ bravest Murids, after a bloody encounter. With traitors or
+ criminals whom he has resolved to destroy, he will converse
+ without betraying the least sign of anger or vengeance. He
+ regards himself as a mere instrument in the hands of a higher
+ Being; and holds, according to the Sufi doctrine, that all his
+ thoughts and determinations are immediate inspirations from
+ God. The flow of his speech is as animating and irresistible as
+ his outward appearance is awful and commanding. "He shoots
+ flames from his eyes, and scatters flowers from his
+ lips,"&mdash;said Bersek Bey, who sheltered him for some days
+ after the fall of Achulgo,&mdash;when Schamyl dwelt for some
+ time among the princes of the Djighetes and Ubiches, for the
+ purpose of inciting the tribes on the Black Sea to rise against
+ the Russians. Schamyl is now (<i>circa</i> 1847?) fifty years
+ old, but still full of vigor and strength: it is however said,
+ that he has for some years past suffered from an obstinate
+ disease of the eyes, which is constantly growing worse. He
+ fills the intervals of leisure which his public charges allow
+ him, in reading the Koran, fasting, and prayer. Of late years
+ he has but seldom, and then only on critical occasions, taken a
+ personal share in warlike encounters. In spite of his almost
+ supernatural activity, Schamyl is excessively
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page303"
+ id="page303"></a>[pg 303]</span> severe and temperate in his
+ habits. A few hours of sleep are enough for him: at times he
+ will watch for the whole night, without Showing the least
+ trace of fatigue on the following day. He eats little, and
+ water is his only beverage. According to Mohammedan custom,
+ he keeps several wives&mdash;[this contradicts Wagner, who
+ affirms that Schamyl always confined himself to one]; in
+ 1844 he had <i>three</i>, of which his favorite, <i>Dur
+ Heremen</i>, (Pearl of the Harem) as she was called, was an
+ Armenian, of exquisite beauty."</p>
+
+ <p>Will Russian arms prevail in the end? The following is Herr
+ Bodenstedt's answer; after noticing the arrival of Woronzow,
+ and the expectations raised by his talents, by the immense
+ resources at his command, as well as by such events as the
+ storm of Schamyl's stronghold of Cargo:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"He who believes that the issue of this contest hangs on the
+ destruction of stone fortresses, on the devastation of tracts
+ of forest, has not yet conceived the essential nature of the
+ war in the Caucasus. This is not merely a war of men against
+ men&mdash;it is a strife between the mountain and the steppe.
+ The population of the Caucasus may be changed; the air of
+ liberty wafted from its heights will ever remain the same.
+ Invigorated by this atmosphere, even Russian hirelings would
+ grow into men eager for freedom: and among their descendants a
+ new race of heroes would arise, to point their weapons against
+ that servile constitution, to extend which their fathers had
+ once fought, as blind, unquestioning slaves."</p>
+
+ <p>To this answer of Herr Bodenstedt's we will add nothing of
+ our own. We are weary with waiting for the events of history
+ such as we would have them.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>COOLING A BURNING SPIRIT.</h2>
+
+ <p>An incident which occurred soon after the accession of the
+ present Sultan, shows that, in some respects, at least, he is
+ not indisposed to follow up the strong traditions of his race.
+ At the beginning of his reign, the Ulema was resolved, if
+ possible, to prevent the new Sultan from carrying on those
+ reforms which had ever been so distasteful to the Turks,
+ grating at once against their religious associations and their
+ pride of race, and which recent events had certainly proved not
+ to be productive of those good results anticipated by Sultan
+ Mamoud. To attain this object, the Muftis adopted the expedient
+ of working on the religious fears of the youthful prince. One
+ day as he was praying, according to his custom, at his father's
+ tomb, he heard a voice from beneath reiterating, in a stifled
+ tone, the words, "I burn." The next time that he prayed there
+ the same words assailed his ears. "I burn" was repeated again
+ and again, and no word beside. He applied to the chief of the
+ Imams to know what this prodigy might mean; and was informed in
+ reply, that his father, though a great man, had also been,
+ unfortunately, a great reformer, and that as such it was too
+ much to be feared that he had a terrible penance to undergo in
+ the other world. The Sultan sent for his brother-in-law to pray
+ at the same place, and afterward several others of his
+ household; and on each occasion the same portentous words were
+ heard. One day he announced his intention of going in state to
+ his father's tomb, and was attended thither by a splendid
+ retinue, including the chief doctors of the Mahometan law.
+ Again, during his devotions, were heard the words, "I burn,"
+ and all except the Sultan trembled. Rising from his
+ prayer-carpet, he called in his guards, and commanded them to
+ dig up the pavement and remove the tomb. It was in vain that
+ the Muftis interposed, reprobating so great a profanation, and
+ uttering warnings as to its consequences. The Sultan persisted,
+ the foundations of the tomb were laid bare, and in a cavity
+ skillfully left among them was found&mdash;not a burning
+ Sultan, but a Dervise. The young monarch regarded him for a
+ time fixedly and in silence, and then said, without any further
+ remark or the slightest expression of anger, "You
+ burn?&mdash;We must cool you in the Bosphorus." In a few
+ minutes more the dervise was in a bag, and the bag immediately
+ after was in the Bosphorus.&mdash;<i>De Vere's
+ Sketches</i>.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h4>[From Household Words.]</h4>
+
+ <h2>AN OLD HAUNT.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The rippling water, with its drowsy tone,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The tall elms, tow 'ring in their stately
+ pride,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>And&mdash;sorrow's type&mdash;the willow sad and
+ lone,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Kissing in graceful woe the murmuring
+ tide;&mdash;</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The grey church-tower,&mdash;and dimly seen
+ beyond,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The faint hills gilded by the parting
+ sun,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>All were the same, and seem'd with greeting fond</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">To welcome me as they of old had
+ done.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And for a while I stood as in a trance,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">On that loved spot, forgetting toil and
+ pain;&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Buoyant my limbs, and keen and bright my glance,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">For that brief space I was a boy
+ again!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Again with giddy mates I careless play'd,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Or plied the quiv'ring oar, on conquest
+ bent:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Again, beneath the tall elms' silent shade,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">I woo'd the fair, and won the sweet
+ consent.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>But brief, alas! the spell,&mdash;for suddenly</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Peal'd from the tower the old familiar
+ chimes,</p>
+
+ <p>And with their clear, heart-thrilling melody,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Awaked the spectral forms of darker
+ times</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And I remember'd all that years had
+ wrought&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">How bow'd my care-worn frame, how dimm'd
+ my eye,</p>
+
+ <p>How poor the gauds by Youth so keenly sought,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">How quench'd and dull Youth's aspirations
+ high!</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And in half mournful, half upbraiding host,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Duties neglected&mdash;high resolves
+ unkept&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>And many a heart by death or falsehood lost,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In lightning current o'er my bosom
+ swept.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Then bow'd the stubborn knees, as backward sped</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The self-accusing thoughts in dread
+ array,</p>
+
+ <p>And, slowly, from their long-congealed bed,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Forced the remorseful tears their silent
+ way.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Bitter yet healing drops in mercy sent,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Like soft dews tailing on a thirsty
+ plain,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>And ere those chimes their last faint notes had
+ spent,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Strengthen'd and calm'd, I stood erect
+ again.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Strengthen'd, the tasks allotted to
+ fulfill;&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Calm'd the thick-coming sorrows to
+ endure;</p>
+
+ <p>Fearful of nought but of my own frail
+ will,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In His Almighty strength and aid
+ secure.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>For a sweet voice had whisper'd hope to
+ me,&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Had through my darkness shed a kindly
+ ray;&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>It said: "The past is fix'd immutably,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Yet is there comfort in the coming
+ day!"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page304"
+ id="page304"></a>[pg 304]</span>
+
+ <h2>KILLING A GIRAFFE.</h2>
+
+ <p>At every stride I gained upon the giraffes, and, after a
+ short burst at a swingeing gallop, I was in the middle of them,
+ and turned the finest cow out of the herd. On finding herself
+ driven from her comrades and hotly pursued, she increased her
+ pace, and cantered along with tremendous strides, clearing an
+ amazing extent of ground at every bound; while her neck and
+ breast, coming in contact with the dead old branches of the
+ trees, were continually strewing them in my path. In a few
+ minutes I was riding within five yards of her stern, and,
+ firing at a gallop, I sent a bullet into her back. Increasing
+ my pace, I next rode alongside, and, placing the muzzle of my
+ rifle within a few feet of her, I fired my second shot behind
+ the shoulder; the ball, however, seemed to have little effect.
+ I then placed myself directly in front, when she came to a
+ walk. Dismounting, I hastily loaded both barrels, putting in
+ double charges of powder. Before this was accomplished, she was
+ off at a canter. In a short time I brought her to a stand in
+ the dry bed of a watercourse, where I fired at fifteen yards,
+ aiming where I thought the heart lay, upon which she again made
+ off. Having loaded, I followed, and had very nearly lost her;
+ she had turned abruptly to the left, and was far out of sight
+ among the trees. Once more I brought her to a stand, and
+ dismounted from my horse. There we stood together alone in the
+ wild wood. I gazed in wonder at her extreme beauty, while her
+ soft dark eye, with its silky fringe, looked down imploringly
+ at me, and I really felt a pang of sorrow in this moment of
+ triumph for the blood I was shedding. Pointing my rifle toward
+ the skies, I sent a bullet through her neck. On receiving it
+ she reared high on her hind legs and fell back with a heavy
+ crash, making the earth shake around her. A thick stream of
+ dark blood spouted out from the wound, her colossal limbs
+ quivered for a moment, and she expired.&mdash;<i>Cummings'
+ Adventures</i>.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>THE VETERAN KOLOMBESKI.</h2>
+
+ <p>Several journals have spoken of the entry into the Hotel des
+ Invalides of a soldier, stated to be 126 years of age. This is
+ not quite correct. The following are some precise details
+ respecting this extraordinary man, who arrived at the Hotel on
+ the 21st inst.:&mdash;Jean Kolombeski, born at Astrona
+ (Poland), on the 1st of March, 1730, entered the service of
+ France, as a volunteer in the Bourbon regiment of infantry, in
+ 1774, at the age of forty-four. He was made corporal in 1790,
+ at the age of sixty. He made all the campaigns of the
+ Revolution and of the Empire, in different regiments of
+ infantry, and was incorporated, in 1808, in the 3d regiment of
+ the Vistula. He was wounded in 1814, and entered the hospital
+ at Poitiers, which he soon afterward left to be placed <i>en
+ subsistence</i> in the 2d regiment of light infantry. On the
+ 11th of October of the same year he was admitted into the 1st
+ company of <i>sous-officiers sedentaires</i>, and, in 1846,
+ into the 5th company of Veteran Sub-Officers. The last three of
+ these companies having just been suppressed by the Minister of
+ War, Kolombeski was placed <i>en subsistence</i> in the 61st
+ regiment of the line, received a retiring pension by decree of
+ May 17, 1850, and the Minister authorized his admission into
+ the Invalides. Kolombeski is, therefore, more than 120 years of
+ age; he reckons seventy-five and a half years of service, and
+ twenty-nine campaigns. He enjoys good health, is strong and
+ well made, and does not appear to be more than seventy or
+ eighty. He performed every duty with big comrades of the 5th
+ company of Veterans, When King Louis Philippe visited Dreus,
+ Kolombeski was presented to him, who, taking the decoration
+ from his breast, presented it to the veteran soldier. This is
+ the most astonishing instance of longevity that has, perhaps,
+ been ever known in the army. The Marshal Governor of the
+ Invalides ordered that Kolombeski should be brought to him on
+ his arrival; but, as the old soldier was fatigued, he was taken
+ to the infirmary, and the Governor, informed of it, went to his
+ bedside with General Petit, the commandant of the hotel, and
+ addressed the veteran in the kindest manner. The Governor has
+ issued an order that, for the future, all centenarian soldiers
+ admitted into the hospital shall mess with the officers, in
+ order to show his respect for their age, and for the long
+ services they have rendered to the state.&mdash;<i>Galignani's
+ Messenger</i>.</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>ANECDOTE OF LORD BROUGHAM.</h2>
+
+ <p>The "Life of the Rev. Dr. Hugh Heugh" has a description of
+ an interview which a deputation of Scotch dissenters had some
+ years ago with Lord Brougham. The <i>Scotsman</i> adds, from
+ its private knowledge, some odd incidents of the affair.</p>
+
+ <p>His lordship, on coming out of the court to meet the
+ deputation, immediately on being informed of their object,
+ burst out in a volley of exclamations to the effect that, but
+ for dissent, there would be "No vital religion&mdash;no vital
+ religion, gentlemen, no vital religion." While pouring forth
+ this in a most solemn tone, he was all the while shaking
+ violently the locked doors of a lobby full of committee rooms,
+ into one of which he wished to find entrance, and calling for
+ an absent official not only in passionate tones, but in
+ phraseology which the reverend deputation, at first unwilling
+ to trust their own ears, were at last forced to believe was
+ nothing better than profane swearing. At last, he suddenly drew
+ himself up to the wall opposite a locked door, and with a
+ tremendous kick, smashed the lock, and entered (exclaiming,
+ first in a vehement and then in a solemn tone, but without
+ pause) "&mdash;that fellow! where the &mdash;&mdash; does he
+ always go to! No vital religion, gentlemen, no vital
+ religion&mdash;no, no, no."</p>
+ <hr />
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1"
+ name="footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>Trésor de Numismatique et de Glyptique; ou, Recueil
+ Général de Médailles, Monnaies, Pierres Gravées, Sceaux,
+ Bas-reliefs, Ornements, &amp;c. Paris, 1850.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2"
+ name="footnote2"></a><b>Footnote 2:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>"Lachrymis oculos effusa nitentes."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3"
+ name="footnote3"></a><b>Footnote 3:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The Prelude, or Growth of a Poet's Mind; an
+ Autobiographical Poem. By William Wordsworth. London,
+ Moxon. [New York, Appletons.]</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4"
+ name="footnote4"></a><b>Footnote 4:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The Moohummadan Law of Sale, according to the Hunefeea
+ Code: from the Futawa Alumgeeree, a Digest of the whole
+ Law, prepared by command of the Emperor Aurungzebe
+ Alumgeer. Selected and translated from the original Arabic,
+ with an Introduction and explanatory Notes, by Neil B.E.
+ Baillie, Author of "The Moohummadan Law of inheritance."
+ Published by Smith and Elder.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote5"
+ name="footnote5"></a><b>Footnote 5:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag5">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The people of the Caucasus, and their Struggle for
+ Liberty with the Russians&mdash;(<i>Die Volker des
+ Caucasus, &amp;c.</i>) By Friedrich Bodenstedt. Second
+ Edition. Frankfurt am Main, Lizius; London, Nutt.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote6"
+ name="footnote6"></a><b>Footnote 6:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag6">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>It is worth noting&mdash;as a characteristic of Russian
+ misrule and of its consequences&mdash;that this chieftain,
+ after having been a devoted soldier of the Emperor for
+ seven years, was goaded by the ill treatment of his
+ officers into abjuring the service; make the offer of his
+ sword to Schamyl, against whom he had fought with the
+ utmost animosity; was heartily welcomed by that prudent
+ leader, and became one of his principal lieutenants.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The International Weekly Miscellany,
+Volume I. No. 9., by Various
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/old/13797.txt b/old/13797.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The International Weekly Miscellany, Volume
+I. No. 9., 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, Volume I. No. 9.
+ Of Literature, Art, and Science, August 26, 1850
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: October 19, 2004 [EBook #13797]
+
+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 26, 1850. No. 9.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+NUMISMATIC ARCHAEOLOGY.
+
+A magnificent work[1] upon this subject has just been completed in
+Paris, where it was commenced fifteen years ago. It was begun under
+the auspices of M. Paul Delaroche and M.C. Lenormand, member of the
+Institute, and well known already as one of the first authorities in
+the numismatic branch of archaeology. Some faint idea of the greatness
+of the task may be given by stating that it embraces the whole range
+of art, from the regal coins of Syracuse and of the Ptolemies, down to
+those of our day; that such a stupendous scheme should ever have been
+carried into execution is not solely due to the admirable ease and
+fidelity, with which the "Collas machine" renders the smallest and the
+largest gems of the antique: but to him who first felt, appreciated,
+and afterward promoted its capabilities in this labor of love, M.A.
+Lachevardiere. Comparisons and contrasts, which are the life of art,
+though generally confined to the mental vision, are not the least of
+the recommendations of this vast work. For the first time have the
+minor treasures of each country been brought together, and not the
+least conspicuous portion are those from the British Museum and the
+Bank of England.
+
+[Footnote 1: Tresor de Numismatique et de Glyptique; ou, Recueil
+General de Medailles, Monnaies, Pierres Gravees, Sceaux, Bas-reliefs,
+Ornements, &c. Paris, 1850.]
+
+Whether we consider the selection of these monumental relics, the
+explanatory letterpress, or the engravings which reproduce them, we
+are struck by the admirable taste, science, and fidelity with which
+the largest as well as the smallest gems have each and every one been
+made to tally in size with the originals.
+
+The collection of the "Tresor de Numismatique et Glyptique,"
+consisting of twenty volumes in folio, and containing a thousand
+engraved plates in folio, reproduces upward of 15,000 specimens, and
+is divided into three classes--1st. The coins, medals, cameos, &c.
+of antiquity; 2d. Those of the middle ages; lastly, those of modern
+times. The details of this immense mass of artistic wealth would be
+endless; but these three classes seem to be arranged according to the
+latest classification of numismatists.
+
+In the first class may be noticed--1. The regal coins of Greece,
+which contains, beside the portraits of the Greek Kings, to be found
+in Visconti's "Iconographie," copied from medals and engraved gems,
+all the coins bearing the Greek name of either a king, a prince, or
+a tyrant, and every variety of these types, whether they bear the
+effigy of a prince, or only reproduce his name. To the medals of each
+sovereign are joined the most authentic and celebrated engraved gems
+of European cabinets. Next come the series of portraits of the Roman
+emperors and their families, with all the important varieties of Roman
+numismatics, amongst which will be found the most celebrated coins
+of France, Vienna, Dresden, Munich, Florence, Naples, St. Petersburg,
+Weimar, &c.; and, moreover, those medallions which perpetuate great
+events. These two volumes contain eight-fold more matter than the
+great work of Visconti.
+
+In the second class, containing the works of the middle ages, and
+showing the uninterrupted progress of the numismatic art down to
+modern times, and forming alone fourteen volumes, we find the source
+which the French artists and men of letters have studied with such
+predilection. First in order are the Italian medals of the fifteenth
+and sixteenth centuries, chiefly by the famous Victor Pisano, a
+Veronese, whom Nasari has so much lauded. The scholars and imitators
+of Pisano also produced works as interesting as historical documents
+as they are admirable in workmanship. Here also will be found the
+French and English seals, in which the balance of skill in design and
+execution is acknowledged to be in our favor.
+
+Less barbarous, and indeed perfect works of art, in character of
+costume and visage, are the medals struck in Germany during the
+sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, when the influence of Albert
+Durer and his school was strongly felt. And finally, relics of
+ornamental art of different nations and epochs.
+
+In the third class, two parts only are devoted to contemporary art;
+the medals illustrative of the French revolution of 1789; those of
+the "Empire" and of the Emperor "Napoleon;" generally smacking of the
+florid and corrupt taste of that period, they are nevertheless curious
+as being often the sole evidence of the facts commemorated. There is,
+however, a manifest improvement in the late ones, and in them may be
+traced the transition from the independent ideas of the revolution
+to the subsequent submission to one man: and not less striking is
+the transition from a slip-shod style of art to a pedantic imitation
+of the antique. The "Tresor de Numismatique et de Glyptique" is the
+most scientific and important work of art which has been executed and
+achieved of late years in France. Our great public libraries may be
+proud of possessing so rich, so valuable, and so curious a collection,
+
+Most lovers of art have their favorite periods and well-beloved
+masters, but in this varied range of excellence it is difficult which
+to select for preference and admiration. The cameos have a beauty and
+_finesse_ which far surpass that of busts and statues; they evince the
+skill of grouping, which, with rare exceptions, such as the Niobe and
+Laocoon, is seldom aimed at in the more important pieces of sculpture.
+Cameos, moreover, let us, as it were, into the secrets of indoor
+life. To these considerations we may add that these gems have had an
+immense influence on French modern art. The "Apotheosis of Augustus"
+especially, known to antiquarians as the "Agate of Tiberius," the
+largest cameo in the world, and beautifully engraved the size of the
+original in this collection, may be traced in more than one of their
+late compositions.
+
+It is said that large medallions are a sign of taste either in the
+medalist or the monarch he is supposed to honor; if so, Dupre and
+Varin have drawn a thick vail over the effulgence of Louis XIV.
+We would not, however, lose their wigs and smiles for a world of
+historiettes.
+
+But it is to be remembered that the more names are blazoned on works
+of art, the more art becomes deteriorated. In this respect the present
+collection shows the rapidly progressive march of this evil through
+twenty-five centuries--a most instructive subject of contemplation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE CSIKOS OF HUNGARY.
+
+Of the chivalry, the gallantry, the splendor, the hospitality, the
+courage, and the love of liberty of the Hungarian noble or gentleman,
+no one doubts. Of his ideas of true constitutional freedom, or the
+zeal with which that or Hungarian independence has been maintained
+first through Turkish, and then German domination for some hundred
+years past, doubts may be entertained. Neither do the Hungarian
+peasantry or people reflect high credit on their "natural superiors."
+Something should be deducted for the forced vivacity and straining
+after effect of the litterateur; but this sketch of a large class of
+peasantry from Max Schlesinger's "War in Hungary," just published
+in London, must have some foundation in truth--and very like the Red
+Indians or half-breeds of Spanish America the people look.
+
+"The Csikos is a man who from his birth, somehow or other, finds
+himself seated upon a foal. Instinctively the boy remains fixed upon
+the animal's back, and grows up in his seat as other children do in
+the cradle.
+
+"The boy grows by degrees to a big horse-herd. To earn his livelihood,
+he enters the service of some nobleman, or of the Government, who
+possess in Hungary immense herds of wild horses. These herds range
+over a tract of many German square miles, for the most part some level
+plain, with wood, marsh, heath, and moorland; they rove about where
+they please, multiply, and enjoy freedom of existence. Nevertheless,
+it is a common error to imagine that these horses, like a pack of
+wolves in the mountains, are left to themselves and nature, without
+any care or thought of man. Wild horses, in the proper sense of the
+term, are in Europe at the present day only met with in Bessarabia;
+whereas the so-called wild herds in Hungary may rather be compared
+to the animals ranging in our large parks, which are attended to and
+watched. The deer are left to the illusion that they enjoy the most
+unbounded freedom; and the deer-stalker, when in pursuit of his game,
+readily gives in to the same illusion. Or, to take another simile, the
+reader has only to picture to himself a well-constituted free state,
+whether a republic or a monarchy is all one.
+
+"The Csikos has the difficult task of keeping a watchful eye upon
+these herds. He knows their strength, their habits, the spots they
+frequent; he knows the birthday of every foal, and when the animal,
+fit for training, should be taken out of the herd. He has then a hard
+task upon his hands, compared with which a Grand-Ducal wild-boar hunt
+is child's play; for the horse has not only to be taken alive from the
+midst of the herd, but of course safe and sound in wind and limb. For
+this purpose, the celebrated whip of the Csikos serves him; probably
+at some future time a few splendid specimens of this instrument will
+be exhibited in the Imperial Arsenal at Vienna, beside the sword of
+Scanderberg and the Swiss 'morning-stars.'
+
+"This whip has a stout handle from one and a half to two feet long,
+and a cord which measures not less than from eighteen to twenty-four
+feet in length. The cord is attached to a short iron chain, fixed
+to the top of the handle by an iron ring. A large leaden button is
+fastened to the end of the cord, and similar smaller buttons are
+distributed along it at distances, according to certain rules
+derived from experience, of which we are ignorant. Armed with this
+weapon, which the Csikos carries in his belt, together with a short
+grappling-iron or hook, he sets out on his horse-chase. Thus mounted
+and equipped without saddle or stirrup, he flies like the storm-wind
+over the heath, with such velocity that the grass scarcely bends
+under the horse's hoof; the step of his horse is not heard, and the
+whirling cloud of dust above his head alone marks his approach and
+disappearance. Although familiar with the use of a bridle, he despises
+such a troublesome article of luxury, and guides his horse with his
+voice, hands, and feet--nay, it almost seems as if he directed it by
+the mere exercise of the will, as we move our feet to the right or
+left, backward or forward, without its ever coming into our head to
+regulate our movements by a leather strap.
+
+"In this manner for hours he chases the flying herd, until at length
+he succeeds in approaching the animal which he is bent on catching.
+He then swings his whip round in immense circles, and throws the cord
+with such dexterity and precision that it twines around the neck of
+his victim. The leaden button at the end, and the knots along the
+cord, form a noose, which draws closer and tighter the faster the
+horse hastens on.
+
+"See how he flies along with outstretched legs, his mane whistling
+in the wind, his eye darting fire, his mouth covered with foam, and
+the dust whirling aloft on all sides! But the noble animal breathes
+shorter, his eye grows wild and staring, his nostrils are reddened
+with blood, the veins of his neck are distended like cords, his legs
+refuse longer service--he sinks exhausted and powerless, a picture
+of death. But at the same instant the pursuing steed likewise stands
+still and fixed as if turned to stone. An instant, and the Csikos has
+flung himself off his horse upon the ground, and inclining his body
+backward, to keep the noose tight, he seizes the cord alternately with
+the right and left hand, shorter and shorter, drawing himself by it
+nearer and nearer to the panting and prostrate animal, till at last
+coming up to it he flings his legs across its back. He now begins to
+slacken the noose gently, allowing the creature to recover breath: but
+hardly does the horse feel this relief, before he leaps up, and darts
+off again in a wild course, as if still able to escape from his enemy.
+But the man is already bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh; he
+sits fixed upon his neck as if grown to it, and makes the horse feel
+his power at will, by tightening or slackening the cord. A second time
+the hunted animal sinks upon the ground; again he rises, and again
+breaks down, until at length, overpowered with exhaustion, he can no
+longer stir a limb....
+
+"The foot-soldier who has discharged his musket is lost when opposed
+to the Csikos. His bayonet, with which he can defend himself against
+the Uhlans and Hussars, is here of no use to him; all his practiced
+maneuvers and skill are unavailing against the long whip of his enemy,
+which drags him to the ground, or beats him to death with his leaden
+buttons; nay, even if he had still a charge in his musket, he could
+sooner hit a bird on the wing than the Csikos, who, riding round and
+round him in wild bounds, dashes with his steed first to one side then
+to another, with the speed of lightning, so as to frustrate any aim.
+The horse-soldier, armed in the usual manner, fares not much better;
+and wo to him if he meets a Csikos singly! better to fall in with a
+pack of ravenous wolves."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE PRESENT RELIGION OF PERSIA.
+
+An account of the Expedition for the survey of the rivers Euphrates
+and Tigris, carried on by order of the British Government, in the
+years 1835, 1836, and 1837; preceded by geographical and historical
+notices of the regions situated between the Nile and the Indus, with
+fourteen maps and charts, and ninety-seven plates, besides numerous
+woodcuts, has just appeared in London, in four large volumes, from the
+pen of Lieutenant-Colonel Chesney, R.A., F.R.S., &c., commander of
+the Expedition. It is too comprehensive a work ever to be reprinted
+here, or to be much read, even in England, but it is undoubtedly very
+valuable as an authority. The following paragraphs from it describe
+the present state of religion in Persia:
+
+"The title of Mulla is conferred on a candidate by some member of the
+order, after the requisite examination in theology and law; and the
+person is then intrusted with the education of youth, as well as
+the administration of justice, and the practice of law. The Mullas
+sometimes possess sufficient power not only to influence the people at
+large, but even the King himself.
+
+"Of this class of priests, those who have been successful in life are
+either placed in mosques or private families, waiting for advancement;
+but a greater number are nominally attached to colleges, and live
+by the practice of astrology, fortune-telling, the sale of charms,
+talismans, &c. They who are not possessed of the requisite ingenuity
+to subsist by the credulity of others, take charge of an inferior
+school, or write letters, and draw up marriage and other engagements,
+for those who are unequal to the task. They mix at the same time
+largely in the domestic concerns of families. But in addition to
+these and other vocations, a considerable number of the lowest priests
+derive a scanty support from that charity which no one denies to
+the true believer. These men wander as fakirs from place to place,
+carrying news, and repeating poems, tales, &c., mixed with verses from
+the Koran. The heterodox religions are very numerous; nor is Irian
+without her free-thinkers, as the Kamurs and Mu'tazelis, (Mitaulis,)
+who deny everything which they cannot prove by natural reason. A third
+sect, the Mahadelis, or Molochadis, still maintain the Magian belief
+that the stars and the planets govern all things. Another, the Ehl
+el Tabkwid, (men of truth,) hold that there is no God except the four
+elements, and no rational soul or life after this one. They maintain
+also, that all living bodies, being mixtures of the elements, will
+after death return to their first principles. They also affirm that
+paradise and hell belong to this world, into which every man returns
+in the form of a beast, a plant, or again as a man; and that in this
+second state, he is great, powerful, and happy, or poor, despicable,
+and unhappy, according to his former merits or demerits. In practice
+they inculcate kindness to and respect for each other, with implicit
+obedience to their chiefs, who are called Pir, (old men,) and are
+furnished with all kinds of provisions for their subsistence. This
+sect is found in the provinces of Irak and Fars.
+
+"The Tarikh Zenadikah (way of the covetous) are directly opposed to
+the last on the subject of transmigration; and they believe that God
+is in all places, and performs all things. They likewise maintain
+that the whole visible universe is only a manifestation of the
+Supreme Being; the soul itself being a portion of the Divine essence.
+Therefore, they consider, that whatever appears to the eye is God, and
+that all religious rites should be comprised in the contemplation of
+God's goodness and greatness.
+
+"On these various creeds the different branches of Suffeeism seem to
+have been founded. One of the most extraordinary of these sects is the
+Rashaniyah; the followers of which believe in the transmigration of
+souls, and the manifestation of the Divinity in the persons of holy
+men. They maintain likewise, that all men who do not join their
+sect are to be considered as dead, and that their goods belong, in
+consequence, to the true believers, as the only survivors."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE "OLD DUKE OF QUEENSBURY."
+
+Mr. Burke gives in his gossiping book about the English aristocracy,
+the following anecdotes of this once famous person:
+
+"Few men occupied a more conspicuous place about the court and town
+for nearly seventy years, during the reigns of the Second and Third
+Georges. Like Wilmot Earl of Rochester, he pursued pleasure under
+every shape, and with as much ardor at fourscore as he had done at
+twenty. At the decease of his father, in 1731, he became Earl of
+March; and he subsequently, in 1748, inherited his mother's earldom
+of Ruglen, together with the family's estates in the counties of
+Edinburgh and Linlithgow. These rich endowments of fortune, and a
+handsome person, of which he was especially careful, combined to
+invest the youthful Earl with no ordinary attractions, and the
+ascendency they acquired he retained for a longer period than any one
+of his contemporaries; from his first appearance in the fashionable
+world in the year 1746, to the year he left it forever, in 1810,
+at the age of eighty-five, he was always an object of comparative
+notoriety. There was no interregnum in the public course of his
+existence. His first distinction he achieved on the turf; his
+knowledge of which, both in theory and practice, equaled that of the
+most accomplished adepts of Newmarket. In all his principal matches
+he rode himself, and in that branch of equitation rivaled the most
+professional jockeys. Properly accoutered in his velvet cap, red
+silken jacket, buckskin breeches, and long spurs, his Lordship bore
+away the prize on many a well-contested field. His famous match with
+the Duke of Hamilton was long remembered in sporting annals. Both
+noblemen rode their own horses, and each was supported by numerous
+partisans. The contest took place on the race-ground at Newmarket, and
+attracted all the fashionables of the period. Lord March, thin, agile,
+and admirably qualified for exertion, was the victor. Still more
+celebrated was his Lordship's wager with the famous Count O'Taafe.
+During a conversation at a convivial meeting on the subject of
+'running against time,' it was suggested by Lord March, that it
+was possible for a carriage to be drawn with a degree of celerity
+previously unexampled, and believed to be impossible. Being desired to
+name his maximum, he undertook, provided choice of ground were given
+him and a certain period for training, to draw a carriage with four
+wheels not less than nineteen miles within the space of sixty minutes.
+The accomplishment of such rapidity staggered the belief of his
+hearers; and a heavy wager was the consequence. Success mainly
+depending on the lightness of the carriage, Wright of Long Acre, the
+most ingenious coach-builder of the day, devoted the whole resources
+of his skill to its construction, and produced a vehicle formed partly
+of wood and partly of whale-bone, with silk harness, that came up
+to the wishes of his employer. Four blood horses of approved speed
+were then selected, and the course at Newmarket chosen as the ground
+of contest. On the day appointed, 29th of August, 1750, noble and
+ignoble gamesters journeyed from far and near to witness the wonderful
+experiment; excitement reached the highest point, and bets to an
+enormous amount were made. At length the jockeys mounted; the carriage
+was put in motion, and rushing on with a velocity marvelous in those
+times of coach traveling, but easily conceived by us railway travelers
+of the nineteenth century, gained within the stipulated hour the goal
+of victory."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE DECAY OF GREAT FAMILIES.
+
+Not the least valuable parts of Burke's just published "Anecdotes of
+the Aristocracy," are a species of essay on the fortunes of families.
+The following is from a chapter on their decadence:
+
+"It has often occurred to us that a very interesting paper might
+be written on the rise and fall of English families. Truly does Dr.
+Borlase remark that 'the most lasting houses have only their seasons,
+more or less, of a certain constitutional strength. They have their
+spring and summer sunshine glare, their wane, decline, and death.'
+Take, for example, the Plantagenets, the Staffords, and the Nevills,
+the three most illustrious names on the roll of England's nobility.
+What race in Europe surpassed in royal position, in personal
+achievement, our Henries and our Edwards? and yet we find the
+great-great-grandson of Margaret Plantagenet, daughter and heiress
+of George Duke of Clarence, following the craft of a cobbler at the
+little town of Newport in Shropshire, in the year 1637. Beside, if
+we were to investigate the fortunes of many of the inheritors of the
+royal arms, it would soon be discovered that
+
+ 'The aspiring blood of Lancaster'
+
+had sunk into the ground. The princely stream at the present time
+flows through very humble veins. Among the lineal descendants of
+Edmund of Woodstock, Earl of Kent, sixth son of Edward I., King
+of England, entitled to quarter the Royal arms, occur Mr. Joseph
+Smart, of Hales Owen, butcher, and Mr. George Wilmot, keeper of the
+turnpike-gate at Cooper's Bank, near Dudley; and among the descendants
+of Thomas Plantagenet, Duke of Gloucester, fifth son of Edward
+III., we may mention Mr. Stephen James Penny, the late sexton at St.
+George's, Hanover Square.
+
+"The story of the Gargraves is a melancholy chapter in the romance
+of real life. For full two centuries, or more, scarcely a family in
+Yorkshire enjoyed a higher position. Its chiefs earned distinction
+in peace and war; one died in France, Master of the Ordnance to King
+Henry V.; another, a soldier, too, fell with Salisbury, at the siege
+of Orleans; and a third filled the Speaker's chair of the House of
+Commons. What an awful contrast to this fair picture does the sequel
+offer. Thomas Gargrave, the Speaker's eldest son, was hung at York,
+for murder; and his half-brother, Sir Richard, endured a fate only
+less miserable. The splendid estate he inherited he wasted by the most
+wanton extravagance, and at length reduced himself to abject want.
+'His excesses,' says Mr. Hunter, in his 'History of Doncaster,' 'are
+still, at the expiration of two centuries, the subject of village
+tradition; and his attachment to gaming is commemorated in an old
+painting, long preserved in the neighboring mansion of Badsworth, in
+which he is represented as playing at the old game of put, the right
+hand against the left, for the stake of a cup of ale.
+
+"The close of Sir Richard's story is as lamentable as its course.
+An utter bankrupt in means and reputation, he is stated to have been
+reduced to travel with the pack-horses to London, and was at last
+found dead in an old hostelry! He had married Catherine, sister of
+Lord Danvers, and by her left three daughters. Of the descendants of
+his brothers few particulars can be ascertained. Not many years since,
+a Mr. Gargrave, believed to be one of them, filled the mean employment
+of parish-clerk of Kippax.
+
+"A similar melancholy narrative applies to another great Yorkshire
+house. Sir William Reresby, Bart., son and heir of the celebrated
+author, succeeded, at the death of his father, in 1689, to the
+beautiful estate of Thrybergh, in Yorkshire, where his ancestors had
+been seated uninterruptedly from the time of the Conquest; and he
+lived to see himself denuded of every acre of his broad lands. Le Neve
+states, in his MSS. preserved in the Heralds' College, that he became
+a tapster in the King's Bench Prison, and was tried and imprisoned for
+cheating in 1711. He was alive in 1727, when Wootton's account of the
+Baronets was published. In that work he is said to be reduced to a low
+condition. At length he died in great obscurity, a melancholy instance
+how low pursuits and base pleasures may sully the noblest name, and
+waste an estate gathered with labor and preserved by the care of a
+race of distinguished progenitors. Gaming was amongst Sir William's
+follies--particularly that lowest specimen of the folly, the fights
+of game-cocks. The tradition at Thrybergh is (for his name is not
+quite forgotten) that the fine estate of Dennaby was staked and lost
+on a single main. Sir William Reresby was not the only baronet who
+disgraced his order at that period. In 1722, Sir Charles Burton was
+tried at the Old Bailey for stealing a seal; pleaded poverty, but
+was found guilty, and sentenced to transportation; which sentence was
+afterward commuted for a milder punishment."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+MADRID AND THE SPANISH SENATE.
+
+Gazpacho; or, Summer Months in Spain, is the title of a new book by W.
+George Clark, published in London. Gazpacho, it seems, is the name of
+a dish peculiar to Spain, but of universal use there, a sort of cold
+soup, made up of familiars and handy things, as bread, pot-herbs, oil,
+and water. "My Gazpacho," says the author, "has been prepared after
+a similar receipt. I know not how it will please the more refined
+and fastidious palates to which it will be submitted; indeed, amid
+the multitude of dainties wherewith the table is loaded, it may well
+remain untasted." It at least deserves a better fate than that. The
+volume relates, in a pleasant, intelligent, and gossiping way, a
+summer's ramble through Spain, describing with considerable force the
+peculiarities of its people, and the romantic features by which it
+is marked. The clever painter could not have better materials. The
+party-colored costumes of the peasants, like dahlias at a Chiswick
+show; the somber garments of the priests, the fine old churches, the
+queer rambling houses, looking centuries old, the dull, gloomy streets
+of Madrid, the life and activity of the market-place. Such are the
+objects upon which the eye rests, and of which Mr. Clark was too
+observant to neglect any. The following passages will give an idea of
+the materials of which the Gazpacho is made up:--
+
+MADRID.
+
+"I left, I suppose, scarcely a street in Madrid which I did not
+traverse, or a church which I did not enter. The result is hardly
+worth the trouble. One street and church are exactly like another
+street and church. In the latter, one always finds the same profusion
+of wooden Christs, and Madonnas in real petticoats, on the walls, and
+the same scanty sprinkling of worshipers, also in petticoats, on the
+floor. The images outnumber the devotees here, as in all other Roman
+Catholic countries (except Ireland, which is an exception to every
+rule.) To a stranger, the markets are always the most interesting
+haunts. A Spaniard, he or she, talks more while making the daily
+bargain than in all the rest of the twenty-four hours. The fruit and
+vegetable market was my especial lounge. There is such a fresh, sweet
+smell of the country, and the groups throw themselves, or are thrown,
+into such pretty tableaux after the Rubens and Snyders fashion. The
+shambles one avoids instinctively, and fish-market there is none,
+for Madrid is fifty hours' journey from the nearest sea, and the
+Manzanares has every requisite for a fine trout stream, but water.
+
+"Madrid has one peculiarity which conduces very much to the visitor's
+comfort, namely, that there are very few inevitable 'sights' to be
+gone through. The armory said to be the finest in the world; the
+palace, ditto (which people who are addicted to upholstering may
+go and see, if they don't mind breaking the tenth commandment); the
+museum of natural history, where is the largest loadstone in active
+operation between this and Medina; and the Academia, nearly complete
+the list. Everybody should devote a morning to the last-named, were it
+only for the sake of the Murillos. The famous picture of 'St. Isabel
+giving alms to the sick' has been arrested at Madrid on its return
+from Paris to Seville. As the Sevilians have instituted a 'process'
+for its recovery, it is likely to stay there for some time longer.
+'The Patrician's Dream' is quite cheering to look upon, so rich and
+glowing it is. Shut your eyes to the semi-ludicrous effect of husband,
+wife, and dog, in a decreasing series, like the three genders in
+Lindley Murray, all asleep.
+
+"The gardens of the queen, sunk in a deep hollow below the palace,
+deserve a visit. The head-gardener, of course a Frenchman, struggles
+gallantly against all kinds of difficulties of soil, climate, and lack
+of water. By a series of ingenious artifices he has concocted a plot
+of grass, some ten feet square, to the great astonishment of all
+natives."
+
+NARVAEZ IN THE SENATE.
+
+"One day my kind friend Colonel S. took me to hear a debate in the
+_Senado_, the Spanish Chamber of Peers, which holds its sittings in
+the chapel of a suppressed convent, near the palace. By dint of paint,
+gilding, and carpets, the room has been divested of its sanctified
+aspect, and made to look like a handsome modern room. They have not
+thought it necessary that a place in which a hundred gentlemen in
+surtouts meet to discuss secular matters in this nineteenth century,
+should be made to resemble a chapel of the fifteenth. Antiquity is
+here represented in the person of two halberdiers, who stand to guard
+the door, dressed in extravagant costume, like beefeaters in full
+bloom. Rows of raised seats extend on each side of the room; in
+the center, facing the beef-eaters, are the chair and desk of the
+president, and on each side a little tribune, from which the clerks
+read out documents from time to time. The spectators are accommodated
+in niches round the walls. Each member speaks from his place, and the
+voting is by ballot. First a footman hands round a tray of beans, and
+then each advances, when his name is called, to a table in the center,
+where he drops his bean into the box. The beans are then counted, and
+the result proclaimed by the president. On the right of the chair, in
+the front, is the bench assigned to the ministers; and there I had
+the good luck to see Narvaez, otherwise called Duke of Valencia, and
+a great many fine names besides, and, in reality, master of all the
+Spains. His face wears a fixed expression of inflexible resolve, very
+effective, and garnished with a fierce dyed mustache, and a somewhat
+palpable wig to match. His style of dress was what, in an inferior
+man, one would have called 'dandified.' An unexceptionable surtout,
+opened to display a white waistcoat with sundry chains, and the
+extremities terminated, respectively, in patent leather and primrose
+kid. During the discussion he alternately fondled a neat riding-whip
+and aired a snowy pocket-handkerchief. Those who know him give him
+credit for good intentions and great courage, but do not expect
+that he will ever set the Thames on fire, whatever he may do to
+the Manzanares. He is a mixture, they say, of the chivalric and the
+asinine: a kind of moral mule. His personal weakness is a wish to be
+thought young, and hence he was naturally angry when Lord Palmerston
+wanted to give him a 'wrinkle.' I saw, likewise, Mon, the Minister of
+Finance, smiling complacently, like a shopkeeper on his customers;
+and the venerable Castanos, Duke of Bailen, who, as he tottered in,
+stooping under the weight of ninety years, was affectionately greeted
+by Narvaez and others. On the whole, the debate seemed to be languid,
+and to be listened to with little interest; but that is the general
+fate of debates in July."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE KANASZ.
+
+Of the Servian swineherd we have heard something of late, both in
+history and romance; because this was the vocation of Kara George, the
+Servian Liberator. In Hungary the swine-keeper does not seem to be so
+respectable a person. Here is a sketch of him from Max Schlesinger's
+new book on the Hungarian war:
+
+"The Kanasz is a swineherd, whose occupation, everywhere unpoetical
+and dirty, is doubly troublesome and dirty in Hungary. Large droves
+of pigs migrate annually into the latter country from Serbia, where
+they still live in a half-wild state. In Hungary they fatten in the
+extensive oak-forests, and are sent to market in the large towns, even
+to Vienna, and still further....
+
+"It is a true enjoyment to live in these shady forests. The oak
+attains a finer and more luxuriant growth on the Hungarian soil than
+in any part of Germany. The hogs find food in profusion, and commonly
+stuff themselves to such a degree that they lose all desire for roving
+about: so that dog, master, and ass, lead a comparatively easy life,
+and are left to the quiet enjoyment of nature. But the lot of the
+Kanasz is a pitiable one when, at the close of summer, he has to
+drive his swine to market. From Debreczin, nay even from the Serbian
+frontier, he has to make a journey on foot more toilsome than was ever
+undertaken by the most adventurous traveler, pacing slowly over the
+interminable heaths in rain, storm, or under a burning sun, behind
+his pigs, which drive into his face hot clouds of dust. Every now and
+then a hog has stuffed itself so full as to be unable to stir from the
+spot; and there it lies on the road without moving, whilst the whole
+caravan is obliged to wait for half a day or longer, until the glutted
+animal can get on his legs again; and when at length this feat is
+accomplished, frequently his neighbor begins the same trick. There
+is truly not a more toilsome business in the wide world than that of
+a Kanasz.... The fokos is a hatchet, with a long handle, which the
+Kanasz hurls with great dexterity. Whenever he desires to pick out
+and slaughter one of his hogs, either for his own use or for sale,
+the attempt would be attended with danger, in the half-savage state
+of these animals, without such a weapon. The fokos here assists him;
+which he flings with such force and precision, that the sharp iron
+strikes exactly into the center of the frontal bone of the animal
+he has marked out; the victim sinks on the earth without uttering a
+sound, and the drove quietly proceeds on its way. That he can strike
+down a man with equal precision at eighty to a hundred paces, is
+proved by the gallows at the entrance of the forest--the three-legged
+monument of his dexterity. During recent events, too, the surgeons
+of the Austrian army will readily furnish the Kanasz and Csikos with
+certificates of their ability and skill."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE "WILD HUSSAR" OF HUNGARY.
+
+France, Russia, Prussia, and other countries, have introduced the
+Hussars into their armies; but these soldiers are merely Russian,
+French, and Prussian cavalry, dressed in the Hungarian laced jacket:
+they want the spirit, the horse, and--the 'Magyar Isten.' For this
+reason, the Hungarian Hussar will not acknowledge them as brethren;
+and whenever he comes in contact with foreign Hussars, he lets them
+feel in battle the full force of his contempt. A story is told, that
+during a campaign against the French in the war with Napoleon, the
+bivouacs of the Prussian and Hungarian Hussars were near to one
+another. A Prussian came over to his neighbors in a familiar way with
+a glass of wine, and drank it to the health of his 'brother hussar.'
+But the Hungarian gently pushed the glass back, and stroked his beard,
+saying, 'What brother?--no brother--I hussar--you jack-pudding.'
+
+This expression is not to be mistaken for a brag. The Hungarian hussar
+is no fanfaron like the French chasseur, but he is conscious of his
+own powers, like a Grenadier of the Old Imperial Guard. The dolmany,
+the csako, and the csizma, have grown to his body; they form his
+holyday dress even when off duty--the national costume transferred
+into the army; and as he is aware that this is not the case in other
+countries, the foreign Hussar's dress is in his eyes a mere servant's
+livery; and logically the man is not altogether wrong.
+
+The Hussar, like the Magyars in general, is naturally good-tempered.
+The finest man in the service, he is at the same time the most jovial
+companion in the tavern, and will not sit by and empty his glass by
+himself when a Bohemian or German comrade at his side has spent all
+his money. There is only one biped under the sun who is in his eyes
+more contemptible and hateful than any animal of marsh or forest. This
+is the Banderial Hussar--that half-breed between Croat and Magyar,
+that caricature of the true Hussar, who serves in the cavalry, as
+the Croat in the infantry, of the Military Frontier. Never was an
+Hungarian Hussar known to drink with a Banderial Hussar; never will he
+sit at the same table: if he meets a snake he crushes it under foot--a
+wolf he will hunt in the mountains--with a buffalo he will fight on
+the open heath--with a miserable horse-stealer he will wrestle for a
+halter; but as for the Banderial Hussar, he spits in his face wherever
+he meets him.
+
+It was at Hatvan, or at Tapjo-Bicske, that Hungarian and Banderial
+Hussars were for the first time in this war--the first time perhaps
+in the recollection of man--opposed to one another in battle. If looks
+could slay, there would have been no need of a conflict, for the eyes
+of the Magyars shot death and contempt at their unworthy adversaries.
+The signal of attack sounded; and at the same instant, as if seized by
+one common thought, the Hungarian Hussars clattered their heavy sabres
+back into the scabbard, and with a fearful imprecation, such as no
+German tongue could echo, charged weaponless and at full speed their
+mimic caricatures whom fate had thrown in their way. The shock was so
+irresistible, that the poor Croats could make no use of their sabers
+against the furious onset of their unarmed foe: they were beaten down
+from their saddles with the fist, and dragged off their horses by
+their dolmanys; those who could save themselves fled. The Hussars
+disdained to pursue them; but they complained to their Colonel at
+having been opposed to 'such a rabble.'--_Schlesinger_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+ORIGINAL POETRY.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A HOROSCOPE.
+
+BY ELIZABETH OAKES SMITH.
+
+"Quorum pars magna fui."
+
+ Oh! loveliest of the stars of Heaven,
+ Thus did ye walk the crystal dome,
+ When to the earth a child was given,
+ Within a love-lit, northern home;
+ Thus leading up the starry train,
+ With aspect still benign,
+ Ye move in your fair orbs again
+ As on that birth long syne.
+
+ Within her curtained room apart,
+ The pale young mother faintly smiled;
+ While warmly to a father's heart
+ With love and prayer was pressed the child;
+ And, softly to the lattice led,
+ In whispers grandams show
+ How those presaging stars have shed
+ Around the child a glow.
+
+ Born in the glowing summer prime,
+ With planets thus conjoined in space
+ As if they watched the natal time,
+ And came to bless the infant face;
+ Oh! there was gladness in that bower,
+ And beauty in the sky;
+ And Hope and Love foretold a dower
+ Of brightest destiny.
+
+ Unconscious child! that smiling lay
+ Where love's fond eyes, and bright stars gleamed,
+ How long and toilsome grew the way
+ O'er which those brilliant orbs had beamed;
+ How oft the faltering step drew back
+ In terror of the path,
+ When giddy steep, and wildering track
+ Seemed fraught with only wrath!
+
+ How oft recoiled the woman foot,
+ With tears that shamed the path she trod.
+ To find a canker at the root
+ Of every hope, save that in God!
+ And long, oh! long, and weary long,
+ Ere she had learned to feel
+ That Love, unselfish, deep, and strong,
+ Repays its own wild zeal.
+
+ Bright Hesperus! who on the eyes
+ Of Milton poured thy brightest ray!
+ Effulgent dweller of the skies,
+ Take not from me thy light away--
+ I look on thee, and I recall
+ The dreams of by-gone years--
+ O'er many a hope I lay the pall
+ With its becoming tears;
+
+ Yet turn to thee with thy full beam,
+ And bless thee, Oh love-giving star!
+ For life's sweet, sad, illusive dream
+ Fruition, though in Heaven afar--
+ "A silver lining" hath the cloud
+ Through dark and stormiest night,
+ And there are eyes to pierce the shroud
+ And see the hidden light.
+
+ Thou movest side by side with Jove,
+ And, 'tis a quaint conceit, perchance--
+ Thou seem'st in humid light to move
+ As tears concealed thy burning glance--
+ Such Virgil saw thee, when thine eyes,
+ More lovely through their glow,[2]
+ Won from the Thunderer of the skies
+ An accent soft and low.
+
+ And Mars is there with his red beams,
+ Tumultuous, earnest, unsubdued--
+ And silver-footed Dian gleams
+ Faint as when she, on Latmos stood--
+ God help the child! such night brought forth
+ When Love to Power appeals,
+ And strong-willed Mars at frozen north
+ Beside Diana steals.
+
+BROOKLYN, August, 1850.
+
+[Footnote 2: "Lachrymis oculos effusa nitentes."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FRIENDSHIP.
+
+ How oft the burdened heart would sink
+ In fathomless despair
+ But for an angel on the brink--
+ In mercy standing there:
+ An angel bright with heavenly light--
+ And born of loftiest skies,
+ Who shows her face to mortal race,
+ In Friendship's holy guise.
+
+ Upon the brink of dark despair,
+ With smiling face she stands;
+ And to the victim shrinking there,
+ Outspreads her eager hands:
+ In accents low that sweetly flow
+ To his awakening ear,
+ She woos him back--his deathward track.
+ Toward Hope's effulgent sphere.
+
+ Sweet Friendship! let me daily give
+ Thanks to my God for thee!
+ Without thy smiles t'were death to live,
+ And joy to cease to be:
+ Oh, bitterest drop in woe's full cup--
+ To have no friend in need!
+ To struggle on, with grief alone--
+ Were agony indeed!
+
+August. WILLIAM C. RICHARDS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BALANCE OF LIFE.
+
+ All daring sympathy--clear-sighted love--
+ Is, from its source, a ray of endless bliss;
+ Self has no place in the pure world above,
+ Its shadows vanish in the strife of this.
+
+ The toil--the tumult--the sharp struggle o'er,--
+ The casket breaks;--men say, "A martyr dies!"
+ The death--the martyrdom--has past before:
+ The soul, transfigured, finds its native skies.
+
+ The good--the ill--we vainly strive to weigh
+ With Reason's scales, hung in the mists of Time:
+ Yet child-like Faith the balance doth survey,
+ Held high in ether, by a hand sublime.
+
+May, 1850. HERMA.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+SCIENCE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The SPANISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES have announced the following subject
+for competition: "An experimental investigation and explanation of
+the theory of nitrification, the causes which most influence the
+production of this phenomenon, and the means most conducive in Spain
+to natural nitrification." The prize, to be awarded in May 1851, is to
+be a gold medal and 6000 copper reals--about seventy pounds sterling;
+and a second similar medal will be given to the second best paper. The
+papers, written in Spanish or Latin, are to be sent in before the 1st
+May, with, as usual, the author's name under seal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IMPROVEMENTS IN THE TELEGRAPH.--The _Presse_ gives some account of
+experiments made at the house of M. de Girardin, in Paris, with a
+new telegraphic dictionary, the invention of M. Gonon. Dispatches
+in French, English, Portuguese, Russian, and Latin, including proper
+names of men and places, and also figures, were transmitted and
+translated, says this account, with a rapidity and fidelity alike
+marvelous, by an officer who knew nothing of any one of the languages
+used except his own. Dots, commas, accents, and breaks were all in
+their places. This dictionary of M. Gonon is applicable alike to
+electric and aerial telegraphy, to transmissions by night and by day,
+to maritime and to military telegraphing. The same paper speaks of
+the great interest excited in the European capitals by the approaching
+experiment of submarine telegraphic communication between England
+and France. The wires, it says, on the English side are deposited
+and ready for laying down. It is probable that in a very few days the
+experiment will be complete.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+AUTHORS AND BOOKS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NEW ORLEANS AS SEEN BY A GERMAN PRINCE is very naturally not quite
+the same city as in the opinion of her own pleasure-loving citizens,
+nor can the republic whose South-western metropolis is condemned with
+the rigidity of a merciless judge and the jaundice of an unfriendly
+traveler, hope to get clear of censure from the same super-royal pen.
+It seems that his serenest highness Major-General Duke Paul William,
+of Wirtemburg, is traveling in America, and that the _Ausland_, a
+weekly paper, of Stuttgart, is from time to time favored with the
+results of his experience on the way. From some recent portions of his
+correspondence _The International_ translates the subjoined _morceau_,
+which, however, despite its great exaggeration, is not altogether
+devoid of truth: "It is not necessary here to mention how much
+New Orleans has altered, increased, and deteriorated, for it is an
+established thing that cities which grow to such gigantic proportions
+gain nothing in respect to the morals of their inhabitants. Here
+drunkenness and gambling, two vices of which the Americans were
+ignorant in the time of the founders of their great federation,
+have taken very deep root. The decrease of the inflexible spirit of
+religion, and the increase of vice and luxury, gnaw the powerful tree,
+and are fearful enemies, which cannot be resisted by a structure that
+might resist with scorn all foreign foes, and would have played a
+mighty part in the world's history had the spirit of Washington and
+Franklin remained with it. The annexation of Texas, the war with
+Mexico, and now the gold of California, have transformed the United
+States. A people which makes conquests, loses inward power in
+proportion to the aggrandizement of its volume, and the increase of
+its external enemies."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN ARABIAN NEWSPAPER, with the title _Mobacher_. has lately been
+commenced in Algiers, at the expense of the French Government. It
+is edited in the cabinet of the Governor-General, issued weekly, and
+lithographed, as less expensive than printing, which in Arabic types
+would be quite costly. It contains political news from Europe and
+Africa, the latest advices from Constantinople, all those laws and
+decrees of the Government which in any way concern the Arabs, and
+descriptions of such new discoveries and inventions as can be made
+intelligible to the readers for whom it is designed. A thousand copies
+are printed weekly and sent to the chiefs and headmen of all the
+tribes that are under French rule or influence. At first it was not
+read much, but now the vanity of the Arabs has been excited by it as a
+mark of special attention from the Governor-General, so that they take
+it as an honor, and a degree of curiosity has been excited to obtain
+news from other parts of the world.
+
+Within a short time, also, an additional importance has been given to
+the paper by the publication in it of the amount of the tribute which
+each tribe is required to pay to France. Formerly this was known only
+to the chiefs who would accordingly exact from their people whatever
+amount they deemed best, under the pretense that it was for the
+government, while the greater part was retained by themselves. These
+tribes have profited greatly by the French conquest; it is estimated
+that of the eighty millions of francs which the army in Algeria costs
+yearly, from twenty to twenty-five millions remain in the hands of the
+Arabs. The Arab sells his corn, dates, horses, sheep, the baskets he
+weaves, &c., to the European population, but never buys anything from
+them in turn, except it be arms and powder. The rest of his money he
+carries home and buries where no one knows but himself, so that, if
+he dies suddenly, it is lost. Only the chiefs of the tribe know how to
+extort anything of these hidden sums. According to the most moderate
+estimates the tribes must have from two to three hundred millions
+of French money. The gains which the chiefs draw from this wealth is
+considerable; some of them have from a hundred to a hundred and fifty
+thousand francs income. They are beginning to build large houses,
+and cultivate gardens around them, a disposition which the government
+favors, because it is easier to keep tribes in order that are
+settled and have dwellings to lose which they cannot take with them.
+The publication of the tribute in the _Mobacher_, is, under these
+circumstances, of great value for the Arabs, because it enables them,
+as it were, to supervise their chiefs, and to refuse to pay exorbitant
+taxes laid under pretense of a high tribute. This has increased the
+respect generally felt for the paper, though it has not rendered it
+more a favorite with the chiefs. The power of these leaders is very
+great in the various tribes, having been in most cases hereditary, at
+least since the tenth century, and although not always inherited in
+direct line, the tribes have never suffered it to pass into the hands
+of new families. Hitherto nothing has diminished it; the war rather
+gave it new strength, and it is only by means of the chiefs that the
+French can keep Algiers quiet. It would be a remarkable fact if the
+dissolving power of publicity through the press should be manifested
+here as elsewhere, and begin the overthrow of the long standing
+influence exercised by the great Arabian families.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. M. ST. LEON LOUD, of Philadelphia, has in the press of Ticknor,
+Reed & Fields, of Boston, a collection of her poems, entitled,
+"Wayside Flowers." Mrs. Loud is a writer of much grace and elegance,
+and occasionally of a rich and delicate fancy. The late Mr. Poe was
+accustomed to praise her works very highly, and was to have edited
+this edition of them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LITERATURE OF SOCIALISM occupies the press in France. The subject
+is warmly debated, _pro_ and _con_. In a pamphlet called _Despotisme
+ou Socialisme_, M. Pompery rapidly sketches the alternative which, he
+says, lies open to those who rise against despotism. There are but two
+religious doctrines according to him: the one absolutist, represented
+by De Maistre, and the Catholic school, which is, logically enough,
+desirous of reestablishing the Inquisition; the other professed by all
+the illustrious teachers of mankind, by Pythagoras, Jesus, Socrates,
+Pascal, &c., which, believing in the goodness of the Creator and the
+perfectibility of man, endeavors to found upon earth the reign of
+justice, fraternity, and equality. A more important work on Socialism
+is that of Dr. Guepin, of Nantes, _Philosophie du Socialisme_; and M.
+Lecouturier announces a _Science du Socialisme_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. G.P.R. JAMES has taken a cottage at Jamaica, Long Island, and
+is domiciliated as an American--we hope for a long time. He has made
+troops of friends since his arrival here, and is likely to be as
+popular in society as he has long been in literature. We are sure
+we communicate a very pleasing fact when we state that it is his
+intention to give in two or three of our principal cities, during the
+autumn and fall, a series of lectures--probably upon the chivalric
+ages, with which no one is more profoundly familiar, and of which
+no one can discourse more wisely or agreeably. His abilities, his
+reputation, and the almost universal acquaintance with his works,
+insure for him the largest success. We are indebted to no other living
+author for so much enjoyment, and by his proposed lectures he will not
+only add to our obligations, but furnish an opportunity to repair
+in some degree the wrong he has suffered from the imperfection and
+injustice of our copyright system.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"THE LIFE, CHARACTER, AND GENIUS OF EBENEZER ELLIOTT," is a volume
+by January Searle, author of _Leaves from Sherwood Forest_, &c., who
+knew the corn-law rhymer well, and has been enabled to give very
+characteristic sketches, original descriptions, correspondence, &c.
+There are in it many judiciously selected specimens of Elliott's
+poems, prose productions, and lectures. Mr. Searle observes of him,
+that "he was cradled into poetry by human wrong and misery; and was
+emphatically the bard of poverty--singing of the poor man's loves and
+sorrows, and denouncing his oppressors." Again: "He has one central
+idea--terrible and awful in its aspect, although beautiful and
+beneficent in spirit--before which he tries all causes, and men, and
+things. It is the Eternal Idea of Right; his synonyme of God. And this
+idea is perpetually present in his mind, pervades all his thoughts,
+will not be shuffled nor cheated, but demands a full satisfaction from
+all violators of it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE LATE MRS. OSGOOD was in a very remarkable degree respected and
+beloved by those who were admitted to her acquaintance. Without envy
+or jealousy, or any of the immoralities of the intellect which most
+commonly beset writers of her sex, she occasioned no enmities and was
+a party to none, but was regarded, especially by the literary women
+of this country, with a feeling of tenderness and devotion probably
+unparalleled in the annals of literature or of society. Immediately
+after her death, therefore, a desire was manifested to illustrate
+the common regard for her by some suitable testimonial, and upon
+consultation, it was decided to publish a splendid souvenir, to
+consist of the gratuitous contributions of her friends, and with the
+profits accruing from its sale to erect a monument to her memory in
+the cemetery of Mount Auburn. This gift book, edited by Mrs. Osgood's
+most intimate friend, Mary E. Hewitt, will be published by Mr. Putnam,
+on the first of October, under the title of _The Cairn_, and it will
+contain original articles by George Aubrey, Lord Bishop of Jamaica:
+the Right Rev. George W. Doane, the Right Rev. Alonzo Potter, the
+Hon. R.H. Walworth, the Hon. J. Leander Starr, the Rev. C.S. Henry,
+D.D., G.P.R. James, Esq., N.P. Willis, Esq., W. Gilmore Simms, Esq.,
+Bayard Taylor, Esq., J.H. Boker, Esq., Alfred B. Street, Esq., R.
+H. Stoddard, Esq., Miss Fredrika Bremer, Mrs. Sigourney, Mrs. Oakes
+Smith, Mrs. Embury, Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. Neal, Mrs. Willard, Mrs. Whitman,
+Miss Lynch, Miss Hunter, Miss Cheesebro', and indeed nearly all the
+writers of her sex who have attained any eminence in our literary
+world. The volume will be illustrated with nine engravings on steel,
+by Cheney and other eminent artists.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE REV. WALTER COLTON has just published through A.S. Barnes & Co.
+"Three Years in California," a journal of experiences and observations
+in the gold region, from the period when it first attracted the
+attention of the Atlantic cities. Mr. Colton was some time alcade
+of Monterey, and he had in every way abundant opportunity to acquire
+whatever facts are deserving of preservation in history. His "Ship
+and Shore," "Constantinople and Athens," "Deck and Port," and other
+works, have illustrated his genial temper, shrewdness, and skill in
+description and character writing; and this book will increase his
+reputation for these qualities. It contains portraits of Capt. Sutter,
+Col. Fremont, Mr. Gwin, Mr. Wright, Mr. Larkin, and Mr. Snyder, a map
+of the valley of the Sacramento, and several other engravings, very
+spirited in design and execution.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. GEORGE STEPHENS, author of the "_Manuscripts of Erdely_," has
+been struck by ill health and reduced to poverty, and an amateur play
+has been prepared for his benefit at the Soho Theater. He wrote "The
+Vampire," "Montezuma," and "Martinuzzi."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Gallery of Illustrious Americans, conducted by Mr. Lester,
+continues with every number to increase in interest. The work is
+designed to embrace folio portraits, engraved by Davignon, from
+daguerreotypes by Brady, of twenty-four of the most eminent American
+citizens who have lived since the time of Washington. The portraits
+thus far have been admirable for truthfulness and artistic effect. It
+may be said that the _only_ published pictures we have, deserving to
+be called portraits, of the historian Prescott, or Mr. Calhoun, or
+Colonel Fremont, are in this Gallery. The great artist, naturalist,
+and man of letters, Audubon, is reflected here as he appears at the
+close of the battle, receiving the reverence of nations and ages.
+In the biographical department Mr. Lester has evinced very eminent
+abilities for this kind of writing. He seizes the prominent events
+of history and the strong points of character, and presents them
+with such force and fullness, and happy combination, as to make the
+letter-press as interesting and valuable as the engraved portion
+of the work. We are pleased to learn that the Gallery is remarkably
+successful. No publication of equal splendor and expensiveness has
+ever before been so well received in this country. The cost of it
+is but one dollar per number, or twenty dollars for the series of
+twenty-four numbers. It is now half completed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+M. Max Schlesinger, author of "The War in Hungary, in 1848-9,"--a
+work which, from what we read of it in the foreign journals, is much
+the most striking and attractive of all that have appeared upon its
+subject in English,--is described in the _Athenaeum_, as by birth
+a Hungarian, by the accidents of fortune a German. For some time a
+resident in Prague, and more recently settled in Berlin, he has had
+excellent opportunities of seeing the men and studying the questions
+connected both in the literary and political sense with the present
+movement of ideas and races in Eastern Europe. His acquaintance
+with the aspects of nature in his native land--his knowledge of the
+peculiar character of its inhabitants, their manners, modes of thought
+and habits of life--his familiarity with past history--his right
+conception of the leading men in the recent struggle--are all vouched
+for as "essentially accurate" by no less an authority than Count
+Pulszky. It would be an injustice merely to say that M. Schlesinger
+has given in an original and picturesque way a general view of the
+course of events in the late war, more complete and connected than is
+afforded in any account hitherto presented to the public. He has done
+more: he has enabled the German and English reader to understand the
+miracle of a nation of four or five millions of men rising up at the
+command of a great statesman, and doing successful battle with the
+elaborately organized power of a first-class European state, shaking
+it to its very foundations, and contending, not without hope,
+against two mighty military empires,--until the treachery from within
+paralyzed its power of resistance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Mayo's new novel, "The Berber, or the Mountaineer of the Atlas,"
+published by Putnam, promises to be scarcely less popular than his
+"Kaloolah." The _Evening Post_ says of it: "Kaloolah was a sprightly
+narrative of the wanderings of a Yankee, who seemed to combine in
+his person the characteristics of Robinson Crusoe with those of Baron
+Munchausen; but the Berber professes to be nothing more than a novel;
+or, as the author says in his preface, his principal object has been
+to tell an agreeable story in an agreeable way. In doing so, however,
+an eye has been had to the illustration of Moorish manners, customs,
+history, and geography; to the exemplification of Moorish life as
+it actually is in Barbary in the present day, and not as it usually
+appears in the vague and poetic glamour of the common Moorish romance.
+It has also been an object to introduce to the acquaintance of the
+reader a people who have played a most important part in the world's
+history, but of whom very few educated people know anything more than
+the name. As Dr. Mayo has traveled extensively over the regions he
+describes, we presume that his descriptions may be taken as true. His
+account of the Berbers, a tribe of ancient Asiatic origin, who inhabit
+a range of the Atlas, and who live a semi-savage life like the Arabs,
+is minute, and to the intelligent reader quite as interesting as the
+more narrative parts of the work. It is, perhaps, the best evidence of
+the merits of the book, that the whole first edition was exhausted by
+orders from the country before the first number had appeared in the
+city."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Col. Forbes, who was in Italy during the revolution, and many years
+previous, and who was himself, both in a military and civic capacity,
+one of the actors in that event, the _Evening Post_ informs us, is
+about to give public lectures on the subject of Italy in the various
+cities and towns of the United States. Col. Forbes was intimately
+connected with the revolutionary chiefs during the brief existence
+of the Roman Republic, and was directly and confidently employed by
+Mazzini. His knowledge of the country, its people, its politics, and
+its recent history, will supply him with materials for making his
+lectures highly interesting and instructive.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Gem of the Western World, edited by Mrs. Hewitt, and published by
+Cornish & Co., Fulton street, is a very beautiful gift-book, and in
+its literary character is deserving of a place with the most splendid
+and; tasteful annuals of the season. Mrs. Hewitt's own contributions
+to it embrace some of her finest compositions, and are of course among
+its most brilliant contents.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FRENCH PERIODICALS.--A Parisian correspondent of the London _Literary
+Gazette_ observes, that if we exclude the _Revue des Deux Mondes_--a,
+sort of cross between the English _Quarterly_ and the monthlies,--if
+we exclude also a few dry scientific periodicals, and one or two
+theatrical or musical newspapers, we shall seek in vain for any
+_Quarterly_, or _Blackwood_, or _Art Union_, or _Literary Gazette_;
+and that even the periodicals and journals which make the nearest
+approach to the weekly, monthly, or quarterly publications of England,
+are either wretched compilations, or abominably ill-written and
+ill-printed. The _feuilleton_ system of the newspapers is no doubt
+the principal cause of the periodical literature being in such
+an extremely low condition. But though literary and scientific
+periodicals be, generally speaking, vile in quality, they can at least
+boast of quantity. There are, it seems, not fewer than 300 of one
+kind or another published in Paris alone. Among them are 44 devoted
+to medicine, chemistry, natural science, &c.; 42, trade, commerce,
+railways, advertisements; 34, fashions; 30, law; 22, administration,
+public works, roads, bridges, mines; 19, archaeology, history,
+biography, geography, numismatics; 19, public instruction and
+education; 15, agriculture and horticulture; 8, bibliography and
+typography; 10, army and navy; 7, literary; the rest theatrical,
+musical, or of a character too hybrid to be classified.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ILLUSTRATED DOMESTIC BIBLE, edited by the Rev. Ingram Cobbin,
+seems to us decidedly the best family Bible ever offered to the trade
+in this country. It is printed with remarkable correctness and beauty;
+illustrated with a very large number of maps and engravings on wood;
+and its notes, written with much condensation and perspicuity, are
+such as are necessary for the understanding of the text. Indeed, all
+that is added to the letter of the Bible is legitimate and necessary
+_illustration_. It is being published in a series of twenty-five
+numbers, at twenty-five cents each, by S. Hueston, publisher of _The
+Knickerbocker_, Nassau-street.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE VIENNA UNIVERSITY, long one of the best in Europe, has not been
+reopened since the insurrection of November, 1848, its principal
+edifice having been occupied as barracks for a regiment of soldiers.
+It is now proposed to restore it to its proper use, but great
+difficulty is experienced in finding professors. The old ones
+are scattered, some as exiles in foreign countries, on account of
+democratic opinions,--some in prison for the same reason, others
+employed elsewhere. Wackernagel, the eminent professor of the German
+Language and Literature at Basle, Switzerland, tempted by liberal
+offers, had promised to come to Vienna, and lend the aid of his
+reputation and talents to the restoration of the University, but being
+lately at Milan, on a wedding tour, as he and his wife were passing
+through the _Piazza d'Armi_, their ears were saluted by cries of
+pain, which on inquiry they found to proceed from sundry rebellious
+Italians, of both sexes, who were receiving each from twenty-five to
+fifty blows of the military baton, or cane, employed by the Austrians
+in flogging soldiers. Madame Wackernagel at once declared that she
+would never willingly inhabit a country whose laws and habits suffered
+women to be so brutally punished for patriotism, and her husband could
+only agree with her. He has accordingly broken off the engagement, and
+the Government cannot hope to supply his place.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HINCKS ON LITERARY LARCENY.--A Canadian friend sends us the following
+extract from a speech by Francis Hincks, a leading member of the
+Canadian Ministry, touching the International Copyright question:
+
+ "The American publisher steals the works of British authors,
+ because he is immoral enough to do it, because he is scoundrel
+ enough, and the nation is scoundrel enough to permit it.
+ (Ironical cheers.) Yes, because the nation is scoundrel enough
+ to permit it."
+
+Our unknown friend who sends us this wants us to give Hincks a
+thorough roasting for it, and evidently expects every hair on our head
+to bristle with indignation. Now we have not the least objection to
+roasting the Minister aforesaid, and will do it when a fair chance
+presents itself, but we don't consider this such a chance. In fact,
+though we think Francis has drawn rather a strong draught from "the
+well of English undefiled," yet essentially we regard his observations
+above quoted as rather more than half right. It _is_ rascally to steal
+a man's book, print it, sell it, read it, and refuse him any pay for
+the labor of writing it; and we don't see that his being an Englishman
+makes any material difference. There may be a cheaper way to get the
+proceeds of another man's toil than by paying for it, but we don't
+think there is any other strictly honest way.--_Tribune_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HERR SCHUMANN's opera, "Genevieve," was produced at Leipsic on the
+28th ultimo. "This work," says the _Gazette Musicale_, "after having
+been much recommended beforehand, does not seem to have satisfied
+public expectation, being concert music, without any dramatic force."
+For the verdict which will finally be passed on "Genevieve" every
+one must be curious who has at all followed the journals of Young
+Germany in the recent crusades which they nave made, not so much to
+establish Schumann as a great composer, as to prove him greater than
+Mendelssohn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GRAND LITERARY TRADE SALES are now in progress in New York: and
+the catalogues of the rival houses are the largest ever printed.
+Cooley & Keese at their splendid hall in Broadway present this year a
+richer and more extensive series of invoices than has ever before been
+sold in America.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+THE FINE ARTS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bavaria is a sort of artists' paradise, both the late King Louis and
+the present Maximilian being determined to leave behind them the glory
+of munificent patrons of art. In this they have so far succeeded, that
+Munich, which before their time was by no means among German cities
+the most worthy a traveler's attention, may now dispute the palm even
+with Dresden, notwithstanding the unrivaled gallery of paintings,
+possessed by the latter. For students of modern art, and especially
+of the German schools, Munich is incomparable, while its collection of
+ancient sculptures cannot be equaled out of Italy. We now learn that
+King Maximilian has conceived the plan of a grand series of pictures
+to comprehend the prominent epochs and events of history. The most
+eminent German and foreign artists are to be invited to assist in
+carrying out this immense undertaking; so that thus the series will
+not only represent the great experiences of mankind, but will, it is
+hoped, contain specimens of all the great schools of modern painting.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An exhibition of indisputable works by the old painters is now open
+at Valenciennes, in France. It consists of pictures belonging to the
+family of the Belgian general Rottiers. They are for sale, either
+single or together. Among them is a St. Denis, bearing his Head, by
+Rubens, said to have been painted by order of Pope Urban VIII. It was
+deposited in the Convent of the _Annunciades_, at Antioch; in 1747,
+Louis XV. offered 100,000 francs for it, but was refused, the convent
+having no right to dispose of it. Afterward, on the suppression
+of the convent, it fell into the hands of the family to which it
+now belongs. The exhibition also contains a landscape by Salvator
+Rosa, representing a scene in the Appenines; a Magdalen kneeling
+in a Cavern, by Kneller; two Allegories, by Giulio Romano; several
+portraits by Rubens and Van Dyke, besides other works of less value.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Darley's "Sleepy Hollow."--The London Art Journal, for July, has the
+following notice of Mr. Darley's illustrations of Irving's "Legends of
+Sleepy Hollow," published by the _American Art Union_: "The charmingly
+quaint original legend told with so much quiet humor by Washington
+Irving, is here illustrated by a native artist in a congenial spirit,
+and his scenes realized in a manner which must give its author
+satisfaction, and redound to the credit of the designer. We have
+before noticed the great ability exhibited by Mr. Darley for the mode
+of illustration he adopts, which we may add is that rendered famous
+by Retzsh. The series we are now noticing are quite as meritorious as
+that designed by the same artist to Rip Van Winkle; but the subject
+matter is not equally capable of such broad contrasts in drollery
+as that legend presents. Nevertheless, Mr. Darley has executed his
+task in the truest appreciation of his author; and his hero is the
+veritable Ichabod Crane of Irving; his love-making scene with "the
+peerless daughter of Van Tassel" is exquisite in its quiet humor;
+so also is the merry-making in the Dutch Farmer's home. Altogether,
+the series is extremely good, and does the greatest credit to the
+designer. American literature thus illustrated by American artists
+cannot fail to achieve honor to that country in the old world as well
+as the new. We believe Mr. Darley, in his line, to be as great as any
+American artist whose works have fallen under our notice."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Chaucer's Monument.--The _Athenaeum_ says, "One of the objections
+formerly urged against taking steps to restore the perishing memorial
+of the Father of English Poetry in Poet's Corner was, that it was not
+really his tomb, but a monument erected to do honor to his memory a
+century and a half after his death. An examination, however, of the
+tomb itself, by competent authorities, has proved this objection to
+be unfounded--inasmuch as there can exist no doubt, we hear, from
+the difference of workmanship, material, &c., that the altar tomb is
+the original tomb of Geoffrey Chaucer,--and that instead of Nicholas
+Brigham having erected an entirely new monument, he only added to that
+which then existed the overhanging canopy, &c. So that the sympathy of
+Chaucer's admirers is now invited to the restoration of what till now
+was really not known to exist--_the original tomb_ of the Poet--as
+well as to the additions made to it by the affectionate remembrance of
+Nicholas Brigham."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lessing's new picture.--A letter from Duesseldorf under date of
+9th July, in the _Courier and Enquirer_, says that Lessing's great
+painting, "The Martyrdom of Huss," Sad just been finished and had been
+exhibited for the last few days at the Academy of Fine Arts, where
+it was visited by thousands. When it became known that orders for its
+immediate shipment had arrived from New York, the desire to obtain a
+last view of this truly great work became so intense that it was found
+necessary to put the Police in requisition to keep back the throng,
+and the gates of the Academy had to be closed. It causes general
+regret that it is to be sent out of the country. The _Cologne Gazette_
+calls this picture the most sublime production of the great artist,
+and expresses the conviction that a speedy fortune might be realized
+by its exhibition in Europe.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. George Flagg has just completed a portrait of Mrs. E. Oakes Smith,
+which will be ranked among the first productions of his pencil. We
+know of scarce a picture as beautiful or a portrait as truthful. It is
+to be engraved, we believe, by Cheney.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mlle. Rachel.--The wonderful accuracy of the death-scene in "Adrienne
+Lecouvreur" has been the object of universal praise in London, not
+merely from the thrilled and thralled public, but from men of art
+and science. A physician, it is said, was complimenting Mademoiselle
+on her amazing truth to the symptoms of mortal agony: "You must have
+studied death closely," said he. "Yes, I have," was the quiet reply;
+"my maid's. I went up to her--I stayed with her--she recommended her
+mother to me!--I was studying my part." This is probably merely one
+of those cynical stories with which the sharp people of Paris love
+to environ and encircle every one who stands a dangerous chance of
+becoming too popular. But smaller artists than Mademoiselle Rachel
+have sometimes had recourse to curious expedients to give their
+dramatic personations a show at reality. The French _prima donna_, who
+not very long ago appeared in M. Clapisson's poor opera, "Jeanne la
+Folle," is said to have shut herself up in the _Salpetriere_, by way
+of studying _her_ part, and to have been rewarded for her zealous
+curiosity by receiving a basin of scalding soup dashed in her face by
+one of the poor miserable objects of her examination.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Frankfort journal states that the colossal statue of Bavaria, by
+SCHWANTHALER, which is to be placed on the hill of Seudling, surpasses
+in its gigantic proportions all the works of the moderns. It will have
+to be removed in pieces from the foundry where it is cast to its place
+of destination,--and each piece will require sixteen horses to draw
+it. The great toes are each half a metre in length. In the head two
+persons could dance a polka very conveniently,--while the nose might
+lodge the musician. The thickness of the robe--which forms a rich
+drapery descending to the ankles--is about six inches, and its
+circumference at the bottom about two hundred metres. The Crown
+of Victory which the figure holds in her hands weighs one hundred
+quintals (a quintal is a hundred-weight).
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The death of SIR ROBERT PEEL, says the _Literary Gazette_, has
+awakened a busy competing spirit for the production of articles
+relating to him, and especially in connection with Literature and the
+Arta. In the one, Memoirs, Speeches, Recollections, Anecdotes, &c.,
+have been abundantly supplied; and in the other, every printshop
+window in London displays its Peels of every style and every degree,
+but mostly very indifferent, absolutely bad, or utter caricature.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Goupil, Vibert & Co. have published a series of portraits of eminent
+Americans which is deserving of the largest approval and sale.
+The head of Mr. Bryant is the best ever published of that poet; it
+presents his fine features and striking phrenology with great force
+and with pleasing as well as just effect. A portrait of Mr. Willis
+is wonderfully truthful, in detail, and is in an eminent degree
+characteristic. The admirers of that author who have not seen him will
+find in it their ideal, and all his acquaintances will see in it as
+distinctly the real man who sits in the congress of editors as the
+representative of the polite world. The head of the artist Mount,
+after Elliott, is not by any means less successful. Among the other
+portraits are those of Gen. Scott, President Fillmore, Robert Fulton,
+J.Q. Adams, Mr. Clay, Mr. Webster, and President Taylor. They are all
+on imperial sheets, and are sold at $1 each.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Paris papers tell a story of a young actor, who finding no
+engagement in that city, came to America to try his fortune. From
+New Orleans he went to California, was lucky as a digger, embarked
+in business and got immensely rich. He is now building in the Champs
+Elysees a magnificent hotel for his mother. All actors are not so
+fortunate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Expected arrivals from Nineveh.--The Great Bull, and upward of one
+hundred tons of sculpture, excavated by Dr. Layard, are now on their
+way to England, and may be expected in the course of September. In
+addition-to the Elgin, Phigalian, Lycian, and Boodroun marbles, the
+British Museum will soon be enriched with a magnificent series of
+Assyrian sculptures.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mr. Burt has nearly finished the "Anne Page and Slender" of Leslie,
+which is to be the annual engraving of the Art Union. It will be an
+admirable picture, but we cannot but regret that the managers selected
+for this purpose a work so familiar.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The French Minister of the Interior has decided that marble busts of
+M. Gay-Lussac and of M. Blainville shall be executed at the expense of
+the government, and placed in the Institute.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+Mr. Powell, who is living in Paris, engaged upon his picture for the
+capital, has been in ill health nearly all the summer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+RECENT DEATHS.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The French papers report the death, at Paris, of M. MORA, the Mexican
+Minister Plenipotentiary at the Court of St. James. M. Mora was
+the author of a History of Mexico and its Revolutions since the
+establishment of its independence, and editor-in-chief of several
+journals in Mexico.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MR. B. SIMMONS, an amiable and accomplished writer, whose name will
+be recollected as that of a frequent contributor of lyrical poems of
+a high order to _Blackwood's Magazine_, and to several of the Annuals,
+died in London on the 20th of July.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM GRAHAM'S MAGAZINE.]
+
+ON A PORTRAIT OF CROMWELL.
+
+BY JAMES T. FIELD.
+
+ "Paint me as I am," said Cromwell,
+ Rough with age, and gashed with wars--
+ "Show my visage as you find it--
+ Less than truth my soul abhors!"
+
+ This was he whose mustering phalanx
+ Swept the foe at Marston Moor;
+ This was he whose arm uplifted
+ From the dust the fainting poor.
+
+ God had made his face uncomely--
+ "Paint me as I am," he said.
+ So he lives upon the canvas
+ Whom they chronicled as _dead_!
+
+ Simple justice he requested
+ At the artist's glowing hands,
+ "Simple justice!" from his ashes
+ Cries a voice that still commands.
+
+ And, behold! the page of History,
+ Centuries dark with Cromwell's name,
+ Shines to-day with thrilling luster
+ From the light of Cromwell's fame!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE EXAMINER.]
+
+WORDSWORTH'S POSTHUMOUS POEM.[3]
+
+This is a voice that speaks to us across a gulf of nearly fifty years.
+A few months ago Wordsworth was taken from us at the ripe age of
+fourscore, yet here we have him addressing the public, as for the
+first time, with all the fervor, the unworn freshness, the hopeful
+confidence of thirty. We are carried back to the period when
+Coleridge, Byron, Scott, Rogers, and Moore were in their youthful
+prime. We live again in the stirring days when the poets who divided
+public attention and interest with the Fabian struggle in Portugal and
+Spain, with the wild and terrible events of the Russian campaign, with
+the uprising of the Teutonic nations and the overthrow of Napoleon,
+were in a manner but commencing their cycle of songs. This is to
+renew, to antedate, the youth of a majority of the living generation.
+But only those whose memory still carries them so far back, can feel
+within them any reflex of that eager excitement with which the news of
+battles fought and won, or mailcoach copies of some new work of Scott,
+or Byron, or the _Edinburgh Review_, were looked for and received in
+those already old days.
+
+[Footnote 3: The Prelude, or Growth of a Poet's Mind; an
+Autobiographical Poem. By William Wordsworth. London, Moxon. [New
+York, Appletons.]]
+
+We need not remind the readers of the _Excursion_ that when Wordsworth
+was enabled by the generous enthusiasm of Raisley Calvert to retire
+with a slender independence to his native mountains, there to devote
+himself exclusively to his art, his first step was to review and
+record in verse the origin and progress of his own powers, as far
+as he was acquainted with them. This was at once an exercise in
+versification, and a test for the kind of poetry for which he was
+by temperament fitted. The result was a determination to compose a
+philosophical poem containing views of man, of nature, and of society.
+This, ambitious conception has been doomed to share the fate of so
+many other colossal undertakings. Of the three parts of his _Recluse_,
+thus planned, only the second, (the _Excursion_, published in 1814,)
+has been completed. Of the other two there exists only the first book
+of the first, and the plan of the third. The _Recluse_ will remain in
+fragmentary greatness, a poetical Cathedral of Cologne.
+
+Matters standing thus, it has not been without a melancholy sense of
+the uncertainty of human projects, and of the contrast between the
+sanguine enterprise and its silent evaporation (so often the "history
+of an individual mind"), that we have perused this _Prelude_ which no
+completed strain was destined to follow. Yet in the poem itself there
+is nothing to inspire depression. It is animated throughout with the
+hopeful confidence in the poet's own powers, so natural to the time
+of life at which it was composed; it evinces a power and soar of
+imagination unsurpassed in any of his writings; and its images and
+incidents have a freshness and distinctness which they not seldom
+lost, when they came to be elaborated, as many of them were, in his
+minor poems of a later date.
+
+The _Prelude_, as the title-page indicates, is a poetical
+autobiography, commencing with the earliest reminiscences of the
+author, and continued to the time at which it was composed. We are
+told that it was begun in 1799 and completed, in 1805. It consists
+of fourteen books. Two are devoted to the infancy and school-time of
+the poet; four to the period of his University life; two to a brief
+residence in London immediately subsequent to his leaving Cambridge,
+and a retrospect of the progress his mind had then made; and three
+to a residence in France, chiefly in the Loire, but partly in Paris,
+during the stormy period of Louis the Sixteenth's flight and capture,
+and the fierce contest between the Girondins and Robespierre. Five
+books are then occupied with an analysis of the internal struggle
+occasioned by the contradictory influences of rural and secluded
+nature in boyhood, and of society when the young man first mingles
+with the world. The surcease of the strife is recorded in the
+fourteenth book, entitled "Conclusion."
+
+The poem is addressed to Coleridge; and apart from its poetical
+merits, is interesting as at once a counterpart and a supplement to
+that author's philosophical and beautiful criticism of the _Lyrical
+Ballads_ in his _Biographia Literaria_. It completes the explanation,
+there given, of the peculiar constitution of Wordsworth's mind, and of
+his poetical theory. It confirms and justifies our opinion that that
+theory was essentially partial and erroneous; but at the same time it
+establishes the fact that Wordsworth was a true and a great poet in
+despite of his theory.
+
+The great defect of Wordsworth, in our judgment, was want of sympathy
+with and knowledge of men. From his birth till his entry at college,
+he lived in a region where he met with none whose minds might awaken
+his sympathies, and where life was altogether uneventful. On the
+other hand, that region abounded with the inert, striking, and most
+impressive objects of natural scenery. The elementary grandeur
+and beauty of external nature came thus to fill up his mind to
+the exclusion of human interests. To such a result his individual
+constitution powerfully contributed. The sensuous element was
+singularly deficient in his nature. He never seems to have passed
+through that erotic period out of which some poets have never emerged.
+A soaring, speculative imagination, and an impetuous, resistless
+self-will, were his distinguishing characteristics. From first to last
+he concentrated himself within himself; brooding over his own fancies
+and imaginations to the comparative disregard of the incidents and
+impressions which suggested them; and was little susceptible of ideas
+originating in other minds. We behold the result. He lives alone in a
+world of mountains, streams, and atmospheric phenomena, dealing with
+moral abstractions, and rarely encountered by even shadowy specters
+of beings outwardly resembling himself. There is measureless grandeur
+and power in his moral speculations. There is intense reality in
+his pictures of external nature. But though his human characters are
+presented with great skill of metaphysical analysis, they have rarely
+life or animation. He is always the prominent, often the exclusive,
+object of his own song.
+
+Upon a mind so constituted, with its psychological peculiarities
+so cherished and confirmed, the fortunes and fates of others, and
+the stirring events of his time, made vivid but very transient
+impressions. The conversation and writing of contemporaries trained
+among books, and with the faculty of speech more fully developed than
+that of thought, seemed colorless and empty to one with--whom natural
+objects and grandeurs were always present in such overpowering force.
+Excluded by his social position from taking an active part in the
+public events of the day, and repelled by the emptiness of the then
+fashionable literature, he turned to private and humble life as
+possessing at least a reality. But he thus withheld himself from
+the contemplation of those great mental excitements which only great
+public struggles can awaken. He contracted a habit of exaggerating the
+importance of every-day incidents and emotions. He accustomed himself
+to see in men and in social relations only what he was predetermined
+to see there, and to impute to them a value and importance derived
+mainly from his own self-will. Even his natural good taste contributed
+to confirm him in his error. The two prevailing schools of literature
+in England, at that time, were the trashy and mouthing writers who
+adopted the sounding language of Johnson and Darwin, unenlivened
+by the vigorous thought of either; and the "dead-sea apes" of
+that inflated, sentimental, revolutionary style which Diderot had
+unconsciously originated, and Kotzebue carried beyond the verge of
+caricature. The right feeling and manly thought of Wordsworth were
+disgusted by these shallow word-mongers, and he flew to the other
+extreme. Under the influences--repulsive and attractive--we have thus
+attempted to indicate, he adopted the theory that as much of grandeur
+and profound emotion was to be found in mere domestic incidents and
+feelings, as on the more conspicuous stage of public life; and that
+a bald and naked simplicity of language was the perfection of style.
+Singularly enough, he was confirmed in these notions by the very
+writer of the day whose own natural genius, more than any of his
+contemporaries, impelled him to revel in great, wild, supernatural
+conceptions; and to give utterance to them in gorgeous language.
+Coleridge was perhaps the only contemporary from whom Wordsworth ever
+took an opinion; and that he did so from him, is mainly attributable
+to the fact that Coleridge did little more than reproduce to him
+his own notions, sometimes rectified by a subtler logic, but always
+rendered more attractive by new and dazzling illustrations.
+
+Fortunately it is out of the power of the most perverse theory to
+spoil the true poet. The poems of Wordsworth must continue to charm
+and elevate mankind, in defiance of his crotchets, just as Luther,
+Henri Quatre, and other living impersonations of poetry do, despite
+all quaint peculiarities of the attire, the customs, or the opinions
+of their respective ages, with which they were imbued. The spirit of
+truth and poetry redeems, ennobles, hallows, every external form in
+which it may be lodged. We may "pshaw" and "pooh" at Harry Gill and
+the Idiot Boy; but the deep and tremulous tenderness of sentiment,
+the strong-winged flight of fancy, the excelling and unvarying purity,
+which pervade all the writings of Wordsworth, and the exquisite melody
+of his lyrical poems, must ever continue to attract and purify the
+mind. The very excesses into which his one-sided theory betrayed him,
+acted as a useful counter-agent to the prevailing bad taste of his
+time.
+
+The Prelude may take a permanent place as one of the most perfect of
+his compositions. It has much of the fearless felicity of youth; and
+its imagery has the sharp and vivid outline of ideas fresh from the
+brain. The subject--the development of his own great powers--raises
+him above that willful dallying with trivialties which repels us in
+some of his other works. And there is real vitality in the theme,
+both from our anxiety to know the course of such a mind, and from
+the effect of an absorbing interest in himself excluding that languor
+which sometimes seized him in his efforts to impart or attribute
+interest to themes possessing little or none in themselves. Its mere
+narrative, though often very homely, and dealing in too many words,
+is often characterized also by elevated imagination, and always by
+eloquence. The bustle of London life, the prosaic uncouthness of its
+exterior, the earnest heart that beats beneath it, the details even of
+its commonest amusements, from Bartholomew Fair to Sadler's Wells, are
+portrayed with simple force and delicate discrimination; and for the
+most part skillfully contrasted with the rural life of the poet's
+native home. There are some truthful and powerful sketches of French
+character and life, in the early revolutionary era. But above all,
+as might have been anticipated, Wordsworth's heart revels in the
+elementary beauty and grandeur of his mountain theme; while his
+own simple history is traced with minute fidelity, and is full of
+unflagging interest.
+
+We have already adverted to the fact that this Prelude was but
+the overture to a grander song which the poet has left, in a great
+measure, unsung. Reverting to this consideration an important
+fact seems to force itself upon our notice. The creative power of
+Wordsworth would appear to have been paralyzed after the publication
+of his Excursion. All his most finished works precede that period. His
+later writings generally lack the strength and freshness which we find
+in those of an earlier date. Some may attribute this to his want of
+the stimulus which the necessity of writing for a livelihood imparts,
+and in part they may be right; but this is not the whole secret. That
+his isolation from the stirring contact of competition, that his utter
+disregard of contemporary events, allowed his mind, which for perfect
+health's sake requires constantly-renewed impulses from without, to
+subside into comparative hebetude, there can be no doubt whatever.
+But the main secret of the freezing up of his fountain of poetical
+inspiration, we really take to have been his change of politics.
+Wordsworth's muse was essentially liberal--one may say, Jacobinical.
+That he was unconscious of any sordid motive for his change, we
+sincerely believe; but as certainly his conforming was the result less
+of reasonable conviction than of willfulness. It was by a determined
+effort of his will that he brought himself, to believe in the
+Church-and-State notions which he latterly promulgated. Hence the want
+of definite views, and of a living interest, which characterizes all
+his writings subsequent to that change, when compared with those of
+an earlier time. It was Wordsworth's wayward fate to be patronized and
+puffed into notice by the champions of old abuses, by the advocates
+of the pedantry of Oxford, and by the maintainers of the despotism not
+even of Pitt but of Castlereagh. It is already felt, however, that the
+poet whom these men were mainly instrumental in bringing into notice,
+will live in men's memories by exactly those of his writings most
+powerful to undermine and overthrow their dull and faded bigotries.
+Despite his own efforts, Wordsworth (as has been said of Napoleon) is
+the child and champion of Jacobinism. Though clothed in ecclesiastical
+formulas, his religion is little more than the simple worship of
+nature; his noblest moral flights are struggles to emancipate himself
+from conventional usage; and the strong ground of his thoughts, as of
+his style, is nature stripped of the gauds with which the pupils of
+courts and circles would bedeck and be-ribbon it. Even in the ranks of
+our opponents Wordsworth has been laboring in our behalf.
+
+It is in the record of his extra-academic life that the poet soars his
+freest flight, in passages where we have a very echo of the emotions
+of an emancipated worshiper of nature flying back to his loved
+resorts. Apart from its poetic value, the book is a graphical and
+interesting portraiture of the struggles of an ingenuous and impetuous
+mind to arrive at a clear insight into its own interior constitution
+and external relations, and to secure the composure of self-knowledge
+and of equally adjusted aspirations. As a poem it is likely to
+lay fast and enduring hold on pure and aspiring intellects, and to
+strengthen the claim of Wordsworth to endure with his land's language.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE MONUMENT TO SIR ROBERT PEEL.
+
+A LETTER FROM WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR,
+
+TO THE EDITOR OF THE 'EXAMINER.'
+
+Now the fever hath somewhat subsided which came over the people from
+the grave of Sir Robert Peel, there is room for a few observations on
+his decease and on its consequences. All public writers, I believe,
+have expatiated on his character, comparing him with others who,
+within our times, have occupied the same position. My own opinion
+has invariably been that he was the wisest of all our statesmen;
+and certainly, though he found reason to change his sentiments and
+his measures, he changed them honestly, well weighed, always from
+conviction, and always for the better. He has been compared, and
+seemingly in no spirit of hostility or derision, with a Castlereagh,
+a Perceval, an Addington. a Canning. Only one of these is worthy of
+notice, namely Canning, whose brilliancy made his shallowness less
+visible, and whose graces, of style and elocution threw a vail over
+his unsoundness and lubricity. Sir Robert Peel was no satirist or
+epigrammatist: he was only a statesman in public life: only a virtuous
+and friendly man in private. _Par negotiis, nee supra_. Walpole alone
+possessed his talents for business. But neither Peel nor his family
+was enriched from the spoils of his country; Walpole spent in building
+and pictures more than double the value of his hereditary estate, and
+left the quadruple to his descendants.
+
+Dissimilar from Walpole, and from commoner and coarser men who
+occupied the same office, Peel forbade that a name which he had
+made illustrious should be degraded and stigmatized by any title
+of nobility. For he knew that all those titles had their origin and
+nomenclature from military services, and belong to military men, like
+their epaulets and spurs and chargers. They sound well enough against
+the sword and helmet, but strangely in law-courts and cathedrals: but,
+reformer as he was, he could not reform all this; he could only keep
+clear of it in his own person.
+
+I now come to the main object of my letter.
+
+Subscriptions are advertised for the purpose of raising monuments
+to Sir Robert Peel; and a motion has been made in Parliament for
+one in Westminster Abbey at the public expense, Whatever may be the
+precedents, surely the house of God should contain no object but
+such as may remind us of His presence and our duty to Him. Long ago I
+proposed that ranges of statues and busts should commemorate the great
+worthies of our country. All the lower part of our National Gallery
+might be laid open for this purpose. Even the best monuments in
+Westminster Abbey and St. Paul's are deformities to the edifice. Let
+us not continue this disgrace. Deficient as we are in architects,
+we have many good statuaries, and we might well employ them on the
+statues of illustrious commanders, and the busts of illustrious
+statesmen and writers. Meanwhile our cities, and especially the
+commercial, would, I am convinced, act more wisely, and more
+satisfactorily to the relict of the deceased, if, instead of statues,
+they erected schools and almshouses, with an inscription to his
+memory.
+
+We glory in about sixty whose busts and statues may occupy what are
+now the "deep solitudes and awful cells" in our national gallery. Our
+literary men of eminence are happily more numerous than the political
+or the warlike, or both together. There is only one class of them
+which might be advantageously excluded, namely, the theological; and
+my reasons are these. First, their great talents were chiefly employed
+on controversy; secondly, and consequently, their images would excite
+dogmatical discord. Every sect of the Anglican Church, and every
+class of dissenters, complaining of undue preferences. Painture and
+sculpture lived in the midst of corruption, lived throughout it, and
+seemed indeed to draw vitality from it, as flowers the most delicate
+from noxious air; but they collapsed at the searching breath of free
+inquiry, and could not abide persecution. The torch of Philosophy
+never kindled the suffocating fagot, under whose smoke Theology was
+mistaken for Religion. Theology had, until now, been speculative
+and quiescent: she abandoned to Philosophy these humbler qualities:
+instead of allaying and dissipating, as Philosophy had always done,
+she excited and she directed animosities. Oriental in her parentage,
+and keeping up her wide connections in that country, she acquired
+there all the artifices most necessary to the furtherance of her
+designs: among the rest was ventriloquism, which she quite perfected,
+making her words seem to sound from above and from below and from
+every side around. Ultimately, when men had fallen on their faces at
+this miracle, she assumed the supreme power. Kings were her lackeys,
+and nations the dust under her palfrey's hoof. By her sentence Truth
+was gagged, scourged, branded, cast down on the earth in manacles; and
+Fortitude, who had stood at Truth's side, was fastened with nails and
+pulleys to the stake. I would not revive by any images, in the abode
+of the graceful and the gentle Arts, these sorrowful reminiscences.
+The vicissitudes of the world appear to be bringing round again the
+spectral Past. Let us place great men between it and ourselves: they
+all are tutelar: not the warrior and the statesman only; not only the
+philosopher; but also the historian who follows them step by step, and
+the poet who secures us from peril and dejection by his counter-charm.
+Philosophers in most places are unwelcome: but there is no better
+reason why Shaftesbury and Hobbes should be excluded from our
+gallery, than why Epicurus should have been from Cicero's or Zeno from
+Lucullus's. Of our sovereigns, I think Alfred, Cromwell, and William
+III alone are eligible; and they, because they opposed successfully
+the subverters of the laws. Three viceroys of Ireland will deservedly
+be placed in the same receptacle; Sir John Perrot, Lord Chesterfield,
+and (in due time) the last Lord-Deputy. One Speaker, one only, of the
+Parliament; he without whom no Parliament would be now existing;
+he who declared to Henry IV. that until all public grievances were
+removed, no subsidy should be granted. The name of this Speaker may be
+found in Rapin; English historians talk about facts, forgetting men.
+
+Admirals and generals are numerous and conspicuous. Drake, Blake,
+Rodney, Jervis, Nelson, Collingwood; the subduer of Algiers beaten
+down for the French to occupy: and the defender of Acre, the first who
+defeated, discomfited, routed, broke, and threw into shameful flight,
+Bonaparte. Our generals are Marlborough, Peterborough, Wellington, and
+that successor to his fame in India, who established the empire that
+was falling from us, who achieved in a few days two arduous victories,
+who never failed in any enterprise, who accomplished the most
+difficult with the smallest expenditure of blood, who corrected
+the disorders of the military, who gave the soldier an example of
+temperance, the civilian of simplicity and frugality, and whose sole
+(but exceedingly great) reward, was the approbation of our greatest
+man.
+
+With these come the statesmen of the Commonwealth, the students of
+Bacon, the readers of Philip Sidney, the companions of Algernon, the
+precursors of Locke and Newton. Opposite to them are Chaucer, Spenser,
+Shakspeare, Milton; lower in dignity, Dryden, Pope, Gray, Goldsmith,
+Cowper, Scott, Burns, Shelley, Southey, Byron, Wordsworth; the author
+of _Hohenlinden_ and the _Battle of the Baltic_; and the glorious
+woman who equaled these, two animated works in her _Ivan_ and
+_Casabianca_. Historians have but recently risen up among us: and long
+be it before, by command of Parliament, the chisel grates on the brow
+of a Napier, a Grote, and Macaulay!
+
+WALTER SAVAGE LANDOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE SPECTATOR.]
+
+JURISPRUDENCE OF THE MOGULS: THE PANDECTS OF AURUNGZEBE.[4]
+
+THE Government of British India have not neglected to countenance
+the study of the indigenous and other systems of law which they found
+established on acquiring possession of the country. Warren Hastings
+was the first to recognize the value of such knowledge; and to his
+encouragement, if not to his incitement, we are indebted for the
+compilation of Hindoo law translated by Halbed, Jones, Colebrooke,
+Macnaghten, Hamilton, and a pretty numerous body of accomplished
+men, of whom Mr. Baillie is the most recently enrolled laborer in
+the vineyard, have carried on the good work. More comprehensive and
+accurate views of Hindoo law have gradually been developed, and the
+more advanced and more influential system of Mahometan jurisprudence
+has also shared in the attention of European students. There is,
+however, still much to be done in this field of inquiry; as a few
+remarks on the nature of the present publication, and the source
+whence its materials are derived, will show.
+
+[Footnote 4: The Moohummadan Law of Sale, according to the Hunefeea
+Code: from the Futawa Alumgeeree, a Digest of the whole Law, prepared
+by command of the Emperor Aurungzebe Alumgeer. Selected and translated
+from the original Arabic, with an Introduction and explanatory Notes,
+by Neil B.E. Baillie, Author of "The Moohummadan Law of inheritance."
+Published by Smith and Elder.]
+
+The law of Mahometan jurists is for India pretty much what the Roman
+law is for Scotland and the Continental nations of Europe. Savigny has
+shown how, throughout all the territories formerly included within the
+limits of the Roman Empire, a large amount of Roman legal doctrines
+and forms of procedure continued to be operative after the Empire's
+subversion. The revival of the study of the Roman law, as embodied
+in the compilations of Justinian, by the doctors of the school
+of Bologna, augmented and systematized these remnants of Roman
+jurisprudence, and extended their application to countries which (like
+great part of Germany) had never been subjected to the sway of Rome.
+In like manner, throughout that part of India which was permanently
+subdued and organized by the Mogul dynasty, and also those parts in
+which minor Islamitic states were established, the organization of
+the courts of justice, and the legal opinions of the individuals who
+officiated in them, necessarily introduced a large amount of Mahometan
+jurisprudence. This element of the law of India was augmented and
+systematized by the writings of private jurists, and by compilations
+undertaken by command of princes. As with the Roman jurisprudence in
+Europe, so with Mahometan jurisprudence in India, only so much of its
+doctrines and forms could at any time be considered to possess legal
+force as had been reenacted by the local sovereigns, or introduced by
+judges in the form of decisions. A systematic knowledge of the whole
+body of Mahometan law was important to the Indian lawyer, as enabling
+him more thoroughly to understand the system, and its various isolated
+doctrines; but the whole body of that law was at no time binding in
+India. Since the establishment of British sway, only so much of the
+Mahometan law as has kept its ground in the practice of the courts,
+or has been reenacted by the "regulations" or "ordinances" of the
+Anglo-Indian Government, _is law_; the rest is only valuable as the
+"antiquities of the law," which help to trace the origin of what
+survives, and thereby throw light upon what in it is obscure or
+doubtful.
+
+Among the most valuable, if not indeed the most valuable of the
+compilations from which we may obtain a knowledge of Mahometan
+jurisprudence, is the "Futawa Alumgeeree," mentioned in Mr. Baillie's
+title-page. Its value is not confined to the purposes of those
+who would make themselves acquainted with Mahometan jurisprudence
+in the peculiar form it assumed in India. It is highly esteemed
+throughout Islam, and is quoted even by the doctors of Mecca as the
+Futawa-i-hind, or the Indian _responsa prudentum_. It was compiled by
+the orders of the Emperor Aurungzebe. It is a digest of the "Futawa"
+of the most celebrated jurists of the Hanifeh (or, as Mr. Baillie
+spells it, _Hunefeeah_) sect or school. Mr. Baillie informs us in
+his preface, that "_futawa_ is the plural form of _futwa_, a term in
+common use in Mahometan countries to signify an exposition of law by a
+public officer called the _mooftee_, or a case submitted to him by the
+_kazee_ or judge." The "futwa," therefore, seems to correspond not
+so much with our English "decisions" or "precedents" as with the
+"responsa prudentum," that fertile source of doctrines in the Roman
+law. The "Futawa Alumgeeree" consequently resembles the Pandects
+of Justinian in being a systematical arrangement of selections from
+juridical authorities--compiled by Imperial authority; but differs
+from it in this, that the selections are made exclusively from the
+"responsa prudentum," and a few legal treatises, whereas Justinian's
+digest combined with those excerpts from judicial decisions,
+praetorian edicts, &c. With this distinction, we may regard the "Futawa
+Alumgeeree" as the Pandects or Digest of Mahometan Law. As in the
+Roman work of that name, to each extract is appended the name of the
+original work from which it is taken; and the whole of them are so
+arranged as to form a complete digest of Mahometan law.
+
+A work of this kind is invaluable to the student who would make
+himself master of Mahometan jurisprudence as a system. But great care
+must be taken not to misapprehend the exact nature of the knowledge
+to be obtained from it. The "Futawa Alumgeeree" is a systematic
+exposition of the principles of Mahometan law; it assuredly does not
+enable us to ascertain what doctrines of that law are now of legal
+force in India, or even what doctrines have at any time had force
+in India. It does not appear to have been Aurungzebe's intention to
+promulgate it as a code, but to present it to lawyers as a complete
+text-book. Even if he did by ordinance attribute to it the power of
+law, such ordinance was only effectual at any time in the provinces of
+the Mogul Empire; and since the disruption of that empire, it has been
+superseded and modified by laws and the practice of law-courts in the
+various independent states erected on its ruins.
+
+Again the general scholar must be on his guard against the delusion
+that he will find in this digest materials illustrative of the social
+condition of India under the Mogul dynasty. The juridical works
+excerpted in it are almost all foreign to Hindostan; the special cases
+illustrative of abstract doctrines are taken from other countries,
+and many of them from ages antecedent to the invasion of India by the
+Moguls.
+
+Though Persian was the court language of the Mogul dynasty, there is
+scarcely any Persian element in Aurungzebe's legal compilation. The
+Shiite views of jurisprudence, as of theology, prevailed in Persia;
+the "Futawa Alumgeeree" is strictly Sunnite. It is not difficult to
+account for this.--The Mahometan conquerors of India were mainly of
+Turkish or Tartar race; they came from Turan, a region which from time
+immemorial has stood in antagonistic relations to Iran or Persia. This
+may account for the fact that the races of Turan which have embraced
+Mahometanism have uniformly adhered to the Sunnite sect--the sect
+most hostile to the Persian Shias--not only when they settled in the
+countries where the Sunnite sect originated, but when they remained in
+their native regions. The views of the Sunnites were first promulgated
+and have prevailed most extensively in those regions of Islam which
+were once part of the Roman empire, which nominally at least was
+Christian; those of the Shiites, in the countries where, under the
+Sassanides and Arsacidae, the doctrines of Zoroaster predominated. The
+Euphrates forms pretty nearly the line of demarkation between them.
+
+The Caliphs dominated over both countries and over both sects. Under
+their orthodox protection the Sunnite doctrines were able to strike
+root in Balkh and Samarkand--the ancient Turan, and therefore hostile
+to Iran and Persia. When Islam was reorganized after the anarchy which
+ensued upon the overthrow of the Caliphs, Persia became the appanage
+of the Sophis or Shiite dynasty; the regions to the West of the
+Euphrates--the ci-devant Roman Empire--acknowledged the rule of
+the Turkish dynasties, which were Sunnite. On the Oxus and further
+East--the old Turan--the Sunnite sect was sufficiently strong to defy
+the efforts of the Shiite sovereigns of Persia to eradicate it. The
+doctors of Samarkand and Bokhara continued (and continue) as orthodox
+Sunnites as those of Kufah, Mecca, and Stamboul.
+
+Accordingly, we find the authorities excerpted in the "Futawa
+Alumgeeree" consist almost exclusively of two classes; they are either
+the immediate disciples of Hanifa at Kufah and Bagdad, or the jurists
+of Samarkand and Bokhara. The law-cases they expounded are such as had
+originated, or might have originated, in those countries--in Babylonia
+or Turan. And they are for the most part taken from a state of
+society, and illustrative of social relations, which prevailed in
+these countries at a period long antecedent to that of Aurunzebe. To
+attempt to illustrate the civil and social condition of India, under
+that Emperor by their aid, would be as preposterous as to attempt to
+illustrate the civil and social condition of those parts of Germany
+where the Roman law still possesses authority from cases recorded in
+the Pandects of Justinian.
+
+The real use and value of the "Futawa Alumgeeree" may be briefly
+explained. In every country in Europe where the Roman law is still
+recognized as more or less authoritative--and indeed in every country
+where the common law has borrowed more or less from the Roman--an
+acquaintance with the system of Roman jurisprudence as it is embodied
+in the law-books of Justinian has its value for the scientific lawyer.
+In like manner a knowledge of Mahometan jurisprudence as embodied in
+the "Futawa Alumgeeree" cannot fail to be instructive for the lawyers
+of all the countries of Islam, and the lawyers of India, where so much
+of the existing practical law has been derived from that source. To
+the general scholar who wishes to master the civil history of Arabia
+and Babylonia, in which the Sunnite sect, and more particularly the
+Hanifite subdivision of it, originated, or to familiarize himself
+with the moral theories which regulate the judgments and actions of
+the modern Turks, Turcomans, Arabians, and Egyptians, the digest of
+Aurungzeebee is also a valuable repertory of facts and illustrations.
+
+For this reason we incline to be of opinion that Mr. Baillie is
+mistaken in thinking that a selection from the two books of the
+"Futawa Alumgeeree," which embrace the subject of "sale" can have much
+utility for Indian practitioners. It does not follow, because a legal
+doctrine is declared sound in this work, that it is or ever has been
+practically applicable in India. As an authoritative declaration of
+legal doctrines, the book is as likely to mislead as to guide aright.
+On the other hand, as an exposition of the general principles of
+Mahometan law, even with regard to sale, it is necessarily imperfect.
+The work from which it is taken is a collection of legal opinions,
+which had in their day the force of judicial decisions--of something
+equivalent to the "responsa prudentum" of Roman jurisprudence. Each is
+expounded on its own merits; and all the special doctrines involved
+in it are laid down. Hence it comes, that much that is calculated
+to throw light on the principles of the law of sale must be sought
+under other heads; and that much included in the chapters ostensibly
+treating of sale refers to other topics. As part of an entire digest
+of the law compiled on the same principle as that of Justinian,
+the two books relating to sale are sufficient; but for an isolated
+treatise on "sale," they contain at once too much and too little.
+
+Nevertheless, we welcome Mr. Baillie's publication as a valuable
+addition to juridical and even to general literature. The translation,
+though not by any means free from defects, is the best specimen of
+a really good Mahometan law-book that has yet been published. The
+defects to which we allude are twofold. In the first place, though Mr.
+Baillie mentions that in the original the name of the treatise from
+which it is taken is appended to every excerpt, he has not in his
+translation given those references. His work is not therefore what
+the original is, a Chrestomathia of the best Arabian jurists--a
+succedaneum for their complete works--an illustration of Arabic legal
+literature. Again, he is often loose and vacillating in the use of
+the English words he has selected as corresponding to the technical
+phraseology of the Arabian jurists, and sometimes infelicitous in the
+selection of his English terms. It has occurred to us that he would
+have succeeded better in rendering the exact meaning of his originals,
+had he availed himself more of technical phrases of the Roman law
+which are familiar to all European jurists. Is does not occur to
+us that he would by doing so have been in danger of Romanizing the
+Mahometan to an extent that might mislead. Mill, in his History of
+British India, has noticed how closely the classification of the
+Mahometan approaches to that of the Roman jurists. An attentive
+perusal of Mr. Baillie's volume has convinced us that the analogy in
+the substance is quite as strong as in the arrangements. This fact
+seems susceptible of being accounted for on historical grounds.
+Mahometanism is in fact a sect or heresy of Christianity. The views
+and sentiments, the aggregate of which make up the body of Christian
+opinion, are not all of Jewish or Christian origin. They are the moral
+creed of societies whose opinions and civilization have been derived
+in part from other sources. The philosophy of Greece and the law of
+Rome have contributed in nearly equal proportions to the theosophy
+of the Hebrews. The jurisprudence of all Christian nations is mainly
+referable to Rome for its origin, and the same is the case with at
+least the Sunnite Mahometans. The nations of Islam took only their
+religious creed from their Prophet; the jurists of Kufah retained and
+expounded the civil law which prevailed among them before his time.
+That law was the law of the Greek Empire, developed in the same way as
+that of the Western Empire under the judicial and legislative auspices
+of Roman Praetors and Pro-Consuls, aided by Roman jurists. Theophilus,
+one of the jurists employed by Justinian for his compilations,
+lectured in Greek on the Institutions; and the substance of
+his lectures still survives under the name of the Paraphrase of
+Theophilus. The Greek edicts and novels of Justinian's successors are
+mainly Roman law. Throughout the Byzantine Empire (within which Kufah
+and the region where Bagdad now stands were included) Roman law was
+paramount, and Roman jurists were numerous. The arrangement, the
+subdivisions, and the substance of Mahometan jurisprudence, show
+that it has been principally derived from this source. Some of its
+doctrines are doubtless aboriginal engrafted on the law of the
+Empire; and it has been modified in some respects to reconcile it to
+the religious dictates of Islam, just as the law of Pagan Rome was
+modified after Christianity became the religion of the Empire. But
+still Mahometan jurisprudence retains undeniably the lineaments of its
+parentage.
+
+This consideration places in a strong light the importance of the
+study of Mahometan law. The increasing intimacy of our relations with
+independent Mahometan states makes it of the utmost consequence that
+we should entertain correct views of their opinions and institutions;
+and no better key to the knowledge of both can be found than in the
+historical study of their law. Again, we are called upon to legislate
+and supply judges for British India, a large proportion of the
+inhabitants of which are Mahometans. Even the Hindoos of the former
+Mogul Empire have adopted many legal forms and doctrines from
+their conquerors. A minute and accurate acquaintance with Mahometan
+jurisprudence is an indispensable preliminary to judicious legislation
+for British India. For these reasons, it could be wished that Mr.
+Baillie, or some other equally accomplished laborer in that field,
+would set himself to do for the "Futawa Alumgeeree" what Heineccius
+and other modern civilians have done for the law-books of
+Justinian--present the European public with an elegant and exact
+abstract of its contents.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The following, from Southey's "Gridiron," now first published in his
+Memoirs, ought to be set to music for the Beef-Steak Club:--
+
+ "Now the perfect Steak prepare!
+ Now the appointed rites begin!
+ Cut it from the pinguid rump.
+ Not too thick and not too thin;
+ Somewhat to the thick inclining,
+ Yet the thick and thin between,
+ That the gods, when they are dining,
+ May comment the golden mean.
+ Ne'er till now have they been blest
+ With a beef-steak daily drest:
+ Ne'er till this auspicious morn
+ When the Gridiron was born."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The most ignorant of the world's fools are those called "knowing
+ones," a phrase satirical with the very glee of irony.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE MYSTERIOUS COMPACT.
+
+A FREE TRANSLATION FROM THE GERMAN.
+
+PART II--CONCLUSION
+
+(CONCLUDED FROM PAGE 192.)
+
+Several weeks passed away. Edward spared no pains to discover
+some trace of the lady in question, but all in vain. No one in the
+neighborhood knew the family; and he had already determined, as
+soon as the spring began, to ask for leave of absence, and to travel
+through the country where Ferdinand had formed his unfortunate
+attachment, when a circumstance occurred which coincided strangely
+with his wishes. His commanding-officer gave him a commission to
+purchase some horses, which, to his great consolation, led him exactly
+into that part of the country where Ferdinand had been quartered.
+It was a market-town of some importance. He was to remain there some
+time, which suited his plans exactly; and he made use of every leisure
+hour to cultivate the acquaintance of the officers, to inquire into
+Ferdinand's connections and acquaintance, to trace the mysterious name
+if possible, and thus fulfill a sacred duty. For to him it appeared a
+sacred duty to execute the commission of his departed friend--to get
+possession of the ring, and to be the means, as he hoped, of giving
+rest to the troubled spirit of Ferdinand.
+
+Already, on the evening of the second day, he was sitting in the
+coffee-room with burghers of the place and officers of different
+regiments.
+
+A newly-arrived cornet was inquiring whether the neighborhood were a
+pleasant one, of an infantry officer, one of Hallberg's corps. "For,"
+said he, "I come from charming quarters."
+
+"There is not much to boast of," replied the captain. "There is no
+good fellowship, no harmony among the people."
+
+"I will tell you why that is," cried an animated lieutenant; "that is
+because there is no house as a point of reunion, where one is sure
+to find and make acquaintances, and to be amused, and where each
+individual ascertains his own merits by the effect they produce on
+society at large."
+
+"Yes, we have had nothing of that kind since the Varniers left us,"
+said the captain.
+
+"Varniers!" cried Edward, with an eagerness he could ill conceal. "The
+name sounds foreign."
+
+"They were not Germans--they were emigrants from the Netherlands, who
+had left their country on account of political troubles," replied the
+captain.
+
+"Ah, that was a charming house," cried the lieutenant, "cultivation,
+refinement, a sufficient competency, the whole style of establishment
+free from ostentation, yet most comfortable; and Emily--Emily was the
+soul of the whole house."
+
+"Emily Varnier!" echoed Edward, while his heart beat fast and loud.
+
+"Yes, yes! that was the name of the prettiest, most graceful, most
+amiable girl in the world," said the lieutenant.
+
+"You seem bewitched by the fair Emily," observed the cornet.
+
+"I think you would have been too, had you known her," rejoined the
+lieutenant; "she was the jewel of the whole society. Since she went
+away there is no bearing their stupid balls and assemblies."
+
+"But you must not forget," the captain resumed once more, "when you
+attribute everything to the charms of the fair girl, that not only
+she but the whole family has disappeared, and we have lost that
+house which formed, as you say, so charming a point of reunion in our
+neighborhood."
+
+"Yes, yes; exactly so," said an old gentleman, a civilian, who had
+been silent hitherto; "the Varniers' house is a great loss in the
+country, where such losses are not so easily replaced as in a large
+town. First, the father died, then came the cousin and carried the
+daughter away."
+
+"And did this cousin marry the young lady?" inquired Edward, in a tone
+tremulous with agitation.
+
+"Certainly," answered the old gentleman; "it was a very great match
+for her; he bought land to the value of half a million about here."
+
+"And he was an agreeable, handsome man, we must all allow," remarked
+the captain.
+
+"But she would never have married him," exclaimed the lieutenant, "if
+poor Hallberg had not died."
+
+Edward was breathless, but he did not speak a word.
+
+"She would have been compelled to do so in any case," said the old
+man; "the father had destined them for each other from infancy,
+and people say he made his daughter take a vow as he lay on his
+death-bed."
+
+"That sounds terrible," said Edward; "and does not speak much for the
+good feeling of the cousin."
+
+"She could not have fulfilled her father's wish," interposed the
+lieutenant; "her heart was bound up in Hallberg, and Hallberg's in
+her. Few people, perhaps, know this, for the lovers were prudent and
+discreet; I, however, knew it all."
+
+"And why was she not allowed to follow the inclination of her heart?"
+asked Edward.
+
+"Because her father had promised her," replied the captain: "you used
+just now the word terrible; it is a fitting expression, according to
+my version of the matter. It appears that one of the branches of the
+house of Varnier had committed an act of injustice toward another, and
+Emily's father considered it a point of conscience to make reparation.
+Only through the marriage of his daughter with a member of the
+ill-used branch could that act be obliterated and made up for, and,
+therefore, he pressed the matter sorely."
+
+"Yes, and the headlong passion which Emily inspired her cousin with
+abetted his designs."
+
+"Then her cousin loved Emily?" inquired Edward.
+
+"Oh, to desperation," was the reply. "He was a rival to her shadow,
+who followed her not more closely than he did. He was jealous of the
+rose that she placed on her bosom."
+
+"Then poor Emily is not likely to have a calm life with such a man,"
+said Edward.
+
+"Come," interposed the old gentleman, with en authoritative tone, "I
+think you, gentlemen, go a little too far. I know D'Effernay; he is an
+honest, talented man, very rich, indeed, and generous; he anticipates
+his wife in every wish. She has the most brilliant house in the
+neighborhood, and lives like a princess."
+
+"And trembles," insisted the lieutenant, "when she hears her husband's
+footstep. What good can riches be to her? She would have been happier
+with Hallberg."
+
+"I do not know," rejoined the captain, "why you always looked upon
+that attachment as something so decided. It never appeared so to
+me; and you yourself say that D'Effernay is very jealous, which I
+believe him to be, for he is a man of strong passions; and this very
+circumstance causes me to doubt the rest of your story. Jealousy has
+sharp eyes, and D'Effernay would have discovered a rival in Hallberg,
+and not proved himself the friend he always was to our poor comrade."
+
+"That does not follow at all," replied the lieutenant, "it only proves
+that the lovers were very cautious. So far, however, I agree with you.
+I believe that if D'Effernay had suspected anything of the kind he
+would have murdered Hallberg."
+
+A shudder passed through Edward's veins.
+
+"Murdered!" he repeated, in a hollow voice; "do you not judge too
+harshly of this man when you hint the possibility of such a thing?"
+
+"That does he, indeed," said the old man; "these gentlemen are all
+angry with D'Effernay, because he has carried off the prettiest girl
+in the country. But I am told he does not intend remaining where he
+now lives. He wishes to sell his estates."
+
+"Really," inquired the captain, "and where is he going?"
+
+"I have no idea," replied the other; "but he is selling everything
+off. One manor is already disposed of, and there have been people
+already in negotiation for the place where he resides."
+
+The conversation now turned on the value of D'Effernay's property, and
+of land in general, &c.
+
+Edward had gained materials enough for reflection; he rose soon, took
+leave of the company, and gave himself up, in the solitude of his
+own room, to the torrent of thought and feeling which that night's
+conversation had let loose. So, then, it was true; Emily Varnier was
+no fabulous being! Hallberg had loved her, his love had been returned,
+but a cruel destiny had separated them. How wonderfully did all he
+had heard explain the dream at the Castle, and how completely did
+that supply what had remained doubtful, or had been omitted in the
+officers' narrative. Emily Varnier, doubtless, possessed that ring, to
+gain possession of which now seemed his bounden duty. He resolved not
+to delay its fulfillment a moment, however difficult it might prove,
+and he only reflected on the best manner in which he should perform
+the task allotted to him. The sale of the property appeared to him a
+favorable opening. The fame of his father's wealth made it probable
+that the son might wish to be purchaser of a fine estate, like the one
+in question. He spoke openly of such a project, made inquiries of the
+old gentleman, and the captain, who seemed to him to know most about
+the matter; and as his duties permitted a trip for a week or so, he
+started immediately, and arrived on the second day at the place of his
+destination. He stopped in the public house in the village to inquire
+if the estate lay near, and whether visitors were allowed to see the
+house and grounds. Mine host, who doubtless had had his directions,
+sent a messenger immediately to the Castle, who returned before long,
+accompanied by a chasseur, in a splendid livery, who invited the
+stranger to the Castle in the name of M. D'Effernay.
+
+This was exactly what Edward wished, and expected. Escorted by
+the chasseur he soon arrived at the Castle, and was shown up
+a spacious staircase into a modern, almost, one might say, a
+magnificently-furnished room, where the master of the house received
+him. It was evening, toward the end of winter, the shades of twilight
+had already fallen, and Edward found himself suddenly in a room quite
+illuminated with wax candles. D'Effernay stood in the middle of the
+saloon, a tall, thin young man. A proud bearing seemed to bespeak
+a consciousness of his own merit, or at least of his position. His
+features were finely formed, but the traces of strong passion, or of
+internal discontent, had lined them prematurely.
+
+In figure he was very slender, and the deep-sunken eye, the gloomy
+frown which was fixed between his brows, and the thin lips, had no
+very prepossessing expression, and yet there was something imposing in
+the whole appearance of the man.
+
+Edward thanked him civilly for his invitation, spoke of his idea of
+being a purchaser as a motive for his visit, and gave his own, and
+his father's name. D'Effernay seemed pleased with all he said. He had
+known Edward's family in the metropolis; he regretted that the late
+hour would render it impossible for them to visit the property to-day,
+and concluded by pressing the lieutenant to pass the night at the
+Castle. On the morrow they would proceed to business, and now he would
+have the pleasure of presenting his wife to the visitor. Edward's
+heart beat violently--at length then he would see her! Had he loved
+her himself he could not have gone to meet her with more agitation.
+D'Effernay led his guest through many rooms, which were all as well
+furnished, and as brilliantly lighted as the first he had entered.
+At length he opened the door of a small boudoir, where there was no
+light, save that which the faint, gray twilight imparted through the
+windows.
+
+The simple arrangement of this little room, with dark green walls,
+only relieved by some engravings and coats of arms, formed a pleasing
+contrast to Edward's eyes, after the glaring splendor of the other
+apartments. From behind a piano-forte, at which she had been seated
+in a recess, rose a tall, slender female form, in a white dress of
+extreme simplicity.
+
+"My love," said D'Effernay, "I bring you a welcome guest, Lieutenant
+Wensleben, who is willing to purchase the estate."
+
+Emily courtesied; the friendly twilight concealed the shudder that
+passed over her whole frame, as she heard the familiar name which
+aroused so many recollections.
+
+She bade the stranger welcome, in a low, sweet voice, whose tremulous
+accents were not unobserved by Edward; and while the husband made some
+further observation, he had leisure to remark, as well as the fading
+light would allow, the fair outline of her oval face, the modest
+grace of her movements, her pretty, nymph-like figure--in fact, all
+those charms which seemed familiar to him through the impassioned
+descriptions of his friend.
+
+"But what can this fancy be, to sit in the dark?" asked D'Effernay, in
+no mild tone; "you know that is a thing I cannot bear." and with these
+words, and without waiting his wife's answer, he rang the bell over
+her sofa, and ordered lights.
+
+While these were placed on the table the company sat down by the fire,
+and conversation commenced. By the full light Edward could perceive
+all Emily's real beauty--her pale, but lovely face, the sad expression
+of her large blue eyes, so often concealed by their dark lashes, and
+then raised, with a look full of feeling, a sad, pensive, intellectual
+expression; and he admired the simplicity of her dress, and of every
+object that surrounded her: all appeared to him to bespeak a superior
+mind.
+
+They had not sat long, before D'Effernay was called away. One of
+his people had something important, something urgent to communicate
+to him, which admitted of no delay. A look of fierce anger almost
+distorted his features; in an instant his thin lips moved rapidly, and
+Edward thought he muttered some curses between his teeth. He left the
+room, but in so doing, he cast a glance of mistrust and ill-temper
+on the handsome stranger with whom he was compelled to leave his wife
+alone. Edward observed it all. All that he had seen to-day, all that
+he had heard from his comrades of the man's passionate and suspicious
+disposition, convinced him that his stay here would not be long, and
+that perhaps a second opportunity of speaking alone with Emily might
+not offer itself.
+
+He determined, therefore, to profit by the present moment; and no
+sooner had D'Effernay left the room, than he began to tell Emily she
+was not so complete a stranger to him as it might seem; that long
+before he had had the pleasure of seeing her--even before he had heard
+her name--she was known to him, so to speak, in spirit.
+
+Madame D'Effernay was moved. She was silent for a time, and gazed
+fixedly on the ground; then she looked up; the mist of unshed tears
+dimmed her blue eyes, and her bosom heaved with the sigh she could not
+suppress.
+
+"To me also the name of Wensleben is familiar. There is a link between
+our souls. Your friend has often spoken of you to me."
+
+But she could say no more; tears checked her speech.
+
+Edward's eyes were glistening also, and the two companions were
+silent; at length he began once more:
+
+"My dear lady," he said, "my time is short, and I have a solemn
+message to deliver to you. Will you allow me to do so now?"
+
+"To me?" she asked, in a tone of astonishment.
+
+"From my departed friend," answered Edward, emphatically.
+
+"From Ferdinand?--and that now--after--" she shrunk back, as if in
+terror.
+
+"Now that he is no longer with us, do you mean? I found the message
+in his papers, which have been intrusted to me only lately, since I
+have been in the neighborhood. Among them was a token which I was to
+restore to you." He produced the ring. Emily seized it wildly, and
+trembled as she looked upon it.
+
+"It is indeed my ring," she said at length, "the same which I gave
+him when we plighted our troth in secret. You are acquainted with
+everything, I perceive; I shall therefore risk nothing if I speak
+openly."
+
+She wept, and pressed the ring to her lips.
+
+"I see that my friend's memory is dear to you," continued Edward. You
+will forgive the prayer I am about to make to you: my visit to you
+concerns his ring."
+
+"How--what is it you wish?" cried Emily; terrified.
+
+"It was _his_ wish," replied Edward. "He evinced an earnest desire
+to have this pledge of an unfortunate and unfulfilled engagement
+restored."
+
+"How is that possible? You did not speak with him before his
+death; and this happened so suddenly after, that, to give you the
+commission--"
+
+"There was no time for it! that is true," answered Edward, with an
+inward shudder, although outwardly he was calm. "Perhaps this wish
+was awakened immediately before his death. I found it, as I told you,
+expressed in those papers."
+
+"Incomprehensible!" she exclaimed. "Only a short time before his
+death, we cherished--deceitful, indeed, they proved, but, oh, what
+blessed hopes! we reckoned on casualties, on what might possibly
+occur to assist as. Neither of us could endure to dwell on the idea
+of separation; and yet--yet since--Oh, my God," she cried, overcome by
+sorrow, and she hid her face between her hands.
+
+Edward was lost in confused thought. For a time both again were
+silent: at length Emily started up--
+
+"Forgive me, M. de Wensleben. What you have related to me, what you
+have asked of me, has produced so much excitement, so much agitation,
+that it is necessary that I should be alone for a few moments, to
+recover my composure."
+
+"I am gone," cried Edward, springing from his chair.
+
+"No! no!" she replied, "you are my guest; remain here. I have a
+household duty which calls me away." She laid a stress on these words.
+
+She leant forward, and with a sad, sweet smile, she gave her hand to
+the friend of her lost Ferdinand, pressing his gently, and disappeared
+through the inner door.
+
+Edward stood stunned, bewildered; then he paced the room with hasty
+steps, threw himself on the sofa, and took up one of the books that
+lay on the table, rather to have something in his hand, than to read.
+It proved to be Young's "Night Thoughts." He looked through it, and
+was attracted by many passages, which seemed, in his present frame
+of mind, fraught with peculiar meaning; yet his thoughts wandered
+constantly from the page to his dead friend. The candles, unheeded
+both by Emily and him, burned on with long wicks, giving little light
+in the silent room, over which the red glare from the hearth shed a
+lurid glow. Hurried footsteps sounded in the anteroom; the door was
+thrown open.
+
+Edward looked up, and saw D'Effernay staring at him, and round the
+room, in an angry, restless manner.
+
+Edward could not but think there was something almost unearthly in
+those dark looks and that towering form.
+
+"Where is my wife?" was D'Effernay's first question.
+
+"She is gone to fulfill some household duty," replied the other.
+
+"And leaves you here alone in this miserable darkness! Most
+extraordinary!--indeed, most unaccountable!" and as he spoke he
+approached the table and snuffed the candles, with a movement of
+impatience.
+
+"She left me here with old friends," said Edward, with a forced smile.
+"I have been reading."
+
+"What, in the dark?" inquired D'Effernay, with a look of mistrust.
+"It was so dark when I came in, that you could not possibly have
+distinguished a letter."
+
+"I read for some time, and then I fell into a train of thought, which
+is usually the result of reading Young's 'Night Thoughts.'"
+
+"Young! I cannot bear that author. He is so gloomy."
+
+"But you are fortunately so happy, that the lamentations of the lonely
+mourner can find no echo in your breast."
+
+"You think so!" said D'Effernay, in a churlish tone, and he pressed
+his lips together tightly, as Emily came into the room: he went to
+meet her.
+
+"You have been a long time away," was his observation, as he looked
+into her eyes, where the trace of tears might easily be detected. "I
+found our guest alone."
+
+"M. de Wensleben was good enough to excuse me," she replied; "and then
+I thought you would be back immediately."
+
+They sat down to the table; coffee was brought, and the past appeared
+to be forgotten.
+
+The conversation at first was broken by constant pauses. Edward saw
+that Emily did all she could to play the hostess agreeably, and to
+pacify her husband's ill-humor.
+
+In this attempt the young man assisted her, and at last they were
+successful. D'Effernay became more cheerful; the conversation more
+animated; and Edward found that his host could be a very agreeable
+member of society when he pleased, combining a good deal of
+information with great natural powers. The evening passed away more
+pleasantly than it promised at one time; and after an excellent and
+well-served supper, the young officer was shown into a comfortable
+room, fitted up with every modern luxury; and weary in mind and body,
+he soon fell asleep. He dreamed of all that had occupied his waking
+thoughts-of his friend, and his friend's history.
+
+But in that species of confusion which often characterizes dreams,
+he fancied that he was Ferdinand, or at least, his own individuality
+seemed mixed up with that of Hallberg. He felt that he was ill. He lay
+in an unknown room, and by his bedside stood a small table, covered
+with glasses and phials, containing medicines, as is usual in a sick
+room.
+
+The door opened, and D'Effernay came in, in his dressing-gown, as
+if he had just left his bed: and now in Edward's mind dreams and
+realities were mingled together, and he thought that D'Effernay came,
+perhaps, to speak with him on the occurrences of the preceding day.
+But no! he approached the table on which the medicines stood, looked
+at the watch, took up one of the phials and a cup, measured the
+draught, drop by drop, then he turned and looked round him stealthily,
+and then he drew from his breast a pale blue, coiling serpent, which
+he threw into the cup, and held it to the patient's lips, who drank,
+and instantly felt a numbness creep over his frame which ended in
+death. Edward fancied that he was dead; he saw the coffin brought, but
+the terror lest he should be buried alive, made him start up with a
+sudden effort, and he opened his eyes.
+
+The dream had passed away; he sat in his bed safe and well; but it was
+long ere he could in any degree recover his composure, or get rid of
+the impression which the frightful apparition had made on him. They
+brought his breakfast, with a message from the master of the house
+to inquire whether he would like to visit the park, farms, &c. He
+dressed quickly, and descended to the court, where he found his host
+in a riding dress, by the side of two fine horses, already saddled.
+D'Effernay greeted the young man courteously; but Edward felt
+an inward repugnance as he looked on that gloomy though handsome
+countenance, now lighted up by the beams of the morning sun, yet
+recalling vividly the dark visions of the night. D'Effernay was full
+of attentions to his new friend. They started on their ride, in spite
+of some threatening clouds, and began the inspection of meadows,
+shrubberies, farms, &c. After a couple of hours, which were consumed
+in this manner, it began to rain a few drops, and at last burst out
+into a heavy shower. It was soon impossible even to ride through the
+woods for the torrents that were pouring down, and so they returned to
+the castle.
+
+Edward retired to his room to change his dress, and to write some
+letters, he said, but more particularly to avoid Emily, in order not
+to excite her husband's jealousy. As the bell rang for dinner he
+saw her again, and found to his surprise that the captain, whom he
+had first seen in the coffee-room, and who had given him so much
+information, was one of the party. He was much pleased, for they had
+taken a mutual fancy to each other. The captain was not at quarters
+the day Edward had left them, but as soon as he heard where his friend
+had gone, he put horses to his carriage and followed him, for he said
+he also should like to see these famous estates. D'Effernay seemed
+in high good humor to-day, Emily far more silent than yesterday,
+and taking little part in the conversation of the men, which turned
+on political economy. After coffee she found an opportunity to give
+Edward (unobserved) a little packet. The look with which she did so,
+told plainly what it contained, and the young man hurried to his room
+as soon as he fancied he could do so without remark or comment. The
+continued rain precluded all idea of leaving the house any more that
+day. He unfolded the packet; there were a couple of sheets, written
+closely in a woman's fair hand, and something wrapped carefully in a
+paper, which he knew to be the ring. It was the fellow to that which
+he had given the day before to Emily, only Ferdinand's name was
+engraved inside instead of hers. Such were the contents of the
+papers:--
+
+"Secrecy would be misplaced with the friend of the dead. Therefore,
+will I speak to you of things which I have never uttered to a human
+being until now. Jules D'Effernay is nearly related to me. We knew
+each other in the Netherlands, where our estates joined. The boy loved
+me already with a love that amounted to passion; this love was my
+father's greatest joy, for there was an old and crying injustice which
+the ancestors of D'Effernay had suffered from ours, that could alone,
+he thought, be made up by the marriage of the only children of the two
+branches. So we were destined for each other almost from our cradles;
+and I was content it should be so, for Jules's handsome face and
+decided preference for me were agreeable to me, although I felt no
+great affection for him. We were separated: Jules traveled in France,
+England, and America, and made money as a merchant, which profession
+he had taken up suddenly. My father, who had a place under government,
+left his country in consequence of political troubles, and came into
+this part of the world where some distant relations of my mother's
+lived. He liked the neighborhood; he bought land; we lived very
+happily; I was quite contented in Jules's absence; I had no yearning
+of the heart toward him, yet I thought kindly of him, and troubled
+myself little about my future. Then--then I learned to know your
+friend. Oh, then! I felt, when I looked upon him, when I listened to
+him, when we conversed together, I felt, I acknowledged that there
+might be happiness on earth, of which I had hitherto never dreamed.
+Then I loved for the first time, ardently, passionately, and was
+beloved in return. Acquainted with the family engagements, he did not
+dare openly to proclaim his love, and I knew I ought not to foster
+the feeling; but, alas! how seldom does passion listen to the voice
+of reason and of duty. Your friend and I met in secret; in secret we
+plighted our troth, and exchanged those rings, and hoped and believed
+that by showing a bold front to our destiny we should subdue it to our
+will. The commencement was sinful, it has met with a dire retribution,
+Jules's letters announced his speedy return. He had sold everything
+in his own country, had given up all his mercantile affairs, through
+which he had greatly increased an already considerable fortune, and
+now he was about to join us, or rather me, without whom he could not
+live. This appeared to me like the demand for payment of a heavy debt.
+This debt I owed to Jules, who loved me with all his heart, who was
+in possession of my father's promised word and mine also. Yet I could
+not give up your friend. In a state of distraction I told him all; we
+meditated flight. Yes, I was so far guilty, and I make the confession
+in hopes that some portion of my errors may be expiated by repentance.
+My father, who had long been in a declining state, suddenly grew
+worse, and this delayed and hindered the fulfillment of our designs.
+Jules arrived. During the five years he had been away he was much
+changed in appearance, and that advantageously. I was struck when
+I first saw him, but it was also easy to detect in those handsome
+features and manly bearing, a spirit of restlessness and violence
+which had already shown itself in him as a boy, and which passing
+years, with their bitter experience and strong passions, had greatly
+developed. The hope that we had cherished of D'Effernay's possible
+indifference to me, of the change which time might have wrought in
+his attachment, now seemed idle and absurd. His love was indeed
+impassioned. He embraced me in a manner that made me shrink from him,
+and altogether his deportment toward me was a strange contrast to
+the gentle, tender, refined affection of our dear friend. I trembled
+whenever Jules entered the room, and all that I had prepared to say
+to him, all the plans which I had revolved in my mind respecting
+him, vanished in an instant before the power of his presence, and
+the almost imperative manner in which he claimed my hand. My father's
+illness increased; he was now in a very precarious state, hopeless
+indeed. Jules rivaled me in filial attentions to him, that I can never
+cease to thank him for; but this illness made my situation more and
+more critical, and it accelerated the fulfillment of the contract.
+I was now to renew my promise to him by the death-bed of my father.
+Alas, alas! I fell senseless to the ground when this announcement
+was made to me. Jules began to suspect. Already my cold, embarrassed
+manner toward him since his return had struck him as strange. He began
+to suspect, I repeat, and the effect that this suspicion had on him,
+it would be impossible to describe to you. Even now, after so long a
+time, now that I am accustomed to his ways, and more reconciled to my
+fate by the side of a noble, though somewhat impetuous man, it makes
+me tremble to think of those paroxysms, which the idea that I did not
+love him called forth. They were fearful; he nearly sank under them.
+During two days his life was in danger. At last the storm passed, my
+father died; Jules watched over me with the tenderness of a brother,
+the solicitude of a parent; for that indeed I shall ever be grateful.
+His suspicion once awakened, he gazed round with penetrating looks
+to discover the cause of my altered feelings. But your friend never
+came to our house; we met in an unfrequented spot, and my father's
+illness had interrupted these interviews. Altogether I cannot tell
+if Jules discovered anything. A fearful circumstance rendered all
+our precautions useless, and cut the knot of our secret connection,
+to loose which voluntarily I felt I had no power. A wedding feast,
+at a neighboring castle, assembled all the nobility and gentry, and
+officers quartered near, together; my deep mourning was an excuse for
+my absence. Jules, though he usually was happiest by my side, could
+not resist the invitation, and your friend resolved to go, although he
+was unwell; he feared to raise suspicion by remaining away, when I was
+left at home. With great difficulty he contrived the first day to make
+one at a splendid hunt, the second day he could not leave his bed.
+A physician, who was in the house, pronounced his complaint to be
+violent fever, and Jules, whose room joined that of the sick man,
+offered him every little service and kindness which compassion and
+good feeling prompted; and I cannot but praise him all the more for
+it, as who can tell, perhaps, his suspicion might have taken the right
+direction? On the morning of the second day--but let me glance quickly
+at that terrible time, the memory of which can never pass from my
+mind--a fit of apoplexy most unexpectedly, but gently, ended the
+noblest life, and separated us forever! Now you know all. I inclose
+the ring. I cannot write more. Farewell!"
+
+The conclusion of the letter made a deep impression on Edward. His
+dream rose up before his remembrance, the slight indisposition, the
+sudden death, the fearful nursetender, all arranged themselves in
+order before his mind, and an awful whole rose out of all these
+reflections, a terrible suspicion which he tried to throw off. But
+he could not do so, and when he met the captain and D'Effernay
+in the evening, and the latter challenged his visitors to a game
+of billiards, Edward glanced from time to time at his host in
+a scrutinizing manner, and could not but feel that the restless
+discontent which was visible in his countenance, and the unsteady
+glare of his eyes, which shunned the fixed look of others, only fitted
+too well into the shape of the dark thoughts which were crossing his
+own mind. Late in the evening, after supper, they played whist in
+Emily's boudoir. On the morrow, if the weather permitted, they were
+to conclude their inspection of the surrounding property, and the next
+day they were to visit the iron foundries, which, although distant
+from the Castle several miles, formed a very important item in the
+rent-roll of the estates. The company separated for the night.
+Edward fell asleep; and the same dream, with the same circumstances,
+recurred, only with the full consciousness that the sick man
+was Ferdinand. Edward felt overpowered, a species of horror
+took possession of his mind, as he found himself now in regular
+communication with the beings of the invisible world.
+
+The weather favored D'Effernay's projects. The whole day was passed
+in the open air. Emily only appeared at meals, and in the evening when
+they played at cards. Both she and Edward avoided, as if by mutual
+consent, every word, every look that could awaken the slightest
+suspicion or jealous feeling in D'Effernay's mind. She thanked him
+in her heart for this forbearance, but her thoughts were in another
+world; she took little heed of what passed around her. Her husband was
+in an excellent temper; he played the part of host to perfection; and
+when the two officers were established comfortably by the fire, in the
+captain's room, smoking together, they could not but do justice to his
+courteous manners.
+
+"He appears to be a man of general information," remarked Edward.
+
+"He has traveled a great deal, and read a great deal, as I told you
+when we first met: he is a remarkable man, but one of uncontrolled
+passions, and desperately jealous."
+
+"Yet he appears very attentive to his wife."
+
+"Undoubtedly he is wildly in love with her; yet he makes her unhappy,
+and himself too."
+
+"He certainly does not appear happy, there is so much restlessness."
+
+"He can never bear to remain in one place for any length of time
+together. He is now going to sell the property he only bought last
+year. There is an instability about him; everything palls on him."
+
+"That is the complaint of many who are rich and well to do in the
+world."
+
+"Yes; only not in the same degree. I assure you it has often struck me
+that man must have a bad conscience."
+
+"What an idea!" rejoined Edward, with a forced laugh, for the
+captain's remark struck him forcibly. "He seems a man of honor."
+
+"Oh, one may be a man of honor, as it is called, and yet have
+something quite bad enough to reproach yourself with. But I know
+nothing about it, and would not breathe such a thing except to you.
+His wife, too, looks so pale and so oppressed."
+
+"But, perhaps, that is her natural complexion and expression."
+
+"Oh, no! no! the year before D'Effernay came from Paris, she was as
+fresh as a rose. Many people declare that your poor friend loved her.
+The affair was wrapped in mystery, and I never believed the report,
+for Hallberg was a steady man, and the whole country knew that Emily
+had been engaged a long time."
+
+"Hallberg never mentioned the name in his letters," answered Edward,
+with less candor than usual.
+
+"I thought not. Besides D'Effernay was very much attached to him, and
+mourned his death."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+"I assure you the morning that Hallberg was found dead in his bed so
+unexpectedly, D'Effernay was like one beside himself."
+
+"Very extraordinary. But as we are on the subject, tell me, I pray
+you, all the circumstances of my poor Ferdinand's illness, and awful
+sudden death."
+
+"I can tell you all about it, as well as any one, for I was one of the
+guests at that melancholy wedding. Your friend, and I, and many others
+were invited. Hallberg had some idea of not going; he was unwell, with
+violent headache and giddiness. But we persuaded him, and he consented
+to go with us. The first day he felt tolerably well. We hunted in
+the open field; we were all on horseback, the day hot. Hallberg felt
+worse. The second day he had a great deal of fever; he could not
+stay up. The physician (for fortunately there was one in the company)
+ordered rest, cooling medicine, neither of which seemed to do him
+good. The rest of the men dispersed, to amuse themselves in various
+ways. Only D'Effernay remained at home; he was never very fond of
+large societies, and we voted that he was discontented and out of
+humor because his betrothed bride was not with him. His room was next
+to the sick man's, to whom he gave all possible care and attention,
+for poor Hallberg, besides being ill, was in despair at giving so
+much trouble in a strange house. D'Effernay tried to calm him on
+this point; he nursed him, amused him with conversation, mixed his
+medicines, and, in fact, showed more kindness and tenderness, than any
+of us would have given him credit for. Before I went to bed I visited
+Hallberg, and found him much better, and more cheerful; the doctor
+had promised that he should leave his bed next day. So I left him and
+retired with the rest of the world, rather late, and very tired, to
+rest. The next morning I was awoke by the fatal tidings. I did not
+wait to dress, I ran to his room, it was full of people."
+
+"And how, how was the death first discovered?" inquired Edward, in
+breathless eagerness.
+
+"The servant, who came in to attend on him, thought he was asleep, for
+he lay in his usual position, his head upon his hand. He went away
+and waited for some time; but hours passed, and he thought he ought to
+wake his master to give him his medicine. Then the awful discovery was
+made. He must have died peacefully, for his countenance was so calm,
+his limbs undisturbed. A fit of apoplexy had terminated his life, but
+in the most tranquil manner."
+
+"Incomprehensible," said Edward, with a deep sigh. "Did they take no
+measures to restore animation?"
+
+"Certainly; all that could be done was done, bleeding, fomentation,
+friction; the physician superintended, but there was no hope, it was
+all too late. He must have been dead some hours, for he was already
+cold and stiff. If there had been a spark of life in him he would have
+been saved. It was all over; I had lost my good lieutenant, and the
+regiment one of its finest officers."
+
+He was silent, and appeared lost in thought. Edward, for his part,
+felt overwhelmed by terrible suspicions and sad memories. After a long
+pause he recovered himself: "and where was D'Effernay?" he inquired.
+
+"D'Effernay," answered the Captain, rather surprised at the question;
+"oh! he was not in the Castle when we made the dreadful discovery: he
+had gone out for an early walk, and when he came back late, not before
+noon, he learned the truth, and was like one out of his senses. It
+seemed so awful to him, because he had been so much, the very day
+before, with poor Hallberg."
+
+"Aye," answered Edward, whose suspicions were being more and more
+confirmed every moment. "And did he see the corpse, did he go into the
+chamber of death?"
+
+"No," replied the captain; "he assured us it was out of his power to
+do so; he could not bear the sight; and I believe it. People with such
+uncontrolled feelings as this D'Effernay, are incapable of performing
+those duties which others think it necessary and incumbent on them to
+fulfill."
+
+"And where was Hallberg buried?"
+
+"Not far from the castle where the mournful event took place.
+To-morrow, if we go to the iron foundry, we shall be near the spot."
+
+"I am glad of it," cried Edward eagerly, while a host of projects rose
+up in his mind. "But now, captain, I will not trespass any longer on
+your kindness. It is late, and we must be up betimes to-morrow. How
+far have we to go?"
+
+"Not less than four leagues certainly. D'Effernay has arranged that we
+shall drive there, and see it all at our leisure: then we shall return
+in the evening. Good night, Wensleben."
+
+They separated: Edward hurried to his room; his heart overflowed.
+Sorrow on the one hand, horror and even hatred on the other, agitated
+him by turns. It was long before he could sleep. For the third time
+the vision haunted him; but now it was clearer than before; now he
+saw plainly the features of him who lay in bed, and of him who stood
+beside the bed--they were those of Hallberg and of D'Effernay.
+
+This third apparition, the exact counterpart of the two former (only
+more vivid), all that he had gathered from conversations on the
+subject, and the contents of Emily's letter, left scarcely the shadow
+of a doubt remaining as to how his friend had left the world.
+
+D'Effernay's jealous and passionate nature seemed to allow of the
+possibility of such a crime, and it could scarcely be wondered at, if
+Edward regarded him with a feeling akin to hatred. Indeed the desire
+of visiting Hallberg's grave, in order to place the ring in the
+coffin, could alone reconcile Wensleben to the idea of remaining any
+longer beneath the roof of a man whom he now considered the murderer
+of his friend. His mind was a prey to conflicting doubts; detestation
+for the culprit, and grief for the victim, pointed out one line of
+conduct, while the difficulty of proving D'Effernay's guilt, and still
+more, pity and consideration for Emily, determined him at length to
+let the matter rest, and to leave the murderer, if such he really
+were, to the retribution which his own conscience and the justice of
+God would award him. He would seek his friend's grave, and then he
+would separate from D'Effernay, and never see him more. In the midst
+of these reflections the servant came to tell him that the carriage
+was ready. A shudder passed over his frame as D'Effernay greeted him;
+but he commanded himself, and they started on their expedition.
+
+Edward spoke but little, and that only when it was necessary, and
+the conversation was kept up by his two companions; he had made every
+inquiry, before he set out, respecting the place of his friend's
+interment, the exact situation of the tomb, the name of the village,
+and its distance from the main road. On their way home, he requested
+that D'Effernay would give orders to the coachman to make a round of
+a mile or two as far as the village of ----, with whose rector he
+was particularly desirous to speak. A momentary cloud gathered on
+D'Effernay's brow, yet it seemed no more than his usual expression
+of vexation at any delay or hindrance; and he was so anxious to
+propitiate his rich visitor, who appeared likely to take the estate
+off his hands, that he complied with all possible courtesy. The
+coachman was directed to turn down a by-road, and a very bad one it
+was. The captain stood up in the carriage and pointed out the village
+to him, at some distance off; it lay in a deep ravine at the foot of
+the mountains.
+
+They arrived in the course of time, and inquired for the clergyman's
+house, which, as well as the church, was situated on rising ground.
+The three companions alighted from the carriage, which they left at
+the bottom of the hill, and walked up together in the direction of the
+rectory. Edward knocked at the door and was admitted, while the two
+others sat on a bench outside. He had promised to return speedily,
+but to D'Effernay's restless spirit, one-quarter of an hour appeared
+interminable.
+
+He turned to the captain and said, in a tone of impatience, "M. de
+Wensleben must have a great deal of business with the rector: we have
+been here an immense time, and he does not seem inclined to make his
+appearance.
+
+"Oh, I dare say he will come soon. The matter cannot detain him long."
+
+"What on earth can he have to do here?"
+
+"Perhaps you would call it a mere fancy--the enthusiasm of youth."
+
+"It has a name, I suppose?"
+
+"Certainly, but--"
+
+"Is it sufficiently important, think you, to make us run the risk of
+being benighted on such roads as these?"
+
+"Why, it is quite early in the day."
+
+"But we have more than two leagues to go. Why will you not
+speak?--there cannot any great mystery."
+
+"Well, perhaps not a mystery, exactly, but just one of those subjects
+on which we are usually reserved with others."
+
+"So! so!" rejoined D'Effernay, with a little sneer. "Some love affair;
+some girl or another who pursues him, that he wants to get rid of."
+
+"Nothing of the kind, I can assure you," replied the captain drily.
+"It could scarcely be more innocent. He wishes, in fact, to visit his
+friend's grave."
+
+The listener's expression was one of scorn and anger. "It is worth the
+trouble certainly," he exclaimed, with a mocking laugh. "A charming
+sentimental pilgrimage, truly; and pray who is this beloved
+friend, over whose resting-place he must shed a tear and plant a
+forget-me-not? He told me he had never been in the neighborhood
+before."
+
+"No more he had; neither did he know where poor Hallberg was buried
+until I told him."
+
+"Hallberg!" echoed the other in a tone that startled the captain,
+and caused him to turn and look fixedly in the speaker's face. It was
+deadly pale, and the captain observed the effort which D'Effernay made
+to recover his composure.
+
+"Hallberg!" he repeated again, in a calmer tone, "and was Wensleben a
+friend of his?"
+
+"His bosom friend from childhood. They were brought up together at the
+academy. Hallberg left it a year earlier than his friend."
+
+"Indeed!" said D'Effernay, scowling as he spoke, and working himself
+up into a passion. "And this lieutenant came here on this account,
+then, and the purchase of the estates was a mere excuse."
+
+"I beg your pardon," observed the captain, in a decided tone of voice;
+"I have already told you that it was I who informed him of the place
+where his friend lies buried."
+
+"That may be, but it was owing to his friendship, to the wish to learn
+something further of his fate, that we are indebted for the visit of
+this romantic knight-errant."
+
+"That does not appear likely," replied the captain, who thought it
+better to avert, if possible, the rising storm of his companion's
+fury. "Why should he seek for news of Hallberg here, when he comes
+from the place where he was quartered for a long time, and where all
+his comrades now are."
+
+"Well, I don't know," cried D'Effernay, whose passion was increasing
+every moment. "Perhaps you have heard what was once gossiped about
+the neighborhood, that Hallberg was an admirer of my wife before she
+married."
+
+"Oh yes, I have heard that report, but never believed it. Hallberg was
+a prudent, steady man, and every one knew that Mademoiselle Varnier's
+hand had been promised for some time."
+
+"Yes! yes! but you do not know to what lengths passion and avarice may
+lead: for Emily was rich. We must not forget that, when we discuss
+the matter; an elopement with the rich heiress would have been a fine
+thing for a poor, beggarly lieutenant."
+
+"Shame! shame! M. D'Effernay. How can you slander the character
+of that upright young man? If Hallberg were so unhappy as to love
+Mademoiselle Varnier--"
+
+"That he did! you may believe me so far, I had reason to know it, and
+I did know it."
+
+"We had better change the conversation altogether, as it has taken
+so unpleasant a turn, Hallberg is dead; his errors, be they what they
+may, lie buried with him. His name stands high with all who knew him
+Even you, M. D'Effernay--you were his friend."
+
+"I his friend? I hated him!--I loathed him!" D'Effernay could not
+proceed; he foamed at the mouth with rage.
+
+"Compose yourself!" said the Captain, rising as he spoke; "you look
+and speak like a madman."
+
+A madman! Who says I am mad? Now I see it all--the connection of the
+whole--the shameful conspiracy."
+
+"Your conduct is perfectly incomprehensible to me," answered the
+captain, with perfect coolness. "Did you not attend Hallberg in his
+last illness, and give him his medicines with your own hand?"
+
+"I!" stammered D'Effernay. "No! no! no!" he cried, while the
+captain's growing suspicions increased every moment, on account of
+the perturbation which his companion displayed. "I never gave his
+medicines; whoever says that is a liar."
+
+"I say it!" exclaimed the officer, in a loud tone, for his patience
+was exhausted. "I say it, because I know that it was so, and I will
+maintain that fact against any one at any time. If you choose to
+contradict the evidence of my senses, it is you who are a liar!"
+
+"Ha! you shall give me satisfaction for this insult. Depend upon it,
+I am not one to be trifled with, as you shall find. You shall retract
+your words."
+
+"Never! I am ready to defend every word I have uttered here on this
+spot, at this moment, if you please. You have your pistols in the
+carriage, you know."
+
+D'Effernay cast a look of hatred on the speaker, and then dashing
+down the little hill, to the surprise of the servants, he dragged
+the pistols from the sword-case, and was by the captain's side in a
+moment. But the loud voices of the disputants had attracted Edward to
+the spot, and there he stood on D'Effernay's return; and by his side a
+venerable old man, who carried a large bunch of keys in his hand.
+
+"In heaven's name, what has happened?" cried Wensleben.
+
+"What are you about to do?" interposed the rector, in a tone of
+authority, though his countenance was expressive of horror. "Are you
+going to commit murder on this sacred spot, close to the precincts of
+the church?"
+
+"Murder! who speaks of murder?" cried D'Effernay. "Who can prove it?"
+and as he spoke, the captain turned a fierce, penetrating look upon
+him, beneath which he quailed.
+
+"But, I repeat the question," Edward began once more, "what does all
+this mean? I left you a short time ago in friendly conversation. I
+come back and find you both armed--both violently agitated--and M.
+D'Effernay, at least, speaking incoherently. What do you mean by
+'proving it?'--to what do you allude?" At this moment, before any
+answer could be made, a man came out of the house with a pick-axe
+and shovel on his shoulder, and advancing toward the rector, said
+respectfully, "I am quite ready, sir, if you have the key of the
+churchyard."
+
+It was now the captain's turn to look anxious: "What are you going
+to do, you surely don't intend--?" but as he spoke, the rector
+interrupted him.
+
+"This gentleman is very desirous to see the place where his friend
+lies buried."
+
+"But these preparations, what do they mean?"
+
+"I will tell you," said Edward, in a voice and tone that betrayed
+the deepest emotion, "I have a holy duty to perform. I must cause the
+coffin to be opened."
+
+"How, what!" screamed D'Effernay, once again. "Never--I will never
+permit such a thing."
+
+"But, sir," the old man spoke, in a tone of calm decision, contrasting
+wonderfully with the violence of him whom he addressed, "you have no
+possible right to interfere. If this gentleman wishes it, and I accede
+to the proposition, no one can prevent us from doing as we would."
+
+"I tell you I will not suffer it," continued D'Effernay, with the same
+frightful agitation. "Stir at your peril," he cried, turning sharply
+round upon the grave-digger, and holding a pistol to his head; but the
+captain pulled his arm away, to the relief of the frightened peasant.
+
+"M. D'Effernay," he said, "your conduct for the last half-hour has
+been most unaccountable--most unreasonable."
+
+"Come, come," interposed Edward, "Let us say no more on the subject;
+but let us be going," he addressed the rector; "we will not detain
+these gentlemen much longer."
+
+He made a step toward the churchyard, but D'Effernay clutched his arm,
+and, with an impious oath, "you shall not stir," he said; "that grave
+shall not be opened."
+
+Edward shook him off, with a look of silent hatred, for now indeed all
+his doubts were confirmed.
+
+D'Effernay saw that Wensleben was resolved, and a deadly pallor spread
+itself over his features, and a shudder passed visibly over his frame.
+
+"You are going!" he cried, with every gesture and appearance of
+insanity. "Go, then;" ... and he pointed the muzzle of the pistol to
+his mouth, and before any one could prevent him, he drew the trigger,
+and fell back a corpse. The spectators were motionless with surprise
+and horror; the captain was the first to recover himself in some
+degree. He bent over the body with the faint hope of detecting some
+sign of life. The old man turned pale and dizzy with a sense of
+terror, and he looked as if he would have swooned, had not Edward led
+him gently into his house, while the two others busied themselves with
+vain attempts to restore life.
+
+The spirit of D'Effernay had gone to its last account!
+
+It was, indeed, an awful moment. Death in its worst shape was before
+them, and a terrible duty still remained to be performed.
+
+Edward's cheek was blanched; his eye had a fixed look, yet he moved
+and spoke with a species of mechanical action, which had something
+almost ghastly in it. Causing the body to be removed into the house,
+he bade the captain summon the servants of the deceased, and then
+motioning with his hand to the awe-struck sexton, he proceeded with
+him to the churchyard. A few clods of earth alone were removed ere the
+captain stood by his friend's side.
+
+Here we must pause. Perhaps it were better altogether to emulate the
+silence that was maintained then and afterward by the two comrades.
+But the sexton could not be bribed to entire secrecy, and it was a
+story he loved to tell, with details we gladly omit, of how Wensleben
+solemnly performed his task--of how no doubt could any longer exist
+as to the cause of Hallberg's death. Those who love the horrible must
+draw on their own imaginations to supply what we resolutely withhold.
+
+Edward, we believe, never alluded to D'Effernay's death, and all the
+awful circumstances attending it, but twice--once, when, with every
+necessary detail, he and the captain gave their evidence to the legal
+authorities; and once, with as few details as possible, when he had an
+interview with the widow of the murderer, the beloved of the victim.
+The particulars of this interview he never divulged, for he considered
+Emily's grief too sacred to be exposed to the prying eyes of the
+curious and the unfeeling. She left the neighborhood immediately,
+leaving her worldly affairs in Wensleben's hands, who soon disposed
+of the property for her. She returned to her native country, with the
+resolution of spending the greater part of her wealth in relieving
+the distresses of others, wisely seeking, in the exercise of piety
+and benevolence, the only possible alleviation of her own deep
+and many-sided griefs. For Edward, he was soon pronounced to have
+recovered entirely from the shock of these terrible events. Of a
+courageous and energetic disposition, he pursued the duties of his
+profession with a firm step, and hid his mighty sorrow deep in the
+recesses of his heart. To the superficial observer, tears, groans, and
+lamentations are the only proofs of sorrow: and when they subside,
+the sorrow is said to have passed away also. Thus the captive, immured
+within the walls of his prison-house, is as one dead to the outward
+world, though the gaoler be a daily witness to the vitality of
+affliction.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Paris has been again emptied of its citizens to see M. Poitevin make
+his second ascent on horseback from the Champ de Mars. To show that he
+was not fastened to his saddle, the idiot, when some hundred yards
+up in the air, stood upright on his horse, and saluted the multitude
+below with both his hands.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+PEASANT LIFE IN GERMANY.
+
+We copy the following interesting paragraph from a work just issued in
+London on "The Social Condition and Education of the People of England
+and Europe," by Joseph Kay, of Cambridge University.
+
+ "As I have already said, the _moral, intellectual and physical
+ condition of the peasants and operatives_ of Prussia, Saxony
+ and other parts of Germany, of Holland, and of the Protestant
+ cantons of Switzerland, and the social condition of the
+ peasants in the greater part of France, _is very much higher
+ and happier, and very much more satisfactory, than that of
+ the peasants and operatives of England_; the condition of the
+ _poor_ in the North German, Swiss and Dutch _towns_, is as
+ remarkable a contrast to that of the poor of the _English
+ towns_ as can well be imagined; and that the condition of the
+ _poorer classes_ of Germany, Switzerland, Holland and France
+ is _rapidly improving_. The great _superiority_ of the
+ _preparation_ for life which a _poor man_ receives in those
+ countries I have mentioned, to that which a peasant or
+ operative receives _in England_, and the difference of the
+ social position of a poor man in those countries to that of
+ a peasant or operative in England, seem sufficient to explain
+ the difference which exists between the moral and social
+ condition of the poor of our own country and of the other
+ countries I have named. In Germany, Holland, and Switzerland,
+ a child begins its life in the society of parents who have
+ been educated and brought up for years in the company of
+ learned and gentlemanly professors, and in the society and
+ under the direction of a father who has been exercised in
+ military arts, and who has acquired the bearing, the clean and
+ orderly habits, and the taste for respectable attire, which
+ characterize the soldier. The children of these countries
+ spend the first six years of their lives in homes which
+ are well regulated. They are during this time accustomed to
+ orderly habits, to neat and clean clothes, and to ideas of the
+ value of instruction, of the respect due to the teachers,
+ and of the excellence of the schools, by parents who have, by
+ their training in early life, acquired such tastes and ideas
+ themselves. Each child at the age of six begins to attend a
+ school, which is perfectly clean, well ventilated, directed by
+ an able and well-educated gentleman, and superintended by the
+ religious ministers and by the inspectors of the Government.
+ Until the completion of its _fourteenth_ year, each child
+ continues regular daily attendance at one of these schools,
+ daily strengthening its habits of cleanliness and order,
+ learning the rudiments of useful knowledge, receiving the
+ principles of religion and morality, and gaining confirmed
+ health and physical energy by the exercise and drill of the
+ school playground. _No children are left idle in the streets
+ of the towns; no children are allowed to grovel in the
+ gutters; no children are allowed to make_ their appearance
+ at the schools dirty, or in ragged clothes; and the local
+ authorities are obliged to clothe all whose parents cannot
+ afford to clothe them. The children of the _poor_ of
+ Germany, Holland and Switzerland acquire stronger habits of
+ cleanliness, neatness and industry at the _primary_ schools,
+ than the children of the _small shopkeeping_ classes of
+ England do at the private schools of England; and they
+ leave the _primary schools_ of these countries _much better
+ instructed_ than those who leave our _middle class private
+ schools_. After having learnt reading, writing, arithmetic,
+ singing, geography, history and the Scriptures, the children
+ leave the schools, carrying with them into life habits of
+ cleanliness, neatness, order and industry, and awakened
+ intellect, capable of collecting truths and reasoning upon
+ them."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE.]
+
+SUMMER PASTIME.
+
+ Do you ask how I'd amuse me
+ When the long bright summer comes,
+ And welcome leisure woos me
+ To shun life's crowded homes;
+ To shun the sultry city,
+ Whose dense, oppressive air
+ Might make one weep with pity
+ For those who must be there.
+
+ I'll tell you then--I would not
+ To foreign countries roam,
+ As though my fancy could not
+ Find occupance at home;
+ Nor to home-haunts of fashion
+ Would I, least of all, repair,
+ For guilt, and pride, and passion,
+ Have summer-quarters there.
+
+ Far, far from watering-places
+ Of note and name I'd keep,
+ For there would vapid faces
+ Still throng me in my sleep;
+ Then contact with the foolish,
+ The arrogant, the vain,
+ The meaningless--the mulish,
+ Would sicken heart and brain.
+
+ No--I'd seek some shore of ocean
+ Where nothing comes to mar
+ The ever-fresh commotion
+ Of sea and land at war;
+ Save the gentle evening only
+ As it steals along the deep,
+ So spirit-like and lonely,
+ To still the waves to sleep.
+
+ There long hours I'd spend in viewing
+ The elemental strife,
+ My soul the while subduing
+ With the littleness of life;
+ Of life, with all its paltry plans,
+ Its conflicts and its cares--
+ The feebleness of all that's man's--
+ The might that's God's and theirs!
+
+ And when eve came I'd listen
+ To the stilling of that war,
+ Till o'er my head should glisten
+ The first pure silver star;
+ Then, wandering homeward slowly,
+ I'd learn my heart the tune
+ Which the dreaming billows lowly,
+ Were murmuring to the moon!
+
+R.C.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+True genius is perpetual youth, health, serenity, and strength. The
+eye is bright with a fine fire that is undimmed by time, and the mind,
+not sharing the body's decline from the prime of middle age, continues
+on with illimitable accession of spiritual power.
+
+Our convictions should be based on conceptions got from insight of
+principles, and not upon opinions spawned of authority and expediency.
+Every man shall influence me, no man can decide for me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE SPIRIT OF THE TIMES]
+
+REMINISCENCES OF SARGENT S. PRENTISS, OF MISSISSIPPI.
+
+BY T.B. THORPE.
+
+AUTHOR OF "TOM OWEN, THE BEE HUNTER."
+
+The death of Sargeant S. Prentiss has called forth an universal
+feeling of sorrow; the consciousness that "a great man has fallen" is
+depicted upon the faces of the multitude.
+
+The eloquent offerings to his virtues and to his genius that
+everywhere follow the news of his demise, are but slight tokens of
+that sorrow that fills the heart of all who knew the gifted Prentiss.
+Having known him long, and having had frequent occasions to witness
+exhibitions of his great mental powers, I cannot refrain from paying
+an imperfect tribute to his memory.
+
+I first met Mr. Prentiss when he was in the full maturity of his
+power, but I have the pleasure of knowing hundreds who were well
+acquainted with his early history and early triumphs. Volumes of
+interest might be written upon the life of Mr. Prentiss. And then
+his high sense of honor, his brave spirit, his nobleness of soul, his
+intense but commendable pride, his classical attainments, and his deep
+knowledge of the law, can scarcely be illustrated, so universal and
+superior were his accomplishments and acquirements.
+
+In his early career, I consider Mr. Prentiss both fortunate and
+unfortunate. I have often imagined the shrinking but proud boy, living
+unnoticed and unknown among the wealthiest citizens of the south.
+Buried in the obscurity of his humble school, he looked out upon the
+busy world, and measured the mighty capacities of his own soul with
+those whom society had placed above him. I think I see him brooding
+over his position, and longing to be free, as the suffocating man
+longs for the boundless air of heaven. His hour of triumph came,
+and surpassed, perhaps, his own aspirations. From the schoolroom he
+entered that of the court--a chance offered--a position gained--the
+law his theme, he at once not only equaled, but soared even beyond the
+aim of the most favored of his compeers.
+
+The era was one of extravagance. The virgin soil of Mississippi was
+pouring into the laps of her generous sons untold abundance. There
+were thousands of her citizens, full of health and talent, who adorned
+excesses of living by the tasteful procurements of wealth, and the
+highest accomplishments of mind. Into this world Prentiss entered,
+heralded by naught save his own genius. The heirs of princely
+fortunes, the descendants of heroes, men of power and place, of family
+pride, of national associations, were not more proud, more gallant,
+than was Prentiss, for "he was reckoned among the noblest Romans of
+them all."
+
+Each step in his new fortune seemed only to elicit new qualities
+for admiration. At the forum he dazzled--the jury and the judge were
+confounded--the crowd carried him to the stump, and the multitude
+listened as to one inspired. Fair ladies vied with each other in
+waving tiny hands in token of admiration--the stolid judges of the
+Supreme Court wondered at the mind of the apparent boy--even the walls
+of Congress echoed forth paeans to his praise. His course was as rapid
+and brilliant as that of the meteor that suddenly springs athwart the
+heavens, but he was human and accomplished his task, herculean as he
+was, at the price of an injured constitution.
+
+In personal appearance Prentiss was eminently handsome, and yet
+eminently manly. Although of medium height, there was that in the
+carriage of his head that was astonishingly impressive. I shall never
+forget him on one occasion, "in '44," when he rose at a public meeting
+to reply to an antagonist worthy of his steel. His whole soul was
+roused, his high smooth forehead fairly coruscated. He remained silent
+for some seconds, and only _looked_. The bald eagle never glanced
+so fiercely from his eyry. It seemed as if his deep blue eye would
+distend until it swallowed up the thousands of his audience. For an
+instant the effect was painful; he saw it and smiled, when a cheer
+burst from the admiring multitude that fairly shook the earth.
+
+His voice was clear and sweet, and could be heard at an immense
+distance, and yet, to be all like Demosthenes, he had a perceptible
+impediment in his speech. As a reader he had no superior. His
+narration was clear and unadorned, proper sentences were subduedly
+humorous, but the impressive parts were delivered with an effect that
+reminded me of the elder Kean.
+
+His imagination was unsurpassed, and the rich stores of his mind
+supplied him with never-ending material, quoted and original.
+The slightest allusion to anything gave him the key to all its
+peculiarities if he had occasion to allude to the diamond, its bed in
+the Golconda, its discovery by some poor native, its being associated
+with commerce, its polish by the lapidary, its adorning the neck
+of beauty, its rays brilliant and serene, its birth, its life,
+its history, all flashed upon him. So with every idea in the vast
+storehouse of his mind. He seemed to know all things, in mass and in
+particulars, never confused, never at a loss--the hearer listened,
+wondered, and dreamed. Thoughts of moment came forth as demanded, but
+ten thousand other thoughts rare and beautiful, continued to bubble
+up, after all effort ceased.
+
+No man had a more delicate or subtle wit than Prentiss, or a more
+Falstaffian humor when it suited his purpose. Who will ever forget the
+spending of a social dinner hour with him, when his health was high
+and his mind at ease? Who so lovely?--who so refined? What delight
+was exhibited by sweet ladies who listened to his words! Who could
+so eloquently discourse of roses and buds, of lilies and pearls, of
+eyes and graces, of robes and angels, and yet never offend the most
+sensitive of the sex, or call other than the blush of pleasure and
+joy to the cheek? Who could, on the "public day," ascend so gracefully
+from the associations of tariffs, and banks, and cotton, and sugar,
+to greet the fair ladies that honored him with their presence? How
+he would lean toward them, as he dwelt upon "the blessed of all God's
+handiwork," compared their bright eyes to "day-stars" that lit up the
+dark recesses of his own clouded imagination; and how he would revel,
+like another Puck, among the rays and beams of smiles called forth by
+his own happy compliments--and how he would change from all this, and
+in an instant seemingly arm himself with the thunderbolts of Jove,
+which he would dash with appalling sound among his antagonists, or at
+principles he opposed, and yet with such a charm, with such a manner,
+that these very daughters of the sunny South who had listened to his
+syren-song so admiringly, would now stare, and wonder, and pallor, and
+yet listen, even as one gazes over the precipice, and is fascinated at
+the very nearness to destruction.
+
+Prentiss had originally a constitution of iron; his frame was so
+perfect in its organization, that, in spite of the most extraordinary
+negligence of health, his muscles had all the compactness, glossiness,
+and distinctiveness of one who had specially trained by diet and
+exercise. It was this constitution that enabled him to accomplish
+so much in so short a time. He could almost wholly discard sleep for
+weeks, with apparent impunity; he could eat or starve; do anything
+that would kill ordinary men, yet never feel a twinge of pain. I
+saw him once amidst a tremendous political excitement; he had been
+talking, arguing, dining, visiting, and traveling, without rest for
+three whole days. His companions would steal away at times for sleep,
+but Prentiss was like an ever-busy spirit, here, and there, and
+everywhere. The morning of the fourth day came, and he was to appear
+before an audience familiar with his fame, but one that had never
+heard him speak; an audience critical in the last degree, he desired
+to succeed, for more was depending than he had ever before had cause
+to stake upon such an occasion. Many felt a fear that he would be
+unprepared. I mingled in the expecting crowd: I saw ladies who had
+never honored the stump with their presence struggling for seats,
+counselors, statesmen, and professional men, the elite of a great
+city, were gathered together. An hour before I had seen Prentiss,
+still apparently ignorant of his engagement.
+
+The time of trial came, and the remarkable man presented himself,
+the very picture of buoyant health, of unbroken rest. All this had
+been done _by the unyielding resolve of his will_--his triumph was
+complete; high-wrought expectations were more than realized, prejudice
+was demolished, professional jealousy silenced, and he descended from
+the rostrum, freely accorded his proper place among the orators and
+statesmen of the "Southern Metropolis."
+
+Mr. Clay visited the South in the fall of '44, and, as he was
+then candidate for the Presidency, he attracted in New Orleans, if
+possible, more than usual notice. His hotel was the St. Charles;
+toward noon he reached that magnificent palace. The streets presented
+a vast ocean of heads, and every building commanding a view was
+literally covered with human beings. The great "Statesman of the West"
+presented himself to the multitude between the tall columns of the
+finest portico in the world. The scene was beyond description, and of
+vast interest. As the crowd swayed to and fro, a universal shout was
+raised for Mr. Clay to speak; he uttered a sentence or two, waved his
+hand in adieu, and escaped amidst the prevailing confusion. Prentiss
+meanwhile was at a side window, evidently unconscious of being himself
+noticed, gazing upon what was passing with all the delight of the
+humblest spectator. Suddenly his name was announced. He attempted to
+withdraw from public gaze, but his friends pushed him forward. Again
+his name was shouted, hats and caps were thrown in the air, and he
+was finally compelled to show himself on the portico. With remarkable
+delicacy, he chose a less prominent place than that previously
+occupied by Mr. Clay, although perfectly visible. He thanked his
+friends for their kindness by repeated bows, and by such smiles as he
+alone could give. "A speech! A speech!" thundered a thousand voices.
+Prentiss lifted his hand; in an instant everything was still--then
+pointing to the group that surrounded Mr. Clay, he said,
+"Fellow-citizens, when the eagle is soaring in the sky, the owls
+and the bats retire to their holes." And long before the shout that
+followed this remark had ceased, Prentiss had disappeared amid the
+multitude.
+
+But the most extraordinary exhibition of Prentiss' powers of mind and
+endurance of body, was shown while he was running for Congress. He
+had the whole State to canvass, and the magnitude of the work was just
+what he desired. From what I have learned from anecdotes, that canvass
+must have presented some scenes combining the highest mental and
+physical exertion that was ever witnessed in the world. Prentiss was
+in perfect health, and in the first blush of success, and it cannot be
+doubted but that his best efforts of oratory were then made, and now
+live recorded only in the fading memories of his hearers. An incident
+illustrative of the time is remembered, that may hear repeating.
+
+The whole state of Mississippi was alive with excitement; for the
+moment, she felt that her sovereign dignity had been trifled with,
+and that her reputation demanded the return of Prentiss to Congress.
+Crowds followed him from place to place, making a gala time of weeks
+together. Among the shrewd worldlings who take advantage of such times
+"to coin money," was the proprietor of a traveling menagerie, and he
+soon found out that the multitude followed Prentiss. Getting the list
+of that remarkable man's "appointments," he filled up his own, and it
+was soon noticed as a remarkable coincidence, that the orator always
+"arrived along with the other 'lions.'" The reason of this meeting was
+discovered, and the "boys" decided that Prentiss should "next time"
+speak from the top of the lion's cage. Never was the menagerie more
+crowded. At the proper time, the candidate gratified his constituents,
+and mounted his singular rostrum. I was told by a person, who
+professed to be an eye witness, that the whole affair presented a
+singular mixture of the terrible and the comical. Prentiss was, as
+usual, eloquent, and, as if ignorant of the novel circumstances with
+which he was surrounded, went deeply into the matter in hand, his
+election. For a while the audience and the animals were quiet, the
+former listening, the latter eyeing the speaker with grave intensity.
+The first burst of applause electrified the menagerie; the elephant
+threw his trunk into the air and echoed back the noise, while the
+tigers and bears significantly growled. On went Prentiss, and as each
+peculiar animal vented his rage or approbation, he most ingeniously
+wrought in its habits, as a facsimile of some man or passion. In the
+meanwhile, the stately king of beasts, who had been quietly treading
+the mazes of his prison, became alarmed at the footsteps over
+his head, and placing his mouth upon the floor of his cage, made
+everything shake by his terrible roar. This, joined with the already
+excited feelings of the audience, caused the ladies to shriek, and
+a fearful commotion for a moment followed. Prentiss, equal to every
+occasion, changed his tone and manner; he commenced a playful strain,
+and introduced the fox, the jackal, and hyena, and capped the climax
+by likening some well known political opponent to a grave baboon that
+presided over the "cage with monkeys"; the resemblance was instantly
+recognized, and bursts of laughter followed, that literally set many
+into convulsions. The baboon, all unconscious of the attention he
+was attracting, suddenly assumed a grimace, and then a serious face,
+when Prentiss exclaimed--"I see, my fine fellow, that your feelings
+are hurt by my unjust comparison, and I humbly beg your pardon."
+The effect of all this may be vaguely imagined, but it cannot be
+described.
+
+Of Prentiss' power before a jury too much cannot be said. Innumerable
+illustrations might be gathered up, showing that he far surpassed
+any living advocate. "The trial of the Wilkinsons" might be cited,
+although it was far from being one of his best efforts. Two young men,
+only sons, and deeply attached as friends, quarreled, and in the mad
+excitement of the moment, one of them was killed. Upon the trial, the
+testimony of the mother of the deceased was so direct, that it seemed
+to render "the clearing of the prisoner" hopeless. Prentiss spoke to
+the witness in the blandest manner and most courtly style. The mother,
+arrayed in weeds, and bowed down with sorrow, turned toward Prentiss,
+and answered his inquiries with all the dignity of a perfectly
+accomplished lady--she calmly uttered the truth, and every word she
+spoke rendered the defense apparently more hopeless.
+
+"Would you punish that young man with death?" said Prentiss, pointing
+to the prisoner.
+
+The questioned looked, and answered--"He has made me childless, let
+the law take its course."
+
+"And would wringing his mother's heart and hurrying her gray hairs
+with sorrow into the grave, by rendering her childless, assuage your
+grief?"
+
+All present were dissolved in tears--even convulsive sobbing was heard
+in the courtroom.
+
+"No!" said the witness, with all the gushing tenderness of a
+mother--"No! I would not add a sorrow to her heart, nor that of her
+son!"
+
+Admissions in the evidence followed, and hopes were uttered for
+the prisoner's acquittal, that changed the whole character of the
+testimony. What was a few moments before so dark, grew light, and
+without the slightest act that might be construed into an unfair
+advantage, in the hands of Prentiss, the witness pleaded for the
+accused.
+
+Soon after Mr. Prentiss settled in New Orleans, a meeting was held
+to raise funds for the erection of a suitable monument to Franklin.
+On that occasion, the lamented Wilde and the accomplished McCaleb
+delivered ornate and chaste addresses upon the value of art, and the
+policy of enriching New Orleans with its exhibition. At the close
+of the meeting, as the audience rose to depart, some one discovered
+Prentiss, and calling his name, it was echoed from all sides--he tried
+to escape, but was literally carried on the stand.
+
+As a rich specimen of off-hand eloquence, I think the address he
+delivered on that occasion was unequaled. Unlike any other speech,
+he had the arts to deal with, and of course the associations were of
+surpassing splendor. I knew that he was ignorant of the technicalities
+of art, and had paid but little attention to their study, and my
+surprise was unbounded to see him, thus unexpectedly called upon,
+instantly arrange in his mind ideas, and expressing facts and
+illustrations that would have done honor to Burke, when dwelling upon
+the sublime and beautiful. Had he been bred to the easel, or confined
+to the sculptor's room, he could not have been more familiar with the
+details of the studio--he painted with all the brilliancy of Titian,
+and with the correctness of Raphael, while his images in marble
+combined the softness of Praxiteles, and the nervous energy of Michael
+Angelo. All this with Prentiss was intuition--I believe that the whole
+was the spontaneous thought of the moment, the crude outlines that
+floated through his mind being filled up by the intuitive teachings of
+his surpassing genius. His conclusion was gorgeous--he passed Napoleon
+to the summit of the Alps--his hearers saw him and his steel clad
+warriors threading the snows of Mount St. Bernard, and having gained
+the dizzy height, Prentiss represented "the man of destiny" looking
+down upon the sunny plains of Italy, and then with a mighty swoop,
+descending from the clouds and making the grasp of Empire secondary to
+that of Art.
+
+I had the melancholy pleasure of hearing his last, and, it would seem
+to me, his greatest speech. Toward the close of the last Presidential
+campaign, I found him in the interior of the State, endeavoring
+to recruit his declining health. He had been obliged to avoid all
+public speaking, and had gone far into the country to get away from
+excitement. But there was a "gathering" near by his temporary home,
+and he consented to be present. It was late in the evening when
+he ascended the "stand," which was supported by the trunks of two
+magnificent forest trees, through which the setting sun poured with
+picturesque effect. The ravages of ill health were apparent upon his
+face, and his high massive forehead was paler, and seemingly more
+transparent than usual. His audience, some three or four hundred, was
+composed in a large degree of his old and early friends. He seemed to
+feel deeply, and as there was nothing to oppose, he assumed the style
+of the mild and beautiful--he casually alluded to the days of his
+early coming among his Southern friends--of hours of pleasure he had
+massed, and of the hopes of the future. In a few moments the bustle
+and confusion natural to a fatiguing day of political wrangling
+ceased--one straggler after another suspended his noisy demonstration,
+and gathered near the speaker. Soon a mass of silent but heart-heaving
+humanity was crowded compactly before him. Had Prentiss, on that
+occasion, held the very heart-strings of his auditors in his hand, he
+could not have had them more in his power. For an hour he continued,
+rising from one important subject to another, until the breath was
+fairly suspended in the excitement. An uninterested spectator would
+have supposed that he had used sorcery in thus transfixing his
+auditors. While all others forgot, he noticed the day was drawing to a
+close, he turned and looked toward the setting sun, and apostrophized
+its fading glory--then in his most touching voice and manner,
+concluded as follows:--
+
+"Friends--That glorious orb reminds me that the day is spent, and
+that I too must close. Ere we part, let me hope that it may be our
+good fortune to end our days in the same splendor, and that when the
+evening of life comes, we may sink to rest with the clouds that close
+in on our departure, gold-tipped with the glorious effulgence of a
+well-spent life!"
+
+In conclusion, I would ask, will some historian, who can sympathize
+with the noble dead, gather up the now fleeting memorials that still
+live in memory, and combine them together, that future generations may
+know something of the mighty mind of Prentiss.
+
+The remains of the orator must ever be imperfect--the tone of
+voice--the flashing eye--the occasion, and the mighty shout of the
+multitude, cannot be impressed; but still Prentiss has left enough
+in his brilliant career, if treasured up, to show posterity that he
+was every inch a man. Let his fragmentary printed speeches--let the
+reminiscences of his friends that treat of his power as an orator,
+be brought together, and unsatisfactory as they may be, there will
+be found left intrinsic value enough to accomplish the object. There
+will be in the fluted column, though shattered and defaced, an Ionian
+beauty that will tell unerringly of the magnificent temple that it
+once adorned.
+
+BATON ROUGE, July 9, 1850.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM HOUSEHOLD WORDS.]
+
+THE CHEMISTRY OF A CANDLE.
+
+The Wilkinsons were having a small party,--it consisted of themselves
+and Uncle Bagges--at which the younger members of the family, home
+for the holidays, had been just admitted to assist after dinner. Uncle
+Bagges was a gentleman from whom his affectionate relatives cherished
+expectations of a testamentary nature. Hence the greatest attention
+was paid by them to the wishes of Mr. Bagges, as well as to every
+observation which he might be pleased to make.
+
+"Eh! what? you sir," said Mr. Bagges, facetiously addressing himself
+to his eldest nephew, Harry,--"Eh! what? I am glad to hear, sir, that
+you are doing well at school. Now--eh? now, are you clever enough to
+tell where was Moses when he put the candle out?"
+
+"That depends, uncle," said the young gentleman, "on whether he had
+lighted the candle to see with at night, or by daylight, to seal a
+letter."
+
+"Eh! Very good, now! 'Pon my word, very good," exclaimed Uncle Bagges.
+"You must be Lord Chancellor, sir--Lord Chancellor, one of these
+days."
+
+"And now, uncle," asked Harry, who was a favorite with his uncle, "can
+you tell me what you do when you put a candle out?"
+
+"Clap an extinguisher on it, you young rogue, to be sure."
+
+"Oh! but I mean, you cut off its supply of oxygen," said Master Harry.
+
+"Cut off its ox's--eh? what? I shall cut off your nose, you young dog,
+one of these fine days."
+
+"He means something he heard at the Royal Institution," observed Mrs.
+Wilkinson. "He reads a great deal about chemistry, and he attended
+Professor Faraday's lectures there on the chemical history of a
+candle, and has been full of it ever since."
+
+"Now, you sir," said Uncle Bagges, "come you here to me, and tell
+me what you have to say about this chemical, eh?--or comical:
+which?--this comical chemical history of a candle."
+
+"He'll bore you, Bagges," said Mr. Wilkinson. "Harry, don't be
+troublesome to your uncle."
+
+"Troublesome! Oh, not at all. He amuses me. I like to hear him. So let
+him teach his old uncle the comicality and chemicality of a farthing
+rushlight."
+
+"A wax candle will be nicer and cleaner, uncle, and answer the same
+purpose. There's one on the mantel-shelf. Let me light it.
+
+"Take care you don't burn your fingers, Or set anything on fire," said
+Mrs. Wilkinson.
+
+"Now, uncle," commenced Harry, having drawn his chair to the side of
+Mr. Bagges, "we have got our candle burning. What do you see?"
+
+"Let me put on my spectacles," answered the uncle.
+
+"Look down on the top of the candle around the wick. See, it is a
+little cup full of melted wax. The heat of the flame has melted the
+wax just round the wick. The cold air keeps the outside of it hard,
+so as to make the rim of it. The melted wax in the little cup goes up
+through the wick to be burnt, just as oil does in the wick of a lamp.
+What do you think makes it go up, uncle?"
+
+"Why--why, the flame draws it up, doesn't it?"
+
+"Not exactly, uncle. It goes up through little tiny passages in the
+cotton wick, because very, very small channels, or pipes, or pores,
+have the power in themselves of sucking up liquids. What they do it by
+is called cap--something."
+
+"Capillary attraction, Harry," suggested Mr. Wilkinson.
+
+"Yes, that's it; just as a sponge sucks up water, or a bit of
+lump-sugar the little drop of tea or coffee left in the bottom of a
+cup. But I mustn't say much more about this, or else you will tell me
+I am doing something very much like teaching my grandmother to--you
+know what."
+
+"Your grandmother, eh, young sharp-shins?"
+
+"No--I mean my uncle. Now, I'll blow the candle out, like Moses; not
+to be in the dark, though, but to see into what it is. Look at the
+smoke rising from the wick. I'll hold a bit of lighted paper in the
+smoke, so as not to touch the wick. But see, for all that, the candle
+lights again. So this shows that the melted wax sucked up through
+the wick is turned into vapor; and the vapor burns. The heat of the
+burning vapor keeps on melting more wax, and that is sucked up too
+within the flame, and turned into vapor, and burnt, and so on till the
+was is all used up, and the candle is gone. So the flame, uncle, you
+see, is the last of the candle, and the candle seems to go through the
+flame into nothing--although it doesn't, but goes into several things,
+and isn't it curious, as Professor Faraday said, that the candle
+should look so splendid and glorious in going away?"
+
+"How well he remembers, doesn't he?" observed Mrs. Wilkinson.
+
+"I dare say," proceeded Harry, "that the flame of the candle looks
+flat to you; but if we were to put a lamp glass over it, so as
+to shelter it from the draught, you would see it is round,--round
+sideways and running up to a peak. It is drawn up by the hot air; you
+know that hot air always rises, and that is the way smoke is taken up
+the chimney. What should you think was in the middle of the flame?"
+
+"I should say fire," replied Uncle Bagges.
+
+"Oh, no! The flame is hollow. The bright flame we see is something
+no thicker than a thin peel, or skin; and it doesn't touch the wick.
+Inside of it is the vapor I told you of just now. If you put one end
+of a bent pipe into the middle of the flame, and let the other end of
+the pipe dip into a bottle, the vapor or gas from the candle will mix
+with the air there; and if you set fire to the mixture of gas from the
+candle and air in the bottle, it would go off with a bang."
+
+"I wish you'd do that, Harry," said Master Tom, the younger brother of
+the juvenile lecturer.
+
+"I want the proper things," answered Harry. "Well, uncle, the flame
+of the candle is a little shining case, with gas in the inside of it,
+and air on the outside, so that the case of flame is between the air
+and the gas. The gas keeps going into the flame to burn, and when the
+candle burns properly, none of it ever passes out through the flame;
+and none of the air ever gets in through the flame to the gas. The
+greatest heat of the candle is in this skin, or peel, or case of
+flame."
+
+"Case of flame!" repeated Mr. Bagges. "Live and learn. I should have
+thought a candle-flame was as thick as my poor old noddle."
+
+"I can show you the contrary," said Harry. "I take this piece of white
+paper, look, and hold it a second or two down upon the candle-flame,
+keeping the flame very steady. Now I'll rub off the black of the
+smoke, and--there--you find that the paper is scorched in the shape
+of a ring; but inside the ring it is only dirtied, and not singed at
+all."
+
+"Seeing is believing," remarked the uncle.
+
+"But," proceeded Harry, "there is more in the candle-flame than the
+gas that comes out of the candle. You know a candle won't burn without
+air. There must be always air around the gas, and touching it like, to
+make it burn. If a candle hasn't got enough air, it goes out, or burns
+badly, so that some of the vapor inside of the flame comes out through
+it in the form of smoke, and this is the reason of a candle smoking.
+So now you know why a great clumsy dip smokes more than a neat wax
+candle; it is because the thick wick of the dip makes too much fuel in
+proportion to the air that can get to it."
+
+"Dear me! Well, I suppose there is a reason for everything," exclaimed
+the young philosopher's mamma.
+
+"What should you say now," continued Harry, "if I told you that the
+smoke that comes out of a candle is the very thing that makes a candle
+light? Yes; a candle shines by consuming its own smoke. The smoke of
+a candle is a cloud of small dust, and the little grains of the dust
+are bits of charcoal, or carbon, as chemists call it. They are made in
+the flame, and burnt in the flame, and, while burning, make the flame
+bright. They are burnt the moment they are made; but the flame goes on
+making more of them as fast as it burns them: and that is how it keeps
+bright. The place they are made in, is in the ease of flame itself,
+where the strong heat is. The great heat separates them from the gas
+which conies from the melted wax, and, as soon as they touch the air
+on the outside of the thin case of flame, they burn."
+
+"Can you tell how it is that the little bits of carbon came the
+brightness of the flame?" asked Mr. Wilkinson.
+
+"Because they are pieces of solid matter," answered Harry. "To make
+a flame shine, there must always be some solid--or at least
+liquid-matter in it."
+
+"Very good." said Mr. Bagges,--"solid stuff necessary to brightness."
+
+"Some gases and other things," resumed Harry, "that burn with a
+flame you can hardly see, burn splendidly when something solid is
+put into them. Oxygen and hydrogen--tell me if I use too hard words,
+uncle--oxygen and hydrogen gases, if mixed together and blown through
+a pipe, burn with plenty of heat but with very little light. But if
+their flame is blown upon a piece of quick-lime, it gets so bright
+as to be quite dazzling, Make the smoke of oil of turpentine pass
+through the same flame, and it gives the flame a beautiful brightness
+directly."
+
+"I wonder," observed Uncle Bagges, "what has made you such a bright
+youth."
+
+"Taking after uncle, perhaps," retorted his nephew. "Don't put my
+candle and me out. Well, carbon, or charcoal is what causes the
+brightness of all lamps, and candles, and other common lights; so, of
+course, there is carbon in what they are all made of."
+
+"So carbon is smoke, eh? and light is owing to your carbon. Giving
+light out of smoke, eh? as they say in the classics," observed Mr.
+Bagges.
+
+"But what becomes of the candle," pursued Harry, "as it burns away?
+where does it go?"
+
+"Nowhere," said his mamma, "I should think. It burns to nothing."
+
+"Oh, dear, no!" said Harry, "everything--everybody goes somewhere."
+
+"Eh!--rather an important consideration, that," Mr. Bagges moralized.
+
+"You can see it goes into smoke, which makes soot, for one thing,"
+pursued Harry. "There are other things it goes into, not to be seen
+by only looking, but you can get to see them by taking the right
+means,--just put your hand over the candle, uncle."
+
+"Thank you, young gentleman, I had rather be excused."
+
+"Not close enough down to burn you, uncle; higher up. There--you
+feel a stream of hot air; so something seems to rise from the candle.
+Suppose you were to put a very long slender gas-burner over the flame,
+and let the flame burn just within the end of it, as if it were a
+chimney,--some of the hot steam would go up and come out at the top,
+but a sort of dew would be left behind in the glass chimney, if
+the chimney was cold enough when you put it on. There are ways of
+collecting this sort of dew, and when it is collected it turns out to
+be really water. I am not joking, uncle. Water is one of the things
+which the candle turns into in burning,--water coming out of fire. A
+jet of oil gives above a pint of water in burning. In some lighthouses
+they burn, Professor Faraday says, up to two gallons of oil in a
+night, and if the windows are cold the steam from the oil clouds the
+inside of the windows, and, in frosty weather, freezes into ice."
+
+"Water out of a candle, eh?" exclaimed Mr. Bagges. "As hard to get, I
+should have thought, as blood out of a post. Where does it come from?"
+
+"Part from the wax, and part from the air, and yet not a drop of
+it comes either from the air or the wax. What do you make of that,
+uncle?"
+
+"Eh? Oh! I'm no hand at riddles. Give it up."
+
+"No riddle at all, uncle. The part that comes from the wax isn't
+water, and the part that comes from the air isn't water, but when put
+together they become water. Water is a mixture of two things then.
+This can be shown. Put some iron wire or turnings into a gun barrel
+open at both ends. Heat the middle of the barrel red-hot in a little
+furnace. Keep the heat up, and send the steam of boiling water through
+the red-hot gun barrel. What will come out at the other end of the
+barrel won't be steam; it will be gas, which doesn't turn to water
+again when it gets cold, and which burns if you put a light to it.
+Take the turnings out of the gun-barrel, and you will find them
+changed to rust, and heavier than when they were put in. Part of the
+water is the gas that comes out of the barrel, the other part is what
+mixes with the iron turnings, and changes them to rust, and makes
+them heavier. You can fill a Wadder with the gas that comes out of
+the gun-barrel, or you can pass bubbles of it up into a jar of water
+turned upside down in a trough, and, as I said, you can make this part
+of the water burn."
+
+"Eh?" cried Mr. Bagges. "Upon my word! One of these day, we shall have
+you setting the Thames on fire."
+
+"Nothing more easy," said Harry, "than to burn part of the Thames, or
+of any other water; I mean the gas that I have just told you about,
+which is called hydrogen. In burning, hydrogen produces water again,
+like the flame of a candle. Indeed, hydrogen is that part of the water
+formed by a candle burning, that comes from the wax. All things that
+have hydrogen in them produce water in burning, and the more there
+is in them the more they produce. When pure hydrogen burns, nothing
+comes from it but water, no smoke or soot at all. If you were to burn
+one ounce of it, the water you would get would be just nine ounces.
+There are many ways of making hydrogen besides out of steam by the
+hot gun-barrel. I could show it you in a moment by pouring a little
+sulphuric acid mixed with water into a bottle upon a few zinc or steel
+filings, and putting a cork in the bottle with a little pipe through
+it, and setting fire to the gas that would come from the mouth of
+the pipe. We should find the flame very hot, but having scarcely
+any brightness. I should like you to see the curious qualities of
+hydrogen, particularly how light it is, so as to carry things up in
+the air; and I wish I had a small balloon to fill with it, and make go
+up to the ceiling, or a bag-pipe full of it to blow soap-bubbles with,
+and show how much faster they rise than common ones, blown with the
+breath."
+
+"So do I," interposed Master Tom.
+
+"And so," resumed Harry, "hydrogen, you know, uncle, is part of water,
+and just one-ninth part."
+
+"As hydrogen is to water, so is a tailor to an ordinary individual,
+eh?" Mr. Bagges remarked.
+
+"Well, now then, uncle, if hydrogen is the tailor's part of the
+water, what are the other eight parts? The iron turnings used to make
+hydrogen in the gun-barrel, and rusted, take just those eight parts
+from the water in the shape of steam, and are so much the heavier.
+Burn iron turnings in the air, and they make the same rust, and gain
+just the same in weight. So the other eight parts must be found in the
+air for one thing, and in the rusted iron turnings for another, and
+they must also be in the water; and now the question is, how to get at
+them?"
+
+"Out of the water? Fish for them, I should say," suggested Mr. Bagges.
+
+"Why, so we can," said Harry. "Only, instead of hooks and lines, we
+must use wires--two wires, one from one end, the other from the other,
+of a galvanic battery. Put the points of these wires into water, a
+little distance apart, and they instantly take the water to pieces.
+If they are of copper, or a metal that will rust easily, one of them
+begins to rust, and air-bubbles come up from the other. These bubbles
+are hydrogen. The other part of the water mixes with the end of the
+wire and makes rust. But if the wires are of gold, or a metal that
+does not rust easily, air-bubbles rise from the ends of both wires.
+Collect the bubbles from both wires in a tube, and fire them, and they
+turn to water again; and this water is exactly the same weight as the
+quantity that has been changed into the two gases. Now then, uncle,
+what should you think water was composed of?"
+
+"Eh? well--I suppose of those very identical two gases, young
+gentleman."
+
+"Right, uncle. Recollect that the gas from one of the wires was
+hydrogen, the one-ninth of water. What should you guess the gas from
+the other wire to be?"
+
+"Stop--eh?--wait a bit--eh?--oh! why, the other eight-ninths, to be
+sure."
+
+"Good again, uncle. Now this gas that is eight-ninths of water is the
+gas called oxygen that I mentioned just now. This is a very curious
+gas. It won't burn in air at all itself, like gas from a lamp, but it
+has a wonderful power of making things burn that are lighted and put
+into it. If you fill a jar with it--"
+
+"How do you manage that?" Mr. Bagges inquired.
+
+"You fill the jar with water," answered Harry, "and you stand it
+upside down in a vessel full of water too. Then you let bubbles of the
+gas up into the jar, and they turn out the water and take its place.
+Put a stopper in the neck of the jar, or hold a glass plate against
+the mouth of it, and you can take it out of the water and so have
+bottled oxygen. A lighted candle put into a jar of oxygen blazes up
+directly, and is consumed before you can say Jack Robinson. Charcoal
+burns away in it as fast, with beautiful bright sparks--phosphorus
+with a light that dazzles you to look at--and a piece of iron or steel
+just made red-hot at the end first, is burnt in oxygen quicker than
+a stick would be in common air. The experiment of burning things in
+oxygen beats any fire-works."
+
+"Oh, how jolly!" exclaimed Tom.
+
+"Now we see, uncle," Harry continued, "that water is hydrogen and
+oxygen united together, that water is got wherever hydrogen is burnt
+in common air, that a candle won't burn without air, and that when a
+candle burns there is hydrogen in it burning, and forming water. Now,
+then, where does the hydrogen of the candle get the oxygen from, to
+turn into water with it?"
+
+"From the air, eh?"
+
+"Just so. I can't stop to tell you of the other things which there is
+oxygen in, and the many beautiful and amusing ways of getting it. But
+as there is oxygen in the air, and as oxygen makes things burn at such
+a rate, perhaps you wonder why air does not make things burn as fast
+as oxygen. The reason is, that there is something else in the air that
+mixes with the oxygen and weakens it."
+
+"Makes a sort of gaseous grog of it, eh?" said Mr. Bagges. "But how is
+that proved?"
+
+"Why, there is a gas, called nitrous gas, which, if you mix it with
+oxygen, takes all the oxygen into itself, and the mixture of the
+nitrous gas and oxygen, if you put water with it, goes into the water.
+Mix nitrous gas and air together in a jar over water, and the nitrous
+gas takes away the oxygen, and then the water sucks up the mixed
+oxygen and nitrous gas, and that part of the air which weakens the
+oxygen is left behind. Burning phosphorus in confined air will also
+take all the oxygen from it, and there are other ways of doing the
+same thing. The portion of the air left behind is called nitrogen. You
+wouldn't know it from common air by the look; it has no color, taste,
+nor smell, and it won't burn. But things won't burn in it, either;
+and anything on fire put into it goes out directly. It isn't fit to
+breathe, and a mouse, or any animal, shut up in it, dies. It isn't
+poisonous, though; creatures only die in it for want of oxygen. We
+breathe it with oxygen, and then it does no harm, but good: for if
+we breathed pure oxygen, we should breathe away so violently, that
+we should soon breathe our life out. In the same way, if the air were
+nothing but oxygen, a candle would not last above a minute.
+
+"What a tallow-chandler's bill we should have!" remarked Mrs.
+Wilkinson.
+
+"'If a house were on fire in oxygen,' as Professor Faraday said,
+'every iron bar, or rafter, or pillar, every nail and iron tool,
+and the fire-place itself; all the zinc and copper roofs, and leaden
+coverings, and gutters, and pipes, would consume and burn, increasing
+the combustion.'"
+
+"That would be, indeed, burning 'like a house on fire,'" observed Mr.
+Bagges.
+
+"'Think,'" said Harry, continuing his quotation, "'of the Houses
+of Parliament, or a steam-engine manufactory. Think of an iron
+proof-chest no proof against oxygen. Think of a locomotive and its
+train,--every engine, every carriage, and even every rail would be set
+on fire and burnt up.' So now, uncle, I think you see what the use of
+nitrogen is, and especially how it prevents a candle from burning out
+too fast."
+
+"Eh?" said Mr. Bagges. "Well, I will say I do think we are under
+considerable obligations to nitrogen."
+
+"I have explained to you, uncle," pursued Harry, "how a candle, in
+burning, turns into water. But it turns into something else. besides
+that. There is a stream of hot air going up from it that won't
+condense into dew; some of that is the nitrogen of the air which the
+candle has taken all the oxygen from. But there is more in it than
+nitrogen. Hold a long glass tube over a candle, so that the stream
+of hot air from it may go up through the tube. Hold a jar over the
+end of the tube to collect some of the stream of hot air. Put some
+lime-water, which looks quite clear, into the jar; stop the jar,
+and shake it up. The lime-water, which was quite clear before, turns
+milky. Then there is something made by the burning of the candle that
+changes the color of the lime-water. That is a gas, too, and you can
+collect it, and examine it. It is to be got from several things,
+and is a part of all chalk, marble, and the shells of eggs or of
+shell-fish. The easiest way to make it is by pouring muriatic or
+sulphuric acid on chalk or marble. The marble or chalk begins to hiss
+or bubble, and you can collect the bubbles in the same way that you
+can oxygen. The gas made by the candle in burning, and which also is
+got out of the chalk and marble, is called carbonic acid. It puts out
+a light in a moment; it kills any animal that breathes it, and it is
+really poisonous to breathe, because it destroys life even when mixed
+with a pretty large quantity of common air. The bubbles made by beer
+when it ferments, are carbonic acid, so is the air that fizzes out of
+soda-water, and it is good to swallow though it is deadly to breathe.
+It is got from chalk by burning the chalk as well as by putting acid
+to it, and burning the carbonic acid out of chalk makes the chalk
+lime. This is why people are killed sometimes by getting in the way of
+the wind that blows from lime-kilns."
+
+"Of which it is advisable carefully to keep to the windward." Mr.
+Wilkinson observed.
+
+"The most curious thing about carbonic acid gas," proceeded Harry, "is
+its weight. Although it is only a sort of air, it is so heavy that
+you can pour it from one vessel into another. You may dip a cup of it
+and pour it down upon a candle, and it will put the candle out, which
+would astonish an ignorant person; because carbonic acid gas is as
+invisible as the air, and the candle seems to be put out by nothing. A
+soap-bubble or common air floats on it like wood on water. Its weight
+is what makes it collect in brewers' vats; and also in wells, where
+it is produced naturally; and owing to its collecting in such places
+it causes the deaths we so often hear about of those who go down into
+them without proper care. It is found in many springs of water, more
+or less; and a great deal of it comes out of the earth in some places.
+Carbonic acid gas is what stupefies the dogs in the Grotto del Cane.
+Well, but how is carbonic acid gas made by the candle?"
+
+"I hope with your candle you'll throw some light upon the subject,"
+said Uncle Bagges.
+
+"I hope so," answered Harry. "Recollect it is the burning of the
+smoke, or soot, or carbon of the candle, that makes the candle-flame
+bright. Also that the candle won't burn without air. Likewise that it
+will not burn in nitrogen, or air that has been deprived of oxygen.
+So the carbon of the candle mingles with oxygen, in burning, to make
+carbonic acid gas; just as the hydrogen does to form water. Carbonic
+acid gas, then, is carbon or charcoal dissolved in oxygen. Here is
+black soot getting invisible and changing into air; and this seems
+strange, uncle, doesn't it?"
+
+"Ahem! Strange, if true," answered Mr. Bagges. "Eh? Well! I suppose
+it's all right."
+
+"Quite so, uncle. Burn carbon or charcoal either in the air or in
+oxygen, and it is sure always to make carbonic acid, and nothing else,
+if it is dry. No dew or mist gathers in a cold glass jar if you burn
+dry charcoal in it. The charcoal goes entirely into carbonic acid gas,
+and leaves nothing behind but ashes, which are only earthy stuff that
+was in the charcoal, but not part of the charcoal itself. And now,
+shall I tell you something about carbon?"
+
+"With all my heart," assented Mr. Bagges.
+
+"I said that there was carbon or charcoal in all common lights, so
+there is in every common kind of fuel. If you heat coal or wood away
+from the air, some gas comes away, and leaves behind coke from coal,
+and charcoal from wood; both carbon, though not pure. Heat carbon
+as much as you will in a close vessel, and it does not change in the
+least; but let the air get to it, and then it burns and flies off in
+carbonic acid gas. This makes carbon so convenient for fuel. But it is
+ornamental as well as useful, uncle. The diamond is nothing else than
+carbon."
+
+"The diamond, eh! You mean the black diamond."
+
+"No: the diamond, really and truly. The diamond is only carbon in the
+shape of a crystal."
+
+"Eh? and can't some of your clever chemists crystalize a little bit of
+carbon, and make a Koh-i-noor?"
+
+"Ah, uncle, perhaps we shall, some day. In the mean time I suppose we
+must be content with making carbon so brilliant as it is in the flame
+of a candle. Well; now you see that a candle-flame is vapor burning,
+and the vapor, in burning, turns into water and carbonic acid gas. The
+oxygen of both the carbonic acid gas and the water comes from the air,
+and the hydrogen and carbon together are the vapor. They are distilled
+out of the melted was by the heat. But, you know, carbon alone can't
+be distilled by any heat. It can be distilled, though, when it is
+joined with hydrogen, as it is in the wax, and then the mixed hydrogen
+and carbon rise in gas of the same kind as the gas in the streets, and
+that also is distilled by heat from coal. So a candle is a little gas
+manufactory in itself, that burns the gas as fast as it makes it."
+
+"Haven't you pretty nearly come to your candle's end'!" said Mr.
+Wilkinson.
+
+"Nearly. I only want to tell uncle, that the burning of a candle is
+almost exactly like our breathing. Breathing is consuming oxygen,
+only not so fast as burning. In breathing we throw out water in vapor
+and carbonic acid from our lungs, and take oxygen in. Oxygen is as
+necessary to support the life of the body, as it is to keep up the
+flame of a candle."
+
+"So," said Mr. Bagges, "man is a candle, eh? and Shakspeare knew that,
+I suppose, (as he did most things,) when he wrote
+
+ 'Out, out, brief candle!'
+
+"Well, well; we old ones are moulds, and you young squires are dips
+and rushlights, eh? Any more to tell us about the candle?"
+
+"I could tell you a great deal more about oxygen, and hydrogen, and
+carbon, and water, and breathing, that Professor Faraday said, if I
+had time; but you should go and hear him yourself, uncle."
+
+"Eh? well! I think I will. Some of us seniors may learn something from
+a juvenile lecture, at any rate, if given by a Faraday. And now, my
+boy. I will tell you what," added Mr. Bagges, "I am very glad to find
+you so fond of study and science; and you deserve to be encouraged:
+and so I'll give you a what-d'ye-call-it'?--a Galvanic Battery, on
+your next birth-day; and so much for your teaching your old uncle the
+chemistry of a candle."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM A REVIEW OF GRISWOLD'S _PROSE WRITERS OF AMERICA_, IN THE
+SOUTHERN LITERARY MESSENGER.]
+
+DANIEL WEBSTER,
+
+AS A STATESMAN, AND AS A MAN OF LETTERS.
+
+Mr. Webster is properly selected as the representative of the
+best sense, and highest wisdom, and most consummate dignity, of
+the politics and oratory of the present times, because his great
+intelligence has continued to be so finely sensitive to all the
+influences that stir the action and speculation of the country.
+
+With elements of reason, definite, absolute, and emphatic; with
+principles settled, strenuous, deep and unchangeable as his being;
+his wisdom is yet exquisitely practical: with subtlest sagacity it
+apprehends every change in the circumstances in which it is to act,
+and can accommodate its action without loss of vigor, or alteration
+of its general purpose. Its theories always "lean and hearken" to
+the actual. By a sympathy of the mind, almost transcendental in
+its delicacy, its speculations are attracted into a parallelism
+with the logic of life and nature. In most men, that intellectual
+susceptibility by which they are capable of being reacted upon by the
+outer world, and having their principles and views expanded, modified
+or quickened, does not outlast the first period of life; from
+that time they remain fixed and rigid in their policy, temper and
+characteristics; if a new phase of society is developed, it must
+find its exponent in other men. But in Webster this fresh suggestive
+sensibility of the judgment has been carried on into the matured and
+determined wisdom of manhood. His perceptions, feelings, reasonings,
+tone, are always up to the level of the hour, or in advance of it;
+sometimes far, very far in advance, as in the views thrown out in his
+speech at Baltimore, on an international commercial system, in which
+he showed that he then foresaw both the fate of the tariff and the
+fallacy of free-trade. No man has ever been able to say, or now can
+say, that he is before Webster. The youngest men in the nation look to
+him, not as representing the past, but as leading in the future.
+
+This practicalness and readiness of adaptation are instinctive,
+not voluntary and designed. They are united with the most decided
+preference for certain opinions and the most earnest averseness to
+others. Nothing can be less like Talleyrand's system of waiting
+for events. He has never, in view of a change which he saw to be
+inevitable, held himself in reserve and uncommitted. What Webster is
+at any time, that he is strenuously, entirely, openly. He has first
+opposed, with every energy of his mind and temper, that which, when
+it has actually come, he is ready to accept, and make the best of. He
+never surrenders in advance a position which knows will be carried; he
+takes his place, and delivers battle; he fights as one who is fighting
+the last battle of his country's hopes; he fires the last shot. When
+the smoke and tumult are cleared off, where is Webster! Look around
+for the nearest rallying point which the view presents; there he
+stands, with his hand upon his heart, in grim composure; calm,
+dignified, resolute; neither disheartened nor surprised by defeat.
+"Leaving the things that are behind," is now the trumpet-sound by
+which he rallies his friends to a new confidence, and stimulates them
+to fresh efforts. It is obvious that Webster, when contending with
+all his force for or against some particular measure, has not been
+contemplating the probability of being compelled to oppose or defend a
+different policy, and, so, choosing his words warily, in reference to
+future possibilities of a personal kind: yet when the time has come
+that he has been obliged to fight with his face in another direction,
+it has always been found that no one principle had been asserted, no
+one sentiment displayed, incompatible with his new positions. This
+union of consistency with practicability has arisen naturally from
+the extent and comprehensiveness of his views, from the breadth and
+generality with which the analytical power of his understanding has
+always led him to state his principles and define his position. From
+the particular scheme or special maxim which his party was insisting
+upon, his mind rose to a higher and more general formula of truth.
+
+Owing to the same superior penetration and reach of thought, the gloom
+of successive repulses has never been able to paralyze the power
+which it has saddened. The constitution has been so often invaded
+and trampled upon, that to a common eye it might well seem to have
+lost all the resentments of vitality. But Webster has distinguished
+between the constitution and its administration. He has seen that the
+constitution, though in bondage, is not killed; that the channels
+of its life-giving wisdom are stuffed up with rubbish, but not
+obliterated. He has been determined that if the rulers of the country
+will deny the truth, they shall not debauch it; if they depart from
+the constitution, they shall not deprave it. He has been resolved,
+that when this tyranny of corruption shall be overpast, and the
+constitution draws again its own free breath of virtue, truth and
+wisdom, it shall be found perfect of limb and feature, prepared to
+rise like a giant refreshed by sleep.
+
+Mr. Griswold, we suppose, is quite right in suggesting that the only
+name in modern times to which reference can with any fitness be made
+for purposes of analogy or comparison with Webster is that of Burke.
+In many respects there is a correspondence between their characters;
+in some others they differ widely. As a prophet of the truth of
+political morals, as a revealer of those essential elements in the
+constitution of life, upon which, or of which, society is constructed
+and government evolved, Burke had no peer. In that department he rises
+into the distance and grandeur of inspiration; _nil mortote sonans_.
+Nor do we doubt that the Providence of God had raised him up for the
+purposes of public safety and guidance, any more than we doubt the
+mission of Jeremiah or Elisha, or any other of the school of the
+Lord's prophets. But leaving Burke unapproached in this region of
+the nature and philosophy of government, and looking at him, in his
+general career, as a man of intellect and action, we might indicate an
+analogy of this kind, that the character, temper and reason of Burke
+seem to be almost an image of the English constitution, and Webster's
+of the American. To get the key to Burke's somewhat irregular and
+startling career, it is necessary, to study the idea of the old whig
+constitution of the English monarchy: viewing his course from that
+point of view, we comprehend his almost countenancing and encouraging
+rebellion in the case of the American colonies; his intense hostility
+to Warren Hastings' imperial system; his unchastised earnestness
+in opposition to French maxims in the decline of his life. The
+constitution of the United States, that most wonderful of the
+emanations of providential wisdom, seems to be not only the home of
+Webster's affections and seat of his proudest hopes, but the very type
+of his understanding and fountain of his intellectual strength:
+
+ ----"hic illius arma;----
+ Hic currus."
+
+The genius of Burke, like the one, was inexhaustible in resources,
+so composite and so averse from theory as to appear incongruous, but
+justified in the result; not formal, not always entirely perspicuous.
+Webster's mind, like the other, is eminently logical, reduced
+into principles, orderly, distinct, reconciling abstraction with
+convenience, various in manifestation, yet pervaded by an unity of
+character.
+
+Mr. Webster has not merely illustrated a great range of mental powers
+and accomplishments, but has filled, in the eye of the nation, on a
+great scale, and to the farthest reach of their exigency, a diversity
+of intellectual characters; while the manner in which Burke's wisdom
+displayed itself was usually the same. We cannot suppose that Burke
+could have been a great lawyer. Webster possesses a consummate legal
+judgment and prodigious powers of legal logic, and is felt to be
+the highest authority on a great question of law in this country.
+The demonstrative faculty; the capacity to analyze and open any
+proposition so as to identify its separate elements with the very
+consciousness of the reader's or hearer's mind; this, which is the
+lawyer's peculiar power, had not been particularly developed in Burke,
+but exists in Webster in greater expansion and force than in any
+one since Doctor Johnson, who, it always appeared to us, had he been
+educated for the bar, would have made the greatest lawyer that ever
+led the decisions of Westminster-Hall. We should hardly be justified
+in saying that Burke would have made a great First Lord of the
+Treasury. Mr. Webster, as Secretary of State, proved himself to be
+a practical statesman of the highest; finest, promptest sagacity and
+foresight that this or any nation ever witnessed. Who now doubts the
+surpassing wisdom, who now but reverences the exalted patriotism,
+of the advice and the example which he gave, but gave in vain, to
+the Whig party at the beginning of Mr. Tyler's administration? His
+official correspondence would be lowered by a comparison with any
+state papers since the secretaryship of John Marshall. Does the public
+generally know what has become of that portentous difficulty about the
+Right of Search, upon which England and America, five years ago, were
+on the point of being "_lento collisae duello_." Mr. Webster settled it
+by mere force of mind: he dissipated the Question, _by seeing through
+it_, and by compelling others to see a fallacy in its terms which
+before had imposed upon the understanding of two nations. In the
+essential and universal philosophy of politics, Webster is second only
+to Burke. After Burke, there is no statesman whose writings might be
+read with greater advantage by foreign nations, or would have been
+studied with so much respect by antiquity, as Webster's.
+
+In a merely literary point of view, this perhaps may be said of Mr.
+Webster, that he is the only powerful and fervid orator, since the
+glorious days of Greece, whose style is so disciplined that any of
+his great public harangues might be used as models of composition. His
+language is beautifully pure, and his combinations of it exhibit more
+knowledge of the genius, spirit, and classic vigor of the English
+tongue, than it has entered the mind of any professor of rhetoric to
+apprehend. As the most impetuous sweeps of passion in him are pervaded
+and informed and guided by intellect, so the most earnest struggles
+of intellect seem to be calmed and made gentle in their vehemence,
+by a more essential rationality of taste. That imperious mind, which
+seems fit to defy the universe, is ever subordinate, by a kind of
+fascination, to the perfect law of grace. In the highest of his
+intellectual flights--and who can follow the winged rush of that eagle
+mind?--in the widest of his mental ranges-and who shall measure their
+extent?--he is ever moving within the severest line of beauty. No one
+would think of saying that Mr. Webster's speeches are thrown off with
+ease, and cost him but little effort; they are clearly the result
+of the intensest stress of mental energy; yet the manner is never
+discomposed; the decency and propriety of the display never interfered
+with; he is always greater than his genius; you see "the depth out not
+the tumult" of the mind. Whether, with extended arm, he strangles
+the "reluctantes dracones" of democracy, or with every faculty called
+home, concentrates the light and heat of his being in developing into
+principles those great sentiments and great instincts which are his
+inspiration; in all, the orator stands forth with the majesty and
+chastened grace of Pericles himself. In the fiercest of encounters
+with the deadliest of foes, the mind, which is enraged, is never
+perturbed; the style, which leaps like the fire of heaven, is never
+disordered. As in Guido's picture of St. Michael piercing the dragon,
+while the gnarled muscles of the arms and hands attest the utmost
+strain of the strength, the countenance remains placid, serene, and
+undisturbed. In this great quality of mental dignity, Mr. Webster's
+speeches have become more and more eminent. The glow and luster
+which set his earlier speeches a-blaze with splendor, is in his
+later discourses rarely let forth; but they have gained more, in the
+increase of dignity, than they have parted with in the diminution
+of brilliancy. We regard his speech before the shop-keepers, calling
+themselves merchants, of Philadelphia, as one of the most weighty
+and admirable of the intellectual efforts of his life. The range of
+profound and piercing wisdom; the exquisite and faultless taste; but
+above all, the august and indefectible dignity, that are illustrated
+from the beginning to the end of that great display of matured
+and finished strength, leave us in mingled wonder and reverence.
+There is one sentence there which seems to us almost to reach the
+_intellectual_ sublime; and while it stirs within us the depths of
+sympathy and admiration, we could heartily wish that the young men of
+America would inhale the almost supra-mortal spirit which it breathes:
+"I would not with any idolatrous admiration regard the Constitution
+of the United States, nor any other work of man; but this side of
+idolatry, I hold it in profound respect. I believe that no human
+working on such a subject, no human ability exerted for such an end,
+has ever produced so much happiness, or holds out now to so many
+millions of people the prospect, through such a succession of ages and
+ages, of so much happiness, as the Constitution of the United States.
+We who are here for one generation, for a single life, and yet in our
+several stations and relations in society intrusted in some degree
+with its protection and support, what duty does it devolve, what duty
+does it _not_ devolve, upon us!" In the name of distant ages, and a
+remote posterity, we hail the author of this and similar orations, as
+Webster the _Olympian_.
+
+But we leave a subject which we have incidentally touched, sincerely
+disclaiming any attempt to estimate the character or define the
+greatness of Webster. In reference to him we feel, as Cicero said to
+Caesar, "_Nil vulgare te dignum videri possit._"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM THE ATHENAEUM.]
+
+THE NEW PROPHET IN THE EAST.[5]
+
+The vicissitudes of the war in the Caucasus of late have been
+surprising enough to awaken the interest of Western Europe, even
+amidst her own nearer anxieties. Last year it was said that the
+conquest of Achulgo, the stronghold of the redoubtable Schamyl,
+had effectually broken the power of that daring leader. In direct
+contradiction to such reports, later accounts from Daghestan tell
+of the reappearance of the notable partisan amidst the lines of the
+Russians, and of a defeat of the latter, the most severe, if the
+details of the event be true, that they have yet suffered in the
+Caucasus. In any case, these exciting changes of fortune would be in
+favor of a book professing to describe this interesting region, and
+to add to our knowledge of its brave inhabitants. The main interest
+of Herr Bodenstedt's work will now be enhanced by its undertaking
+to give a more precise account than had previously appeared of the
+priest-warrior of Daghestan. and of the new sect as the prophet of
+which he succeeded in arraying the independent mountain clans against
+their common enemy with a kind of combination unknown in earlier
+periods of the struggle.
+
+[Footnote 5: The people of the Caucasus, and their Struggle for
+Liberty with the Russians--(_Die Volker des Caucasus, &c._) By
+Friedrich Bodenstedt. Second Edition. Frankfurt am Main, Lizius;
+London, Nutt.]
+
+The author has evidently lived for some time in the region which he
+describes, or in the bordering districts along the Caspian, both in
+Georgia and in North Daghestan, His acquaintance with Asiatic and
+Russian languages and customs appears to have been gained both by
+study and from intercourse with the natives of the south-eastern
+frontier. He is not ignorant of Oriental writings that refer to
+his subject; and his Russian statistics prove an access to official
+authorities which are not to be found in print. These, however
+obtained, can scarcely have been imparted to him as one of those
+writers whom the Court of St. Petersburg hires to promote its views
+through the press of Western Europe. His sympathies are declared
+against Russian usurpation; and the tendency of his essay is to prove
+how little real progress it has yet made in subduing the Caucasus, the
+enormous waste of money and life with which its fluctuating successes
+have been bought, and the fallacy of expecting a better result
+hereafter.
+
+What it has cost in life on the Russian side to attack-hitherto with
+no lasting effect--the handful of Caucasian mountaineers, may be
+guessed from a single note, dated 1847: "The present Russian force in
+the Caucasus"--including of course, the armed Cossacks of the Kuban
+and Terek--"amounts to two hundred thousand." Taking into account the
+numbers yearly cut off by disease, more fatal even than the mountain
+war, every step of which must be won by the most reckless waste
+of life,--the "Russian Officer" may perhaps truly affirm that the
+_annual_ expenditure of life by Russia, in her warfare with Schamyl,
+has for many years past exceeded the whole number of the population at
+any one time directly under the rule of that chieftain.
+
+We have said that the most instructive part of Herr Bodenstedt's essay
+is his sketch of that politico-religious scheme which made Schamyl
+formidable to the Russians. This system, it is to be observed, arose
+and has since been fully developed only in the Eastern Caucasus, where
+of late the main stress of the war has been. The western tribes (our
+"Circassians") who took the lead at an earlier stage of the contest,
+were not then, nor have they since been, inspired by the fanatic zeal
+which united the tribes of Daghestan. They fought from a mere love
+of independence, each little republic by itself; and their efforts,
+however heroic, being without concert, gradually declined before the
+vast force of the invader. In the region looking westward from the
+Georgian frontier on the Euxine, on the one side of the Caucasian
+range, and along the lower Kuban on the other, the Russian posts
+are now seldom threatened but by small predatory bands; the natives,
+retired to their mountain villages, have for some time made but few
+more formidable incursions. The war is transferred to the region
+spreading eastward from the Elbrus to the Caspian; where the strife
+for free existence is animated not less by the hatred of Russian
+slavery than by a fresh outbreak of Mohammedan zeal against infidel
+invasion,--a revival, in fact, of that war-like fanaticism which made
+the Moslem name terrible from the eighth to the sixteenth century.
+
+It dates from the years 1823-4; at which period a "new doctrine" began
+to be preached, secretly at first, to the select Ulema, afterward to
+greater numbers, in word and writing, by one Mullah Mohammed, a famous
+teacher and a judge (or _kadi_) of Jarach, in the Kurin district of
+Daghestan. He professed to have learnt it from Hadis-Ismail, an Alim
+of Kurdomir, highly famed for wisdom and sanctity. It laid bare the
+degradation into which his countrymen had sunk by irreligion and by
+the jealousy of sect; their danger, in consequence, from enemies
+of the true faith; and urged the necessity of reform in creed and
+practice, in order to regain the invincible character promised by the
+Prophet to believers. The theoretical part of the reformed doctrine
+seems to be a kind of Sufism,--the general character of which mode
+of Islam, long prevalent in the adjacent kingdom of Persia, has
+been described by our own orientalists. Disputed questions as to its
+origin, whether in Brahmin philosophy or in the reveries of Moslem
+mystics, cannot be discussed here; it must suffice to indicate those
+points which appear to connect it with the hieratic policy that has
+given a new aspect to the war in the Caucasus.
+
+Proceeding nominally on the basis of the Koran, it inculcates or
+expounds a kind of spiritual transcendentalism; in which the adept is
+raised above the necessity of formal laws, which are only requisite
+for those who are not capable of rising to a full intelligence of the
+supreme power. To gain this height, by devout contemplation, must be
+the personal work and endeavor of each individual. The revelation of
+divine truth, once attained, supersedes specific moral injunctions;
+ceremonies and systems, even, of religion, become indifferent to the
+mind illuminated by the sacred idea. A higher degree is the perfect
+conception or ecstatic vision of the Deity;--the highest-reserved
+only for the prophetic few--a real immediate union with his essence.
+Here, it will be seen, are four steps or stages, each of which has
+its sacred manual or appropriate system of teaching. In the hieratic
+system, of which Schamyl is the head, the divisions seem to correspond
+pretty nearly with this arrangement, as follows:--
+
+The _first_ includes the mass of the armed people; whose zeal it
+promotes by strict religious and moral injunctions enjoining purity of
+life, exact regard to the ritual of the Koran, teaching pilgrimages,
+fasting, ablutions; the duty of implacable war against the Infidel,
+the sin of enduring his tyranny.
+
+The _second_ is composed of those, who, in virtue of striving upward
+to a higher Divine intelligence, are elevated above ceremonial
+religion. Of these the _Murids_ (_seekers_ or _strugglers_,) are
+formed: a body of religious warriors attached to the Imam, whose
+courage in battle, raised to a kind of frenzy, despises numbers and
+laughs at death. To accept quarter, or to fly from the Infidel, is
+forbidden to this class.
+
+The _third_ includes the more perfect acolytes, who are presumed to
+have risen to the ecstatic view of the Deity. These are the elect,
+whom the Imam makes _Naibs_ or vice-regents,--invested with nearly
+absolute power in his absence.
+
+The _fourth_, or highest, implying entire union with the Divine
+essence, is held by Schamyl alone. In virtue of this elevation and
+spiritual endowment, the Imam, as an immediate organ of the Supreme
+Will, is himself the source of all law to his followers, unerring,
+impeccable; to question or disobey his behests is a sin against
+religion, as well as a political crime. It may be seen what advantage
+this system must have given to Schamyl in his conflict with the
+Russians. The doctrine of the indifference of sects and forms enabled
+him to unite the divided followers of Omar and of Ali, in a region
+where both abound, and where the schism had formerly been one of
+the most effectual instruments of the enemy. The belief in a Divine
+mission and spiritual powers sustains his adherents in all reverses;
+while it invites to defection from the Russian side those of the
+Mohammedan tribes who have submitted to the invader. Among these,
+however, Schamyl, like his predecessors in the same priestly office,
+by no means confides the progress of his sect to spiritual influences
+only. The work of conversion, where exhortation fails, is carried on
+remorselessly by fire and sword; and the Imam is as terrible to those
+of his countrymen whom fear or interest retains in alliance with
+Russia, as to the soldiers of the Czar. With a character in which
+extreme daring is allied with coolness, cunning, and military genius,
+with a good fortune which has hitherto preserved his life in many
+circumstances where escape seemed impossible,--it may be seen that the
+belief in his supernatural gifts and privileges, once created, must
+always tend to increase in intensity and effect among the imaginative
+and credulous Mohammedans of the Caucasus; and that this apt
+combination of the warrior with the politician and prophet accounts
+for his success in combining against the Russians a force of the once
+discordant tribes of Daghestan, possessing more of the character
+of a national resistance than had been ever known before in the
+Caucasus,--and compelling the invaders to purchase every one of their
+few, trifling, and dubious advances by the terrible sacrifice of life
+already noticed.
+
+In this formidable movement the highlander's natural freedom is fanned
+into a blaze by a religious zeal like that which once led the armies
+of Islam over one half of Asia and Europe. Although it reached its
+highest energy and a more consummate development under Schamyl, it was
+begun by his predecessors. Of the Mullah Mohammed, who first preached
+the duty of casting off the yoke of the Giaour, and the necessity of
+a religious reform and union of rival sects, as a means to that end,
+we have already spoken. This founder of the new system, an aged man,
+untrained in arms, never himself drew the sword in the cause; but was
+active in diffusing its principles and preparing a warlike rising by
+exhortations and letters circulated through all Daghestan. Suspected
+of these designs, he was seized, in 1826, by the orders of Jermoloff;
+and although be escaped,--by the connivance, it is said, of the native
+prince employed to capture him,--he afterward lived, in a kind of
+concealment, for some years. The post of Imam was thereupon assumed
+by a priest who was able to fight for the new doctrine as well as
+to preach it. The first armed outbreak took place under Kasi-Mullah,
+about the year 1829; from which time, until his death in a battle at
+Himry, in 1831, he waged a terrible, and, although often defeated,
+a virtually successful warfare, against the Russians, while he
+prosecuted the work of conversion among the tribes of Islam who
+delayed to acknowledge his mission, and to join in his enmity to the
+Russians, by the extremities of bloodshed and rapine. His death, after
+an heroic resistance, was hailed as a triumph by the Russians. They
+counted on the extinction of the new sect in the defeat of its leader,
+whose dead body they carried about the country to prove the imposture
+of his pretensions. This piece of barbarism produced an effect the
+reverse of what they expected. The venerable face of the Imam, the
+attitude in which he had expired, with one hand pointed as if to
+heaven, was more impressive to those who crowded round the body than
+his fearless enthusiasm had been,--and thousands who till then had
+held aloof, now joined his followers in venerating him as a prophet.
+Of this first warrior-priest of Daghestan, Schamyl was the favorite
+disciple and the most trusted soldier. Kasi-Mullah was not killed
+until Schamyl had already fallen as it seemed, under several deadly
+wounds:--his reappearance after this bloody scene was but the first of
+many similar escapes, the report of which sounds like a fable. He did
+not, however, at once succeed to the dignity of Imam: the office was
+usurped for more than a year by Hamsad Beg (Bey), whose rapacious and
+savage treatment of some of the princely families of Daghestan nearly
+caused a fatal reaction against the new sect, and the destruction
+of its main support, the Murids. Hamsad Beg performed no action of
+consequence against the Russians; but expended his rage upon the
+natives allied with them, or reluctant to obey his mandates. He
+was assassinated in 1834, by some kinsmen of a princely house whose
+territories he had usurped after a massacre of its princes. In the
+affray which took place on this occasion, there perished with him
+many of the fanatic Murids, who had become odious as instruments of
+the cruelties of their Imam. On his death, Schamyl was raised to
+the dignity,--but it was some time before the mischief done by his
+predecessor was so far repaired as to allow him to act with energy
+as the prophet of the new doctrine. One of the ill effects of Hamsad
+Beg's iniquities had been the defection to the Russians of n notable
+partisan--Hadjii Murad--for many years a fatal thorn in the side of
+the independent party.[6] This and other difficulties, among which was
+the unpopularity of the Murids under Hamsad Beg, were removed by new
+alliances and precautions, while all that eloquence and skill could
+perform was applied to restore the credit of the religious system,
+before Schamyl could hazard a direct attack of the Russian enemy,
+who meanwhile had taken advantage of the delay and disunion to gain
+ground in many parts of Daghestan. From the year 1839, however, the
+tide rapidly turned; and the result, from that date until the period
+at which the account closes (1845)--when Woronzow was appointed to
+command in the Caucasus, with nearly unlimited powers,--has been,
+that the Russians, in spite of tremendous sacrifices, were constantly
+losing ground and influence, while Schamyl gained both in equal
+proportion. The details of the campaigns during this interval are
+highly interesting; and we regret that conditions of space forbid
+us to translate some of the exciting episodes recorded by Herr
+Bodenstedt. We may, however, extract the following account of the
+Caucasian hero,--whose portrait, we believe, has never before been so
+fully exhibited to European readers;--
+
+[Footnote 6: It is worth noting--as a characteristic of Russian
+misrule and of its consequences--that this chieftain, after having
+been a devoted soldier of the Emperor for seven years, was goaded by
+the ill treatment of his officers into abjuring the service; make the
+offer of his sword to Schamyl, against whom he had fought with the
+utmost animosity; was heartily welcomed by that prudent leader, and
+became one of his principal lieutenants.]
+
+"Schamyl is of middle stature; he has light hair, gray eyes, shaded
+by bushy and well-arched eyebrows,--a nose finely moulded, and a small
+mouth. His features are distinguished from those of his race by a
+peculiar fairness of complexion and delicacy of skin: the elegant form
+of his hands and feet is not less remarkable. The apparent stiffness
+of his arms, when he walks, is a sign of his stern and impenetrable
+character. His address is thoroughly noble and dignified. Of himself
+he is completely master; and he exerts a tacit supremacy over all who
+approach him. An immovable stony calmness, which never forsakes him,
+even in moments of the utmost danger, broods over his countenance.
+He passes a sentence of death with the same composure with which
+he distributes "the sabre of honor" to his bravest Murids, after a
+bloody encounter. With traitors or criminals whom he has resolved to
+destroy, he will converse without betraying the least sign of anger or
+vengeance. He regards himself as a mere instrument in the hands of a
+higher Being; and holds, according to the Sufi doctrine, that all his
+thoughts and determinations are immediate inspirations from God. The
+flow of his speech is as animating and irresistible as his outward
+appearance is awful and commanding. "He shoots flames from his eyes,
+and scatters flowers from his lips,"--said Bersek Bey, who sheltered
+him for some days after the fall of Achulgo,--when Schamyl dwelt for
+some time among the princes of the Djighetes and Ubiches, for the
+purpose of inciting the tribes on the Black Sea to rise against the
+Russians. Schamyl is now (_circa_ 1847?) fifty years old, but still
+full of vigor and strength: it is however said, that he has for some
+years past suffered from an obstinate disease of the eyes, which is
+constantly growing worse. He fills the intervals of leisure which his
+public charges allow him, in reading the Koran, fasting, and prayer.
+Of late years he has but seldom, and then only on critical occasions,
+taken a personal share in warlike encounters. In spite of his almost
+supernatural activity, Schamyl is excessively severe and temperate in
+his habits. A few hours of sleep are enough for him: at times he will
+watch for the whole night, without Showing the least trace of fatigue
+on the following day. He eats little, and water is his only beverage.
+According to Mohammedan custom, he keeps several wives--[this
+contradicts Wagner, who affirms that Schamyl always confined himself
+to one]; in 1844 he had _three_, of which his favorite, _Dur Heremen_,
+(Pearl of the Harem) as she was called, was an Armenian, of exquisite
+beauty."
+
+Will Russian arms prevail in the end? The following is Herr
+Bodenstedt's answer; after noticing the arrival of Woronzow, and the
+expectations raised by his talents, by the immense resources at
+his command, as well as by such events as the storm of Schamyl's
+stronghold of Cargo:--
+
+"He who believes that the issue of this contest hangs on the
+destruction of stone fortresses, on the devastation of tracts of
+forest, has not yet conceived the essential nature of the war in the
+Caucasus. This is not merely a war of men against men--it is a strife
+between the mountain and the steppe. The population of the Caucasus
+may be changed; the air of liberty wafted from its heights will
+ever remain the same. Invigorated by this atmosphere, even Russian
+hirelings would grow into men eager for freedom: and among their
+descendants a new race of heroes would arise, to point their weapons
+against that servile constitution, to extend which their fathers had
+once fought, as blind, unquestioning slaves."
+
+To this answer of Herr Bodenstedt's we will add nothing of our own. We
+are weary with waiting for the events of history such as we would have
+them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+COOLING A BURNING SPIRIT.
+
+An incident which occurred soon after the accession of the present
+Sultan, shows that, in some respects, at least, he is not indisposed
+to follow up the strong traditions of his race. At the beginning
+of his reign, the Ulema was resolved, if possible, to prevent the
+new Sultan from carrying on those reforms which had ever been so
+distasteful to the Turks, grating at once against their religious
+associations and their pride of race, and which recent events
+had certainly proved not to be productive of those good results
+anticipated by Sultan Mamoud. To attain this object, the Muftis
+adopted the expedient of working on the religious fears of the
+youthful prince. One day as he was praying, according to his custom,
+at his father's tomb, he heard a voice from beneath reiterating, in a
+stifled tone, the words, "I burn." The next time that he prayed there
+the same words assailed his ears. "I burn" was repeated again and
+again, and no word beside. He applied to the chief of the Imams to
+know what this prodigy might mean; and was informed in reply, that
+his father, though a great man, had also been, unfortunately, a great
+reformer, and that as such it was too much to be feared that he had
+a terrible penance to undergo in the other world. The Sultan sent for
+his brother-in-law to pray at the same place, and afterward several
+others of his household; and on each occasion the same portentous
+words were heard. One day he announced his intention of going in state
+to his father's tomb, and was attended thither by a splendid retinue,
+including the chief doctors of the Mahometan law. Again, during his
+devotions, were heard the words, "I burn," and all except the Sultan
+trembled. Rising from his prayer-carpet, he called in his guards, and
+commanded them to dig up the pavement and remove the tomb. It was in
+vain that the Muftis interposed, reprobating so great a profanation,
+and uttering warnings as to its consequences. The Sultan persisted,
+the foundations of the tomb were laid bare, and in a cavity skillfully
+left among them was found--not a burning Sultan, but a Dervise. The
+young monarch regarded him for a time fixedly and in silence, and then
+said, without any further remark or the slightest expression of anger,
+"You burn?--We must cool you in the Bosphorus." In a few minutes more
+the dervise was in a bag, and the bag immediately after was in the
+Bosphorus.--_De Vere's Sketches_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+[FROM HOUSEHOLD WORDS.]
+
+AN OLD HAUNT.
+
+ The rippling water, with its drowsy tone,--
+ The tall elms, tow 'ring in their stately pride,--
+ And--sorrow's type--the willow sad and lone,
+ Kissing in graceful woe the murmuring tide;--
+
+ The grey church-tower,--and dimly seen beyond,
+ The faint hills gilded by the parting sun,--
+ All were the same, and seem'd with greeting fond
+ To welcome me as they of old had done.
+
+ And for a while I stood as in a trance,
+ On that loved spot, forgetting toil and pain;--
+ Buoyant my limbs, and keen and bright my glance,
+ For that brief space I was a boy again!
+
+ Again with giddy mates I careless play'd,
+ Or plied the quiv'ring oar, on conquest bent:--
+ Again, beneath the tall elms' silent shade,
+ I woo'd the fair, and won the sweet consent.
+
+ But brief, alas! the spell,--for suddenly
+ Peal'd from the tower the old familiar chimes,
+ And with their clear, heart-thrilling melody,
+ Awaked the spectral forms of darker times
+
+ And I remember'd all that years had wrought--
+ How bow'd my care-worn frame, how dimm'd my eye,
+ How poor the gauds by Youth so keenly sought,
+ How quench'd and dull Youth's aspirations high!
+
+ And in half mournful, half upbraiding host,
+ Duties neglected--high resolves unkept--
+ And many a heart by death or falsehood lost,
+ In lightning current o'er my bosom swept.
+
+ Then bow'd the stubborn knees, as backward sped
+ The self-accusing thoughts in dread array,
+ And, slowly, from their long-congealed bed,
+ Forced the remorseful tears their silent way.
+
+ Bitter yet healing drops in mercy sent,
+ Like soft dews tailing on a thirsty plain,--
+ And ere those chimes their last faint notes had spent,
+ Strengthen'd and calm'd, I stood erect again.
+
+ Strengthen'd, the tasks allotted to fulfill;--
+ Calm'd the thick-coming sorrows to endure;
+ Fearful of nought but of my own frail will,--
+ In His Almighty strength and aid secure.
+
+ For a sweet voice had whisper'd hope to me,--
+ Had through my darkness shed a kindly ray;--
+ It said: "The past is fix'd immutably,
+ Yet is there comfort in the coming day!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+KILLING A GIRAFFE.
+
+At every stride I gained upon the giraffes, and, after a short burst
+at a swingeing gallop, I was in the middle of them, and turned
+the finest cow out of the herd. On finding herself driven from her
+comrades and hotly pursued, she increased her pace, and cantered along
+with tremendous strides, clearing an amazing extent of ground at every
+bound; while her neck and breast, coming in contact with the dead old
+branches of the trees, were continually strewing them in my path. In
+a few minutes I was riding within five yards of her stern, and, firing
+at a gallop, I sent a bullet into her back. Increasing my pace, I next
+rode alongside, and, placing the muzzle of my rifle within a few feet
+of her, I fired my second shot behind the shoulder; the ball, however,
+seemed to have little effect. I then placed myself directly in front,
+when she came to a walk. Dismounting, I hastily loaded both barrels,
+putting in double charges of powder. Before this was accomplished, she
+was off at a canter. In a short time I brought her to a stand in the
+dry bed of a watercourse, where I fired at fifteen yards, aiming where
+I thought the heart lay, upon which she again made off. Having loaded,
+I followed, and had very nearly lost her; she had turned abruptly
+to the left, and was far out of sight among the trees. Once more I
+brought her to a stand, and dismounted from my horse. There we stood
+together alone in the wild wood. I gazed in wonder at her extreme
+beauty, while her soft dark eye, with its silky fringe, looked down
+imploringly at me, and I really felt a pang of sorrow in this moment
+of triumph for the blood I was shedding. Pointing my rifle toward the
+skies, I sent a bullet through her neck. On receiving it she reared
+high on her hind legs and fell back with a heavy crash, making the
+earth shake around her. A thick stream of dark blood spouted out
+from the wound, her colossal limbs quivered for a moment, and she
+expired.--_Cummings' Adventures_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE VETERAN KOLOMBESKI.
+
+Several journals have spoken of the entry into the Hotel des Invalides
+of a soldier, stated to be 126 years of age. This is not quite
+correct. The following are some precise details respecting this
+extraordinary man, who arrived at the Hotel on the 21st inst.:--Jean
+Kolombeski, born at Astrona (Poland), on the 1st of March, 1730,
+entered the service of France, as a volunteer in the Bourbon regiment
+of infantry, in 1774, at the age of forty-four. He was made corporal
+in 1790, at the age of sixty. He made all the campaigns of the
+Revolution and of the Empire, in different regiments of infantry,
+and was incorporated, in 1808, in the 3d regiment of the Vistula. He
+was wounded in 1814, and entered the hospital at Poitiers, which he
+soon afterward left to be placed _en subsistence_ in the 2d regiment
+of light infantry. On the 11th of October of the same year he was
+admitted into the 1st company of _sous-officiers sedentaires_, and, in
+1846, into the 5th company of Veteran Sub-Officers. The last three of
+these companies having just been suppressed by the Minister of War,
+Kolombeski was placed _en subsistence_ in the 61st regiment of the
+line, received a retiring pension by decree of May 17, 1850, and the
+Minister authorized his admission into the Invalides. Kolombeski is,
+therefore, more than 120 years of age; he reckons seventy-five and
+a half years of service, and twenty-nine campaigns. He enjoys good
+health, is strong and well made, and does not appear to be more than
+seventy or eighty. He performed every duty with big comrades of the
+5th company of Veterans, When King Louis Philippe visited Dreus,
+Kolombeski was presented to him, who, taking the decoration from
+his breast, presented it to the veteran soldier. This is the most
+astonishing instance of longevity that has, perhaps, been ever known
+in the army. The Marshal Governor of the Invalides ordered that
+Kolombeski should be brought to him on his arrival; but, as the old
+soldier was fatigued, he was taken to the infirmary, and the Governor,
+informed of it, went to his bedside with General Petit, the commandant
+of the hotel, and addressed the veteran in the kindest manner. The
+Governor has issued an order that, for the future, all centenarian
+soldiers admitted into the hospital shall mess with the officers, in
+order to show his respect for their age, and for the long services
+they have rendered to the state.--_Galignani's Messenger_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ANECDOTE OF LORD BROUGHAM.
+
+The "Life of the Rev. Dr. Hugh Heugh" has a description of an
+interview which a deputation of Scotch dissenters had some years ago
+with Lord Brougham. The _Scotsman_ adds, from its private knowledge,
+some odd incidents of the affair.
+
+His lordship, on coming out of the court to meet the deputation,
+immediately on being informed of their object, burst out in a volley
+of exclamations to the effect that, but for dissent, there would be
+"No vital religion--no vital religion, gentlemen, no vital religion."
+While pouring forth this in a most solemn tone, he was all the while
+shaking violently the locked doors of a lobby full of committee rooms,
+into one of which he wished to find entrance, and calling for an
+absent official not only in passionate tones, but in phraseology
+which the reverend deputation, at first unwilling to trust their own
+ears, were at last forced to believe was nothing better than profane
+swearing. At last, he suddenly drew himself up to the wall opposite a
+locked door, and with a tremendous kick, smashed the lock, and entered
+(exclaiming, first in a vehement and then in a solemn tone, but
+without pause) "--that fellow! where the ---- does he always go to! No
+vital religion, gentlemen, no vital religion--no, no, no."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The International Weekly Miscellany,
+Volume I. No. 9., by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INTERNATIONAL WEEKLY ***
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