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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 73,
+November, 1863, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 73, November, 1863
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: June 9, 2005 [EBook #16028]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ATLANTIC MONTHLY, VOLUME 12 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Josephine
+Paolucci and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+ATLANTIC MONTHLY.
+
+A MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, ART, AND POLITICS.
+
+VOL. XII.--NOVEMBER, 1863.--NO. LXXIII.
+
+Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1863, by TICKNOR AND
+FIELDS, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of
+Massachusetts.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SPANIARD AND THE HERETIC.
+
+[In the August number of the "Atlantic," under the title of "The
+Fleur-de-Lis in Florida," will be found a narrative of the Huguenot
+attempts to occupy that country, which, exciting the jealousy of Spain,
+gave rise to the crusade whose history is recorded below.]
+
+
+The monk, the inquisitor, the Jesuit, these were the lords of
+Spain,--sovereigns of her sovereign, for they had formed and fed the
+dark and narrow mind of that tyrannical recluse. They had formed and fed
+the minds of her people, quenched in blood every spark of rising heresy,
+and given over a noble nation to bigotry, dark, blind, inexorable as the
+doom of fate. Linked with pride, ambition, avarice, every passion of a
+rich, strong nature, potent for good and ill, it made the Spaniard of
+that day a scourge as dire as ever fell on man.
+
+Day was breaking on the world. Light, hope, freedom, pierced with
+vitalizing ray the clouds and the miasma that hung so thick over the
+prostrate Middle Age, once noble and mighty, now a foul image of decay
+and death. Kindled with new life, the nations teemed with a progeny of
+heroes, and the stormy glories of the sixteenth century rose on awakened
+Europe. But Spain was the citadel of darkness,--a monastic cell, an
+inquisitorial dungeon, where no ray could pierce. She was the bulwark of
+the Church, against whose adamantine front the wrath of innovation beat
+in vain. In every country of Europe the party of freedom and reform was
+the national party, the party of reaction and absolutism was the Spanish
+party, leaning on Spain, looking to her for help. Above all, it was so
+in France; and while within her bounds there was a semblance of peace,
+the national and religious rage burst forth on a wilder theatre. Thither
+it is for us to follow it, where, on the shores of Florida, the Spaniard
+and the Frenchman, the bigot and the Huguenot, met in the grapple of
+death.
+
+In a corridor of the Escurial, Philip II. was met by a man who had long
+stood waiting his approach, and who with proud reverence placed a
+petition in the hand of the pale and sombre King. The petitioner was
+Pedro Menendez de Aviles, one of the ablest and most distinguished
+officers of the Spanish marine. He was born of an ancient Asturian
+family. His boyhood had been wayward, ungovernable, and fierce. He ran
+off at eight years of age, and when, after a search of six months, he
+was found and brought back, he ran off again. This time he was more
+successful, escaping on board a fleet bound against the Barbary
+corsairs, when his precocious appetite for blood and blows had
+reasonable contentment. A few years later, he found means to build a
+small vessel in which he cruised against the corsairs and the French,
+and, though still little more than a boy, displayed a singular address
+and daring. The wonders of the New World now seized his imagination. He
+made a voyage thither, and the ships under his charge came back
+freighted with wealth. War with France was then at its height. As
+captain-general of the fleet, he was sent with troops to Flanders, and
+to their prompt arrival was due, it is said, the victory of St. Quentin,
+Two years later, he commanded the luckless armada which bore back Philip
+to his native shore, and nearly drowned him in a storm off the port of
+Laredo. This mischance, or his own violence and insubordination, wrought
+to the prejudice of Menendez. He complained that his services were ill
+repaid. Philip lent him a favoring ear, and despatched him to the Indies
+as general of the fleet and army. Here he found means to amass vast
+riches; and, in 1561, returning to Spain, charges were brought against
+him of a nature which his too friendly biographer does not explain. The
+Council of the Indies arrested him. He was imprisoned and sentenced to a
+heavy fine, but, gaining his release, hastened to Madrid to throw
+himself on the royal clemency.
+
+His petition was most graciously received. Philip restored his command,
+but remitted only half his fine, a strong presumption of his guilt.
+
+Menendez kissed the royal hand; he had still a petition in reserve. His
+son had been wrecked near the Bermudas, and he would fain go thither to
+find tidings of his fate. The pious King bade him trust in God, and
+promised that he should be despatched without delay to the Bermudas and
+to Florida with a commission to make an exact survey of those perilous
+seas for the profit of future voyagers; but Menendez was ill content
+with such an errand. He knew, he said, nothing of greater moment to His
+Majesty than the conquest and settlement of Florida. The climate was
+healthful, the soil fertile; and, worldly advantages aside, it was
+peopled by a race sunk in the thickest shades of infidelity. "Such
+grief," he pursued, "seizes me, when I behold this multitude of wretched
+Indians, that I should choose the conquest and settling of Florida above
+all commands, offices, and dignities which your Majesty might bestow."
+Those who think this hypocrisy do not know the Spaniard of the sixteenth
+century.
+
+The King was edified by his zeal. An enterprise of such spiritual and
+temporal promise was not to be slighted, and Menendez was empowered to
+conquer and convert Florida at his own cost. The conquest was to be
+effected within three years. Menendez was to take with him five hundred
+men, and supply them with five hundred slaves, besides horses, cattle,
+sheep, and hogs. Villages were to be built, with forts to defend them;
+and sixteen ecclesiastics, of whom four should be Jesuits, were to form
+the nucleus of a Floridian church. The King, on his part, granted
+Menendez free trade with Hispaniola, Porto Rico, Cuba, and Spain, the
+office of Adelantado of Florida for life, joined to the right of naming
+his successor, and large emoluments to be drawn from the expected
+conquest.
+
+The compact struck, Menendez hastened to his native Asturias to raise
+money among his relatives. Scarcely was he gone, when tidings for the
+first time reached Madrid that Florida was already occupied by a colony
+of French Protestants, and that a reinforcement, under Ribaut, was on
+the point of sailing thither. A French historian of high authority
+declares that these advices came from the Catholic party at the French
+court, in whom all sense of the national interest and honor was
+smothered under their hatred of Coligny and the Huguenots. Of this there
+can be little doubt, though information also came from the buccaneer
+Frenchmen captured in the West Indies.
+
+Foreigners had invaded the territory of Spain. The trespassers, too,
+were heretics, foes of God and liegemen of the Devil. Their doom was
+fixed. But how would France endure an assault, in time of peace, on
+subjects who had gone forth on an enterprise sanctioned by the crown,
+undertaken in its name, and under its commission?
+
+The throne of France, where the corruption of the nation seemed gathered
+to a head, was trembling between the two parties of the Catholics and
+the Huguenots, whose chiefs aimed at royalty. Flattering both, caressing
+both, betraying both, playing one against the other, Catherine de
+Médicis, by a thousand crafty arts and expedients of the moment, sought
+to retain the crown on the heads of her weak and vicious sons. Of late
+her crooked policy had drawn her towards the Catholic party, in other
+words, the party of Spain; and already she had given ear to the savage
+Duke of Alva, urging her to the course which, seven years later, led to
+the carnage of St. Bartholomew. In short, the Spanish policy was
+ascendant, and no thought of the national interest or honor could
+restrain that basest of courts from consigning by hundreds to the
+national enemy those whom, itself, it was meditating to immolate by
+thousands.
+
+Menendez was summoned back in haste to the court. There was counsel,
+deep and ominous, in the chambers of the Escurial. His force must be
+strengthened. Three hundred and ninety-four men were added at the royal
+charge, and a corresponding number of transport and supply ships. It was
+a holy war, a crusade, and as such was preached by priest and monk along
+the western coasts of Spain. All the Biscayan ports flamed with zeal,
+and adventurers crowded to enroll themselves; since to plunder heretics
+is good for the soul as well as the purse, and broil and massacre have
+double attraction, when promoted to a means of salvation: a fervor, deep
+and hot, but not of celestial kindling; nor yet that buoyant and
+inspiring zeal, which, when the Middle Age was in its youth and prime,
+glowed in the soul of Tancred, Godfrey, and St. Louis, and which, when
+its day was long since past, could still find its home in the great
+heart of Columbus. A darker spirit urged the new crusade,--born, not of
+hope, but of fear, slavish in its nature, the creature and the tool of
+despotism. For the typical Spaniard of the sixteenth century was not in
+strictness a fanatic; he was bigotry incarnate.
+
+Heresy was a plague-spot, an ulcer to be eradicated with fire and the
+knife, and this foul abomination was infecting the shores which the
+Vicegerent of Christ had given to the King of Spain, and which the Most
+Catholic King had given to the Adelantado. Thus would countless heathen
+tribes be doomed to an eternity of flame, shut out from that saving
+communion with Holy Church, to which, by the sword and the whip and the
+fagot, dungeons and slavery, they would otherwise have been mercifully
+driven, to the salvation of their souls, and the greater glory of God.
+And, for the Adelantado himself, should the vast outlays, the vast
+debts, of his bold Floridian venture be all in vain? Should his fortunes
+be wrecked past redemption through these tools of Satan? As a Catholic,
+as a Spaniard, as an adventurer, his course was clear. Woe, then, to the
+Huguenot in the gripe of Pedro Menendez!
+
+But what was the scope of this enterprise, and the limits of the
+Adelantado's authority? He was invested with power almost absolute, not
+merely over the peninsula which now retains the name of Florida, but
+over all North America, from Labrador to Mexico,--for this was the
+Florida of the old Spanish geographers, and the Florida designated in
+the commission of Menendez. It was a continent which he was to conquer
+and occupy out of his own purse. The impoverished King contracted with
+his daring and ambitious subject to win and hold for him the territory
+of the future United States and British Provinces. His plan, as
+subsequently developed and exposed at length in his unpublished letters
+to Philip II., was, first, to plant a garrison at Port Royal, and next
+to fortify strongly on Chesapeake Bay, called by him St. Mary's. He
+believed that this bay was an arm of the sea, running northward and
+eastward, and communicating with the Gulf of St. Lawrence, thus making
+New England, with adjacent districts, an island. His proposed fort on
+the Chesapeake, giving access, by this imaginary passage, to the seas of
+Newfoundland, would enable the Spaniards to command the fisheries, on
+which both the French and the English had long encroached, to the great
+prejudice of Spanish rights. Doubtless, too, these inland waters gave
+access to the South Sea, and their occupation was necessary to prevent
+the French from penetrating thither; for that ambitious people, since
+the time of Cartier, had never abandoned their schemes of seizing this
+portion of the dominions of the King of Spain. Five hundred soldiers and
+one hundred sailors must, he urges, take possession, without delay, of
+Port Royal and the Chesapeake.
+
+Preparation for his enterprise was pushed with a furious energy. His
+force amounted to two thousand six hundred and forty-six persons, in
+thirty-four vessels, one of which, the San Pelayo, bearing Menendez
+himself, was of more than nine hundred tons' burden, and is described as
+one of the finest ships afloat. There were twelve Franciscans and eight
+Jesuits, besides other ecclesiastics; and many knights of Galicia,
+Biscay, and the Asturias bore part in the expedition. With a slight
+exception, the whole was at the Adelantado's charge. Within the first
+fourteen months, according to his admirer, Barcia, the adventure cost
+him a million ducats.
+
+Before the close of the year, Sancho de Arciniega was commissioned to
+join Menendez with an additional force of fifteen hundred men.
+
+Red-hot with a determined purpose, he would brook no delay. To him, says
+the chronicler, every day seemed a year. He was eager to anticipate
+Ribaut, of whose designs and whose force he seems to have been informed
+to the minutest particular, but whom he hoped to thwart and ruin by
+gaining Fort Caroline before him. With eleven ships, then, he sailed
+from Cadiz on the 29th of June, 1565, leaving the smaller vessels of his
+fleet to follow with what speed they might. He touched first at the
+Canaries, and on the eighth of July left them, steering for Dominica. A
+minute account of the voyage has come down to us from the pen of
+Mendoza, chaplain of the expedition, a somewhat dull and illiterate
+person, who busily jots down the incidents of each passing day, and is
+constantly betraying, with a certain awkward simplicity, how the cares
+of this world and the next jostle each other in his thoughts.
+
+On Friday, the twentieth of July, a storm fell upon them with appalling
+fury. The pilots lost head, the sailors gave themselves up to their
+terrors. Throughout the night, they beset Mendoza for confession and
+absolution, a boon not easily granted, for the seas swept the crowded
+decks in cataracts of foam, and the shriekings of the gale in the
+rigging drowned the exhortations of the half-drowned priest. Cannon,
+cables, spars, water-casks, were thrown overboard, and the chests of the
+sailors would have followed, had not the latter, despite their fright,
+raised such a howl of remonstrance that the order was revoked. At length
+day dawned. At least there was light to die by. Plunging, reeling, half
+submerged, quivering under the crashing shock of the seas, whose
+mountain ridges rolled down upon her before the gale, the ship lay in
+deadly jeopardy from Friday till Monday noon. Then the storm abated; the
+sun broke forth; and again she held her course.
+
+They reached Dominica on Sunday, the fifth of August. The chaplain
+tells us how he went on shore to refresh himself,--how, while his
+Italian servant washed his linen at a brook, he strolled along the beach
+and picked up shells,--and how he was scared, first, by a prodigious
+turtle, and next by a vision of the cannibal natives, which caused his
+prompt retreat to the boats.
+
+On the tenth, they anchored in the harbor of Porto Rico, where they
+found two of their companion-ships, from which they had parted in the
+storm. One of them was the San Pelayo, with Menendez on board. Mendoza
+informs us that in the evening the officers came on board his ship, when
+he, the chaplain, regaled them with sweetmeats, and that Menendez
+invited him not only to supper that night, but to dinner the next day,
+"for the which I thanked him, as reason was," says the gratified
+churchman.
+
+Here thirty men deserted, and three priests also ran off, of which
+Mendoza bitterly complains, as increasing his own work. The motives of
+the clerical truants may perhaps be inferred from a worldly temptation
+to which the chaplain himself was subjected. "I was offered the service
+of a chapel where I should have got a _peso_ for every mass I said, the
+whole year round; but I did not accept it, for fear that what I hear
+said of the other three would be said of me. Besides, it is not a place
+where one can hope for any great advancement, and I wished to try
+whether, in refusing a benefice for the love of the Lord, He will not
+repay me with some other stroke of fortune before the end of the voyage;
+for it is my aim to serve God and His blessed Mother."
+
+The original design had been to rendezvous at Havana, but, with the
+Adelantado, the advantages of despatch outweighed every other
+consideration. He resolved to push directly for Florida. Five of his
+scattered ships had by this time rejoined company, comprising, exclusive
+of officers, a force of about five hundred soldiers, two hundred
+sailors, and one hundred colonists. Bearing northward, he advanced by an
+unknown and dangerous course along the coast of Hayti and through the
+intricate passes of the Bahamas. On the night of the twenty-sixth, the
+San Pelayo struck three times on the shoals; "but," says the chaplain,
+"inasmuch as our enterprise was undertaken for the sake of Christ and
+His blessed Mother, two heavy seas struck her abaft, and set her afloat
+again."
+
+At length the ships lay becalmed in the Bahama Channel, slumbering on
+the dead and glassy sea, torpid with the heats of a West-Indian August.
+Menendez called a council of the commanders. There was doubt and
+indecision. Perhaps Ribaut had already reached the French fort, and then
+to attack the united force would be a stroke of desperation. Far better
+to await their lagging comrades. But the Adelantado was of another mind;
+and, even had his enemy arrived, he was resolved that he should have no
+time to fortify himself.
+
+"It is God's will," he said, "that our victory should be due, not to our
+numbers, but to His all-powerful aid. Therefore has He stricken us with
+tempests and scattered our ships." And he gave his voice for instant
+advance.
+
+There was much dispute; even the chaplain remonstrated; but nothing
+could bend the iron will of Menendez. Nor was a sign of celestial
+approval wanting. At nine in the evening, a great meteor burst forth in
+mid-heaven, and, blazing like the sun, rolled westward towards the
+Floridian coast. The fainting spirits of the crusaders were kindled
+anew. Diligent preparation was begun. Prayers and masses were said; and,
+that the temporal arm might not be wanting, the men were daily practised
+on deck in shooting at marks, in order, says the chronicle, that the
+recruits might learn not to be afraid of their guns.
+
+The dead calm continued. "We were all very tired," says the chaplain,
+"and I above all, with praying to God for a fair wind. To-day, at about
+two in the afternoon, He took pity on us, and sent us a breeze." Before
+night they saw land,--the faint line of forest, traced along the watery
+horizon, that marked the coast of Florida. But where in all this vast
+monotony was the lurking-place of the French? Menendez anchored, and
+sent fifty men ashore, who presently found a band of Indians in the
+woods, and gained from them the needed information. He stood northward,
+till, on the afternoon of Tuesday, the fourth of September, he descried
+four ships anchored near the mouth of a river. It was the river St.
+John's, and the ships were four of Ribaut's squadron. The prey was in
+sight. The Spaniards prepared for battle, and bore down upon the
+Lutherans; for, with them, all reformers alike were branded with the
+name of the arch-heretic. Slowly, before the faint breeze, the ships
+glided on their way; but while, excited and impatient, the fierce crews
+watched the decreasing space, and while they were still three leagues
+from their prize, the air ceased to stir, the sails flapped against the
+mast, a black cloud with thunder rose above the coast, and the warm rain
+of the South descended on the breathless sea. It was dark before the
+wind moved again, and the ships resumed their course. At half past
+eleven they reached the French. The San Pelayo slowly moved to windward
+of Ribaut's flag-ship, the Trinity, and anchored very near her. The
+other ships took similar stations. While these preparations were making,
+a work of two hours, the men labored in silence, and the French,
+thronging their gangways, looked on in equal silence. "Never, since I
+came into the world," writes the chaplain, "did I know such a
+stillness."
+
+It was broken, at length, by a trumpet from the deck of the San Pelayo.
+A French trumpet answered. Then Menendez, "with much courtesy," says his
+Spanish eulogist, demanded, "Gentlemen, whence does this fleet come?"
+
+"From France," was the reply.
+
+"What are you doing here?" pursued the Adelantado.
+
+"Bringing soldiers and supplies for a fort which the King of France has
+in this country, and for many others which he soon will have."
+
+"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?"
+
+Many voices cried together, "Lutherans, of the new religion"; then, in
+their turn, they demanded who Menendez was, and whence he came. The
+latter answered,--
+
+"I am Pedro Menendez, General of the fleet of the King of Spain, Don
+Philip the Second, who have come to this country to hang and behead all
+Lutherans whom I shall find by land or sea, according to instructions
+from my King, so precise that I have power to pardon none whomsoever;
+and these commands I shall fulfil, as you shall know. At daybreak I
+shall board your ships, and if I find there any Catholic, he shall be
+well treated; but every heretic shall die."
+
+The French with one voice raised a cry of wrath and defiance.
+
+"If you are a brave man, don't wait till day. Come on now, and see what
+you will get!"
+
+And they assailed the Adelantado with a shower of scoffs and insults.
+
+Menendez broke into a rage, and gave the order to board. The men slipped
+the cables, and the sullen black hulk of the San Pelayo drifted down
+upon the Trinity. The French by no means made good their defiance.
+Indeed, they were incapable of resistance, Ribaut with his soldiers
+being ashore at Fort Caroline. They cut their cables, left their
+anchors, made sail, and fled. The Spaniards fired, the French replied.
+The other Spanish ships had imitated the movement of the San Pelayo;
+"but," writes the chaplain, Mendoza, "these devils run mad are such
+adroit sailors, and manoeuvred so well, that we did not catch one of
+them." Pursuers and pursued ran out to sea, firing useless volleys at
+each other.
+
+In the morning Menendez gave over the chase, turned, and, with the San
+Pelayo alone, ran back for the St. John's. But here a welcome was
+prepared for him. He saw bands of armed men drawn up on the beach, and
+the smaller vessels of Ribaut's squadron, which had crossed the bar
+several days before, anchored behind it to oppose his landing. He would
+not venture an attack, but, steering southward, skirted the coast till
+he came to an inlet which he named St. Augustine.
+
+Here he found three of his ships, already debarking their troops, guns,
+and stores. Two officers, Patiño and Vicente, had taken possession of
+the dwelling of Seloy, an Indian chief, a huge barn-like structure,
+strongly framed of entire trunks of trees, and thatched with
+palmetto-leaves. Around it they were throwing up intrenchments of
+fascines and sand. Gangs of negroes, with pick, shovel, and spade, were
+toiling at the work. Such was the birth of St. Augustine, the oldest
+town of the United States, and such the introduction of slave-labor upon
+their soil.
+
+On the eighth, Menendez took formal possession of his domain. Cannon
+were fired, trumpets sounded, and banners displayed, as, at the head of
+his officers and nobles, he landed in state. Mendoza, crucifix in hand,
+came to meet him, chanting, "_Te Deum laudamus_," while the Adelantado
+and all his company, kneeling, kissed the cross, and the congregated
+Indians gazed in silent wonder.
+
+Meanwhile the tenants of Fort Caroline were not idle. Two or three
+soldiers, strolling along the beach in the afternoon, had first seen the
+Spanish ships and hastily summoned Ribaut. He came down to the mouth of
+the river, followed by an anxious and excited crowd; but, as they
+strained their eyes through the darkness, they could see nothing but the
+flashes of the distant guns. The returning light showed them at length,
+far out at sea, the Adelantado in hot chase of their flying comrades.
+Pursuers and pursued were soon out of sight. The drums beat to arms.
+After many hours of suspense, the San Pelayo reappeared, hovering about
+the mouth of the river, then bearing away towards the south. More
+anxious hours ensued, when three other sail came in sight, and they
+recognized three of their own returning ships. Communication was opened,
+a boat's crew landed, and they learned from Captain Cosette, that,
+confiding in the speed of his ship, he had followed the Spaniards to St.
+Augustine, reconnoitred their position, and seen them land their negroes
+and intrench themselves.
+
+In his chamber at Fort Caroline, Laudonnière lay sick in bed, when
+Ribaut entered, and with him La Grange, Ste. Marie, Ottigny, Yonville,
+and other officers. At the bedside of the displaced commandant they held
+their council of war. There were three alternatives: first, to remain
+where they were and fortify; next, to push overland for St. Augustine,
+and attack the invaders in their intrenchments; and, finally, to embark,
+and assail them by sea. The first plan would leave their ships a prey to
+the Spaniards; and so too, in all likelihood, would the second, besides
+the uncertainties of an overland march through an unknown wilderness. By
+sea, the distance was short and the route explored. By a sudden blow
+they could capture or destroy the Spanish ships, and master the troops
+on shore before their reinforcements could arrive, and before they had
+time to complete their defences.
+
+Such were the views of Ribaut, with which, not unnaturally, Laudonnière
+finds fault, and Le Moyne, judging by results, echoes the censures of
+his chief. And yet the plan seems as well-conceived as it was bold,
+lacking nothing but success. The Spaniards, stricken with terror, owed
+their safety to the elements, or, as they affirm, to the special
+interposition of the Holy Virgin. Let us be just to Menendez. He was a
+leader fit to stand with Cortés and Pizarro; but he was matched with a
+man as cool, skilful, prompt, and daring as himself. The traces that
+have come down to us indicate, in Ribaut, one far above the common
+stamp: "a distinguished man, of many high qualities," as even the
+fault-finding Le Moyne calls him, devout after the best spirit of the
+Reform, and with a human heart under his steel breastplate.
+
+La Grange and other officers took part with Laudonnière and opposed the
+plan of an attack by sea; but Ribaut's conviction was unshaken, and the
+order was given. All his own soldiers fit for duty embarked in haste,
+and with them went La Caille, Arlac, and, as it seems, Ottigny, with the
+best of Laudonnière's men. Even Le Moyne, though wounded in the fight
+with Outina's warriors, went on board to bear his part in the fray, and
+would have sailed with the rest, had not Ottigny, seeing his disabled
+condition, ordered him back to the fort.
+
+On the tenth, the ships, crowded with troops, set sail. Ribaut was gone,
+and with him the pith and sinew of the colony. The miserable remnant
+watched his receding sails with dreary foreboding, a foreboding which
+seemed but too just, when, on the next day, a storm, more violent than
+the Indians had ever known, howled through the forest and lashed the
+ocean into fury, Most forlorn was the plight of these exiles, left, it
+might be, the prey of a band of ferocious bigots more terrible than the
+fiercest hordes of the wilderness. And when night closed on the stormy
+river and the gloomy waste of pines, what dreams of terror may not have
+haunted the helpless women who crouched under the hovels of Fort
+Caroline!
+
+The fort was in a ruinous state, the palisade on the water side broken
+down, and three breaches in the rampart. In the driving rain, urged by
+the sick Laudonnière, the men, bedrenched and disheartened, labored as
+they might to strengthen their defences. Their muster-roll shows but a
+beggarly array. "Now," says Laudonnière, "let them which have bene bold
+to say that I had men ynongh left me, so that I had meanes to defend my
+selfe, give care a little now vnto mee, and if they have eyes in their
+heads, let them see what men I had." Of Ribaut's followers left at the
+fort, only nine or ten had weapons, while only two or three knew how to
+use them. Four of them were boys, who kept Ribaut's dogs, and another
+was his cook. Besides these, he had left a brewer, an old
+crossbow-maker, two shoemakers, a player on the spinet, four valets, a
+carpenter of threescore--Challeux, no doubt, who has left us the story
+of his woes,--and a crowd of women, children, and eighty-six
+camp-followers. To these were added the remnant of Laudonnière's men, of
+whom seventeen could bear arms, the rest being sick or disabled by
+wounds received in the fight with Outina.
+
+Laudonnière divided his force, such as it was, into two watches, over
+which he placed two officers, St. Cler and La Vigne, gave them lanterns
+to go the rounds, and an hour-glass to set the time; while he himself,
+giddy with weakness and fever, was every night at the guard-room.
+
+It was the night of the nineteenth of September; floods of rain
+bedrenched the sentries on the rampart, and as day dawned on the
+dripping barracks and deluged parade, the storm increased in violence.
+What enemy could have ventured forth on such a night? La Vigne, who had
+the watch, took pity on the sentries and on himself, dismissed them, and
+went to his quarters. He little knew what mortal energies, urged by
+ambition, avarice, bigotry, desperation, will dare and do.
+
+To return to the Spaniards at St. Augustine. On the morning of the
+eleventh, the crew of one of their smaller vessels, lying outside the
+bar, saw through the twilight of early dawn two of Ribaut's ships close
+upon them. Not a breath of air was stirring. There was no escape, and
+the Spaniards fell on their knees in supplication to Our Lady of Utrera,
+explaining to her that the heretics were upon them, and begging her to
+send them a little wind. "Forthwith," says Mendoza, "one would have said
+that Our Lady herself came down upon the vessel." A wind sprang up, and
+the Spaniards found refuge behind the bar. The returning day showed to
+their astonished eyes all the ships of Ribaut, their decks black with
+men, hovering off the entrance of the port; but Heaven had them in its
+charge, and again they experienced its protecting care. The breeze sent
+by Our Lady of Utrera rose to a gale, then to a furious tempest; and the
+grateful Adelantado saw through rack and mist the ships of his enemy
+tossed wildly among the raging waters as they struggled to gain an
+offing. With exultation at his heart the skilful seaman read their
+danger, and saw them in his mind's eye dashed to utter wreck among the
+sand-bars and breakers of the lee-shore.
+
+A bold thought seized him. He would march overland with five hundred men
+and attack Fort Caroline while its defenders were absent. First he
+ordered a mass; then he called a council. Doubtless, it was in that
+great Indian lodge of Seloy, where he had made his head-quarters; and
+here, in this dim and smoky concave, nobles, officers, priests, gathered
+at his summons. There were fears and doubts and murmurings, but Menendez
+was desperate. Not the mad desperation that strikes wildly and at
+random, but the still red heat that melts and burns and seethes with a
+steady, unquenchable fierceness. "Comrades," he said, "the time has come
+to show our courage and our zeal. This is God's war, and we must not
+flinch. It is a war with Lutherans, and we must wage it with blood and
+fire."
+
+But his hearers would not respond. They had not a million of ducats at
+stake, and were nowise ready for a cast so desperate. A clamor of
+remonstrance rose from the circle. Many voices, that of Mendoza among
+the rest, urged waiting till their main forces should arrive. The
+excitement spread to the men without, and the swarthy, black-bearded
+crowd broke into tumults mounting almost to mutiny, while an officer was
+heard to say that he would not go on such a hare-brained errand to be
+butchered like a beast. But nothing could move the Adelantado. His
+appeals or his threats did their work at last; the confusion was
+quelled, and preparation was made for the march.
+
+Five hundred arquebusiers and pikemen were drawn up before the camp.
+
+To each was given a sack of bread and a flagon of wine. Two Indians and
+a renegade Frenchman, called François Jean, were to guide them, and
+twenty Biscayan axe-men moved to the front to clear the way. Through
+floods of driving rain, a hoarse voice shouted the word of command, and
+the sullen march began.
+
+With dire misgiving, Mendoza watched the last files as they vanished in
+the tempestuous forest. Two days of suspense ensued, when a messenger
+came back with a letter from the Adelantado announcing that he had
+nearly reached the French fort, and that on the morrow, September
+twentieth, at sunrise, he hoped to assault it. "May the Divine Majesty
+deign to protect us, for He knows that we have need of it," writes the
+scared chaplain; "the Adelantado's great zeal and courage make us hope
+he will succeed, but for the good of His Majesty's service he ought to
+be a little less ardent in pursuing his schemes."
+
+Meanwhile the five hundred had pushed their march through forest and
+quagmire, through swollen streams and inundated savannas, toiling
+knee-deep through mud, rushes, and the rank, tangled grass,--hacking
+their way through thickets of the _yucca_ or Spanish bayonet, with its
+clumps of dagger-like leaves, or defiling in gloomy procession through
+the drenched forest, to the moan, roar, and howl of the storm-racked
+pines. As they bent before the tempest, the water trickling from the
+rusty headpiece crept clammy and cold betwixt the armor and the skin;
+and when they made their wretched bivouac, their bed was the spongy
+soil, and the exhaustless clouds their tent.
+
+The night of Wednesday, the nineteenth, found their vanguard in a deep
+forest of pines, less than a mile from Fort Caroline, and near the low
+hills which extended in its rear, and formed a continuation of St.
+John's Bluff. All around was one great morass. In pitchy darkness,
+knee-deep in weeds and water, half starved, worn with toil and lack of
+sleep, drenched to the skin, their provision spoiled, their ammunition
+wet, their spirit chilled out of them, they stood in shivering groups,
+cursing the enterprise and the author of it. Menendez heard an ensign
+say aloud to his comrades,--
+
+"This Asturian _corito_, who knows no more of war on shore than an ass,
+has ruined us all. By ----, if my advice had been followed, he would have
+had his deserts the day he set out on this cursed journey!"
+
+The Adelantado pretended not to hear.
+
+Two hours before dawn he called his officers about him. All night, he
+said, he had been praying to God and the Virgin.
+
+"Señores, what shall we resolve on? Our ammunition and provisions are
+gone. Our case is desperate." And he urged a bold rush on the fort.
+
+But men and officers alike were disheartened and disgusted. They
+listened coldly and sullenly; many were for returning at every risk;
+none were in a mood for fight. Menendez put forth all his eloquence,
+till at length the dashed spirits of his followers were so far rekindled
+that they consented to follow him.
+
+All fell on their knees in the marsh; then, rising, they formed their
+ranks and began to advance, guided by the renegade Frenchman, whose
+hands, to make sure of him, were tied behind his back. Groping and
+stumbling in the dark among trees, roots, and underbrush, buffeted by
+wind and rain, and slashed in the face by the recoiling boughs which
+they could not see, they soon lost their way, fell into confusion, and
+came to a stand, in a mood more savagely desponding than before. But
+soon a glimmer of returning day came to their aid, and showed them the
+dusky sky, and the dark columns of the surrounding pines. Menendez
+ordered the men forward on pain of death. They obeyed, and presently,
+emerging from the forest, could dimly discern the ridge of a low hill,
+behind which, the Frenchman told them, was the fort. Menendez, with a
+few officers and men, cautiously mounted to the top. Beneath lay Fort
+Caroline, three gunshots distant; but the rain, the imperfect light, and
+a cluster of intervening houses prevented his seeing clearly, and he
+sent two officers to reconnoitre. Descending, they met a solitary
+Frenchman, a straggler from the fort. They knocked him down with a
+sheathed sword, took him prisoner, then stabbed him in cold blood. This
+done, and their observations made, they returned to the top of the hill,
+behind which, clutching their weapons in fierce expectancy, all the gang
+stood waiting.
+
+"Santiago!" cried Menendez. "At them! God is with us!"
+
+And, shouting their hoarse war-cries, the Spaniards rushed down the
+slope like starved wolves.
+
+Not a sentry was on the rampart. La Vigne, the officer of the guard, had
+just gone to his quarters, but a trumpeter, who chanced to remain, saw,
+through sheets of rain, the black swarm of assailants sweeping down the
+hill. He blew the alarm, and at his shrill summons a few half-naked
+soldiers ran wildly out of the barracks. It was too late. Through the
+breaches, over the ramparts, the Spaniards came pouring in.
+
+"Santiago! Santiago! Down with the Lutherans!"
+
+Sick men leaped from their beds. Women and children, blind with fright,
+darted shrieking from the houses. A fierce gaunt visage, the thrust of a
+pike or blow of a rusty halberd,--such was the greeting that met all
+alike. Laudonnière snatched his sword and target, and ran towards the
+principal breach, calling to his soldiers. A rush of Spaniards met him;
+his men were cut down around him; and he, with a soldier named
+Bartholomew, was forced back into the courtyard of his house. Here a
+tent was pitched, and as the pursuers stumbled among the cords, he
+escaped behind Ottigny's house, sprang through the breach in the western
+rampart, and fled for the woods.
+
+Le Moyne had been one of the guard. Scarcely had he thrown himself into
+a hammock which was slung in his room, when a savage shout, and a wild
+uproar of shrieks, outcries, and the clash of weapons, brought him to
+his feet. He rushed past two Spaniards in the door-way, ran behind the
+guard-house leaped through an embrasure into the ditch, and escaped to
+the forest.
+
+Challeux, the carpenter, was going betimes to his work, a chisel in his
+hand. He was old, but pike and partisan brandished at his back gave
+wings to his flight. In the ecstasy of his terror, he leaped upward at
+the top of the palisade, and, clutching it, threw himself over with the
+agility of a boy. He ran up the hill, no one pursuing, and as he neared
+the edge of the forest, turned and looked back. From the high ground
+where he stood he could see the butchery, the fury of the conquerors,
+the agonized gestures of the victims. He turned again in horror, and
+plunged into the woods. As he tore his way through the briers and
+thickets, he met several fugitives, escaped like himself. Others
+presently came up, haggard and wild, like men broke loose from the jaws
+of fate. They gathered and consulted together. One of them, in great
+repute for his knowledge of the Bible, was for returning and
+surrendering to the Spaniards. "They are men," he said; "perhaps when
+their fury is over they will spare our lives, and even if they kill us,
+it will only be a few moments' pain. Better so than to starve here in
+the woods or be torn to pieces by wild beasts."
+
+The greater part of the naked and despairing company assented, but
+Challeux was of a different mind. The old Huguenot quoted Scripture, and
+called up the names of prophets and apostles to witness, that, in direst
+extremity, God would not abandon those who rested their faith in Him.
+Six of the fugitives, however, still held to their desperate purpose.
+Issuing from the woods, they descended towards the fort, and as with
+beating hearts their comrades watched the result, a troop of Spaniards
+rushed forth, hewed them down with swords and halberds, and dragged
+their bodies to the brink of the river, where the victims of the
+massacre were already flung in heaps.
+
+Le Moyne, with a soldier named Grandchemin, whom he had met in his
+flight, toiled all day through the woods, in the hope of reaching the
+small vessels anchored behind the bar. Night found them in a morass. No
+vessels could be seen, and the soldier, in despair, broke into angry
+upbraidings against his companion,--saying that he would go back and
+give himself up. Le Moyne at first opposed him, then yielded. But when
+they drew near the fort, and heard the howl of savage revelry that rose
+from within, the artist's heart failed him. He embraced his companion,
+and the soldier advanced alone. A party of Spaniards came out to meet
+him. He kneeled, and begged for his life. He was answered by a
+death-blow; and the horrified Le Moyne, from his hiding-place in the
+thickets, saw his limbs hacked apart, thrust on pikes, and borne off in
+triumph.
+
+Meanwhile, Menendez, mustering his followers, had offered thanks to God
+for their victory; and this pious butcher wept with emotion as he
+recounted the favors which Heaven had showered upon their enterprise.
+His admiring historian gives it in proof of his humanity, that, after
+the rage of the assault was spent, he ordered that women, infants, and
+boys under fifteen should thenceforth be spared. Of these, by his own
+account, there were about fifty. Writing in October to the King, he says
+that they cause him great anxiety, since he fears the anger of God,
+should he now put them to death, while, on the other hand, he is in
+dread lest the venom of their heresy should infect his men.
+
+A hundred and forty-two persons were slain in and around the fort, and
+their bodies lay heaped together on the shore. Nearly opposite was
+anchored a small vessel, called the Pearl, commanded by James Ribaut,
+son of the Admiral. The ferocious soldiery, maddened with victory and
+drunk with blood, crowded to the beach, shouting insults to those on
+board, mangling the corpses, tearing out their eyes, and throwing them
+towards the vessel from the points of their daggers. Thus did the Most
+Catholic Philip champion the cause of Heaven in the New World.
+
+It was currently believed in France, and, though no eye-witness attests
+it, there is reason to think it true, that among those murdered at Fort
+Caroline there were some who died a death of peculiar ignominy.
+Menendez, it is affirmed, hanged his prisoners on trees, and placed over
+them the inscription, "I do this, not as to Frenchmen, but as to
+Lutherans."
+
+The Spaniards gained a great booty: armor, clothing, and provision.
+"Nevertheless," says the devout Mendoza, after closing his inventory of
+the plunder, "the greatest profit of this victory is the triumph which
+our Lord has granted us, whereby His holy gospel will be introduced into
+this country, a thing so needful for saving so many souls from
+perdition." Again, he writes in his journal,--"We owe to God and His
+Mother, more than to human strength, this victory over the adversaries
+of the holy Catholic religion."
+
+To whatever influence, celestial or other, the exploit may best be
+ascribed, the victors were not yet quite content with their success. Two
+small French vessels, besides that of James Ribaut, still lay within
+range of the fort. When the storm had a little abated, the cannon were
+turned on them. One of them was sunk, but Ribaut, with the others,
+escaped down the river, at the mouth of which several light craft,
+including that bought from the English, had been anchored since the
+arrival of his father's squadron.
+
+While this was passing, the wretched fugitives were flying from the
+scene of massacre through a tempest, of whose pertinacious violence all
+the narratives speak with wonder. Exhausted, starved, half-clothed,--for
+most of them had escaped in their shirts,--they pushed their toilsome
+way amid the ceaseless howl of the elements. A few sought refuge in
+Indian villages; but these, it is said, were afterwards killed by the
+Spaniards. The greater number attempted to reach the vessels at the
+mouth of the river. Of the latter was Le Moyne, who, despite his former
+failure, was toiling through the maze of tangled forests when he met a
+Belgian soldier with the woman described as Laudonnière's maid-servant,
+the latter wounded in the breast, and, urging their flight towards the
+vessels, they fell in with other fugitives, among them Laudonnière
+himself. As they struggled through the salt-marsh, the rank sedge cut
+their naked limbs, and the tide rose to their waists. Presently they
+descried others, toiling like themselves through the matted vegetation,
+and recognized Challeux and his companions, also in quest of the
+vessels. The old man still, as he tells us, held fast to his chisel,
+which had done good service in cutting poles to aid the party to cross
+the deep creeks that channelled the morass. The united band, twenty-six
+in all, were relieved at length by the sight of a moving sail. It was
+the vessel of Captain Mallard, who, informed of the massacre, was
+standing along-shore in the hope of picking up some of the fugitives. He
+saw their signals, and sent boats to their rescue; but such was their
+exhaustion, that, had not the sailors, wading to their armpits among the
+rushes, borne them out on their shoulders, few could have escaped.
+Laudonnière was so feeble that nothing but the support of a soldier, who
+held him upright in his arms, had saved him from drowning in the marsh.
+
+Gaining the friendly decks, the fugitives counselled together. One and
+all, they sickened for the sight of France.
+
+After waiting a few days, and saving a few more stragglers from the
+marsh, they prepared to sail. Young Ribaut, though ignorant of his
+father's fate, assented with something more than willingness; indeed,
+his behavior throughout had been stamped with weakness and poltroonery.
+On the twenty-fifth of September, they put to sea in two vessels; and,
+after a voyage whose privations were fatal to many of them, they
+arrived, one party at Rochelle, the other at Swansea, in Wales.
+
+In suspense and fear, hourly looking seaward for the dreaded fleet of
+John Ribaut, the chaplain Mendoza and his brother priests held watch and
+ward at St. Augustine, in the Adelantado's absence. Besides the
+celestial guardians whom they ceased not to invoke, they had as
+protectors Bartholomew Menendez, the brother of the Adelantado, and
+about a hundred soldiers. Day and night, the latter toiled to throw up
+earthworks and strengthen their position.
+
+A week elapsed, when they saw a man running towards their fort, shouting
+as he ran.
+
+Mendoza went out to meet him.
+
+"Victory! Victory!" gasped the breathless messenger. "The French fort is
+ours!" And he flung his arms about the chaplain's neck.
+
+"To-day," writes the latter in his journal, "Monday, the twenty-fourth,
+came our good general himself, with fifty soldiers, very tired, like all
+those who were with him. As soon as they told me he was coming, I ran to
+my lodging, took a new cassock, the best I had, put on my surplice, and
+went out to meet him with a crucifix in my hand; whereupon he, like a
+gentleman and a good Christian, kneeled down with all his followers, and
+gave the Lord a thousand thanks for the great favors he had received
+from Him."
+
+In solemn procession, four priests in front chanting the _Te Deum_, the
+victors entered St. Augustine in triumph.
+
+On the twenty-eighth, when the weary Adelantado was taking his _siesta_
+under the sylvan roof of Seloy, a troop of Indians came in with news
+that quickly roused him from his slumbers. They had seen a French vessel
+wrecked on the coast towards the south. Those who escaped from her were
+some four leagues off, on the banks of a river or arm of the sea, which
+they could not cross.
+
+Menendez instantly sent forty or fifty men in boats to reconnoitre.
+Next, he called the chaplain,--for he would fain have him at his elbow
+to countenance the devilish deeds he meditated,--and embarked, with him,
+twelve soldiers, and two Indian guides, in another boat. They rowed
+along the channel between Anastasia Island and the main shore; then
+landed, struck across the country on foot, traversed plains and marshes,
+readied the sea towards night, and searched along-shore till ten o'clock
+to find their comrades who had gone before. At length, with mutual joy,
+the two parties met, and bivouacked together on the sands. Not far
+distant they could see lights. They were the camp-fires of the
+shipwrecked French.
+
+And now, to relate the fortunes of these unhappy men. To do so with
+precision is impossible, for henceforward the French narratives are no
+longer the narratives of eye-witnesses.
+
+It has been seen how, when on the point of assailing the Spaniards of
+St. Augustine, John Ribaut was thwarted by a gale which the former
+hailed as a divine interposition. The gale rose to a tempest of strange
+fury. Within a few days, all the French ships were cast on shore, the
+greater number near Cape Canaveral. According to the letter of Menendez,
+many of those on board were lost, but others affirm that all escaped but
+the captain, La Grange, an officer of high merit, who was washed from a
+floating mast. One of the ships was wrecked at a point farther northward
+than the rest, and it was her company whose camp-fires were seen by the
+Spaniards at their bivouac among the sands of Anastasia Island. They
+were endeavoring to reach Fort Caroline, of whose fate they knew
+nothing, while Ribaut with the remainder was farther southward,
+struggling through the wilderness towards the same goal. What befell the
+latter will appear hereafter. Of the fate of the former party there is
+no French record. What we know of it is due to three Spanish writers,
+Mendoza, Doctor Solis de las Meras, and Menendez himself. Solis was a
+priest, and brother-in-law to Menendez. Like Mendoza, he minutely
+describes what he saw, and, like him, was a red-hot zealot, lavishing
+applause on the darkest deeds of his chief. Before me lie the long
+despatches, now first brought to light from the archives of Seville,
+which Menendez sent from Florida to the King, a cool record of
+atrocities never surpassed, and inscribed on the back with the royal
+indorsement,--"Say to him that he has done well."
+
+When the Adelantado saw the French fires in the distance, he lay close
+in his bivouac, and sent two soldiers to reconnoitre. At two in the
+morning they came back and reported that it was impossible to get at the
+enemy, since they were on the farther side of an arm of the sea,
+probably Matanzas Inlet. Menendez, however, gave orders to march, and
+before daybreak reached the hither bank, where he hid his men in a bushy
+hollow. Thence, as it grew light, they could discern the enemy, many of
+whom were searching along the sands and shallows for shell-fish, for
+they were famishing. A thought struck Menendez, an inspiration, says
+Mendoza, of the Holy Spirit. He put on the clothes of a sailor, entered
+a boat which had been brought to the spot, and rowed towards the
+shipwrecked men, the better to learn their condition. A Frenchman swam
+out to meet him. Menendez demanded what men they were.
+
+"Followers of Ribaut," answered the swimmer, "Viceroy of the King of
+France."
+
+"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?"
+
+"All Lutherans."
+
+A brief dialogue ensued, during which the Adelantado declared his name
+and character. The Frenchman swam back to his companions, but soon
+returned, and asked safe conduct for his captain and four other
+gentlemen who wished to hold conference with the Spanish general.
+Menendez gave his word for their safety, and, returning to the shore,
+sent his boat to bring them over. On their landing, he met them very
+courteously. His followers were kept at a distance, so disposed behind
+hills and clumps of bushes as to give an exaggerated idea of their
+force,--a precaution the more needful as they were only about sixty in
+number, while the French, says Solis, were above two hundred, though
+Menendez declares that they did not exceed a hundred and forty. The
+French officer told him the story of their shipwreck, and begged him to
+lend them a boat to aid them in crossing the rivers which lay between
+them and a fort of their King, whither they were making their way.
+
+Then came again the ominous question,--
+
+"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?"
+
+"We are Lutherans."
+
+"Gentlemen," pursued Menendez, "your fort is taken, and all in it put to
+the sword." And in proof of his declaration he caused articles plundered
+from Fort Caroline to be shown to the unhappy petitioners. He then left
+them, to breakfast with his officers, first ordering food to be placed
+before them. His repast over, he returned to them.
+
+"Are you convinced now," he asked, "that what I have told you is true?"
+
+The French captain assented, and implored him to lend them ships in
+which to return home. Menendez answered, that he would do so willingly,
+if they were Catholics, and if he had ships to spare, but he had none.
+The supplicants then expressed the hope, that, at least, they and their
+followers would be allowed to remain with the Spaniards till ships could
+be sent to their relief, since there was peace between the two nations,
+whose kings were friends and brothers.
+
+"All Catholics," retorted the Spaniard, "I will befriend; but as you are
+of the New Sect, I hold you as enemies, and wage deadly war against you;
+and this I will do with all cruelty [_crueldad_] in this country, where
+I command as Viceroy and Captain-General for my King. I am here to plant
+the holy gospel, that the Indians may be enlightened and come to the
+knowledge of the holy Catholic faith of our Lord Jesus Christ, as the
+Roman Church teaches it. If you will give up your arms and banners, and
+place yourselves at my mercy, you may do so, and I will act towards you
+as God shall give me grace. Do as you will, for other than this you can
+have neither truce nor friendship with me."
+
+Such were the Adelantado's words, as reported by a by-stander, his
+admiring brother-in-law; and that they contain an implied assurance of
+mercy has been held, not only by Protestants, but by Catholics and
+Spaniards. The report of Menendez himself is more brief and sufficiently
+equivocal:--
+
+"I answered, that they could give up their arms and place themselves
+under my mercy,--that I should do with them what our Lord should order;
+and from that I did not depart, nor would I, unless God our Lord should
+otherwise inspire."
+
+One of the Frenchmen recrossed to consult with his companions. In two
+hours he returned, and offered fifty thousand ducats to secure their
+lives; but Menendez, says his brother-in-law, would give no pledges. On
+the other hand, expressions in his own despatches point to the inference
+that a virtual pledge was given, at least to certain individuals.
+
+The starving French saw no resource but to yield themselves to his
+mercy. The boat was again sent across the river. It returned, laden with
+banners, arquebuses, swords, targets, and helmets. The Adelantado
+ordered twenty soldiers to bring over the prisoners by tens at a time.
+He then took the French officers aside behind a ridge of sand, two
+gunshots from the bank. Here, with courtesy on his lips and murder
+reeking at his heart, he said,--
+
+"Gentlemen, I have but few men, and you are so many, that, if you were
+free, it would be easy for you to take your satisfaction on us for the
+people we killed when we took your fort. Therefore it is necessary that
+you should go to my camp, four leagues from this place, with your hands
+tied."
+
+Accordingly, as each party landed, they were led out of sight behind the
+sand-hill, and their hands tied at their backs with the match-cords of
+the arquebuses,--though not before each had been supplied with food. The
+whole day passed before all were brought together, bound and helpless,
+under the eye of the inexorable Adelantado. But now Mendoza interposed.
+"I was a priest," he says, "and had the bowels of a man." He asked,
+that, if there were Christians, that is to say Catholics, among the
+prisoners, they should be set apart. Twelve Breton sailors professed
+themselves to be such; and these, together with four carpenters and
+calkers, "of whom," writes Menendez, "I was in great need," were put on
+board the boat and sent to St. Augustine. The rest were ordered to march
+thither by land.
+
+The Adelantado walked in advance till he came to a lonely spot, not far
+distant, deep among the bush-covered hills. Here he stopped, and with
+his cane drew a line in the sand. The sun was set when the captive
+Huguenots, with their escort, reached the fatal goal thus marked out.
+And now let the curtain drop; for here, in the name of Heaven, the
+hounds of hell were turned loose, and the savage soldiery, like wolves
+in a sheepfold, rioted in slaughter. Of all that wretched company, not
+one was left alive.
+
+"I had their hands tied behind their backs," writes the chief criminal,
+"and themselves passed under the knife. It appeared to me, that, by thus
+chastising them, God our Lord and your Majesty were served; whereby in
+future they will leave us more free from their evil sect, to plant the
+gospel in these parts."
+
+Again Menendez returned triumphant to St. Augustine, and behind him
+marched his band of butchers, steeped in blood to the elbows, but still
+unsated. Great as had been his success, he still had cause for anxiety.
+There was ill news of his fleet. Some of the ships were lost, others
+scattered, or lagging tardily on their way. Of his whole force, but a
+fraction had reached Florida, and of this a large part was still at Fort
+Caroline. Ribaut could not be far off; and whatever might be the
+condition of his shipwrecked company, their numbers would make them
+formidable, unless taken at advantage. Urged by fear and fortified by
+fanaticism, Menendez had well begun his work of slaughter; but rest for
+him there was none; a darker deed was behind.
+
+On the next day, Indians came with the tidings that at the spot where
+the French had been found was now another party, still larger. This
+murder-loving race looked with great respect on Menendez for his
+wholesale butchery of the night before,--an exploit rarely equalled in
+their own annals of massacre. On his part, he doubted not that Ribaut
+was at hand. Marching with a hundred and fifty men, he reached the inlet
+at midnight, and again, like a savage, ambushed himself on the bank. Day
+broke, and he could plainly see the French on the farther side. They had
+made a raft, which lay in the water, ready for crossing. Menendez and
+his men showed themselves, when, forthwith, the French displayed their
+banners, sounded drums and trumpets, and set their sick and starving
+ranks in array of battle. But the Adelantado, regardless of this warlike
+show, ordered his men to seat themselves at breakfast, while he with
+three officers walked unconcernedly along the shore. His coolness had
+its effect. The French blew a trumpet of parley, and showed a white
+flag. The Spaniards replied. A Frenchman came out upon the raft, and,
+shouting across the water, asked that a Spanish envoy should be sent
+over.
+
+"You have a raft," was the reply; "come yourselves."
+
+An Indian canoe lay under the bank on the Spanish side. A French sailor
+swam to it, paddled back unmolested, and presently returned, bringing
+with him La Caille, Ribaut's sergeant-major. He told Menendez that the
+French were three hundred and fifty in all, on their way to Fort
+Caroline; and, like the officers of the former party, begged for boats
+to aid them in crossing the river.
+
+"My brother," said Menendez, "go and tell your general, that, if he
+wishes to speak with me, he may come with four or six companions, and
+that I pledge my word he shall go back safe."
+
+La Caille returned; and Ribaut, with eight gentlemen, soon came over in
+the canoe. Menendez met them courteously, caused wine and preserved
+fruits to be placed before them,--he had come with well-stocked larder
+on his errand of blood,--and next led Ribaut to the reeking Golgotha,
+where, in heaps upon the sands, lay the corpses of his slaughtered
+followers. Ribaut was prepared for the spectacle; La Caille had already
+seen it; but he would not believe that Fort Caroline was taken till a
+part of the plunder was shown him. Then, mastering his despair, he
+turned to the conqueror.
+
+"What has befallen us," he said, "may one day befall you." And, urging
+that the kings of France and Spain were brothers and close friends, he
+begged, in the name of that friendship, that the Spaniard would aid him
+in conveying his followers home. Menendez gave him the same equivocal
+answer that he had given the former party, and Ribaut returned to
+consult with his officers. After three hours of absence, he came back in
+the canoe, and told the Adelantado that some of his people were ready to
+surrender at discretion, but that many refused.
+
+"They can do as they please," was the reply.
+
+In behalf of those who surrendered Ribaut offered a ransom of a hundred
+thousand ducats.
+
+"It grieves me much," said Menendez, "that I cannot accept it; for I
+have great need of it."
+
+Ribaut was much encouraged. Menendez could scarcely forego such a prize,
+and he thought, says the Spanish narrator, that the lives of his
+followers would now be safe. He asked to be allowed the night for
+deliberation, and at sunset recrossed the river. In the morning he
+reappeared among the Spaniards and reported that two hundred of his men
+had retreated from the spot, but that the remaining one hundred and
+fifty would surrender. At the same time he gave into the hands of
+Menendez the royal standard and other flags, with his sword, dagger,
+helmet, buckler, and his official seal, given him by Coligny. Menendez
+directed an officer to enter the boat and bring over the French by
+tens. He next led Ribaut among the bushes behind the neighboring
+sand-hill, and ordered his hands to be bound fast. Then the scales fell
+from the prisoner's eyes. Face to face his hideous fate rose up before
+him. He saw his followers and himself entrapped,--the dupe of words
+artfully framed to lure them to their ruin. The day wore on; and, as
+band after band of prisoners was brought over, they were led behind the
+sand-hill, out of sight from the farther shore, and bound like their
+general. At length the transit was complete. With bloodshot eyes and
+weapons bared, the fierce Spaniards closed around their victims.
+
+"Are you Catholics or Lutherans? and is there any one among you who will
+go to confession?"
+
+Ribaut answered,--
+
+"I and all here are of the Reformed Faith."
+
+And he recited the Psalm, "_Domine, memento mei_."
+
+"We are of earth," he continued, "and to earth we must return; twenty
+years more or less can matter little"; and, turning to the Adelantado,
+he bade him do his will.
+
+The stony-hearted bigot gave the signal; and those who will may paint to
+themselves the horrors of the scene. A few, however, were spared.
+
+"I saved," writes Menendez, "the lives of two young gentlemen of about
+eighteen years of age, as well as of three others, the fifer, the
+drummer, and the trumpeter; and I caused Jean Ribaut with all the rest
+to be passed under the knife, judging this to be expedient for the
+service of God our Lord, and of your Majesty. And I consider it great
+good fortune that he (Jean Ribaut) should be dead, for the King of
+France could effect more with him and five hundred ducats than with
+other men and five thousand, and he would do more in one year than
+another in ten, for he was the most experienced sailor and naval
+commander ever known, and of great skill in this passage to the Indies
+and the coast of Florida. He was, besides, greatly liked in England, in
+which kingdom his reputation is such that he was appointed
+Captain-General of all the British fleet against the French Catholics in
+the war between England and France some years ago."
+
+Such is the sum of the Spanish accounts,--the self-damning testimony of
+the author and abettors of the crime. A picture of lurid and awful
+coloring; and yet there is reason to believe that the truth was more
+hideous still. Among those spared was one Christophe le Breton, who was
+carried to Spain, escaped to France, and told his story to Challeux.
+Among those struck down in the carnage was a sailor of Dieppe, stunned
+and left for dead under a heap of corpses. In the night he revived,
+contrived to draw his knife, cut the cords that bound his hands, and
+make his way to an Indian village. The Indians, though not without
+reluctance, abandoned him to the Spaniards. The latter sold him as a
+slave; but on his way in fetters to Portugal, the ship was taken by the
+Huguenots, the sailor set free, and his story published in the narrative
+of Le Moyne. When the massacre was known in France, the friends and
+relatives of the victims sent to the King, Charles IX., a vehement
+petition for redress; and their memorial recounts many incidents of the
+tragedy. From these three sources is to be drawn the French version of
+the story. The following is its substance:--
+
+Famished and desperate, the followers of Ribaut were toiling northward
+to seek refuge at Fort Caroline, when they found the Spaniards in their
+path. Some were filled with dismay; others, in their misery, almost
+hailed them as deliverers. La Caille, the sergeant-major, crossed the
+river. Menendez met him with a face of friendship, and protested that he
+would spare the lives of the shipwrecked men, sealing the promise with
+an oath, a kiss, and many signs of the cross. He even gave it in
+writing, under seal. Still, there were many among the French who would
+not place themselves in his power. The most credulous crossed the river
+in a boat. As each successive party landed, their hands were bound fast
+at their backs; and thus, except a few who were set apart, they were all
+driven towards the fort, like cattle to the shambles, with curses and
+scurrilous abuse. Then, at sound of drums and trumpets, the Spaniards
+fell upon them, striking them down with swords, pikes, and halberds.
+Ribaut vainly called on the Adelantado to remember his oath. By the
+latter's order, a soldier plunged a dagger into his heart; and Ottigny,
+who stood near, met a similar fate. Ribaut's beard was cut off, and
+portions of it sent in a letter to Philip II. His head was hewn into
+four parts, one of which was displayed on the point of a lance at each
+corner of Fort St. Augustine. Great fires were kindled, and the bodies
+of the murdered burned to ashes.
+
+Such is the sum of the French accounts. The charge of breach of faith
+contained in them was believed by Catholics as well as Protestants, and
+it was as a defence against this charge that the narrative of the
+Adelantado's brother-in-law was published. That Ribaut, a man whose good
+sense and bravery were both reputed high, should have submitted himself
+and his men to Menendez without positive assurance of safety is scarcely
+credible; nor is it lack of charity to believe that a miscreant so
+savage in heart and so perverted in conscience would act on the maxim,
+current among the bigots of the day, that faith ought not to be kept
+with heretics.
+
+It was night when the Adelantado again entered St. Augustine. Some there
+were who blamed his cruelty; but many applauded. "Even if the French had
+been Catholics,"--such was their language,--"he would have done right,
+for, with the little provision we have, they would all have starved;
+besides, there were so many of them that they would have cut our
+throats."
+
+And now Menendez again addressed himself to the despatch, already begun,
+in which he recounts to the King his labors and his triumphs, a
+deliberate and business-like document, mingling narratives of butchery
+with recommendations for promotions, commissary details, and petitions
+for supplies; enlarging, too, on the vast schemes of encroachment which
+his successful generalship had brought to nought. The French, he says,
+had planned a military and naval depot at Los Martires, whence they
+would make a descent upon Havana, and another at the Bay of Ponce de
+Leon, whence they could threaten Vera Cruz. They had long been
+encroaching on Spanish rights at Newfoundland, from which a great arm of
+the sea--the St. Lawrence--would give them access to the Moluccas and
+other parts of the East Indies. Moreover, he adds in a later despatch,
+by this passage they may reach the mines of Zacatecas and St. Martin, as
+well as every part of the South Sea. And, as already mentioned, he urges
+immediate occupation of Chesapeake Bay, which, by its supposed
+water-communication with the St. Lawrence, would enable Spain to
+vindicate her rights, control the fisheries of Newfoundland, and thwart
+her rival in her vast designs of commercial and territorial
+aggrandizement. Thus did France and Spain dispute the possession of
+North America long before England became a party to the strife.
+
+Some twenty days after Menendez returned to St. Augustine, the Indians,
+enamored of carnage, and exulting to see their invaders mowed down, came
+to tell him that on the coast southward, near Cape Canaveral, a great
+number of Frenchmen were intrenching themselves. They were those of
+Ribaut's party who had refused to surrender. Retreating to the spot
+where their ships had been cast ashore, they were endeavoring to build a
+vessel from the fragments of the wrecks.
+
+In all haste Menendez despatched messengers to Fort Caroline,--named by
+him San Mateo,--ordering a reinforcement of a hundred and fifty men. In
+a few days they came. He added some of his own soldiers, and, with a
+united force of two hundred and fifty, set forth, as he tells us, on
+the second of November, pushing southward along the shore with such
+merciless energy that some of his men dropped dead with wading night and
+day through the loose sands. When, from behind their frail defences, the
+French saw the Spanish pikes and partisans glittering into view, they
+fled in a panic, and took refuge among the hills. Menendez sent a
+trumpet to summon them, pledging his honor for their safety. The
+commander and several others told the messenger that they would sooner
+be eaten by the savages than trust themselves to Spaniards; and,
+escaping, they fled to the Indian towns. The rest surrendered; and
+Menendez kept his word. The comparative number of his own men made his
+prisoners no longer dangerous. They were led back to St. Augustine,
+where, as the Spanish writer affirms, they were well treated. Those of
+good birth sat at the Adelantado's table, eating the bread of a homicide
+crimsoned with the slaughter of their comrades. The priests essayed
+their pious efforts, and, under the gloomy menace of the Inquisition,
+some of the heretics renounced their errors. The fate of the captives
+may be gathered from the indorsement, in the handwriting of the King, on
+the back of the despatch of Menendez of December twelfth.
+
+"Say to him," writes Philip II., "that, as to those he has killed, he
+has done well, and as for those he has saved, they shall be sent to the
+galleys."
+
+Thus did Spain make good her claim to North America, and crush the upas
+of heresy in its germ. Within her bounds the tidings were hailed with
+acclamation, while in France a cry of horror and execration rose from
+the Huguenots, and found an echo even among the Catholics. But the weak
+and ferocious son of Catherine de Médicis gave no response. The victims
+were Huguenots, disturbers of the realm, followers of Coligny, the man
+above all others a thorn in his side. True, the enterprise was a
+national enterprise, undertaken at the national charge, with royal
+commission, and under the royal standard. True, it had been assailed in
+time of peace by a power professing the closest amity. Yet Huguenot
+influence, had prompted and Huguenot hands executed it. That influence
+had now ebbed low; Coligny's power had waned; and the Spanish party was
+ascendant. Charles IX., long vacillating, was fast subsiding into the
+deathly embrace of Spain, for whom, at last, on the bloody eve of St.
+Bartholomew, he was destined to become the assassin of his own best
+subjects.
+
+In vain the relatives of the slain petitioned him for redress; and had
+the honor of the nation rested in the keeping of her king, the blood of
+hundreds of murdered Frenchmen would have cried from the ground in vain.
+But it was not so to be. Injured humanity found an avenger, and outraged
+France a champion. Her chivalrous annals may be searched in vain for a
+deed of more romantic daring than the vengeance of Dominic de Gourgue.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WEARINESS.
+
+
+ O little feet, that such long years
+ Must wander on through doubts and fears,
+ Must ache and bleed beneath your load!
+ I, nearer to the way-side inn
+ Where toil shall cease and rest begin,
+ Am weary, thinking of your road.
+
+ O little hands, that, weak or strong,
+ Have still to serve or rule so long,
+ Have still so long to give or ask!
+ I, who so much with book and pen
+ Have toiled among my fellow-men,
+ Am weary, thinking of your task.
+
+ O little hearts, that throb and beat
+ With such impatient, feverish heat,
+ Such limitless and strong desires!
+ Mine, that, so long has glowed and burned,
+ With passions into ashes turned,
+ Now covers and conceals its fires.
+
+ O little souls, as pure and white
+ And crystalline as rays of light
+ Direct from heaven, their source divine!
+ Refracted through the mist of years,
+ How red my setting sun appears,
+ How lurid looks this soul, of mine!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. LEWIS.
+
+A STORY IN THREE PARTS.
+
+PART III.
+
+
+XI.
+
+When we returned from our journey, Lulu was among the first to greet us,
+and with a cordial animation quite unlike the gentle, dawdling way she
+used to have. Indeed, I was struck the first evening with a new impulse,
+and a healthful mental current, that gave glow and freshness to
+everything she said. Mr. Lewis was gone to Cuba, she told us, and would
+be away a month more, but "George" was with her continually, and the
+days were all too short for what they had to do. She seemed to have
+attacked all the arts and sciences simultaneously, and with an eagerness
+very amusing to see. George had begun a numismatic collection for her,
+and she had made out an historic table from the coins, writing down all
+that was most important under each king's reign. George had brought home
+some fine specimens of stones, and had interested her much in
+mineralogy. George liked riding, and had taught her to ride; and she now
+perpetually made her appearance in her riding-habit and little
+jockey-cap, wishing she could do something for me here or there. George
+moulded, and taught her to mould; and she was dabbling in clay and
+plaster of Paris all the morning. George painted beautifully in
+water-colors, and taught her to sketch from Nature, which she often did
+now, in their rides, when the days were pleasant enough. George not only
+thrummed a Spanish guitar, but liked singing; so music went on with
+wonderful force and improvement. Nothing that George liked better than
+botany, metaphysics, and micrology. And now Lulu was screaming at
+dreadful dragons' heads on a pin's point, or delighted with
+diamond-beetles and spiders' eyes. She fairly revelled in the new worlds
+that were opened to her eager eye and hungry mind. No more long,
+tiresome mornings now. Every hour was occupied. Intelligent smiles
+dimpled her beautiful mouth; the weary, unoccupied, childish look
+vanished from her eyes; and her talk was animated and animating. For
+though she might not tell much that was new, she told it in a new way
+and with the fresh light of recent experience. Thus she became in a
+wonderfully short time a quite different woman from the Lulu of the
+early winter.
+
+We acknowledged that she was become an agreeable companion. In a few
+weeks of home-education her soul had expanded to a tropical and rich
+growth. This we were talking over one night, when Lulu had been with us,
+and when George had come for her and extinguished us with his great
+hearty laugh and abundant health and activity, as the sun's effulgence
+does a house-candle.
+
+"I don't like that Remington, either," said the minister, after we were
+left in this state of darkness.
+
+"But, surely, he has given Lulu's mind a most desirable impulse and
+direction. How glad Mr. Lewis will be to see her so happy, so animated,
+and so sensible, when he comes home!"
+
+"If that makes him happy, he could have had it before, I suppose. But do
+you notice anything unhealthy in this mental cultivation,--anything
+forced in this luxuriant flowering? Now the light of heaven expands the
+whole nature, I hold, into healthy and proportioned beauty. If anything
+is lacking or exuberant, the influence is not heavenly, be sure. What do
+you think of this statement?"
+
+"Very sensible, but very Hebrew to me."
+
+"I never thought Lulu's were 'household eyes,'--but now she never speaks
+of husband or children, of house or home. Now that is not a suitable
+mental condition. Let us hope that this intellectual effervescence will
+subside, and leave her some thoughtfulness and care for others, and the
+meditation which will make her accomplishments something to enrich and
+strengthen, rather than excite and overrun her mind."
+
+"Ah! well, it is only a few weeks, not more than six, since she found
+out she had a soul. No wonder she feels she has been such a laggard in
+the race, she must keep on the gallop now to make up for lost time."
+
+"But,--about the husband and children?"
+
+"Oh, they will come in in due time and take their true place. She is a
+young artist, and hasn't got her perspectives arranged. Be sure they
+will be in the foreground presently," said I, cheerfully.
+
+"Let us hope so. For a wife, mother, and house-mistress to be racing
+after so many ologies, and ignoring her daily duties, is a spectacle of
+doubtful utility to me."
+
+To tell the truth, this want of domestic interest had often struck me
+also. One day, as we were talking about my children, Lulu had said that
+she believed herself destitute of the maternal instinct; for although
+she liked to see the children, of course, yet she did not miss them
+when away from her. And after the death of young Lewis, which happened
+while they were at Cuba, and which distressed my Johnnie so much that he
+could not for a long time bear either books or play, for want of his
+beloved playmate, his mother, apparently, did not lament him at all.
+
+"I never liked to have him with me," she said to me,--"partly, I
+suppose, because he reminded me of Montalli, and of a period of great
+suffering in my life. I should be glad never to think of him again. But
+William seemed to love and pity him always. Gave him his name, and
+always treated him like an only and elder son. And William is fond of
+the little girls, too. I don't mean that I am not fond of them, but not
+as he is. He will go and spend a week at a time playing and driving with
+them."
+
+Indeed, she very often reminded me of Undine in her soulless days.
+
+As she scarcely went into society, during the absence of Mr. Lewis, Lulu
+had time for all this multifarious culture that I have been describing,
+and she was gradually coming also to reason and reflect on what she read
+and heard, though her appetite for knowledge continued with the same
+keenness. Her artistic eye, which naturally grouped and arranged with
+taste whatever was about her, stood her in good stead of experience; and
+with a very little instruction, she was able to do wonders in both a
+plastic and pictorial way.
+
+One day she showed me a fine drawing of the Faun of Praxiteles, with
+some verses written beneath. The lines seemed to me full of vigor and
+harmony. They implied and breathed, too, such an intimacy with classical
+thought, that I was astonished when, in answer to my inquiry, she told
+me she wrote them herself.
+
+"How delighted Mr. Lewis will be with this!" I exclaimed, looking at the
+beautifully finished drawing; "to think how you have improved, Lulu!"
+
+"You think so?" she answered, with glistening eyes. "I, too, feel that I
+have, and am so happy!"
+
+"I am sure Mr. Lewis will be so, too," I continued, persistently.
+
+She answered in a sharp tone, dropping her eyes, and, as it were, all
+the joy out of them,--
+
+"Surely, I have told you often enough that Mr. Lewis hates literary
+women! I am not goose enough to expect him to sympathize with any
+intellectual pursuits of mine. No. Fatima in the harem, or Nourmahal
+thrumming her lute under a palm-tree, is his _belle-idéale_; failing
+that, a housekeeper and drudge."
+
+I cannot describe the scorn with which she said this. She changed the
+subject, however, at once, instead of pursuing it as she would formerly
+have done, and soon after left me for a drive over Milton Hills with
+George, with a hammer and sketch-book in the chaise.
+
+Mr. Lewis's business in Cuba was prolonged into May. He had estates
+there, and desired to dispose of them, Lulu said, so that they might for
+the future live entirely at the North, which they both liked better.
+
+I could not help seeing that her affections drifted farther and farther
+every week from their lawful haven, and I wished Mr. Lewis safe back
+again and overlooking his Northern estates. I guessed how, through her
+pride of awakened intellect, Lulu's gratitude had wrought a deep
+interest in her cousin. He had rescued her from the idleness and inanity
+of her daily life, pointed out to her the broad fields of literary
+enjoyment and excellence, and inevitably associated his own image with
+all the new and varied occupations with which her now busy days were
+filled. The poetry she read he brought to her; the songs she sang were
+of his selection. His mind and taste, his observations and reflections,
+were all written over every page she read, over every hour of her life.
+She had been on a desert island in her intellectual loneliness. She
+could hardly help loving the hand that had guided her to the palm-tree
+and the fountain, especially when she glanced back at the long sandy
+reach of her life.
+
+Naturally enough, I watched and distrusted Mr. Remington, who was a man
+of the world, and knew very well what he was about. Of all things, he
+dearly loved to be excited, occupied, and amused. Of course, I was not
+disturbed about his heart, nor seriously supposed he would get into any
+entanglement of the affections and the duties of life, but I thought he
+might do a great deal of harm for all that.
+
+At last, in the middle of May, Mr. Lewis returned, having failed in his
+desired arrangement for a permanent residence in New England. The first
+evening I saw them together without company, I perceived that he was
+struck with the new life in Lulu's manner and conversation. He watched
+and listened to her with an astonishment which he could not conceal.
+
+I never saw anything like jealousy in Mr. Lewis's manner, either at this
+time, or before. He was always tender and dignified, when speaking to or
+of her. If he felt any uneasiness now, he did not betray it. In looking
+back, I am sure of this. Afterwards, in company, where he might be
+supposed to be proud of his wife, he often looked at her with the same
+astonishment, and sometimes with unaffected admiration. He could not
+help seeing the great change in her,--that the days were taken up with
+rational and elegant pursuits, and that the hours were vocal with poetry
+and taste. The illuminating mind had brought her tulip beauty into a
+brighter and more gorgeous glow, and her movements were full of graceful
+meaning. Everything was touched and inspired but the heart. I don't know
+that he felt this, or that he missed anything. She had the same easy
+self-possession in his presence which she had always had,--the same pet
+names of endearment. It was always "Willie, dear," or "Yes, my love,"
+which makes the usual matrimonial vocabulary, and which does not reward
+study. But he always looked at her with a calm delight, perfectly
+satisfied with all she said and did, and with a Southern indolence of
+mind and body, that precluded effort. I think he never once lost entire
+confidence in her, or was jealous of the hand that had unlocked such
+mental treasures for her.
+
+Meanwhile her eager lip quaffed the bright cup so cautiously presented,
+and drained it with ever new delight. If it was mingled with delicate
+flattery, it only sparkled more merrily; and if there were poison there,
+I am sure she never guessed it, even when it burnt in her cheek or
+thrilled in her dancing veins.
+
+
+XII.
+
+The Lewises, with Mr. Remington and a large party of pleasure-seekers,
+went about this time on a tour to Quebec and the Falls of Montmorency.
+They decided to shut their house in Boston, and Lulu asked me if I would
+employ and look after a _protégée_ of hers, in whom she took some
+interest. The woman was a tolerable seamstress, she said, and would come
+to me the next day. She knew nothing about her except that she was poor
+and could sew.
+
+When the woman came in, I was puzzled to think where I could have seen
+her, which I was sure I had done somewhere, though I could not recall
+the where or when. In answer to my particular inquiries, as she could
+give me no references, she told me her husband was living, but was sick
+and could do nothing for his family,--in fact, that she and three
+children were kept alive by her efforts of various sorts. These were,
+sewing when she could get it, washing and scrubbing when she could not.
+She was very poorly dressed, but had a Yankee, go-ahead expression, as
+if she would get a living on the top of a bare rock.
+
+Still puzzling over the likeness in her face to somebody I had known, I
+continued to ask questions and to observe face, manner, and voice, in
+hope to catch the clue of which I was in search. When she admitted that
+her husband's intemperance had lost him his place and forbade his
+getting another, and said his name was Jim Ruggles, "a light broke in
+upon my brain." I remembered my vision of the fresh young girl who had
+sprung out on our path like a morning-glory, on our way to New York
+seven years before. The poor morning-glory was sadly trodden in the
+dust. It hadn't done "no good," as the driver had remarked, to forewarn
+her of the consequences of marrying a sponge. She had accepted her lot,
+and, strangely enough, was quite happy in it. There could be no mistake
+in the cheerful expression of her worn face. Whatever Jim might be to
+other people, she said, he was always good to her and the children; and
+she pitied him, loved him, and took care of him. It wasn't at all in the
+fashion the Temperance Society would have liked; for when I first went
+to the house, I found her pouring out a glass of strong waters for him,
+and handing it to his pale and trembling lips herself. As soon as I was
+seated, she locked bottle and glass carefully. Before I left her, she
+had given him stimulants of various sorts from the same source, which he
+received with grateful smiles, and then went on coughing as before.
+
+"It's no time now for him to be forming new habits," said she, in answer
+to my open-eyed surprise; "and it's best he should have all the comfort
+and ease he can get. As long as I can get it for him, he shall have it."
+
+She spoke very quietly, but very much as if the same will of her own
+which had led her to marry Jim Ruggles, when a gay, dissipated fellow,
+kept her determined to give him what he wanted, even to the doubtful
+extreme I saw. So she struggled bravely on during the next four weeks of
+Jim's existence, keeping herself and her three children on hasty
+pudding, and buying for Jim's consumptively craving appetite rich
+mince-pies and platefuls of good rich food from an eating-house hard by.
+At the end of the four weeks he died most peacefully and suddenly,
+having not five minutes before swallowed a glass of gin sling, prepared
+by the loving hand of his wife, and saying to her, with a firm, clear
+voice, and a grateful smile, "Good Amy! always good!" So the weak man's
+soul passed away. And as Amy told me about it, with sorrowful sobs, I
+was not ready to say or think she had done wrong, although both her
+conduct and my opinion were entirely uncanonical.
+
+Before Mrs. Lewis returned, Amy was one day at my room and asked me when
+I expected her back.
+
+"Is Mr. Lewis with her, Ma'am?" said she, hesitatingly.
+
+"Of course; at least, I suppose so. Why, what makes you ask?" said I,
+with surprise at her downcast eyes and flushed face.
+
+"I heard he had gone away. And that--_that_ Mr. Remington was there with
+her. But you know about it, most likely."
+
+"No, I know nothing about it, Amy."
+
+"It was their old cook told me, Mrs. Butler. And she said,--oh! all
+sorts of things, that I am sure couldn't be true, for Mrs. Lewis is such
+a kind, beautiful woman! I couldn't believe a word she said!"
+
+In my quality of minister's wife, and with a general distrust of cooks'
+opinions, I told Amy that there was always scandal enough, and it was a
+waste of time to listen to it. But after she left me, I confess to a
+whole hour wasted in speculations and anxious reflections on Amy's
+communication, and also to having taken the Dominie away from his sermon
+for a like space of time to consider the matter fully.
+
+I was relieved when the whole party came back, and when the blooming,
+happy face of Lulu showed that she, at least, had neither thought nor
+done anything very bad.
+
+The summer was becoming warm and oppressive in Boston, and we prepared
+to take the children and go to Weston for a few weeks. While we should
+be among the mountains, the Lewises proposed a voyage to Scotland, and
+we hoped that sometime in the early autumn we should all be together
+once more. The evening before our departure Mr. Remington and Lulu
+spent with us, Mr. Lewis coming in at a later hour. I remember vividly
+the conversation during the whole of that last evening we ever passed
+together.
+
+
+XIII.
+
+While Mrs. Lewis and I were chatting in one corner on interests
+specially feminine, the Dominie had got Mr. Remington into a
+metaphysical discussion of some length. From time to time we heard,
+"Pascal's idea seems to be," and then, "The notion of Descartes and all
+that school of thinkers"; and feeling that they were plunging quite
+beyond our depth, we continued babbling of dry goods, and what was
+becoming, till Mr. Remington leaned back laughing to us, and said,--
+
+"What do you think, ladies? or are you of the opinion of somebody who
+said of metaphysics, 'Whoever troubles himself to skin a flint should
+have the skin for his pains'?"
+
+"But that is a most unfair comparison!" said the minister, eagerly, "and
+what I will by no means allow. By so much more as the mind is better
+than the body, nay, because the mind is all that is worth anything about
+a man, metaphysics is the noblest science, and most worthy"--
+
+"I give in! I am down!" said Remington.
+
+"But what are you disputing about?" said I.
+
+"Oh, only Infinity!" said Remington. "But then you know metaphysics does
+not hesitate at anything. I say, it is impossible for the mind to go
+back to a first cause, and if the mind of a man cannot conceive an idea,
+why of course that idea can never be true to him. I can think of no
+cause that may not be an effect."
+
+"Nor of infinite space, nor of infinite time?" said the minister.
+
+"No,--of nothing that cannot be divided, and nothing that cannot be
+extended."
+
+"Very good. Perhaps you can't. I suppose we cannot comprehend infinity,
+because we are essentially finite ourselves. But it by no means follows
+that we cannot apprehend and believe in attributes which we are unable
+to comprehend. We can certainly do that."
+
+"No. After you reach your limit of comprehension, you may say, all
+beyond that is infinite,--but you only push the object of your thought
+out of view. After you have reiterated the years till you are tired, you
+say, beyond that is infinite. You only mean that you are tired of
+computing and adding."
+
+"Then you cannot believe in an Infinite Creator?" said the minister.
+
+"I can believe in nothing that is not founded on reason. I should be
+very glad to believe in an Infinite Creator, only it is entirely
+impossible, you see, for the mind to conceive of a being who is not
+himself created."
+
+"Yet you can believe in a world that is not created?" said the minister.
+"You can believe that a world full of adaptations, full of signs of
+intelligence and design, could be uncreated. How do you make that out?"
+
+"There remains no greater difficulty to me," said Remington, "in
+believing in an uncreated world than you have in believing in an
+uncreated God. Why is it stranger that Chaos should produce harmony than
+that Nothing should produce God?"
+
+He looked at us, smiling as he said this, which he evidently considered
+unanswerable.
+
+"You are quite right," said my husband, gravely. "It is impossible that
+nothing should produce God, and therefore I say God is eternal. It is
+not impossible that something should produce the world, and therefore I
+believe the world is not eternal. That point is the one on which the
+whole argument hangs in my mind."
+
+"It does not become me to dispute a clergyman," said Mr. Remington,
+smiling affectedly, as if only courtesy prevented his coming in with an
+entirely demolishing argument.
+
+To my great surprise Lulu instantly answered, and with an intelligence
+that showed she had followed the argument entirely,--
+
+"I am certain, George, that Mr. Prince has altogether the best of it.
+Yours is merely a technical difficulty,--merely words. You can conceive
+a thousand things which you can never fully comprehend. And this, too,
+is a proof of the Infinite Father in our very reasoning,--that, if we
+could comprehend Him, we should be ourselves infinite. As it is, we can
+believe and adore,--and, more than that, rejoice that we cannot in this
+finite life of ours do more."
+
+"If we believed we could comprehend Him," said I, "we should soon begin
+to meddle with God's administration of affairs."
+
+"Yes,--and in fatalism I have always thought there was a profound
+reverence," said Lulu.
+
+"Oh, are you going into theological mysteries, too?" said Remington,
+with a laugh in which none of us joined; "what care you, Lulu, for the
+quiddities of Absolute Illimitation and Infinite Illimitation? After
+all, what matters it whether one believes in a God, who you allow to be
+the personation of all excellence, if only one endeavors to act up to
+the highest conceivable standard of perfection,--I mean of human
+perfection,--leaving, of course, a liberal margin for human frailties
+and defects? One wouldn't like to leave out mercy, you know."
+
+Whatever might be the real sentiments of the man, there was an air of
+levity in his mode of treating the most important subjects of thought
+which displeased me, especially when he said, "You adore the
+Incomprehensible; I am contented to adore, with silent reverence, the
+lovely works of His hand." He pointed his remark without hesitation at
+LuLu, who sat looking into the fire, and did not notice him or it.
+
+"You are quite right, Mr. Prince, and my cousin, is quite wrong," said
+she, looking up with a docile, childlike expression, at the minister.
+"One feels that all through, though one may not be able to reason or
+argue about it."
+
+"And the best evidence of all truth, my dear," answered the delighted
+Dominie, "is that intuition which is before all reasoning, and by which
+we must try reasoning itself. The moral is before the intellectual; and
+that is why we preachers continually insist on faith as an illuminator
+of the reason."
+
+"You mean that we should cultivate faith," I said.
+
+"Yes: not the faith that is blind, but the faith that sees, that is
+positive; that which leads, not that which follows; the faith that
+weighs argument and decides on it; in short, the native intuitions which
+are a necessary part of the mind."
+
+"I see, and I shall remember," said Lulu. "I shall never forget all you
+say, Mr. Prince."
+
+It was this sweet frankness, and the clearness with which her lately
+developed intellect acted, that made us begin to respect Lulu as well as
+to love her. She seemed to be getting right-minded at last.
+
+When Mr. Lewis came, the conversation turned on other subjects; but it
+was quite late at night before we were willing to part with our friends.
+The shadow of misgiving which hangs over even short separations was
+deeper than usual with me from the thought of the voyage. Lulu had been
+so many times across the sea that she had no fear of it; and she went
+up-stairs with me to say last words and give last commissions with her
+usual cheerfulness. Notwithstanding the relief which I had felt during
+the evening from her expressions of a moral and religious kind, I yet
+had a brooding fear of the effect of association with a mind so lively
+and so full of error as Remington's. What help or what sustaining power
+for her there might be in her husband I could not tell; but be it more
+or less, I feared she would not avail herself of it. Indeed, I feared
+that she was daily becoming more alienated from him, as she pursued
+onward and upward the bright mental track on which she had entered. And
+it was seeing that she had not yet begun to con the alphabet of true
+knowledge, that disturbed me most. If I could have seen her thoughtful
+for others, humble in her endeavor after duty, I should have hailed,
+rejoicingly, her intellectual illumination. As it was, I could not help
+saying to her, anxiously, before we went downstairs,--
+
+"I don't like Mr. Remington's notions at all, my dear!--I don't mean
+merely his theological notions, but his ideas of life and duty seem to
+me wrong and poor. You will forgive me, if I say, you cannot be too
+careful how you allow his views to act on your own sense of right and
+wrong."
+
+"What!--George? Oh, dear friend, it is only his nonsense! He will take
+any side for the time, only to hear himself talk. But he _is_ the best
+fellow that ever breathed. Oh, if you only knew his excellence as well
+as I do!"
+
+"My dear Lulu!" I expostulated, greatly pained to see her glowing face
+and the almost tearful sparkle of her eyes, as she defended her cousin,
+"your husband is a great deal the best guide for you,--in action, and I
+presume in opinion. At all events, you are safest under the shadow of
+his wing. There is the truest peace for a wife."
+
+Whether she guessed what was in my mind I don't know; I did not try much
+to conceal it. But she shook her curls away from her face as if
+irritated, and answered in a tone from which all the animation had been
+quenched,--
+
+"No. I have been a child. I am one no longer. Don't ask me to go back. I
+am a living, feeling, understanding woman! George himself allows it is
+perfectly shocking to be treated as I am,--a mere toy! a plaything!"
+
+George again! I could scarcely restrain my impatience. Yet how to make
+her understand?
+
+"Don't you see, Lulu, that George ought never to have dared to name the
+subject of your and your husband's differences? and do you not see that
+you can never discuss the subject with anybody with propriety? If,
+unhappily, all is not as you, as we, wish it, let us hope for the effect
+of time and right feeling in both; but don't, don't allow any gentleman
+to talk to you of your husband's treatment of you!"
+
+Lulu listened in quiet wonderment, while, with agitated voice and
+trembling mouth, I addressed her as I had never before done. I had
+constantly avoided speaking to her on the subject. She looked at me now
+with clear, innocent eyes, (I am so glad to remember them!) and placed
+her two hands affectionately on my shoulders.
+
+"I know what you mean,--and what you fear. That I shall say something,
+or do something undignified, or possibly wrong. But that, with God's
+help, I shall never do. Such happiness as I can procure, aside from my
+husband, and which I had a right to expect through him,--such enjoyment
+as comes from intellectual improvement and the exercise of my faculties,
+this is surely innocent pleasure, this I shall have. And George,--you
+must not blame him for being indignant, when he sees me treated so
+unworthily,--or for calling Lewis a Pacha, as he always does. You must
+think, my dear, that it isn't pleasant to be treated only like a
+Circassian slave, and that one may have something better to do in life
+than to twirl jewelled armlets, or to light my lord's _chibouk!_"
+
+She looked all radiant with scorn, as she said this,--her eyes flashing,
+and her very forehead crimson. I could see she was remembering long
+months and years in that moment of indignant anger. Seeing them with her
+eyes, I could not say she was unjust, or that her estrangement was
+unnatural.
+
+"Now, then, good friend, good bye! Don't look anxious. Don't fear for
+me. I am not happy, but I shall know how to keep myself from misery. You
+and your excellent husband have done more for me than you know or think;
+and I shall try to keep right."
+
+She left me with this, and we parted from both with a lingering sweet
+friendliness that dwells still in our memories.
+
+"It would be horrible to be on these terms, if she loved him," said the
+minister, that night, after I had told him of our parting interview.
+
+"Well, she don't, you see. Did she ever?"
+
+"With such mind and heart as she had, I suppose. On the other hand, what
+did he marry?"
+
+"Grace and beauty--and promise. Of course, like every man in love, he
+took everything good for granted."
+
+"The sweetest flower in my garden," said the minister, "should perfume
+no stranger's vase, however, nor dangle at a knave's button-hole."
+
+"Because you would watch it and care for it, water and train it, and
+make it doubly your own. But if you did neither?"
+
+"I should deserve my fate," said he, sorrowfully.
+
+
+XIV.
+
+The first letter we received from Mrs. Lewis was from the North of
+Scotland, where the party of three, increased to one much larger, were
+making the tour of the Hebrides. I cannot say much for either the
+penmanship or the orthography of the letter, which was incorrect as
+usual; but the abundant beauty of her descriptions, and the fine sense
+she seemed to have of lofty and wild scenery, made her journey a living
+picture. All her keen sense of external life was brought into activity,
+and she projected on the paper before her groups of people, or groups of
+mountains, with a vividness that showed she had only to transfer them
+from the retina: they had no need of any additional processes. She made
+no remarks on society, or inferences from what she saw in the present to
+what had been in the past or might be in the future. It was simply a
+power of representation, unequalled in its way, and yet more remarkable
+to us for what it failed of doing than for what it did.
+
+We could not but perceive two things. One, that she never spoke of
+home-ties, or children, or husband: not an allusion to either. The
+other, that every hill and every vale, the mounting mist and the resting
+shadow, all that gave life and beauty to her every-day pursuits, which
+seemed, indeed, all pictorial,--all these were informed and permeated,
+as it were, with one influence,--that of Remington. An uncomfortable
+sense of this made me say, as I finished the letter,--
+
+"I am sorry for the poor bird!"
+
+"So am I," answered the minister, with a clouded brow; "and the more, as
+I think I see the bird is limed."
+
+"How?" I said, with a sort of horrified retreat from the expressed
+thought, though the thought itself haunted me.
+
+My husband seemed thinking the matter over, as if to clear it in his own
+mind before he spoke again.
+
+"I suppose there is a moral disease, which, through its connection with
+a newly awakened and brilliant intellect, does not enervate the whole
+character. I mean that this connection of moral weakness with the
+intellect gives a fatal strength to the character,--do you take me?"
+
+"Yes, I think so," said I.
+
+"She is lofty, self-poised,--confident in what never yet supported any
+one. Pride of character does not keep us from falling. Humility would
+help us in that way. Unfortunately, that, too, is often bought dearly. I
+mean that this virtue of humbleness, which makes us tender of others and
+afraid for ourselves, is at the expense of sorrowful and humiliating
+experience."
+
+"You speak as if you feared more for her than I do," said I, struck by
+the foreboding look in his face.
+
+"You women judge only by your own hearts, or by solitary instances; and
+you forget the inevitable downward course of wrong tendencies. Besides,
+she has neither lofty principle nor a strong will. You will think I
+mistake here; but I don't mean she has not wilfulness enough. A strong
+will generally excludes wilfulness,--and the converse."
+
+This conversation made me nervous.
+
+I had such an intense anxiety for her now, that I could not avoid
+expressing it often and strongly in my letters to her. I wondered Lewis
+was not more open-eyed. I blamed him for letting her run on so
+heedlessly into habits which might compromise her reputation for dignity
+and discretion, if no worse. Then I would recall her manner the last
+evening she was with us, when, although her want of self-regulation was
+very apparent, not less so was the native nobleness and purity of her
+soul. I could not think of this "unsphered angel wofully astray" without
+inward tears that dimmed the vision of my foreboding heart.
+
+Could Lewis mistake her indifference? Could he avoid suffering from it?
+Could he, for a moment, accept her conventional expletives in place of
+the irrepressible and endearing tokens of a real love? Could he see what
+had weaned her from him, and was still, like a baleful star, wiling her
+farther and farther on its treacherously lighted path? Could he
+see,--feel?--had he a heart? These questions I incessantly asked myself.
+
+In the last days of summer we went with the children to Nantasket Beach.
+
+We had walked to a point of rocks at some distance from the bay, above
+which we lodged, and were sitting in the luxury of quiet companionship,
+gazing out on the water.
+
+The ineffable, still beauty of Nature, separated from the usual noises
+of actual life,--the brilliant effect of the long reaches of color from
+the plunging sun, as it dipped, and reappeared, and dipped again, as
+loath to leave its field of beauty,--then the still plash against the
+rocks, and the subsidence in murmurs of the retiring wave, with all its
+gathered treasure of pebbles and shells,--all these sounds and sights of
+reposeful life suggested unspeakable thoughts and memories that clung to
+silence. We had not been without so much sorrow in life as does not well
+afford to dwell on its own images; and we rose to retrace our steps to
+the measure of the eternal and significant psalm of the sea.
+
+As we turned away, we both perceived at once a sail in the distance,
+against the western sky. It had just rounded the nearest point and was
+coming slowly in with a gentle breeze, when it suddenly tacked and put
+out to sea again. It had come so near, however, that with our glass we
+saw that it was a small boat, holding two persons, and with a single
+sail.
+
+Immediately after, a dead calm succeeded the light wind which had before
+rippled the distant waves, and we watched the boat, lying as if asleep
+and floating lazily on the red water against the blazing sky,--or
+rather, itself like a cradle, so pavilioned was it with gorgeous
+cloud-curtains, and fit home for the two water-sprites lying in the
+slant sunbeams.
+
+Walking slowly borne, we felt the air to be full of oppressive languor,
+and turned now and then to see if the distant sail were yet lightened by
+the coming breeze. When we reached the inner bay, we mounted a rock,
+from which, with the lessened interval between us, I could distinctly
+see the boat. One of the occupants--a lady--wore a dark hat with a
+scarlet plume drooping from it. She leaned over the gunwale, dipping her
+hands in the blazing water and holding them up against the light, as if
+playing rainbows in the sunset. The other figure was busy in fastening
+up the sail, ready to catch the first breath of wind.
+
+As we stood looking, the water, which during the last few minutes had
+changed from flaming red to the many-colored hues of a dolphin's back,
+suddenly turned slate-colored, almost black. Then a low scud crept
+stealthily and quickly along the surface, bringing with it a steady
+breeze, for perhaps five minutes. We watched the little boat, as it
+yielded gracefully to the welcome impetus, and swept rapidly to the
+shore. Fearing, however, from the sudden change of weather, that it
+would soon rain, we cast a parting look at the boat, and started on a
+rapid walk to the house.
+
+This last glimpse of the boat showed us a tall figure standing upright
+against the mast, and fastening or holding something to it, while the
+lady still played with the water, bending her head so low that the red
+plume in her hat almost touched it. She seemed in a pleasant reverie,
+and rocked softly with the rocking waves. It was a peaceful
+picture,--the sail set, and full of heaven's breath, as it seemed.
+
+Before we could grasp anything,--even if there had been anything to
+grasp on the level sand,--we were both taken at once off our feet and
+thrown violently to the ground. I had felt the force of water before,
+but never that of wind, and had no idea of the utter helplessness of man
+or woman before a wind that is really in earnest. It was with a very
+novel sense of more than childish incapacity that I suffered the Dominie
+to gather up capes, canes, hats, and shawls, and, last of all, an
+astonished woman, and put them on their way homewards. However, long
+before we reached the house-door we were drenched to the skin. The rain
+poured in blinding sheets, and the thunder was like a hundred cannon
+about our ears. It was so sudden and so frightful to me that I had but
+one idea, that of getting into the piazza, where was comparative safety.
+Having reached it, we turned to face the elements. Nothing could be seen
+through the thick deluge. The ocean itself, tossing and tumbling in
+angry darkness, seemed fighting with the other ocean that poured from
+the black wall above, and all was one tumult of thunderous fury. This
+elemental war lasted but a short time, and gave place to a quiet as
+sudden as its angry burst. It was my first experience of a squall. It is
+always difficult for me to feel that a storm is a natural
+occurrence,--so that I have a great reverence for a Dominie who stands
+with head uncovered, with calm eyes, looking tranquilly out on the
+loudest tempest.
+
+"Beautiful! wonderful!" he murmured, as the lightning fiercely shot over
+us, and the roar died away in long billows of heavy sound.
+
+Afterwards he told me he had the same unbounded delight in a great storm
+as he had at the foot of Niagara, or in looking at the stars on a winter
+night: that it stirred in his soul all that was loftiest,--that for the
+time he could comprehend Deity, and that "the noise of the thundering of
+His waters" was an anthem that struck the highest chords of his nature.
+What is really sublime takes us out of ourselves, so that we have no
+room for personal terror, and we mingle with the elemental roar in
+spirit as with something kindred to us. I guessed this, and meditated on
+it, while I stopped my ears and shut my eyes and trembled with
+overwhelming terror myself. Clearly, I am a coward, in spite of my
+admiration of the sublime. The Dominie, being as good as he is great,
+does not require a woman to be sublime, luckily; and I think, as I like
+him all the better for his strength, he really does not object to a
+moderate amount of weakness on my part, which is unaffected and not to
+be helped. When animal magnetism becomes a science, it will be seen why
+some spirits revel and soar, and some cower and shrink, at the same
+amount of electricity. So the Dominie says now; and then--he said
+nothing.
+
+
+XV.
+
+In the fright, excitement, and thorough wetting, I forgot about the
+boat,--or rather, no misgiving seized me as to its safety. But, on
+coming to breakfast the next morning, we felt that there was a great
+commotion in the house. Everybody was out on the piazza, and a crowd was
+gathered a short distance off. Somebody had taken off the doors from the
+south entrance, and there was a sort of procession already formed on
+each side of these two doors. We went out in front of the house to
+listen to a rough fisherman who described the storm in which the little
+boat capsized. He had stood on the shore and just finished fastening his
+own boat, for he well knew the signs of the storm, when he caught sight
+of the little sail scudding with lightning-speed to the landing.
+Suddenly it stopped short, shook all over as if in an ague, and capsized
+in an instant. The storm broke, and although he tried to discern some
+traces of the boat or its occupants, nothing could be seen but the white
+foam on the black water, glistening like a shark's teeth when he has
+seized his prey. In the early morning he had found two bodies on the
+sand. The water, he said, must have tossed them with considerable
+force,--yet not against the rocks at all, for they were not disfigured,
+nor their clothing much torn. As the man ceased relating the story, the
+bodies were brought past us, covered by a piano-cloth which somebody had
+considerately snatched up and taken to the shore. They were placed in
+the long parlor on a table.
+
+My husband beckoned to me to come to him. Turning down the cloth, he
+showed me the faces I dreamily expected to see. I don't know when I
+thought of it, but suppose I recognized the air and movement so
+familiar, even in the distant dimness. No matter how clearly and fully
+death is expected, when it comes it is with a death-shock,--how much
+more, coming as this did, as if with a bolt from the clear sky!
+
+In their prime,--in their beauty,--in their pride of youth,--in their
+pleasure, they died. What was the strong man or the smiling woman,--what
+was the smooth sea, the shining sail,--what was strength, skill,
+loveliness, against the great and terrible wind of the Lord?
+
+So here they lay, white and quiet as sculptured stone, and as placid as
+if they had only fallen asleep in the midst of the tempestuous uproar.
+All the clamor and talking about the house had subsided in the real
+presence of death; and every one went lightly and softly around, as if
+afraid of wakening the sleepers.
+
+She had never looked so beautiful, even in her utmost pride of health
+and bloom. Her dark luxuriant hair lay in masses over brow and bosom,
+and her face expressed the unspeakable calm and perfect peace which are
+suggested only by the sleep of childhood. The long eyelashes seemed to
+say, in their close adherence to the cheek, how gladly they shut out the
+tumult of life; and the whole cast of the face was so elevated by death
+as to look rather angelic than mortal.
+
+His face was quiet, too,--the manliness and massive character of the
+features giving a majestic and severe cast to the whole countenance, far
+more elevated than it had while living.
+
+We could only weep over these relics. But where was the deepest mourner?
+No one had even seen these two before, or could give any account of
+them.
+
+On making stricter inquiry and looking at the books, we found that Mr.
+and Mrs. Lewis had arrived first. Mr. Lewis had taken his gun and a
+boat, and gone out at once to shoot. The lady had been in her room but a
+short time, when another gentleman arrived, wrote his name, and ordered
+a boat. She had scarcely seen any one, but the boatman saw her step into
+the boat, and described her dress.
+
+A message was at once sent to "the Glades," where Mr. Lewis had gone,
+and where he was detained, as we had supposed, by the storm. Before he
+reached the house, however, all necessary arrangements were completed
+for removing any associations of suffering. No confusion remained; the
+room was gently darkened, and the bodies, robed in white, lay in such
+peaceful silence as soothes and quiets the mourner.
+
+As the carriage drew up to the door, we both hastened to meet Mr. Lewis,
+to take him by the hand, and to lead him, by our evident sympathy, to
+accept his terrible affliction with something like composure. In our
+entire uncertainty as to his feelings, we could only weep silently, and
+hold his hands, which were as cold as death.
+
+He looked surprised a little at seeing us, but otherwise his face was
+like stone. His eyes,--they, too, looked stony, and as if all the
+expression and life were turned inward. Outwardly, there seemed hardly
+consciousness. He sat down between us, while we related all the
+particulars of the accident, which he seemed greedy to hear,--turning,
+as one ceased, to the other, with an eager, hungry look, most painful
+to witness. He made us describe, repeatedly, our last glimpse of the
+unconscious victims, and then, pressing our hands with a vice-cold grip,
+said, in a dry whisper,--
+
+"Where are they?"
+
+We led him to the door. He went in, and we softly closed it after him.
+As we went up-stairs to our own room we heard deep groans of anguish. We
+knew that his heart could not relieve itself by tears. My husband read
+the "prayer for persons in great affliction," and then we sat silently
+looking out on the peaceful sea. In the great stillness of the house, we
+heard the calm wave plash up on the smiling sands, and watched the
+silver specks in the distance as they hovered over the blue sea. So
+soft, so still, it had been the day before,--and where we now saw the
+placid wave we had seen it then. Yet there had two lives gone out, as
+suddenly as one quenches a lamp.
+
+Thinking, but not speaking, we waited. The report of a pistol in the
+house struck us to the heart. I believe we felt sure, both of us, of
+what it must be. He had loved her so much! And now we were sure, that in
+the tension of his grief, reason had given way. When we saw them next,
+there were three where two had been, in the marble calm of death.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FORMATION OF GLACIERS.
+
+
+The long summer was over. For ages a tropical climate had prevailed over
+a great part of the earth, and animals whose home is now beneath the
+Equator roamed over the world from the far South to the very borders of
+the Arctics. The gigantic quadrupeds, the Mastodons, Elephants, Tigers,
+Lions, Hyenas, Bears, whose remains are found in Europe from its
+southern promontories to the northernmost limits of Siberia and
+Scandinavia, and in America from the Southern States to Greenland and
+the Melville Islands, may indeed be said to have possessed the earth in
+those days. But their reign was over. A sudden intense winter, that was
+also to last for ages, fell upon our globe; it spread over the very
+countries where these tropical animals had their homes, and so suddenly
+did it come upon them that they were embalmed beneath masses of snow and
+ice, without time even for the decay which follows death. The Elephant
+whose story was told at length in the preceding article was by no means
+a solitary specimen; upon further investigation it was found that the
+disinterment of these large tropical animals in Northern Russia and Asia
+was no unusual occurrence. Indeed, their frequent discoveries of this
+kind had given rise among the ignorant inhabitants to the singular
+superstition already alluded to, that gigantic moles lived under the
+earth, which crumbled away and turned to dust as soon as they came to
+the upper air. This tradition, no doubt, arose from the fact, that, when
+in digging they came upon the bodies of these animals, they often found
+them perfectly preserved under the frozen ground, but the moment they
+were exposed to heat and light they decayed and fell to pieces at once.
+Admiral Wrangel, whose Arctic explorations have been so valuable to
+science, tells us that the remains of these animals are heaped up in
+such quantities in certain parts of Siberia that he and his men climbed
+over ridges and mounds consisting entirely of the bones of Elephants,
+Rhinoceroses, etc. From these facts it would seem that they roamed over
+all these northern regions in troops as large and numerous as the
+Buffalo herds that wander over our Western prairies now. We are
+indebted to Russian naturalists, and especially to Rathke, for the most
+minute investigations of these remains, in which even the texture of the
+hair, the skin, and flesh has been subjected by him to microscopic
+examination as accurate as if made upon any living animal.
+
+We have as yet no clue to the source of this great and sudden change of
+climate. Various suggestions have been made,--among others, that
+formerly the inclination of the earth's axis was greater, or that a
+submersion of the continents under water might have produced a decided
+increase of cold; but none of these explanations are satisfactory, and
+science has yet to find any cause which accounts for all the phenomena
+connected with it. It seems, however, unquestionable that since the
+opening of the Tertiary age a cosmic summer and winter have succeeded
+each other, during which a Tropical heat and an Arctic cold have
+alternately prevailed over a great portion of the globe. In the
+so-called drift (a superficial deposit subsequent to the Tertiaries, of
+the origin of which I shall speak presently) there are found far to the
+south of their present abode the remains of animals whose home now is in
+the Arctics or the coldest parts of the Temperate Zones. Among them are
+the Musk-Ox, the Reindeer, the Walrus, the Seal, and many kinds of
+Shells characteristic of the Arctic regions. The northernmost part of
+Norway and Sweden is at this day the southern limit of the Reindeer in
+Europe; but their fossil remains are found in large quantities in the
+drift about the neighborhood of Paris, where their presence would, of
+course, indicate a climate similar to the one now prevailing in Northern
+Scandinavia. Side by side with the remains of the Reindeer are found
+those of the European Marmot, whose present home is in the mountains,
+about six thousand feet above the level of the sea. The occurrence of
+these animals in the superficial deposits of the plains of Central
+Europe, one of which is now confined to the high North, and the other to
+mountain-heights, certainly indicates an entire change of climatic
+conditions since the time of their existence. European Shells now
+confined to the Northern Ocean are found as fossils in Italy,--showing,
+that, while the present Arctic climate prevailed in the Temperate Zone,
+that of the Temperate Zone extended much farther south to the regions we
+now call sub-tropical. In America there is abundant evidence of the same
+kind; throughout the recent marine deposits of the Temperate Zone,
+covering the low lands above tide-water on this continent, are found
+fossil Shells whose present home is on the shores of Greenland. It is
+not only in the Northern hemisphere that these remains occur, but in
+Africa and in South America, wherever there has been an opportunity for
+investigation, the drift is found to contain the traces of animals whose
+presence indicates a climate many degree colder than that now prevailing
+there.
+
+But these organic remains are not the only evidence of the geological
+winter. There are a number of phenomena indicating that during this
+period two vast caps of ice stretched from the Northern pole southward
+and from the Southern pole northward, extending in each case far toward
+the Equator,--and that ice-fields, such as now spread over the Arctics,
+covered a great part of the Temperate Zones, while the line of perpetual
+ice and snow in the tropical mountain-ranges descended far below its
+present limits. As the explanation of these facts has been drawn from
+the study of glacial action, I shall devote this and subsequent articles
+to some account of glaciers and of the phenomena connected with them.
+
+The first essential condition for the formation of glaciers in
+mountain-ranges is the shape of their valleys. Glaciers are by no means
+in proportion to the height and extent of mountains. There are many
+mountain-chains as high or higher than the Alps, which can boast of but
+few and small glaciers, if, indeed, they have any. In the Andes, the
+Rocky Mountains, the Pyrenees, the Caucasus, the few glaciers remaining
+from the great ice-period are insignificant in size. The volcanic,
+cone-like shape of the Andes gives, indeed, but little chance for the
+formation of glaciers, though their summits are capped with snow. The
+glaciers of the Rocky Mountains have been little explored, but it is
+known that they are by no means extensive. In the Pyrenees there is but
+one great glacier, though the height of these mountains is such, that,
+were the shape of their valleys favorable to the accumulation of snow,
+they might present beautiful glaciers. In the Tyrol, on the contrary, as
+well as in Norway and Sweden, we find glaciers almost as fine as those
+of Switzerland, in mountain-ranges much lower than either of the
+above-named chains. But they are of diversified forms, and have valleys
+widening upward on the slope of long crests. The glaciers on the
+Caucasus are very small in proportion to the height of the range; but on
+the northern side of the Himalaya there are large and beautiful ones,
+while the southern slope is almost destitute of them. Spitzbergen and
+Greenland are famous for their extensive glaciers, coming down to the
+sea-shore, where huge masses of ice, many hundred feet in thickness,
+break off and float away into the ocean as icebergs. At the Aletsch in
+Switzerland, where a little lake lies in a deep cup between the
+mountains, with the glacier coming down to its brink, we have these
+Arctic phenomena on a small scale; a miniature iceberg may often be seen
+to break off from the edge of the larger mass, and float out upon the
+surface of the water. Icebergs were first traced back to their true
+origin by the nature of the land-ice of which they are always composed,
+and which is quite distinct in structure and consistency from the marine
+ice produced by frozen sea-water, and called "ice-flow" by the Arctic
+explorers, as well as from the pond or river ice, resulting from the
+simple congelation of fresh water.
+
+Water is changed to ice at a certain temperature under the same law of
+crystallization by which any inorganic bodies in a fluid state may
+assume a solid condition, taking the shape of perfectly regular
+crystals, which combine at certain angles with mathematical precision.
+The frost does not form a solid, continuous sheet of ice over an expanse
+of water, but produces crystals, little ice-blades, as it were, which
+shoot into each other at angles of thirty or sixty degrees, forming the
+closest net-work. Of course, under the process of alternate freezing and
+thawing, these crystals lose their regularity, and soon become merged in
+each other. But even then a mass of ice is not continuous or compact
+throughout, for it is rendered completely porous by air-bubbles, the
+presence of which is easily explained. Ice being in a measure
+transparent to heat, the water below any frozen surface is nearly as
+susceptible to the elevation of the temperature without as if it were in
+immediate contact with it. Such changes of temperature produce
+air-bubbles, which float upward against the lower surface of the ice and
+are stranded there. At night there may come a severe frost; new ice is
+then formed below the air-bubbles, and they are thus caught and
+imprisoned, a layer of air-bubbles between two layers of ice, and this
+process may be continued until we have a succession of such parallel
+layers, forming a body of ice more or less permeated with air. These
+air-bubbles have the power also of extending their own area, and thus
+rendering the whole mass still more porous; for, since the ice offers
+little or no obstacle to the passage of heat, such an air-bubble may
+easily become heated during the day; the moment it reaches a temperature
+above thirty-two degrees, it melts the ice around it, thus clearing a
+little space for itself, and rises through the water produced by the
+action of its own warmth. The spaces so formed are so many vertical
+tubes in the ice, filled with water, and having an air-bubble at the
+upper extremity.
+
+Ice of this kind, resulting from the direct congelation of water, is
+easily recognized under all circumstances by its regular
+stratification, the alternate beds varying in thickness according to the
+intensity of the cold, and its continuance below the freezing-point
+during a longer or shorter period. Singly, these layers consist of
+irregular crystals confusedly blended together, as in large masses of
+crystalline rocks in which a crystalline structure prevails, though
+regular crystals occur but rarely. The appearance of stratification is
+the result of the circumstances under which the water congeals. The
+temperature varies much more rapidly in the atmosphere around the earth
+than in the waters upon its surface. When the atmosphere above any sheet
+of water sinks below the freezing-point, there stretches over its
+surface a stratum of cold air, determining by its intensity and duration
+the formation of the first stratum of ice. According to the alternations
+of temperature, this process goes on with varying activity until the
+sheet of ice is so thick that it becomes itself a shelter to the water
+below, and protects it, to a certain degree, from the cold without. Thus
+a given thickness of ice may cause a suspension of the freezing process,
+and the first ice-stratum may even be partially thawed before the cold
+is renewed with such intensity as to continue the thickening of the
+ice-sheet by the addition of fresh layers. The strata or beds of ice
+increase gradually in this manner, their separation being rendered still
+more distinct by the accumulation of air-bubbles, which, during a hot
+and clear day, may rise from a muddy bottom in great numbers. In
+consequence of these occasional collections of air-bubbles, the layers
+differ, not only in density and closeness, but also in color, the more
+compact strata being blue and transparent, while those containing a
+greater quantity of air-bubbles are opaque and whitish, like water
+beaten to froth.
+
+A cake of pond-ice, such as is daily left in summer at our doors, if
+held against the light and turned in different directions, will exhibit
+all these phenomena very distinctly, and we may learn still more of its
+structure by watching its gradual melting. The process of decomposition
+is as different in fresh-water ice and in land-or glacier-ice and that
+of their formation. Pond-ice, in contact with warm air, melts uniformly
+over its whole surface, the mass being thus gradually reduces from the
+exterior till it vanishes completely. If the process be slow, the
+temperature of the air-bubbles contained in it may be so raised as to
+form the vertical funnels or tubes alluded to above. By the anastomosing
+of these funnels, the whole mass may be reduced to a collection of
+angular pyramids, more or less closely united by cross-beams of ice, and
+it finally falls to pieces when the spaces in the interior have become
+for numerous as to render it completely cavernous. Such a breaking-up of
+ice is always caused by the enlargement of the open spaces produces by
+the elevated temperature of the air-bubbles, these spaces being
+necessarily more or less parallel with one another, and vertical in
+their position, owing to the natural tendency of the air-bubbles to work
+their way upward till they reach the surface, where they escape. A sheet
+of ice, of this kind, floating upon water, dissolves in the same manner,
+melting wholly from the surface, if the process be sufficiently rapid,
+or falling to pieces, if the air-bubbles are gradually raised in their
+temperature sufficiently to render the whole mass cavernous and
+incoherent. If we now compare these facts with what is known of the
+structure of land-ice, we shall see that the mode of formation in the
+two cases differs essentially.
+
+Land-ice, of which both the ice-fields of the Arctics and glaciers
+consist, is produced by the slow and gradual transformation of snow into
+ice; and though the ice thus formed may eventually be as clear and
+transparent as the purest pond- or river-ice, its structure is
+nevertheless entirely distinct. We may trace these different processes
+during any moderately cold winter in the ponds and snow-meadows
+immediately about us. We need not join an Arctic exploring expedition,
+nor even undertake a more tempting trip to the Alps, in order to
+investigate these phenomena for ourselves, if we have any curiosity to
+do so. The first warm day after a thick fall of light, dry snow, such as
+occurs in the coldest of our winter weather, is sufficient to melt its
+surface. As this snow is porous, the water readily penetrates it, having
+also a tendency to sink by its own weight, so that the whole mass
+becomes more or less filled with moisture in the course of the day.
+Daring the lower temperature of the night, however, the water is frozen
+again, and the snow is now filled with new ice-particles. Let this
+process be continued long enough, and the mass of snow is changed to a
+kind of ice-gravel, or, if the grains adhere together, to something like
+what we call pudding-stone, allowing, of course, for the difference of
+material; the snow, which has been rendered cohesive by the process of
+partial melting and regelation, holding the ice-globules together, just
+as the loose materials of the pudding-stone are held together by the
+cement which unites them.
+
+Within this mass, air is intercepted and held inclosed between the
+particles of ice. The process by which snow-flakes or snow-crystals are
+transformed into grains of ice, more or less compact, is easily
+understood. It is the result of a partial thawing, under a temperature
+maintained very nearly at thirty-two degrees, falling sometimes a little
+below, and then rising a little above the freezing-point, and thus
+producing constant alternations of freezing and thawing in the same mass
+of snow. This process amounts to a kind of kneading of the snow, and
+when combined with the cohesion among the particles more closely held
+together in one snow-flake, it produces granular ice. Of course, the
+change takes place gradually, and is unequal in its progress at
+different depths in the same bed of recently fallen snow. It depends
+greatly on the amount of moisture infiltrating the mass, whether derived
+from the melting of its own surface, or from the accumulation of dew or
+the falling of rain or mist upon it. The amount of water retained within
+the mass will also be greatly affected by the bottom on which it rests
+and by the state of the atmosphere. Under a certain temperature, the
+snow may only be glazed at the surface by the formation of a thin, icy
+crust, an outer membrane, as it were, protecting the mass below from a
+deeper transformation into ice; or it may be rapidly soaked throughout
+its whole bulk, the snow being thus changed into a kind of soft pulp,
+what we commonly call slosh, which, upon freezing, becomes at once
+compact ice; or, the water sinking rapidly, the lower layers only may be
+soaked, while the upper portion remains comparatively dry. But, under
+all these various circumstances, frost will transform the crystalline
+snow into more or less compact ice, the mass of which will be composed
+of an infinite number of aggregated snow-particles, very unequal in
+regularity of outline, and cemented by ice of another kind, derived from
+the freezing of the infiltrated moisture, the whole being interspersed
+with air. Let the temperature rise, and such a mass, rigid before, will
+resolve itself again into disconnected ice-particles, like grains more
+or less rounded. The process may be repeated till the whole mass is
+transformed into very compact, almost uniformly transparent and blue
+ice, broken only by the intervening air-bubbles. Such a mass of ice,
+when exposed to a temperature sufficiently high to dissolve it, does not
+melt from the surface and disappear by a gradual diminution of its bulk,
+like pond-ice, but crumbles into its original granular fragments, each
+one of which melts separately. This accounts for the sudden
+disappearance icebergs, which, instead of slowly dissolving into the
+ocean, are often seen to fall to pieces and vanish at once.
+
+Ice of this kind may be seen forming every winter on our sidewalks, on
+the edge of the little ditches which drain them, or on the summits of
+broad gateposts when capped with snow. Of such ice glaciers are
+composed; but, in the glacier, another element comes in which we have
+not considered as yet,--that of immense pressure in consequence of the
+vast accumulations of snow within circumscribed spaces. We see the same
+effects produced on a small scale, when snow is transformed into a
+snowball between the hands. Every boy who balls a mass of snow in his
+hands illustrates one side of glacial phenomena. Loose snow, light and
+porous, and pure white from the amount of air contained in it, is in
+this way presently converted into hard, compact, almost transparent ice.
+This change will take place sooner, if the snow be damp at first,--but
+if dry, the action of the hand will presently produce moisture enough to
+complete the process. In this case, mere pressure produces the same
+effect which, in the cases we have been considering above, was brought
+about by alternate thawing and freezing,--only that in the latter the
+ice is distinctly granular, instead of being uniform throughout, as when
+formed under pressure. In the glaciers we have the two processes
+combined. But the investigators of glacial phenomena have considered too
+exclusively one or the other: some of them attributing glacial motion
+wholly to the dilatation produced by the freezing of infiltrated
+moisture in the mass of snow; others accounting for it entirely by
+weight and pressure. There is yet a third class, who, disregarding the
+real properties of ice, would have us believe, that, because tar, for
+instance, is viscid when it moves, therefore ice is viscid because it
+moves. We shall see hereafter that the phenomena exhibited in the onward
+movement of glaciers are far more diversified than has generally been
+supposed.
+
+There is no chain of mountains in which the shape of the valleys is more
+favorable to the formation of glaciers than the Alps. Contracted at
+their lower extremity, these valleys widen upward, spreading into deep,
+broad, trough-like depressions. Take, for instance, the valley of
+Hassli, which is not more than half a mile wide where you enter it above
+Meyringen; it opens gradually upward, till, above the Grimsel, at the
+foot of the Finster-Aarhorn, it measures several miles across. These
+huge mountain-troughs form admirable cradles for the snow, which
+collects in immense quantities within them, and, as it moves slowly down
+from the upper ranges, is transformed into ice on its way, and compactly
+crowded into the narrower space below. At the lower extremity of the
+glacier the ice is pure, blue and transparent, but, as we ascend, it
+appears less compact, more porous and granular, assuming gradually the
+character of snow, till in the higher regions the snow is as light, as
+shifting, and incoherent, as the sand of the desert. A snow-storm on a
+mountain-summit is very different from a snow-storm on the plain, on
+account of the different degrees of moisture in the atmosphere. At great
+heights, there is never dampness enough to allow the fine snow-crystals
+to coalesce and form what are called "snow-flakes." I have even stood on
+the summit of the Jungfrau when a frozen cloud filled the air with
+ice-needles, while I could see the same cloud pouring down sheet of rain
+upon Lauterbrunnen below. I remember this spectacle as one of the most
+impressive I have witnessed in my long experience of Alpine scenery. The
+air immediately about me seemed filled with rainbow-dust, for the
+ice-needles glittered with a thousand hues under the decomposition of
+light upon them, while the dark storm in the valley below offered a
+strange contract to the brilliancy of the upper region in which I stood.
+One wonder where even so much vapor as may be transformed into the
+finest snow should come from at such heights. But the warm winds,
+creeping up the sides of the valleys, the walls of which become heated
+during the middle of the day, come laden with moisture which is changed
+to a dry snow like dust as soon as it comes into contact with the
+intense cold above.
+
+Currents of warm air affect the extent of the glaciers, and influence
+also the line of perpetual snow, which is by no means at the same level
+even in neighboring localities. The size of glaciers, of course,
+determines to a great degree the height at which they terminate, simply
+because a small mass of ice will melt more rapidly, and at a lower
+temperature, than a larger one. Thus, the small glaciers, such as those
+of the Rothhorn or of Trift, above the Grimsel, terminate at a
+considerable height above the plain, while the Mer de Glace, fed from
+the great snow-caldrons of Mont Blanc, forces its way down to the bottom
+of the valley of Chamouni, and the glacier of Grindelwald, constantly
+renewed from the deep reservoirs where the Jungfrau hoards her vast
+supplies of snow, descends to about four thousand feet above the
+sea-level. But the glacier of the Aar, though also very large, comes to
+a pause at about six thousand feet above the level of the sea; for the
+south wind from the other side of the Alps, the warm sirocco of Italy,
+blows across it, and it consequently melts at a higher level than either
+the Mer de Glace or the Grindelwald. It is a curious fact, that in the
+valley of Hassli the temperature frequently rises instead of falling as
+you ascend; at the Grimsel, the temperature is at times higher than at
+Meyringen below, where the warmer winds are not felt so directly. The
+glacier of Aletsch, on the southern slope of the Jungfrau, and into
+which many other glaciers enter, terminates also at a considerable
+height, because it turns into the valley of the Rhone, through which the
+southern winds blow constantly.
+
+Under ordinary conditions, vegetation fades in these mountains at the
+height of six thousand feet, but, in consequence of prevailing winds,
+and the sheltering influence of the mountain-walls, there is no
+uniformity in the limit of perpetual snow and ice. Where currents of
+warm air are very constant, glaciers do not occur at all, even where
+other circumstances are favorable to their formation. There are valleys
+in the Alps far above six thousand feet which have no glaciers, and
+where perpetual snow is seen only on their northern sides. These
+contrasts in temperature lead to the most wonderful contrasts in the
+aspect of the soil; summer and winter lie side by side, and bright
+flowers look out from the edge of snows that never melt. Where the warm
+winds prevail, there may be sheltered spots at a height of ten or eleven
+thousand feet, isolated nooks opening southward where the most exquisite
+flowers bloom in the midst of perpetual snow and ice; and occasionally I
+have seen a bright little flower with a cap of snow over it that seemed
+to be its shelter. The flowers give, indeed, a peculiar charm to these
+high Alpine regions. Occurring often in beds of the same kind, forming
+green, blue or yellow patches, they seem nestled close together in
+sheltered spots, or even in fissures and chasms of the rock, where they
+gather in dense quantities. Even in the sternest scenery of the Alps
+some sign of vegetation lingers; and I remember to have found a tuft of
+lichen growing on the only rock which pierced through the ice on the
+summit of the Jungfrau. The absolute solitude, the intense stillness of
+the upper Alps is most impressive; no cattle, no pasturage, no bird, nor
+any sound of life,--and, indeed, even if there were, the rarity of the
+air in these high regions is such that sound is hardly transmissible.
+The deep repose, the purity of aspect of every object, the snow, broken
+only by ridges of angular rocks, produce an effect no less beautiful
+than solemn. Sometimes, in the midst of the wide expanse, one comes upon
+a patch of the so-called red snow of the Alps. At a distance, one would
+say that such a spot marked some terrible scene of blood, but, as you
+come nearer, the hues are so tender and delicate, as they fade from deep
+red to rose, and so die into the pure colorless snow around, that the
+first impression is completely dispelled. This red snow is an organic
+growth, a plant springing up in such abundance that it colors extensive
+surfaces, just as the microscopic plants dye our pools with green in the
+spring. It is an _Alga_ well known in the Arctics, where it forms wide
+fields in the summer. With the above facts before us concerning the
+materials of which glaciers are composed, we may now proceed to
+consider their structure more fully in connection with their movements
+and the effects they produce on the surfaces over which they extend. It
+has already been stated that the ice of the glaciers has not the same
+appearance everywhere, but differs according to the level at which it
+stands. In consequence of this we distinguish three very distinct
+regions in these frozen fields, the uppermost of which, upon the sides
+of the steepest and highest slopes of the mountain-ridges, consists
+chiefly of layers of snow piled one above another by the successive
+snowfalls of the colder seasons, and which would remain in uniform
+superposition but for the change to which they are subjected in
+consequence of a gradual downward movement, causing the mass to descend
+by slow degrees, while new accumulations in the higher regions annually
+replace the snow which has been thus removed to an inferior level. We
+shall consider hereafter the process by which this change of position is
+brought about. For the present it is sufficient to state that such a
+transfer, by which a balance is preserved in the distribution of the
+snow, takes place in all glaciers, so that, instead of increasing
+indefinitely in the upper regions, where on account of the extreme cold
+there is little melting, they permanently preserve about the same
+thickness, being yearly reduced by their downward motion in a proportion
+equal to their annual increase by fresh additions of snow. Indeed, these
+reservoirs of snow maintain themselves at the same level, much as a
+stream, into which many rivulets empty, remains within its usual limits
+in consequence of the drainage of the average supply. Of course, very
+heavy rains or sudden thaws at certain seasons or in particular years
+may cause an occasional overflow of such a stream; and irregularities of
+the same kind are observed during certain years or at different periods
+of the same year in the accumulations of snow, in consequence of which
+the successive strata may vary in thickness. But in ordinary times
+layers from six to eight feet deep are regularly added annually to the
+accumulation of snow in the higher regions,--not taking into account, of
+course, the heavy drifts heaped up in particular localities, but
+estimating the uniform average increase over wide fields. This snow is
+gradually transformed into more or less compact ice, passing through an
+intermediate condition analogous to the slosh of our roads, and in that
+condition chiefly occupies the upper part of the extensive troughs into
+which these masses descend from the loftier heights. This region is
+called the region of the _névé_. It is properly the birthplace of the
+glaciers, for it is here that the transformation of the snow into ice
+begins. The _névé_ ice, though varying in the degree of its compactness
+and solidity, is always very porous and whitish in color, resembling
+somewhat frozen slosh, while lower down in the region of the glacier
+proper the ice is close, solid, transparent, and of a bluish tint.
+
+But besides the differences in solidity and in external appearance,
+there are also many other important changes taking place in the ice of
+these different regions, to which we shall return presently. Such
+modifications arise chiefly from the pressure to which it is subjected
+in its downward progress, and to the alterations, in consequence of this
+displacement, in the relative position of the snow- and ice-beds, as
+well as to the influence exerted by the form of the valleys themselves,
+not only upon the external aspect of the glaciers, but upon their
+internal structure also. The surface of a glacier varies greatly in
+character in these different regions. The uniform even surfaces of the
+upper snow-fields gradually pass into a more undulating outline, the
+pure white fields become strewn with dust and sand in the lower levels,
+while broken bits of stone and larger fragments of rock collect upon
+them, which assume a regular arrangement, and produce a variety of
+features most startling and incomprehensible at first sight, but more
+easily understood when studied in connection with the whole series of
+glacial phenomena. They are then seen to be the consequence of the
+general movement of the glacier, and of certain effects which the course
+of the seasons, the action of the sun, the rain, the reflected heat from
+the sides of the valley, or the disintegration of its rocky walls, may
+produce upon the surface of the ice. In the next article we shall
+consider in detail all these phenomena, and trace them in their natural
+connection. Once familiar with these facts, it will not be difficult
+correctly to appreciate the movement of the glacier and the cause of its
+inequalities. We shall see, that, in consequence of the greater or less
+rapidity in the movement of certain portions of the mass, its centre
+progressing faster than its sides, and the upper, middle, and lower
+regions of the same glacier advancing at different rates, the strata
+which in the higher ranges of the snow-fields were evenly spread over
+wide expanses, become bent and folded to such a degree that the
+primitive stratification is nearly obliterated, while the internal mass
+of the ice has also assumed new features under these new circumstances.
+There is, indeed, as much difference between the newly formed beds of
+snow in the upper region and the condition of the ice at the lower end
+of a glacier as between a recent deposit of coral sand or a mud-bed in
+an estuary and the metamorphic limestone or clay slate twisted and
+broken as they are seen in the very chains of mountains from which the
+glaciers descend. A geologist, familiar with all the changes to which a
+bed of rock may be subjected from the time it was deposited in
+horizontal layers up to the time when it was raised by Plutonic agencies
+along the sides of a mountain-ridge, bent and distorted in a thousand
+directions, broken through the thickness of its mass, and traversed by
+innumerable fissures which are themselves filled with new materials,
+will best be able to understand how the stratification of snow may be
+modified by pressure and displacement so as finally to appear like a
+laminated mass full of cracks and crevices, in which the original
+stratification is recognized only by the practical student. I trust in
+my next article I shall be able to explain intelligibly to my readers
+even these extreme alterations in the condition of the primitive snow of
+the Alpine summits.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TWO SCENES FROM THE LIFE OF BLONDEL.
+
+
+SCENE I.--_Near a Castle in Germany._
+
+ 'Twere no hard task, perchance, to win
+ The popular laurel for my song;
+ 'Twere only to comply with sin,
+ And own the crown, though snatched by wrong:
+ Rather Truth's chaplet let me wear,
+ Though sharp as death its thorns may sting;
+ Loyal to Loyalty, I bear
+ No badge but of my rightful king.
+
+ Patient by town and tower I wait,
+ Or o'er the blustering moorland go;
+ I buy no praise at cheaper rate,
+ Or what faint hearts may fancy so:
+ For me, no joy in lady's bower,
+ Or hall, or tourney, will I sing,
+ Till the slow stars wheel round the hour
+ That crowns my hero and my king.
+
+ While all the land runs red with strife,
+ And wealth is won by peddler-crimes,
+ Let who will find content in life
+ And tinkle in unmanly rhymes:
+ I wait and seek; through dark and light,
+ Safe in my heart my hope I bring,
+ Till I once more my faith may plight
+ To him my whole soul owns her king.
+
+ When power is filched by drone and dolt,
+ And, with caught breath and flashing eye,
+ Her knuckles whitening round the bolt,
+ Vengeance leans eager from the sky,--
+ While this and that the people guess,
+ And to the skirts of praters cling,
+ Who court the crowd they should compress,--
+ I turn in scorn to seek my king.
+
+ Shut in what tower of darkling chance
+ Or dungeon of a narrow doom,
+ Dream'st thou of battle-axe and lance
+ That for the cross make crashing room?
+ Come! with strained eyes the battle waits
+ In the wild van thy mace's swing;
+ While doubters parley with their fates,
+ Make thou thine own and ours, my king!
+
+ Oh, strong to keep upright the old,
+ And wise to buttress with the new,
+ Prudent, as only are the bold,
+ Clear-eyed, as only are the true,
+ To foes benign, to friendship stern,
+ Intent to imp Law's broken wing,--
+ Who would not die, if death might earn
+ The right to kiss thy hand, my king?
+
+
+SCENE II.--_An Inn near the Château of Chalus._
+
+ Well, the whole thing is over, and here I sit
+ With one arm in a sling and a milk-score of gashes,
+ And this flagon of Cyprus must e'en warm my wit,
+ Since what's left of youth's flame is a head flecked with ashes.
+ I remember I sat in this very same inn,--
+ I was young then, and one young man thought I was handsome,--
+ I had found out what prison King Richard was in,
+ And was spurring for England to push on the ransom.
+
+ How I scorned the dull souls that sat guzzling around,
+ And knew not my secret nor recked my derision!
+ Let the world sink or swim, John or Richard be crowned,
+ All one, so the beer-tax got lenient revision.
+ How little I dreamed, as I tramped up and down,
+ That granting our wish one of Fate's saddest jokes is!
+ I had mine with a vengeance,--my king got his crown,
+ And made his whole business to break other folks's.
+
+ I might as well join in the safe old _tum_, _tum_:
+ A hero's an excellent loadstar,--but, bless ye,
+ What infinite odds 'twixt a hero to come
+ And your only too palpable hero _in esse_!
+ Precisely the odds (such examples are rife)
+ 'Twixt the poem conceived and the rhyme we make show of,
+ 'Twixt the boy's morning dream and the wake-up of life,
+ 'Twixt the Blondel God meant and a Blondel I know of!
+
+ But the world's better off, I'm convinced of it now,
+ Than if heroes, like buns, could be bought for a penny,
+ To regard all mankind as their haltered milch-cow,
+ And just care for themselves. Well, God cares for the many;
+ And somehow the poor old Earth blunders along,
+ Each son of hers adding his mite of unfitness,
+ And, choosing the sure way of coming out wrong,
+ Gets to port, as the next generation will witness.
+
+ You think her old ribs have come all crashing through,
+ If a whisk of Fate's broom snap your cobweb asunder;
+ But her rivets were clinched by a wiser than you,
+ And our sins cannot push the Lord's right hand from under.
+ Better one honest man who can wait for God's mind,
+ In our poor shifting scene here, though heroes were plenty!
+ Better one bite, at forty, of truth's bitter rind
+ Than the hot wine that gushed from the vintage of twenty!
+
+ I see it all now: when I wanted a king,
+ 'Twas the kingship that failed in myself I was seeking,--
+ 'Tis so much less easy to do than to sing,
+ So much simpler to reign by a proxy than _be_ king!
+ Yes, I think I _do_ see: after all's said and sung,
+ Take this one rule of life and you never will rue it,--
+ 'Tis but do your own duty and hold your own tongue,
+ And Blondel were royal himself, if he knew it!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NIGHT AND MOONLIGHT.
+
+
+Chancing to take a memorable walk by moonlight some years ago, I
+resolved to take more such walks, and make acquaintance with another
+side of Nature. I have done so.
+
+According to Pliny, there is a stone in Arabia called Selenites,
+"wherein is a white, which increases and decreases with the moon." My
+journal for the last year or two has been _selenitic_ in this sense.
+
+Is not the midnight like Central Africa to most of us? Are we not
+tempted to explore it,--to penetrate to the shores of its Lake Tchad,
+and discover the source of its Nile, perchance the Mountains of the
+Moon? Who knows what fertility and beauty, moral and natural, are there
+to be found? In the Mountains of the Moon, in the Central Africa of the
+night, there is where all Niles have their hidden heads. The expeditions
+up the Nile as yet extend but to the Cataracts, or perchance to the
+mouth of the White Nile; but it is the Black Nile that concerns us.
+
+I shall be a benefactor, if I conquer some realms from the night,--if I
+report to the gazettes anything transpiring about us at that season
+worthy of their attention,--if I can show men that there is some beauty
+awake while they are asleep,--if I add to the domains of poetry.
+
+Night is certainly more novel and less profane than day. I soon
+discovered that I was acquainted only with its complexion; and as for
+the moon, I had seen her only as it were through a crevice in a shutter,
+occasionally. Why not walk a little way in her light?
+
+Suppose you attend to the suggestions which the moon makes for one
+month, commonly in vain, will it not be very different from anything in
+literature or religion? But why not study this Sanscrit? What if one
+moon has come and gone, with its world of poetry, its weird teachings,
+its oracular suggestions,--so divine a creature freighted with hints for
+me, and I have not used her,--one moon gone by unnoticed?
+
+I think it was Dr. Chalmers who said, criticizing Coleridge, that for
+his part he wanted ideas which he could see all round, and not such as
+he must look at away up in the heavens. Such a man, one would say, would
+never look at the moon, because she never turns her other side to us.
+The light which comes from ideas which have their orbit as distant from
+the earth, and which is no less cheering and enlightening to the
+benighted traveller than that of the moon and stars, is naturally
+reproached or nicknamed as moonshine by such. They are moonshine, are
+they? Well, then, do your night-travelling when there is no moon to
+light you; but I will be thankful for the light that reaches me from the
+star of least magnitude. Stars are lesser or greater only as they appear
+to us so. I will be thankful that I see so much as one side of a
+celestial idea, one side of the rainbow and the sunset sky.
+
+Men talk glibly enough about moonshine, as if they knew its qualities
+very well, and despised them,--as owls might talk of sunshine. None of
+your sunshine!--but this word commonly means merely something which they
+do not understand, which they are abed and asleep to, however much it
+may be worth their while to be up and awake to it.
+
+It must be allowed that the light of the moon, sufficient though it is
+for the pensive walker, and not disproportionate to the inner light we
+have, is very inferior in quality and intensity to that of the sun. But
+the moon is not to be judged alone by the quantity of light she sends to
+us, but also by her influence on the earth and its inhabitants. "The
+moon gravitates toward the earth, and the earth reciprocally toward the
+moon." The poet who walks by moonlight is conscious of a tide in his
+thought which is to be referred to lunar influence. I will endeavor to
+separate the tide in my thoughts from the current distractions of the
+day. I would warn my hearers that they must not try my thoughts by a
+daylight standard, but endeavor to realize that I speak out of the
+night. All depends on your point of view. In Drake's "Collection of
+Voyages," Wafer says of some Albinos among the Indians of Darien,--"They
+are quite white, but their whiteness is like that of a horse, quite
+different from the fair or pale European, as they have not the least
+tincture of a blush or sanguine complexion.... Their eyebrows are
+milk-white, as is likewise the hair of their heads, which is very
+fine.... They seldom go abroad in the daytime, the sun being
+disagreeable to them, and causing their eyes, which are weak and poring,
+to water, especially if it shines towards them; yet they see very well
+by moonlight, from which we call them mooneyed."
+
+Neither in our thoughts in these moonlight walks, methinks, is there
+"the least tincture of a blush or sanguine complexion," but we are
+intellectually and morally Albinos,--children of Endymion,--such is the
+effect of conversing much with the moon.
+
+I complain of Arctic voyages that they do not enough remind us of the
+constant peculiar dreariness of the scenery, and the perpetual twilight
+of the Arctic night. So he whose theme is moonlight, though he may find
+it difficult, must, as it were, illustrate it with the light of the moon
+alone.
+
+Many men walk by day; few walk by night. It is a very different season.
+Take a July night, for instance. About ten o'clock,--when man is asleep,
+and day fairly forgotten,--the beauty of moonlight is seen over lonely
+pastures where cattle are silently feeding. On all sides novelties
+present themselves. Instead of the sun, there are the moon and stars;
+instead of the wood-thrush, there is the whippoorwill; instead of
+butterflies in the meadows, fire-flies, winged sparks of fire!--who
+would have believed it? What kind of cool, deliberate life dwells in
+those dewy abodes associated with a spark of fire? So man has fire in
+his eyes, or blood, or brain. Instead of singing-birds, the
+half-throttled note of a cuckoo flying over, the croaking of frogs, and
+the intenser dream of crickets,--but above all, the wonderful trump of
+the bull-frog, ringing from Maine to Georgia. The potato-vines stand
+upright, the corn grows apace, the bushes loom, the grain-fields are
+boundless. On our open river-terraces, once cultivated by the Indian,
+they appear to occupy the ground like an army,--their heads nodding in
+the breeze. Small trees and shrubs are seen in the midst, overwhelmed as
+by an inundation. The shadows of rocks and trees and shrubs and hills
+are more conspicuous than the objects themselves. The slightest
+irregularities in the ground are revealed by the shadows, and what the
+feet find comparatively smooth appears rough and diversified in
+consequence. For the same reason the whole landscape is more variegated
+and picturesque than by day. The smallest recesses in the rocks are dim
+and cavernous; the ferns in the wood appear of tropical size. The
+sweet-fern and indigo in overgrown wood-paths wet you with dew up to
+your middle. The leaves of the shrub-oak are shining as if a liquid were
+flowing over them. The pools seen through the trees are as full of light
+as the sky. "The light of the day takes refuge in their bosoms," as the
+Purana says of the ocean. All white objects are more remarkable than by
+day. A distant cliff looks like a phosphorescent space on a hill-side.
+The woods are heavy and dark. Nature slumbers. You see the moonlight
+reflected from particular stumps in the recesses of the forest, as if
+she selected what to shine on. These small fractions of her light remind
+one of the plant called moon-seed,--as if the moon were sowing it in
+such places.
+
+In the night the eyes are partly closed, or retire into the head. Other
+senses take the lead. The walker is guided as well by the sense of
+smell. Every plant and field and forest emits its odor now,--swamp-pink
+in the meadow, and tansy in the road; and there is the peculiar dry
+scent of corn which has begun to show its tassels. The senses both of
+hearing and smelling are more alert. We hear the tinkling of rills which
+we never detected before. From time to time, high up on the sides of
+hills, you pass through a stratum of warm air: a blast which has come up
+from the sultry plains of noon. It tells of the day, of sunny noon-tide
+hours and banks, of the laborer wiping his brow and the bee humming amid
+flowers. It is an air in which work has been done,--which men have
+breathed. It circulates about from wood-side to hill-side, like a dog
+that has lost its master, now that the sun is gone. The rocks retain all
+night the warmth of the sun which they have absorbed. And so does the
+sand: if you dig a few inches into it, you find a warm bed.
+
+You lie on your back on a rock in a pasture on the top of some bare hill
+at midnight, and speculate on the height of the starry canopy. The stars
+are the jewels of the night, and perchance surpass anything which day
+has to show. A companion with whom I was sailing, one very windy, but
+bright moonlight night, when the stars were few and faint, thought that
+a man could get along with _them_, though he was considerably reduced in
+his circumstances,--that they were a kind of bread and cheese that never
+failed.
+
+No wonder that there have been astrologers,--that some have conceived
+that they were personally related to particular stars. Du Bartas, as
+translated by Sylvester, says he'll
+
+ "not believe that the Great Architect
+ With all these fires the heavenly arches decked
+ Only for shew, and with these glistering shields,
+ 'T awake poor shepherds, watching in the fields,"--
+
+he'll
+
+ "not believe that the least flower which pranks
+ Our garden-borders or our common banks,
+ And the least stone that in her warming lap
+ Our Mother Earth doth covetously wrap,
+ Hath some peculiar virtue of its own,
+ And that the glorious stars of heaven have none."
+
+And Sir Walter Raleigh well says, "The stars are instruments of far
+greater use than to give an obscure light, and for men to gaze on after
+sunset"; and he quotes Plotinus as affirming that they "are significant,
+but not efficient"; and also Augustine as saying, "_Deus regit inferiora
+corpora per superiora_": God rules the bodies below by those above. But
+best of all is this, which another writer has expressed: "_Sapiens
+adjuvabit opus astrorum quemadmodum agricola terræ naturam_": A wise man
+assisteth the work of the stars as the husbandman helpeth the nature of
+the soil.
+
+It does not concern men who are asleep in their beds, but it is very
+important to the traveller, whether the moon shines brightly or is
+obscured. It is not easy to realize the serene joy of all the earth,
+when she commences to shine unobstructedly, unless you have often been
+abroad alone in moonlight nights. She seems to be waging continual war
+with the clouds in your behalf. Yet we fancy the clouds to be _her_ foes
+also. She comes on magnifying her dangers by her light, revealing,
+displaying them in all their hugeness and blackness,--then suddenly
+casts them behind into the light concealed, and goes her way triumphant
+through a small space of clear sky.
+
+In short, the moon traversing, or appearing to traverse, the small
+clouds which lie in her way, now obscured by them, now easily
+dissipating and shining through them, makes the drama of the moonlight
+night to all watchers and night-travellers. Sailors speak of it as the
+moon eating up the clouds. The traveller all alone, the moon all alone,
+except for his sympathy, overcoming with incessant victory whole
+squadrons of clouds above the forests and lakes and hills. When she is
+obscured, he so sympathizes with her that he could whip a dog for her
+relief, as Indians do. When she enters on a clear field of great extent
+in the heavens, and shines unobstructedly, he is glad. And when she has
+fought her way through all the squadron of her foes, and rides majestic
+in a clear sky unscathed, and there are no more any obstructions in her
+path, he cheerfully and confidently pursues his way, and rejoices in his
+heart, and the cricket also seems to express joy in its song.
+
+How insupportable would be the days, if the night, with its dews and
+darkness, did not come to restore the drooping world! As the shades
+begin to gather around us, our primeval instincts are aroused, and we
+steal forth from our lairs, like the inhabitants of the jungle, in
+search of those silent and brooding thoughts which are the natural prey
+of the intellect.
+
+Richter says, that "the earth is every day overspread with the veil of
+night for the same reason as the cages of birds are darkened, namely,
+that we may the more readily apprehend the higher harmonies of thought
+in the hush and quiet of darkness. Thoughts which day turns into smoke
+and mist stand about us in the night as light and flames; even as the
+column which fluctuates above the crater of Vesuvius in the daytime
+appears a pillar of cloud, but by night a pillar of fire."
+
+There are nights in this climate of such serene and majestic beauty, so
+medicinal and fertilizing to the spirit, that methinks a sensitive
+nature would not devote them to oblivion, and perhaps there is no man
+but would be better and wiser for spending them out of doors, though he
+should sleep all the next day to pay for it, should sleep an Endymion
+sleep, as the ancients expressed it,--nights which warrant the Grecian
+epithet _ambrosial_, when, as in the land of Beulah, the atmosphere is
+charged with dewy fragrance, and with music, and we take our repose and
+have our dreams awake,--when the moon, not secondary to the sun,
+
+ "gives us his blaze again,
+ Void of its flame, and sheds a softer day.
+ Now through the passing cloud she seems to stoop,
+ Now up the pure cerulean rides sublime."
+
+Diana still hunts in the New-England sky.
+
+ "In heaven queen she is among the spheres;
+ She, mistress-like, makes all things to be pure;
+ Eternity in her oft change she bears;
+ She Beauty is; by her the fair endure.
+
+ "Time wears her not; she doth his chariot guide;
+ Mortality below her orb is placed;
+ By her the virtues of the stars down slide;
+ By her is Virtue's perfect image cast."
+
+The Hindoos compare the moon to a saintly being who has reached the last
+stage of bodily existence.
+
+Great restorer of antiquity, great enchanter! In a mild night, when the
+harvest or hunter's moon shines unobstructedly, the houses in our
+village, whatever architect they may have had by day, acknowledge only a
+master. The village street is then as wild as the forest. New and old
+things are confounded. I know not whether I am sitting on the ruins of a
+wall, or on the material which is to compose a new one. Nature is an
+instructed and impartial teacher, spreading no crude opinions, and
+flattering none; she will be neither radical nor conservative. Consider
+the moonlight, so civil, yet so savage!
+
+The light is more proportionate to our knowledge than that of day. It is
+no more dusky in ordinary nights than our mind's habitual atmosphere,
+and the moonlight is as bright as our most illuminated moments are.
+
+ "In such a night let me abroad remain
+ Till morning breaks, and all's confused again."
+
+Of what significance the light of day, if it is not the reflection of an
+inward dawn?--to what purpose is the veil of night withdrawn, if the
+morning reveals nothing to the soul? It is merely garish and glaring.
+
+When Ossian, in his address to the Sun, exclaims,--
+
+ "Where has darkness its dwelling?
+ Where is the cavernous home of the stars,
+ When thou quickly followest their steps,
+ Pursuing them like a hunter in the sky,--
+ Thou climbing the lofty hills,
+ They descending on barren mountains?"
+
+who does not in his thought accompany the stars to their "cavernous
+home," "descending" with them "on barren mountains"?
+
+Nevertheless, even by night the sky is blue and not black; for we see
+through the shadow of the earth into the distant atmosphere of day,
+where the sunbeams are revelling.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ANDANTE.
+
+BEETHOVEN'S SIXTH SYMPHONY.
+
+
+ Sounding above the warring of the years,
+ Over their stretch of toils and pains and fears,
+ Comes the well-loved refrain,
+ That ancient voice again.
+
+ Sweeter than when beside the river's marge
+ We lay and watched, like Innocence at large,
+ The changeful waters flow,
+ Speaks this brave music now.
+
+ Tender as sunlight upon childhood's head,
+ Serene as moonlight upon childhood's bed,
+ Comes the remembered power
+ Of that forgotten hour.
+
+ The little brook with merry voice and low,
+ The gentle ripples rippling far below,
+ Talked with no idle voice,
+ Though idling were their choice.
+
+ Now through the tumult and the pride of life,
+ Gentler, yet firmly soothing all its strife,
+ Nature draws near once more,
+ And knocks at the world's door.
+
+ She walks within her wild, harmonious maze,
+ Evolving melodies from doubt and haze,
+ And leaves us freed from care,
+ Like children standing there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BROTHERS.
+
+
+Doctor Franck came in as I sat sewing up the rents in an old shirt, that
+Tom might go tidily to his grave. New shirts were needed for the living,
+and there was no wife or mother to "dress him handsome when he went to
+meet the Lord," as one woman said, describing the fine funeral she had
+pinched herself to give her son.
+
+"Miss Dane, I'm in a quandary," began the Doctor, with that expression
+of countenance which says as plainly as words, "I want to ask a favor,
+but I wish you'd save me the trouble."
+
+"Can I help you out of it?"
+
+"Faith! I don't like to propose it, but you certainly can, if you
+please."
+
+"Then give it a name, I beg."
+
+"You see a Reb has just been brought in crazy with typhoid; a bad case
+every way; a drunken, rascally little captain somebody took the trouble
+to capture, but whom nobody wants to take the trouble to cure. The wards
+are full, the ladies worked to death, and willing to be for our own
+boys, but rather slow to risk their lives for a Reb. Now you've had the
+fever, you like queer patients, your mate will see to your ward for a
+while, and I will find you a good attendant. The fellow won't last long,
+I fancy; but he can't die without some sort of care, you know. I've put
+him in the fourth story of the west wing, away from the rest. It is
+airy, quiet, and comfortable there. I'm on that ward, and will do my
+best for you in every way. Now, then, will you go?"
+
+"Of course I will, out of perversity, if not common charity; for some of
+these people think that because I'm an abolitionist I am also a heathen,
+and I should rather like to show them, that, though I cannot quite love
+my enemies, I am willing to take care of them."
+
+"Very good; I thought you'd go; and speaking of abolition reminds me
+that you can have a contraband for servant, if you like. It is that fine
+mulatto fellow who was found burying his Rebel master after the fight,
+and, being badly cut over the head, our boys brought him along. Will you
+have him?"
+
+"By all means,--for I'll stand to my guns on that point, as on the
+other; these black boys are far more faithful and handy than some of the
+white scamps given me to serve, instead of being served by. But is this
+man well enough?"
+
+"Yes, for that sort of work, and I think you'll like him. He must have
+been a handsome fellow before he got his face slashed; not much darker
+than myself; his master's son, I dare say, and the white blood makes him
+rather high and haughty about some things. He was in a bad way when he
+came in, but vowed he'd die in the street rather than turn in with the
+black fellows below; so I put him up in the west wing, to be out of the
+way, and he's seen to the captain all the morning. "When can you go up?"
+
+"As soon as Tom is laid out, Skinner moved, Haywood washed, Marble
+dressed, Charley rubbed, Downs taken up, Upham laid down, and the whole
+forty fed."
+
+We both laughed, though the Doctor was on his way to the dead-house and
+I held a shroud on my lap. But in a hospital one learns that
+cheerfulness is one's salvation; for, in an atmosphere of suffering and
+death, heaviness of heart would soon paralyze usefulness of hand, if the
+blessed gift of smiles had been denied us.
+
+In an hour I took possession of my new charge, finding a
+dissipated-looking boy of nineteen or twenty raving in the solitary
+little room, with no one near him but the contraband in the room
+adjoining. Feeling decidedly more interest in the black man than in the
+white, yet remembering the Doctor's hint of his being "high and
+haughty," I glanced furtively at him as I scattered chloride of lime
+about the room to purify the air, and settled matters to suit myself. I
+had seen many contrabands, but never one so attractive as this. All
+colored men are called "boys," even if their heads are white; this boy
+was five-and-twenty at least, strong-limbed and manly, and had the look
+of one who never had been cowed by abuse or worn with oppressive labor.
+He sat on his bed doing nothing; no book, no pipe, no pen or paper
+anywhere appeared, yet anything less indolent or listless than his
+attitude and expression I never saw. Erect he sat, with a hand on either
+knee, and eyes fixed on the bare wall opposite, so rapt in some
+absorbing thought as to be unconscious of my presence, though the door
+stood wide open and my movements were by no means noiseless. His face
+was half averted, but I instantly approved the Doctor's taste, for the
+profile which I saw possessed all the attributes of comeliness belonging
+to his mixed race. He was more quadroon than mulatto, with Saxon
+features, Spanish complexion darkened by exposure, color in lips and
+cheek, waving hair, and an eye full of the passionate melancholy which
+in such men always seems to utter a mute protest against the broken law
+that doomed them at their birth. What could he be thinking of? The sick
+boy cursed and raved, I rustled to and fro, steps passed the door, bells
+rang, and the steady rumble of army-wagons came up from the street,
+still he never stirred. I had seen colored people in what they call "the
+black sulks," when, for days, they neither smiled nor spoke, and
+scarcely ate. But this was something more than that; for the man was not
+dully brooding over some small grievance; he seemed to see an
+all-absorbing fact or fancy recorded on the wall, which was a blank to
+me. I wondered if it were some deep wrong or sorrow, kept alive by
+memory and impotent regret; if he mourned for the dead master to whom he
+had been faithful to the end; or if the liberty now his were robbed of
+half its sweetness by the knowledge that some one near and dear to him
+still languished in the hell from which he had escaped. My heart quite
+warmed to him at that idea; I wanted to know and comfort him; and,
+following the impulse of the moment, I went in and touched him on the
+shoulder.
+
+In an instant the man vanished and the slave appeared. Freedom was too
+new a boon to have wrought its blessed changes yet, and as he started
+up, with his hand at his temple and an obsequious "Yes, Ma'am," any
+romance that had gathered round him fled away, leaving the saddest of
+all sad facts in living guise before me. Not only did the manhood seem
+to die out of him, but the comeliness that first attracted me; for, as
+he turned, I saw the ghastly wound that had laid open cheek and
+forehead. Being partly healed, it was no longer bandaged, but held
+together with strips of that transparent plaster which I never see
+without a shiver and swift recollections of the scenes with which it is
+associated in my mind. Part of his black hair had been shorn away, and
+one eye was nearly closed; pain so distorted, and the cruel sabre-cut so
+marred that portion of his face, that, when I saw it, I felt as if a
+fine medal had been suddenly reversed, showing me a far more striking
+type of human suffering and wrong than Michel Angelo's bronze prisoner.
+By one of those inexplicable processes that often teach us how little we
+understand ourselves, my purpose was suddenly changed, and though I went
+in to offer comfort as a friend, I merely gave an order as a mistress.
+
+"Will you open these windows? this man needs more air."
+
+He obeyed at once, and, as he slowly urged up the unruly sash, the
+handsome profile was again turned toward me, and again I was possessed
+by my first impression so strongly that I involuntarily said,--
+
+"Thank you, Sir."
+
+Perhaps it was fancy, but I thought that in the look of mingled surprise
+and something like reproach which he gave me there was also a trace of
+grateful pleasure. But he said, in that tone of spiritless humility
+these poor souls learn so soon,--
+
+"I a'n't a white man, Ma'am, I'm a contraband."
+
+"Yes, I know it; but a contraband is a free man, and I heartily
+congratulate you."
+
+He liked that; his face shone, he squared his shoulders, lifted his
+head, and looked me full in the eye with a brisk--
+
+"Thank ye, Ma'am; anything more to do fer yer?"
+
+"Doctor Franck thought you would help me with this man, as there are
+many patients and few nurses or attendants. Have you had the fever?"
+
+"No, Ma'am."
+
+"They should have thought of that when they put him here; wounds and
+fevers should not be together. I'll try to get you moved."
+
+He laughed a sudden laugh,--if he had been a white man, I should have
+called it scornful; as he was a few shades darker than myself, I suppose
+it must be considered an insolent, or at least an unmannerly one.
+
+"It don't matter, Ma'am. I'd rather be up here with the fever than down
+with those niggers; and there a'n't no other place fer me."
+
+Poor fellow! that was true. No ward in all the hospital would take him
+in to lie side by side with the most miserable white wreck there. Like
+the bat in Æsop's fable, he belonged to neither race; and the pride of
+one, the helplessness of the other, kept him hovering alone in the
+twilight a great sin has brought to overshadow the whole land.
+
+"You shall stay, then; for I would far rather have you than my lazy
+Jack. But are you well and strong enough?"
+
+"I guess I'll do, Ma'am."
+
+He spoke with a passive sort of acquiescence,--as if it did not much
+matter, if he were not able, and no one would particularly rejoice, if
+he were.
+
+"Yes, I think you will. By what name shall I call you?"
+
+"Bob, Ma'am."
+
+Every woman has her pet whim; one of mine was to teach the men
+self-respect by treating them respectfully. Tom, Dick, and Harry would
+pass, when lads rejoiced in those familiar abbreviations; but to address
+men often old enough to be my father in that style did not suit my
+old-fashioned ideas of propriety. This "Bob" would never do; I should
+have found it as easy to call the chaplain "Gus" as my tragical-looking
+contraband by a title so strongly associated with the tail of a kite.
+
+"What is your other name?" I asked. "I like to call my attendants by
+their last names rather than by their first."
+
+"I've got no other, Ma'am; we have our masters' names, or do without.
+Mine's dead, and I won't have anything of his about me."
+
+"Well, I'll call you Robert, then, and you may fill this pitcher for me,
+if you will be so kind."
+
+He went; but, through all the tame obedience years of servitude had
+taught him, I could see that the proud spirit his father gave him was
+not yet subdued, for the look and gesture with which he repudiated his
+master's name were a more effective declaration of independence than any
+Fourth-of-July orator could have prepared.
+
+We spent a curious week together. Robert seldom left his room, except
+upon my errands; and I was a prisoner all day, often all night, by the
+bedside of the Rebel. The fever burned itself rapidly away, for there
+seemed little vitality to feed it in the feeble frame of this old young
+man, whose life had been none of the most righteous, judging from the
+revelations made by his unconscious lips; since more than once Robert
+authoritatively silenced him, when my gentler hushings were of no avail,
+and blasphemous wanderings or ribald camp-songs made my cheeks burn and
+Robert's face assume an aspect of disgust. The captain was a gentleman
+in the world's eye, but the contraband was the gentleman in mine;--I was
+a fanatic, and that accounts for such depravity of taste, I hope. I
+never asked Robert of himself, feeling that somewhere there was a spot
+still too sore to bear the lightest touch; but, from his language,
+manner, and intelligence, I inferred that his color had procured for him
+the few advantages within the reach of a quick-witted, kindly treated
+slave. Silent, grave, and thoughtful, but most serviceable, was my
+contraband; glad of the books I brought him, faithful in the performance
+of the duties I assigned to him, grateful for the friendliness I could
+not but feel and show toward him. Often I longed to ask what purpose was
+so visibly altering his aspect with such daily deepening gloom. But I
+never dared, and no one else had either time or desire to pry into the
+past of this specimen of one branch of the chivalrous "F.F.Vs."
+
+On the seventh night, Dr. Franck suggested that it would be well for
+some one, besides the general watchman of the ward, to be with the
+captain, as it might be his last. Although the greater part of the two
+preceding nights had been spent there, of course I offered to
+remain,--for there is a strange fascination in these scenes, which
+renders one careless of fatigue and unconscious of fear until the crisis
+is passed.
+
+"Give him water as long as he can drink, and if he drops into a natural
+sleep, it may save him. I'll look in at midnight, when some change will
+probably take place. Nothing but sleep or a miracle will keep him now.
+Good night."
+
+Away went the Doctor; and, devouring a whole mouthful of gapes, I
+lowered the lamp, wet the captain's head, and sat down on a hard stool
+to begin my watch. The captain lay with his hot, haggard face turned
+toward me, filling the air with his poisonous breath, and feebly
+muttering, with lips and tongue so parched that the sanest speech would
+have been difficult to understand. Robert was stretched on his bed in
+the inner room, the door of which stood ajar, that a fresh draught from
+his open window might carry the fever-fumes away through mine. I could
+just see a long, dark figure, with the lighter outline of a face, and,
+having little else to do just then, I fell to thinking of this curious
+contraband, who evidently prized his freedom highly, yet seemed in no
+haste to enjoy it. Doctor Franck had offered to send him on to safer
+quarters, but he had said, "No, thank yer, Sir, not yet," and then had
+gone away to fall into one of those black moods of his, which began to
+disturb me, because I had no power to lighten them. As I sat listening
+to the clocks from the steeples all about us, I amused myself with
+planning Robert's future, as I often did my own, and had dealt out to
+him a generous hand of trumps wherewith to play this game of life which
+hitherto had gone so cruelly against him, when a harsh, choked voice
+called,--
+
+"Lucy!"
+
+It was the captain, and some new terror seemed to have gifted him with
+momentary strength.
+
+"Yes, here's Lucy," I answered, hoping that by following the fancy I
+might quiet him,--for his face was damp with the clammy moisture, and
+his frame shaken with the nervous tremor that so often precedes death.
+His dull eye fixed upon me, dilating with a bewildered look of
+incredulity and wrath, till he broke out fiercely,--
+
+"That's a lie! she's dead,--and so's Bob, damn him!"
+
+Finding speech a failure, I began to sing the quiet tune that had often
+soothed delirium like this; but hardly had the line,
+
+ "See gentle patience smile on pain,"
+
+passed my lips, when he clutched me by the wrist, whispering like one in
+mortal fear,--
+
+"Hush! she used to sing that way to Bob, but she never would to me. I
+swore I'd whip the Devil out of her, and I did; but you know before she
+cut her throat she said she'd haunt me, and there she is!"
+
+He pointed behind me with an aspect of such pale dismay, that I
+involuntarily glanced over my shoulder and started as if I had seen a
+veritable ghost; for, peering from the gloom of that inner room, I saw a
+shadowy face, with dark hair all about it, and a glimpse of scarlet at
+the throat. An instant showed me that it was only Robert leaning from
+his bed's-foot, wrapped in a gray army-blanket, with his red shirt just
+visible above it, and his long hair disordered by sleep. But what a
+strange expression was on his face! The unmarred side was toward me,
+fixed and motionless as when I first observed it,--less absorbed now,
+but more intent. His eye glittered, his lips were apart like one who
+listened with every sense, and his whole aspect reminded me of a hound
+to which some wind had brought the scent of unsuspected prey.
+
+"Do you know him, Robert? Does he mean you?"
+
+"Lord, no, Ma'am; they all own half a dozen Bobs: but hearin' my name
+woke me; that's all."
+
+He spoke quite naturally, and lay down again, while I returned to my
+charge, thinking that this paroxysm was probably his last. But by
+another hour I perceived a hopeful change, for the tremor had subsided,
+the cold dew was gone, his breathing was more regular, and Sleep, the
+healer, had descended to save or take him gently away. Doctor Franck
+looked in at midnight, bade me keep all cool and quiet, and not fail to
+administer a certain draught as soon as the captain woke. Very much
+relieved, I laid my head on my arms, uncomfortably folded on the little
+table, and fancied I was about to perform one of the feats which
+practice renders possible,--"sleeping with one eye open," as we say: a
+half-and-half doze, for all senses sleep but that of hearing; the
+faintest murmur, sigh, or motion will break it, and give one back one's
+wits much brightened by the brief permission to "stand at ease." On this
+night, the experiment was a failure, for previous vigils, confinement,
+and much care had rendered naps a dangerous indulgence. Having roused
+half a dozen times in an hour to find all quiet, I dropped my heavy head
+on my arms, and, drowsily resolving to look up again in fifteen minutes,
+fell fast asleep.
+
+The striking of a deep-voiced clock woke me with a start. "That is one,"
+thought I, but, to my dismay, two more strokes followed; and in
+remorseful haste I sprang up to see what harm my long oblivion had done.
+A strong hand put me back into my seat, and held me there. It was
+Robert. The instant my eye met his my heart began to beat, and all along
+my nerves tingled that electric flash which foretells a danger that we
+cannot see. He was very pale, his mouth grim, and both eyes full of
+sombre fire,--for even the wounded one was open now, all the more
+sinister for the deep scar above and below. But his touch was steady,
+his voice quiet, as he said,--
+
+"Sit still, Ma'am; I won't hurt yer, nor even scare yer, if I can help
+it, but yer waked too soon."
+
+"Let me go, Robert,--the, captain is stirring,--I must give him
+something."
+
+"No, Ma'am, yer can't stir an inch. Look here!"
+
+Holding me with one hand, with the other he took up the glass in which I
+had left the draught, and showed me it was empty.
+
+"Has he taken it?" I asked, more and more bewildered.
+
+"I flung it out o' winder, Ma'am; he'll have to do without."
+
+"But why, Robert? why did you do it?"
+
+"Because I hate him!"
+
+Impossible to doubt the truth of that; his whole face showed it, as he
+spoke through his set teeth, and launched a fiery glance at the
+unconscious captain. I could only hold my breath and stare blankly at
+him, wondering what mad act was coming next. I suppose I shook and
+turned white, as women have a foolish habit of doing when sudden danger
+daunts them; for Robert released my arm, sat down upon the bedside just
+in front of me, and said, with the ominous quietude that made me cold to
+see and hear,--
+
+"Don't yer be frightened, Ma'am: don't try to run away, fer the door's
+locked an' the key in my pocket; don't yer cry out, fer yer'd have to
+scream a long while, with my hand on yer mouth, before yer was heard.
+Be still, an' I'll tell yer what I'm goin' to do."
+
+"Lord help us! he has taken the fever in some sudden, violent way, and
+is out of his head. I must humor him till some one comes"; in pursuance
+of which swift determination, I tried to say, quite composedly,--
+
+"I will be still and hear you; but open the window. Why did you shut
+it?"
+
+"I'm sorry I can't do it, Ma'am; but yer'd jump out, or call, if I did,
+an' I'm not ready yet. I shut it to make yer sleep, an' heat would do it
+quicker 'n anything else I could do."
+
+The captain moved, and feebly muttered, "Water!" Instinctively I rose,
+to give it to him, but the heavy hand came down upon my shoulder, and in
+the same decided tone Robert said,--
+
+"The water went with the physic; let him call."
+
+"Do let me go to him! he'll die without care!"
+
+"I mean he shall;--don't yer interfere, if yer please, Ma'am."
+
+In spite of his quiet tone and respectful manner, I saw murder in his
+eyes, and turned faint with fear; yet the fear excited me, and, hardly
+knowing what I did, I seized the hands that had seized me, crying,--
+
+"No, no, you shall not kill him! it is base to hurt a helpless man. Why
+do you hate him? He is not your master?"
+
+"He's my brother."
+
+I felt that answer from head to foot, and seemed to fathom what was
+coming, with a prescience vague, but unmistakable. One appeal was left
+to me, and I made it.
+
+"Robert, tell me what it means? Do not commit a crime and make me
+accessory to it. There is a better way of righting wrong than by
+violence;--let me help you find it."
+
+My voice trembled as I spoke, and I heard the frightened flutter of my
+heart; so did he, and if any little act of mine had ever won affection
+or respect from him, the memory of it served me then. He looked down,
+and seemed to put some question to himself; whatever it was, the answer
+was in my favor, for when his eyes rose again, they were gloomy, but not
+desperate.
+
+"I _will_ tell you, Ma'am; but mind, this makes no difference; the boy
+is mine. I'll give the Lord a chance to take him fust; if He don't, I
+shall."
+
+"Oh, no! remember, he is your brother."
+
+An unwise speech; I felt it as it passed my lips, for a black frown
+gathered on Robert's face, and his strong hands closed with an ugly sort
+of grip. But he did not touch the poor soul gasping there behind him,
+and seemed content to let the slow suffocation of that stifling room end
+his frail life.
+
+"I'm not like to forget that, Ma'am, when I've been thinkin' of it all
+this week. I knew him when they fetched him in, an' would 'a' done it
+long 'fore this, but I wanted to ask where Lucy was; he knows,--he told
+to-night--an' now he's done for."
+
+"Who is Lucy?" I asked hurriedly, intent on keeping his mind busy with
+any thought but murder.
+
+With one of the swift transitions of a mixed temperament like this, at
+my question Robert's deep eyes filled, the clenched hands were spread
+before his face, and all I heard were the broken words,--
+
+"My wife,--he took her"--
+
+In that instant every thought of fear was swallowed up in burning
+indignation for the wrong, and a perfect passion of pity for the
+desperate man so tempted to avenge an injury for which there seemed no
+redress but this. He was no longer slave or contraband, no drop of black
+blood marred him in my sight, but an infinite compassion yearned to
+save, to help, to comfort him. Words seemed so powerless I offered none,
+only put my hand on his poor head, wounded, homeless, bowed down with
+grief for which I had no cure, and softly smoothed the long neglected
+hair, pitifully wondering the while where was the wife who must have
+loved this tender-hearted man so well.
+
+The captain moaned again, and faintly whispered, "Air!" but I never
+stirred. God forgive me! just then I hated him as only a woman thinking
+of a sister woman's wrong could hate. Robert looked up; his eyes were
+dry again, his mouth grim. I saw that, said, "Tell me more," and he
+did,--for sympathy is a gift the poorest may give, the proudest stoop to
+receive.
+
+"Yer see, Ma'am, his father,--I might say ours, if I warn't ashamed of
+both of 'em,--his father died two years ago, an' left us all to Marster
+Ned,--that's him here, eighteen then. He always hated me, I looked so
+like old Marster: he don't,--only the light skin an' hair. Old Marster
+was kind to all of us, me 'specially, an' bought Lucy off the next
+plantation down there in South Car'lina, when he found I liked her. I
+married her, all I could, Ma'am; it warn't much, but we was true to one
+another till Marster Ned come home a year after an' made hell fur both
+of us. He sent my old mother to be used up in his rice-swamp in Georgy;
+he found me with my pretty Lucy, an' though young Miss cried, an' I
+prayed to him on my knees, an' Lucy run away, he wouldn't have no mercy;
+he brought her back, an'--took her, Ma'am."
+
+"Oh! what did you do?" I cried, hot with helpless pain and passion.
+
+How the man's outraged heart sent the blood flaming up into his face and
+deepened the tones of his impetuous voice, as he stretched his arm
+across the bed, saying, with a terribly expressive gesture,--
+
+"I half murdered him, an' to-night I'll finish."
+
+"Yes, yes,--but go on now; what came next?"
+
+He gave me a look that showed no white man could have felt a deeper
+degradation in remembering and confining these last acts of brotherly
+oppression.
+
+"They whipped me till I couldn't stand, an' then they sold me further
+South. Yer thought I was a white man once;--look here!"
+
+With a sudden wrench he tore the shirt from neck to waist, and on his
+strong brown shoulders showed me furrows deeply ploughed, wounds which,
+though healed, were ghastlier to me than any in that house. I could not
+speak to him, and, with the pathetic dignity a great grief lends the
+humblest sufferer, he ended his brief tragedy by simply saying,--
+
+"That's all, Ma'am. I've never seen her since, an' now I never shall in
+this world,--maybe not in t' other."
+
+"But, Robert, why think her dead? The captain was wandering when he said
+those sad things; perhaps he will retract them when he is sane. Don't
+despair; don't give up yet."
+
+"No, Ma'am, I guess he's right; she was too proud to bear that long.
+It's like her to kill herself. I told her to, if there was no other way;
+an' she always minded me, Lucy did. My poor girl! Oh, it warn't right!
+No, by God, it warn't!"
+
+As the memory of this bitter wrong, this double bereavement, burned in
+his sore heart, the devil that lurks in every strong man's blood leaped
+up; he put his hand upon his brother's throat, and, watching the white
+face before him, muttered low between his teeth,--
+
+"I'm lettin' him go too easy; there's no pain in this; we a'n't even
+yet. I wish he knew me. Marster Ned! it's Bob; where's Lucy?"
+
+From the captain's lips there came a long faint sigh, and nothing but a
+flutter of the eyelids showed that he still lived. A strange stillness
+filled the room as the elder brother held the younger's life suspended
+in his hand, while wavering between a dim hope and a deadly hate. In the
+whirl of thoughts that went on in my brain, only one was clear enough to
+act upon. I must prevent murder, if I could,--but how? What could I do
+up there alone, locked in with a dying man and a lunatic?--for any mind
+yielded utterly to any unrighteous impulse is mad while the impulse
+rules it. Strength I had not, nor much courage, neither time nor wit for
+stratagem, and chance only could bring me help before it was too late.
+But one weapon I possessed,--a tongue,--often a woman's best defence;
+and sympathy, stronger than fear, gave me power to use it. What I said
+Heaven only knows, but surely Heaven helped me; words burned on my lips,
+tears streamed from my eyes, and some good angel prompted me to use the
+one name that had power to arrest my hearer's hand and touch his heart.
+For at that moment I heartily believed that Lucy lived, and this earnest
+faith rousted in him a like belief.
+
+He listened with the lowering look of one in whom brute instinct was
+sovereign for the time,--a look that makes the noblest countenance base.
+He was but a man,--a poor, untaught, outcast, outraged man. Life had few
+joys for him; the world offered him no honors, no success, no home, no
+love. What future would this crime mar? and why should he deny himself
+that sweet, yet bitter morsel called revenge? How many white men, with
+all New England's freedom, culture, Christianity, would not have felt as
+he felt then? Should I have reproached him for a human anguish, a human
+longing for redress, all now left him from the ruin of his few poor
+hopes? Who had taught him that self-control, self-sacrifice, are
+attributes that make men masters of the earth and lift them nearer
+heaven? Should I have urged the beauty of forgiveness, the duty of
+devout submission? He had no religion, for he was no saintly "Uncle
+Tom," and Slavery's black shadow seemed to darken all the world to him
+and shut out God. Should I have warned him of penalties, of judgments,
+and the potency of law? What did he know of justice, or the mercy that
+should temper that stern virtue, when every law, human and divine, had
+been broken on his hearthstone? Should I have tried to touch him by
+appeals to filial duty, to brotherly love? How had his appeals been
+answered? What memories had father and brother stored up in his heart to
+plead for either now? No,--all these influences, these associations,
+would have proved worse than useless, had I been calm enough to try
+them. I was not; but instinct, subtler than reason, showed me the one
+safe clue by which to lead this troubled soul from the labyrinth in
+which it groped and nearly fell. When I paused, breathless, Robert
+turned to me, asking, as if human assurances could strengthen his faith
+in Divine Omnipotence,--
+
+"Do you believe, if I let Marster Ned live, the Lord will give me back
+my Lucy?"
+
+"As surely as there is a Lord, you will find her here or in the
+beautiful hereafter, where there is no black or white, no master and no
+slave."
+
+He took his hand from his brother's throat, lifted his eyes from my face
+to the wintry sky beyond, as if searching for that blessed country,
+happier even than the happy North. Alas, it was the darkest hour before
+the dawn!--there was no star above, no light below but the pale glimmer
+of the lamp that showed the brother who had made him desolate. Like a
+blind man who believes there is a sun, yet cannot see it, he shook his
+head, let his arms drop nervelessly upon his knees, and sat there dumbly
+asking that question which many a soul whose faith is firmer fixed than
+his has asked in hours less dark than this,--"Where is God?" I saw the
+tide had turned, and strenuously tried to keep this rudderless life-boat
+from slipping back into the whirlpool wherein it had been so nearly
+lost.
+
+"I have listened to you, Robert; now hear me, and heed what I say,
+because my heart is full of pity for you, full of hope for your future,
+and a desire to help you now. I want you to go away from here, from the
+temptation of this place, and the sad thoughts that haunt it. You have
+conquered yourself once, and I honor you for it, because, the harder the
+battle, the more glorious the victory; but it is safer to put a greater
+distance between you and this man. I will write you letters, give you
+money, and send you to good old Massachusetts to begin your new life a
+freeman,--yes, and a happy man; for when the captain is himself again, I
+will learn where Lucy is, and move heaven and earth to find and give her
+back to you. Will you do this, Robert?"
+
+Slowly, very slowly, the answer came; for the purpose of a week, perhaps
+a year, was hard to relinquish in an hour.
+
+"Yes, Ma'am, I will."
+
+"Good! Now you are the man I thought you, and I'll work for you with all
+my heart. You need sleep, my poor fellow; go, and try to forget. The
+captain is still alive, and as yet you are spared that sin. No, don't
+look there; I'll care for him. Come, Robert, for Lucy's sake."
+
+Thank Heaven for the immortality of love! for when all other means of
+salvation failed, a spark of this vital fire softened the man's iron
+will until a woman's hand could bend it. He let me take from him the
+key, let me draw him gently away and lead him to the solitude which now
+was the most healing balm I could bestow. Once in his little room, he
+fell down on his bed and lay there as if spent with the sharpest
+conflict of his life. I slipped the bolt across his door, and unlocked
+my own, flung up the window, steadied myself with a breath of air, then
+rushed to Doctor Franck. He came; and till dawn we worked together,
+saving one brother's life, and taking earnest thought how best to secure
+the other's liberty. When the sun came up as blithely as if it shone
+only upon happy homes, the Doctor went to Robert. For an hour I heard
+the murmur of their voices; once I caught the sound of heavy sobs, and
+for a time a reverent hush, as if in the silence that good man were
+ministering to soul as well as sense. When he departed he took Robert
+with him, pausing to tell me he should get him off as soon as possible,
+but not before we met again.
+
+Nothing more was seen of them all day; another surgeon came to see the
+captain, and another attendant came to fill the empty place. I tried to
+rest, but could not, with the thought of poor Lucy tugging at my heart,
+and was soon back at my post again, anxiously hoping that my contraband
+had not been too hastily spirited away. Just as night fell there came a
+tap, and opening, I saw Robert literally "clothed and in his right
+mind." The Doctor had replaced the ragged suit with tidy garments, and
+no trace of that tempestuous night remained but deeper lines upon the
+forehead and the docile look of a repentant child. He did not cross the
+threshold, did not offer me his hand,--only took off his cap, saying,
+with a traitorous falter in his voice,--
+
+"God bless you, Ma'am! I'm goin'."
+
+I put out both my hands, and held his fast.
+
+"Good bye, Robert! Keep up good heart, and when I come home to
+Massachusetts we'll meet in a happier place than this. Are you quite
+ready, quite comfortable for your journey?"
+
+"Yes, Ma'am, yes; the Doctor's fixed everything; I'm goin' with a friend
+of his; my papers are all right, an' I'm as happy as I can be till I
+find"--
+
+He stopped there; then went on, with a glance into the room,--
+
+"I'm glad I didn't do it, an' I thank yer, Ma'am, fer hinderin'
+me,--thank yer hearty; but I'm afraid I hate him jest the same."
+
+Of course he did; and so did I; for these faulty hearts of ours cannot
+turn perfect in a night, but need frost and fire, wind and rain, to
+ripen and make them ready for the great harvest-home. Wishing to divert
+his mind, I put my poor mite into his hand, and, remembering the magic
+of a certain little book, I gave him mine, on whose dark cover whitely
+shone the Virgin Mother and the Child, the grand history of whose life
+the book contained. The money went into Robert's pocket with a grateful
+murmur, the book into his bosom with a long look and a tremulous--
+
+"I never saw _my_ baby, Ma'am."
+
+I broke down then; and though my eyes were too dim to see, I felt the
+touch of lips upon my hands, heard the sound of departing feet, and knew
+my contraband was gone.
+
+When one feels an intense dislike, the less one says about the subject
+of it the better; therefore I shall merely record that the captain
+lived,--in time was exchanged; and that, whoever the other party was, I
+am convinced the Government got the best of the bargain. But long before
+this occurred, I had fulfilled my promise to Robert; for as soon as my
+patient recovered strength of memory enough to make his answer
+trustworthy, I asked, without any circumlocution,--
+
+"Captain Fairfax, where is Lucy?"
+
+And too feeble to be angry, surprised, or insincere, he straightway
+answered,--
+
+"Dead, Miss Dane."
+
+"And she killed herself, when you sold Bob?"
+
+"How the Devil did you know that?" he muttered, with an expression
+half-remorseful, half-amazed; but I was satisfied, and said no more.
+
+Of course, this went to Robert, waiting far away there in a lonely
+home,--waiting, working, hoping for his Lucy. It almost broke my heart
+to do it; but delay was weak, deceit was wicked; so I sent the heavy
+tidings, and very soon the answer came,--only three lines; but I felt
+that the sustaining power of the man's life was gone.
+
+"I thought I'd never see her any more; I'm glad to know she's out of
+trouble. I thank yer, Ma'am; an' if they let us, I'll fight fer yer till
+I'm killed, which I hope will be 'fore long."
+
+Six months later he had his wish, and kept his word.
+
+Every one knows the story of the attack on Fort Wagner; but we should
+not tire yet of recalling how our Fifty-Fourth, spent with three
+sleepless nights, a day's fast, and a march under the July sun, stormed
+the fort as night fell, facing death in many shapes, following their
+brave leaders through a fiery rain of shot and shell, fighting valiantly
+for "God and Governor Andrew,"--how the regiment that went into action
+seven hundred strong came out having had nearly half its number
+captured, killed, or wounded, leaving their young commander to be
+buried, like a chief of earlier times, with his body-guard around him,
+faithful to the death. Surely, the insult turns to honor, and the wide
+grave needs no monument but the heroism that consecrates it in our
+sight; surely, the hearts that held him nearest see through their tears
+a noble victory in the seeming sad defeat; and surely, God's benediction
+was bestowed, when this loyal soul answered, as Death called the roll,
+"Lord, here am I, with the brothers Thou hast given me!"
+
+The future must show how well that fight was fought; for though Fort
+Wagner still defies us, public prejudice is down; and through the
+cannon-smoke of that black night the manhood of the colored race shines
+before many eyes that would not see, rings in many ears that would not
+hear, wins many hearts that would not hitherto believe.
+
+When the news came that we were needed, there was none so glad as I to
+leave teaching contrabands, the new work I had taken up, and go to nurse
+"our boys," as my dusky flock so proudly called the wounded of the
+Fifty-Fourth. Feeling more satisfaction, as I assumed my big apron and
+turned up my cuffs, than if dressing for the President's levee, I fell
+to work on board the hospital-ship in Hilton-Head harbor. The scene was
+most familiar, and yet strange; for only dark faces looked up at me from
+the pallets so thickly laid along the floor, and I missed the sharp
+accent of my Yankee boys in the slower, softer voices calling cheerily
+to one another, or answering my questions with a stout, "We'll never
+give it up, Ma'am, till the last Reb's dead," or, "If our people's free,
+we can afford to die."
+
+Passing from bed to bed, intent on making one pair of hands do the work
+of three, at least, I gradually washed, fed, and bandaged my way down
+the long line of sable heroes, and coming to the very last, found that
+he was my contraband. So old, so worn, so deathly weak and wan, I never
+should have known him but for the deep scar on his cheek. That side lay
+uppermost, and caught my eye at once; but even then I doubted, such an
+awful change had come upon him, when, turning to the ticket just above
+his head, I saw the name, "Robert Dane." That both assured and touched
+me, for, remembering that he had no name, I knew that he had taken mine.
+I longed for him to speak to me, to tell how he had fared since I lost
+sight of him, and let me perform some little service for him in return
+for many he had done for me; but he seemed asleep; and as I stood
+reliving that strange night again, a bright lad, who lay next him softly
+waving an old fan across both beds, looked up and said,--
+
+"I guess you know him, Ma'am?"
+
+"You are right. Do you?"
+
+"As much as any one was able to, Ma'am."
+
+"Why do you say 'was,' as if the man were dead and gone?"
+
+"I s'pose because I know he'll have to go. He's got a bad jab in the
+breast, an' is bleedin' inside, the Doctor says. He don't suffer any,
+only gets weaker 'n' weaker every minute. I've been fannin' him this
+long while, an' he's talked a little; but he don't know me now, so he's
+most gone, I guess."
+
+There was so much sorrow and affection in the boy's face, that I
+remembered something, and asked, with redoubled interest,--
+
+"Are you the one that brought him off? I was told about a boy who nearly
+lost his life in saving that of his mate."
+
+I dare say the young fellow blushed, as any modest lad might have done;
+I could not see it, but I heard the chuckle of satisfaction that escaped
+him, as he glanced from his shattered arm and bandaged side to the pale
+figure opposite.
+
+"Lord, Ma'am, that's nothin'; we boys always stan' by one another, an' I
+warn't goin' to leave him to be tormented any more by them cussed Rebs.
+He's been a slave once, though he don't look half so much like it as me,
+an' I was born in Boston."
+
+He did not; for the speaker was as black as the ace of spades,--being a
+sturdy specimen, the knave of clubs would perhaps be a fitter
+representative,--but the dark freeman looked at the white slave with the
+pitiful, yet puzzled expression I have so often seen on the faces of our
+wisest men, when this tangled question of Slavery presents itself,
+asking to be cut or patiently undone.
+
+"Tell me what you know of this man; for, even if he were awake, he is
+too weak to talk."
+
+"I never saw him till I joined the regiment, an' no one 'peared to have
+got much out of him. He was a shut-up sort of feller, an' didn't seem to
+care for anything but gettin' at the Rebs. Some say he was the fust man
+of us that enlisted; I know he fretted till we were off, an' when we
+pitched into old Wagner, he fought like the Devil."
+
+"Were you with him when he was wounded? How was it?"
+
+"Yes, Ma'am. There was somethin' queer about it; for he 'peared to know
+the chap that killed him, an' the chap knew him. I don't dare to ask,
+but I rather guess one owned the other some time,--for, when they
+clinched, the chap sung out, 'Bob!' an' Dane, 'Marster Ned!'--then they
+went at it."
+
+I sat down suddenly, for the old anger and compassion struggled in my
+heart, and I both longed and feared to hear what was to follow.
+
+"You see, when the Colonel--Lord keep an' send him back to us!--it a'n't
+certain yet, you know, Ma'am, though it's two days ago we lost
+him--well, when the Colonel shouted, 'Rush on, boys, rush on!' Dane tore
+away as if he was goin' to take the fort alone; I was next him, an' kept
+close as we went through the ditch an' up the wall. Hi! warn't that a
+rusher!" and the boy flung up his well arm with a whoop, as if the mere
+memory of that stirring moment came over him in a gust of irrepressible
+excitement.
+
+"Were you afraid?" I said,--asking the question women often put, and
+receiving the answer they seldom fail to get.
+
+"No, Ma'am!"--emphasis on the "Ma'am,"--"I never thought of anything but
+the damn' Rebs, that scalp, slash, an' cut our ears off, when they git
+us. I was bound to let daylight into one of 'em at least, an' I did.
+Hope he liked it!"
+
+"It is evident that you did, and I don't blame you in the least. Now go
+on about Robert, for I should be at work."
+
+"He was one of the fust up; I was just behind, an' though the whole
+thing happened in a minute, I remember how it was, for all I was yellin'
+an' knockin' round like mad. Just where we were, some sort of an officer
+was wavin' his sword an' cheerin' on his men; Dane saw him by a big
+flash that come by; he flung away his gun, give a leap, an' went at that
+feller as if he was Jeff, Beauregard, an' Lee, all in one. I scrabbled
+after as quick as I could, but was only up in time to see him git the
+sword straight through him an' drop into the ditch. You needn't ask what
+I did next, Ma'am, for I don't quite know myself; all I'm clear about
+is, that I managed somehow to pitch that Reb into the fort as dead as
+Moses, git hold of Dane, an' bring him off. Poor old feller! we said we
+went in to live or die; he said he went in to die, an' he's done it."
+
+I had been intently watching the excited speaker; but as he regretfully
+added those last words I turned again, and Robert's eyes met
+mine,--those melancholy eyes, so full of an intelligence that proved he
+had heard, remembered, and reflected with that preternatural power which
+often outlives all other faculties. He knew me, yet gave no greeting;
+was glad to see a woman's face, yet had no smile wherewith to welcome
+it; felt that he was dying, yet uttered no farewell. He was too far
+across the river to return or linger now; departing thought, strength,
+breath, were spent in one grateful look, one murmur of submission to the
+last pang he could ever feel. His lips moved, and, bending to them, a
+whisper chilled my cheek, as it shaped the broken words,--
+
+"I would have done it,--but it's better so,--I'm satisfied."
+
+Ah! well he might be,--for, as he turned his face from the shadow of the
+life that was, the sunshine of the life to be touched it with a
+beautiful content, and in the drawing of a breath my contraband found
+wife and home, eternal liberty and God.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE SAM ADAMS REGIMENTS IN THE TOWN OF BOSTON.--CONCLUDED.[1]
+
+THE REMOVAL.
+
+
+"I have been in constant panic," wrote Franklin in London to Dr. Cooper
+in Boston, "since I heard of troops assembling in Boston, lest the
+madness of mobs, or the interference of soldiers, or both, when too near
+each other, might occasion some mischief difficult to be prevented or
+repaired, and which might spread far and wide."
+
+The people wore indignant at the introduction of the troops, and the
+crown officials were arrogant and goading; but so wise and forbearing
+were the popular leaders, that, for ten months, from October, 1768, to
+August, 1769, no detriment came to their cause from the madness of mobs
+or the insolence of soldiers. The Loyalists, in this public order, saw
+the wholesome terror with which military force had imbued the community;
+they said this "had prevented, if it had not put a final period to, its
+most pestilential town-meetings": but they termed this quiet "only a
+truce procured from the dread of the bayonet"; and they held that
+nothing would reach and suppress the rising spirit of independence but a
+radical stroke at the democratic element in the local Constitution. They
+relied on physical force to carry out such a policy, and hence they
+looked on the demand of the people for a withdrawal of the troops as
+equivalent to a demand for the abandonment of their policy and the
+abdication of the Government. The partial removal already made caused
+great chagrin. The report, at first, was hardly credited in British
+political circles, and, when confirmed, was construed into inability,
+inconsistency, and concession by the Administration, and a sign that
+things were growing worse in America.
+
+General Gage had withdrawn the Sixty-Fourth and Sixty-Fifth Regiments,
+the detachment of the Fifty-Ninth, and the company of artillery, which
+left the Fourteenth Regiment under Lieutenant-Colonel Dalrymple and the
+Twenty-Ninth under Lieutenant-Colonel Carr,--the two regiments which
+Lord North termed "the Sam Adams Regiments,"--not enough, if the
+Ministers intended to govern by military force, and too many, if they
+did not intend this. They continued under General Mackay until he left
+for England, when the command devolved on Lieutenant-Colonel Dalrymple,
+the senior officer, under whom they had landed, who was exacting, severe
+in his judgment on the Patriots, and impatient of professional service.
+Commodore Hood and his family also sailed for Halifax. Both Mackay and
+Hood, aiming at reconciliation, and liberal in non-essentials, easily
+won the general good-will. The disuse of the press-gang, which even
+"Junius" was now justifying, and which England had not learned to
+abominate, but which rowelled the differently trained mind of the
+Colonies, was regarded as a great concession to personal liberty; and
+the discontinuance of parades and horse-racing on Sundays was accepted
+as a concession to a religious sentiment that was very general, and
+which, so far from deserving the sneer of being hypocritical, indicated
+the wide growth of respect for things noble and divine. These officers
+seemed, at least, to steer clear of political matters, to keep to the
+line of their profession, and to make the best of an irksome duty. They
+lived on good terms with the popular leaders, were invited to visit the
+common-schools with the Selectmen, appeared at the public festivals,
+and, on their departure, were handsomely complimented in both the Whig
+and Tory journals for the manner in which they had discharged their
+duties. They were, however, no mere lookers-on, and their official
+representations and conclusions were no more far-reaching than those of
+their superiors. Hood, from Halifax, wrote in harsh terms of Boston,
+although he put on record severe and true things of that chronic local
+infliction, the Commissioners of the Customs. His official letters,
+printed this year, were open to sharp criticism, which they received in
+the journals. Not, however, until the publication of the Cavendish
+Debates was it known that General Mackay, who was regarded as uncommonly
+liberal, received every personal attention, and was the most
+complimented by the press, stood up in the House of Commons, soon after
+his arrival in England, and maligned Boston in severe terms. He charged
+the town with being without government; said it was tyrannized over by a
+set of men hardly respectable, in point of fortune; and even had the
+hardihood to say that some of the troops he commanded there had been
+sold for slaves!
+
+Boston, now a subject of speculation in Continental courts, as well as
+of abuse in Parliament, was destined to undergo a still severer trial
+for the succeeding seven months, from August, 1769, to March, 1770,
+during the continuance of the two remaining regiments. This was an
+eventful period, characterized by violent agitation in the Colonies to
+promote a repeal of the revenue acts and an abandonment of the
+intermeddling and aggressive policy of the Ministry; and it was marked
+by uncommon political activity in Boston. The popular leaders, as
+though no British troops were lookers-on, and in spite, too, of the
+protests and commands of the crown officials, steadily guided the
+deliberations of the people in Faneuil Hall; and at times the disorderly
+also, in violations of law and personal liberty that can never be
+justified, intrepidly carried out their projects. The events of this
+period tended powerfully to inflame the public mind. The appeals of the
+Patriots, through the press, show their appreciation of the danger of an
+outbreak, and yet their determination to meet their whole duty. They
+endeavored to restrain the rash among the Sons of Liberty within the
+safe precincts of the law; yet, repelling all thought of submission to
+arbitrary power, they strove to lift up the general mind to the high
+plane of action which a true patriotism demanded, and prepare it, if
+need were, for the majestic work of revolution.
+
+The executive, during an interval thus exciting and important, was in a
+transition-state, from Francis Bernard to Thomas Hutchinson. It was
+semi-officially announced in the journals, when the Governor sailed for
+England, that the Administration had no intention of superseding his
+commission; and it was intimated that the Lieutenant-Governor would
+administer the functions of the office until the return of the chief
+magistrate to his post. These officials, for nine years, had been warm
+personal friends and intimate political associates. Indeed, so close had
+been their private and public relations, that Bernard ascribed the
+origin of his administrative difficulties to his adoption of the
+quarrels of Hutchinson. For a long time, the Governor had been seeking
+and expecting something better in the political line than his present
+office, as a substantial recognition of his zeal; and he had urged, and
+was now urging, the selection of the Lieutenant-Governor for his
+successor in office. He represented that Hutchinson was well versed in
+the local affairs,--knew the motives of the Governor,--warmly approved
+the policy of the Ministry,--had been, on critical occasions, a trusted
+confidential adviser,--and, in fact, had become so thoroughly identified
+with public affairs, that, of the two officials, he (Hutchinson) was the
+most hated by the faction, which the Governor seemed to consider a
+special recommendation. He favored this appointment as a measure that
+would be equivalent to an indorsement of his own administration, and
+therefore a compliment to himself and a blow at the faction. "It would
+be," he said, "a peculiarly happy stroke; for while it would discourage
+the Sons of Liberty, it would afford another great instance of rewarding
+faithful servants to the Crown."
+
+Thomas Hutchinson, descended from one of the most respected families of
+New England, and the son of an honored merchant of Boston, was now
+fifty-seven years of age. He was a pupil at the Old North Grammar
+School, and was graduated at Harvard College, when he entered upon a
+mercantile life. He was not successful as a merchant. Thus early,
+however, he evinced the untiring industry that marked his whole career.
+He had a decided political turn, and, with uncommon natural talent, had
+the capacity and the ambition for public life. An irreproachable private
+character, pleasing manners, common-sense views of things, and politics
+rather adroit than high-toned, secured him a run of popular favor and
+executive confidence so long that he had now (1769) been thirty-three
+years uninterruptedly engaged in public affairs; and he confessed to his
+friends that this concern in politics had created a hankering for them
+which a return to business-pursuits could not overcome. He had reason to
+be gratified at the tokens of public approbation. He was so faithful to
+the municipal interests as a Selectman that the town intrusted him with
+an important mission to England, which he satisfactorily executed; his
+wide commercial knowledge, familiarity with constitutional law and
+history, decided ability in debate, and reputed disinterestedness, gave
+him large influence as a Representative in the General Court; he showed
+as Councillor an ever ready zeal for the prerogative, and thus won the
+most confidential relations with so obsequious a courtier as Bernard; as
+Judge of Probate, he was attentive, kind to the widow, accurate, and won
+general commendation; and as a member of the Superior Court, he
+administered the law, in the main, satisfactorily. He had been Chief
+Justice for nine years, and for eleven years the Lieutenant-Governor. He
+had also prepared two volumes of his History, which, though rough in
+narrative, is a valuable authority, and his volume of "Collections" was
+now announced. His fame at the beginning of the Revolutionary
+controversy was at its zenith; for, according to John Adams, "he had
+been admired, revered, rewarded, and almost adored; and the idea was
+common that he was the greatest and best man in America." He was now,
+and had been for years, the master-spirit of the Loyalist party. It Is
+an anomaly that he should have attained to this position. He had had
+practical experience, as a merchant, of the intolerable injustice of the
+old mercantile system, and yet he sided with its friends; he had dealt,
+as a politician, to a greater degree than most men, with the rights and
+privileges which the people prized, conceded that they had made no ill
+use of them, and yet urged that they ought to be abridged; as a patriot,
+when he loved his native land wisely, he remonstrated against the
+imposition of the Stamp Tax, and yet he grew into one of the sturdiest
+of the defenders of the supremacy of Parliament in all cases whatsoever.
+He exhibited the usual characteristics of public men who from unworthy
+considerations change their principles and desert their party. No man
+urged a more arbitrary course; no man passed more discreditable
+judgments on his patriot contemporaries; and if in that way he won the
+smiles of the court which he was swift to serve, he earned the hatred of
+the land which he professed to love. The more his political career is
+studied, the greater will be the wonder that one who was reared on
+republican soil, and had antecedents so honorable, should have become so
+complete an exponent of arbitrary power.
+
+Hutchinson was not so blinded by party-spirit or love of money or of
+place as not to see the living realities of his time; for he wrote that
+a thirst for liberty seemed to be the ruling passion, not only of
+America, but of the age, and that a mighty empire was rising on this
+continent, the progress of which would be a theme for speculative and
+ingenious minds in distant ages. It was the vision of the cold and clear
+intellect, distrusting the march of events and the capacity and
+intelligence of the people, he had no heart to admire, he had not even
+the justice to recognize, the greatness that was making an immortal
+record,--the sublime faith, the divine enthusiasm, the dauntless
+resolve, the priceless consciousness of being in the right, that were
+the life and inspiration of the lovers of freedom. He conceded, however,
+that the body of the people were honest, but acted on the belief,
+inspired by wrong-headed leaders, that their liberties were in danger;
+and while, with the calculation of the man of the world, he dreaded, and
+endeavored to stem, still, with a statesman's foresight, he appreciated
+and held in respect, the mysterious element of public opinion. He felt
+that it was rising as a power. He saw this power already intrenched in
+the impregnable lines of free institutions. Seeking to know its springs,
+he was a close and at times a shrewd observer, as well from a habit of
+research, in tracing the currents of the past, as from occupying a
+position which made it a duty to watch the growth of what influenced the
+present. His letters, very voluminous, deal with causes as well as with
+facts, and are often fine tributes to the life-giving power of vital
+political ideas, from the pen of a subtle and determined enemy.
+
+When the executive functions devolved on Hutchinson, it had been
+semi-officially announced that the Ministry, wholly out of commercial
+considerations, intended to propose, at the next session of Parliament,
+a repeal of a portion of the revenue acts; and the Patriots were
+pressing, with more zeal than ever, the non-importation agreement, in
+the hope of obtaining, as matter of constitutional right, a total
+repeal. To enforce this agreement, the merchants had held a public
+meeting in Faneuil Hall, adopted a series of spirited resolves, and
+adjourned to a future day; and Hutchinson's first important
+gubernatorial decision had reference to this meeting. He had urged the
+necessity of troops to sustain the authority of the Government. He had
+awarded to them the credit of preventing a great catastrophe. He had
+written that they would make the Boston saints as tame as lambs. It was
+his settled conviction that the Americans never would set armies in the
+field against Great Britain, and if they did, that "a few troops would
+be sufficient to quell them." He was now importuned to use the troops at
+his command to disperse the merchants' meeting at its adjournment. He
+held that this meeting was contrary to law. He characterized its
+resolves as contemptuous and insolent, and derogatory to the authority
+of Parliament. He never grew weary of holding up to reprobation the
+objects which the merchants had in view. And his political friends now
+asked him to make good his professions by acts. But he declined to
+interfere with this meeting. The merchants proceeded to a close with
+their business. Hutchinson's explanation of his course to the Ministry,
+on this occasion, applies to the popular demonstrations which took
+place, at intervals, down to the military crisis. "I am very sensible,"
+are his words, "that the whole proceeding is unwarrantable; but it is so
+generally countenanced in this and in several of the Colonies, and the
+authority of Government is so feeble, that an attempt to put a stop to
+it would have no other effect than still further to inflame the minds of
+the people. I can do no more than represent to your Lordship, and wait
+for such instructions as may be thought proper." And he continued to
+present these combinations of the merchants as "a most certain evidence
+of the lost authority of Government," and as exhibiting "insolence and
+contempt of Parliament." But he complains that they were not so much
+regarded in England as he expected they would be, and that he was left
+to act on his own judgment. He soon saw pilloried in the newspapers the
+names of a son of Governor Bernard and two of his own sons, in a list of
+Boston merchants who "audaciously counteracted the united sentiments of
+the body of merchants throughout North America by importing British
+goods contrary to agreement."
+
+The Lieutenant-Governor again kept quiet, as a town-meeting went on,
+which he watched with the keenest interest, freely commented on in his
+letters, and which is far too important to be overlooked in any review
+of these times. William Bollan, the Colonial Agent in London, sent to
+the popular leaders a selection from the letters of Governor Bernard,
+General Gage, Commodore Hood, and others, bearing on the introduction of
+the troops, which were judged to have aspersed the character, affected
+the rights, and injured the interests of the town. Their publication
+made a profound impression on the public mind, and they became the theme
+of every circle. At one of the political clubs, in which the Adamses,
+the Coopers, Warren, and others were wont to discuss public affairs,
+Otis, in a blaze of indignation, charged the crown officials with
+haughtiness, arbitrary dispositions, and the insolence of office, and
+vehemently urged a town-meeting. One was soon summoned by the Selectmen,
+which deliberated with dignity and order, and made answer to the
+official indictment in a strong, conclusive, and grand "Appeal to the
+World," and appointed, as a committee to circulate it, Thomas Cushing,
+Samuel Adams, Joseph Warren, Richard Dana, Joshua Henshaw, Joseph
+Jackson, and Benjamin Kent,--men of sterling character, and bearing
+names that have shed lustre on the whole country. Reason and truth,
+thus put forth, exerted an influence. Hutchinson felt the force of this.
+"We find, my Lord, by experience," he advised Lord Hillsborough, October
+19, 1769, "that associations and assemblies pretending to be legal and
+constitutional, assuming powers that belong only to established
+authority, prove more fatal to this authority than mobs, riots, or the
+most tumultuous disorders; for such assemblies, from erroneous or
+imperfect notions of the nature of government, very often meet with the
+approbation of the body of the people, and in such case there is no
+internal power which can be exerted to suppress them. Such case we are
+in at present, and shall probably continue in it until the wisdom of
+Parliament delivers us from it."
+
+It would be difficult to say what power the people now assumed that
+belonged only to established authority; they assumed only the right of
+public meeting and of liberty of discussion, which are unquestionable in
+every free country; but the ruling spirit of Hutchinson is seen in this
+fine tribute to the instrumentality of the town-meeting, for he regarded
+the American custom of corporate presentation of political matters as
+illegal, and the power of Parliament as sufficient to meet it with pains
+and penalties. As the committee already named sent forth the doings of
+the town, they said, (October 23, 1769,) "The people will never think
+their grievances redressed till every revenue act is repealed, the Board
+of Commissioners dissolved, and the troops removed."
+
+A few days after this the Lieutenant-Governor was obliged to deal with a
+mob, which grew out of the meanness of importers, whose selfish course
+proved to be a great strain on the forbearing policy of the popular
+leaders. The merchants on the Tory side, among whom were two of
+Hutchinson's sons, persisted in importing goods; and he writes, with a
+good deal of pride, as though it were meritorious, that since the
+agreement was formed these two sons had imported two hundred chests of
+tea, which they had been so clever as to sell. But such was the public
+indignation at this course, that they, too, were compelled to give in to
+the non-importation agreement; and Hutchinson's letters are now severer
+than ever on the Patriots. He characterizes "the confederacy of
+merchants" as a very high offence, and the Sons of Liberty as the
+greatest tyrants ever known. But as he continually predicted a crisis,
+he said, "I can find nobody to join with me in an attempt to discourage
+them." He adds, "If any tumults should happen, I shall be under less
+difficulty than if my own children had been the pretended occasion of
+them; and for this reason Dalrymple tells me he is very glad they have
+done as they have." The immediate occasion of the mob was the dealing of
+the people with an informer on the twenty-eighth of October. They got
+track of him about noon, and, after a long search, found him towards
+evening, when they immediately prepared to tar and feather him. It was
+quite dark. A formidable procession carted the culprit from one quarter
+of the town to another, and threatened to break the windows of all
+houses which were without lights. The Lieutenant-Governor summoned such
+of the members of the Council as were at hand, and the justices of the
+county, to meet him at the Council-Chamber; he requested Dalrymple to
+order the force under his command "to be ready to march when the
+occasion required"; and he "kept persons employed to give him immediate
+notice of every new motion of the mob." Dalrymple, with a soldier's
+alacrity, complied with the official request; but the mob went on its
+course, for "none of the justices nor the sheriff," writes Hutchinson,
+"thought it safe for them to restrain so great a body of people in a
+dark evening,"--and the only work done by the soldiers was to protect
+Mien, the printer, who, being goaded into discharging a pistol among the
+crowd, fled to the main guard for safety. The finale of this mob is thus
+related by Hutchinson:--"Between eight and nine o'clock they dispersed
+of their own account, and the town was quiet."
+
+The intrepid and yet prudent course of the popular leaders and of the
+people, in standing manfully for the common cause in presence of the
+British troops, was now eliciting the warmest encomiums on the town from
+the friends of liberty in England and in the Colonies. The generous
+praise was copied into the local journals, and, so far from being
+received with assumption, became a powerful incentive to worthy action.
+"Your Bostonians," a Southern letter runs, "shine with renewed lustre.
+Their last efforts were indeed like themselves, full of wisdom,
+prudence, and magnanimity. Such a conduct must silence every pretended
+suspicion, and baffle every vile attempt to calumniate their noble and
+generous struggles in the cause of American Liberty." "So much wisdom
+and virtue," says a New-Hampshire letter, "as hath been conspicuous in
+the Bostonians, will not go unrewarded. You will in all respects
+increase until you become the glory of New England, the pride of British
+kings, the scourge of tyrants, and the joy of the whole earth," "The
+patriotism of Boston," says another letter, "will be revered through
+every age." One of these tributes, from a Southern journal, in the
+Boston papers of December 18, 1769, runs,--"The noble conduct of the
+Representatives, Selectmen, and principal merchants of Boston, in
+defending and supporting the rights of America and the British
+Constitution, cannot fail to excite love and gratitude in the heart of
+every worthy person in the British empire. They discover a dignity of
+soul worthy the human mind, which is the true glory of man, and merits
+the applause of all rational beings. Their names will shine unsullied in
+the bright records of Panic to the latest ages, and unborn millions will
+rise up and call them blessed."
+
+This eulogy on Boston is a great fact of these times, and therefore
+ought to have a place in a history of them. It was not of a local cast,
+for it appears in several Colonies and in England; it was not a
+manufacture of politicians, for it is seen in the private letters of the
+friends of constitutional liberty which have come to light subsequently
+to the events; it was not a transient enthusiasm, for the same strain
+was continued during the years preceding the war. The praise was
+bestowed on a town small in territory and comparatively small in
+population. Such were the cities of Greece in the era of their renown.
+"The territories of Athens, Sparta, and their allies," remarks Gibbon,
+"do not exceed a moderate province of France or England; but after the
+trophies of Salamis or Platæa, they expand in our fancy to the gigantic
+size of Asia, which had been trampled under the feet of the victorious
+Greeks." No trophies had been gathered in an American Platæa; there had
+been no great civic triumph; there was no hero upon whom public
+affection centred; nor was there here a field on which to weave a web of
+court-intrigue, or to play a game of criminal ambition;--there was,
+indeed, little that common constructors of history would consider to be
+history. Yet it was now written, and made common thought by an
+unfettered press,--"Nobler days nor deeds were never seen than at this
+time."[2] This was an instinctive appreciation of a great truth; for
+the real American Revolution was going on in the tidal flow of thought
+and feeling, and in the formation of public opinion. A people inspired
+by visions of better days for humanity, luxuriating in the emotions of
+hope and faith, yearning for the right, mastering the reasoning on which
+it was based, were steadily taking their fit place on the national
+stage, in the belief of the nearness of a mighty historic hour. And
+their spontaneous praise was for a community heroically acting on
+national principles and for a national cause. Because of this did they
+predict that unborn millions would hold up the men of Boston as worthy
+to be enrolled in the shining record of Fame.
+
+As the new year (1770) came in, the people were looking forward to a
+meeting of the General Court, always a season of peculiar interest, and
+more so now than ever, for it was certain that the debates in this body
+would turn on the foremost local subject, the removal of the troops. But
+the subject was no longer merely local, for it had become a general
+issue, one affecting not only Boston and Massachusetts, but other towns
+and Colonies, and the interest felt in the controversy was wide and
+deep. "In this day of constitutional light," a New-York essay copied
+into a Boston newspaper runs, "it is monstrous that troops should be
+kept, not to protect the right, but to enslave the continent." While it
+was thus put by the journals, the policy was meant to be of this
+significance by the Ministry; and the letters printed for the first time
+in this monograph attest the accuracy of the Patriot judgment. On purely
+local grounds, also, the presence of the troops continued to be
+deplored. "The troops," Dr. Cooper wrote, January 1, 1770, "greatly
+corrupt our morals, and are in every sense an oppression. May Heaven
+soon deliver us from this great evil!" Samuel Adams said, "The troops
+must move to the Castle; it must be the first business of the General
+Court to move them out of town"; and James Otis said. "The Governor has
+the power to move them under the Constitution." Hutchinson endeavored to
+conciliate the people by making arrangements with General Gage for a
+removal of the main guard from its location near the Town-House, being
+informed that this might satisfy the greater part of the members.
+
+Having taken this precaution, Hutchinson was really anxious for a
+meeting of the General Court. He was in great uncertainty both as to
+public and private affairs. He knew now that Bernard was not to return,
+but he did not know who was to be the successor; he conjectured that it
+might be "that the government was to be put on a new establishment, and
+a person of rank appointed Governor"; and he confessed that he was
+"ignorant of the Ministerial plan" as to the Colonies. The Legislature
+was appointed to convene on the tenth of January. But the November
+packet from England, happening to make an uncommonly short passage,
+brought him a peremptory order, which he received on the evening of the
+third of January, to prorogue the time of the sitting of the General
+Court; and the journals of the next morning contain his Proclamation,
+setting forth that "by His Majesty's command" the Legislature was
+prorogued to the second Wednesday in March. "I guess," Hutchinson
+writes, "that the Court is prorogued to a particular day with an
+intention that something from the King or the Parliament shall be then
+laid before them." "Some of the distant members will be on their journey
+before the Proclamation reaches them; and if the packet had not had a
+better passage than common, my orders would have found the Court
+sitting." As a consequence of this unlooked-for prorogation, the main
+guard continued to be stationed near the Town-House, until a portion of
+it played its tragic part on the memorable fifth of March.
+
+The Lieutenant-Governor was apprehensive that this sudden prorogation
+would cause a great clamor; but he judged that the popular leaders were
+rather humbled and mortified than roused and enraged by it; and he soon
+expressed the conviction that this was the right step. But the favorite
+organ of the Patriots, the "Boston Gazette," in its next issue, of
+January the eighth, indicates anything but humility. Through it James
+Otis, John Hancock, and Samuel Adams spoke kindling words to a community
+who received words from them as things. Otis, in a card elicited by
+strictures on the "unmanly assault, battery, and barbarous wounding" of
+himself by Robinson, declared that "a clear stage and no favor were all
+he ever wished or wanted in court, country, camp, or city"; Hancock, in
+a card commenting on the report that he had violated the merchants'
+agreement, "publicly defied all mankind" to prove the allegation, and
+pledged his coöperation "in every legal and laudable measure to redress
+the grievances under which the Province and the Continent had so long
+labored"; and Samuel Adams, under the signature of "Vindex," tested the
+legality of the prorogation by the terms of the Charter, and adjured
+every man to make it the subject of his contemplation. "We all
+remember," are his weighty words, "that, no longer ago than last year,
+the extraordinary dissolution by Governor Bernard, in which he declared
+he was purely Ministerial, produced another assembly, which, though
+legal in all its proceedings, awaked an attention in the very soul of
+the British empire." He claimed that a Massachusetts executive ought to
+act from the dictates of his own judgment. "It is not to be expected
+that in ordinary times, much less at such an important period as this,
+any man, though endowed with the wisdom of Solomon, at the distance of
+three thousand miles, can be an adequate judge of the expediency of
+proroguing, and in effect of putting an end to, an American legislative
+assembly."
+
+The Lieutenant-Governor had now to meet the severest pressure brought to
+bear on him by the Tory faction for the employment of the troops,
+occasioned by a violation on the part of his sons of their agreement as
+to a sale of goods. They had stipulated with the merchants that an
+importation of teas made by them should remain unsold, and, as security,
+had given to the committee of inspection the key of the building in
+which it was stored. Yet they secretly made sales, broke the lock, and
+delivered the teas. This was done when the non-importation agreement was
+the paramount measure,--when fidelity to it was patriotism, was honor,
+was union, was country,--and when all eyes were looking to see Boston
+faithful. "If this agreement of the merchants," said "Determinatus" in
+the "Boston Gazette," "is of that consequence to all America which our
+brethren in all the other governments and in Great Britain itself think
+it to be,--if the fate of unborn millions is suspended upon it, verily
+it behooves not the merchants only, but every individual of every class
+in city and country to aid and support them, and peremptorily to insist
+upon its being strictly adhered to. And yet what is most astonishing is,
+that some two or three persons, of very little consequence in
+themselves, have dared openly to give out that they will vend the goods
+they have imported, though they have solemnly pledged their faith to the
+body of merchants that they should remain in store till a general
+importation takes place." The merchants met in Faneuil Hall in a large
+and commanding gathering; for it was composed of the solid men of the
+town. After deliberation, they proceeded in a body to the residence of
+the Lieutenant-Governor to remonstrate against the course of his sons.
+Meantime, the ultra Loyalists pressed him to order the troops to
+disperse the meeting; the Commissioners savagely urged, that "there
+could not be a better time for trying the strength of the government";
+and others said, "It were best to bring matters to extremities." The
+commanding officers of the troops now expected work, and prepared for
+it. Dalrymple dealt out twelve rounds of cartridges to the men. But
+Hutchinson involuntarily shrank from the bloody business of this
+programme. He tried other means than force. He appealed to the justices
+of the peace, and through the sheriff he commanded the meeting, in His
+Majesty's name, to disperse. But the intrepid merchants, in a written
+paper, in Hancock's handwriting, averred that law warranted their
+proceeding; and so they calmly adhered to the action that patriotism
+dictated. Hutchinson at length sent for the Moderator, William Phillips,
+of fragrant Revolutionary renown and of educational fame, and stipulated
+to deposit a sum of money to stand for the tea that had been sold, and
+to return the balance of it to the store. The concession was accepted.
+In explanation of his course, and with special reference to the action
+of the Commissioners in this case, Hutchinson pleaded a want of power,
+under the Constitution, to comply with their demand. "They did not
+consider the Constitution," he remarked, "and that by the Charter I can
+do nothing without the Council, the major part of whom are against me,
+and the civil magistrates, many of whom made a part of the body which
+was to be suppressed; so that there could not have been a worse occasion
+[to call out the troops], and I think anything tragical would have set
+the whole Province in a flame, and maybe spread farther."
+
+Thus Hutchinson, as well as Franklin, dreaded the effect of a serious
+collision between the citizens and the troops. At this time the feeling
+was one of sullen acquiescence in their presence. "Molineaux," he says,
+February 18, 1770, "to whom the Sons of Liberty have given the name of
+Paoli, and some others, are restless; but there seems to be no
+disposition to any general muster of the people again." And yet the
+newspapers were now crowded with unusually exciting matter, and so
+continued up to the first week in March: articles about the Liberty-Pole
+in New York being cut down by the military and replaced in a triumphal
+procession by the people; about McDougal's imprisonment for printing
+free comments on the Assembly for voting supplies to the troops; the
+famous address of "Junius" to the King, in which one count is his
+alienation of a people who left their native land for freedom and found
+it in a desert; the details of the shooting, by an informer, of
+Christopher Snider, the son of a poor German, and of the imposing
+funeral, which moved from the Liberty-Tree to the burial-place. The
+importers now feared an assault on their houses; whereupon soldiers were
+allowed as a guard to some, while others slept with loaded guns at their
+bedsides. These things deserve to be borne in mind; for they show how
+much there was to exasperate, when the popular leaders were called upon
+to meet a paroxysm without a precedent in the Colonies.
+
+It seemed to the Patriots astonishing that the Ministry persisted in
+keeping troops in Boston. There was no spirit of resistance to law;
+there was no plot maturing to resist the Government; the avocations of
+life went on as usual; the popular leaders, men of whom any community
+might be proud, averred that their opposition to public measures had
+been prudent and legal, and that they had not taken "a single step that
+could not be fully justified on constitutional grounds"; and the demand
+in the public prints was continuous to know what the troops were wanted
+for, and how they were to be used. On the other hand, the ultra
+Loyalists as continuously represented that the town was full of a
+rebellious spirit, was a nest of disorder, and threatened the leaders in
+it with transportation. Hutchinson seems to have apprehended that this
+misrepresentation had been carried so far as to be suicidal; for he
+advised Lord Hillsborough, that, "in matters that had no relation to the
+dispute between the Kingdom and the Colonies, government retained its
+vigor, and the administration of it was attended with no unusual
+difficulty." This is to the point, and conclusive. This was the truth on
+which the popular leaders rested; and hence it seemed to them a marvel
+that the Ministry, to use the words of Samuel Adams, should employ
+troops only "to parade the streets of Boston, and, by their ridiculous
+merry-andrew tricks, to become the objects of contempt of the women and
+children."
+
+It would be a tedious and profitless task to go over the bickerings and
+quarrels that occurred between the inhabitants and the soldiers. The
+high-spirited citizens, on being challenged in their walks, could not
+keep their temper; the roughs, here as in every place, would have their
+say; and the coarse British soldier could not be restrained by
+discipline; yet in all the brawls, for seventeen months, not a gun was
+fired in an affray. Fist had been met with fist, and club with club; and
+not unfrequently these quarrels were settled in the courts. The nature
+of such emergency as would justify the troops in firing on the people
+was acutely discussed in the newspapers, and undoubtedly the subject was
+talked about in private circles and in the political clubs. "What shall
+I say?" runs an article in the "Gazette." "I shudder at the thought.
+Surely no provincial magistrate could be found so steeled against the
+sensations of humanity and justice as wantonly to order troops to fire
+on an unarmed populace, and more than repeat in Boston the tragic scene
+exhibited in St. George's Fields." It was a wanton fire on an unarmed
+populace that was protected against; and the protest was by men who
+involuntarily shrank from mob-law as they would from the hell of
+anarchy. They apprehended an impromptu collision between the people and
+the troops; they knew that an illegal and wanton fire on the people
+would produce such collision; the danger of this result formed,
+undoubtedly, a large portion of the common talk; and the frequency and
+manner in which the subject was discussed elicited from General Gage the
+rather sweeping remark, that every citizen in Boston was a lawyer. Every
+citizen was interested in the support of public liberty and public
+order, and might well regard with deep concern the threats that were
+continually made, which, if executed, would disturb both. Hutchinson, in
+one of his letters, thus states the conclusions that were reached:--"Our
+heroes for liberty say that no troops dare to fire on the people without
+the order of the civil magistrate, and that no civil magistrate, would
+dare to give such orders. In the first part of their opinion they may be
+right; in the second they cannot be sure until they have made the
+trial."
+
+On Friday, the second of March, in the forenoon, as three soldiers were
+at Gray's Ropewalks, near the head of India Wharf, they were asked by
+one of the workmen to empty a vault. Sharp altercation followed this
+insult, and the soldiers went off, but soon returned with a party of
+their comrades, when there was a challenge to a boxing-match, and this
+grew into a fight, the rope-makers using their "wouldring-sticks," and
+the soldiers clubs and cutlasses. It proved to be the most serious
+quarrel that had occurred. Lieutenant-Colonel Carr, commander of the
+Twenty-Ninth, which, Hutchinson said, was composed of such bad fellows
+that discipline could not restrain them, made a complaint to the
+Lieutenant-Governor relative to the provoking conduct of the rope-maker
+which brought on the affray; and thus this affair became the occasion of
+political consultation, which tended to intensify the animosity between
+the parties.
+
+On Saturday, the report was circulated that the parties who were engaged
+in this affray would renew the fight on Monday evening; on Sunday, Carr
+and other officers went into the ropewalk, giving out that they were
+searching for a sergeant of their regiment; but though on these days
+there was much irritation, the town was comparatively quiet.
+
+On Monday, the Lieutenant-Governor laid the complaint of
+Lieutenant-Colonel Carr before the Council, and asked the advice of this
+body, which gave rise to debate about the removal of the
+troops,--members freely expressing the opinion, that the way to prevent
+collisions between the military and the people was to withdraw the two
+regiments to the Castle. No important action was taken by the Council,
+although the apprehension was expressed that the ropewalk affair might
+grow into a general quarrel. And it is worthy of remark, that, ominous
+as the signs were, the Lieutenant-Governor took no precautionary
+measures, not even the obvious step of having the troops restrained to
+their barracks. His letters, and, indeed, his whole course, up to the
+eventful evening of this day, indicate confidence in the opinion that
+there was no intention on the part of the popular leaders to molest the
+troops, and that the troops, without an order from the civil authority,
+would not fire on the citizens.
+
+Nor was there now, as zealous Loyalists alleged, any plan formed by the
+popular leaders, or by any persons of consideration, to expel the troops
+by force from the town, much less the obnoxious Commissioners of the
+Customs; nor is there any evidence to support the allegation on the
+other side, that the crown officials, civil or military, meditated or
+stimulated an attack on the inhabitants. The Patriots regarded what had
+occurred and what was threatened, like much that had taken place during
+the last seventeen months, as the motions of a rod of power needlessly
+held over the people to overawe them, serving no earthly good, but
+souring their minds and embittering their passions; the crown officials
+represented this chafing of the free spirit at the incidents of military
+rule as a sign of the lost authority of Government and of a desire for
+independence. Among the fiery spirits, accurately on both sides the
+mob-element, the ropewalk affair was regarded as a drawn game, and a
+renewal of the fight was desired on the ground that honor was at stake;
+while to spirit up the roughs among the Whigs, to use Dr. Gordon's
+words,--"the newspapers had a pompous account of a victory obtained by
+the inhabitants of New York over the soldiers there in an affray, while
+the Boston newspapers could present but a tame relation of the result of
+the affray here." These facts account satisfactorily for the intimations
+and warnings given during the day to prominent characters on both sides,
+and for the handbill that was circulated in the afternoon. The course
+things took fully justifies the remark of Gordon, that "everything
+tended to a crisis, and it is rather wonderful that it did not exist
+sooner, when so many circumstances united to hasten its approach."
+
+There was a layer of ice on the ground, a slight fall of snow during the
+day, and a young moon in the evening. At an early hour, as though
+something uncommon was expected, parties of boys, apprentices, and
+soldiers strolled through the streets, and neither side was sparing of
+insult. Ten or twelve soldiers went from the main guard, in King Street,
+across this street to Murray's Barracks, in Brattle Street, about three
+hundred yards from King Street; and another party came out of these
+barracks, armed with clubs and cutlasses, bent on a stroll. A little
+after eight o'clock, quite a crowd collected near the Brattle-Street
+Church, many of whom had canes and sticks; and after a spell of
+bantering wretched abuse on both sides, things grew into a fight. As it
+became more and more threatening, a few North-Enders ran to the Old
+Brick Meeting-House, on what is now Washington Street, at the head of
+King Street, and lifted a boy into a window, who rang the bell. About
+the same time, Captain Goldfinch, of the army, who was on his way to
+Murray's Barracks, crossed King Street, near the Custom-House, at the
+corner of Exchange Lane, where a sentinel had long been stationed; and
+as he was passing along, he was taunted by a barber's apprentice as a
+mean fellow for not paying for dressing his hair, when the sentinel ran
+after the boy and gave him a severe blow with his musket. The boy went
+away crying, and told several persons of the assault, while the Captain
+passed on towards Murray's Barracks, but found the passage into the yard
+obstructed by the affray going on here,--the crowd pelting the soldiers
+with snowballs, and the latter defending themselves. Being the senior
+officer, he ordered the men into the barracks; the gate of the yard was
+then shut, and the promise was made that no more men should be let out
+that evening. In this way the affray here was effectually stopped.
+
+For a little time, perhaps twenty minutes, there was nothing to attract
+to a centre the people who were drawn by the alarm-bell out of their
+homes on this frosty, moonlight, memorable evening; and in various
+places individuals were asking where the fire was. King Street, then, as
+now, the commercial centre of Boston, was quiet. A group was standing
+before the main guard with firebags and buckets in their hands; a few
+persons were moving along in other parts of the street; and the sentinel
+at the Custom-House, with his firelock on his shoulder, was pacing his
+beat quite unmolested. In Dock Square, a small gathering, mostly of
+participants in the affair just over, were harangued by a large, tall
+man, who wore a red cloak and a white wig; and as he closed, there was a
+hurrah, and the cry, "To the main guard!" In another street, a similar
+cry was raised, "To the main guard!--that is the nest!" But no assault
+was made on the main guard. The word went round that there was no fire,
+"only a rumpus with the soldiers," who had been driven to their
+quarters; and well-disposed citizens, as they withdrew, were saying,
+"Every man to his home!"
+
+But at about fifteen minutes past nine, an excited party passed up Royal
+Exchange Lane, (now Exchange Street,) leading into King Street; and as
+they came near the Custom-House, on the corner, one of the number, who
+knew of the assault on the apprentice-boy, said, "Here is the soldier
+who did it," when they gathered round the sentinel. The barber's boy now
+came up and said, "This is the soldier who knocked me down with the
+butt-end of his musket." Some now said, "Kill him! knock him down!" The
+sentinel moved back up the steps of the Custom-House, and loaded his
+gun. Missiles were thrown at him, when he presented his musket, warned
+the party to keep off, and called for help. Some one ran to Captain
+Preston, the officer of the day, and informed him that the people were
+about to assault the sentinel, when he hastened to the main guard, on
+the opposite side of the street, about forty rods from the Custom-House,
+and sent from here a sergeant, a very young officer, with a file of
+seven men, to protect the sentinel. They went over in a kind of trot,
+using rough words and actions towards those who went with them, and,
+coming near the party round the sentinel, rudely pushed them aside,
+pricking some with their bayonets, and formed in a half-circle near the
+sentry-box. The sentinel now came down the steps and fell in with the
+file, when they were ordered to prime and load. Captain Preston almost
+immediately joined his men. The file now numbered nine.
+
+The number of people here at this time is variously estimated from
+thirty to a hundred,--"between fifty and sixty" being the most common
+statement. Some of them were fresh from the affray at the barracks, and
+some of the soldiers had been in the affair at the ropewalks. There was
+aggravation on both sides. The crowd were unarmed, or had merely sticks,
+which they struck defiantly against each other,--having no definite
+object, and doing no greater mischief than, in retaliation of
+uncalled-for military roughness, to throw snowballs, hurrah, whistle
+through their fingers, use oaths and foul language, call the soldiers
+names, hustle them, and dare them to fire. One of the file was struck
+with a stick. There were good men trying to prevent a riot, and some
+assured the soldiers that they would not be hurt. Among others, Henry
+Knox, subsequently General, was present, who saw nothing to justify the
+use of fire-arms, and, with others, remonstrated against their
+employment; but Captain Preston, as he was talking with Knox, saw his
+men pressing the people with their bayonets, when, in great agitation,
+he rushed in among them. Then, with or without orders, but certainly
+without any legal form or warning, seven of the file, one after another,
+discharged their muskets upon the citizens; and the result indicates the
+malignity and precision of their aim. Crispus Attucks, an intrepid
+mulatto, who was a leader in the affair at Murray's Barracks, was killed
+as he stood leaning and resting his breast on a stout "cord-wood stick";
+Samuel Gray, one of the rope-makers, was shot as he stood with his hands
+in his bosom, and just as he had said, "My lads, they will not fire";
+Patrick Carr, on hearing the alarm-bell, had left his house full of
+fight, and, as he was crossing the street, was mortally wounded; James
+Caldwell, in like manner summoned from his home, was killed as he was
+standing in the middle of the street; Samuel Maverick, a lad of
+seventeen, ran out of the house to go to a fire, and was shot as he was
+crossing the street; six others were wounded. But fifteen or twenty
+minutes had elapsed from the time the sergeant went from the main guard
+to the time of the firing. The people, on the report of the guns, fell
+back, but instinctively and instantly returned for the killed and
+wounded, when the infuriated soldiers prepared to fire again, but were
+checked by Captain Preston, and were withdrawn across the street to the
+main guard. The drums beat; several companies of the Twenty-Ninth
+Regiment, under Colonel Carr, promptly appeared in the street, and were
+formed in three divisions in front of the main guard, the front division
+near the northeast corner of the Town-House, in the kneeling posture for
+street-firing. The Fourteenth Regiment was ordered under arms, but
+remained at their barracks.
+
+The report now spread that "the troops had risen on the people"; and the
+beat of drums, the church-bells, and the cry of fire summoned the
+inhabitants from their homes, and they rushed through the streets to the
+place of alarm. In a few minutes thousands collected, and the cry was,
+"To arms! to arms!" The whole town was in the utmost confusion; while in
+King Street there was, what the Patriots had so long predicted, dreaded,
+and vainly endeavored to avert, an indignant population and an
+exasperated soldiery face to face. The excitement was terrible. The care
+of the popular leaders for their cause, since the mob-days of the Stamp
+Act, had been like the care of their personal honor: it drew them forth
+as the prompt and brave controlling power in every crisis; and they were
+among the concourse on this "night of consternation." Joseph Warren,
+early on the ground to act the good physician as well as the fearless
+patriot, gives the impression produced on himself and his co-laborers as
+they saw the first blood flowing that was shed for American liberty.
+"Language," he says, "is too feeble to paint the emotions of our souls,
+when our streets were stained with the blood of our brethren, when our
+ears were wounded by the groans of the dying, and our eyes were
+tormented by the sight of the mangled bodies of the dead." "Our hearts
+beat to arms; we snatched our weapons, almost resolved by one decisive
+stroke to avenge the death of our slaughtered brethren."
+
+Meantime the Lieutenant-Governor, at his residence in North Square,
+heard the sound of the church-bell near by, and supposed it was an alarm
+of fire. But soon, at nearly ten o'clock, a number of the inhabitants
+came running into the house, entreating him to go to King Street
+immediately, otherwise, they said, "the town would be all in blood." He
+immediately started for the scene of danger. On his way, in the
+Market-Place, he found himself amidst a great body of people, some armed
+with clubs, others with cutlasses, and all calling for fire-arms. He
+made himself known to them, but pleaded in vain for a hearing; and, to
+insure his safety, he retreated into a dwelling-house, and thence went
+by a private way into King Street, where he found an excited multitude
+anxiously awaiting his arrival. He first called for Captain Preston; and
+a natural indignation at a high-handed act is expressed in the stern and
+searching questions which the civilian put to the soldier, bearing on
+the vital point of the subordination of the military to the civil power.
+
+"Are you the commanding officer?"
+
+"Yes, Sir."
+
+"Do you know, Sir, you have no power to fire on any body of people
+collected together, except you have a civil magistrate with you to give
+orders?"
+
+Captain Preston replied,--
+
+"I was obliged to, to save the sentry."
+
+So great was the confusion that Preston's reply was heard but by few.
+The cry was raised, "To the Town-House! to the Town-House!" when
+Hutchinson, by the irresistible violence of the crowd, was forced into
+the building, and up to the Council-Chamber; and in a few minutes he
+appeared on the balcony. Near him were prominent citizens, both
+Loyalists and Whigs; below him, on the one side, were his indignant
+townsmen, who had conferred on him every honor in their power, and on
+the other side, the regiment in its defiant attitude. He could speak
+with eloquence and power; throughout this strange and trying scene he
+bore himself with dignity and self-possession; and as in the stillness
+of night he expressed great concern at the unhappy event, and made
+solemn pledges to the people, his manner must have been uncommonly
+earnest. "The law," he averred, "should have its course; he would live
+and die by the law." He promised to order an inquiry in the morning, and
+requested all to retire to their homes. But words now were not
+satisfactory to the people; and those near him urged that the course of
+justice had always been evaded or obstructed in favor of the soldiery,
+and that the people were determined not to disperse until Captain
+Preston was arrested. In consequence, Hutchinson ordered an immediate
+court of inquiry. The Patriots also entreated the Lieutenant-Governor to
+order the troops to their barracks. He replied, that it was not in his
+power to give such an order, but he would consult the officers. They now
+came on to the balcony,--Dalrymple of the Fourteenth Regiment being
+present,--and after an interview with Hutchinson returned to the troops.
+The men now rose from their kneeling posture; the order to "shoulder
+arms" was heard; and the people were greatly relieved by seeing the
+troops move towards their barracks.
+
+The people now began to disperse, but slowly, however. Meanwhile, the
+court of inquiry on Captain Preston was in session, and, after an
+examination that lasted three hours, he was bound over for trial. Later,
+the file of soldiers were also arrested. It was three o'clock in the
+morning before the Lieutenant-Governor left the scene of the massacre.
+And now all, excepting about a hundred of the people, who formed
+themselves into a watch, left the streets. Thus wise action by the crown
+officials, the activity of the popular leaders, and the habitual respect
+of the people for law, proved successful in preventing further carnage.
+"It was Royal George's livery," said Warren, "that proved a shield to
+the soldiery, and saved them from destruction." Hence, a contemporary
+versifier and participator in these scenes was able to write,--
+
+ "No sudden rage the ruffian soldier bore,
+ Or drenched the pavements with his vital gore;
+ Deliberate thought did all our souls compose,
+ Till veiled in gloom the low'ry morning rose."
+
+During the night, the popular leaders sent expresses to the neighboring
+towns, bearing intelligence of what had occurred, and summoning people
+from their beds to go to the aid of Boston; but as the efforts to
+restore quiet were proving successful, the summons was countermanded.
+This action accounts for the numbers who, very early in the morning of
+the sixth of March, flocked into the town. They could learn details of
+the tragedy from the actors in it,--could see the blood, the brains
+even, of the slaughtered inhabitants,--could hear the groans of the
+wounded,--could view the bodies of the dead. This terrible revelation of
+the work of arbitrary power, to a people habitually tender of regard for
+human life, naturally shocked the sensibilities of all; and thus the
+public temper was again wrought up to a fearful pitch of indignation. It
+required the strongest moral influence to restrain the rash, and to
+guide in the forms of law a righteous demand for a redress of grievance
+and for future security.
+
+The Lieutenant-Governor, during the night, had summoned such members of
+the Council as were within reach to meet in the Council-Chamber in the
+morning; and on joining them, he found the Selectmen, with most of the
+justices of the county, waiting for him, to represent, as he says,
+"their opinion of the absolute necessity of the troops being at a
+distance, that there might be no intercourse between the inhabitants and
+them, in order to prevent a further effusion of blood." Such was the
+logic of events which now forced the seventeen months' question of the
+removal of the troops on the civil and military authorities with an
+imperativeness that could not be resisted.
+
+The question, however, came up now in a new shape. To put it in the
+simplest way, and in the very words used on that day,--the people were
+so excited by the shedding of blood on the preceding night, that they
+were resolved no longer to acquiesce in the decision of the constituted
+authorities as to the troops; but, failing in other means, they were
+determined to effect their removal by force, let the act be deemed
+rebellion or otherwise. Not that any conspiracy existed; not that any
+plan had been matured to do this; but circumstances had transferred the
+question from the domain of reason to that of physical force; and the
+only point with the crown officials, during this whole day's
+deliberations, was, whether they would be justified in what appeared to
+them lowering the national standard at the demand of a power which they
+habitually represented as "the faction," or whether they might venture
+to take the responsibility of resisting the demand and of meeting the
+consequences. Well might John Adams say, "This was a dangerous and
+difficult crisis."
+
+The Selectmen expressed to the Lieutenant-Governor the opinion, that
+"the inhabitants would be under no restraint whilst the troops were in
+town." "I let them know," Hutchinson says, "that I had no power to
+remove the troops." They also informed him that they had been requested
+to call a town-meeting, which was the special dread of Hutchinson. As
+the settled determination of the people became revealed, the anxiety of
+the Lieutenant-Governor naturally deepened as to what the day might
+bring forth; and he sent for Colonels Dalrymple and Carr to be present
+in Council and act as military advisers. But the discussions here were
+interrupted by the entrance of a messenger from another assembly,
+bearing the ominous summons for the immediate presence among them of the
+Selectmen.
+
+This summons invites attention to the movements of the people, who had
+been constantly coming in from the neighboring towns, and had now
+gathered in great numbers in and around Faneuil Hall, to use
+Hutchinson's words, "in a perfect frenzy." It was, however, the general
+disposition, volcanic as were the elements, to act with caution,
+deliberation, and in a spirit of unity, and, doubtless, with the
+consideration that the eyes of the friends of their cause were upon
+them, and the name and fame of Boston were at stake. The hours passed,
+and no warrant appeared calling a town-meeting; when, at eleven o'clock,
+the town-records say, "the freeholders and other inhabitants" held a
+meeting, "occasioned, by the massacre made in King Street by the
+soldiery." The town-clerk, William Cooper, acted as the chairman. This
+true and intrepid patriot held this office forty-nine years, which
+speaks for his fidelity to duty, intelligence, devotion to principle,
+and moral worth. "The Selectmen," his clear, round record reads, "not
+being present, and the inhabitants being informed that they were in the
+Council-Chamber, it was voted that Mr. William Greenleaf be desired to
+proceed there and acquaint the Selectmen that the inhabitants desire
+and expect their attendance at the Hall." This was virtually a command,
+and the Selectmen immediately repaired thither. Thomas Cushing was
+chosen the Moderator. He was now the Speaker of the House of
+Representatives; and though not of such shining abilities as to cause
+him to be looked up to in Boston as a leader, and of the moderate class
+of Patriots, yet, by urbanity of manner, a high personal character,
+diligent public service, and fidelity to the cause, he won a large
+influence. It was next voted that Constable Wallace wait upon the
+Reverend Dr. Cooper and acquaint him that the inhabitants desired him to
+open the meeting with prayer. This great divine was a brother of the
+town-clerk, and the pastor of the Brattle-Street Church. He was devoted
+to the Patriot cause, and on the most confidential terms with the
+popular leaders; and besides being rich in genius and learning, he had,
+says Dr. Eliot, a gift in prayer peculiar and very excellent. He
+complied with the request, but no reporter has transmitted the words of
+this righteous man, or described this solemn assembly, as fervent prayer
+now went up for country.
+
+The meeting next voted to invite any citizen to give information of the
+massacre of the preceding evening, "that the same might be minuted by
+the town-clerk"; whereupon several persons related details of the
+tragedy. One said he heard a soldier, after the firing, say, that "the
+Devil might give quarter, he should give none"; another said he heard a
+soldier say, that "his officer told him, that, if the soldiers went out
+that night, they must go armed and in companies"; another related a
+soldier's story of a scheme formed to kill the inhabitants; another
+said, he "descried a soldier who struck down the inhabitants." These
+homely words are life-like glimpses of the spirit of the hour. No speech
+could have been more eloquent, because none could have been better
+calculated to deepen the general conviction and minister to the common
+emotion. However, so many witnesses were ready to testify, that it was
+found to be impracticable to hear all; and a committee was appointed to
+receive and digest the evidence.
+
+Samuel Adams addressed this remarkable meeting. He spoke with a pathos
+peculiar to himself. His manner, naturally impressive, was rendered more
+so by the solemnity of the occasion, and every heart was moved. The
+great hour demanded dignity and discretion in unison with firmness, and
+they were combined in the action of the meeting. It resolved that the
+inhabitants would submit no longer to the insult of military rule. A
+committee of fifteen was chosen to wait on the Lieutenant-Governor, and
+acquaint him that it was the unanimous opinion of the meeting that the
+inhabitants and soldiery could no longer dwell together in safety, and
+that nothing could be rationally expected to restore the peace of the
+town and prevent additional scenes of blood and carnage but the
+immediate removal of the troops; and to say, further, that they most
+fervently prayed his Honor that his power and influence might be exerted
+in order that this removal might be instantly effected. This committee
+well represented the intelligence, the patriotism, the varied interests,
+and whatever there was of true greatness in Boston. The meeting now
+dissolved; when the Selectmen issued a warrant for a regular
+town-meeting to convene at the same place, at three o'clock in the
+afternoon.
+
+It was about noon when the Lieutenant-Governor received the committee of
+the town at the Council-Chamber, the Council being in session. I have
+found no details of what was said by the committee at this interview, in
+urging a compliance with the demand. Hutchinson said he was not prepared
+to reply, but would give an answer in writing, when the committee
+withdrew into another room; and he gives glimpses of what then occurred.
+"I told the Council," he says, "that a removal of the troops was not
+with me; and I desired them to consider what answer I could give to
+this application of the town, whilst Colonel Dalrymple, who had the
+command, was present." Some of the members, who were among the truest
+Patriots, urged a compliance, when the Lieutenant-Governor declared that
+"he would upon no consideration whatever give orders for their removal."
+The result reached this morning was an advice for the removal of one
+regiment, in which the commanding officer concurred. As Hutchinson rose
+from this sitting, he declared that "he meant to receive no further
+application on the subject."
+
+Things wore a gloomy aspect during the interval between the session of
+the Council and the time of the afternoon meeting; for the natural
+effect of the unbending tone of the crown officials was to give firmness
+to the determined spirit of the people. There were consultations between
+members of the Council, the popular leaders, and the commanding
+officers; and now the very men who were branded as incendiaries, enemies
+of Great Britain, and traitors, were again seen quietly endeavoring to
+prevent a catastrophe. Hutchinson, in his History, says it was intimated
+to members of the Council, that, though the commanding officer should
+receive no authoritative order to remove all the troops, yet the
+expression of a desire by the Lieutenant-Governor and Council that it
+should be done would cause him to do it; and on this basis Hutchinson
+was prevailed upon to meet the Council in the afternoon. This was a
+great point gained for the popular cause.
+
+At three o'clock, Faneuil Hall was filled to overflowing with the
+excited population assembled in legal town-meeting. Thomas Cushing was
+again chosen the Moderator; but the place would hold only about thirteen
+hundred, and the record reads, "The Hall not being spacious enough to
+receive the inhabitants who attended, it was voted to adjourn to Dr.
+Sewall's meeting-house,"--the Old South. The most convenient way for the
+people would be to pass into King Street, up by the Council-Chamber, and
+along what is now Washington Street, to the church. As they went, no
+mention is made of mottoes or banners or flags, of cheers or of jeers.
+Thomas dishing said his countrymen "were like the old British commoners,
+grave and sad men"; and it was said in the Council to Hutchinson, "That
+multitude are not such as pulled down your house"; but they are "men of
+the best characters," "men of estates and men of religion," "men who
+pray over what they do." With similar men, men who feared God and were
+devoted to public liberty, Cromwell won at Marston Moor; and so striking
+was the analogy, that at this hour it virtually forced itself on the
+well-read Hutchinson: for men of this stamp had once made a revolution
+in Boston, and as he looked out on this scene, perhaps scanned the
+concourse who passed from Faneuil Hall to the Old South, and read in
+their faces the sign of resolute hearts, he judged "their spirit to be
+as high as was the spirit of their ancestors when they imprisoned
+Andros, while they were four times as numerous." As the burden of
+official responsibility pressed heavily on him, he realized that he had
+to deal with an element far more potent than "the faction" which
+officials had long represented as composing the Patriot band, and that
+much depended on dealing with it wisely. This was not a dependent and
+starved host wildly urging the terrible demand of "Bread or blood"; nor
+was it fanaticism in a season of social discontent claiming
+impossibilities at the hand of power: the craving was moral and
+intellectual: it was an intelligent public opinion, a people with
+well-grounded and settled convictions, making a just demand on arbitrary
+power. Was such public opinion about to be scorned as though it were but
+a faction, and by officials who bore high the party-standard? And were
+men of such resoluteness of character and purpose about to be involved
+in a work of carnage? or would the wielders of British authority avoid
+the extremity by concession? Boston, indeed America, had seen no hour of
+intenser interest, of deeper solemnity, of more instant peril, or of
+truer moral sublimity; and as this assembly deliberated with the sounds
+of the fife and drum in their ears, and with the soldiery in their
+sight, questions like these must have been on every lip,--and they are
+of the civil-war questions that cause an involuntary shudder in every
+home.
+
+The Old South was not large enough to hold the people, and they stood in
+the street and near the Town-House awaiting the report of the committee
+of fifteen, chosen in the morning. The Lieutenant-Governor was now at
+the Council-Chamber, where, in addition to Colonels Dalrymple and Carr,
+there had been summoned Captain Caldwell of the Rose frigate; and
+Hutchinson would, he says, have summoned other crown officers, but he
+knew the Council would not consent to it. He took care to repeat to the
+committee, he says, the declaration which he had made in the morning to
+the Selectmen, the Justices, and the Council,--that "the ordering of the
+troops did not lie with him." As the committee, with Samuel Adams at the
+head, appeared on the Town-House steps, the people were in motion, and
+the word passed, "Make way for the committee!" Adams uncovered his head,
+and, as he went towards the church, he bowed alternately to those on
+each side of the lane that was formed, and repeated the words, "Both
+regiments or none." The answer of the Lieutenant-Governor to the morning
+demand for a total removal of the troops was read to the meeting in the
+church. It was to the effect, that he had conferred with the commanders
+of the two regiments, who received orders from the General in New York,
+and it was not in his power to countermand these orders; but the Council
+desired their removal, and Colonel Dalrymple had signified that because
+of the part which the Twenty-Ninth Regiment had taken in the differences
+it should be placed without delay in the barracks at the Castle, and
+also that the main guard should be removed; while the Fourteenth
+Regiment should be so disposed and laid under such restraint that all
+occasion for future differences might be prevented. And now resounded
+through the excited assembly, from a thousand tongues, the words, "Both
+regiments or none!"
+
+A short debate occurred, when the answer was voted to be unsatisfactory.
+Then another committee was chosen. It was resolved that John Hancock,
+Samuel Adams, William Molineaux, William Phillips, Joseph Warren, Joshua
+Henshaw, and Samuel Pemberton be a committee to inform the
+Lieutenant-Governor that it was the unanimous opinion of the people that
+the reply was by no means satisfactory, and that nothing less would
+satisfy them than a total and immediate removal of the troops. This
+committee was one worthy of a great occasion. Hancock, Henshaw, and
+Pemberton, besides being individually of large and just influence from
+their ability, patriotism, worth, and wealth, were members of the Board
+of Selectmen, and therefore represented the municipality; Phillips, who
+had served on this Board, was a type of the upright and liberal
+merchant; Molineaux was one of the most determined and zealous of the
+Patriots, and a stirring business-man; Warren, ardent and bold, of
+rising fame as a leader, personified the generous devotion and noble
+enthusiasm of the young men; Adams, though not the first-named on the
+committee, played so prominent a part in its doings, that he appears as
+its chairman. He was so widely and favorably known now that he was
+addressed as "the Father of America." Of middling stature, plain in
+dress, quiet in manner, unpretending in deportment, he exhibited nothing
+extraordinary in common affairs; but on great occasions, when his deeper
+nature was called into action, he rose, without the smallest
+affectation, into an upright dignity of figure and bearing,--with a
+harmony of voice and a power of speech which made a strong impression,
+the more lasting from the purity and nervous eloquence of his style and
+the logical consistency of his argument. Such were the men selected to
+speak and act for Boston in this hour of deep passion and of high
+resolve.
+
+The committee, about four o'clock, repaired to the Council-Chamber. It
+was a room respectable in size and not without ornament and historic
+memorials. On its walls were representatives of the two elements now in
+conflict,--of the Absolutism that was passing away, in full-length
+portraits of Charles II. and James II. robed in the royal ermine, and of
+a Republicanism which had grown robust and self-reliant, in the heads of
+Belcher and Bradstreet and Endicott and Winthrop. Around a long table
+were seated the Lieutenant-Governor and the members of the Council with
+the military officers,--the scrupulous and sumptuous costumes of
+civilians in authority, gold and silver lace, scarlet cloaks, and large
+wigs, mingled with the brilliant uniforms of the British army and navy.
+Into such imposing presence was now ushered the plainly attired
+committee of the town.
+
+At this time the Lieutenant-Governor, a portion of the Council, the
+military officers, and, among other officials now in the Town-House,
+though not in the Council, the Secretary of the Province, were sternly
+resolved to refuse compliance with the demand of the people. On the vote
+of the meeting being presented to the Lieutenant-Governor, Adams
+remarked at length on the illegality of quartering troops on the
+inhabitants in time of peace and without the consent of the legislature,
+urged that the public service did not require them, adverted with
+sensibility and warmth to the late tragedy, painted the misery in which
+the town would be involved, if the troops were suffered to remain, and
+urged the necessity of an immediate compliance with the vote of the
+people. The Lieutenant-Governor, in a brief reply, defended both the
+legality and the necessity of the troops, and renewed his old assertion
+that they were not subject to his authority. Adams again rose, and
+attention was riveted on him as he paused and gave a searching look at
+the Lieutenant-Governor. There was in his countenance and attitude a
+silent eloquence that words could not express; his manner showed that
+the energies of his soul were roused; and, in a tone not loud, but deep
+and earnest, he again addressed himself to Hutchinson, "It is well
+known," he said, "that, acting as Governor of the Province, you are, by
+its Charter, the Commander-in-Chief of the military forces within it,
+and, as such, the troops now in the capital are subject to your orders.
+If you, or Colonel Dalrymple under you, have the power to remove one
+regiment, you have the power to remove both; and nothing short of their
+total removal will satisfy the people or preserve the peace of the
+Province. A multitude, highly incensed, now wait the result of this
+application. The voice of ten thousand freemen demands that both
+regiments be forthwith removed. Their voice must be respected,--their
+demand obeyed. Fail, then, at your peril, to comply with this
+requisition. On you alone rests the responsibility of the decision; and
+if the just expectations of the people are disappointed, you must be
+answerable to God and your country for the fatal consequences that must
+ensue. The committee have discharged their duty, and it is for you to
+discharge yours. They wait your final determination." As Adams, while
+speaking, intently eyed Hutchinson, he says, "I observed his knees to
+tremble; I saw his face grow pale; and I enjoyed the sight."
+
+A spell of silence followed this appeal. Then there was low
+conversation, to a whisper, between the Lieutenant-Governor and Colonel
+Dalrymple, who, in the spirit of the unbending soldier, was for
+resisting this demand, as he had been for summary proceedings in the
+case of the meetings. "It is impossible for me," he had said this
+afternoon, "to go any further lengths in this matter. The information
+given of the intended rebellion is sufficient reason against the removal
+of His Majesty's troops." But he now said in a loud tone, "I am ready to
+obey your orders," which threw the responsibility on Hutchinson. All the
+members of the committee urged the demand. "Every one of them,"
+Hutchinson says, "deliberately gave his opinion at large, and generally
+gave this reason to support it,--that the people would most certainly
+drive out the troops, and that the inhabitants of the other towns would
+join in it; and several of the gentlemen, declared that they did not
+judge from the general temper of the people only, but they knew it to be
+the determination, not of a mob, but of the generality of the principal
+inhabitants; and they added, that all the blood would be charged to me
+alone, for refusing to follow their unanimous advice, in desiring that
+the quarters of a single regiment might be changed, in order to put an
+end to the animosities between the troops and the inhabitants, seeing
+Colonel Dalrymple would consent to it." After the committee withdrew,
+the debates of the Council were long and earnest; and, as they went on,
+Hutchinson asked, "What protection would there be for the Commissioners,
+if both regiments were ordered to the Castle?" Several said, "They would
+be safe, and always had been safe." "As safe," said Gray, "without the
+troops as with them." And Irving said, "They never had been in danger,
+and he would pawn his life that they should receive no injury." "Unless
+the troops were removed," it was said, "before evening there would be
+ten thousand men on the Common." "The people in general," Tyler said,
+"were resolved to have the troops removed, without which they would not
+be satisfied; that, failing of other means, they were determined to
+effect their removal by force, let the act be deemed rebellion or
+otherwise." As the Council deliberated, the people were impatient, and
+the members were repeatedly called out to give information as to the
+result, This at length was unanimity. This body resolved, that, to
+preserve the peace, it was absolutely necessary that the troops should
+be removed; and they advised the Lieutenant-Governor to communicate that
+conclusion to Colonel Dalrymple, and to request that he would order his
+whole command to Castle William.
+
+The remark of Dalrymple, as well as the decision of the Council, became
+known to the people, and the word passed round, "that Colonel Dalrymple
+had yielded, and that the Lieutenant-Governor only held out." This
+circumstance was communicated to Hutchinson, and he says, "It now lay
+upon me to choose that side which had the fewest and least difficulties;
+and I weighed and compared them as well as the time I had for them would
+permit. I knew it was most regular for me to leave this matter entire to
+the commanding officer. I was sensible the troops were designed to be,
+upon occasion, employed under the direction of the civil magistrate, and
+that at the Castle they would be too remote, in most cases, to answer
+that purpose. But then I considered they never had been used for that
+purpose, and there was no probability they ever would be, because no
+civil magistrate could be found under whose directions they might act;
+and they could be considered only as having a tendency to keep the
+inhabitants in some degree of awe, and even this was every day
+lessening; and the affronts the troops received were such that there was
+no avoiding quarrels and slaughter." Still he hesitated substantially to
+retract his word; for now a request from him, he knew, was equivalent to
+an order; and before he determined, he consulted three officers of the
+crown, who, though not present in the Council, were in the building, and
+the Secretary, Oliver. All agreed that he ought to comply with the
+advice of the Council. He then formally recommended Colonel Dalrymple to
+remove all the troops, who gave his word of honor that he would commence
+preparations in the morning for a removal, and that there should be no
+unnecessary delay in quartering both regiments at the Castle.
+
+It was dark when the committee bore back to the meeting the great report
+of their success. It was received with expressions of the highest
+satisfaction. What a burden was lifted from the hearts of the Patriots!
+They did not, however, regard their work as quite done. They voted that
+a strong watch was necessary through the night, when the committee who
+had waited on the Lieutenant-Governor tendered their services to make a
+part of the watch, and the whole matter was placed in their hands as "a
+committee of safety." They were authorized to accept the service of such
+inhabitants as they might deem proper. The meeting, then dissolved. A
+few days after, the two regiments were removed to the Castle.
+
+The withdrawal of the troops caused great surprise in England, and long
+deliberations by the Ministry. "It is put out of all doubt," Governor
+Bernard wrote Hutchinson, "that the attacking the soldiers was
+preconcerted in order to oblige them to fire, and then make it necessary
+to quit the town, in consequence of their doing what they were forced to
+do. It is considered by thinking men wholly as a manoeuvre to support
+the cause of non-importation." The Opposition termed it an indignity put
+upon Great Britain, and called upon the Ministry to resent it upon a
+system, or to resign their offices. Lord Barrington, who approved of the
+soldiers' retiring to the Castle, said, that, "where there was no
+magistracy there should be no soldiers; and if they intended to have
+soldiers sent there again, they should provide for a magistracy, which
+could not be done but by appointing a royal Council, instead of the
+present democratical one." The Government were perplexed; but the
+expectation was general, that General Gage, without waiting for orders
+from the Government, would send a reinforcement to Boston, and order the
+whole of the troops into the town. "Every one," Governor Bernard wrote,
+"without exception, says it must be immediately done. Those in
+opposition are as loud as any. Lord Shelburne told a gentleman, who
+reported it to me, that it was now high time for Great Britain to act
+with spirit." The Governor advised Hutchinson, that, should it turn out
+that he had been successful in preventing Captain Preston from being
+murdered by the mob, "Government might be reconciled to the removal of
+the troops." There was much outside clamor, and those who indulged in it
+could not reconcile to themselves "six hundred regular troops giving way
+to two or three thousand common people, who, they say, would not have
+dared to attack them, if they had stood their ground"; and this class
+regarded the affair "as a successful bully." Colonel Barré, in the House
+of Commons, disposed of the question in a few words: "The officers
+agreed in sending the soldiers to Castle William; what Minister will
+dare to send them back to Boston?"
+
+These events stirred the public mind in the Colonies profoundly. The
+Spirit evinced by the people of Boston in the whole transaction raised
+the town still higher in the estimation of the Patriots; annual
+commemorative orations kept alive the tragic scene; and thus the
+introduction of the troops, the question involved in their removal, and
+the massacre and triumph of the people, contributed powerfully to bring
+about that change in affections and principles which finally resulted in
+American Independence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WET-WEATHER WORK.
+
+BY A FARMER.
+
+
+IV.
+
+We are fairly on English ground now; of course, it is wet weather. The
+phenomena of the British climate have not changed much since the time
+when the rains "let fall their horrible pleasure" upon the head of the
+poor, drenched outcast, Lear. Thunder and lightning, however, which
+belonged to that particular war of the elements, are rare in England.
+The rain is quiet, fine, insinuating, constant as a lover,--not wasting
+its resources in sudden, explosive outbreaks.
+
+During a foot-tramp of some four hundred miles, which I once had the
+pleasure of making upon English soil, and which led me from the mouth of
+the Thames to its sources, and thence through Derbyshire, the West
+Riding of Yorkshire, and all of the Lake counties, I do not think that
+the violence of the rain kept me housed for more than five days out of
+forty. Not to say that the balance showed sunshine and a bonny sky; on
+the contrary, a soft, lubricating mist is the normal condition of the
+British atmosphere; and a neutral tint of gray sky, when no wet is
+falling, is almost sure to call out from the country-landlord, if
+communicative, an explosive and authoritative, "Fine morning, this,
+Sir!"
+
+The really fine, sunny days--days you believed in rashly, upon the sunny
+evidence of such blithe poets as Herrick--are so rare, that, after a
+month of British travel, you can count them on your fingers. On such a
+one, by a piece of good fortune, I saw all the parterres of Hampton
+Court,--its great vine, its labyrinthine walks, its stately alleys, its
+ruddy range of brick, its clipped lindens, its rotund and low-necked
+beauties of Sir Peter Lely, and the red geraniums flaming on the
+window-sills of once royal apartments, where the pensioned dowagers now
+dream away their lives. On another such day, Twickenham, and all its
+delights of trees, bowers, and villas, were flashing in the sun as
+brightly as ever in the best days of Horace Walpole or of Pope. And on
+yet another, after weary tramp, I toiled up to the inn-door of "The
+Bear," at Woodstock; and after a cut or two into a ripe haunch of
+Oxfordshire mutton, with certain "tiny kickshaws," I saw, for the first
+time, under the light of a glorious sunset, that exquisite velvety
+stretch of the park of Woodstock, dimpled with water, dotted with
+forest--clumps, where companies of sleek fallow-deer were grazing by the
+hundred, where pheasants whirred away down the aisles of wood, where
+memories of Fair Rosamond and of Rochester and of Alice Lee
+lingered,--and all brought to a ringing close by Southey's ballad of
+"Blenheim," as the shadow of the gaunt Marlborough column slanted across
+the path.
+
+There are other notable places, however, which seem--so dependent are we
+on first impressions--to be always bathed in a rain-cloud. It is quite
+impossible, for instance, for me to think of London Bridge save as a
+great reeking thoroughfare, slimy with thin mud, with piles of umbrellas
+crowding over it, like an army of turtles, and its balustrade steaming
+with wet. The charming little Dulwich Gallery, with its Bonningtons and
+Murillos, I remember as situated somewhere (for I could never find it
+again of my own head) at a very rainy distance from London, under the
+spout of an interminable waterfall. The guide-books talk of a pretty
+neighborhood, and of a thousand rural charms thereabout; I remember only
+one or two draggled policemen in oil-skin capes, and with heads slanted
+to the wind, and my cabby, in a four-caped coat, shaking himself like a
+water-dog, in the area. Exeter, Gloucester, and Glasgow are three great
+wet cities in my memory,--a damp cathedral in each, with a damp-coated
+usher to each, who shows damp tombs, and whose talk is dampening to the
+last degree. I suppose they have sunshine in these places, and in the
+light of the sun I am sure that marvellous gray tower of Gloucester must
+make a rare show; but all the reports in the world will not avail to dry
+up the image of those wet days of visit.
+
+Considering how very much the fair days are overbalanced by the dirty,
+thick, dropping, misty weather of England, I think we take a too sunny
+aspect of her history: it has not been under the full-faced smiles of
+heaven that her battles, revolutions, executions, and pageants have held
+their august procession; the rain has wet many a May-day and many a
+harvesting, whose traditional color (through tender English verses) is
+gaudy with yellow sunshine. The revellers of the "Midsummer Night's
+Dream" would find a wet turf eight days out of ten to disport upon. We
+think of Bacon without an umbrella, and of Cromwell without a
+mackintosh; yet I suspect both of them carried these, or their
+equivalents, pretty constantly. Raleigh, indeed, threw his velvet cloak
+into the mud for the Virgin Queen to tread upon,--from which we infer a
+recent shower; but it is not often that an historical incident is so
+suggestive of the true state of the atmosphere.
+
+History, however, does not mind the rain: agriculture must. More
+especially in any view of British agriculture, whether old or new, and
+in any estimate of its theories or progress, due consideration must be
+had for the generous dampness of the British atmosphere. To this cause
+is to be attributed primarily that wonderful velvety turf which is so
+unmatchable elsewhere; to the same cause, and to the accompanying even
+temperature, is to be credited very much of the success of the
+turnip-culture, which has within a century revolutionized the
+agriculture of Kugland; yet again, the magical effects of a thorough
+system of drainage are nowhere so demonstrable as in a soil constantly
+wetted, and giving a steady flow, however small, to the discharging
+tile. Measured by inches, the rain-fall is greater in most parts of
+America than in Great Britain; but this fall is so capricious with us,
+often so sudden and violent, that there must be inevitably a large
+surface-discharge, even though the tile, three feet below, is in working
+order. The true theory of skilful drainage is, not to carry away the
+quick flush of a shower, but to relieve a soil too heavily saturated by
+opening new outflows, setting new currents astir of both air and
+moisture, and thus giving new life and an enlarged capacity to lands
+that were dead with a stagnant over-soak.
+
+Bearing in mind, then, the conditions of the British climate, which are
+so much in keeping with the "wet weather" of these studies, let us go
+back again to old Markham's day, and amble along--armed with our
+umbrellas--through the current of the seventeenth century.
+
+James I., that conceited old pedant, whose "Counterblast to Tobacco" has
+worked the poorest of results, seems to have had a nice taste for
+fruits; and Sir Henry Wotton, his ambassador at Venice, writing from
+that city in 1622, says,--"I have sent the choicest melon-seeds of all
+kinds, which His Majesty doth expect, as I had order both from ray Lord
+Holderness and from Mr. Secretary Calvert." Sir Henry sent also with the
+seeds very particular directions for the culture of the plants, obtained
+probably from some head-gardener of a Priuli or a Morosini, whose melons
+had the full beat of Italian sunshine upon the south slopes of the
+Vicentine mountains. The same ambassador sends at that date to Lord
+Holderness "a double-flowering yellow rose, of no ordinary nature";[3]
+and it would be counted of no ordinary nature now, if what he avers be
+true, that "it flowreth every month from May till almost Christmas."
+
+King James took special interest in the establishment of his garden at
+the Theobald Palace in Hertfordshire: there were clipped hedges, neat
+array of linden avenues, fountains, and a Mount of Venus within a
+labyrinth; twelve miles of wall encircled the park, and the soldiers of
+Cromwell found fine foraging-ground in it, when they entered upon the
+premises a few years later. The schoolmaster-king formed also a guild of
+gardeners in the city of London, at whose hands certificates of capacity
+for garden-work were demanded, and these to be given only after proper
+examination of the applicants. Lord Bacon possessed a beautiful garden,
+if we may trust his own hints to that effect, and the added praises of
+Wotton. Cashiobury, Holland House, and Greenwich gardens were all noted
+in this time; and the experiments and successes of the proprietor of
+Bednall-Greene garden I have already alluded to. But the
+country-gentleman, who lived upon his land and directed the cultivation
+of his property, was but a very savage type of the Bedford or
+Oxfordshire landholders of our day. It involved a muddy drag over bad
+roads, after a heavy Flemish mare, to bring either one's self or one's
+crops to market.
+
+Sir Thomas Overbury, who draws such a tender picture of a "Milke-Mayde,"
+is severe, and, I dare say, truthful, upon the country-gentleman. "His
+conversation," says he, "amongst his tenants is desperate: but amongst
+his equals full of doubt. His travel is seldome farther than the next
+market towne, and his inquisition is about the price of corne: when he
+travelleth, he will goe ten mile out of the way to a cousins house of
+his to save charges; and rewards servants by taking them by the hand
+when hee departs. Nothing under a _sub-poena_ can draw him to
+_London_: and when he is there, he sticks fast upon every object, casts
+his eyes away upon gazing, and becomes the prey of every cut-purse. When
+he comes home, those wonders serve him for his holy-day talke. If he goe
+to court, it is in yellow stockings: and if it be in winter, in a slight
+tafety cloake, and pumps and pantofles."
+
+The portrait of the smaller farmer, who, in this time, tilled his own
+ground, is even more severely sketched by Bishop Earle. "A plain country
+fellow is one that manures his ground well, but lets himself lye fallow
+and unfilled. He has reason enough to do his business, and not enough to
+be idle or melancholy.... His hand guides the plough, and the plough his
+thoughts, and his ditch and land-mark is the very mound of his
+meditations. He expostulates with his oxen very understandingly, and
+speaks _gee_, and _ree_, better than English. His mind is not much
+distracted with objects, but if a good fat cow come in his way, he
+stands dumb and astonished, and though his haste be never so great, wilt
+fix here half an hours contemplation. His habitation is some poor
+thatched roof, distinguished from his barn by the loop-holes that let
+out smoak, which the rain had long since washed through, but for the
+double ceiling of bacon on the inside, which has hung there from his
+grand-sires time, and is yet to make rashers for posterity. He
+apprehends Gods blessings only in a good year, or a fat pasture, and
+never praises him but on _good ground_."
+
+Such were the men who were to be reached by the agricultural literature
+of the day! Yet, notwithstanding this unpromising audience, scarcely a
+year passed but some talker was found who felt himself competent to
+expound the whole art and mystery of husbandry.
+
+Adam Speed, Gent., (from which title we may presume that he was no
+Puritan,) published a little book in the year 1626, which he wittily
+called "Adam out of Eden." In this he undertakes to show how Adam, under
+the embarrassing circumstance of being shut out of Paradise, may
+increase the product of a farm from two hundred pounds to two thousand
+pounds a year by the rearing of rabbits on furze and broom! It is all
+mathematically computed; there is nothing to disappoint in the figures;
+but I suspect there might be in the rabbits.
+
+Gentleman Speed speaks of turnips, clover, and potatoes; he advises the
+boiling of "butchers' blood" for poultry, and mixing the "pudding" with
+bran and other condiments, which will "feed the beasts very fat."
+
+The author of "Adam out of Eden" also indulges himself in verse, which
+is certainly not up to the measure of "Paradise Lost." This is its
+taste:--
+
+ "Each soyl hath no liking of every grain,
+ Nor barley nor wheat is for every vein;
+ Yet know I no country so barren of soyl
+ But some kind of come may be gotten with toyl.
+ Though husband at home be to count the cost what,
+ Yet thus huswife within is as needful as that:
+ What helpeth in store to have never so much,
+ Half lost by ill-usage, ill huswifes, and such?"
+
+The papers of Bacon upon subjects connected with rural life are so
+familiar that I need not recur to them. His particular suggestions,
+however sound in themselves, (and they generally are sound,) did by no
+means measure the extent of his contribution to the growth of good
+husbandry. But the more thorough methods of investigation which he
+instituted and encouraged gave a new and healthier direction to
+inquiries connected not only with agriculture, but with every
+experimental art.
+
+Thus, Gabriel Platte, publishing his "Observations and Improvements in
+Husbandry," about the year 1638, thinks it necessary to sustain and
+illustrate them with a record of "twenty experiments."
+
+Sir Richard Weston, too, a sensible up-country knight, has travelled
+through Flanders about the same time, and has seen such success
+attending upon the turnip and the clover culture there, that he urges
+the same upon his fellow-landholders, in a "Discourse of Husbandrie."
+
+The book was published under the name of Hartlib,--the same Master
+Samuel Hartlib to whom Milton addressed his tractate "Of Education," and
+of whom the great poet speaks as "a person sent hither [to England] by
+some good Providence from a far country, to be the occasion and
+incitement of great good to this island."
+
+This mention makes us curious to know something more of Master Samuel
+Hartlib. I find that he was the son of a Polish merchant, of Lithuania,
+was himself engaged for a time in commercial transactions, and came to
+England about the year 1640. He wrote several theological tracts, edited
+sundry agricultural works, including, among others, those of Sir Richard
+Weston, and published his own observations upon the shortcomings of
+British husbandry. He also proposed a grandiose scheme for an
+agricultural college, in order to teach youths "the theorick and
+practick parts of this most ancient, noble, and honestly gainfull art,
+trade, or mystery." The work published under his name entitled "The
+Legacy," besides notices of the Brabant husbandry, embraces epistles
+from various farmers, who may be supposed to represent the progressive
+agriculture of England. Among these letters I note one upon "Snaggreet,"
+(shelly earth from river-beds); another upon "Seaweeds"; a third upon
+"Sea-sand"; and a fourth upon "Woollen-rags."
+
+Hartlib was in good odor during the days of the Commonwealth; for he
+lived long enough to see that bitter tragedy of the executed king before
+Whitehall Palace, and to hold over to the early years of the
+Restoration. But he was not in favor with the people about Charles II.;
+the small pension that Cromwell had bestowed fell into sad arrearages;
+and the story is, that he died miserably poor.
+
+It is noticeable that Hartlib, and a great many sensible old gentlemen
+of his date, spoke of the art of husbandry as a mystery. And so it is; a
+mystery then, and a mystery now. Nothing tries my patience more than to
+meet one of those billet-headed farmers who--whether in print or in
+talk--pretend to have solved the mystery and mastered it.
+
+Take my own crop of corn yonder upon the flat, which I have watched
+since the day when it first shot up its little dainty spears of green,
+until now it spindles has been faithfully ploughed and fed and tilled;
+but how gross appliances all these, to the fine fibrous feeders that
+have been searching, day by day, every cranny of the soil,--to the broad
+leaflets that, week by week, have stolen out from their green sheaths to
+wanton with the wind and caress the dews! Is there any quick-witted
+farmer who shall tell us with anything like definiteness what the
+phosphates have contributed to all this, and how much the nitrogenous
+manures, and to what degree the deposits of _humus_? He may establish
+the conditions of a sure crop, thirty, forty, or sixty bushels to the
+acre, (seasons favoring); but how short a reach is this toward
+determining the final capacity of either soil or plant! How often the
+most petted experiments laugh us in the face! The great miracle of the
+vital laboratory in the plant remains to mock us. We test it; we humor
+it; we fondly believe that we have detected its secret: but the mystery
+stays.
+
+A bumpkin may rear a crop that shall keep him from starvation; but to
+develop the _utmost_ capacity of a given soil by fertilizing appliances,
+or by those of tillage, is the work, I suspect, of a wiser man than
+belongs to our day. And when I find one who fancies he has resolved all
+the conditions which contribute to this miracle of God's, and can
+control and fructify at his will, I have less respect for his head than
+for a good one--of Savoy cabbage. The great problem of Adam's curse is
+not worked out so easily. The sweating is not over yet.
+
+If we are confronted with mystery, it is not blank, hopeless, fathomless
+mystery. Our plummet-lines are only too short; but they are growing
+longer. It is a lively mystery, that piques and tempts and rewards
+endeavor. It unfolds with an appetizing delay. Every year a new secret
+is laid bare, which, in the flush of triumph, seems a crowning
+development; whereas it presently appears that we have only opened a new
+door upon some further labyrinth.
+
+Throughout the seventeenth century, the progress in husbandry, without
+being at any one period very brilliant, was decided and constant. If
+there was anything like a relapse, and neglect of good culture, it was
+most marked shortly after the Restoration. The country-gentlemen, who
+had entertained a wholesome horror of Cromwell and his troopers, had,
+during the Commonwealth, devoted themselves to a quiet life upon their
+estates, repairing the damages which the Civil War had wrought in their
+fortunes and in their lands. The high price of farm-products stimulated
+their efforts, and their country-isolation permitted a harmless show of
+the chivalrous contempt they entertained for the _novi homines_ of the
+Commonwealth. With the return of Charles they abandoned their estates
+once more to the bailiffs, and made a rush for the town and for their
+share of the "leeks and onions."
+
+But the earnest men were at work. Sainfoin and turnips were growing
+every year into credit. The potato was becoming a crop of value; and in
+the year 1664 a certain John Foster devoted a treatise to it, entitled,
+"England's Happiness increased, or a Sure Remedy against all Succeeding
+Dear Years, by a Plantation of Roots called Potatoes."
+
+For a long time the crop had been known, and Sir Thomas Overbury had
+made it the vehicle of one of his sharp witticisms against people who
+were forever boasting of their ancestry,--their best part being below
+ground. But Foster anticipates the full value of what had before been
+counted a novelty and a curiosity. He advises how custards, paste,
+puddings, and even bread, may be made from the flour of potatoes.
+
+John Worlidge (1669) gives a full system of husbandry, advising green
+fallows, and even recommending and describing a drill for the putting in
+of seed, and for distributing with it a fine fertilizer.
+
+Evelyn, also, about this time, gave a dignity to rural pursuits by his
+"Sylva" and "Terra," both these treatises having been recited before the
+Royal Society. The "Terra" is something muddy,[4] and is by no means
+exhaustive; but the "Sylva" for more than a century was the British
+planter's hand-book, being a judicious, sensible, and eloquent treatise
+upon a subject as wide and as beautiful as its title. Even Walter
+Scott,--himself a capital woodsman,--when he tells (in "Kenilworth") of
+the approach of Tressilian and his Doctor companion to the neighborhood
+of Say's Court, cannot forego his tribute to the worthy and cultivated
+author who once lived there, and who in his "Sylva" gave a manual to
+every British planter, and in his life an exemplar to every British
+gentleman.
+
+Evelyn was educated at Oxford, travelled widely upon the Continent, was
+a firm adherent of the royal party, and at one time a member of Prince
+Rupert's famous troop. He married the daughter of the British ambassador
+in Paris, through whom he came into possession of Say's Court, which he
+made a gem of beauty. But in his later years he had the annoyance of
+seeing his fine parterres and shrubbery trampled down by that Northern
+boor, Peter the Great, who made his residence there while studying the
+mysteries of ship-building at Deptford, and who had as little reverence
+for a parterre of flowers as for any other of the tenderer graces of
+life.
+
+The British monarchs have always been more regardful of those interests
+which were the object of Evelyn's tender devotion. I have already
+alluded to the horticultural fancies of James I. His son Charles was an
+extreme lover of flowers, as well as of a great many luxuries which
+hedged him against all Puritan sympathy. "Who knows not," says Milton,
+in his reply to the [Greek: EIKÔN BASIAIKÊ], "the licentious remissness
+of his Sunday's theatre, accompanied with that reverend statute for
+dominical jigs and May-poles, published in his own name," etc.?
+
+But the poor king was fated to have little enjoyment of either jigs or
+May-poles; harsher work belonged to his reign; and all his
+garden-delights came to be limited finally to a little pot of flowers
+upon his prison-window. And I can easily believe that the elegant,
+wrong-headed, courteous gentleman tended these poor flowers daintily to
+the very last, and snuffed their fragrance with a Christian gratitude.
+
+Charles was an appreciative lover of poetry, too, as well as of Nature.
+I wonder if it ever happened to him, in his prison-hours at Carisbrooke,
+to come upon Milton's "L'Allegro," (first printed in the very year of
+the Battle of Naseby,) and to read,--
+
+ "In thy right hand lead with thee
+ The mountain nymph, sweet Liberty;
+ And if I give thee honor due,
+ Mirth, admit me of thy crew
+ To live with her, and live with thee,
+ In unreprovèd pleasures free;
+ To hear the lark begin his flight,
+ And, singing, startle the dull night,
+ From his watch-tower in the skies,
+ Till the dappled dawn doth rise;
+ Then to come, in spite of sorrow,
+ And at my window bid good-morrow,
+ Through the sweetbrier, or the vine,
+ Or the twisted eglantine."
+
+How it must have smitten the King's heart to remember that the tender
+poet, whose rhythm none could appreciate better than he, was also the
+sturdy Puritan pamphleteer whose blows had thwacked so terribly upon the
+last props that held up his tottering throne!
+
+Cromwell, as we have seen, gave Master Hartlib a pension; but whether on
+the score of his theological tracts, or his design for an agricultural
+college, would be hard to say. I suspect that the hop was the
+Protector's favorite among flowering plants, and that his admiration of
+trees was measured by their capacity for timber. Yet that rare masculine
+energy, which he and his men carried with them in their tread all over
+England, was a very wakeful stimulus to productive agriculture.
+
+Charles II. loved tulips, and befriended Evelyn. In his long residence
+at Paris he had grown into a great fondness for the French gardens. He
+afterward sent for Le Notre--who had laid out Versailles at an expense
+of twenty millions of dollars--to superintend the planting of Greenwich
+and St. James. Fortunately, no strict imitation of Versailles was
+entered upon. The splendors of Chatsworth Garden grew in this time out
+of the exaggerated taste, and must have delighted the French heart of
+Charles. Other artists have had the handling of this great domain since
+the days of Le Notre. A crazy wilderness of rock-work, amid which the
+artificial waters commit freak upon freak, has been strewed athwart the
+lawn; a stately conservatory has risen, under which the Duke may drive,
+if he choose, in coach and four, amid palm-trees, and the
+monster-vegetation of the Eastern archipelago; the little glass temple
+is in the gardens, under which the Victoria lily was first coaxed into
+British bloom; a model village has sprung up at the Park gates, in which
+each cottage is a gem, and seems transplanted from the last book on
+rural ornamentation. But the sight of the village oppresses one with a
+strange incongruity; the charm of realism is wanting; it needs a
+population out of one of Watteau's pictures,--clean and deft as the
+painted figures; flesh and blood are too gross, too prone to muddy
+shoes, and to--sneeze. The rock-work, also, is incongruous; it belongs
+on no such wavy roll of park-land; you see it a thousand times grander,
+a half-hour's drive away, toward Matlock. And the stiff parterres,
+terraces, and alleys of Le Notre are equally out of place in such a
+scene. If, indeed, as at Versailles, they bounded and engrossed the
+view, so that natural surfaces should have no claim upon your eye,--if
+they were the mere setting to a monster palace, whose colonnades and
+balusters of marble edged away into colonnades and balusters of
+box-wood, and these into a limitless extent of long green lines, which
+are only lost to the eye where a distant fountain dashes its spray of
+golden dust into the air,--as at Versailles,--there would be keeping.
+But the Devonshire palace has quite other setting. Blue Derbyshire hills
+are behind it; a grand, billowy slope of the comeliest park-land in
+England rolls down from its terrace-foot to where the Derwent, under
+hoary oaks, washes its thousand acres of meadow-vale, with a flow as
+charming and limpid as one of Virgil's eclogues. It is such a setting
+that carries the great quadrangle of Chatsworth Palace and its flanking
+artificialities of rock and garden, like a black patch upon the face of
+a fine woman of Charles's court.
+
+This brings us upon our line of march again. Charles II. loved stiff
+gardens; James II. loved stiff gardens; and William, with his
+Low-Country tastes, out-stiffened both, with his
+
+ "topiary box a-row."
+
+Lord Bacon has commended the formal style to public admiration by his
+advocacy and example. The lesson was repeated at Cashiobury by the most
+noble the Earl of Essex (of whom Evelyn writes,--"My Lord is not
+illiterate beyond the rate of most noblemen of his age"). So also that
+famous garden of Moor-Park in Hertfordshire, laid out by the witty
+Duchess of Bedford, to whom Dr. Donne addresses some of his piquant
+letters, was a model of old-fashioned and stately graces. Sir William
+Temple praises it beyond reason in his "Garden of Epicurus," and
+cautions readers against undertaking any of those irregularities of
+garden-figures which the Chinese so much affect. He admires only
+stateliness and primness. "Among us," he says, "the Beauty of Building
+and Planting is placed chiefly in some certain Proportions, Symmetries,
+or Uniformities; our Walks and our Trees ranged so as to answer one
+another, and at exact Distances."
+
+From all these it is clear what was the garden-drift of the century.
+Even Waller, the poet,--whose moneys, if he were like most poets, could
+not be thrown away idly,--spent a large sum in levelling the hills
+about his rural home at Beaconsfields. (We shall find a different poet
+and treatment by-and-by in Shenstone.)
+
+Only Milton, speaking from the very arcana of the Puritan rigidities,
+breaks in upon these geometric formalities with the rounded graces of
+the garden which he planted in Eden. There
+
+ "the crisped brooks,
+ Rolling on orient pearl and sands of gold
+ With mazy error under pendent shades,
+ Ran nectar, visiting each plant, and fed
+ Flowers worthy of Paradise, which not nice Art
+ In beds and curious knots, but Nature boon
+ Poured forth profuse on hill and dale and plain."
+
+Going far behind all conventionalities, he credited to Paradise--the
+ideal of man's happiest estate--variety, irregularity, profusion,
+luxuriance; and to the fallen estate, precision, formality, and an
+inexorable Art, which, in place of concealing, glorified itself. In the
+next century, when Milton comes to be illustrated by Addison and the
+rest, we shall find gardens of a different style from those of Waller
+and of Hampton Court.
+
+And now from some look-out point near to the close of the seventeenth
+century, when John Evelyn, in his age, is repairing the damages that
+Peter the Great has wrought in his pretty Deptford home, let us take a
+bird's-eye glance at rural England.
+
+It is raining; and the clumsy Bedford coach, drawn by stout Flemish
+mares,--for thorough-breds are as yet unknown,--is covered with a
+sail-cloth to keep the wet away from the six "insides." The grass,
+wherever the land is stocked with grass, is as velvety as now. The wheat
+in the near county of Herts is fair, and will turn twenty bushels to the
+acre; here and there an enterprising landholder has a small field of
+dibbled grain, which will yield a third more. John Worlidge's drill is
+not in request, and is only talked of by a few wiseacres who prophesy
+its ultimate adoption. The fat bullocks of Bedford will not dress more
+than seven hundred a head; and the cows, if killed, would not overrun
+five hundred weight. There are occasional fields of sainfoin and of
+turnips; but these latter are small, and no ridging or hurdling is yet
+practised. From time to time appears a patch of barren moorland, which
+has been planted with forest-trees, in accordance with the suggestions
+of Mr. Evelyn, and under the wet sky the trees are thriving. Wide
+reaches of fen, measured by hundreds of miles, (which now bear great
+crops of barley,) are saturated with moisture, and tenanted only by
+ghost-like companies of cranes.
+
+The gardens attached to noble houses, under the care of some pupil of
+Wise, or of Parkinson, have their espaliers,--their plums, their
+pears,[5] and their grapes. These last are rare, however, (Parkinson
+says sour, too,) and bear a great price in the London market. One or two
+horticulturists of extraordinary enterprise have built greenhouses,
+warmed, Evelyn says, "in a most ingenious way, by passing a brick flue
+underneath the beds."
+
+The lesser country-gentlemen, who have no establishments in town, rarely
+venture up, for fear of the footpads on the heath, and the insolence of
+the black-guard Cockneys. Their wives are staid dames, learned at the
+brew-tub and in the buttery,--but not speaking French, nor wearing hoops
+or patches. A great many of the older exotic plants have become
+domesticated; and the goodwife has a flaming parterre at her door,--but
+not valued one half so much as her bed of marjoram and thyme. She may
+read King James's Bible, or, if a Non-Conformist, Baxter's "Saint's
+Rest"; while the husband regales himself with a thumb-worn copy of "Sir
+Fopling Flutter," or, if he live well into the closing years of the
+century, with De Foe's "True-born Englishman."
+
+Poetic feeling was more lacking in the country-life than in the
+illustrative literature of the century. To say nothing of Milton's
+brilliant little poems, "L'Allegro" and "Il Penseroso," which flash all
+over with the dews, there are the charming "Characters" of Sir Thomas
+Overbury, and the graceful discourse of Sir William Temple. The poet
+Drummond wrought a music out of the woods and waters which lingers
+alluringly even now around the delightful cliffs and valleys of
+Hawthornden. John Dryden, though a thorough cit, and a man who would
+have preferred his arm-chair at Will's Coffee-House to Chatsworth and
+the fee of all its lands, has yet touched most tenderly the "daisies
+white" and the spring, in his "Flower and the Leaf."
+
+But we skip a score of the poets, and bring our wet day to a close with
+the naming of two honored pastorals. The first, in sober prose, is
+nothing more nor less than Walton's "Angler." Its homeliness, its calm,
+sweet pictures of fields and brooks, its dainty perfume of flowers, its
+delicate shadowing-forth of the Christian sentiment which lived by old
+English firesides, its simple, artless songs, (not always of the highest
+style, but of a hearty naturalness that is infinitely better,)--these
+make the "Angler" a book that stands among the thumb-worn. There is good
+marrowy English in it; I know very few fine writers of our times who
+could make a better book on such a subject to-day,--with all the added
+information, and all the practice of the newspaper-columns. What Walton
+wants to say he says. You can make no mistake about his meaning; all is
+as lucid as the water of a spring. He does not play upon your wonderment
+with tropes. There is no chicane of the pen; he has some pleasant
+matters to tell of, and he tells of them--straight.
+
+Another great charm about Walton is his childlike truthfulness. I think
+he is almost the only earnest trout-fisher I ever knew (unless Sir
+Humphrey Davy be excepted) whose report could be relied upon for the
+weight of a trout. I have many excellent friends--capital
+fishermen--whose word is good upon most concerns of life, but in this
+one thing they cannot be confided in. I excuse it; I take off twenty per
+cent. from their estimates without either hesitation, anger, or
+reluctance.
+
+I do not think I should have trusted in such a matter Charles Cotton,
+although he was agricultural as well as piscatory,--having published a
+"Planter's Manual." I think he could, and did, draw a long bow. I
+suspect innocent milkmaids were not in the habit of singing Kit
+Marlowe's songs to the worshipful Mr. Cotton.
+
+One pastoral remains to mention, published at the very opening of the
+year 1600, and spending its fine forest-aroma thenceforward all down the
+century. I mean Shakspeare's play of "As You Like It."
+
+From beginning to end the grand old forest of Arden is astir overhead;
+from beginning to end the brooks brawl in your ear; from beginning to
+end you smell the bruised ferns and the delicate-scented wood-flowers.
+It is Theocritus again, with the civilization of the added centuries
+contributing its spangles of reason, philosophy, and grace. Who among
+all the short-kirtled damsels of all the eclogues will match us this
+fair, lithe, witty, capricious, mirthful, buxom Rosalind? Nowhere in
+books have we met with her like,--but only at some long-gone picnic in
+the woods, where we worshipped "blushing sixteen" in dainty boots and
+white muslin. There, too, we met a match for sighing Orlando,--mirrored
+in the water; there, too, some diluted Jaques may have "moralized" the
+excursion for next day's "Courier," and some lout of a Touchstone (there
+are always such in picnics) passed the ices, made poor puns, and won
+more than his share of the smiles.
+
+Walton is English all over; but "As You Like It" is as broad as the sky,
+or love, or folly, or hope.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FRENCH STRUGGLE FOR NAVAL AND COLONIAL POWER.
+
+
+In comparison with our national misfortunes all beside seems trifling.
+Else nothing would so fasten our attention as the French invasion and
+conquest of Mexico. A dependency of France established at our door! The
+most restless, ambitious, and warlike nation in Europe our neighbor! Who
+shall tell what results, momentous and lasting, may follow in the train
+of such events?
+
+What is the explanation of this conquest? Is it the freak of an
+ambitious despot? Or is it only a stroke in the line of a settled
+policy? one fact, which we see, amid a great number of facts which we do
+not see?
+
+This particular enterprise comes close to us. It affronts our pride and
+tramples upon our political traditions. It establishes, what we did not
+wish to see on this Western Continent, another foreign jurisdiction. But
+for more than twenty-five years France has been engaged in a series of
+like enterprises. In places not so near to us, by the same arbitrary
+methods, she has already achieved conquests as important. With
+soft-footed ambition, she has planted her flag and reared her
+strongholds on spots full of natural advantages. But the aim is the same
+everywhere: the reëstablishment of her lost colonial and naval power.
+And the hope of France is, that in the race for mercantile and naval
+greatness she may yet challenge and vanquish the Sovereign of the Seas.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The peace of 1815 left France with her naval and colonial power broken
+apparently beyond hope. Even in the thirteen years preceding that peace
+England had taken or destroyed not less than six hundred of her
+war-ships. In the Mediterranean, on the Atlantic, amid the islands of
+the West Indies, in the far-off golden East, wherever contending, fleet
+against fleet, or ship with ship, everywhere she had been vanquished and
+driven from the sea. That boundless colonial empire, of which Dupleix in
+the East dreamed, and for whose establishment in the West Montcalm
+fought and died, had shrunk to a few fishing-ports off the Gulf of St.
+Lawrence, a few sugar-islands in the West Indies, and some unarmed
+factories dotting the coasts of Africa and the shores of Hindostan, and
+existing by British grace and permission. To so low an estate had fallen
+that towering ambition which thought to exercise uncontrolled dominion
+over this continent, to rule with more than regal sway the rich islands
+and peninsulas of Asia, and to dictate peace to fallen England from the
+guns of her armadas. After five wars waged with no craven spirit in less
+than three-quarters of a century, after she had exhausted every resource
+and more than once banded against her island foe every naval power in
+Europe, she was forced to succumb to British perseverance and to the
+gallantry of British sailors. The peace, which came not a moment too
+soon, found her with a navy literally annihilated, and with little
+remaining of her colonial empire but the memory. When we compare this
+hopeless failure with the mercantile activity and naval force of Modern
+France,--when we call up, in imagination, her new colonies, the germs
+almost of empires,--we cannot admire too much the courage and energy
+which have called into existence such magnificent resources. To what are
+we to attribute this stupendous change? What have been the methods of
+this growth? By what steps has this grand progress from weakness to
+strength been achieved?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In such a work of restoration, France had everything to create,--ships,
+armaments, machinery, and sailors even, to replace those who had fallen
+in the front of battle. To produce capacity of production was her first
+work,--to establish new ports or replenish old ones, to build docks, to
+rear workshops, to gather materials. This is what she has been doing.
+Silently and steadily she has been laying the foundations of maritime
+greatness. Her ports, in everything which contributes to naval
+efficiency,--in size, in mechanical appliances, in concentration upon
+one spot of all the trades and all the resources necessary for the
+construction and repair of war-ships,--excel all other naval depots in
+the world.
+
+This is no exaggeration. There is the port of Cherbourg. Originally it
+was little more than an open bay, hollowed by the waters of the English
+Channel in the French coast, with a rocky shore exposed to every
+northern blast. But it was situated just where France needed a harbor,
+midway on her northern coast, facing England. Across this open bay, as a
+chord subtends its arc, a gigantic sea-wall has been stretched. Built in
+deep water more than a mile from the head of the bay, it extends almost
+from shore to shore. It is nearly three miles long. It is scarcely less
+than nine hundred feet wide at its base. Rising from the bed of the sea
+sixty-six feet, it is firm enough to bear up fortresses strong as human
+engineering can rear. This is the famous _digue_ of Cherbourg. Its
+construction has been a seventy years' battle with the elements. Many
+times the waves have destroyed the work of years. Once a furious tempest
+swept away the whole superstructure, with its forts, armaments,
+barracks, and even garrison. But failure has only awakened fresh energy,
+and it stands now complete and rooted in the sea like a reef. At each
+end of the _digue_, between it and the main land, are broad
+ship-channels, affording a free passage at all tides to the largest
+ships. Thus science has called into existence a safe harbor, protected
+from the assaults of the sea by its granite barrier,--protected none the
+less from man's assaults by the concentric fire of more than six hundred
+guns.
+
+This is but the exterior of Cherbourg. In the bosom of the rocky cliffs
+of its western shore three basins or docks have been hewn with gigantic
+toil. The first, finished in 1813, is 950 feet long, 768 feet wide, and
+55 feet deep, and will hold securely fifteen ships of the line. The
+second, of somewhat smaller dimensions, was completed in 1829, and will
+float a dozen ships. The third, far larger than either, was opened with
+great ceremony in 1858: it is 1365 feet long, 650 feet wide, and 60 feet
+deep, and will contain eighteen or twenty ships of the largest size. On
+the sides of these basins are twelve building-slips and seven docks. And
+radiating from them, and in close contiguity, are arsenals, storehouses,
+timber-yards, ropewalks, sail-lofts, bakeries, and machine-shops capable
+of turning out marine engines, anchors, cables, and indeed every piece
+of iron-work which enters into the construction of a ship. It is no vain
+boast that an army of a hundred thousand men can be embarked any fine
+morning at Cherbourg, and that the fleet necessary for its transport can
+be built and armed and equipped and protected to the hour of its
+departure in this fortified haven.
+
+Yet Cherbourg is but one of five ports equally efficient, equally
+protected, and equally furnished with the products of mechanic and
+nautical invention. Brest, L'Orient, and Rochefort, on the west, have
+far greater natural and scarcely less acquired advantages; while the old
+port of Toulon on the Mediterranean, old only in name, has been so
+enlarged and strengthened, that it can supply for the southern waters
+all and more than Cherbourg does for the northern. One fact will show to
+what an extent this power of naval production has been carried. In these
+five ports are some eighty building-slips or houses, and twenty-five
+docks, and, connected with them, all the materials, all the trades, all
+the labor-saving machines, all the mechanical forces, which the
+nineteenth century knows. If she wished, France could build at the same
+time forty ships of the line and forty frigates, while twenty-five more
+were undergoing repairs. The result of all this activity is, that, in
+extent, in completeness, in concentration of forces upon the right spot,
+the naval ports and dockyards of France are absolutely unequalled. And
+the work goes on. To-day twenty-two thousand men are employed upon naval
+works. Within six months a wet dock has been completed at Toulon, and
+another at L'Orient, while at Brest great ranges of workshops are
+hastening to completion; and it is whispered that at Cherbourg another
+basin is, like its predecessors, to be chiselled out of the solid rock.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Do we ask now what France has gained, in fleets and armaments, from this
+immense work of preparation? Everything. Not to dwell upon
+sailing-ships, which the progress of invention has made of inferior
+worth, she has a steam-navy second to that of no power in Europe. Her
+present ruler has fully appreciated the importance of that new element
+in naval warfare, steam,--an element all the more important to France,
+that it tends to lower the value of mere seamanship, in which she has
+always been deficient, and to increase the value of scientific knowledge
+and training, in which she has ever been with the foremost. For ten
+years her energy has been tasked to produce steamships of the greatest
+power and of the finest models. Since 1852 her ships of the line have
+increased from two to forty, and her frigates from twenty-one to
+forty-six. A fleet has thus been created which is numerically equal to
+that of England, and which, so far as these things depend upon the
+stanchness of the ships and the weight of the armaments, is perhaps in
+force and efficiency superior.
+
+If we turn our attention to iron-clad ships, we shall see best displayed
+the sagacity, energy, and secretiveness of Louis Napoleon. In the
+Crimean War, three floating batteries covered with iron slabs, and each
+mounting eighteen fifty-pounders, silenced the Russian fort at Kinburn.
+This was a lesson it would seem that any one might learn. Louis Napoleon
+did not fail to learn it. If a ship can be made invulnerable, or nearly
+so, in every part, then of what avail is that strategy which secures
+choice of position, and which, of old, almost decided the battle? Will
+not he come off victor who can produce guns from which the heaviest shot
+may be hurled at the highest velocity, and gunners who shall launch them
+on their errand of destruction with the greatest accuracy? The French
+emperor has fairly overreached his island rivals. While they were
+experimenting, he laid the keels of two iron-clads of six thousand tons
+burden. In 1859 he ordered the construction of twenty steel-clad
+frigates and fifty gunboats. Lord Clarence Paget declared in debate last
+March, that, while England had, finished or constructing, only sixteen
+iron-clad frigates, France had thirty-one. And even this takes no
+account of floating-batteries and gunboats, wholly or in part protected,
+and of which, if we are to trust her papers, France has an almost
+fabulous number.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But who shall man this fleet? Where are the skilful mariners to make
+efficient these tremendous elements of naval power? It was Lord Nelson,
+I think, who exclaimed, when he saw the stanch ships of Spain, "Thank
+God, Spaniards cannot build men!" The recent changes in naval
+construction, decreasing perhaps the relative worth of mere seamanship,
+may have made the exclamation less pertinent than of old. But, after
+all, on the rude and stormy ocean, proverbially fickle and uncertain,
+nothing can take the place of sailors,--of brave and skilful men,
+trained by long struggle with wind and wave, calm in danger, apt in
+emergencies, finding the narrow path of safety where common eyes see
+only peril and ruin. France understands tins. She knows how many of her
+past humiliations can be traced directly to defective seamanship. But
+where to seek the remedy? How to find or make sailors fit to contend
+with those who were almost born and bred on the restless surge? By what
+methods, with a slender commercial marine and a people reluctant to
+encounter the hardships and dangers of sea-life, to fill up the scanty
+roll of her able seamen? That is the problem France had to solve; and
+she has done everything to solve it,--but remove impossibilities.
+
+The first counsel of wisdom was to make the number of her sailors
+greater. France has, at the most liberal estimate, only one hundred and
+fifty thousand men at all conversant with the sea; while England has,
+including boatmen, fishermen, coasters, and sailors of long voyages, the
+enormous number of eight hundred thousand. Remove this disproportion and
+you settle the whole question. Unfortunately, this is a matter in which
+government can do but little, while national tastes and habits do
+everything. No despotism can make a commercial marine where no
+commercial spirit is. And no voice, charm it ever so wisely, can draw
+the peasant of France from his vine-clad hills and plains. The French
+rulers have done what they could. They have fostered, with a steady and
+liberal hand, the fisheries. Every spring, twenty thousand men have set
+sail to that best nursery of seamanship,--the Banks of Newfoundland.
+These men are paid a bounty by Government, and, in return, are subjected
+to a naval discipline, and, upon an emergency, are liable at a moment's
+notice to enter into the naval service. To quicken mercantile
+enterprise, by which alone mariners can be called into existence,
+enormous subsidies have been paid to the great lines of steamers to
+Brazil and the East. And the yearning for colonies, which in our day has
+led to almost simultaneous attempts to found settlements in both
+hemispheres and in all waters, has no doubt for a leading cause the
+desire to build up a mercantile marine, and with it a numerous body of
+expert seamen. If these efforts have not accomplished all that their
+projectors could wish, it is not because their plans lacked sagacity,
+but because it is hard to put the genius of the sea into the breasts of
+men who are essentially landsmen.
+
+To increase the number of French sailors would unquestionably be the
+best possible method of adding to French naval power. But suppose that
+this cannot be done. Supposes that there is in the heart of the French
+people an invincible attachment to the soil, which makes them deaf to
+every siren of the sea. What is the next counsel of wisdom? This, is it
+not? To make what sailors you have efficient and available for naval
+emergencies. In this respect the French authorities have achieved an
+entire success. Every sailor, nay, every man whose employment savors at
+all of maritime life, though he be only a boatman plying the river, or a
+laborer in harbor or dock, is enrolled in what is called the marine
+inscription,--thenceforward in all times of need to be called into
+active service. This puts the whole seafaring population at the disposal
+of Government. Nor is this all. Regular drafts are made upon the seamen;
+and it is computed that in every period of nine years all the sailors of
+France serve in their turn in the navy. They are trained in all that
+belongs to naval duty: in the use of ships' guns, in the sailing of
+great ships, and in the evolutions of fleets. No matter how sudden the
+call, or from what direction the sailors are taken, no French fleet
+leaves or can leave port with a crew of green hands.
+
+The training which is given to sailors actually in service is an equally
+important matter. The French Admiralty keeps no drones in its employ;
+certainly it does not promote them to places of trust. Honors are won,
+not bought. Every step up, from midshipman to admiral, must be the
+result of honorable service, and actual proficiency both in the theory
+and practice of a sailor's profession. The modern French naval officer
+is master of his business, fit to compete with the best skill of the
+best maritime races. Then the sailors themselves are trained. Even in
+time of peace, twenty-five thousand are kept in service. Gathered on
+board great experimental fleets, officers and men alike are schooled in
+all branches of nautical duty. In port or out of it, they are not idle.
+Every day a prescribed routine of exercise is rigidly enforced. Great
+have been the results. The French sailor of 1863 is not a reproduction
+of the sailor of 1800. In alertness, in knowledge, in silent obedience,
+he is a great improvement upon his predecessor. Actual experiment shows
+that a French crew will weigh anchor, spread and furl sail, replace
+spars or running-ringing, lower or raise topmasts, or perform any other
+duty pertaining to a ship, with as much celerity as the crew of any
+other nation. And no confusion, no babbling of many voices, such as the
+British writers of the last generations delighted to describe, mars the
+beauty of the evolutions. One mind directs, and one voice alone breaks
+the stillness. Since the Crimean War, the English speak with respect of
+French seamanship; and though they do not believe that it is equal to
+their own, they do not scruple to allow that a naval battle would be
+disputed now with a fierceness hitherto unknown.
+
+All that sagacity and experience would prompt has been attempted. All
+that training and discipline can do has already been accomplished. Yet
+there is one source of weakness for which there can be no remedy. France
+has no naval reserves. And if she war with England, she will need them.
+To put her marine on a war-basis would require all her available seamen.
+To fill the gaps of war, she has not, and she cannot have, until a truly
+commercial spirit grows up in the hearts of her people, the multitudes
+of reserved men, more familiar with the sea than the land, such as swarm
+in English ports. Yet, with every deduction, her capacity of naval
+production, her strong fleets, and her trained seamen make her a naval
+power whose might no one can estimate, and whose assault any nation may
+well shun by all means except the sacrifice of honor and rights.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If now we turn from the naval progress of France to her recent colonial
+enterprises, we shall find fresh evidence that she has resumed that
+contest which came to so disastrous a close fifty years ago. The old
+dream of colonial empire has come back again. This was inevitable. A
+great nation like France cannot always drink the cup of humiliation.
+With an ambition no less high and arrogant than that which pervades the
+British mind, she would plant far and wide French ideas and
+civilization. While England has colonies scattered in every part of the
+habitable globe, while Holland has almost monopolized the rich islands
+of the Eastern Archipelago, and while even Spain has Manila in the East
+and Cuba in the West, it could hardly be expected that France, the equal
+of either, and in some respects the superior of all, should rest content
+with a virtual exclusion from everything but her narrow
+home-possessions.
+
+And then, however disguised, there is in the heart of France an intense
+naval rivalry of England. Though the stern logic of events has been
+against her more than once, she does not accept the verdict. She means
+to revise it with a strong hand. But she must have a navy, and a navy
+cannot exhibit its highest vigor, unless it have a just foundation in an
+energetic, wide-ranging commerce. And such a commerce cannot exist
+except it have its depots and its agencies, its outlets and its markets,
+everywhere. Above all, we are to seek the source of this new colonial
+ambition in the character and purposes of that singular man who controls
+the destinies of France. Not even his enemies would now question his
+ability. The power he wields in Europe, the impression he has stamped
+upon its policy, the skill with which he has made even his foes minister
+to his greatness, all bear witness to it. But no one can study him in
+the light of the past and not see that his is no ordinary ambition. To
+be the ruler of one kingdom does not fill out its measure. To be the
+arbiter of the fortunes of states, the genius who shall change the
+current of affairs and shape the destiny of the future,--to exercise a
+power in every part of the globe, and to have a name familiar in every
+land and beneath every sun,--this is his ambition. No wonder that under
+such a ruler France has embarked in a career of colonial aggrandizement
+whose limit no one can foresee. The same hand which curbed the despot of
+the North, and made the fair vision of Italian unity a solid reality,
+may well think to place a puppet king on the throne of the Aztecs, or to
+carve rich provinces out of Farther India.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+France made her first practical essay in colonization by her conquest of
+Algiers. A Dey once said to an English consul, "The Algerines are a
+company of rogues, and I am their captain." The definition cannot be
+improved. That such a power should have been permitted to exist and
+ravage is one of the anomalies of modern history. Yet within the memory
+of living men this hoard of pirates flaunted its barbarism in the face
+of the civilization of the nineteenth century. But in 1830 the Dey
+filled the cup of wrath to the brim. He inflicted upon the French
+consul, in full levee, the gross insult of a blow in the face. The
+expedition sent to revenge the insult showed upon what a hollow
+foundation this savage power rested. The army landed without opposition.
+In five days it swept before it in hopeless rout the wreck of the
+Algerine forces. In three weeks it breached and captured the corsair's
+strongholds. The history of the French occupation of Algeria is a tale
+of unceasing martial exploits, by which France has extended her empire
+six hundred miles along the shores of the Mediterranean, and inland
+fifty miles,--two hundred miles, according, we had almost said, to the
+position of the last Arab or Kabyle raid and insurrection.
+
+Whatever else Algeria may or may not have done for France, it certainly
+has furnished a field whereon to train soldiers. Here seventy-five
+thousand men, day and night, have watched and fought a wily foe. Here
+all the great soldiers of the Empire, Arnand, Pelissier, Canrobert,
+Bosquet, have won their first laurels. Here, amid the exigencies of wild
+desert and mountain campaigning, has grown up that marvellous body of
+soldiers, the Zouaves: "picked men, short of stature, broad-shouldered,
+deep-chested, bull-necked," agile as goats, tolerant of thirst and
+hunger, outmarching, outfighting, and outenduring the Desert Arab; men
+who have never turned their backs upon a foe. Subtract from the army of
+Louis Napoleon the heroes of Algeria, and you leave behind a body out of
+which the fiery soul has fled.
+
+The commercial results are not quite so satisfactory. The exports,
+indeed, have risen to fifteen millions of dollars, and the imports to
+twenty-five millions more; while some two hundred thousand Europeans
+have made their home in the Colony, and a few hundred square miles have
+been subjected to European culture. But as the yearly cost of the
+occupation is fifteen million of dollars, the net profit cannot be
+great. Algeria, however, is the safety-valve of France, giving active
+employment to the idle, the discontented, and the revolutionary; and the
+Government, on that account, may consider that the money is well
+expended.
+
+One consequence of the occupation of Algeria has generally been
+overlooked,--its naval result. Hitherto France had absolutely no good
+port in the Mediterranean (if we except those of Corsica) but Toulon and
+Marseilles. It was absolutely less at home in its own sea than England.
+The new conquest gave it a strip of coast on the southern border of the
+sea, but no port. The harbor of Algiers, with the exception of a little
+haven artificially protected and capable of holding insecurely a dozen
+vessels, was much like that of Cherbourg, an open bay, facing northward.
+The storms sweep it with such fury that not less than twenty vessels
+have been driven ashore in one gale. But the French genius seems to
+delight in such struggles for empire with the waves. Almost with the
+taking of the citadel the engineer began his work. Two jetties, as they
+are called, were pushed out from the land into deep water,--one from
+the mole on the north, half a mile long, and the other from Point
+Bab-Azoum on the south, a third of a mile long. In 1850 these were so
+far complete as to inclose a safe harbor of two hundred acres. But not
+content, the French have already planned, and possibly are now finished,
+still other works, by which the perilous roadstead outside this harbor
+shall be transformed into a secure anchorage of sixteen hundred acres.
+Past events warrant us in believing that these improvements will be
+pursued with no slack hand, until astonished Europe finds another
+Cherbourg, a safe harbor, ample means of repair, and frowning guns to
+repel all invaders. Imprudent Young France, indeed, whispers now that
+Algiers makes the Mediterranean a French lake. But that is a little
+premature. While Gibraltar and Malta hold safely their harbors, and
+England's naval power is unbroken, no nation can truly make this boast.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The next enterprise of France was hardly so creditable to her as the
+Algerine conquest. Midway in the Pacific is the island of Tahita or
+Otaheite,--as fair a gem as the sun ever looked down upon. The soft and
+balmy air,--the undulating surface, rising to mountains and sinking into
+deep valleys, luxuriant with tropical verdure,--the distant girdle of
+coral reefs, which holds the island set in a circlet of tranquil blue
+waters,--the gentle and indolent temper of the natives,--have all
+conspired to throw an air of romance around the very name Otaheite. The
+Christian world is bound to it by another tie. For thither came
+Protestant missionaries, drawn by the reports of the tractable
+disposition of the islanders, and labored with such success that in 1817
+the king and all his subjects espoused Christianity.
+
+Into this island Eden discord came in the guise of a Roman catechist,
+who was sent thither for the express purpose of proselyting. As if aware
+of the nature of his ungracious task, he disguised his real character.
+But he was detected, and, together with a companion who had joined him,
+was dismissed from the island by Queen Pomare, who dreaded the sectarian
+strife his presence would awaken. This was her whole offence. Four years
+later, in 1838, when the whole transaction might well have been
+forgotten, Captain De Petit Thouars appeared in the French frigate
+Venus, and demanded and obtained satisfaction in the sum of two thousand
+piastres Spanish, and freedom for Catholic worship. In two subsequent
+visits, though no new offence had been given, he increased the severity
+of his demands, first putting the island under a protectorate, and
+finally, in 1843, taking full possession of it as a French colony. The
+helpless Queen appealed to Louis Philippe, who returned the island, but
+reaffirmed the protectorate.
+
+This same French protectorate is a rare piece of ponderous irony. The
+French governor collects all export and import duties, writes all
+state-papers, assembles and dismisses the island legislature according
+to his good pleasure, doles out to the Queen a yearly allowance of a
+thousand pounds, puts her in duress in her own house, if her conduct
+displeases him, and will not allow her to see strangers, except by his
+permission. Few will believe that zeal for the honor of the Catholic
+Church prompted Louis Philippe to inflict so disproportioned a
+punishment. That the island is the best victualling-station in the South
+Pacific is a far greater sin, and one for which there could be in
+covetous eyes no adequate punishment, except that seizure which is so
+modestly termed a protectorate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Pass now from the Pacific to the Indian Ocean. There is the little rocky
+island of St. Paul, situated in the same latitude as Cape Town and
+Melbourne; and, planted with singular accuracy equidistant from the two,
+it is the only place of shelter in the long route between them. Its
+harbor, if harbor it may be called, is the most secure, the most
+secluded, and the most romantic, perhaps, in the whole world. St. Paul
+is of volcanic origin. It is, indeed, little more than an extinct
+crater with a narrow rim of land around it to separate it from the sea.
+Through this rim the waters of the great Indian Ocean have cut a
+channel. The crater has thus become a beautiful salt lake, a mile in
+diameter, clear, deep, almost circular, and from whose border, on every
+side, rise the old volcanic walls draped in verdure. The strait
+connecting it with the sea is but three hundred feet wide, and at high
+tide ten feet deep,--thus affording an easy passage for small vessels
+into this most delightful seclusion; and no doubt the strait might be so
+deepened as to float the largest ships. St. Paul is not at present much
+frequented. But in a sea which is every year becoming more populous with
+the commerce of every nation, who shall tell what such a central station
+may become? Its title was somewhat uncertain. England thought she held
+it as a dependency of Mauritius. But in 1847 the governor of Bourbon,
+with a happy audacity, took possession of it, as an outpost of his own
+island, and planted a little French colony of fishermen. We have not
+heard that the assumption has been disputed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No doubt, most of our readers may have observed in the daily prints
+occasional allusions to the French War in Cochin China. Probably few
+have understood the full meaning of the facts so quietly chronicled.
+Perhaps none have dreamed that they were reading the first notices of a
+new Eastern conquest, which, in extent and importance, may yet be second
+only to that which has already been achieved by the British in
+Hindostan. Yet so it is. The Cambodia is the largest river in Southern
+Asia, and, together with the smaller and parallel river of Saigon,
+drains a tract of not less than five hundred thousand square miles. The
+region for which the French have been contending includes the provinces
+which cluster around the mouths of these two rivers, and command them.
+No position could be happier. For while on the one hand it controls the
+outlet of a river stretching up into a rich and fertile country eighteen
+hundred miles, on the other it projects into the Chinese Sea at a point
+nearly midway between Singapore and Hong Kong, and so secures to its
+possessor a just influence in that commercial highway. The ostensible
+cause of the war in this region was the murder of a French missionary.
+If this was ever the real cause, it long since gave way to a settled
+purpose of conquest.
+
+In the latter part of the year 1862 the Emperor of Cochin China was
+forced to cede to France the coveted provinces. Already new
+fortifications have arisen at Saigon, and dock-yards and coal-depots
+been established, and all steps taken for a permanent occupation of the
+territory. The following advertisement appeared in the London "Times"
+for January 23, 1863,--"Contract for transportation from Glasgow to
+Saigon of a floating iron dock in pieces. Notice to ship-owners. The
+administration of the Imperial Navy of France have at Glasgow a floating
+iron dock in pieces, which they require to be transported from that port
+to Saigon, Cochin China. The said dock, with machinery, pumps, anchors,
+and instruments necessary to its working, will weigh from two thousand
+to twenty-five hundred tons. Ship-owners disposed to undertake the
+transport are requested to forward their tenders to the Minister of
+Marine and Colonies previous to the fifth of February next." Now, if we
+consider that the news of the cession of these provinces did not reach
+France until the close of the year 1862, that this advertisement is
+dated January 23, 1863, and that a dock of the magnitude described could
+hardly be constructed short of many months, we shall be satisfied, that,
+long before any definite articles of peace had been proposed, the
+Emperor had settled in his own mind just what region he would annex to
+his dominions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We shall not need much argument to convince us that the subjugation of
+Mexico does not, either in character or methods, differ much from other
+acts of the French ruler. Nevertheless, the details are curious and
+instructive. It must be allowed that Mexico had given the Allies causes
+of offence. She left unpaid large sums due from her to foreign
+bond-holders. The subjects of the allied powers, temporarily resident in
+Mexico, were robbed by forced loans, and sometimes imprisoned, and even
+murdered. To redress these grievances, an expedition was fitted out by
+the combined powers of England, France, and Spain. The objects of the
+expedition were, first, to obtain satisfaction for past wrongs, and,
+second, some security against their recurrence in the future. It was
+expressly agreed by all parties, that the Mexicans should be left
+entirely free to choose for themselves their own form of government.
+Later events would seem to prove that England and Spain were sincere in
+their professions.
+
+Everything went on smoothly until the capture of Vera Cruz. Then the
+French Emperor unfolded secret plans which were not contained in the
+original programme. They were these: To take advantage of the weakness
+of the United States to establish in Mexico a European influence; to
+take possession of its capital city; and thence to impose upon the
+Mexican people a government more agreeable than the present to the
+Allies. England and Spain retired from the expedition with scarcely
+concealed disgust, declaring, in almost so many words, that they did not
+come into Mexico to rob another people of their rights, but to gain
+redress and protection for their own subjects. Louis Napoleon does not
+even seek to conceal his intentions from us. "We propose," he says, "to
+restore to the Latin race on the other side of the Atlantic all its
+strength and prestige. We have an interest, indeed, in the Republic of
+the United States being powerful and prosperous; but not that she should
+take possession of the whole Gulf of Mexico, thence to command the
+Antilles as well as South America, and to be the only dispenser of the
+products of the New World." This is plain enough. What will be the final
+form of settlement we do not even conjecture. It is probable that the
+Emperor does not himself know. With our fortunes so unsettled, and with
+so many European jealousies to conciliate, even his astute genius may
+well be puzzled as to the wisest policy. But it is of no consequence
+what particular government France may impose upon the conquered
+State,--monarchical, vice-regal, or republican,--Maximilian, a
+Bonaparte, or some one of the seditious Mexican chiefs. In either case,
+if the French plan succeeds, the broad country which Cortés won and
+Spain lost, will be virtually a dependency of France.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Even while we write, France has embarked in yet other schemes of
+colonial aggrandizement. She has just purchased the port of Oboch on the
+eastern coast of Africa, near the entrance of the Red Sea. The place is
+not laid down upon the maps; nor is its naval and commercial importance
+known; but its proximity to Aden suggests that it may be intended as a
+checkmate to that English stronghold. In the great island of Madagascar
+she is founding mercantile establishments whose exact character have not
+as yet been divulged; but experience teaches us that these enterprises
+are likely to be pursued with promptness and vigor.
+
+Thus France is displaying in colonial affairs an aggressive activity
+which was scarcely to have been expected. To what extent she may perfect
+her plans no one can prophesy. That she will be able to girdle the earth
+with her possessions, and rear strongholds in every sea, is not
+probable. England has chosen almost at her leisure what spots of
+commercial advantage or military strength she will occupy; and the whole
+world hardly affords the material for another colonial system as wide
+and comprehensive.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There is one consideration which ought not to be overlooked. It is this:
+the relations which Louis Napoleon has succeeded in maintaining between
+himself and that power which had the most interest in defeating his
+schemes, and the most ability to do it. Under the Bourbons, the whole
+policy of France was based upon a principle of settled and unchangeable
+enmity to England. As a result, war always broke out while French
+preparations were incomplete; and the concentrated English navy swept
+from the sea almost every vestige of an opposing force. The present
+French emperor has adopted an altogether different course. He has sought
+the friendship of England. He has multiplied occasions of mutual action.
+He has sedulously avoided occasions of offence. Kinglake, in his
+"Crimean War," intimates that Louis Napoleon desired this alliance with
+England and her noble Queen to cover up the terrible wrongs by which he
+had obtained his authority. It is more likely far that he sought it in
+order that under its shadow he might build himself up to resistless
+power: just as an oak planted beneath the shade of other trees grows to
+strength and majesty only to cut down its benefactors.
+
+This proposal for alliance was unquestionably received by the English
+people at first with feelings akin to disgust. The memory of the bad
+faith by which power had been won, of the wrongs and exile of the
+greatest statesmen and soldiers of France, and of the red carnage of the
+Boulevards, was too recent to make such a friendship attractive. Though
+acceptance of it might be good policy, yet it could not be yielded
+without profound reluctance. But soon this early sentiment gave way to
+something like pride. It was so satisfactory to think that the allied
+powers were wellnigh irresistible; that they had only to speak and it
+must be done; that they could dictate terms to the world; that they
+could scourge back even the Russian despot, seeking to pour down his
+hordes from the icy North to more genial climes. It is hardly
+surprising, then, that men came to congratulate themselves upon so
+favorable an alliance, and concluded to overlook the defect in his title
+in consideration of the solid benefits which the occupant of the French
+throne conferred.
+
+But this feeling could not last. When the people of England saw how
+inevitably Louis Napoleon reaped from every conflict some selfish
+advantage, how the Crimean War gave him all the prestige, and the
+Italian War the coveted province of Nice, they began to doubt his fair
+professions. And this jealousy is fast deepening into fear. The English
+people have an instinct of approaching danger. Any one can see that the
+"_entente cordiale_" is not quite what it once was. When a British Lord
+of Admiralty can rise in his place in Parliament, and, after alluding to
+the powerful and increasing naval force of France, add,--"I say that any
+Ministry who did not act upon that statement, and did not at once set
+about putting the country in the position she ought to occupy in respect
+to her navy, would deserve to be sent to the Tower or penitentiary,"--we
+may be sure that England has as much jealousy as trust, and perhaps
+quite as much alarm as either.
+
+But we have only to look at her acts to know what England is thinking.
+For six years she has been engaged in an unceasing war with
+France,--not, indeed, with swords and bayonets, but as really with her
+workshops and dockyards. She has tasked these to their uttermost to
+maintain and increase her naval superiority. And this is not the only
+evidence we have of her true feeling. The building of new fortifications
+for her ports, and the enlargement and strengthening of the old
+defences, all tell the same story of profound distrust. "Plymouth has
+been made secure. The mouth of the Thames is thought to be impregnable."
+That is the way English papers write. Around Portsmouth and Gosport she
+has thrown an immense girdle of forts. We may think what we will of
+Cherbourg, England views it in the light of a perpetual menace. To the
+proud challenge she has sent back a sturdy defiance. Right opposite to
+it, on her nearest shore, she has reared a "Gibraltar of the Channel."
+If you take your map, you will perceive, facing Cherbourg, and
+projecting from the southern coast of England, the little island of
+Portland, which at low tide becomes a peninsula, and is connected with
+the main land by Chesil Bank, a low ridge of shingle ten miles long. On
+the extreme north of this island, looking down into Weymouth Bay, is a
+little cluster of rocky hills, rising sharply to a considerable height,
+and occupying, perhaps, a space of sixty acres. This is where the
+fortress, or Veme, as it is called, is built. On the northern side, the
+cliff lifts itself up from the waters of the bay almost in a
+perpendicular line, and is absolutely inaccessible. On all other sides
+the Veme has been isolated by a tremendous chasm, which makes the dry
+ditch of the fort. This chasm has been blasted into the solid rock, and
+is nowhere less than a hundred feet wide and eighty feet deep. At the
+angles of the fortress it widens to two hundred feet, and sinks beneath
+the batteries in a sheer perpendicular of one hundred and thirty feet.
+Two bastions jut from the main work into it, protecting it from approach
+by a terrible cross-fire. All the appointments are upon the same scale.
+The magazines, the storehouses, the water-tanks, are built to furnish
+supplies for a siege, not of months, but of years. On every side the
+rocky surface of the hills has been shaved down below the level of its
+guns; so that there is not a spot seaward or landward that may not be
+swept by its tremendous batteries. Such is this remarkable stronghold
+which is rising to completion opposite Cherbourg. Yet it is but one of
+several strong forts which are to protect the single harbor of Weymouth
+Bay. Was this Titanic work reared in the spirit of trust? Does it speak
+of England's hope of abiding friendship with France? No; it tells us
+that beneath seeming amity a deadly struggle is going on,--that every
+dock hollowed, every ship launched, every colony seized, and every
+fortress reared, is but another step in a silent, but real, contest for
+supremacy.
+
+When this hidden fire shall burst forth into a devouring flame, when
+this seeming alliance shall change into open enmity and bitter war, no
+one can prophesy. But no doubt sooner or later. For between nations, as
+well as in the bosom of communities, there are irrepressible conflicts,
+which no alliances, no compacts, and no motives of wisdom or interest
+can forever hold in check. And when it shall burst forth, no one can
+foretell what its end shall be. That dread uncertainty, more than all
+these things else, keeps the peace. We can but think that the naval
+preëminence of England has grown out of the real character of her people
+and of their pursuits,--and that the same causes which, in the long,
+perilous conflicts of the past, have enabled her to secure the
+sovereignty of the seas, will strengthen her to maintain that
+sovereignty in all the conflicts which in the future may await her. But,
+whatever may be the result, to whomsoever defeat may come, nothing can
+obliterate from the pages of history the record of the sagacity,
+perseverance, and courage with which the French people and their ruler
+have striven to overcome a maritime inferiority, whose origin, perhaps,
+is in the structure of their society and in the nature of their race.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SOMETHING LEFT UNDONE.
+
+
+ Labor with what zeal we will,
+ Something still remains undone,
+ Something, uncompleted still,
+ Waits the rising of the sun.
+
+ By the bedside, on the stair,
+ At the threshold, near the gates,
+ With its menace or its prayer,
+ Like a mendicant it waits:
+
+ Waits, and will not go away,--
+ Waits, and will not be gainsaid.
+ By the cares of yesterday
+ Each to-day is heavier made,
+
+ Till at length it is, or seems,
+ Greater than our strength can bear,--
+ As the burden of our dreams,
+ Pressing on us everywhere;
+
+ And we stand from day to day
+ Like the dwarfs of times gone by,
+ Who, as Northern legends say,
+ On their shoulders held the sky.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GREAT INSTRUMENT.
+
+
+Early in the month of November the mysterious curtain which has hidden
+the work long in progress at the Boston Music Hall will be lifted, and
+the public will throng to look upon and listen to the GREAT ORGAN.
+
+It is the most interesting event in the musical history of the New
+World. The masterpiece of Europe's master-builder is to uncover its
+veiled front and give voice to its long-brooding harmonies. The most
+precious work of Art that ever floated from one continent to the other
+is to be formally displayed before a great assembly. The occasion is one
+of well-earned rejoicing, almost of loud triumph; for it is the crowning
+festival which rewards an untold sum of devoted and conscientious labor,
+carried on, without any immediate recompense, through a long series of
+years, to its now perfect consummation. The whole community will share
+in the deep satisfaction with which the public-spirited citizens who
+have encouraged this noble undertaking, and the enterprising; and
+untiring lover of science and art who has conducted it from the first,
+may look upon their completed task.
+
+What is this wondrous piece of mechanism which has cost so much time and
+money, and promises to become one of the chief attractions of Boston and
+a source of honest pride to all cultivated Americans? The organ, as its
+name implies, is _the instrument_, in distinction from all other and
+less noble instruments. We might almost think it was called
+organ as being a part of an unfinished _organism_, a kind of
+Frankenstein-creation, half framed and half vitalized. It breathes like
+an animal, but its huge lungs must be filled and emptied by alien force.
+It has a wilderness of windpipes, each furnished with its own vocal
+adjustment, or larynx. Thousands of long, delicate tendons govern its
+varied internal movements, themselves obedient to the human muscles
+which are commanded by the human brain, which again is guided in its
+volitions by the voice of the great half-living creature. A strange
+cross between the form and functions of animated beings, on the one
+hand, and the passive conditions of inert machinery, on the other! Its
+utterance rises through all the gamut of Nature's multitudinous voices,
+and has a note for all her outward sounds and inward moods. Its thunder
+is deep as that of billows that tumble through ocean-caverns, and its
+whistle is sharper than that of the wind through their narrowest
+crevice. It roars louder than the lion of the desert, and it can draw
+out a thread of sound as fine as the locust spins at hot noon on his
+still tree-top. Its clustering columns are as a forest in which every
+music-flowering tree and shrub finds its representative. It imitates all
+instruments; it cheats the listener with the sound of singing choirs; it
+strives for a still purer note than can be strained from human throats,
+and emulates the host of heaven with its unearthly "voice of angels."
+Within its breast all the passions of humanity seem to reign in turn. It
+moans with the dull ache of grief, and cries with the sudden thrill of
+pain; it sighs, it shouts, it laughs, it exults, it wails, it pleads, it
+trembles, it shudders, it threatens, it storms, it rages, it is soothed,
+it slumbers.
+
+Such is the organ, man's nearest approach to the creation of a true
+organism.
+
+But before the audacious conception of this instrument ever entered the
+imagination of man, before he had ever drawn a musical sound from pipe
+or string, the chambers where the royal harmonies of his grandest vocal
+mechanism were to find worthy reception were shaped in his own
+marvellous structure. The _organ_ of hearing was finished by its Divine
+Builder while yet the morning stars sang together, and the voices of the
+young creation joined in their first choral symphony. We have seen how
+the mechanism of the artificial organ takes on the likeness of life; we
+shall attempt to describe the living organ in common language by the aid
+of such images as our ordinary dwellings furnish us. The unscientific
+reader need not take notice of the words in parentheses.
+
+The annexed diagram may render it easier to follow the description.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The structure which is to admit Sound as a visitor is protected and
+ornamented at its entrance by a light movable awning (the external ear).
+Beneath and within this opens a recess or passage, (_meatus auditorium
+externus_,) at the farther end of which is the parchment-like
+front-door, D (_membrana tympani_).
+
+Beyond this is the hall or entry, H, (cavity of the _tympanum_,) which
+has a ventilator, V, (Eustachian tube,) communicating with the outer
+air, and two windows, one oval, _o_, (_fenestra ovalis_,) one round,
+_r_, (_fenestra rotunda_,) both filled with parchment-like membrane, and
+looking upon the inner suite of apartments (labyrinth).
+
+This inner suite of apartments consists of an antechamber, A,
+(vestibule,) an arched chamber, B, (semicircular canals,) and a spiral
+chamber, S, (_cochlea_,) with a partition, P, dividing it across, except
+for a small opening at one end. The antechamber opens freely into the
+arched chamber, and into one side of the partitioned spiral chamber. The
+other side of this spiral chamber looks on the hall by the round window
+already mentioned; the oval window looking on the hall belongs to the
+antechamber. From the front-door to the oval window of the antechamber
+extends a chain, _c_, (_ossicula auditûs_,) so connected that a knock on
+the first is transmitted instantly to the second. But as the round
+window of the spiral chamber looks into the hall, the knock at the
+front-door will also make itself heard at and through that window, being
+conveyed along the hall.
+
+In each division of the inner suite of apartments are the watchmen,
+(branches of the auditory nerve,) listening for the approach of Sound.
+The visitor at length enters the porch, and knocks at the front-door.
+The watchmen in the antechamber hear the blow close to them, as it is
+repeated, through the chain, on the window of their apartment. The
+impulse travels onward into the arched chamber, and startles its
+tenants. It is transmitted into one half of the partitioned spiral
+chamber, and rouses the recumbent guardians in that apartment. Some
+portion of it even passes the small opening in the partition, and
+reaches the watchmen in the other half of the room. But they also hear
+it through the round window, not as it comes through the chain, but as
+it resounds along the hall.
+
+Thus the summons of Sound reaches all the watchmen, but not all of them
+through the same channels or with the same force. It is not known how
+their several precise duties are apportioned, but it seems probable that
+the watchmen in the spiral chamber observe the pitch of the audible
+impulse which reaches them, while the others take cognizance of its
+intensity and perhaps of its direction.
+
+Such is the plan of the organ of hearing as an architect might describe
+it. But the details of its special furnishing are so intricate and
+minute that no anatomist has proved equal to their entire and exhaustive
+delineation. An Italian nobleman, the Marquis Corti, has hitherto proved
+most successful in describing the wonderful _key-board_ found in the
+spiral chamber, the complex and symmetrical beauty of which is
+absolutely astonishing to those who study it by the aid of the
+microscope. The figure annexed shows a small portion of this
+extraordinary structure. It is from Kölliker's well-known work on
+Microscopic Anatomy.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Enough has been said to show that the ear is as carefully adjusted to
+respond to the blended impressions of sound as the eye to receive the
+mingled rays of light; and that as the telescope presupposes the lens
+and the retina, so the organ presupposes the resonant membranes, the
+labyrinthine chambers, and the delicately suspended or exquisitely
+spread-out nervous filaments of that other organ, whose builder is the
+Architect of the universe and the Master of all its harmonies.
+
+Not less an object of wonder is that curious piece of mechanism, the
+most perfect, within its limited range of powers, of all musical
+instruments, the _organ_ of the human voice. It is the highest triumph
+of our artificial contrivances to reach a tone like that of a singer,
+and among a hundred organ-stops none excites such admiration as the _vox
+humana_; a brief account of the vocal organ will not, therefore, be out
+of place. The principles of the action of the larynx are easily
+illustrated by reference to the simpler musical instruments. In a flute
+or flageolet the musical sound is produced by the vibration of a column
+of air contained in its interior. In a clarionet or a bassoon another
+source of sound is added in the form of a thin slip of wood contained in
+the mouth-piece, and called the _reed_, the vibrations of which give a
+superadded nasal thrill to the resonance of the column of air.
+
+The human organ of voice is like the clarionet and the bassoon. The
+windpipe is the tube containing the column of air. The larynx is the
+mouth-piece containing the reed. But the reed is double, consisting of
+two very thin membranous edges, which are made tense or relaxed, and
+have the interval between them through which the air rushes narrowed or
+widened by the instinctive, automatic action of a set of little muscles.
+The vibration of these membranous edges (_chordæ vocales_) produces a
+musical sound, just as the vibration of the edge of a finger-bowl
+produces one when a wet finger is passed round it. The cavities of the
+nostrils, and their side-chambers, with their light, elastic
+sounding-boards of thin bone, are essential to the richness of the tone,
+as all singers find out when those passages are obstructed by a cold in
+the head.
+
+The human voice, perfect as it may be in tone, is yet always very
+deficient in compass, as is obvious from the fact that the bass voice,
+the barytone, the contralto, and the soprano have all different
+registers, and are all required to produce a complete vocal harmony. If
+we could make organ-pipes with movable, self-regulating lips, with
+self-shortening and self-lengthening tubes, so that each tube should
+command the two or three octaves of the human voice, a very limited
+number of them would be required. But as each tube has but a single
+note, we understand why we have those immense clusters of hollow
+columns. As we wish to produce different effects, sometimes using the
+pure flute-sounds, at other times preferring the nasal thrill of the
+reed-instruments, we see why some of the tubes have simple mouths and
+others are furnished with vibratory tongues. And, lastly, we can easily
+understand that the great interior spaces of the organ must of
+themselves furnish those resonant surfaces which we saw provided for, on
+a small scale, in the nasal passages,--the sounding-board of the human
+larynx.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The great organ of the Music Hall is a choir of nearly six thousand
+vocal throats. Its largest windpipes are thirty-two feet in length, and
+a man can crawl through them. Its finest tubes are too small for a
+baby's whistle. Eighty-nine _stops_ produce the various changes and
+combinations of which its immense orchestra is capable, from the purest
+solo of a singing nun to the loudest chorus in which all its groups of
+voices have their part in the full flow of its harmonies. Like all
+instruments of its class, it contains several distinct systems of pipes,
+commonly spoken of as separate organs, and capable of being played alone
+or in connection with each other. Four _manuals_, or hand key-boards,
+and two _pedals_, or foot key-boards, command these several
+systems,--the _solo_ organ, the _choir_ organ, the _swell_ organ, and
+the _great_ organ, and the _piano_ and _forte_ pedal-organ. Twelve pairs
+of bellows, which it is intended to move by water-power, derived from
+the Cochituate reservoirs, furnish the breath which pours itself forth
+in music. Those beautiful effects, for which the organ is incomparable,
+the _crescendo_ and _diminuendo_,--the gradual rise of the sound from
+the lowest murmur to the loudest blast, and the dying fall by which it
+steals gently back into silence,--the _dissolving views_, so to speak,
+of harmony,--are not only provided for in the swell-organ, but may be
+obtained by special adjustments from the several systems of pipes and
+from the entire instrument.
+
+It would be anticipating the proper time for judgment, if we should
+speak of the excellence of the musical qualities of the great organ
+before having had the opportunity of hearing its full powers displayed.
+We have enjoyed the privilege, granted to few as yet, of listening to
+some portions of the partially mounted instrument, from which we can
+confidently infer that its effect, when all its majestic voices find
+utterance, must be noble and enchanting beyond all common terms of
+praise. But even without such imperfect trial, we have a right, merely
+from a knowledge of its principles of construction, of the preëminent
+skill of its builder, of the time spent in its construction, of the
+extraordinary means taken to insure its perfection, and of the liberal
+scale of expenditure which has rendered all the rest possible, to feel
+sure that we are to hear the instrument which is and will probably long
+remain beyond dispute the first of the New World and second to none in
+the Old in the sum of its excellences and capacities.
+
+The mere comparison of numbers of pipes and of stops, or of external
+dimensions, though it gives an approximative idea of the scale of an
+organ, is not so decisive as it might seem as to its real musical
+effectiveness. In some cases, many of the stops are rather nominal than
+of any real significance. Even in the Haarlem organ, which has only
+about two-thirds as many as the Boston one, Dr. Burney says, "The
+variety they afford is by no means what might be expected." It is
+obviously easy to multiply the small pipes to almost any extent. The
+dimensions of an organ, in its external aspect, must depend a good deal
+on the height of the edifice in which it is contained. Thus, the vaulted
+roof of the Cathedral of Ulm permitted the builder of our Music-Hall
+organ to pile the _façade_ of the one he constructed for that edifice up
+to the giddy elevation of almost a hundred feet, while the famous
+instrument in the Town Hall of Birmingham has only three-quarters of the
+height of our own, which is sixty feet. It is obvious also that the
+effective power of an organ does not depend merely on its size, but that
+the perfection of all its parts will have quite as much to do with it.
+In judging a vocalist, we can form but a very poor guess of the compass,
+force, quality of the voice, from a mere inspection of the throat and
+chest. In the case of the organ, however, we have the advantage of being
+able to minutely inspect every throat and larynx, to walk into the
+interior of the working mechanism, and to see the adaptation of each
+part to its office. In absolute power and compass the Music-Hall organ
+ranks among the three or four mightiest instruments ever built. In the
+perfection of all its parts, and in its whole arrangements, it
+challenges comparison with, any the world can show.
+
+Such an instrument ought to enshrine itself in an outward frame that
+should correspond in some measure to the grandeur and loveliness of its
+own musical character. It has been a dream of metaphysicians, that the
+soul shaped its own body. If this many-throated singing creature could
+have sung itself into an external form, it could hardly have moulded one
+more expressive of its own nature. We must leave to those more skilled
+in architecture the detailed description of that noble _façade_ which
+fills the eye with music as the voices from behind it fill the mind
+through the ear with vague, dreamy pictures. For us it loses all
+technical character in its relations to the soul of which it is the
+body. It is as if a glorious anthem had passed into outward solid form
+in the very ecstasy of its grandest chorus. Milton has told us of such a
+miracle, wrought by fallen angels, it is true, but in a description rich
+with all his opulence of caressing and ennobling language:--
+
+ "Anon out of the earth a fabric huge
+ Rose, like an exhalation, with the sound
+ Of dulcet symphonies and voices sweet,
+ Built like a temple, where pilasters round
+ Were set, and Doric pillars overlaid
+ With golden architrave; nor did there want
+ Cornice or frieze with bossy sculptures grav'n."
+
+The structure is of black walnut, and is covered with carved statues,
+busts, masks, and figures in the boldest relief. In the centre a richly
+ornamented arch contains the niche for the key-boards and stops. A
+colossal mask of a singing woman looks from over its summit. The
+pediment above is surmounted by the bust of Johann Sebastian Bach.
+Behind this rises the lofty central division, containing pipes, and
+crowning it is a beautiful sitting statue of Saint Cecilia, holding her
+lyre. On each side of her a griffin sits as guardian. This centre is
+connected by harp-shaped compartments, filled with pipes, to the two
+great round towers, one on each side, and each of them containing three
+colossal pipes. These magnificent towers come boldly forward into the
+hall, being the most prominent, as they are the highest and stateliest,
+part of the _façade_. At the base of each a gigantic half-caryatid, in
+the style of the ancient _hermæ_, but finished to the waist, bends
+beneath the superincumbent weight, like Atlas under the globe. These
+figures are of wonderful force, the muscular development almost
+excessive, but in keeping with their superhuman task. At each side of
+the base two lion-_hermæ_ share in the task of the giant. Over the base
+rise the round pillars which support the dome and inclose the three
+great pipes already mentioned. Graceful as these look in their position,
+half a dozen men might creep into one of them and lie hidden. A man of
+six feet high went up a ladder, and standing at the base of one of them
+could just reach to put his hand into the mouth at its lower part, above
+the conical foot. The three great pipes are crowned by a heavily
+sculptured, ribbed, rounded dome; and this is surmounted, on each side,
+by two cherubs, whose heads almost touch the lofty ceiling. This whole
+portion of the sculpture is of eminent beauty. The two exquisite cherubs
+of one side are playing on the lyre and the lute; those of the other
+side on the flute and the horn. All the reliefs that run round the lower
+portion of the dome are of singular richness. We have had an opportunity
+of seeing one of the artist's photographs, which showed in detail the
+full-length figures and the large central mask of this portion of the
+work, and found them as beautiful on close inspection as the originals
+at a distance.
+
+Two other lateral compartments, filled with pipes, and still more
+suggestive of the harp in their form, lead to the square lateral towers.
+Over these compartments, close to the round tower, sits on each side a
+harper, a man on the right, a woman on the left, with their harps, all
+apparently of natural size. The square towers, holding pipes in their
+open interior, are lower than the round towers, and fall somewhat back
+from the front. Below, three colossal _hermæ_ of Sibyl-like women
+perform for them the office which the giants and the lion-shapes perform
+for the round towers. The four pillars which rise from the base are
+square, and the dome which surmounts them is square also. Above the dome
+is a vase-like support, upon which are disposed figures of the lyre and
+other musical symbols.
+
+The whole base of the instrument, in the intervals of the figures
+described, is covered with elaborate carvings. Groups of musical
+instruments, standing out almost detached from the background, occupy
+the panels. Ancient and modern, clustered with careless grace and quaint
+variety, from the violin down to a string of sleigh-bells, they call up
+all the echoes of forgotten music, such as the thousand-tongued organ
+blends together in one grand harmony.
+
+The instrument is placed upon a low platform, the outlines of which are
+in accordance with its own. Its whole height is about sixty feet, its
+breadth forty-eight feet, and its average depth twenty-four feet. Some
+idea of its magnitude may be got from the fact that the wind-machinery
+and the swell-organ alone fill up the whole recess occupied by the
+former organ, which was not a small one. All the other portions of the
+great instrument come forward into the hall.
+
+In front of its centre stands Crawford's noble bronze statue of
+Beethoven, the gift of our townsman, Mr. Charles C. Perkins. It might be
+suggested that so fine a work of Art should have a platform wholly to
+itself; but the eye soon reconciles itself to the position of the
+statue, and the tremulous atmosphere which surrounds the vibrating organ
+is that which the almost breathing figure would seem to delight in, as
+our imagination invests it with momentary consciousness.
+
+As we return to the impression produced by the grand _façade_, we are
+more and more struck with the subtile art displayed in its adaptations
+and symbolisms. Never did any structure we have looked upon so fully
+justify Madame de Staël's definition of architecture, as "frozen music."
+The outermost towers, their pillars and domes, are all _square_, their
+outlines thus passing without too sudden transitions from the sharp
+square angles of the vaulted ceiling and the rectangular lines of the
+walls of the hall itself into the more central parts of the instrument,
+where a smoother harmony of outline is predominant. For in the great
+towers, which step forward, as it were, to represent the meaning of the
+entire structure, the lines are all curved, as if the slight discords
+which gave sharpness and variety to its less vital portions were all
+resolved as we approached its throbbing heart. And again, the half
+fantastic repetitions of musical forms in the principal outlines--the
+lyre-like shape of the bases of the great towers, the harp-like figure
+of the connecting wings, the clustering reeds of the columns--fill the
+mind with musical suggestions, and dispose the wondering spectator to
+become the entranced listener.
+
+The great organ would be but half known, if it were not played in a
+place fitted for it in dimensions. In the open air the sound would be
+diluted and lost; in an ordinary hall the atmosphere would be churned
+into a mere tumult by the vibrations. The Boston Music Hall is of ample
+size to give play to the waves of sound, yet not so large that its space
+will not be filled and saturated with the overflowing resonance. It is
+one hundred and thirty feet in length by seventy-eight in breadth and
+sixty-five in height, being thus of somewhat greater dimensions than the
+celebrated Town Hall of Birmingham. At the time of building it, (1852,)
+its great height was ordered partly with reference to the future
+possibility of its being furnished with a large organ. It will be
+observed that the three dimensions above given are all multiples of the
+same number, thirteen, the length being ten times, the breadth six times
+and the height five times this number. This is in accordance with Mr.
+Scott Russell's recommendation, and has been explained by the fact that
+vibrating solids divide into _harmonic lengths_, separated by _nodal
+points_ of rest, and that these last are equally distributed at aliquot
+parts of its whole length. If the whole extent of the walls be in
+vibration, its angles should come in at the nodal points in order to
+avoid the confusion arising from different vibrating lengths; and for
+this reason they are placed at aliquot parts of its entire length. Thus
+the hall is itself a kind of passive musical instrument, or at least a
+sounding-board, constructed on theoretical principles. Whatever is
+thought of the theory, it proves in practice to possess the excellence
+which is liable to be lost in the construction of the best-designed
+edifice.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We have thus attempted to give our readers some imperfect idea of the
+great instrument, illustrating it by the objects of comparison with
+which we are most familiar, and leaving to others the more elaborate
+work of subjecting it to a thorough artistic survey, and the rigorous
+analysis necessary to bring out the various degrees of excellence in its
+special qualities, which, as in a human character, will be found to mark
+its individuality. We shall proceed to give some account of the manner
+in which the plan of obtaining the best instrument the Old World could
+furnish to the New was formed, matured, and carried into successful
+execution.
+
+It is mainly to the persistent labors of a single individual that our
+community is indebted for the privilege it now enjoys in possessing an
+instrument of the supreme order, such as make cities illustrious by
+their presence. That which is on the lips of all it can wrong no
+personal susceptibilities to tell in print; and when we say that Boston
+owes the Great Organ chiefly to the personal efforts of the present
+President of the Music-Hall Association, Dr. J. Baxter Upham, the
+statement is only for the information of distant readers.
+
+Dr. Upham is widely known to the medical profession in connection with
+important contributions to practical science. His researches on typhus
+fever, as observed by him at different periods, during and since the
+years 1847 and 1848, in this country, and as seen at Dublin and in the
+London Fever Hospital, were recognized as valuable contributions to the
+art of medicine. More recently, as surgeon in charge of the Stanley
+General Hospital, Eighteenth Army Corps, he has published an account of
+the "Congestive Fever" prevailing at Newborn, North Carolina, during the
+winter and spring of 1862-63. We must add to these practical labors the
+record of his most ingenious and original investigations of the
+circulation in the singular case of M. Groux, which had puzzled so many
+European experts, and to which, with the tact of a musician, he applied
+the electro-magnetic telegraphic apparatus so as to change the rapid
+consecutive motions of different parts of the heart, which puzzled the
+eye, into successive _sounds_ of a character which the ear could
+recognize in their order. It was during these experiments, many of which
+we had the pleasure of witnessing, that the "side-show" was exhibited of
+counting the patient's pulse, through the wires, at the Observatory in
+Cambridge, while it was beating in Dr. Upham's parlor in Boston. Nor
+should we forget that other ingenious contrivance of his, the system of
+_sound-signals_, devised during his recent term of service as surgeon,
+and applied with the most promising results, as a means of
+intercommunication between different portions of the same armament.
+
+In the summer of 1853, less than a year after the Music Hall was opened
+to the public, Dr. Upham, who had been for some time occupied with the
+idea of procuring an organ worthy of the edifice, made a tour in Europe
+with the express object of seeing some of the most famous instruments of
+the Continent and of Great Britain. He examined many, especially in
+Germany, and visited some of the great organ-builders, going so far as
+to obtain specifications from Mr. Walcker of Ludwigsburg, and from
+Weigl, his pupil at Stuttgart. On returning to this country, he brought
+the proposition of procuring a great instrument in Europe in various
+ways before the public, among the rest by his "Reminiscences of a Summer
+Tour," published in "Dwight's Journal of Music." After this he laid the
+matter before the members of the Harvard Musical Association, and,
+having thus gradually prepared the way, presented it for consideration
+before the Board of Directors of the Music-Hall Association. A committee
+was appointed "to consider." There was some division of opinion as to
+the expediency of the more ambitious plan of sending abroad for a
+colossal instrument. There was a majority report in its favor, and a
+verbal minority report advocating a more modest instrument of home
+manufacture. Then followed the anaconda-torpor which marks the process
+of digestion of a huge and as yet crude project by a multivertebrate
+corporation.
+
+On the first of March, 1856, the day of the inauguration of Beethoven's
+statue, a subscription-paper was started, headed by Dr. Upham, for
+raising the sum of ten thousand dollars. At a meeting in June the plan
+was brought before the stockholders of the Music Hall, who unanimously
+voted to appropriate ten thousand dollars and the proceeds of the old
+organ, on condition that fifteen thousand dollars should be raised by
+private subscription. In October it was reported to the Directors that
+ten thousand dollars of this sum were already subscribed, and Dr. Upham,
+President of the Board, pledged himself to raise the remainder on
+certain conditions, which were accepted. He was then authorized to go
+abroad to investigate the whole subject, with full powers to select the
+builder and to make the necessary contracts.
+
+Dr. Upham had already made an examination of the best organs and
+organ-factories in New England, New York, and elsewhere in this country,
+and received several specifications and plans from builders. He
+proceeded at once, therefore, to Europe, examined the great English
+instruments, made the acquaintance of Mr. Hopkins, the well-known
+organist and recognized authority on all matters pertaining to the
+instrument, and took lessons of him in order to know better the handling
+of the keys and the resources of the instrument. In his company, Dr.
+Upham examined some of the best instruments in London. He made many
+excursions among the old churches of Sir Christopher Wren's building,
+where are to be found the fine organs of "Father Smith," John Snetzler,
+and other famous builders of the past. He visited the workshops of Hill,
+Gray and Davidson, Willis, Robson, and others. He made a visit to Oxford
+to examine the beautiful organ in Trinity College. He found his way into
+the organ-lofts of St. Paul's, of Westminster Abbey, and the Temple
+Church, during the playing at morning and evening service. He inspected
+Thompson's _enharmonic_ organ, and obtained models of various portions
+of organ-structure.
+
+From London Dr. Upham went to Holland, where he visited the famous
+instruments at Haarlem, Amsterdam, and Rotterdam, and the organ-factory
+at Utrecht, the largest and best in Holland. Thence to Cologne, where,
+as well as at Utrecht, he obtained plans and schemes of instruments; to
+Hamburg, where are fine old organs, some of them built two or three
+centuries ago; to Lubeck, Dresden, Breslau, Leipsic, Halle, Merseburg.
+Here he found a splendid organ, built by Ladergast, whose instruments
+excel especially in their tone-effects. A letter from Liszt, the
+renowned pianist, recommended this builder particularly to Dr. Upham's
+choice. At Frankfort and at Stuttgart he found two magnificent
+instruments, built by Walcker of Ludwigsburg, to which place he repaired
+in order to examine his factories carefully, for the second time. Thence
+the musical tourist proceeded to Ulm, where is the sumptuous organ, the
+work of the same builder, ranking, we believe, first in point of
+dimensions of all in the world. Onward still, to Munich, Bamberg,
+Augsburg, Nuremberg, along the Lake of Constance to Weingarten, where is
+that great organ claiming to have sixty-six stops and six thousand six
+hundred and sixty-six pipes; to Freyburg, in Switzerland, where is
+another great organ, noted for the rare beauty of its _vox-humana_ stop,
+the mechanism of which had been specially studied by Mr. Walcker, who
+explained it to Dr. Upham.
+
+Returning to Ludwigsburg, Dr. Upham received another specification from
+Mr. Walcker. He then passed some time at Frankfort examining the
+specifications already received and the additional ones which came to
+him while there.
+
+At last, by the process of exclusion, the choice was narrowed down to
+three names, Schultze, Ladergast, and Walcker, then to the two last.
+There was still a difficulty in deciding between these. Dr. Upham called
+in Mr. Walcker's partner and son, who explained every point on which he
+questioned them with the utmost minuteness. Still undecided, he
+revisited Merseburg and Weissenfels, to give Ladergast's instruments
+another trial. The result was that he asked Mr. Walcker for a third
+specification, with certain additions and alterations which he named.
+This he received, and finally decided in his favor,--but with the
+condition that Mr. Walcker should meet him in Paris for the purpose of
+examining the French organs with reference to any excellences of which
+he might avail himself, and afterwards proceed to London and inspect the
+English instruments with the same object.
+
+The details of this joint tour are very interesting, but we have not
+space for them. The frank enthusiasm with which the great German
+organ-builder was received in France contrasted forcibly with the
+quiet, not to say cool, way in which the insular craftsmen received him,
+gradually, however, warming, and at last, with a certain degree of
+effort, admitting him to their confidence.
+
+A fortnight was spent by Dr. Upham in company with Walcker and Mr.
+Hopkins in studying and perfecting the specification, which was at last
+signed in German and English, and stamped with the notarial seal, and
+thus the contract made binding.
+
+A long correspondence relating to the instrument followed between Dr.
+Upham, the builder, and Mr. Hopkins, ending only with the shipment of
+the instrument. A most interesting part of this was Dr. Upham's account
+of his numerous original experiments with the natural larynx, made with
+reference to determining the conditions requisite for the successful
+imitation of the human voice in the arrangement called _vox humana_. Mr.
+Walcker has availed himself of the results of these experiments in the
+stop as made for this organ, but with what success we are unable to say,
+as the pipes have not been set in place at the time of our writing. As
+there is always great curiosity to hear this particular stop, we will
+guard our readers against disappointment by quoting a few remarks about
+that of the Haarlem organ, made by the liveliest of musical writers, Dr.
+Burney.
+
+"As to the _vox humana_, which is so celebrated, it does not at all
+resemble a human voice, though a very good stop of the kind; but the
+world is very apt to be imposed upon by names; the instant a common
+hearer is told that an organist is playing upon a stop which resembles
+the human voice, he supposes it to be very fine, and never inquires into
+the propriety of the name, or exactness of the imitation. However, with
+respect to our own feelings, we must confess, that, of all the stops
+which we have yet heard, that have been honored with the appellation of
+_vox humana_, no one in the treble part has ever reminded us of anything
+human, so much as the cracked voice of an old woman of ninety, or, in
+the lower parts, of Punch singing through a comb." Let us hope that this
+most irreverent description will not apply to the _vox humana_ of our
+instrument, after all the science and skill that have been expended upon
+it. Should it prove a success like that of the Freyburg organ, there
+will be pilgrimages from the shores of the Pacific and the other side of
+the Atlantic to listen to the organ that can _sing_: and what can be a
+more miraculous triumph of art than to cheat the ear with such an
+enchanting delusion?
+
+Before the organ could be accepted, it was required by the terms of the
+contract to be set up at the factory, and tested by three persons: one
+to be selected by the Organ Committee of the Music-Hall Association, one
+by the builder, and a third to be chosen by them. Having been approved
+by these judges, and also by the State-Commissioner of Würtemberg,
+according to the State ordinance, the result of the trial was
+transmitted to the President and Directors of the Music-Hall
+Association, and the organ was accepted.
+
+The war broke out in the mean time, and there were fears lest the vessel
+in which the instrument might be shipped should fall a victim to some of
+the British corsairs sailing under Confederate colors. But the Dutch
+brig "Presto," though slow, was safe from the licensed pirates, unless
+an organ could be shown to be contraband of war. She was out so long,
+however,--nearly three months from Rotterdam,--that the insurance-office
+presidents shook their heads over her, fearing that she had gone down
+with all her precious freight.
+
+"At length," to borrow Dr. Upham's words, "one stormy Sunday in March
+she was telegraphed from the marine station down in the bay, and the
+next morning, among the marine intelligence, in the smallest possible
+type, might be read the invoice of her cargo thus:--
+
+ "'Sunday Mar. 22
+
+ "'Arr. Dutch brig Presto, Van Wyngarten, Rotterdam, Jan. 1.
+ Helvoet, 10th Had terrific gales from SW the greater part of the
+ passage. 40 casks gin JD & M Williams 8 sheep Chenery & Co 200
+ bags coffee 2 casks herrings 1 case cheese W. Winsel 1 organ JB
+ Upham 20 pipes 6 casks gin JD Richards 6 casks nutmegs J Schumaker
+ 20 do gin 500 bags chickory root Order,' etc., etc.
+
+"And this was the heralding of this greatest marvel of a high and noble
+art, after the labor of seven years bestowed upon it, having been tried
+and pronounced complete by the most fastidious and competent of critics,
+the wonder and admiration of music-loving Germany, the pride of
+Würtemberg, bringing a new phase of civilization to our shores in the
+darkest hour of our country's trouble."
+
+It remains to give a brief history of the construction of the grand and
+imposing architectural frame which we have already attempted to
+describe. Many organ-fronts were examined with reference to their
+effects, during Dr. Upham's visits of which we have traced the course,
+and photographs and sketches obtained for the same purpose. On
+returning, the task of procuring a fitting plan was immediately
+undertaken. We need not detail the long series of trials which were
+necessary before the requirements of the President and Directors of the
+Music-Hall Association were fully satisfied. As the result of these, it
+was decided that the work should be committed to the brothers Herter, of
+New York, European artists, educated at the Royal Academy of Art in
+Stuttgart. The general outline of the _façade_ followed a design made by
+Mr. Hammatt Billings, to whom also are due the drawings from which the
+Saint Cecilia and the two groups of cherubs upon the round towers were
+modelled. These figures were executed at Stuttgart; the other carvings
+were all done in New York, under Mr. Herter's direction, by Italian and
+German artists, one of whom had trained his powers particularly to the
+shaping of colossal figures. In the course of the work, one of the
+brothers Herter visited Ludwigsburg for the special purpose of comparing
+his plans with the structure to which they were to be adapted, and was
+received with enthusiasm, the design for the front being greatly
+admired.
+
+The contract was made with Mr. Herter in April, 1860, and the work,
+having been accepted, was sent to Boston during the last winter, and
+safely stored in the lecture-room beneath the Music Hall. In March the
+_Great Work_ arrived from Germany, and was stored in the hall above.
+
+"The seven-years' task is done,--the danger from flood and fire so far
+escaped,--the gantlet of the pirates safely run,--the perils of the sea
+and the rail surmounted by _the good Providence of God_."
+
+The devout gratitude of the President of the Association, under whose
+auspices this great undertaking has been successfully carried through,
+will be shared by all lovers of Art and all the friends of American
+civilization and culture. We cannot naturalize the Old-World cathedrals,
+for they were the architectural embodiment of a form of worship
+belonging to other ages and differently educated races. But the organ
+was only lent to human priesthoods for their masses and requiems; it
+belongs to Art, a religion of which God himself appoints the
+high-priests. At first it appears almost a violence to transplant it
+from those awful sanctuaries, out of whose arches its forms seemed to
+grow, and whose echoes seemed to hold converse with it, into our gay and
+gilded halls, to utter its majestic voice before the promiscuous
+multitude. Our hasty impression is a wrong one. We have undertaken, for
+the first time in the world's history, to educate a nation. To teach a
+people to know the Creator in His glorious manifestations through the
+wondrous living organs is a task for which no implement of human
+fabrication is too sacred; for all true culture is a form of worship,
+and to every rightly ordered mind a setting forth of the Divine glory.
+
+This consummate work of science and skill reaches us in the midst of the
+discordant sounds of war, the prelude of that blessed harmony which will
+come whenever the jarring organ of the State has learned once more to
+obey its keys.
+
+God grant that the _Miserere_ of a people in its anguish may soon be
+followed by the _Te Deum_ of a redeemed Nation!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE KING'S WINE.
+
+
+ The small green grapes in countless clusters grew,
+ Feeding on mystic moonlight and white dew
+ And mellow sunshine, the long summer through:
+
+ Till, with blind motion in her veins, the Vine
+ Felt the delicious pulses of the wine,
+ And the grapes ripened in the year's decline.
+
+ And day by day the Virgins watched their charge;
+ And when, at last, beyond the horizon's marge
+ The harvest-moon dropt beautiful and large,
+
+ The subtile spirit in the grape was caught,
+ And to the slowly dying Monarch brought
+ In a great cup fantastically wrought,
+
+ Whereof he drank; then straightway from his brain
+ Went the weird malady, and once again
+ He walked the Palace free of scar or pain,--
+
+ But strangely changed, for somehow he had lost
+ Body and voice: the courtiers, as he crost
+ The royal chambers, whispered,--"_The King's Ghost_!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MONOGRAPH FROM AN OLD NOTE-BOOK; WITH A POSTSCRIPT.
+
+"ERIPUIT COELO FULMEN, SCEPTRUMQUE TYRANNIS."
+
+
+In a famous speech, made in the House of Lords, March 16, 1838, against
+the Eastern slave-trade, Lord Brougham arrests the current of his
+eloquence by the following illustrative diversion:--
+
+"I have often heard it disputed among critics, which of all quotations
+was the most appropriate, the most closely applicable to the
+subject-matter illustrated; _and the palm in generally awarded to that
+which applied to Dr. Franklin the line in Claudian_,--
+
+ 'Eripuit fulmen coelo, mox sceptra tyrannis';
+
+yet still there is a difference of opinion, and even that citation,
+admirably close as it is, has rivals."
+
+The British orator errs in attributing this remarkable verse to
+Claudian; and he errs also in the language of the verse itself, which he
+fails to quote with entire accuracy. And this double mistake becomes
+more noticeable, when it appears not merely in the contemporary report,
+but in the carefully prepared collection of speeches, revised at
+leisure, and preserved in permanent volumes.[6]
+
+The beauty of this verse, even in its least accurate form, will not be
+questioned, especially as applied to Franklin, who, before the American
+Revolution, in which it was his fortune to perform so illustrious a
+part, had already awakened the world's admiration by drawing the
+lightning from the skies. But beyond its acknowledged beauty, this verse
+has an historic interest which has never been adequately appreciated.
+Appearing at the moment it did, it is closely associated with the
+acknowledgment of American Independence. Plainly interpreted, it calls
+George III. "tyrant," and announces that the sceptre has been snatched
+from his hands. It was a happy ally to Franklin in France, and has ever
+since been an inspiring voice. Latterly it has been adopted by the city
+of Boston, and engraved on granite in letters of gold,--in honor of its
+greatest child and citizen. It may not be entirely superfluous to
+recount the history of a verse which has justly attracted so much
+attention, and which, in the history of civilization, has been of more
+value than the whole State of South Carolina.
+
+From its first application to Franklin, this verse has excited something
+more than curiosity. Lord Brougham tells us that it is often discussed
+in private circles. There is other evidence of the interest it has
+created. For instance, in an early number of "Notes and Queries"[7]
+there is the following inquiry:--
+
+ "Can you tell me who wrote the line on Franklin, '_Eripuit_,'etc.?
+
+ "HENRY H. BREEN.
+
+ "_St. Lucia_."
+
+A subsequent writer in this same work, after calling the verse "a
+parody" of a certain line of antiquity, says,--"I am unable to say who
+adapted these words to Franklin's career. Was it Condorcet?"[8] Another
+writer in the same work says,--"The inscription was written by
+Mirabeau."[9]
+
+I remember well a social entertainment in Boston, where a most
+distinguished scholar of our country, in reply to an inquiry made at the
+table, said that the verse was founded on the following line from the
+"Astronomicon"[10] of Manilius,--
+
+ "Eripuit Jovi fulmen, viresque tonandi."
+
+John Quincy Adams, who was present, seemed to concur. Mr. Sparks, in his
+notes to the correspondence of Franklin, attributes it to the same
+origin.[11] But there are other places where its origin is traced with
+more precision. One of the correspondents of "Notes and Queries" says
+that he has read, but does not remember where, "that this line was
+_immediately_ taken from one in the 'Anti-Lucretius' of Cardinal
+Polignac."[12] Another correspondent shows the intermediate
+authority.[13] My own notes were originally made without any knowledge
+of these studies, which, while fixing its literary origin, fail to
+exhibit the true character of the verse, both in its meaning and in the
+time when it was uttered.
+
+The verse cannot be found in any ancient writer,--not Claudian or
+anybody else. It is clear that it does not come from antiquity, unless
+indirectly; nor does it appear that at the time of its first production
+it was in any way referred to any ancient writer. Manilius was not
+mentioned. The verse is of modern invention, and was composed after the
+arrival of Franklin in Paris on his eventful mission. At first it was
+anonymous; but it was attributed sometimes to D'Alembert and sometimes
+to Turgot. Beyond question, it was not the production of D'Alembert,
+while it will be found in the Works of Turgot,[14] published after his
+death, in the following form:--
+
+ "Eripuit coelo fulmen, sceptrumque tyrannis."
+
+There is no explanation by the editor of the circumstances under which
+the verse was written; but it is given among poetical miscellanies of
+the author, immediately after a translation into French of Pope's "Essay
+on Man," and is entitled "Inscription for a Portrait of Benjamin
+Franklin." It appears that Turgot also tried his hand in these French
+verses, having the same idea:--
+
+ "Le voilà ce mortel dont l'heureuse industrie
+ Sut enchaîner la Foudre et lui donner des loix,
+ Dont la sagesse active et l'éloquente voix
+ D'un pouvoir oppresseur affranchit sa Patrie,
+ Qui désarma les Dieux, qui réprime les Rois."
+
+The single Latin verse is a marvellous substitute for these diffuse and
+feeble lines.
+
+If there were any doubt upon its authorship, it would be removed by the
+positive statement of Condorcet, who, in his Life of Turgot, written
+shortly after the death of this great man, says, "There is known from
+Turgot but one Latin verse, designed for a portrait of Franklin";[15]
+and he gives the verse in this form:--
+
+ "Eripuit coelo fulmen, mox sceptra tyrannis."
+
+But Sparks and Mignet, in their biographies,[16] and so also both the
+biographical dictionaries of France,--that of Michaud and that of
+Didot,--while ascribing the verse to Turgot, concur in the form already
+quoted from Turgot's Works, which was likewise adopted by Ginguené, the
+scholar who has done so much to illustrate Italian literature, on the
+title-page of his "Science du Bon-Homme Richard," with an abridged Life
+of Franklin, in 1794, and by Cabanis, who lived in such intimacy with
+Franklin.[17] It cannot be doubted that it was the final form which this
+verse assumed,--as it is unquestionably the best.
+
+To appreciate the importance of this verse, as marking and helping a
+great epoch, there are certain dates which must not be forgotten.
+Franklin reached Paris on his mission towards the close of 1776. He had
+already signed the Declaration of Independence, and his present duty was
+to obtain the recognition of France for the new power. The very clever
+Madame Du Deffant, in her amusing correspondence with Horace Walpole,
+describes him in a visit to her "with his fur cap on his head and his
+spectacles on his nose," in the same small circle with Madame de
+Luxembourg, a great lady of the time, and the Duke de Choiseul, late
+Prime-Minister. This was on the thirty-first of December, 1776.[18] A
+pretty good beginning. More than a year of effort and anxiety ensued,
+brightened at last by the news that Burgoyne had surrendered at
+Saratoga. On the sixth of February, 1778, the work of the American
+Plenipotentiary was crowned by the signature of the two Treaties of
+Alliance and Commerce by which France acknowledged our Independence and
+pledged her belligerent support. On the fifteenth of March, one of these
+treaties, with a diplomatic note announcing that the Colonies were free
+and independent States, was communicated to the British Government, at
+London, which was promptly encountered by a declaration of war from
+Great Britain. On the twenty-second of March, Franklin was received by
+the King at Versailles, and this remarkable scene is described by the
+same feminine pen to which we are indebted for the early glimpse of him
+on his arrival in Paris.[19] But throughout this intervening period he
+had not lived unknown. Indeed, he had become at once a celebrity.
+Lacretelle, the eminent French historian, says, "By the effect which
+Franklin produced, he appears to have fulfilled his mission, not with a
+court, but with a free people. His virtues and renown negotiated for
+him."[20]
+
+Condorcet, who was a part of that intellectual society which welcomed
+the new Plenipotentiary, has left a record of his reception. "The
+celebrity of Franklin in the sciences," he says, "gave him the
+friendship of all who love or cultivate them, that is, of all who exert
+a real and durable influence upon public opinion. At his arrival he
+became an object of veneration to all enlightened men, and of curiosity
+to others. He submitted to this curiosity with the natural facility of
+his character, and with the conviction that in this way he served the
+cause of his country. It was an honor to have seen him. People repeated
+what they had heard him say. Every _fête_ which he consented to receive,
+every house where he consented to go, spread in society new admirers,
+_who became so many partisans of the American Revolution_.... Men whom
+the works of philosophy had disposed secretly to the love of liberty
+were impassioned for that of a strange people. A general cry was soon
+raised in favor of the American War, and the friends of peace dared not
+even complain that peace was sacrificed to the cause of liberty."[21]
+This is an animated picture by an eye-witness. But all authorities
+concur in its truthfulness. Even Capefigue--whose business is to
+belittle all that is truly great, and especially to efface those names
+which are associated with human liberty, while, like another Old
+Mortality, he furbishes the tombstones of royal mistresses--is yet
+constrained to bear witness to the popularity and influence which
+Franklin achieved. The critic dwells on what he styles his "Quaker
+garb," "his linen so white under clothes so brown," and also the
+elaborate art of the philosopher, who understood France and knew well
+"that a popular man became soon more powerful than power itself"; but he
+cannot deny that the philosopher "fulfilled his duties with great
+superiority," or that he became at once famous.[22]
+
+The arrival of Franklin was followed very soon by the departure of the
+youthful Lafayette, who crossed the sea to offer his generous sword to
+the service of American liberty. Our cause was now widely known. In the
+thronged _cafés_ and the places of public resort it was discussed with
+sympathy and admiration.[23] And so completely was Franklin recognized
+as the representative of new ideas, that the Emperor Joseph II. of
+Austria,--professed reformer as he was,--on one of his visits to France
+under the travelling-name of Count Falkenstein, is reported to have
+firmly avoided all temptation to see him, saying, "My business is to be
+a Royalist,"--thus doing homage to the real character of Franklin, in
+whom the Republic was personified.
+
+Franklin was at once, by natural attraction, the welcome guest of that
+brilliant company of philosophers who exercised such influence over the
+eighteenth century. The "Encyclopédie" was their work, and they were
+masters at the Academy. He was received into their guild. At the famous
+table of the Baron D'Holbach, where twice a week, Sunday and Thursday,
+at dinner, lasting from two till seven o'clock, the wits of that time
+were gathered, he found a hospitable chair. But he was most at home with
+Madame Helvétius, the widow of the rich and handsome philosopher, whose
+name, derived from Holland, is now almost unknown. At her house he met
+in social familiarity D'Alembert, Diderot, D'Holbach, Morellet, Cabanis,
+and Condorcet, with their compeers. There, also, was Turgot, the
+greatest of all. There was another person in some respects as famous as
+any of these, but leading a very different life, whom Franklin saw
+often,--I refer to Caron de Beaumarchais, the author already of the
+"Barbier de Séville," as he was afterwards of the "Mariage de Figaro,"
+who, turning aside from an unsurpassed success at the theatre, exerted
+his peculiar genius to enlist the French Government on the side of the
+struggling Colonies, predicted their triumph, and at last, under the
+assumed name of a mercantile house, became the agent of the Comte de
+Vergennes in furnishing clandestine supplies of arms even before the
+recognition of Independence. It is supposed that through this popular
+dramatist Franklin maintained communications with the French Government
+until the mask was thrown aside.[24]
+
+Beyond all doubt, Turgot is one of the most remarkable intelligences
+which France has produced. He was by nature a philosopher and a
+reformer, but he was also a statesman, who for a time held a seat in the
+cabinet of Louis XVI., first as Minister of the Marine, and then as
+Comptroller of the Finances. Perhaps no minister ever studied more
+completely the good of the people. His administration was one constant
+benefaction. But he was too good for the age in which he lived,--or
+rather, the age was not good enough for him. The King was induced to
+part with him, saying, when he yielded,--"You and I are the only two
+persons who really love the people." This was some time in May, 1776; so
+that Franklin, on his arrival, found this eminent Frenchman free from
+all the constraints of a ministerial position. The character of Turgot
+shows how naturally he sympathized with the Colonies struggling for
+independence, especially when represented by a person like Franklin. In
+a prize essay of his youth, written in 1750, when he was only
+twenty-three years of age, he had foretold the American Revolution.
+These are his remarkable words on that occasion:--
+
+"Colonies are like fruits, which do not hold to the tree after their
+maturity. Having become sufficient in themselves, they do that which
+Carthage did, _that which America will one day do_."[25]
+
+One of his last acts before leaving the Ministry was to prepare a memoir
+on the American War, for the information of the Comte de Vergennes, in
+which he says "that the idea of the absolute separation of the Colonies
+and the mother-country seems infinitely probable; that, when the
+independence of the Colonies shall be entire and acknowledged by the
+English, there will be a total revolution in the political and
+commercial relations of Europe and America; and that all the
+mother-countries will be forced to abandon all empire over their
+colonies, to leave them entire liberty of commerce with all nations, and
+to be content in sharing with others this liberty, and in preserving
+with their colonies the bonds of amity and fraternity."[26] This memoir
+of the French statesman bears date the sixth of April, 1776, nearly
+three months before the Declaration of Independence.
+
+On leaving the Ministry, Turgot devoted himself to literature, science,
+and charity, translating Odes of Horace and Eclogues of Virgil, studying
+geometry with Bossut, chemistry with Lavoisier, and astronomy with
+Rochon, and interesting himself in every thing by which human welfare
+could be advanced. Such a character, with such an experience of
+government, and the prophet of American independence, was naturally
+prepared to welcome Franklin, not only as philosopher, but as statesman
+also.
+
+But the classical welcome of Turgot was partially anticipated,--at least
+in an unsuccessful attempt. Baron Grimm, in that interesting and
+instructive "Correspondance," prepared originally for the advantage of
+distant courts, but now constituting one of the literary and social
+monuments of the period, mentions, under date of October, 1777, that the
+following French verses were made for a portrait of Franklin by Cochin,
+engraved by St. Aubin:--
+
+ "C'est l'honneur et l'appui du nouvel hémisphère;
+ Les flots de l'Océan s'abaissent à sa voix;
+ Il réprime ou dirige à son gré le tonnerre;
+ Qui désarme les dieux, peut-il craindre les rois?"
+
+These verses seem to contain the very idea in the verse of Turgot. But
+they were suppressed at the time by the censor on the ground that they
+were "blasphemous,"--although it is added in a note that "they concerned
+only the King of England." Was it that the negotiations with Franklin
+were not yet sufficiently advanced? And here mark the dates.
+
+It was only after the communication to Great Britain of the Treaty of
+Alliance and the reception of Franklin at Versailles, that the seal
+seems to have been broken. Baron Grimm, in his "Correspondance,"[27]
+under date of April, 1778, makes the following entry:--
+
+"A very beautiful Latin verse has been made for the portrait of Dr.
+Franklin,--
+
+ 'Eripuit coelo fulmen, sceptrumque tyrannis.'
+
+It is a happy imitation of a verse of the 'Anti-Lucretius,'--
+
+ 'Eripuitque Jovi fulmen, Phoeboque sagittas.'"
+
+Here is the earliest notice of this verse, authenticating its origin.
+Nothing further is said of the "Anti-Lucretius"; for in that day it was
+familiar to every lettered person. But I shall speak of it before I
+close.
+
+Only a few days later the verse appears in the correspondence of Madame
+D'Épinay, whose intimate relations with Baron Grimm--the subject of
+curiosity and scandal--will explain her early knowledge of it. She
+records it in a letter to the very remarkable Italian Abbé Galiani,
+under date of May 3d, 1778.[28] And she proceeds to give a translation
+in French verse, which she says "D'Alembert made the other day between
+sleeping and waking." Galiani, who was himself a master of Latin
+versification, and followed closely the fortunes of America, must have
+enjoyed the tribute. In a letter written shortly afterwards, he enters
+into all the grandeur of the occasion. "You have," says he, "at this
+hour decided the greatest question of the globe,--that is, if it is
+America which shall reign over Europe, or Europe which shall continue to
+reign over America. I would wager in favor of America."[29] In these
+words the Neapolitan said as much as Turgot.
+
+A little later the verse appears in a different scene. It had reached
+the _salons_ of Madame Doublet, whence it was transferred to the
+"Mémoires Secrets de Bachaumont," under date of June 8th, 1778, as "a
+very beautiful verse, proper to characterize M. Franklin and to serve as
+an inscription for his portrait." These Memoirs, as is well known, are
+the record of conversations and news gathered in the circle of that
+venerable Egeria of gossip;[30] and here is evidence of the publicity
+which this welcome had already obtained.
+
+The verse was now fairly launched. War was flagrant between France and
+Great Britain. There was no longer any reason why the new alliance
+between France and the United States should not be placed under the
+auspices of genius, and why the same hand which had snatched the
+lightning from the skies should not have the fame of snatching the
+sceptre from King George III. The time for free speech had come. It was
+no longer "blasphemous."
+
+But it will be observed that these records of this verse fail to mention
+the immediate author. Was he unknown at the time? Or did the fact that
+he was recently a cabinet-minister induce him to hide behind a mask?
+Turgot was a master of epigram,--as witness the terrible lines on
+Frederick of Prussia; but he was very prudent in conduct. "Nobody," said
+Voltaire, "so skilful to launch the shaft without showing the hand." But
+there is a letter from no less a person than D'Alembert, which reveals
+something of the "filing" which this verse underwent, and something of
+the persons consulted. Unhappily, the letter is without date; nor does
+it appear to whom it was addressed, except that the "_cher confrère_"
+seems to imply that it was to a brother of the Academy. This letter will
+be found in a work which is now known to have been the compilation of
+the Marquis Gaëtan de La Rochefoucauld,[31] entitled, "Mémoires de
+Condorcet sur la Révolution Française, extraits de sa Correspondance et
+de celle de ses Amis."[32] It is introduced by the following words from
+the Marquis:--
+
+"It is known how Franklin had been fêted when he came to Paris, because
+he was the representative of a republic. The philosophers, especially,
+received him with enthusiasm. It may be said, among other things, that
+D'Alembert lost his sleep; and we are going to prove it by a letter
+which he wrote, where he put himself to the torture in order to versify
+in honor of Franklin."
+
+The letter is then given as follows:--
+
+ "_Friday Morning_.
+
+ "MY DEAR COLLEAGUE,--You are acquainted with the Franklin verse,--
+
+ 'Eripuit coelo fulmen, _mox sceptra_ tyrannis.'
+
+ You should surely cause it to be put in the Paris paper, if it is
+ not there already.
+
+ "I should agree with La Harpe that _sceptrumque_ is better: first,
+ because _mox sceptra_ is a little hard, and then because _mox_,
+ according to the dictionary of Gesner, who collects examples,
+ signifies equally _statim_ or _deinde_, which causes a double
+ meaning, _mox eripuit_ or _mox eripiet_.
+
+ "However, here is how I have attempted to translate this verse for
+ the portrait of Franklin:--
+
+ 'Tu vois le sage courageux
+ Dont l'heureux et mâle génie
+ Arracha le tonnerre aux dieux
+ Et le sceptre à la tyrannie.'
+
+ If you find these verses sufficiently supportable, so that people
+ will not laugh at me, you can put them into the Paris paper, even
+ with my name. I shall honor myself in rendering this homage to
+ Franklin, but on condition that you find the verses _printable_.
+ As I make no pretension on account of them, I shall be perfectly
+ content, if you reject them as bad.
+
+ "The third verse can be put,--_A ravi le tonnerre aux cieux_, or
+ _aux dieux_."
+
+From this letter it appears that the critical judgment of La Harpe,
+confirmed by D'Alembert, sided for _sceptrumque_ as better than _mox
+sceptra_.
+
+But the verse of Turgot was not alone in its testimony. There was an
+incident precisely contemporaneous, which shows how completely France
+had fallen under the fascination of the American cause. Voltaire, the
+acknowledged chief of French literature in the brilliant eighteenth
+century, after many years of busy exile at Ferney, in the neighborhood
+of Geneva, where he had wielded his far-reaching sceptre, was induced,
+in his old age, to visit Paris once again before he died. He left his
+Swiss retreat on the sixth of February, 1778, the very day on which
+Franklin signed the Alliance with France, and after a journey which
+resembled the progress of a sovereign, he reached Paris on the twelfth
+of February. He was at once surrounded by the homage of all that was
+most illustrious in literature and science, while the theatre, grateful
+for his contributions to the drama, vied with the Academy. But there
+were two characters on whom the patriarch, as he was fondly called,
+lavished a homage of his own. He had already addressed to Turgot a most
+remarkable epistle in verse, the mood of which may be seen in its title,
+"Épitre à un Homme"; but on seeing the discarded statesman, who had
+been so true to benevolent ideas, he came forward to meet him, saying,
+with his whole soul, "Let me kiss the hand which signed the salvation of
+the people." The scene with Franklin was more touching still. Voltaire
+began in English, which he had spoken early in life, but, having lost
+the habit, he soon charted to French, saying that he "could not resist
+the desire of speaking for one moment the language of Franklin." The
+latter had brought with him his grandson, for whom he asked a
+benediction. "God and Liberty," said Voltaire, putting his hands upon
+the head of the child; "this is the only benediction proper for the
+grandson of Franklin." A few days afterward, at a public session of the
+Academy, they were placed side by side, when, amidst the applause of the
+enlightened company, the two old men rose and embraced. The political
+triumphs of Franklin and the dramatic triumphs of Voltaire caused the
+exclamation, that "Solon embraced Sophocles." But it was more than this.
+It was France embracing America, beneath the benediction of "God and
+Liberty." Only a few days later, Voltaire died. But the alliance with
+France had received a new assurance, and the cause of American
+Independence an unalterable impulse.
+
+Turgot did not live to enjoy the final triumph of the cause to which he
+had given such remarkable expression. He died March 30th, 1781, several
+months before that "crowning mercy," the capture of Cornwallis, and
+nearly two years before the Provisional Articles of Peace, by which the
+Colonies were recognized as free and independent States. But his
+attachment to Franklin was one of the enjoyments of his latter
+years.[33] Besides the verse to which so much reference has been made,
+there is an interesting incident which attests the communion of ideas
+between them, if not the direct influence of Turgot. Captain Cook, the
+eminent navigator, who "steered Britain's oak into a world unknown," was
+in distant seas on a voyage of discovery. Such an enterprise naturally
+interested Franklin, and, in the spirit of a refined humanity, he sought
+to save it from the chances of war. Accordingly, he issued a passport,
+addressed "To all captains and commanders of armed ships, acting by
+commission from the Congress of the United States of America, now in war
+with Great Britain," where, after setting forth the nature of the voyage
+of the English navigator, he proceeded to say,--"This is most earnestly
+to recommend to every one of you, that, in case the said ship, which is
+now expected to be soon in the European seas on her return, should
+happen to fall into your hands, you would not consider her as an enemy,
+nor suffer any plunder to be made of the effects contained in her, nor
+obstruct her immediate return to England; but that you would treat the
+said Captain Cook and his people with all civility and kindness,
+affording them, as common friends to mankind, all the assistance in your
+power which they may happen to stand in need of."[34] This document
+bears date March 10th, 1779. But Turgot had anticipated Franklin. At the
+first outbreak of the war, he had submitted a memoir to the French
+Government, on which it was ordered that Captain Cook should not be
+treated as an enemy, but as a benefactor of all European nations.[35]
+Here was a triumph of civilization, by which we have all been gainers;
+for such an example is immortal in its influence.
+
+There is yet another circumstance which should be mentioned, in order to
+exhibit the identity of sympathies in these two eminent persons. Each
+sought to marry Madame Helvétius: Turgot early in life, while she was
+still Mademoiselle Ligniville, belonging to a family of twenty-one
+children, from a chateau in Lorraine, and the niece of Madame de
+Graffigny, the author of the "Peruvian Letters"; Franklin in his old
+age, while a welcome guest in the intellectual circle which this
+widowed lady continued to gather about her. Throughout his stay in
+France he was in unbroken relations with this circle, dining with it
+very often, and adding much to its gayety, while Madame Helvétius, with
+her friends, dined with him once a week. It was with tears in his eyes
+that he parted from her, whom he never expected to see again in this
+life; and on reaching his American home, he addressed her in words of
+touching tenderness:--"I stretch out my arms towards you,
+notwithstanding the immensity of the seas which separate us, while I
+wait the heavenly kiss which I firmly trust one day to give you."[36]
+
+But the story of the verse is not yet finished. And here it mingles with
+the history of Franklin in Paris, constituting in itself an episode of
+the American Revolution. The verse was written for a portrait. And now
+that the ice was broken, the portrait of Franklin was to be seen
+everywhere,--in painting, in sculpture, and in engraving. I have
+counted, in the superb collection of the Bibliothèque Impériale at
+Paris, nearly a hundred engraved heads of him. At the royal exposition
+of pictures the republican portrait found a place, and the name of
+Franklin was printed at length in the catalogue,--a circumstance which
+did not pass unobserved at the time; for the "Espion Anglais," in
+recording it, treats it as "announcing that he began to come out from
+his obscurity."[37] The same curious authority, describing a festival at
+Marseilles, says, under date of March 20th, 1779,--"I was struck, on
+entering the hall, to observe a crowd of portraits representing the
+insurgents; but that of M. Franklin especially drew my attention, on
+account of the device, '_Eripuit coelo_,' etc. This was inscribed
+recently, and _every one admired the sublime truth_."[38] Thus
+completely was France, not merely in its social centre, where fashion
+gives the law, but in its distant borders, pledged to the cause of which
+Franklin was the representative.
+
+As in the halls of science and in popular resorts, so was our
+Plenipotentiary even in the palace of princes. The biographer of the
+Prince de Condé dwells with admiration upon the illustrious character
+who, during the great debate and the negotiations which ensued, had
+fixed the regards of Paris, of Versailles, of the whole kingdom
+indeed,--although in his simple and farmer-like exterior so unlike those
+gilded plenipotentiaries to whom France was accustomed,--and he
+recounts, most sympathetically, that the Prince, after an interview of
+two hours, declared that "Franklin appeared to him above even his
+reputation."[39] And here again we encounter the unwilling testimony of
+Capefigue, who says that he was followed everywhere, taking possession
+of "hearts and minds," and that "his image, under the simple garb of a
+Quaker, was to be found at the hearth of the poor and in the boudoir of
+the beautiful";[40]--all of which is in harmony with the more
+sympathetic record of Lacretelle, who says that "portraits of Franklin
+were everywhere, with this inscription, _Eripuit coelo_, etc., _which
+the Court itself found just and sublime_."[41]
+
+But it was at court, even in the precincts of Versailles, that the
+portrait and the inscription had their most remarkable experience. Of
+this there is an authentic account in the Memoirs of Marie Antoinette by
+her attendant, Madame Campan. This feminine chronicler relates that
+Franklin appeared at court in the dress of an American farmer. His flat
+hair without powder, his round hat, his coat of brown cloth contrasted
+with the bespangled and embroidered dresses, the powdered and perfumed
+hair of the courtiers of Versailles. The novelty charmed the lively
+imagination of French ladies. Elegant _fêtes_ were given to the man who
+was said to unite in himself the renown of a great, natural philosopher
+with "those patriotic virtues which had made him embrace the noble part
+of Apostle of Liberty." Madame Campan records that she assisted at one
+of these _fêtes_, where the most beautiful among three hundred ladies
+was designated to place a crown of laurel upon the white head of the
+American philosopher, and two kisses upon the cheeks of the old man.
+Even in the palace, at the exposition of the Sèvres porcelain, the
+medallion of Franklin, with the legend, "_Eripuit coelo_", etc., was
+sold directly under the eyes of the King. Madame Campan adds, however,
+that the King avoided expressing himself on this enthusiasm, which, she
+says, "without doubt, his sound sense made him blame." But an incident,
+called "a pleasantry," which has remained quite unknown, goes beyond
+speech in the way of explaining the secret sentiments of Louis XVI. The
+Comtesse Diane de Polignac, devoted to Marie Antoinette, shared warmly
+the "infatuation" with regard to Franklin. The King observed it. But
+here the story shall be told in the language of the eminent lady who
+records it:--"Il fit faire à la manufacture de Sèvres un vase de nuit,
+an fond duquel était placé le médaillon avec la légende _si fort en
+vogue_, et l'envoya en présent d'étrennes à la Comtesse Diane."[42] Such
+was the exceptional treatment of Franklin, and of the inscription in his
+honor which was so much in vogue. Giving to this incident its natural
+interpretation, it is impossible to resist the conclusion, that the
+French people, and not the King, sanctioned American Independence.
+
+The conduct of the Queen on this special occasion is not recorded;
+although we are told by the same communicative chronicler who had been
+Her Majesty's companion, that she did not hesitate to express herself
+more openly than the King on the part which France took in favor of the
+independence of the American Colonies, to which she was constantly
+opposed. A letter from Mario Antoinette, addressed to Madame de
+Polignac, under the date of April 9th, 1787, declares unavailing regret,
+saying,--"The time of illusions is past, and to-day we pay dear on
+account of our infatuation and enthusiasm for the American War."[43] It
+is evident that Marie Antoinette, like her brother Joseph, thought that
+her "business was to be a Royalist."
+
+But the name of Franklin triumphed in France. So long as he continued to
+reside there he was received with honor, and when, after the achievement
+of Independence, and the final fulfilment of all that was declared in
+the verse of Turgot, he undertook to return home, the Queen--who had
+looked with so little favor upon the cause which he so grandly
+represented--sent a litter to receive his sick body and carry him gently
+to the sea. As the great Revolution began to show itself, his name was
+hailed with new honor; and this was natural, for the great Revolution
+was the outbreak of that spirit which had risen to welcome him. In
+snatching the sceptre from a tyrant he had given a lesson to France.
+His death, when at last it occurred, was the occasion of a magnificent
+eulogy from Mirabeau, who, borrowing the idea of Turgot, exclaimed from
+the tribune of the National Assembly,--"Antiquity would have raised
+altars to the powerful genius, who, for the good of man, embracing in
+his thought heaven and earth, _could subdue lightning and tyrants_."[44]
+On his motion, France went into mourning for Franklin. His bust was a
+favorite ornament, and, during the festival of Liberty, it was carried,
+with those of Sidney, Rousseau, and Voltaire, before the people to
+receive their veneration.[45] A little later, the eminent medical
+character, Cabanis, who had lived in intimate association with Franklin,
+added his testimony, saying that the enfranchisement of the United
+States was in many respects his work, and that the Revolution, the most
+important to the happiness of men which had then been accomplished on
+earth, united with one of the most brilliant discoveries of physical
+science to consecrate his memory; and he concludes by quoting the verse
+of Turgot.[46] Long afterwards, his last surviving companion in the
+cheerful circle of Madame Helvétius, still loyal to the idea of Turgot,
+hailed him as "that great man who had placed his country in the number
+of independent states, and made one of the most important discoveries of
+the age."[47]
+
+But it is time to look at this verse in its literary relations, from
+which I have been diverted by its commanding interest as a political
+event. Its importance on this account must naturally enhance the
+interest in its origin.
+
+The poem which furnished the prototype of the famous verse was
+"Anti-Lucretius, sive de Deo et Natura," by the Cardinal Melchior de
+Polignac. Its author was of that patrician house which is associated so
+closely with Marie Antoinette in the earlier Revolution, and with
+Charles X. in the later Revolution, having its cradle in the mountains
+of Auvergne, near the cradle of Lafayette, and its present tomb in the
+historic cemetery of Picpus, near the tomb of Lafayette, so that these
+two great names, representing opposite ideas, begin and end side by
+side. He was not merely an author, but statesman and diplomatist also,
+under Louis XIV. and the Regent. Through his diplomacy a French prince
+was elected King of Poland. He represented France at the Peace of
+Utrecht, where he bore himself very proudly towards the Dutch. By the
+nomination of the Pretender, at that time in France, he obtained the hat
+of a cardinal. At Rome he was a favorite, and he was also, with some
+interruptions, a favorite at Versailles. His personal appearance, his
+distinguished manners, his genius, and his accomplishments, all
+commended him. Literary honors were superadded to political and
+ecclesiastical. He succeeded to the chair of Bossuet at the Academy. But
+he was not without the vicissitudes of political life. Falling into
+disgrace at court, he was banished to the abbacy of Bonport. There the
+scholarly ecclesiastic occupied himself with a refutation of Lucretius,
+in Latin verse.
+
+The origin of the poem is not without interest. Meeting Bayle in
+Holland, the ecclesiastic found the indefatigable skeptic most
+persistently citing Lucretius, in whose elaborate verse the atheistic
+materialism of Epicurus is developed and exalted. Others had already
+answered the philosopher directly; but the indignant Christian was moved
+to answer the poet through whom the dangerous system was proclaimed. His
+poem was, therefore, a vindication of God and religion, in direct
+response to a master-poem of antiquity, in which these are assailed. The
+attempt was lofty, especially when the champion adopted the language of
+Lucretius. Perhaps, since Sannazaro, no modern production in Latin verse
+has found equal success. Even before its publication, in 1747, it was
+read at court, and was admired in the princely circle of Sceaux. It
+appeared in elegant, editions, was translated into French prose by
+Bougainville, and into French verse by Jeanty-Laurans, also most
+successfully into Italian verse by Ricci. At the latter part of the last
+century, when Franklin reached Paris, it was hardly less known in
+literary circles than a volume of Grote's History in our own day.
+Voltaire, the arbiter of literary fame at that time, regarding the
+author only on the side of literature, said of him, in his "Temple du
+Goût,"--
+
+ "Le Cardinal, oracle de la France,
+ Réunissaut Virgile avec Platon,
+ _Vengeur du ciel et vainqueur de Lucrèce_."
+
+The last line of this remarkable eulogy has a movement and balance not
+unlike the Latin verse of Turgot, or that which suggested it in the poem
+of Polignac; but the praise which it so pointedly offers attests the
+fame of the author; nor was this praise confined to the "fine frenzy" of
+verse. The "Anti-Lucretius" was gravely pronounced the "rival of the
+poem which it answered,"--"with verses as flowing as Ovid, sometimes
+approaching the elegant simplicity of Horace and sometimes the nobleness
+of Virgil,"--and then again, with a philosophy and a poetry combined
+"which would not be disavowed either by Descartes or by Virgil."[48]
+
+Turning now to the poem itself, we shall see how completely the verse of
+Turgot finds its prototype there. Epicurus is indignantly described as
+denying to the gods all power, and declaring man independent, so as to
+act for himself; and here the poet says, "Braving the thunderous
+recesses of heaven, _he snatched the lightning from Jove and the arrows
+from Apollo_, and, liberating the mortal race, ordered it to dare all
+things,"--
+
+ "Coeli et tonitralia templa lacessens,
+ _Eripuit fulmenque Jovi, Phoeboque sagittas_;
+ Et mortale manumittens genus, omnia jussit
+ Audere."[49]
+
+To deny the power of God and to declare independence of His commands,
+which the poet here holds up to judgment, is very unlike the life of
+Franklin, all whose service was in obedience to God's laws, whether in
+snatching the lightning from the skies or the sceptre from tyrants; and
+yet it is evident that the verse which pictured Epicurus in his impiety
+suggested the picture of the American plenipotentiary in his double
+labors of science and statesmanship.
+
+But the present story will not be complete without an allusion to that
+poem of antiquity which was supposed to have suggested the verse of
+Turgot, and which doubtless did suggest the verse of the
+"Anti-Lucretius." Manilius is a poet little known. It is difficult to
+say when he lived or what he was. He is sometimes supposed to have lived
+under Augustus, and sometimes under Theodosius. He is sometimes supposed
+to have been a Roman slave, and sometimes a Roman senator. His poem,
+under the name of "Astronomicon," is a treatise on astronomy in verse,
+which recounts the origin of the material universe, exhibits the
+relations of the heavenly bodies, and vindicates this ancient science.
+It is while describing the growth of knowledge, which gradually mastered
+Nature, that the poet says,--
+
+ "Eriputque Jovi fulmen, viresque tonandi."[50]
+
+The meaning of this line will be seen in the context, which, for
+plainness as well as curiosity, I quote from a metrical version of the
+first book of the poem,[51] entitled, "The Sphere of Marcus Manilius
+made an English Poem, by Edward Sherburne," which was dedicated to
+Charles II.:--
+
+ "Nor put they to their curious search an end
+ Till reason had scaled heaven, thence viewed this round
+ And Nature latent in its causes found:
+ Why thunder does the suffering clouds assail;
+ Why winter's snow more soft than summer's hail;
+ Whence earthquakes come and subterranean fires;
+ Why showers descend, what force the wind inspires:
+ From error thus the wondering minds uncharmed,
+ _Unsceptred Jove, the Thunderer disarmed_."
+
+Enough has been said on the question of origin; but there is yet one
+other aspect of the story.
+
+The verse was hardly divulged when it became the occasion of various
+efforts in the way of translation. Turgot had already done it into
+French; so had D'Alembert. M. Nogaret wrote to Franklin, inclosing an
+attempted translation, and says in his letter,--"The French have done
+their best to translate the Latin verse, where justice is done you in so
+few words. They have appeared as jealous of transporting this eulogy
+into their language as they are of possessing you. But nobody has
+succeeded, and I think nobody will succeed."[52] He then quotes a
+translation which he thinks defective, although it appeared in the
+"Almanach des Muses" as the best:--
+
+ "Cet homme que tu vois, sublime en tous les tems,
+ Dérobe aux dieux la foudre et le sceptre aux tyrans."
+
+To this letter Dr. Franklin made the following reply:[53]--
+
+ "_Passy, 8 March, 1781_.
+
+ "SIR,--I received the letter you have done me the honor of writing
+ to me the 2d instant, wherein, after overwhelming me with a flood
+ of compliments, which I can never hope to merit, you request my
+ opinion of your translation of a Latin verse that has been applied
+ to me. If I were, which I really am not, sufficiently skilled in
+ your excellent language to be a proper judge of its poesy, the
+ supposition of my being the subject must restrain me from giving
+ any opinion on that line, except that it ascribes too much to me,
+ especially in what relates to the tyrant, the Revolution having
+ been the work of many able and brave men, wherein it is sufficient
+ honor for me, if I am allowed a small share. I am much obliged by
+ the favorable sentiments you are pleased to entertain of me.
+
+ "With regard, I have the honor to be, Sir, etc.,
+
+ "B. FRANKLIN."
+
+In his acknowledgment of this letter M. Nogaret says,--"Paris is pleased
+with the translation of your '_Eripuit_,' and your portrait, as I had
+foreseen, makes the fortune of the engraver."[54] But it does not appear
+to which translation he refers.
+
+Here is another attempt:--
+
+ "Il a par ses travaux, toujours plus étonnans,
+ Ravi la foudre aux Dieux et le sceptre aux tyrans."
+
+There are other verses which adopt the idea of Turgot. Here, for
+instance, is a part of a song by the Abbé Morellet, written for one of
+the dinners of Madame Helvétius:[55]--
+
+ "Comme un aigle audacieux,
+ Il a volé jusqu'aux cieux,
+ _Et dérobé le tonnerre_
+ Dont ils effrayaient la terre,
+ Heureux larcin
+ De l'habile Benjamin.
+
+ "L'Américain indompté
+ _Recouvre sa liberté_;
+ Et ce généreux ouvrage,
+ Autre exploit de notre sage,
+ Est mis à fin
+ Par Louis et Benjamin."
+
+Mr. Sparks found among Franklin's papers the following paraphrastic
+version:[56]--
+
+ "Franklin sut arrêter la foudre dans les airs,
+ Et c'est le moindre bien qu'il fit à sa patrie;
+ Au milieu de climats divers,
+ Où dominait la tyrannie,
+ Il fit régner les arts, les moeurs, et le génie;
+ Et voilà le héros que j'offre à l'univers."
+
+Nor should I omit a translation into English by Mr. Elphinstone:--
+
+ "He snatched the bolt from Heaven's avenging hand,
+ Disarmed and drove the tyrant from the land."
+
+In concluding this sketch, I wish to say that the literary associations
+of the subject did not tempt me; but I could not resist the inducement
+to present in its proper character an interesting incident which can be
+truly comprehended only when it is recognized in its political
+relations. To this end it was important to exhibit its history, even in
+details, so that the verse which has occupied so much attention should
+be seen not only in its scholarly fascination, but in its wide-spread
+influence in the circles of the learned and the circles even of the
+fashionable in Paris and throughout France, binding this great nation by
+an unchangeable vow to the support of American liberty. Words are
+sometimes things; but never were words so completely things as those
+with which Turgot welcomed Franklin. The memory of that welcome cannot
+be forgotten in America. Can it ever be forgotten in France?
+
+
+POSTSCRIPT.
+
+And now the country is amazed by the report that the original welcome of
+France to America and the inspired welcome of Turgot to Franklin are
+forgotten by the France of this day, or, rather let me say, forgotten by
+the Emperor, whose memory for the time is the memory of France. It is
+said that Louis Napoleon is concerting an alliance with the Rebel
+slavemongers of our country, founded on the recognition of their
+independence, so that they may take their place as a new power in the
+family of nations. Indeed, we have been told, through the columns of the
+official organ, the "Moniteur," that he wishes to do this thing. Perhaps
+he imagines that he follows the great example of the last century.
+
+What madness!
+
+The two cases are in perfect contrast,--as opposite as the poles, as
+unlike as Liberty and Slavery.
+
+The struggle for American Independence was a struggle for Liberty, and
+was elevated throughout by this holy cause. But the struggle for
+Slavemonger Independence is necessarily and plainly a struggle for
+Slavery, and is degraded throughout by the unutterable vileness of all
+its barefaced pretensions.
+
+The earlier struggle, adopted by the enlightened genius of France, was
+solemnly placed under the benediction of "God and Liberty." The present
+struggle, happily thus far discarded by that same enlightened genius,
+can have no other benediction than "Satan and Slavery."
+
+The earlier struggle was to snatch the sceptre from a kingly tyrant. The
+present struggle is to put whips into the hands of Rebel slavemongers
+with which _to compel work without wages_, and thus give wicked power to
+vulgar tyrants without number.
+
+The earlier struggle was fitly pictured by the welcome of Turgot to
+Franklin. But another spirit must be found, and other words must be
+invented, to picture the struggle which it is now proposed to place
+under the protection of France.
+
+The earlier struggle was grandly represented by Benjamin Franklin, who
+was already known by a sublime discovery in science. The present
+struggle is characteristically represented by John Slidell, whose great
+fame is from the electioneering frauds by which he sought to control a
+Presidential election; so that his whole life is fitly pictured, when it
+is said, that he thrust fraudulent votes into the ballot-box, and whips
+into the hands of task-masters.
+
+The earlier struggle was predicted by Turgot, who said, that, in the
+course of Nature, colonies must drop from the parent stem, like ripe
+fruit. But where is the Turgot who has predicted, that, in the course of
+Nature, the great Republic must be broken, in order to found a new power
+on the corner-stone of Slavery?
+
+The earlier struggle gathered about it the sympathy of the learned, the
+good, and the wise, while the people of France rose up to call it
+blessed. The present struggle can expect nothing but detestation from
+all who are not lost to duty and honor, while the people of France must
+cover it with curses.
+
+The earlier struggle enjoyed the favor of France, whether in assemblies
+of learning or of fashion, in spite of its King. It remains to be seen
+if the present struggle must not ignobly fail in France, still mindful
+of its early vows, in spite of its Emperor.
+
+Where duty and honor are so plain, it is painful to think that even for
+a moment there can be any hesitation.
+
+Alas for France!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REVIEWS AND LITERARY NOTICES.
+
+
+_History of Spanish Literature._ By GEORGE TICKNOR. In Three Volumes.
+Third American Edition, corrected and enlarged. Boston: Ticknor &
+Fields.
+
+The first edition of this work was published in 1849, in three volumes
+octavo, and it is hardly necessary for us to add, that it was received
+with very great favor both at home and abroad. Indeed, we may go
+farther, and say that it was received with the highest favor by those
+who were best qualified to pronounce upon its merits. The audience which
+it addressed was small at home, and not numerous anywhere; for the
+literature of Spain, in general, does not present strong attractions to
+those who are not natives of the Peninsula. In our country, at the time
+of its publication, there was hardly a man competent to examine and
+criticize it; and in Europe, outside of Spain itself, the number of
+thorough Spanish scholars was and is but small, and of these a large
+proportion is found in Germany. But by these, whether in Germany,
+France, or England, Mr. Ticknor's History was received with a generous
+and hearty admiration which must have been to him as authentic a token
+of the worth of his book as the voice of posterity itself. But, of
+course, it was exposed to the severest trial in Spain, the people of
+which are intensely national, loving their literature, like everything
+else which belongs to them, with a passionate and exclusive love, and
+not disposed to treat with any tenderness a foreign writer who should
+lay an incompetent hand upon any of their great writers, though in a
+friendly and liberal spirit. But by the scholars and men of letters in
+Spain it was greeted with a kindliness of welcome which nothing but the
+most substantial excellence could have assured. Universal assent to the
+views of a foreigner and a Protestant was not to be expected: this or
+that particular judgment was questioned; but no one said, or could say,
+that Mr. Ticknor's History was superficial, or hastily prepared, or
+prejudiced, or wanting in due proportions. On the other hand, a most
+hearty tribute of admiration was paid to its thorough learning, its
+minute and patient research, its accurate judgments, its candid temper
+and generous spirit. Cultivated Spaniards were amazed that a foreigner
+had so thoroughly traced the stream of their literature from its
+fountain-heads, omitting nothing, overlooking nothing, and doing justice
+to all.
+
+Such a work could never attain any very wide popularity, and this from
+the nature of its subject. To the general reader books about books are
+never so attractive as histories and biographies, which deal with the
+doings of men, and glow with the warmth of human interests. But every
+man of literary taste, though but superficially acquainted with Spanish
+literature, could recognize the merits of Mr. Ticknor's work, its
+philosophical spirit, its lucid arrangement, its elegant and judicious
+criticisms, and its neat, correct, and accurate style. He could not fail
+to see that the works of Bouterwek and Sismondi were, by comparison,
+merely a series of graceful sketches, with no claim to be called a
+complete and thorough history. It took its place at once as the highest
+authority in any language upon the subject of which it treated, as the
+very first book which everybody would consult who wanted any information
+upon that subject.
+
+The present edition of the "History of Spanish Literature" is by no
+means identical with those which have preceded it. It omits nearly the
+whole of the inedited, primitive Castilian poems which have heretofore
+filled about seventy pages at the end of the last volume; and in other
+parts of the work a corresponding, and even more than a corresponding,
+amount of new matter has been introduced, which will, it is believed, be
+accounted of greater interest than the early poetry it displaces. These
+additions and changes have been derived from very various sources. In
+the first place, Mr. Ticknor was in Europe himself in 1856 and 1857, and
+visited the principal libraries, public and private, in England, France,
+Germany, and Italy, in which any considerable collection of Spanish
+books was to be found, and by examination of these supplied any wants
+there might be in his own very ample stores. In the second place, his
+History has been translated into German and Spanish, the former version
+being illustrated with notes by Dr. Ferdinand Wolf, perhaps the best
+Spanish scholar in Germany, and the latter by Don Pascual de Gayangos,
+one of the best scholars in Spain. From the results of the labors of
+these distinguished annotators Mr. Ticknor has taken--with generous
+acknowledgment--everything which, in his judgment, could add value,
+interest, or completeness to the present revised edition. And lastly, in
+the period between the publication of the first edition and the present
+time much has been done for the illustration of Spanish literature, both
+in the Peninsula and out of it. This is due in part to the interest in
+the subject which Mr. Ticknor himself awakened; and in Spain it is one
+of the consequences of the rapid progress in material development and
+vital energy which that country has been making during the last fifteen
+years. New lives of some of its principal writers have been published,
+and new editions of their works have been prepared. From all these
+sources a very ample supply of new materials has been derived, so that,
+while the work remains substantially the same in plan, outline, and
+spirit, there are hardly three consecutive pages in it which do not
+contain additions and improvements. We will briefly mention a few of the
+more prominent of these.
+
+In the first volume, pages 446-455, the life of Garcilasso de la Vega is
+almost entirely rewritten from materials found in a recent biography by
+Don Eustaquio Navarrete, which Mr. Ticknor pronounces "an important
+contribution to Spanish literary history." The writer is the son of the
+learned Don Martin Navarrete.
+
+In the second volume, pages 75-81, many new and interesting facts are
+stated in regard to the life of Luis de Leon, derived from a recently
+published report of the entire official record of his trial before the
+Inquisition, of which Mr. Ticknor says that it is "by far the most
+important authentic statement known to me respecting the treatment of
+men of letters who were accused before that formidable tribunal, and
+probably the most curious and important one in existence, whether in
+manuscript or in print. Its multitudinous documents fill more than nine
+hundred pages, everywhere teeming with instruction and warning on the
+subject of ecclesiastical usurpations, and the noiseless, cold, subtle
+means by which they crush the intellectual freedom and manly culture of
+a people."
+
+In the same volume, pages 118-119, some new and interesting facts are
+stated which prove beyond a doubt, that Lope de Vega was actuated by
+ungenerous feelings towards his great contemporary, Cervantes. The
+evidence is found in some autograph letters of Lope, extracts from which
+were made by Duran, and are now published by Von Schack, an excellent
+Spanish scholar.
+
+In the same volume, page 191, is a copy of the will of Lope de Vega,
+recently discovered, and obtained from the late Lord Holland.
+
+In the same volume, pages 354-357, is a learned bibliographical note
+upon the publication and various editions of the plays of Calderon.
+
+In the third volume, Appendix B., pages 408-414, is a learned
+bibliographical note on the Romanceros.
+
+In the same volume, Appendix C., pages 419-422, is an elaborate note on
+the Centon Epistolario, in reply to an article by the Marques de Pidal.
+
+In the same volume, Appendix D., pages 432-434, is a new postscript on
+the clever literary forgery, _El Buscapié_.
+
+At the close of the third volume there are seven pages giving a brief
+and condensed account of the several works connected with Spanish
+literature which have been published within two or three years past, and
+since the stereotype plates for the present work were cast.
+
+The present edition is in a duodecimo, instead of an octavo form, and is
+sold at a less price than the previous ones.
+
+In the closing sentences of the preface to this edition, Mr. Ticknor
+says: "Its preparation has been a pleasant task, scattered lightly over
+the years that have elapsed since the first edition of this work was
+published, and that have been passed, like the rest of my life, almost
+entirely among my own books. That I shall ever recur to this task again,
+for the purpose of further changes or additions, is not at all probable.
+My accumulated years forbid any such anticipation; and therefore, with
+whatever of regret I may part from what has entered into the happiness
+of so considerable a portion of my life, I feel that now I part from it
+for the last time. _Extremum hoc munus habeto_." This is a very natural
+feeling, and gracefully expressed; but whatever of sadness there may be
+in parting from a book which has so long been a constant resource, a
+daily companion, may in this case be tempered by the thought that the
+work, as now dismissed, is so well founded, so symmetrically
+proportioned, so firmly built, as to defy the sharpest criticism--that
+of Time itself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RECENT AMERICAN PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED BY THE EDITORS OF THE ATLANTIC
+MONTHLY.
+
+
+The History, Civil, Political, and Military, of the Southern Rebellion,
+from its Incipient Stages to its Close. Comprehending, also, all
+Important State-Papers, Ordinances of Secession, Proclamations,
+Proceedings of Congress, Official Reports of Commanders, etc., etc. By
+Orville J. Victor. New York. James D. Torrey. Vols. I. and II. 8vo. pp.
+viii., 531; viii., 537. per vol. $2.50.
+
+Biographical Sketches of Illinois Officers engaged in the War against
+the Rebellion of 1861. By James Grant Wilson, Major commanding Fifteenth
+Illinois Cavalry. Enlarged Edition. Illustrated with Portraits. Chicago,
+James Barnet. 8vo. paper. pp. 120. 50 cts.
+
+Leaves from the Diary of an Army-Surgeon; or, Incidents of Field, Camp,
+and Hospital Life. By Thomas T. Ellis, M.D., late Post-Surgeon at New
+York, and Acting Medical Director at Whitehouse, Va. New York. John
+Bradburn. 12mo. pp. 312. $1.00.
+
+The Actress in High Life: An Episode in Winter Quarters. New York. John
+Bradburn. 12mo. pp. 416. $1.25.
+
+Americans in Rome. By Henry P. Leland. New York. Charles T. Evans. 12mo.
+pp. 311. $1.25.
+
+The Castle's Heir: A Novel in Real Life. By Mrs. Henry Wood. In Two
+Volumes. Philadelphia. T.B. Peterson & Brothers. 8vo. paper. pp. 144,
+260. $1.00.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: The circumstances connected with the introduction of the
+British troops into Boston will be found related in the "Atlantic
+Monthly" for June, 1862; and the number for the following August
+contains a view of the relation of the question of removal to the
+arbitrary policy contemplated for the Colonies.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Boston, printed in the "Gazette" of February 12, 1770. A
+letter printed in the "Boston Evening Post," October 9, 1789, from
+London, received by the last ship, after eulogizing "the noble stand of
+the colonists," says, "I am charmed with the prudent conduct of the
+Bostonians in particular, and that you have been able lo preserve so
+much tranquillity among you, while the spirits of the people must have
+been so soured and agitated by oppression. You have certainly very wise
+and prudent men concerned in the conduct of your affairs." A Tory view
+of Boston in these times, (by "Sagittarius,") is as follows:--"The
+Town-Meeting at Boston is the hot-bed of sedition. It is there that all
+their dangerous insurrections are engendered; it is there that the flame
+of discord and rebellion was first lighted up and disseminated over the
+Provinces; it is therefore greatly to be wished that Parliament may
+rescue the loyal inhabitants of that town and Province from the
+merciless hand of an ignorant mob, led on and inflamed by
+self-interested and profligate men."]
+
+[Footnote 3: _Reliq. Wotton._, p. 317, et seq.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Of clay he says, "It is a cursed step-dame to almost all
+vegetation, as having few or no meatuses for the percolation of
+alimental showers."]
+
+[Footnote 5: Sir William Temple gives this list of his pears:--Blanquet,
+Robin, Rousselet, Pepin, Jargonel; and for autumn: Buree, Vertlongue,
+and Bergamot.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Brougham's _Speeches_, Vol. II. p. 233.]
+
+[Footnote 7: Vol. IV. p. 443, First Series.]
+
+[Footnote 8: _Notes and Queries_, Vol. V. p. 17.]
+
+[Footnote 9: _Ibid._]
+
+[Footnote 10: Lib. I. v. 104.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Sparks's _Works of Franklin_, Vol. VIII. p. 538.]
+
+[Footnote 12: _Notes and Queries_, Vol. V. p. 549, First Series.]
+
+[Footnote 13: _Ibid_. Vol. V. p. 140. See, also, _Ibid._ Vol. V. p. 571;
+Vol. VI. p. 88; _Dublin Review_ for March, 1847, p. 212; _Quarterly
+Review_ for June, 1850.]
+
+[Footnote 14: _Oevres de Turgot_, Tom. IX. p. 140.]
+
+[Footnote 15: _Oeuvres de Condorcet_, par O'Connor, Tom. V. p. 162.]
+
+[Footnote 16: Sparks's _Works of Franklin_, Vol. VIII. p. 537; Mignet,
+_Notices et Portraits_, Tom. II. p. 480.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Cabania, _Oeuvres_, Tom. V. p. 251.]
+
+[Footnote 18: _Lettres de Madame Du Deffant_, Tom. III. p. 367.]
+
+[Footnote 19: _Ibid_. Tom. IV. p. 35.]
+
+[Footnote 20: Lacretelle, _Histoire de France_, Tom. V. p. 90.]
+
+[Footnote 21: _Oeuvres de Condorcet_, par O'Connor, Tom. V. pp. 406,
+407.]
+
+[Footnote 22: Capefigue, _Louis XVI_, Tom. II. pp. 12, 13, 42, 49, 50.
+The rose-water biographer of Diane de Poitiers, Madame de Pompadour, and
+Madame du Barry would naturally disparage Franklin.]
+
+[Footnote 23: Mignet, _Notices at Portraits_, Tom. II. p. 427.]
+
+[Footnote 24: _La Gazette Secrète_, 15 Jan. 1777; Capefigue, _Louis
+XVI._, Tom. II. p. 15.]
+
+[Footnote 25: _Oeuvres de Turgot_, Tom. II. p. 66.]
+
+[Footnote 26: _Oeuvres de Turgot_, Tom. VIII. p. 496.]
+
+[Footnote 27: Vol. X. p. 107.]
+
+[Footnote 28: _Mémoires de Madame D'Épinay_, Tom. III. p. 431.]
+
+[Footnote 29: Galiani, _Correspondance_, Tom. II. p. 275, _Lettre de 25
+Juillet_, 1778. Nobody saw America with a more prophetic eye than this
+inspired Pulcinello of Naples. As far back as the eighteenth of May,
+1776, several weeks before the Declaration of Independence, he
+wrote,--"The epoch is come for the total fall of Europe and its
+transmigration to America. Do not buy your house in the Chaussée
+d'Antin, but at Philadelphia. The misfortune for me is that there are no
+abbeys in America." Tom. II. p. 203. See also Grimm, _Correspondence_,
+Tom. IX. p. 285 (1776).]
+
+[Footnote 30: The dictionaries of Michaud and Didot concur in the date
+of her death; but there is reason to suppose that they are both
+mistaken.]
+
+[Footnote 31: See Quérard, _La France Littéraire_, article _La
+Rochefoucauld_.]
+
+[Footnote 32: Tom. I. p. 168.]
+
+[Footnote 33: _Oeuvres de Turgot_, Tom. I. p. 416.]
+
+[Footnote 34: Franklin, _Works_, by Sparks, Vol. V. p. 124.]
+
+[Footnote 35: _Oeuvres de Turgot_, Tom. I. p. 414; Tom. IX. p. 416;
+_Oeuvres de Condorcet_, Tom. V. p. 162.]
+
+[Footnote 36: Cabanis, _Oeuvres_, Tom. V. p. 261; Mignet, _Notices et
+Portraits_, Tom. II. p. 475. See, also, Morellet, _Mémoires_, Tom. I. p.
+290. Cabanis and Morellet both lived for many years under the hospitable
+roof of Madame Helvétius. It is the former who has preserved the
+interesting extract from the letter of Franklin. Nobody who has visited
+the Imperial Library at Paris can forget the very pleasant autograph
+note of Franklin in French to Madame Helvétius, which is exhibited in
+the same case with an autograph note of Henry IV. to Gabrielle
+d'Estrées.]
+
+[Footnote 37: Tom. II. p. 83. See, also, p. 337.]
+
+[Footnote 38: Tom. II. p. 465. See, also, the letter of the Marquis de
+Chastellux to Professor Madison on the Fine Arts in America, where the
+generous Frenchman recommends for all our great towns a portrait of
+Franklin, "with the Latin verse inscribed in France below his portrait."
+Chastellux, _Travels in North America_, Vol. II. p. 372.]
+
+[Footnote 39: Chambelland, _Vie du Prince de Bourbon-Condé_, Tom. I. p.
+374.]
+
+[Footnote 40: Capefigue, _Louis XVI._, Tom. II. pp. 49, 50.]
+
+[Footnote 41: Lacretelle, _Histoire de France pendant le 18me Siècle_,
+Tom. V. p. 91. The historian errs in putting this success in 1777,
+before the date of the Treaty; and he errs also with regard to the
+Court, if he meant to embrace the King and Queen.]
+
+[Footnote 42: _Mémoires sur Marie Antoinette_, par Madame Campan, Tom.
+I. p. 251.]
+
+[Footnote 43: _Bulletin de l'Alliance des Arts_, 10 Octobre, 1843. See
+also Goncourt, _Histoire de Marie Antoinette_, p. 221.]
+
+[Footnote 44: Grimm, _Correspondance_, Tom. XVI. p. 407.]
+
+[Footnote 45: Louis Blanc, _Histoire de la Revolution_, Tom. VI. pp.
+234, 316.]
+
+[Footnote 46: Cabanis, _Oeuvres_, Tom. V. p. 251.]
+
+[Footnote 47: Morellet, _Mémoires_, Tom. I. p. 290.]
+
+[Footnote 48: _L'Anit-Lucrèce_, traduit de Bougainville, _Épitre
+Dédicatoire, Discours Préliminaire_, p. 69.]
+
+[Footnote 49: Lib. I. v. 95.]
+
+[Footnote 50: Lib. I. v. 104. _Tonandi_ is sometimes changed to
+_tonantis_, and also _tonanti_. (See _Notes and Queries_, Vol. V. p.
+140.)]
+
+[Footnote 51: It is understood that there is a metrical version of this
+poem by the Rev. Dr. Frothingham of Boston, which he does not choose to
+publish, although, like everything from this refined scholar, it must be
+marked by taste and accuracy.]
+
+[Footnote 52: Sparks's _Works of Franklin_, Vol. VIII. p. 538, note.]
+
+[Footnote 53: Ibid. p. 537.]
+
+[Footnote 54: Sparks's _Works of Franklin_, Vol. VIII. p. 539, note.]
+
+[Footnote 55: Morellet, _Mémoires_, Tom. I. p. 288. Nothing is more
+curious with regard to Franklin than these _Mémoires_, including
+especially the engraving from an original design by him. In some copies
+this engraving is wanting. It is, probably, the gayeties here recorded,
+and, perhaps, the "infatuation" of the court-ladies, that suggested the
+scandalous charges which Dr. Julius has strangely preserved in his
+_Nordamerikas Sittliche, Zustände_, Vol. I. p. 98.]
+
+[Footnote 56: Sparks's _Works of Franklin_, Vol. VIII. p. 539, note.]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 73,
+November, 1863, by Various
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 73,
+November, 1863, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 73, November, 1863
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: June 9, 2005 [EBook #16028]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ATLANTIC MONTHLY, VOLUME 12 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Josephine
+Paolucci and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+<p><a name="Page_543" id="Page_543"></a></p>
+<h1>THE</h1>
+
+<h1>ATLANTIC MONTHLY.</h1>
+
+<h2>A MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, ART, AND POLITICS.</h2>
+
+<h3>VOL. XII.&mdash;NOVEMBER, 1863.&mdash;NO. LXXIII.</h3>
+
+<p>Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1863, by TICKNOR AND
+FIELDS, in the Clerk's Office
+of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts.</p>
+
+<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
+<p>
+<a href="#THE_SPANIARD_AND_THE_HERETIC"><b>THE SPANIARD AND THE HERETIC.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#WEARINESS"><b>WEARINESS.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#MRS_LEWIS"><b>MRS. LEWIS.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#THE_FORMATION_OF_GLACIERS"><b>THE FORMATION OF GLACIERS.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#TWO_SCENES_FROM_THE_LIFE_OF_BLONDEL"><b>TWO SCENES FROM THE LIFE OF BLONDEL.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#NIGHT_AND_MOONLIGHT"><b>NIGHT AND MOONLIGHT.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#ANDANTE"><b>ANDANTE.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#THE_BROTHERS"><b>THE BROTHERS.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#THE_SAM_ADAMS_REGIMENTS_IN_THE_TOWN_OF_BOSTON_CONCLUDED"><b>THE SAM ADAMS REGIMENTS IN THE TOWN OF BOSTON.&mdash;CONCLUDED.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#WET-WEATHER_WORK"><b>WET-WEATHER WORK.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#THE_FRENCH_STRUGGLE_FOR_NAVAL_AND_COLONIAL_POWER"><b>THE FRENCH STRUGGLE FOR NAVAL AND COLONIAL POWER.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#SOMETHING_LEFT_UNDONE"><b>SOMETHING LEFT UNDONE.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#THE_GREAT_INSTRUMENT"><b>THE GREAT INSTRUMENT.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#THE_KINGS_WINE"><b>THE KING'S WINE.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#MONOGRAPH_FROM_AN_OLD_NOTE-BOOK_WITH_A_POSTSCRIPT"><b>MONOGRAPH FROM AN OLD NOTE-BOOK; WITH A POSTSCRIPT.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#REVIEWS_AND_LITERARY_NOTICES"><b>REVIEWS AND LITERARY NOTICES.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#RECENT_AMERICAN_PUBLICATIONS"><b>RECENT AMERICAN PUBLICATIONS</b></a><br />
+</p>
+<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_SPANIARD_AND_THE_HERETIC" id="THE_SPANIARD_AND_THE_HERETIC"></a>THE SPANIARD AND THE HERETIC.</h2>
+
+<p>[In the August number of the "Atlantic," under the title of
+"The Fleur-de-Lis in Florida," will be found a narrative
+of the Huguenot attempts to occupy that country, which,
+exciting the jealousy of Spain, gave rise to the crusade
+whose history is recorded below.]</p>
+
+
+<p>The monk, the inquisitor, the Jesuit,
+these were the lords of Spain,&mdash;sovereigns
+of her sovereign, for they had formed
+and fed the dark and narrow mind
+of that tyrannical recluse. They had
+formed and fed the minds of her people,
+quenched in blood every spark of rising
+heresy, and given over a noble nation to
+bigotry, dark, blind, inexorable as the
+doom of fate. Linked with pride, ambition,
+avarice, every passion of a rich,
+strong nature, potent for good and ill, it
+made the Spaniard of that day a scourge
+as dire as ever fell on man.</p>
+
+<p>Day was breaking on the world. Light,
+hope, freedom, pierced with vitalizing ray
+the clouds and the miasma that hung so
+thick over the prostrate Middle Age,
+once noble and mighty, now a foul image
+of decay and death. Kindled with new
+life, the nations teemed with a progeny
+of heroes, and the stormy glories of the
+sixteenth century rose on awakened Europe.
+But Spain was the citadel of
+darkness,&mdash;a monastic cell, an inquisitorial
+dungeon, where no ray could pierce.
+She was the bulwark of the Church,
+against whose adamantine front the wrath<a name="Page_544" id="Page_544"></a>
+of innovation beat in vain. In every
+country of Europe the party of freedom
+and reform was the national party, the
+party of reaction and absolutism was the
+Spanish party, leaning on Spain, looking
+to her for help. Above all, it was so
+in France; and while within her bounds
+there was a semblance of peace, the national
+and religious rage burst forth on a
+wilder theatre. Thither it is for us to
+follow it, where, on the shores of Florida,
+the Spaniard and the Frenchman, the
+bigot and the Huguenot, met in the grapple
+of death.</p>
+
+<p>In a corridor of the Escurial, Philip
+II. was met by a man who had long stood
+waiting his approach, and who with proud
+reverence placed a petition in the hand
+of the pale and sombre King. The petitioner
+was Pedro Menendez de Aviles,
+one of the ablest and most distinguished
+officers of the Spanish marine. He was
+born of an ancient Asturian family. His
+boyhood had been wayward, ungovernable,
+and fierce. He ran off at eight
+years of age, and when, after a search
+of six months, he was found and brought
+back, he ran off again. This time he
+was more successful, escaping on board a
+fleet bound against the Barbary corsairs,
+when his precocious appetite for blood
+and blows had reasonable contentment.
+A few years later, he found means to
+build a small vessel in which he cruised
+against the corsairs and the French, and,
+though still little more than a boy, displayed
+a singular address and daring.
+The wonders of the New World now seized
+his imagination. He made a voyage
+thither, and the ships under his charge
+came back freighted with wealth. War
+with France was then at its height. As
+captain-general of the fleet, he was sent
+with troops to Flanders, and to their
+prompt arrival was due, it is said, the
+victory of St. Quentin, Two years later,
+he commanded the luckless armada
+which bore back Philip to his native
+shore, and nearly drowned him in a storm
+off the port of Laredo. This mischance,
+or his own violence and insubordination,
+wrought to the prejudice of Menendez.
+He complained that his services were ill
+repaid. Philip lent him a favoring ear,
+and despatched him to the Indies as general
+of the fleet and army. Here he
+found means to amass vast riches; and,
+in 1561, returning to Spain, charges were
+brought against him of a nature which
+his too friendly biographer does not explain.
+The Council of the Indies arrested
+him. He was imprisoned and sentenced
+<a name="Page_545" id="Page_545"></a>to a heavy fine, but, gaining his
+release, hastened to Madrid to throw himself
+on the royal clemency.</p>
+
+<p>His petition was most graciously received.
+Philip restored his command,
+but remitted only half his fine, a strong
+presumption of his guilt.</p>
+
+<p>Menendez kissed the royal hand; he
+had still a petition in reserve. His son
+had been wrecked near the Bermudas,
+and he would fain go thither to find tidings
+of his fate. The pious King bade
+him trust in God, and promised that he
+should be despatched without delay to
+the Bermudas and to Florida with a commission
+to make an exact survey of those
+perilous seas for the profit of future voyagers;
+but Menendez was ill content with
+such an errand. He knew, he said, nothing
+of greater moment to His Majesty
+than the conquest and settlement of Florida.
+The climate was healthful, the soil
+fertile; and, worldly advantages aside, it
+was peopled by a race sunk in the thickest
+shades of infidelity. "Such grief,"
+he pursued, "seizes me, when I behold
+this multitude of wretched Indians, that
+I should choose the conquest and settling
+of Florida above all commands, offices,
+and dignities which your Majesty might
+bestow." Those who think this hypocrisy
+do not know the Spaniard of the sixteenth
+century.</p>
+
+<p>The King was edified by his zeal. An
+enterprise of such spiritual and temporal
+promise was not to be slighted, and Menendez
+was empowered to conquer and
+convert Florida at his own cost. The
+conquest was to be effected within three
+years. Menendez was to take with him
+five hundred men, and supply them with
+five hundred slaves, besides horses, cattle,
+sheep, and hogs. Villages were to
+be built, with forts to defend them; and
+sixteen ecclesiastics, of whom four should
+be Jesuits, were to form the nucleus of
+a Floridian church. The King, on his
+part, granted Menendez free trade with
+Hispaniola, Porto Rico, Cuba, and Spain,
+the office of Adelantado of Florida for
+life, joined to the right of naming his successor,
+and large emoluments to be drawn
+from the expected conquest.</p>
+
+<p>The compact struck, Menendez hastened
+to his native Asturias to raise money
+among his relatives. Scarcely was
+he gone, when tidings for the first time
+reached Madrid that Florida was already
+occupied by a colony of French Protestants,
+and that a reinforcement, under
+Ribaut, was on <a name="Page_546" id="Page_546"></a>the point of sailing thither.
+A French historian of high authority
+declares that these advices came from
+the Catholic party at the French court,
+in whom all sense of the national interest
+and honor was smothered under their
+hatred of Coligny and the Huguenots.
+Of this there can be little doubt, though
+information also came from the buccaneer
+Frenchmen captured in the West
+Indies.</p>
+
+<p>Foreigners had invaded the territory
+of Spain. The trespassers, too, were
+heretics, foes of God and liegemen of the
+Devil. Their doom was fixed. But how
+would France endure an assault, in time
+of peace, on subjects who had gone forth
+on an enterprise sanctioned by the crown,
+undertaken in its name, and under its
+commission?</p>
+
+<p>The throne of France, where the corruption
+of the nation seemed gathered to
+a head, was trembling between the two
+parties of the Catholics and the Huguenots,
+whose chiefs aimed at royalty. Flattering
+both, caressing both, betraying
+both, playing one against the other, Catherine
+de M&eacute;dicis, by a thousand crafty
+arts and expedients of the moment, sought
+to retain the crown on the heads of her
+weak and vicious sons. Of late her crooked
+policy had drawn her towards the
+Catholic party, in other words, the party
+of Spain; and already she had given ear
+to the savage Duke of Alva, urging her
+to the course which, seven years later,
+led to the carnage of St. Bartholomew.
+In short, the Spanish policy was ascendant,
+and no thought of the national interest
+or honor could restrain that basest
+of courts from consigning by hundreds to
+the national enemy those whom, itself,
+it was meditating to immolate by thousands.</p>
+
+<p>Menendez was summoned back in haste
+to the court. There was counsel, deep
+and ominous, in the chambers of the Escurial.
+His force must be strengthened.
+Three hundred and ninety-four men were
+added at the royal charge, and a corresponding
+number of transport and supply
+ships. It was a holy war, a crusade,
+and as such was preached by priest and
+monk along the western coasts of Spain.
+All the Biscayan ports flamed with zeal,
+and adventurers crowded to enroll themselves;
+since to plunder heretics is good
+for the soul as well as the purse, and
+broil and massacre have double attraction,
+when promoted to a means of salvation:
+a fervor, deep and hot, but not
+of celestial kindling; nor yet that buoyant
+<a name="Page_547" id="Page_547"></a>and inspiring zeal, which, when the
+Middle Age was in its youth and prime,
+glowed in the soul of Tancred, Godfrey,
+and St. Louis, and which, when its day
+was long since past, could still find its
+home in the great heart of Columbus. A
+darker spirit urged the new crusade,&mdash;born,
+not of hope, but of fear, slavish in
+its nature, the creature and the tool of
+despotism. For the typical Spaniard of
+the sixteenth century was not in strictness
+a fanatic; he was bigotry incarnate.</p>
+
+<p>Heresy was a plague-spot, an ulcer to
+be eradicated with fire and the knife,
+and this foul abomination was infecting
+the shores which the Vicegerent of Christ
+had given to the King of Spain, and which
+the Most Catholic King had given to
+the Adelantado. Thus would countless
+heathen tribes be doomed to an eternity
+of flame, shut out from that saving communion
+with Holy Church, to which, by
+the sword and the whip and the fagot,
+dungeons and slavery, they would otherwise
+have been mercifully driven, to the
+salvation of their souls, and the greater
+glory of God. And, for the Adelantado
+himself, should the vast outlays, the vast
+debts, of his bold Floridian venture be
+all in vain? Should his fortunes be
+wrecked past redemption through these
+tools of Satan? As a Catholic, as a
+Spaniard, as an adventurer, his course
+was clear. Woe, then, to the Huguenot
+in the gripe of Pedro Menendez!</p>
+
+<p>But what was the scope of this enterprise,
+and the limits of the Adelantado's
+authority? He was invested with power
+almost absolute, not merely over the
+peninsula which now retains the name of
+Florida, but over all North America, from
+Labrador to Mexico,&mdash;for this was the
+Florida of the old Spanish geographers,
+and the Florida designated in the commission
+of Menendez. It was a continent
+which he was to conquer and occupy out
+of his own purse. The impoverished King
+contracted with his daring and ambitious
+subject to win and hold for him the territory
+of the future United States and
+British Provinces. His plan, as subsequently
+developed and exposed at length
+in his unpublished letters to Philip II.,
+was, first, to plant a garrison at Port
+Royal, and next to fortify strongly on
+Chesapeake Bay, called by him St. Mary's.
+He believed that this bay was an
+arm of the sea, running northward and
+eastward, and communicating with the
+Gulf of St. Lawrence, thus making New
+England, with adjacent districts, an island.
+His proposed fort on the Chesapeake,
+giving access, by this imaginary
+passage, to the seas of Newfoundland,
+would enable the Spaniards to command
+the fisheries, on which both the French<a name="Page_548" id="Page_548"></a>
+and the English had long encroached, to
+the great prejudice of Spanish rights.
+Doubtless, too, these inland waters gave
+access to the South Sea, and their occupation
+was necessary to prevent the
+French from penetrating thither; for that
+ambitious people, since the time of Cartier,
+had never abandoned their schemes
+of seizing this portion of the dominions
+of the King of Spain. Five hundred
+soldiers and one hundred sailors must,
+he urges, take possession, without delay,
+of Port Royal and the Chesapeake.</p>
+
+<p>Preparation for his enterprise was
+pushed with a furious energy. His force
+amounted to two thousand six hundred
+and forty-six persons, in thirty-four vessels,
+one of which, the San Pelayo, bearing
+Menendez himself, was of more than
+nine hundred tons' burden, and is described
+as one of the finest ships afloat.
+There were twelve Franciscans and eight
+Jesuits, besides other ecclesiastics; and
+many knights of Galicia, Biscay, and the
+Asturias bore part in the expedition.
+With a slight exception, the whole was
+at the Adelantado's charge. Within the
+first fourteen months, according to his
+admirer, Barcia, the adventure cost him
+a million ducats.</p>
+
+<p>Before the close of the year, Sancho
+de Arciniega was commissioned to join
+Menendez with an additional force of
+fifteen hundred men.</p>
+
+<p>Red-hot with a determined purpose,
+he would brook no delay. To him, says
+the chronicler, every day seemed a year.
+He was eager to anticipate Ribaut, of
+whose designs and whose force he seems
+to have been informed to the minutest
+particular, but whom he hoped to thwart
+and ruin by gaining Fort Caroline before
+him. With eleven ships, then, he sailed
+from Cadiz on the 29th of June, 1565,
+leaving the smaller vessels of his fleet to
+follow with what speed they might. He
+touched first at the Canaries, and on the
+eighth of July left them, steering for
+Dominica. A minute account of the
+voyage has come down to us from the
+pen of Mendoza, chaplain of the expedition,
+a somewhat dull and illiterate person,
+who busily jots down the incidents
+of each passing day, and is constantly
+betraying, with a certain awkward simplicity,
+how the cares of this world and
+the next jostle each other in his thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>On Friday, the twentieth of July, a
+storm fell upon them with appalling fury.
+The pilots lost head, the sailors gave
+themselves up to their terrors. Throughout
+the night, they beset Mendoza for
+confession and absolution, a boon not easily
+granted, for the seas swept the crowded
+decks in cataracts of foam, and the
+shriekings of the gale in the rigging
+drowned the exhortations of the half-drowned
+priest. Cannon, cables, spars,
+water-casks, were th<a name="Page_549" id="Page_549"></a>rown overboard, and
+the chests of the sailors would have followed,
+had not the latter, despite their
+fright, raised such a howl of remonstrance
+that the order was revoked. At length
+day dawned. At least there was light
+to die by. Plunging, reeling, half submerged,
+quivering under the crashing
+shock of the seas, whose mountain ridges
+rolled down upon her before the gale,
+the ship lay in deadly jeopardy from Friday
+till Monday noon. Then the storm
+abated; the sun broke forth; and again
+she held her course.</p>
+
+<p>They reached Dominica on Sunday,
+the fifth of August. The chaplain tells
+us how he went on shore to refresh himself,&mdash;how,
+while his Italian servant
+washed his linen at a brook, he strolled
+along the beach and picked up shells,&mdash;and
+how he was scared, first, by a prodigious
+turtle, and next by a vision of
+the cannibal natives, which caused his
+prompt retreat to the boats.</p>
+
+<p>On the tenth, they anchored in the
+harbor of Porto Rico, where they found
+two of their companion-ships, from which
+they had parted in the storm. One of
+them was the San Pelayo, with Menendez
+on board. Mendoza informs us that
+in the evening the officers came on board
+his ship, when he, the chaplain, regaled
+them with sweetmeats, and that Menendez
+invited him not only to supper that
+night, but to dinner the next day, "for
+the which I thanked him, as reason was,"
+says the gratified churchman.</p>
+
+<p>Here thirty men deserted, and three
+priests also ran off, of which Mendoza
+bitterly complains, as increasing his own
+work. The motives of the clerical truants
+may perhaps be inferred from a
+worldly temptation to which the chaplain
+himself was subjected. "I was offered
+the service of a chapel where I should
+have got a <i>peso</i> for every mass I said,
+the whole year round; but I did not accept
+it, for fear that what I hear said of
+the other three would be said of me.
+Besides, it is not a place where one can
+hope for any great advancement, and I
+wished to try whether, in refusing a benefice
+for the love of the Lord, He will not
+repay me with some other stroke of fortune
+before the end of the voyage; for it
+is my aim to serve God and His blessed
+Mother."</p>
+
+<p>The original design had been to rendezvous
+at Havana, but, with the Adelantado,
+the advantages of despatch outweighed
+every other consideration. He
+resolved to push directly for Florida.
+<a name="Page_550" id="Page_550"></a>Five of his scattered ships had by this
+time rejoined company, comprising, exclusive
+of officers, a force of about five
+hundred soldiers, two hundred sailors,
+and one hundred colonists. Bearing northward,
+he advanced by an unknown and
+dangerous course along the coast of Hayti
+and through the intricate passes of the
+Bahamas. On the night of the twenty-sixth,
+the San Pelayo struck three times
+on the shoals; "but," says the chaplain,
+"inasmuch as our enterprise was undertaken
+for the sake of Christ and His blessed
+Mother, two heavy seas struck her
+abaft, and set her afloat again."</p>
+
+<p>At length the ships lay becalmed in
+the Bahama Channel, slumbering on the
+dead and glassy sea, torpid with the heats
+of a West-Indian August. Menendez called
+a council of the commanders. There
+was doubt and indecision. Perhaps Ribaut
+had already reached the French
+fort, and then to attack the united force
+would be a stroke of desperation. Far
+better to await their lagging comrades.
+But the Adelantado was of another mind;
+and, even had his enemy arrived, he was
+resolved that he should have no time to
+fortify himself.</p>
+
+<p>"It is God's will," he said, "that our
+victory should be due, not to our numbers,
+but to His all-powerful aid. Therefore
+has He stricken us with tempests and
+scattered our ships." And he gave his
+voice for instant advance.</p>
+
+<p>There was much dispute; even the
+chaplain remonstrated; but nothing could
+bend the iron will of Menendez. Nor
+was a sign of celestial approval wanting.
+At nine in the evening, a great meteor
+burst forth in mid-heaven, and, blazing
+like the sun, rolled westward towards the
+Floridian coast. The fainting spirits of
+the crusaders were kindled anew. Diligent
+preparation was begun. Prayers
+and masses were said; and, that the temporal
+arm might not be wanting, the men
+were daily practised on deck in shooting
+at marks, in order, says the chronicle,
+that the recruits might learn not to be
+afraid of their guns.</p>
+
+<p>The dead calm continued. "We were
+all very tired," says the chaplain, "and
+I above all, with praying to God for a
+fair wind. To-day, at about two in the
+afternoon, He took pity on us, and sent
+us a breeze." Before night they saw land,&mdash;the
+faint line of forest, traced along
+the watery horizon, that marked the coast
+of Florida. But where in all this vast<a name="Page_551" id="Page_551"></a>
+monotony was the lurking-place of the
+French? Menendez anchored, and sent
+fifty men ashore, who presently found a
+band of Indians in the woods, and gained
+from them the needed information.
+He stood northward, till, on the afternoon
+of Tuesday, the fourth of September, he
+descried four ships anchored near the
+mouth of a river. It was the river St.
+John's, and the ships were four of Ribaut's
+squadron. The prey was in sight. The
+Spaniards prepared for battle, and bore
+down upon the Lutherans; for, with them,
+all reformers alike were branded with
+the name of the arch-heretic. Slowly,
+before the faint breeze, the ships glided
+on their way; but while, excited and impatient,
+the fierce crews watched the decreasing
+space, and while they were still
+three leagues from their prize, the air
+ceased to stir, the sails flapped against
+the mast, a black cloud with thunder rose
+above the coast, and the warm rain of
+the South descended on the breathless
+sea. It was dark before the wind moved
+again, and the ships resumed their course.
+At half past eleven they reached the
+French. The San Pelayo slowly moved
+to windward of Ribaut's flag-ship, the
+Trinity, and anchored very near her.
+The other ships took similar stations.
+While these preparations were making,
+a work of two hours, the men labored in
+silence, and the French, thronging their
+gangways, looked on in equal silence.
+"Never, since I came into the world,"
+writes the chaplain, "did I know such a
+stillness."</p>
+
+<p>It was broken, at length, by a trumpet
+from the deck of the San Pelayo. A
+French trumpet answered. Then Menendez,
+"with much courtesy," says his
+Spanish eulogist, demanded, "Gentlemen,
+whence does this fleet come?"</p>
+
+<p>"From France," was the reply.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing here?" pursued
+the Adelantado.</p>
+
+<p>"Bringing soldiers and supplies for a
+fort which the King of France has in
+this country, and for many others which
+he soon will have."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?"</p>
+
+<p>Many voices cried together, "Lutherans,
+of the new religion"; then, in their
+turn, they demanded who Menendez was,
+and whence he came. The latter answered,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I am Pedro Menendez, General of
+the fleet of the King of Spain, Don Philip
+the Second, who have come to this
+country to <a name="Page_552" id="Page_552"></a>hang and behead all Lutherans
+whom I shall find by land or sea, according
+to instructions from my King, so
+precise that I have power to pardon none
+whomsoever; and these commands I shall
+fulfil, as you shall know. At daybreak I
+shall board your ships, and if I find there
+any Catholic, he shall be well treated;
+but every heretic shall die."</p>
+
+<p>The French with one voice raised a
+cry of wrath and defiance.</p>
+
+<p>"If you are a brave man, don't wait
+till day. Come on now, and see what
+you will get!"</p>
+
+<p>And they assailed the Adelantado with
+a shower of scoffs and insults.</p>
+
+<p>Menendez broke into a rage, and gave
+the order to board. The men slipped the
+cables, and the sullen black hulk of the
+San Pelayo drifted down upon the Trinity.
+The French by no means made good
+their defiance. Indeed, they were incapable
+of resistance, Ribaut with his
+soldiers being ashore at Fort Caroline.
+They cut their cables, left their anchors,
+made sail, and fled. The Spaniards fired,
+the French replied. The other Spanish
+ships had imitated the movement of the
+San Pelayo; "but," writes the chaplain,
+Mendoza, "these devils run mad are
+such adroit sailors, and man&#339;uvred so
+well, that we did not catch one of them."
+Pursuers and pursued ran out to sea, firing
+useless volleys at each other.</p>
+
+<p>In the morning Menendez gave over
+the chase, turned, and, with the San Pelayo
+alone, ran back for the St. John's.
+But here a welcome was prepared for
+him. He saw bands of armed men drawn
+up on the beach, and the smaller vessels
+of Ribaut's squadron, which had crossed
+the bar several days before, anchored behind
+it to oppose his landing. He would
+not venture an attack, but, steering southward,
+skirted the coast till he came to an
+inlet which he named St. Augustine.</p>
+
+<p>Here he found three of his ships, already
+debarking their troops, guns, and
+stores. Two officers, Pati&ntilde;o and Vicente,
+had taken possession of the dwelling of
+Seloy, an Indian chief, a huge barn-like
+structure, strongly framed of entire trunks
+of trees, and thatched with palmetto-leaves.
+Around it they were throwing
+up intrenchments of fascines and sand.
+Gangs of negroes, with pick, shovel, and
+spade, were toiling at the work. Such
+was the birth of St. Augustine, the oldest
+town of the United States, and such
+the introduction of slave-labor upon their
+soil.</p>
+
+<p>On the eighth, Menendez took formal
+possession of his domain. Cannon were
+fired, trumpets sounded, and banners displayed,
+as, at the head of his officers and
+nobles, he landed in state. Mendoza,<a name="Page_553" id="Page_553"></a>
+crucifix in hand, came to meet him,
+chanting, "<i>Te Deum laudamus</i>," while
+the Adelantado and all his company,
+kneeling, kissed the cross, and the congregated
+Indians gazed in silent wonder.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the tenants of Fort Caroline
+were not idle. Two or three soldiers,
+strolling along the beach in the
+afternoon, had first seen the Spanish
+ships and hastily summoned Ribaut. He
+came down to the mouth of the river, followed
+by an anxious and excited crowd;
+but, as they strained their eyes through
+the darkness, they could see nothing but
+the flashes of the distant guns. The returning
+light showed them at length, far
+out at sea, the Adelantado in hot chase
+of their flying comrades. Pursuers and
+pursued were soon out of sight. The
+drums beat to arms. After many hours
+of suspense, the San Pelayo reappeared,
+hovering about the mouth of the river,
+then bearing away towards the south.
+More anxious hours ensued, when three
+other sail came in sight, and they recognized
+three of their own returning ships.
+Communication was opened, a boat's crew
+landed, and they learned from Captain
+Cosette, that, confiding in the speed of
+his ship, he had followed the Spaniards
+to St. Augustine, reconnoitred their position,
+and seen them land their negroes
+and intrench themselves.</p>
+
+<p>In his chamber at Fort Caroline, Laudonni&egrave;re
+lay sick in bed, when Ribaut
+entered, and with him La Grange, Ste.
+Marie, Ottigny, Yonville, and other officers.
+At the bedside of the displaced
+commandant they held their council of
+war. There were three alternatives:
+first, to remain where they were and fortify;
+next, to push overland for St. Augustine,
+and attack the invaders in their
+intrenchments; and, finally, to embark,
+and assail them by sea. The first plan
+would leave their ships a prey to the
+Spaniards; and so too, in all likelihood,
+would the second, besides the uncertainties
+of an overland march through an
+unknown wilderness. By sea, the distance
+was short and the route explored.
+By a sudden blow they could capture or
+destroy the Spanish ships, and master
+the troops on shore before their reinforcements
+could arrive, and before they had
+time to complete their defences.</p>
+
+<p>Such were the views of Ribaut, with
+which, not unnaturally, Laudonni&egrave;re finds
+fault, and Le Moyne, judging by results,
+echoes the censures of his chief. And
+yet the plan seems as well-conceived as
+it was bold, lacking nothing but success.
+The Spaniards, stricken with terror, owed
+<a name="Page_554" id="Page_554"></a>their safety to the elements, or, as they
+affirm, to the special interposition of the
+Holy Virgin. Let us be just to Menendez.
+He was a leader fit to stand with
+Cort&eacute;s and Pizarro; but he was matched
+with a man as cool, skilful, prompt, and
+daring as himself. The traces that have
+come down to us indicate, in Ribaut, one
+far above the common stamp: "a distinguished
+man, of many high qualities," as
+even the fault-finding Le Moyne calls
+him, devout after the best spirit of the
+Reform, and with a human heart under
+his steel breastplate.</p>
+
+<p>La Grange and other officers took part
+with Laudonni&egrave;re and opposed the plan
+of an attack by sea; but Ribaut's conviction
+was unshaken, and the order was
+given. All his own soldiers fit for duty
+embarked in haste, and with them went
+La Caille, Arlac, and, as it seems, Ottigny,
+with the best of Laudonni&egrave;re's
+men. Even Le Moyne, though wounded
+in the fight with Outina's warriors, went
+on board to bear his part in the fray, and
+would have sailed with the rest, had not
+Ottigny, seeing his disabled condition,
+ordered him back to the fort.</p>
+
+<p>On the tenth, the ships, crowded with
+troops, set sail. Ribaut was gone, and
+with him the pith and sinew of the colony.
+The miserable remnant watched his
+receding sails with dreary foreboding, a
+foreboding which seemed but too just,
+when, on the next day, a storm, more
+violent than the Indians had ever known,
+howled through the forest and lashed the
+ocean into fury, Most forlorn was the
+plight of these exiles, left, it might be,
+the prey of a band of ferocious bigots
+more terrible than the fiercest hordes of
+the wilderness. And when night closed
+on the stormy river and the gloomy waste
+of pines, what dreams of terror may not
+have haunted the helpless women who
+crouched under the hovels of Fort Caroline!</p>
+
+<p>The fort was in a ruinous state, the
+palisade on the water side broken down,
+and three breaches in the rampart. In
+the driving rain, urged by the sick Laudonni&egrave;re,
+the men, bedrenched and disheartened,
+labored as they might to
+strengthen their defences. Their muster-roll
+shows but a beggarly array.
+"Now," says Laudonni&egrave;re, "let them
+which have bene bold to say that I had
+men ynongh left me, so that I had meanes
+to defend my selfe, give care a little now
+vnto mee, and if they have eyes in their
+heads, let them see what men I had."
+Of Ribaut's followers left at the fort,
+only nine or ten had weapons, while only
+two or three knew how to use them. Four
+of them were boys, who <a name="Page_555" id="Page_555"></a>kept Ribaut's
+dogs, and another was his cook. Besides
+these, he had left a brewer, an old crossbow-maker,
+two shoemakers, a player on
+the spinet, four valets, a carpenter of
+threescore&mdash;Challeux, no doubt, who
+has left us the story of his woes,&mdash;and
+a crowd of women, children, and eighty-six
+camp-followers. To these were added
+the remnant of Laudonni&egrave;re's men, of
+whom seventeen could bear arms, the
+rest being sick or disabled by wounds
+received in the fight with Outina.</p>
+
+<p>Laudonni&egrave;re divided his force, such as
+it was, into two watches, over which he
+placed two officers, St. Cler and La Vigne,
+gave them lanterns to go the rounds, and
+an hour-glass to set the time; while he
+himself, giddy with weakness and fever,
+was every night at the guard-room.</p>
+
+<p>It was the night of the nineteenth of
+September; floods of rain bedrenched
+the sentries on the rampart, and as day
+dawned on the dripping barracks and
+deluged parade, the storm increased in
+violence. What enemy could have ventured
+forth on such a night? La Vigne,
+who had the watch, took pity on the sentries
+and on himself, dismissed them, and
+went to his quarters. He little knew
+what mortal energies, urged by ambition,
+avarice, bigotry, desperation, will dare
+and do.</p>
+
+<p>To return to the Spaniards at St. Augustine.
+On the morning of the eleventh,
+the crew of one of their smaller vessels, lying
+outside the bar, saw through the twilight
+of early dawn two of Ribaut's ships
+close upon them. Not a breath of air
+was stirring. There was no escape, and
+the Spaniards fell on their knees in supplication
+to Our Lady of Utrera, explaining
+to her that the heretics were upon
+them, and begging her to send them a
+little wind. "Forthwith," says Mendoza,
+"one would have said that Our Lady
+herself came down upon the vessel." A
+wind sprang up, and the Spaniards found
+refuge behind the bar. The returning
+day showed to their astonished eyes all
+the ships of Ribaut, their decks black
+with men, hovering off the entrance of
+the port; but Heaven had them in its
+charge, and again they experienced its
+protecting care. The breeze sent by Our
+Lady of Utrera rose to a gale, then to a
+furious tempest; and the grateful Adelantado
+saw through rack and mist the ships
+of his enemy tossed wildly among the
+raging waters as they struggled to gain
+an offing. With exultation at his heart
+the skilful seaman read their danger, and
+saw them in his mind's eye dashed to
+utter wreck among the sand-bars and
+breakers of the lee-shore.</p>
+
+<p>A bold thought seized him. He would
+march overland with five hun<a name="Page_556" id="Page_556"></a>dred men
+and attack Fort Caroline while its defenders
+were absent. First he ordered a
+mass; then he called a council. Doubtless,
+it was in that great Indian lodge of
+Seloy, where he had made his head-quarters;
+and here, in this dim and smoky
+concave, nobles, officers, priests, gathered
+at his summons. There were fears and
+doubts and murmurings, but Menendez
+was desperate. Not the mad desperation
+that strikes wildly and at random, but
+the still red heat that melts and burns
+and seethes with a steady, unquenchable
+fierceness. "Comrades," he said,
+"the time has come to show our courage
+and our zeal. This is God's war,
+and we must not flinch. It is a war with
+Lutherans, and we must wage it with
+blood and fire."</p>
+
+<p>But his hearers would not respond.
+They had not a million of ducats at
+stake, and were nowise ready for a cast
+so desperate. A clamor of remonstrance
+rose from the circle. Many voices, that
+of Mendoza among the rest, urged waiting
+till their main forces should arrive.
+The excitement spread to the men without,
+and the swarthy, black-bearded
+crowd broke into tumults mounting almost
+to mutiny, while an officer was
+heard to say that he would not go on
+such a hare-brained errand to be butchered
+like a beast. But nothing could
+move the Adelantado. His appeals or
+his threats did their work at last; the
+confusion was quelled, and preparation
+was made for the march.</p>
+
+<p>Five hundred arquebusiers and pikemen
+were drawn up before the camp.</p>
+
+<p>To each was given a sack of bread and
+a flagon of wine. Two Indians and a
+renegade Frenchman, called Fran&ccedil;ois
+Jean, were to guide them, and twenty
+Biscayan axe-men moved to the front to
+clear the way. Through floods of driving
+rain, a hoarse voice shouted the word of
+command, and the sullen march began.</p>
+
+<p>With dire misgiving, Mendoza watched
+the last files as they vanished in the
+tempestuous forest. Two days of suspense
+ensued, when a messenger came
+back with a letter from the Adelantado
+announcing that he had nearly reached
+the French fort, and that on the morrow,
+September twentieth, at sunrise, he hoped
+to assault it. "May the Divine Majesty
+deign to protect us, for He knows that
+we have need of it," writes the scared
+chaplain; "the Adelantado's great zeal
+and courage make us hope he will succeed,
+but for the good of His Majesty's
+service he ought to be a little less ardent
+in pursuing his schemes."</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the five hundred had pushed
+their march through forest and quagmire,
+through swollen streams and inundated
+savannas, toiling knee-deep
+through m<a name="Page_557" id="Page_557"></a>ud, rushes, and the rank, tangled
+grass,&mdash;hacking their way through
+thickets of the <i>yucca</i> or Spanish bayonet,
+with its clumps of dagger-like leaves, or
+defiling in gloomy procession through the
+drenched forest, to the moan, roar, and
+howl of the storm-racked pines. As they
+bent before the tempest, the water trickling
+from the rusty headpiece crept clammy
+and cold betwixt the armor and the
+skin; and when they made their wretched
+bivouac, their bed was the spongy soil,
+and the exhaustless clouds their tent.</p>
+
+<p>The night of Wednesday, the nineteenth,
+found their vanguard in a deep
+forest of pines, less than a mile from
+Fort Caroline, and near the low hills
+which extended in its rear, and formed
+a continuation of St. John's Bluff. All
+around was one great morass. In pitchy
+darkness, knee-deep in weeds and water,
+half starved, worn with toil and lack of
+sleep, drenched to the skin, their provision
+spoiled, their ammunition wet, their
+spirit chilled out of them, they stood in
+shivering groups, cursing the enterprise
+and the author of it. Menendez heard
+an ensign say aloud to his comrades,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"This Asturian <i>corito</i>, who knows no
+more of war on shore than an ass, has
+ruined us all. By &mdash;&mdash;, if my advice had
+been followed, he would have had his
+deserts the day he set out on this cursed
+journey!"</p>
+
+<p>The Adelantado pretended not to hear.</p>
+
+<p>Two hours before dawn he called his
+officers about him. All night, he said, he
+had been praying to God and the Virgin.</p>
+
+<p>"Se&ntilde;ores, what shall we resolve on?
+Our ammunition and provisions are gone.
+Our case is desperate." And he urged
+a bold rush on the fort.</p>
+
+<p>But men and officers alike were disheartened
+and disgusted. They listened
+coldly and sullenly; many were for returning
+at every risk; none were in a
+mood for fight. Menendez put forth all
+his eloquence, till at length the dashed
+spirits of his followers were so far rekindled
+that they consented to follow him.</p>
+
+<p>All fell on their knees in the marsh;
+then, rising, they formed their ranks and
+began to advance, guided by the renegade
+Frenchman, whose hands, to make
+sure of him, were tied behind his back.
+Groping and stumbling in the dark among
+trees, roots, and underbrush, buffeted by
+wind and rain, and slashed in the face by
+the recoiling boughs which they could
+not see, they soon lost their way, fell into
+confusion, and came to a stand, in a mood
+more savagely desponding than before.
+But soon a glimmer of returning day
+<a name="Page_558" id="Page_558"></a>came to their aid, and showed them the
+dusky sky, and the dark columns of the
+surrounding pines. Menendez ordered
+the men forward on pain of death. They
+obeyed, and presently, emerging from
+the forest, could dimly discern the ridge
+of a low hill, behind which, the Frenchman
+told them, was the fort. Menendez,
+with a few officers and men, cautiously
+mounted to the top. Beneath lay Fort
+Caroline, three gunshots distant; but the
+rain, the imperfect light, and a cluster
+of intervening houses prevented his seeing
+clearly, and he sent two officers to
+reconnoitre. Descending, they met a
+solitary Frenchman, a straggler from the
+fort. They knocked him down with a
+sheathed sword, took him prisoner, then
+stabbed him in cold blood. This done,
+and their observations made, they returned
+to the top of the hill, behind
+which, clutching their weapons in fierce
+expectancy, all the gang stood waiting.</p>
+
+<p>"Santiago!" cried Menendez. "At
+them! God is with us!"</p>
+
+<p>And, shouting their hoarse war-cries,
+the Spaniards rushed down the slope like
+starved wolves.</p>
+
+<p>Not a sentry was on the rampart. La
+Vigne, the officer of the guard, had just
+gone to his quarters, but a trumpeter,
+who chanced to remain, saw, through
+sheets of rain, the black swarm of assailants
+sweeping down the hill. He blew
+the alarm, and at his shrill summons a
+few half-naked soldiers ran wildly out of
+the barracks. It was too late. Through
+the breaches, over the ramparts, the
+Spaniards came pouring in.</p>
+
+<p>"Santiago! Santiago! Down with
+the Lutherans!"</p>
+
+<p>Sick men leaped from their beds.
+Women and children, blind with fright,
+darted shrieking from the houses. A
+fierce gaunt visage, the thrust of a pike
+or blow of a rusty halberd,&mdash;such was
+the greeting that met all alike. Laudonni&egrave;re
+snatched his sword and target, and
+ran towards the principal breach, calling
+to his soldiers. A rush of Spaniards met
+him; his men were cut down around
+him; and he, with a soldier named Bartholomew,
+was forced back into the courtyard
+of his house. Here a tent was pitched,
+and as the pursuers stumbled among
+the cords, he escaped behind Ottigny's
+house, sprang through the breach in the
+western rampart, and fled for the woods.</p>
+
+<p>Le Moyne had been one of the guard.
+Scarcely had he thrown himself into a
+hammock which was slung in his room,
+when a savage shout, and a wild uproar
+<a name="Page_559" id="Page_559"></a>of shrieks, outcries, and the clash of weapons,
+brought him to his feet. He rushed
+past two Spaniards in the door-way, ran
+behind the guard-house leaped through
+an embrasure into the ditch, and escaped
+to the forest.</p>
+
+<p>Challeux, the carpenter, was going betimes
+to his work, a chisel in his hand.
+He was old, but pike and partisan brandished
+at his back gave wings to his
+flight. In the ecstasy of his terror, he
+leaped upward at the top of the palisade,
+and, clutching it, threw himself over with
+the agility of a boy. He ran up the hill,
+no one pursuing, and as he neared the
+edge of the forest, turned and looked
+back. From the high ground where
+he stood he could see the butchery, the fury
+of the conquerors, the agonized gestures
+of the victims. He turned again in horror,
+and plunged into the woods. As he
+tore his way through the briers and thickets,
+he met several fugitives, escaped like
+himself. Others presently came up, haggard
+and wild, like men broke loose from
+the jaws of fate. They gathered and consulted
+together. One of them, in great
+repute for his knowledge of the Bible, was
+for returning and surrendering to the
+Spaniards. "They are men," he said;
+"perhaps when their fury is over they
+will spare our lives, and even if they kill
+us, it will only be a few moments' pain.
+Better so than to starve here in the woods
+or be torn to pieces by wild beasts."</p>
+
+<p>The greater part of the naked and despairing
+company assented, but Challeux
+was of a different mind. The old Huguenot
+quoted Scripture, and called up the
+names of prophets and apostles to witness,
+that, in direst extremity, God would not
+abandon those who rested their faith in
+Him. Six of the fugitives, however, still
+held to their desperate purpose. Issuing
+from the woods, they descended towards
+the fort, and as with beating hearts their
+comrades watched the result, a troop of
+Spaniards rushed forth, hewed them down
+with swords and halberds, and dragged
+their bodies to the brink of the river,
+where the victims of the massacre were
+already flung in heaps.</p>
+
+<p>Le Moyne, with a soldier named Grandchemin,
+whom he had met in his flight,
+toiled all day through the woods, in the
+hope of reaching the small vessels anchored
+behind the bar. Night found them in
+a morass. No vessels could be seen, and
+the soldier, in despair, broke into angry
+upbraidings against his companion,&mdash;saying
+that he would go back and give himself
+up. Le Moyne at first opposed him,
+then yielded. But when they drew near
+the fort, and heard the howl of savage
+revelry that rose from within, the artist's
+heart failed him. He embraced his <a name="Page_560" id="Page_560"></a>companion,
+and the soldier advanced alone.
+A party of Spaniards came out to meet
+him. He kneeled, and begged for his
+life. He was answered by a death-blow;
+and the horrified Le Moyne, from his
+hiding-place in the thickets, saw his limbs
+hacked apart, thrust on pikes, and borne
+off in triumph.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, Menendez, mustering his
+followers, had offered thanks to God for
+their victory; and this pious butcher
+wept with emotion as he recounted the
+favors which Heaven had showered upon
+their enterprise. His admiring historian
+gives it in proof of his humanity, that, after
+the rage of the assault was spent, he
+ordered that women, infants, and boys
+under fifteen should thenceforth be spared.
+Of these, by his own account, there
+were about fifty. Writing in October to
+the King, he says that they cause him
+great anxiety, since he fears the anger
+of God, should he now put them to death,
+while, on the other hand, he is in dread
+lest the venom of their heresy should infect
+his men.</p>
+
+<p>A hundred and forty-two persons were
+slain in and around the fort, and their
+bodies lay heaped together on the shore.
+Nearly opposite was anchored a small
+vessel, called the Pearl, commanded by
+James Ribaut, son of the Admiral. The
+ferocious soldiery, maddened with victory
+and drunk with blood, crowded to the
+beach, shouting insults to those on board,
+mangling the corpses, tearing out their
+eyes, and throwing them towards the
+vessel from the points of their daggers.
+Thus did the Most Catholic Philip champion
+the cause of Heaven in the New
+World.</p>
+
+<p>It was currently believed in France, and,
+though no eye-witness attests it,
+there is reason to think it true, that among
+those murdered at Fort Caroline there
+were some who died a death of peculiar
+ignominy. Menendez, it is affirmed,
+hanged his prisoners on trees, and placed
+over them the inscription, "I do this, not
+as to Frenchmen, but as to Lutherans."</p>
+
+<p>The Spaniards gained a great booty:
+armor, clothing, and provision. "Nevertheless,"
+says the devout Mendoza, after
+closing his inventory of the plunder, "the
+greatest profit of this victory is the triumph
+which our Lord has granted us,
+whereby His holy gospel will be introduced
+into this country, a thing so needful
+for saving so many souls from perdition."
+Again, he wri<a name="Page_561" id="Page_561"></a>tes in his journal,&mdash;"We
+owe to God and His Mother, more than
+to human strength, this victory over the
+adversaries of the holy Catholic religion."</p>
+
+<p>To whatever influence, celestial or
+other, the exploit may best be ascribed,
+the victors were not yet quite content
+with their success. Two small French
+vessels, besides that of James Ribaut, still
+lay within range of the fort. When the
+storm had a little abated, the cannon
+were turned on them. One of them was
+sunk, but Ribaut, with the others, escaped
+down the river, at the mouth of which
+several light craft, including that bought
+from the English, had been anchored
+since the arrival of his father's squadron.</p>
+
+<p>While this was passing, the wretched
+fugitives were flying from the scene of
+massacre through a tempest, of whose
+pertinacious violence all the narratives
+speak with wonder. Exhausted, starved,
+half-clothed,&mdash;for most of them had
+escaped in their shirts,&mdash;they pushed
+their toilsome way amid the ceaseless
+howl of the elements. A few sought
+refuge in Indian villages; but these, it is
+said, were afterwards killed by the Spaniards.
+The greater number attempted to
+reach the vessels at the mouth of the
+river. Of the latter was Le Moyne, who,
+despite his former failure, was toiling
+through the maze of tangled forests when
+he met a Belgian soldier with the woman
+described as Laudonni&egrave;re's maid-servant,
+the latter wounded in the breast,
+and, urging their flight towards the vessels,
+they fell in with other fugitives,
+among them Laudonni&egrave;re himself. As
+they struggled through the salt-marsh,
+the rank sedge cut their naked limbs, and
+the tide rose to their waists. Presently
+they descried others, toiling like themselves
+through the matted vegetation, and
+recognized Challeux<a name="Page_562" id="Page_562"></a> and his companions,
+also in quest of the vessels. The old
+man still, as he tells us, held fast to his
+chisel, which had done good service in
+cutting poles to aid the party to cross the
+deep creeks that channelled the morass.
+The united band, twenty-six in all, were
+relieved at length by the sight of a moving
+sail. It was the vessel of Captain
+Mallard, who, informed of the massacre,
+was standing along-shore in the hope of
+picking up some of the fugitives. He
+saw their signals, and sent boats to their
+rescue; but such was their exhaustion,
+that, had not the sailors, wading to their
+armpits among the rushes, borne them
+out on their shoulders, few could have
+escaped. Laudonni&egrave;re was so feeble that
+nothing but the support of a soldier, who
+held him upright in his arms, had saved
+him from drowning in the marsh.</p>
+
+<p>Gaining the friendly decks, the fugitives
+counselled together. One and all,
+they sickened for the sight of France.</p>
+
+<p>After waiting a few days, and saving a
+few more stragglers from the marsh, they
+prepared to sail. Young Ribaut, though
+ignorant of his father's fate, assented
+with something more than willingness;
+indeed, his behavior throughout had been
+stamped with weakness and poltroonery.
+On the twenty-fifth of September, they
+put to sea in two vessels; and, after a
+voyage whose privations were fatal to
+many of them, they arrived, one party
+at Rochelle, the other at Swansea, in
+Wales.</p>
+
+<p>In suspense and fear, hourly looking seaward
+for the dreaded fleet of John Ribaut,
+the chaplain Mendoza and his brother
+priests held watch and ward at St. Augustine,
+in the Adelantado's absence. Besides
+the celestial guardians whom they ceased
+not to invoke, they had as protectors
+Bartholomew Menendez, the brother of
+the Adelantado, and about a hundred
+soldiers. Day and night, the latter toiled
+to throw up earthworks and strengthen
+their position.</p>
+
+<p>A week elapsed, when they saw a man
+running towards their fort, shouting <a name="Page_563" id="Page_563"></a>as he
+ran.</p>
+
+<p>Mendoza went out to meet him.</p>
+
+<p>"Victory! Victory!" gasped the
+breathless messenger. "The French
+fort is ours!" And he flung his arms
+about the chaplain's neck.</p>
+
+<p>"To-day," writes the latter in his journal,
+"Monday, the twenty-fourth, came
+our good general himself, with fifty soldiers,
+very tired, like all those who were
+with him. As soon as they told me he
+was coming, I ran to my lodging, took a
+new cassock, the best I had, put on my
+surplice, and went out to meet him with
+a crucifix in my hand; whereupon he,
+like a gentleman and a good Christian,
+kneeled down with all his followers, and
+gave the Lord a thousand thanks for the
+great favors he had received from Him."</p>
+
+<p>In solemn procession, four priests in
+front chanting the <i>Te Deum</i>, the victors
+entered St. Augustine in triumph.</p>
+
+<p>On the twenty-eighth, when the weary
+Adelantado was taking his <i>siesta</i> under
+the sylvan roof of Seloy, a troop of Indians
+came in with news that quickly
+roused him from his slumbers. They had
+seen a French vessel wrecked on the
+coast towards the south. Those who escaped
+from her were some four leagues
+off, on the banks of a river or arm of the
+sea, which they could not cross.</p>
+
+<p>Menendez instantly sent forty or fifty
+men in boats to reconnoitre. Next, he
+called the chaplain,&mdash;for he would fain
+have him at his elbow to countenance the
+devilish deeds he meditated,&mdash;and embarked,
+with him, twelve soldiers, and two
+Indian guides, in another boat. They
+rowed along the channel between Anastasia
+Island and the main shore; then
+landed, struck across the country on foot,
+traversed plains and marshes, readied
+the sea towards night, and searched along-shore
+till ten o'clock to find their comrades
+who had gone before. At length,
+with mutual joy, the two parties met, and
+bivouacked together on the sands. Not
+far distant they could see lights. They
+were the camp-fires of the shipwrecked
+French.</p>
+
+<p>And now, to relate the fortunes of
+these unhappy men. To do so with precision
+is impossible, for henceforward the
+French narratives are no longer the narratives
+of eye-witnesses.</p>
+
+<p>It has been seen how, when on the point
+of assailing the Spaniards of St. Augustine,
+John Ribaut was thwarted by a gale
+which the former hailed as a divine interposition.
+The gale rose to a tempest
+of strange fury. Within a few days, all
+the French ships were cast on shore, the
+greater number near Cape Canaveral<a name="Page_564" id="Page_564"></a>.
+According to the letter of Menendez,
+many of those on board were lost, but
+others affirm that all escaped but the
+captain, La Grange, an officer of high
+merit, who was washed from a floating
+mast. One of the ships was wrecked at
+a point farther northward than the rest,
+and it was her company whose camp-fires
+were seen by the Spaniards at their
+bivouac among the sands of Anastasia
+Island. They were endeavoring to reach
+Fort Caroline, of whose fate they knew
+nothing, while Ribaut with the remainder
+was farther southward, struggling
+through the wilderness towards the same
+goal. What befell the latter will appear
+hereafter. Of the fate of the former
+party there is no French record. What
+we know of it is due to three Spanish
+writers, Mendoza, Doctor Solis de las
+Meras, and Menendez himself. Solis was
+a priest, and brother-in-law to Menendez.
+Like Mendoza, he minutely describes
+what he saw, and, like him, was a red-hot
+zealot, lavishing applause on the
+darkest deeds of his chief. Before me
+lie the long despatches, now first brought
+to light from the archives of Seville, which
+Menendez sent from Florida to the King,
+a cool record of atrocities never surpassed,
+and inscribed on the back with the royal
+indorsement,&mdash;"Say to him that he has
+done well."</p>
+
+<p>When the Adelantado saw the French
+fires in the distance, he lay close in his
+bivouac, and sent two soldiers to reconnoitre.
+At two in the morning they came
+back and reported that it was impossible
+to get at the enemy, since they were on
+the farther side of an arm of the sea,
+probably Matanzas Inlet. Menendez,
+however, gave orders to march, and before
+daybreak reached the hither bank,
+where he hid his men in a bushy hollow.
+Thence, as it grew light, they could discern
+the enemy, many of whom were
+searching along the sands and shallows
+for shell-fish, for they were famishing.
+A thought struck Menendez, an inspiration,
+says Mendoza, of the Holy Spirit.
+He put on the clothes of a sailor, entered
+a boat which had been brought to the
+spot, and rowed towards the shipwrecked
+men, the better to learn their condition.
+A Frenchman swam out to meet
+him. Menendez demanded what men
+they were.</p>
+
+<p>"Followers of Ribaut," answered the
+swimmer, "Viceroy of the King of
+France."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?"</p>
+
+<p>"All Lutherans."</p>
+
+<p>A brief dialogue ensued, during which
+the Adelantado declared his name and
+character. The Frenchman swam back
+to his companions, but soon returned,
+and asked safe con<a name="Page_565" id="Page_565"></a>duct for his captain
+and four other gentlemen who wished to
+hold conference with the Spanish general.
+Menendez gave his word for their
+safety, and, returning to the shore, sent
+his boat to bring them over. On their
+landing, he met them very courteously.
+His followers were kept at a distance, so
+disposed behind hills and clumps of bushes
+as to give an exaggerated idea of their
+force,&mdash;a precaution the more needful
+as they were only about sixty in number,
+while the French, says Solis, were
+above two hundred, though Menendez
+declares that they did not exceed a hundred
+and forty. The French officer told
+him the story of their shipwreck, and
+begged him to lend them a boat to aid
+them in crossing the rivers which lay
+between them and a fort of their King,
+whither they were making their way.</p>
+
+<p>Then came again the ominous question,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are Lutherans."</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen," pursued Menendez,
+"your fort is taken, and all in it put to
+the sword." And in proof of his declaration
+he caused articles plundered from
+Fort Caroline to be shown to the unhappy
+petitioners. He then left them, to
+breakfast with his officers, first ordering
+food to be placed before them. His repast
+over, he returned to them.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you convinced now," he asked,
+"that what I have told you is true?"</p>
+
+<p>The French captain assented, and implored
+him to lend them ships in which
+to return home. Menendez answered,
+that he would do so willingly, if they
+were Catholics, and if he had ships to
+spare, but he had none. The supplicants
+then expressed the hope, that, at
+least, they and their followers would be
+allowed to remain with the Spaniards till
+ships could be sent to their relief, since
+there was peace between the two nations,
+whose kings were friends and brothers.</p>
+
+<p>"All Catholics," retorted the Spaniard,
+"I will befriend; but as you are of the
+New Sect, I hold you as enemies, and
+wage deadly war against you; and this
+I will do with all cruelty [<i>crueldad</i>] in
+this country, where I command as Viceroy
+and Captain-General for my King. I
+am here to plant the holy gospel, that
+the Indians may be enlightened and come
+to the knowledge of the holy Catholic
+faith of our Lord Jesus Christ, as the
+Roman Church teaches it. If you will
+give up your arms and banners, and place
+yourselves at my mercy, you ma<a name="Page_566" id="Page_566"></a>y do so,
+and I will act towards you as God shall
+give me grace. Do as you will, for other
+than this you can have neither truce
+nor friendship with me."</p>
+
+<p>Such were the Adelantado's words, as
+reported by a by-stander, his admiring
+brother-in-law; and that they contain
+an implied assurance of mercy has been
+held, not only by Protestants, but by
+Catholics and Spaniards. The report
+of Menendez himself is more brief and
+sufficiently equivocal:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I answered, that they could give up
+their arms and place themselves under
+my mercy,&mdash;that I should do with them
+what our Lord should order; and from
+that I did not depart, nor would I, unless
+God our Lord should otherwise inspire."</p>
+
+<p>One of the Frenchmen recrossed to
+consult with his companions. In two
+hours he returned, and offered fifty thousand
+ducats to secure their lives; but
+Menendez, says his brother-in-law, would
+give no pledges. On the other hand, expressions
+in his own despatches point to
+the inference that a virtual pledge was
+given, at least to certain individuals.</p>
+
+<p>The starving French saw no resource
+but to yield themselves to his mercy.
+The boat was again sent across the river.
+It returned, laden with banners,
+arquebuses, swords, targets, and helmets.
+The Adelantado ordered twenty soldiers
+to bring over the prisoners by tens at a
+time. He then took the French officers
+aside behind a ridge of sand, two gunshots
+from the bank. Here, with courtesy
+on his lips and murder reeking at
+his heart, he said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen, I have but few men,
+and you are so many, that, if you were
+free, it would be easy for you to take
+your satisfaction on us for the people we
+killed when we took your fort. Therefore
+it is necessary that you should go to
+my camp, four leagues from this place,
+with your hands tied."</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, as each party landed,
+they were led out of sight behind the
+sand-hill, and their hands tied at their
+backs with the match-cords of the arquebuses,&mdash;though
+not before each had
+been supplied with food. The whole
+day passed before all were brought together,
+bound and helpless, under the
+eye of the inexorable Adelantado. But
+now Mendoza interposed. "I was a
+priest," he says, "and had the bowels
+of a man." He asked, that, if there were
+Christians, that is to say Catholics, among
+the prisoners, they should be set apart.
+Twelve Bre<a name="Page_567" id="Page_567"></a>ton sailors professed themselves
+to be such; and these, together
+with four carpenters and calkers, "of
+whom," writes Menendez, "I was in
+great need," were put on board the boat
+and sent to St. Augustine. The rest
+were ordered to march thither by land.</p>
+
+<p>The Adelantado walked in advance
+till he came to a lonely spot, not far
+distant, deep among the bush-covered
+hills. Here he stopped, and with his
+cane drew a line in the sand. The sun
+was set when the captive Huguenots,
+with their escort, reached the fatal goal
+thus marked out. And now let the curtain
+drop; for here, in the name of
+Heaven, the hounds of hell were turned
+loose, and the savage soldiery, like wolves
+in a sheepfold, rioted in slaughter. Of
+all that wretched company, not one was
+left alive.</p>
+
+<p>"I had their hands tied behind their
+backs," writes the chief criminal, "and
+themselves passed under the knife. It
+appeared to me, that, by thus chastising
+them, God our Lord and your Majesty
+were served; whereby in future they
+will leave us more free from their evil
+sect, to plant the gospel in these parts."</p>
+
+<p>Again Menendez returned triumphant
+to St. Augustine, and behind him marched
+his band of butchers, steeped in blood
+to the elbows, but still unsated. Great
+as had been his success, he still had cause
+for anxiety. There was ill news of his
+fleet. Some of the ships were lost, others
+scattered, or lagging tardily on their
+way. Of his whole force, but a fraction
+had reached Florida, and of this a large
+part was still at Fort Caroline. Ribaut
+could not be far off; and whatever might
+be the condition of his shipwrecked company,
+their numbers would make them
+formidable, unless taken at advantage.
+Urged by fear and fortified by fanaticism,
+Menendez had well begun his work
+of slaughter; but rest for him there was
+none; a darker deed was behind.</p>
+
+<p>On the next day, Indians came with
+the tidings that at the spot where the
+French had been found was now another
+party, still larger. This murder-loving
+race looked with great respect on Menendez
+for his wholesale butchery of the
+night before,&mdash;an exploit rarely equalled
+in their own annals of massacre. On
+his part, he doubted not that Ribaut was
+at hand. Marching with a hundred and
+fifty men, he reached the inlet at midnight,
+and again, like a savage, ambushed
+himself on the bank. Day broke, and
+he could plainly see the French on the
+farther side. They had made a raft,
+which lay in the water, ready for crossing.
+Menendez and his men showed
+themselves, when, forthwith, the French
+displayed their banners, sounded drums
+and trumpets, and set their sick and
+starving ranks in array of battle. But
+the Adelantado, regardless of this warlike
+show, ordered his men to seat themselves
+at breakfast, while he with three
+officers walked unconcernedly along the
+shore. His coolness had its effect. The
+<a name="Page_568" id="Page_568"></a>French blew a trumpet of parley, and
+showed a white flag. The Spaniards replied.
+A Frenchman came out upon
+the raft, and, shouting across the water,
+asked that a Spanish envoy should be
+sent over.</p>
+
+<p>"You have a raft," was the reply;
+"come yourselves."</p>
+
+<p>An Indian canoe lay under the bank on
+the Spanish side. A French sailor swam
+to it, paddled back unmolested, and presently
+returned, bringing with him La
+Caille, Ribaut's sergeant-major. He told
+Menendez that the French were three
+hundred and fifty in all, on their way to
+Fort Caroline; and, like the officers of
+the former party, begged for boats to
+aid them in crossing the river.</p>
+
+<p>"My brother," said Menendez, "go
+and tell your general, that, if he wishes
+to speak with me, he may come with four
+or six companions, and that I pledge my
+word he shall go back safe."</p>
+
+<p>La Caille returned; and Ribaut, with
+eight gentlemen, soon came over in the
+canoe. Menendez met them courteously,
+caused wine and preserved fruits to be
+placed before them,&mdash;he had come with
+well-stocked larder on his errand of
+blood,&mdash;and next led Ribaut to the reeking
+Golgotha, where, in heaps upon the
+sands, lay the corpses of his slaughtered
+followers. Ribaut was prepared for
+the spectacle; La Caille had already
+seen it; but he would not believe that
+Fort Caroline was taken till a part of the
+plunder was shown him. Then, mastering
+his despair, he turned to the conqueror.</p>
+
+<p>"What has befallen us," he said, "may
+one day befall you." And, urging that
+the kings of France and Spain were
+brothers and close friends, he begged,
+in the name of that friendship, that the
+Spaniard would aid him in conveying his
+followers home. Menendez gave him the
+same equivocal answer that he had given
+the former party, and Ribaut returned
+to consult with his officers. After three
+hours of absence, he came back in the
+canoe, and told the Adelantado that some
+of his people were ready to surrender at
+discretion, but that many refused.</p>
+
+<p>"They can do as they please," was
+the reply.</p>
+
+<p>In behalf of those who surrendered
+Ribaut offered a ransom of a hundred
+thousand ducats.</p>
+
+<p>"It grieves me much," said Menendez,
+"that I cannot accept it; for I have great
+need of it."</p>
+
+<p>Ribaut was much encouraged. Menendez
+could scarcely forego such a prize,
+and he thought, says the Spanish narrator,
+that the lives of his followers would
+now be safe. He asked to be allowed
+the night for deliberation, and at <a name="Page_569" id="Page_569"></a>sunset
+recrossed the river. In the morning he
+reappeared among the Spaniards and reported
+that two hundred of his men had
+retreated from the spot, but that the remaining
+one hundred and fifty would
+surrender. At the same time he gave
+into the hands of Menendez the royal
+standard and other flags, with his sword,
+dagger, helmet, buckler, and his official
+seal, given him by Coligny. Menendez
+directed an officer to enter the boat and
+bring over the French by tens. He next
+led Ribaut among the bushes behind the
+neighboring sand-hill, and ordered his
+hands to be bound fast. Then the scales
+fell from the prisoner's eyes. Face to
+face his hideous fate rose up before him.
+He saw his followers and himself entrapped,&mdash;the
+dupe of words artfully framed
+to lure them to their ruin. The day
+wore on; and, as band after band of prisoners
+was brought over, they were led
+behind the sand-hill, out of sight from
+the farther shore, and bound like their
+general. At length the transit was complete.
+With bloodshot eyes and weapons
+bared, the fierce Spaniards closed
+around their victims.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?
+and is there any one among you who will
+go to confession?"</p>
+
+<p>Ribaut answered,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I and all here are of the Reformed
+Faith."</p>
+
+<p>And he recited the Psalm, "<i>Domine,
+memento mei</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"We are of earth," he continued, "and
+to earth we must return; twenty years
+more or less can matter little"; and,
+turning to the Adelantado, he bade him
+do his will.</p>
+
+<p>The stony-hearted bigot gave the signal;
+and those who will may paint to
+themselves the horrors of the scene. A
+few, however, were spared.</p>
+
+<p>"I saved," writes Menendez, "the
+lives of two young gentlemen of about
+eighteen years of age, as well as of three
+others, the fifer, the drummer, and the
+trumpeter; and I caused Jean Ribaut
+with all the rest to be passed under the
+knife, judging this to be expedient for
+the service of God our Lord, and of your
+Majesty. And I consider it great good
+fortune that he (Jean Ribaut) should be
+dead, for the King of France could effect
+more with him and five hundred ducats
+than with other men and five thousand,
+and he would do more in one year than
+another in ten, for he was the most experienced
+sailor and naval commander
+ever known, and of great skill in this
+passage to the Indies and the coast of
+Florida. He was, besides, greatly liked
+in England, in which kingdom his repu<a name="Page_570" id="Page_570"></a>tation
+is such that he was appointed
+Captain-General of all the British fleet
+against the French Catholics in the war
+between England and France some years
+ago."</p>
+
+<p>Such is the sum of the Spanish accounts,&mdash;the
+self-damning testimony of
+the author and abettors of the crime.
+A picture of lurid and awful coloring;
+and yet there is reason to believe that
+the truth was more hideous still. Among
+those spared was one Christophe le Breton,
+who was carried to Spain, escaped
+to France, and told his story to Challeux.
+Among those struck down in the carnage
+was a sailor of Dieppe, stunned and left
+for dead under a heap of corpses. In
+the night he revived, contrived to draw
+his knife, cut the cords that bound his
+hands, and make his way to an Indian
+village. The Indians, though not without
+reluctance, abandoned him to the
+Spaniards. The latter sold him as a
+slave; but on his way in fetters to Portugal,
+the ship was taken by the Huguenots,
+the sailor set free, and his story
+published in the narrative of Le Moyne.
+When the massacre was known in France,
+the friends and relatives of the victims
+sent to the King, Charles IX., a vehement
+petition for redress; and their memorial
+recounts many incidents of the
+tragedy. From these three sources is to
+be drawn the French version of the story.
+The following is its substance:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Famished and desperate, the followers
+of Ribaut were toiling northward to seek
+refuge at Fort Caroline, when they found
+the Spaniards in their path. Some were
+filled with dismay; others, in their misery,
+almost hailed them as deliverers. La
+Caille, the sergeant-major, crossed the
+river. Menendez met him with a face
+of friendship, and protested that he would
+spare the lives of the shipwrecked men,
+sealing the promise with an oath, a kiss,
+and many signs of the cross. He even
+gave it in writing, under seal. Still,
+there were many among the French who
+would not place themselves in his power.
+The most credulous crossed the river in
+a boat. As each successive party landed,
+their hands were bound fast at their
+backs; and thus, except a few who were
+set apart, they were all driven towards
+the fort, like cattle to the shambles, with
+curses and scurrilous abuse. Then, at
+sound of drums and trumpets, the Spaniards
+fell upon them, striking them down
+with swords, pikes, and halberds. Ribaut
+vainly called on the Adelantado to remember
+his oath. By the latter's order,
+a soldier plunged a dagger into his heart;
+and Ottigny, who stood near, met a similar
+fate. Ribaut's beard was cut off, and
+portions of it sent in a letter to Philip II.
+His head was hewn into four parts, one
+of which was displayed on the point of
+a lance at each corner of Fort St. Augustine.
+Great fires were kindled, and
+the bodies of the murdered burned to
+ashes.</p>
+
+<p>Such is the sum of the French accounts.
+The charge of breach of faith
+contained in them was believed by Catholics
+as well as Protestants, and it was as
+a defence against this charge that the
+narrative of the Adelantado's brother-in-law
+was published. That Ribaut, a
+man whose good sense and bravery we<a name="Page_571" id="Page_571"></a>re
+both reputed high, should have submitted
+himself and his men to Menendez without
+positive assurance of safety is scarcely
+credible; nor is it lack of charity to
+believe that a miscreant so savage in heart
+and so perverted in conscience would act
+on the maxim, current among the bigots
+of the day, that faith ought not to be
+kept with heretics.</p>
+
+<p>It was night when the Adelantado
+again entered St. Augustine. Some there
+were who blamed his cruelty; but many
+applauded. "Even if the French had
+been Catholics,"&mdash;such was their language,&mdash;"he
+would have done right,
+for, with the little provision we have,
+they would all have starved; besides,
+there were so many of them that they
+would have cut our throats."</p>
+
+<p>And now Menendez again addressed
+himself to the despatch, already begun,
+in which he recounts to the King his labors
+and his triumphs, a deliberate and
+business-like document, mingling narratives
+of butchery with recommendations
+for promotions, commissary details, and
+petitions for supplies; enlarging, too, on
+the vast schemes of encroachment which
+his successful generalship had brought to
+nought. The French, he says, had planned
+a military and naval depot at Los
+Martires, whence they would make a
+descent upon Havana, and another at
+the Bay of Ponce de Leon, whence they
+could threaten Vera Cruz. They had
+long been encroaching on Spanish rights
+at Newfoundland, from which a great arm
+of the sea&mdash;the St. Lawrence&mdash;would
+give them access to the Moluccas and other
+parts of the East Indies. Moreover,
+he adds in a later despatch, by this passage
+they may reach the mines of Zacatecas
+and St. Martin, as well as every
+part of the South Sea. And, as already
+mentioned, he urges immediate occupation
+of Chesapeake Bay, which, by its
+supposed water-communication with the
+St. Lawrence, would enable Spain to
+vindicate her rights, control the fisheries
+of Newfoundland, and thwart her
+rival in her vast designs of commercial
+and territorial aggrandizement. Thus did
+France and Spain dispute the possession
+of North America long before England
+became a party to the strife.</p>
+
+<p>Some twenty days after Menendez returned
+to St. Augustine, the Indians,
+enamored of carnage, and exulting to
+see their invaders mowed down, came to
+tell him that on the coast southward,
+near Cape Canaveral, a great number
+of Frenchmen were intrenching themselves.
+They were those of Ribaut's
+party who had refused to surrender. Retreating
+to the spot where their ships had
+been cast ashore, they were endeavorin<a name="Page_572" id="Page_572"></a>g
+to build a vessel from the fragments of
+the wrecks.</p>
+
+<p>In all haste Menendez despatched messengers
+to Fort Caroline,&mdash;named by
+him San Mateo,&mdash;ordering a reinforcement
+of a hundred and fifty men. In a
+few days they came. He added some of
+his own soldiers, and, with a united force
+of two hundred and fifty, set forth, as
+he tells us, on the second of November,
+pushing southward along the shore with
+such merciless energy that some of his
+men dropped dead with wading night
+and day through the loose sands. When,
+from behind their frail defences, the
+French saw the Spanish pikes and partisans
+glittering into view, they fled in
+a panic, and took refuge among the hills.
+Menendez sent a trumpet to summon
+them, pledging his honor for their safety.
+The commander and several others told
+the messenger that they would sooner
+be eaten by the savages than trust themselves
+to Spaniards; and, escaping, they
+fled to the Indian towns. The rest surrendered;
+and Menendez kept his word.
+The comparative number of his own men
+made his prisoners no longer dangerous.
+They were led back to St. Augustine,
+where, as the Spanish writer affirms, they
+were well treated. Those of good birth
+sat at the Adelantado's table, eating the
+bread of a homicide crimsoned with the
+slaughter of their comrades. The priests
+essayed their pious efforts, and, under
+the gloomy menace of the Inquisition,
+some of the heretics renounced their errors.
+The fate of the captives may be
+gathered from the indorsement, in the
+handwriting of the King, on the back of
+the despatch of Menendez of December
+twelfth.</p>
+
+<p>"Say to him," writes Philip II., "that,
+as to those he has killed, he has done
+well, and as for those he has saved, they
+shall be sent to the galleys."</p>
+
+<p>Thus did Spain make good her claim
+to North America, and crush the upas of
+heresy in its germ. Within her bounds
+the tidings were hailed with acclamation,
+while in France a cry of horror and execration
+rose from the Huguenots, and
+found an echo even among the Catholics.
+But the weak and ferocious son of Catherine
+de M&eacute;dicis gave no response. The
+victims were Huguenots, disturbers of
+the realm, followers of Coligny, the man
+above all others a thorn in his side. True,
+the enterprise was a national enterprise,
+undertaken at the national charge, with
+royal commission, and under the royal
+standard. True, it had been assailed in
+tim<a name="Page_573" id="Page_573"></a>e of peace by a power professing the
+closest amity. Yet Huguenot influence,
+had prompted and Huguenot hands executed
+it. That influence had now ebbed
+low; Coligny's power had waned; and
+the Spanish party was ascendant. Charles
+IX., long vacillating, was fast subsiding
+into the deathly embrace of Spain, for
+whom, at last, on the bloody eve of St.
+Bartholomew, he was destined to become
+the assassin of his own best subjects.</p>
+
+<p>In vain the relatives of the slain petitioned
+him for redress; and had the honor
+of the nation rested in the keeping of her
+king, the blood of hundreds of murdered
+Frenchmen would have cried from the
+ground in vain. But it was not so to be.
+Injured humanity found an avenger, and
+outraged France a champion. Her chivalrous
+annals may be searched in vain for
+a deed of more romantic daring than the
+vengeance of Dominic de Gourgue.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="WEARINESS" id="WEARINESS"></a>WEARINESS.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">O little feet, that such long years<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Must wander on through doubts and fears,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Must ache and bleed beneath your load!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I, nearer to the way-side inn<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where toil shall cease and rest begin,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Am weary, thinking of your road.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">O little hands, that, weak or strong,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Have still to serve or rule so long,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Have still so long to give or ask!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I, who so much with book and pen<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Have toiled among my fellow-men,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Am weary, thinking of your task.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">O little hearts, that throb and beat<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With such impatient, feverish heat,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Such limitless and strong desires!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mine, that, so long has glowed and burned,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With passions into ashes turned,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Now covers and conceals its fires.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">O little souls, as pure and white<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And crystalline as rays of light<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Direct from heaven, their source divine!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Refracted through the mist of years,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How red my setting sun appears,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How lurid looks this soul, of mine!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="MRS_LEWIS" id="MRS_LEWIS"></a>MRS. LEWIS.</h2>
+
+<p>A STORY IN THREE PARTS.</p>
+
+<p>PART III.</p>
+
+
+<p>XI.</p>
+
+<p>When we returned from <a name="Page_574" id="Page_574"></a>our journey,
+Lulu was among the first to greet us, and
+with a cordial animation quite unlike the
+gentle, dawdling way she used to have.
+Indeed, I was struck the first evening
+with a new impulse, and a healthful
+mental current, that gave glow and freshness
+to everything she said. Mr. Lewis
+was gone to Cuba, she told us, and would
+be away a month more, but "George"
+was with her continually, and the days
+were all too short for what they had to do.
+She seemed to have attacked all the arts
+and sciences simultaneously, and with an
+eagerness very amusing to see. George
+had begun a numismatic collection for
+her, and she had made out an historic table
+from the coins, writing down all that
+was most important under each king's
+reign. George had brought home some
+fine specimens of stones, and had interested
+her much in mineralogy. George liked
+riding, and had taught her to ride;
+and she now perpetually made her appearance
+in her riding-habit and little jockey-cap,
+wishing she could do something for me
+here or there. George moulded, and
+taught her to mould; and she was dabbling
+in clay and plaster of Paris all the
+morning. George painted beautifully in
+water-colors, and taught her to sketch
+from Nature, which she often did now, in
+their rides, when the days were pleasant
+enough. George not only thrummed a
+Spanish guitar, but liked singing; so music
+went on with wonderful force and improvement.
+Nothing that George liked
+better than botany, metaphysics, and micrology.
+And now Lulu was screaming at
+dreadful dragons' heads on a pin's point,
+or delighted with diamond-beetles and
+spiders' eyes. She fairly revelled in the
+new worlds that were opened to her eager
+eye and hungry mind. No more long,
+tiresome mornings now. Every hour was
+occupied. Intelligent smiles dimpled her
+beautiful mouth; the weary, unoccupied,
+childish look vanished from her eyes; and
+her talk was animated and animating.
+For though she might not tell much that
+was new, she told it in a new way and
+with the fresh light of recent experience.
+Thus she became in a wonderfully short
+time a quite different woman from the
+Lulu of the early winter.</p>
+
+<p>We acknowledged that she was become
+an agreeable companion. In a few
+weeks of home-education her soul had
+expanded to a tropi<a name="Page_575" id="Page_575"></a>cal and rich growth.
+This we were talking over one night,
+when Lulu had been with us, and when
+George had come for her and extinguished
+us with his great hearty laugh and
+abundant health and activity, as the
+sun's effulgence does a house-candle.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't like that Remington, either,"
+said the minister, after we were left in
+this state of darkness.</p>
+
+<p>"But, surely, he has given Lulu's mind
+a most desirable impulse and direction.
+How glad Mr. Lewis will be to see her
+so happy, so animated, and so sensible,
+when he comes home!"</p>
+
+<p>"If that makes him happy, he could
+have had it before, I suppose. But do
+you notice anything unhealthy in this
+mental cultivation,&mdash;anything forced in
+this luxuriant flowering? Now the light
+of heaven expands the whole nature, I
+hold, into healthy and proportioned beauty.
+If anything is lacking or exuberant,
+the influence is not heavenly, be sure.
+What do you think of this statement?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very sensible, but very Hebrew to
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"I never thought Lulu's were 'household
+eyes,'&mdash;but now she never speaks
+of husband or children, of house or home.
+Now that is not a suitable mental condition.
+Let us hope that this intellectual
+effervescence will subside, and leave her
+some thoughtfulness and care for others,
+and the meditation which will make her
+accomplishments something to enrich and
+strengthen, rather than excite and overrun
+her mind."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! well, it is only a few weeks,
+not more than six, since she found out
+she had a soul. No wonder she feels she
+has been such a laggard in the race, she
+must keep on the gallop now to make up
+for lost time."</p>
+
+<p>"But,&mdash;about the husband and children?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, they will come in in due time
+and take their true place. She is a young
+artist, and hasn't got her perspectives arranged.
+Be sure they will be in the foreground
+presently," said I, cheerfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us hope so. For a wife, mother,
+and house-mistress to be racing after so
+many ologies, and ignoring her daily duties,
+is a spectacle of doubtful utility<a name="Page_576" id="Page_576"></a> to
+me."</p>
+
+<p>To tell the truth, this want of domestic
+interest had often struck me also. One
+day, as we were talking about my children,
+Lulu had said that she believed herself
+destitute of the maternal instinct; for
+although she liked to see the children, of
+course, yet she did not miss them when
+away from her. And after the death of
+young Lewis, which happened while they
+were at Cuba, and which distressed my
+Johnnie so much that he could not for a
+long time bear either books or play, for
+want of his beloved playmate, his mother,
+apparently, did not lament him at all.</p>
+
+<p>"I never liked to have him with me,"
+she said to me,&mdash;"partly, I suppose, because
+he reminded me of Montalli, and
+of a period of great suffering in my life.
+I should be glad never to think of him
+again. But William seemed to love and
+pity him always. Gave him his name,
+and always treated him like an only and
+elder son. And William is fond of the
+little girls, too. I don't mean that I am
+not fond of them, but not as he is. He
+will go and spend a week at a time playing
+and driving with them."</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, she very often reminded me
+of Undine in her soulless days.</p>
+
+<p>As she scarcely went into society, during
+the absence of Mr. Lewis, Lulu had
+time for all this multifarious culture that
+I have been describing, and she was gradually
+coming also to reason and reflect on
+what she read and heard, though her appetite
+for knowledge continued with the
+same keenness. Her artistic eye, which
+naturally grouped and arranged with
+taste whatever was about her, stood her
+in good stead of experience; and with a
+very little instruction, she was able to do
+wonders in both a plastic and pictorial
+way.</p>
+
+<p>One day she showed me a fine drawing
+of the Faun of Praxiteles, with some
+verses written beneath. The lines seemed
+to me full of vigor and harmony. They
+implied and breathed, too, such an intimacy
+with classical thought, that I was
+astonished when, in answer to my inquiry,
+she told me she wrote them herself.</p>
+
+<p>"How delighted Mr. Lewis will be with
+this!" I exclaimed, looking at the beautifully
+finished drawing; "to think how
+you have improved, Lulu!"</p><p><a name="Page_577" id="Page_577"></a></p>
+
+<p>"You think so?" she answered, with
+glistening eyes. "I, too, feel that I have,
+and am so happy!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure Mr. Lewis will be so, too,"
+I continued, persistently.</p>
+
+<p>She answered in a sharp tone, dropping
+her eyes, and, as it were, all the
+joy out of them,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Surely, I have told you often enough
+that Mr. Lewis hates literary women! I
+am not goose enough to expect him to
+sympathize with any intellectual pursuits
+of mine. No. Fatima in the harem, or
+Nourmahal thrumming her lute under a
+palm-tree, is his <i>belle-id&eacute;ale</i>; failing that,
+a housekeeper and drudge."</p>
+
+<p>I cannot describe the scorn with which
+she said this. She changed the subject,
+however, at once, instead of pursuing it
+as she would formerly have done, and
+soon after left me for a drive over Milton
+Hills with George, with a hammer and
+sketch-book in the chaise.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lewis's business in Cuba was prolonged
+into May. He had estates there,
+and desired to dispose of them, Lulu said,
+so that they might for the future live entirely
+at the North, which they both liked
+better.</p>
+
+<p>I could not help seeing that her affections
+drifted farther and farther every
+week from their lawful haven, and I wished
+Mr. Lewis safe back again and overlooking
+his Northern estates. I guessed
+how, through her pride of awakened intellect,
+Lulu's gratitude had wrought a
+deep interest in her cousin. He had rescued
+her from the idleness and inanity
+of her daily life, pointed out to her the
+broad fields of literary enjoyment and
+excellence, and inevitably associated his
+own image with all the new and varied
+occupations with which her now busy days
+were filled. The poetry she read he
+brought to her; the songs she sang were
+of his selection. His mind and taste,
+his observations and reflections, were all
+written over every page she read, over
+every hour of her life. She had been
+on a desert island in her intellectual loneliness.
+She could hardly help loving the
+hand that had guided her to the palm-tree
+and the fountain, especially when
+she glanced back at the long sandy reach
+of her life.</p>
+
+<p>Naturally enough, <a name="Page_578" id="Page_578"></a>I watched and distrusted
+Mr. Remington, who was a man
+of the world, and knew very well what
+he was about. Of all things, he dearly
+loved to be excited, occupied, and amused.
+Of course, I was not disturbed about
+his heart, nor seriously supposed he would
+get into any entanglement of the affections
+and the duties of life, but I thought
+he might do a great deal of harm for all
+that.</p>
+
+<p>At last, in the middle of May, Mr.
+Lewis returned, having failed in his desired
+arrangement for a permanent residence
+in New England. The first evening
+I saw them together without company,
+I perceived that he was struck with the
+new life in Lulu's manner and conversation.
+He watched and listened to her
+with an astonishment which he could
+not conceal.</p>
+
+<p>I never saw anything like jealousy in
+Mr. Lewis's manner, either at this time,
+or before. He was always tender and
+dignified, when speaking to or of her. If
+he felt any uneasiness now, he did not
+betray it. In looking back, I am sure
+of this. Afterwards, in company, where
+he might be supposed to be proud of his
+wife, he often looked at her with the
+same astonishment, and sometimes with
+unaffected admiration. He could not
+help seeing the great change in her,&mdash;that
+the days were taken up with rational
+and elegant pursuits, and that the
+hours were vocal with poetry and taste.
+The illuminating mind had brought her
+tulip beauty into a brighter and more
+gorgeous glow, and her movements were
+full of graceful meaning. Everything
+was touched and inspired but the heart.
+I don't know that he felt this, or that he
+missed anything. She had the same easy
+self-possession in his presence which she
+had always had,&mdash;the same pet names
+of endearment. It was always "Willie,
+dear," or "Yes, my love," which makes
+the usual matrimonial vocabulary, and
+which does not reward study. But he
+always looked at her with a calm delight,
+perfectly satisfied with all she said and
+did, and with a Southern indolence of
+mind and body, that precluded effort. I
+think he never once lost entire confidence
+in her, or was jealous of the hand that
+had unlocked such mental treasures for
+her.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile her eager lip quaffed the
+bright cup so cautiously presented, and
+<a name="Page_579" id="Page_579"></a>drained it with ever new delight. If it
+was mingled with delicate flattery, it only
+sparkled more merrily; and if there
+were poison there, I am sure she never
+guessed it, even when it burnt in her
+cheek or thrilled in her dancing veins.</p>
+
+
+<p>XII.</p>
+
+<p>The Lewises, with Mr. Remington
+and a large party of pleasure-seekers,
+went about this time on a tour to Quebec
+and the Falls of Montmorency. They decided
+to shut their house in Boston, and
+Lulu asked me if I would employ and
+look after a <i>prot&eacute;g&eacute;e</i> of hers, in whom she
+took some interest. The woman was a
+tolerable seamstress, she said, and would
+come to me the next day. She knew
+nothing about her except that she was
+poor and could sew.</p>
+
+<p>When the woman came in, I was puzzled
+to think where I could have seen
+her, which I was sure I had done somewhere,
+though I could not recall the where
+or when. In answer to my particular inquiries,
+as she could give me no references,
+she told me her husband was living,
+but was sick and could do nothing for his
+family,&mdash;in fact, that she and three children
+were kept alive by her efforts of
+various sorts. These were, sewing when
+she could get it, washing and scrubbing
+when she could not. She was very poorly dressed,
+but had a Yankee, go-ahead
+expression, as if she would get a living
+on the top of a bare rock.</p>
+
+<p>Still puzzling over the likeness in her
+face to somebody I had known, I continued
+to ask questions and to observe face,
+manner, and voice, in hope to catch the
+clue of which I was in search. When
+she admitted that her husband's intemperance
+had lost him his place and forbade
+his getting another, and said his
+name was Jim Ruggles, "a light broke
+in upon my brain." I remembered my
+vision of the fresh young girl who had
+sprung out on our path like a morning-glory,
+on our way to New York seven
+years before. The poor morning-glory
+was sadly trodden in the dust. It hadn't
+done "no good," as the driver had
+remarked, to forewarn her of the consequences
+of marrying a sponge. She had
+accepted her lot, and, strangely enough,
+was quite happy in it. There could be
+no mistake in the cheerful expression of<a name="Page_580" id="Page_580"></a>
+her worn face. Whatever Jim might be
+to other people, she said, he was always
+good to her and the children; and she
+pitied him, loved him, and took care of
+him. It wasn't at all in the fashion the
+Temperance Society would have liked;
+for when I first went to the house, I
+found her pouring out a glass of strong
+waters for him, and handing it to his pale
+and trembling lips herself. As soon as I
+was seated, she locked bottle and glass
+carefully. Before I left her, she had given
+him stimulants of various sorts from
+the same source, which he received with
+grateful smiles, and then went on coughing
+as before.</p>
+
+<p>"It's no time now for him to be forming
+new habits," said she, in answer to
+my open-eyed surprise; "and it's best
+he should have all the comfort and ease
+he can get. As long as I can get it for
+him, he shall have it."</p>
+
+<p>She spoke very quietly, but very much
+as if the same will of her own which had
+led her to marry Jim Ruggles, when a
+gay, dissipated fellow, kept her determined
+to give him what he wanted, even
+to the doubtful extreme I saw. So she
+struggled bravely on during the next four
+weeks of Jim's existence, keeping herself
+and her three children on hasty pudding,
+and buying for Jim's consumptively craving
+appetite rich mince-pies and platefuls
+of good rich food from an eating-house
+hard by. At the end of the four
+weeks he died most peacefully and suddenly,
+having not five minutes before
+swallowed a glass of gin sling, prepared
+by the loving hand of his wife, and saying
+to her, with a firm, clear voice, and
+a grateful smile, "Good Amy! always
+good!" So the weak man's soul passed
+away. And as Amy told me about it,
+with sorrowful sobs, I was not ready to
+say or think she had done wrong, although
+both her conduct and my opinion were
+entirely uncanonical.</p>
+
+<p>Before Mrs. Lewis returned, Amy was
+one day at my room and asked me when
+I expected her back.</p>
+
+<p>"Is Mr. Lewis with her, Ma'am?"
+said she, hesitatingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course; at least, I suppose so.
+Why, what makes you ask?" said I,
+with surprise at her downcast eyes and
+flushed face.</p><p><a name="Page_581" id="Page_581"></a></p>
+
+<p>"I heard he had gone away. And
+that&mdash;<i>that</i> Mr. Remington was there with
+her. But you know about it, most likely."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I know nothing about it, Amy."</p>
+
+<p>"It was their old cook told me, Mrs.
+Butler. And she said,&mdash;oh! all sorts of
+things, that I am sure couldn't be true,
+for Mrs. Lewis is such a kind, beautiful
+woman! I couldn't believe a word she
+said!"</p>
+
+<p>In my quality of minister's wife, and
+with a general distrust of cooks' opinions,
+I told Amy that there was always scandal
+enough, and it was a waste of time to listen
+to it. But after she left me, I confess
+to a whole hour wasted in speculations
+and anxious reflections on Amy's communication,
+and also to having taken
+the Dominie away from his sermon for
+a like space of time to consider the matter
+fully.</p>
+
+<p>I was relieved when the whole party
+came back, and when the blooming, happy
+face of Lulu showed that she, at least,
+had neither thought nor done anything
+very bad.</p>
+
+<p>The summer was becoming warm and
+oppressive in Boston, and we prepared to
+take the children and go to Weston for a
+few weeks. While we should be among
+the mountains, the Lewises proposed a
+voyage to Scotland, and we hoped that
+sometime in the early autumn we should
+all be together once more.
+The evening before our departure Mr.
+Remington and Lulu spent with us, Mr.
+Lewis coming in at a later hour. I remember
+vividly the conversation during
+the whole of that last evening we ever
+passed together.</p>
+
+
+<p>XIII.</p>
+
+<p>While Mrs. Lewis and I were chatting
+in one corner on interests specially
+feminine, the Dominie had got Mr. Remington
+into a metaphysical discussion of
+some length. From time to time we
+heard, "Pascal's idea seems to be," and
+then, "The notion of Descartes and all
+that school of thinkers"; and feeling that
+they were plunging quite beyond our
+depth, we continued babbling of dry
+goods, a<a name="Page_582" id="Page_582"></a>nd what was becoming, till Mr.
+Remington leaned back laughing to us,
+and said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"What do you think, ladies? or are
+you of the opinion of somebody who said
+of metaphysics, 'Whoever troubles himself
+to skin a flint should have the skin
+for his pains'?"</p>
+
+<p>"But that is a most unfair comparison!"
+said the minister, eagerly, "and what
+I will by no means allow. By so much
+more as the mind is better than the body,
+nay, because the mind is all that is worth
+anything about a man, metaphysics is the
+noblest science, and most worthy"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I give in! I am down!" said Remington.</p>
+
+<p>"But what are you disputing about?"
+said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, only Infinity!" said Remington.
+"But then you know metaphysics
+does not hesitate at anything. I say, it
+is impossible for the mind to go back to
+a first cause, and if the mind of a man
+cannot conceive an idea, why of course
+that idea can never be true to him. I
+can think of no cause that may not be
+an effect."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor of infinite space, nor of infinite
+time?" said the minister.</p>
+
+<p>"No,&mdash;of nothing that cannot be divided,
+and nothing that cannot be extended."</p>
+
+<p>"Very good. Perhaps you can't. I
+suppose we cannot comprehend infinity,
+because we are essentially finite ourselves.
+But it by no means follows that we cannot
+apprehend and believe in attributes
+which we are unable to comprehend. We
+can certainly do that."</p>
+
+<p>"No. After you reach your limit of
+comprehension, you may say, all beyond
+that is infinite,&mdash;but you only push the
+object of your thought out of view. After
+you have reiterated the years till you
+are tired, you say, beyond that is infinite.
+You only mean that you are tired of
+computing and adding."</p><p><a name="Page_583" id="Page_583"></a></p>
+
+<p>"Then you cannot believe in an Infinite
+Creator?" said the minister.</p>
+
+<p>"I can believe in nothing that is not
+founded on reason. I should be very
+glad to believe in an Infinite Creator,
+only it is entirely impossible, you see, for
+the mind to conceive of a being who is
+not himself created."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet you can believe in a world that
+is not created?" said the minister. "You
+can believe that a world full of adaptations,
+full of signs of intelligence and design,
+could be uncreated. How do you
+make that out?"</p>
+
+<p>"There remains no greater difficulty to
+me," said Remington, "in believing in an
+uncreated world than you have in believing
+in an uncreated God. Why is it stranger
+that Chaos should produce harmony
+than that Nothing should produce God?"</p>
+
+<p>He looked at us, smiling as he said this,
+which he evidently considered unanswerable.</p>
+
+<p>"You are quite right," said my husband,
+gravely. "It is impossible that
+nothing should produce God, and therefore
+I say God is eternal. It is not impossible
+that something should produce
+the world, and therefore I believe the
+world is not eternal. That point is the
+one on which the whole argument hangs
+in my mind."</p>
+
+<p>"It does not become me to dispute a
+clergyman," said Mr. Remington, smiling
+affectedly, as if only courtesy prevented
+his coming in with an entirely demolishing
+argument.</p>
+
+<p>To my great surprise Lulu instantly
+answered, and with an intelligence that
+showed she had followed the argument
+entirely,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I am certain, George, that Mr. Prince
+has altogether the best of it. Yours is
+merely a technical d<a name="Page_584" id="Page_584"></a>ifficulty,&mdash;merely
+words. You can conceive a thousand
+things which you can never fully comprehend.
+And this, too, is a proof of the
+Infinite Father in our very reasoning,&mdash;that,
+if we could comprehend Him, we
+should be ourselves infinite. As it is, we
+can believe and adore,&mdash;and, more than
+that, rejoice that we cannot in this finite
+life of ours do more."</p>
+
+<p>"If we believed we could comprehend
+Him," said I, "we should soon begin to
+meddle with God's administration of affairs."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes,&mdash;and in fatalism I have always
+thought there was a profound reverence,"
+said Lulu.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, are you going into theological
+mysteries, too?" said Remington, with a
+laugh in which none of us joined; "what
+care you, Lulu, for the quiddities of Absolute
+Illimitation and Infinite Illimitation?
+After all, what matters it whether
+one believes in a God, who you allow
+to be the personation of all excellence,
+if only one endeavors to act up to the
+highest conceivable standard of perfection,&mdash;I
+mean of human perfection,&mdash;leaving,
+of course, a liberal margin for
+human frailties and defects? One wouldn't
+like to leave out mercy, you know."</p>
+
+<p>Whatever might be the real sentiments
+of the man, there was an air of levity in
+his mode of treating the most important
+subjects of thought which displeased me,
+especially when he said, "You adore
+the Incomprehensible; I am contented
+to adore, with silent reverence, the lovely
+works of His hand." He pointed his
+remark without hesitation at LuLu, who
+sat looking into the fire, and did not notice
+him or it.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_585" id="Page_585"></a></p>
+<p>"You are quite right, Mr. Prince, and
+my cousin, is quite wrong," said she, looking
+up with a docile, childlike expression,
+at the minister. "One feels that all
+through, though one may not be able to
+reason or argue about it."</p>
+
+<p>"And the best evidence of all truth,
+my dear," answered the delighted Dominie,
+"is that intuition which is before all
+reasoning, and by which we must try reasoning
+itself. The moral is before the intellectual;
+and that is why we preachers
+continually insist on faith as an illuminator
+of the reason."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean that we should cultivate
+faith," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes: not the faith that is blind, but
+the faith that sees, that is positive; that
+which leads, not that which follows; the
+faith that weighs argument and decides
+on it; in short, the native intuitions which
+are a necessary part of the mind."</p>
+
+<p>"I see, and I shall remember," said
+Lulu. "I shall never forget all you say,
+Mr. Prince."</p>
+
+<p>It was this sweet frankness, and the
+clearness with which her lately developed
+intellect acted, that made us begin to respect
+Lulu as well as to love her. She
+seemed to be getting right-minded at last.</p>
+
+<p>When Mr. Lewis came, the conversation
+turned on other subjects; but it was
+quite late at night before we were willing
+to part with our friends. The shadow of
+misgiving which hangs over even short
+separations was deeper than usual with
+me from the thought of the voyage. Lulu
+had been so many times across the sea
+that she had no fear of it; and she went
+up-stairs with me to say last words and
+give last commissions with her usual cheerfulness.
+Notwithstanding the relief which
+I had felt during the evening from her
+expressions of a moral and religious kind,
+I yet had a brooding fear of the effect of
+association with a mind so lively and so
+full of error as Remington's. What help
+or what sustaining power for her there
+might be in her husband I could not
+tell; but be it more or less, I feared she
+would not avail herself of it. Indeed, I
+feared that she was daily becoming more
+alienated from him, as she pursued onward
+and upward the bright mental track
+on which she had entered. And it was
+seeing that she had not yet begun to con
+the alphabet of true knowledge, that disturbed
+me most. If I could have seen
+her thoughtful for others, humble in her
+endeavor after duty, I should have hailed,
+rejoicingly, her intellectual illumination.
+As it was, I could not help saying
+<a name="Page_586" id="Page_586"></a>to her, anxiously, before we went downstairs,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I don't like Mr. Remington's notions
+at all, my dear!&mdash;I don't mean merely
+his theological notions, but his ideas of
+life and duty seem to me wrong and poor.
+You will forgive me, if I say, you cannot
+be too careful how you allow his views
+to act on your own sense of right and
+wrong."</p>
+
+<p>"What!&mdash;George? Oh, dear friend,
+it is only his nonsense! He will take any
+side for the time, only to hear himself
+talk. But he <i>is</i> the best fellow that ever
+breathed. Oh, if you only knew his excellence
+as well as I do!"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Lulu!" I expostulated,
+greatly pained to see her glowing face
+and the almost tearful sparkle of her
+eyes, as she defended her cousin, "your
+husband is a great deal the best guide for
+you,&mdash;in action, and I presume in opinion.
+At all events, you are safest under
+the shadow of his wing. There is the
+truest peace for a wife."</p>
+
+<p>Whether she guessed what was in my
+mind I don't know; I did not try much
+to conceal it. But she shook her curls
+away from her face as if irritated, and
+answered in a tone from which all the
+animation had been quenched,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"No. I have been a child. I am one
+no longer. Don't ask me to go back. I
+am a living, feeling, understanding woman!
+George himself allows it is perfectly
+shocking to be treated as I am,&mdash;a mere
+toy! a plaything!"</p>
+
+<p>George again! I could scarcely restrain
+my impatience. Yet how to make her
+understand?</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you see, Lulu, that George
+ought never to have dared to name the
+subject of your and your husband's differences?
+and do you not see that you
+can never discuss the subject with anybody
+with propriety? If, unhappily, all
+is not as you, as we, wish it, let us hope
+for the effect of time and right feeling in
+both; but don't, don't allow any gentleman
+to talk to you of your husband's
+treatment of you!"</p>
+
+<p>Lulu listened in quiet wonderment,
+while, with agitated voice and trembling
+mouth, I addressed her as I had never
+before done. I had constantly avoided
+speaking to her on the subject. She looked
+at me now with clear, innocent eyes,
+<a name="Page_587" id="Page_587"></a>(I am so glad to remember them!) and
+placed her two hands affectionately on
+my shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"I know what you mean,&mdash;and what
+you fear. That I shall say something,
+or do something undignified, or possibly
+wrong. But that, with God's help, I
+shall never do. Such happiness as I
+can procure, aside from my husband, and
+which I had a right to expect through him,&mdash;such
+enjoyment as comes from intellectual
+improvement and the exercise of
+my faculties, this is surely innocent pleasure,
+this I shall have. And George,&mdash;you
+must not blame him for being indignant,
+when he sees me treated so unworthily,&mdash;or
+for calling Lewis a Pacha,
+as he always does. You must think,
+my dear, that it isn't pleasant to be
+treated only like a Circassian slave, and
+that one may have something better to
+do in life than to twirl jewelled armlets,
+or to light my lord's <i>chibouk!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>She looked all radiant with scorn, as
+she said this,&mdash;her eyes flashing, and her
+very forehead crimson. I could see she
+was remembering long months and years
+in that moment of indignant anger. Seeing
+them with her eyes, I could not say
+she was unjust, or that her estrangement
+was unnatural.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, then, good friend, good bye!
+Don't look anxious. Don't fear for me.
+I am not happy, but I shall know how to
+keep myself from misery. You and your
+excellent husband have done more for
+me than you know or think; and I shall
+try to keep right."</p>
+
+<p>She left me with this, and we parted
+from both with a lingering sweet friendliness
+that dwells still in our memories.</p>
+
+<p>"It would be horrible to be on these
+terms, if she loved him," said the minister,
+that night, after I had told him of
+our parting interview.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, she don't, you see. Did she
+ever?"</p>
+
+<p>"With such mind and heart as she
+had, I suppose. On the other hand,
+what did he marry?"</p>
+
+<p>"Grace and beauty&mdash;and promise.
+Of course, like every man in love, he
+took everything good for granted."</p>
+
+<p>"The sweetest flower in my garden,"
+said the minister, "should perfume no
+stranger's vase, however, nor dangle at a
+knave's button-hole."</p>
+
+<p>"Because you would watch it and care
+for it, water and train it, and make it
+doubly your own. But if you did neither?"</p>
+<p><a name="Page_588" id="Page_588"></a></p>
+<p>"I should deserve my fate," said he,
+sorrowfully.</p>
+
+
+<p>XIV.</p>
+
+<p>The first letter we received from Mrs.
+Lewis was from the North of Scotland,
+where the party of three, increased to one
+much larger, were making the tour of the
+Hebrides. I cannot say much for either
+the penmanship or the orthography of the
+letter, which was incorrect as usual; but
+the abundant beauty of her descriptions,
+and the fine sense she seemed to have of
+lofty and wild scenery, made her journey
+a living picture. All her keen sense of
+external life was brought into activity,
+and she projected on the paper before her
+groups of people, or groups of mountains,
+with a vividness that showed she had only
+to transfer them from the retina: they
+had no need of any additional processes.
+She made no remarks on society, or inferences
+from what she saw in the present
+to what had been in the past or might
+be in the future. It was simply a power
+of representation, unequalled in its way,
+and yet more remarkable to us for what
+it failed of doing than for what it did.</p>
+
+<p>We could not but perceive two things.
+One, that she never spoke of home-ties,
+or children, or husband: not an allusion
+to either. The other, that every hill and
+every vale, the mounting mist and the
+resting shadow, all that gave life and
+beauty to her every-day pursuits, which
+seemed, indeed, all pictorial,&mdash;all these
+were informed and permeated, as it were,
+with one influence,&mdash;that of Remington.
+An uncomfortable sense of this made me
+say, as I finished the letter,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry for the poor bird!"</p>
+
+<p>"So am I," answered the minister,
+with a clouded brow; "and the more, as
+I think I see the bird is limed."</p>
+
+<p>"How?" I said, with a sort of horrified
+retreat from the expressed thought,
+though the thought itself haunted me.</p>
+
+<p>My husband seemed thinking the matter
+over, as if to clear it in his own mind
+before he spoke again.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose there is a moral disease,
+which, through its connection with a
+newly awakened and brilliant intellect,
+does not enervate the whole character.
+I mean that this connection of moral
+weakness with the intellect gives a fatal
+strength to the character,&mdash;do you take
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I think so," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"She is lofty, self-poised,&mdash;confident
+in what never yet supported any one.
+Pride of character does not keep us from
+falling. Humility would help us in that
+way. Unfortunately, that, too, is often
+bought dearly. I mean that this virtue
+of humbleness, which makes us tender of
+others and afraid for ourselves, is at the<a name="Page_589" id="Page_589"></a>
+expense of sorrowful and humiliating experience."</p>
+
+<p>"You speak as if you feared more for
+her than I do," said I, struck by the foreboding
+look in his face.</p>
+
+<p>"You women judge only by your own
+hearts, or by solitary instances; and you
+forget the inevitable downward course of
+wrong tendencies. Besides, she has neither
+lofty principle nor a strong will.
+You will think I mistake here; but I
+don't mean she has not wilfulness enough.
+A strong will generally excludes wilfulness,&mdash;and
+the converse."</p>
+
+<p>This conversation made me nervous.</p>
+
+<p>I had such an intense anxiety for her
+now, that I could not avoid expressing
+it often and strongly in my letters to
+her. I wondered Lewis was not more
+open-eyed. I blamed him for letting her
+run on so heedlessly into habits which
+might compromise her reputation for dignity
+and discretion, if no worse. Then
+I would recall her manner the last evening
+she was with us, when, although her
+want of self-regulation was very apparent,
+not less so was the native nobleness
+and purity of her soul. I could not think
+of this "unsphered angel wofully astray"
+without inward tears that dimmed the
+vision of my foreboding heart.</p>
+
+<p>Could Lewis mistake her indifference?
+Could he avoid suffering from it? Could
+he, for a moment, accept her conventional
+expletives in place of the irrepressible and
+endearing tokens of a real love? Could
+he see what had weaned her from him,
+and was still, like a baleful star, wiling
+her farther and farther on its treacherously
+lighted path? Could he see,&mdash;feel?&mdash;had
+he a heart? These questions I incessantly
+asked myself.</p><p><a name="Page_590" id="Page_590"></a></p>
+
+<p>In the last days of summer we went
+with the children to Nantasket Beach.</p>
+
+<p>We had walked to a point of rocks at
+some distance from the bay, above which
+we lodged, and were sitting in the luxury
+of quiet companionship, gazing out
+on the water.</p>
+
+<p>The ineffable, still beauty of Nature,
+separated from the usual noises of actual
+life,&mdash;the brilliant effect of the long reaches
+of color from the plunging sun, as it dipped,
+and reappeared, and dipped again,
+as loath to leave its field of beauty,&mdash;then
+the still plash against the rocks, and the
+subsidence in murmurs of the retiring
+wave, with all its gathered treasure of
+pebbles and shells,&mdash;all these sounds and
+sights of reposeful life suggested unspeakable
+thoughts and memories that clung
+to silence. We had not been without so
+much sorrow in life as does not well afford
+to dwell on its own images; and we
+rose to retrace our steps to the measure
+of the eternal and significant psalm of
+the sea.</p>
+
+<p>As we turned away, we both perceived
+at once a sail in the distance, against the
+western sky. It had just rounded the
+nearest point and was coming slowly in
+with a gentle breeze, when it suddenly
+tacked and put out to sea again. It had
+come so near, however, that with our
+glass we saw that it was a small boat,
+holding two persons, and with a single
+sail.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately after, a dead calm succeeded
+the light wind which had before
+rippled the distant waves, and we watched
+the boat, lying as if asleep and floating
+lazily on the red water against the
+blazing sky,&mdash;or rather, itself like a cradle,
+so pavilioned was it with gorgeous
+cloud-curtains, and fit home for the two
+water-sprites lying in the slant sunbeams.</p>
+
+<p>Walking slowly borne, we felt the air
+to be full of oppressive languor, and turned
+now and then to see if the distant sail
+were yet lightened by the coming breeze.
+When we reached the inner bay, we
+mounted a rock, from which, with the
+lessened interval between us, I could distinctly
+see the boat. One of the occupants&mdash;a
+lady&mdash;wore a dark hat with a
+scarlet plume drooping from it. She leaned
+over the gunwale, dipping her hands
+in the blazing water and holding them
+up against the light, as if playing rainbows
+in the sunset. The other figure
+was busy in fastening up the sail, ready
+to catch the first breath of wind.</p>
+
+<p>As we stood looking, the water, which
+during the last few minutes had changed
+from flaming red to the many-colored
+hues of a dolphin's back, suddenly turned
+slate-colored, almost black. Then a low
+scud crept stealthily and quickly along the
+surface, bringing with it a steady breeze,
+for perhaps five minutes. We watched
+the little boat, as it yielded gracefully
+to t<a name="Page_591" id="Page_591"></a>he welcome impetus, and swept
+rapidly to the shore. Fearing, however,
+from the sudden change of weather, that
+it would soon rain, we cast a parting look
+at the boat, and started on a rapid walk
+to the house.</p>
+
+<p>This last glimpse of the boat showed
+us a tall figure standing upright against
+the mast, and fastening or holding something
+to it, while the lady still played
+with the water, bending her head so low
+that the red plume in her hat almost
+touched it. She seemed in a pleasant
+reverie, and rocked softly with the rocking
+waves. It was a peaceful picture,&mdash;the
+sail set, and full of heaven's breath,
+as it seemed.</p>
+
+<p>Before we could grasp anything,&mdash;even
+if there had been anything to grasp
+on the level sand,&mdash;we were both taken
+at once off our feet and thrown violently
+to the ground. I had felt the force of
+water before, but never that of wind, and
+had no idea of the utter helplessness of
+man or woman before a wind that is really
+in earnest. It was with a very novel
+sense of more than childish incapacity
+that I suffered the Dominie to gather up
+capes, canes, hats, and shawls, and, last
+of all, an astonished woman, and put
+them on their way homewards. However,
+long before we reached the house-door
+we were drenched to the skin. The
+rain poured in blinding sheets, and the
+thunder was like a hundred cannon about
+our ears. It was so sudden and so frightful
+to me that I had but one idea, that
+of getting into the piazza, where was
+comparative safety. Having reached it,
+we turned to face the elements. Nothing
+could be seen through the thick deluge.
+The ocean itself, tossing and tumbling
+in angry darkness, seemed fighting
+with the other ocean that poured
+from the black wall above, and all was
+one tumult of thunderous fury. This
+elemental war lasted but a short time,
+and gave place to a quiet as sudden as its
+angry burst. It was my first experience
+of a squall. It is always difficult for me
+to feel that a storm is a natural occurrence,&mdash;so
+that I have a great reverence
+for a Dominie who stands with head uncovered,
+with calm eyes, looking tranquilly
+out on the loudest tempest.</p>
+
+<p>"Beautiful! wonderful!" he murmured,
+as the lightning fiercely shot over us,
+and the roar died away in long billows
+of heavy sound.</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards he told me he had the <a name="Page_592" id="Page_592"></a>same
+unbounded delight in a great storm as he
+had at the foot of Niagara, or in looking
+at the stars on a winter night: that it
+stirred in his soul all that was loftiest,&mdash;that
+for the time he could comprehend Deity,
+and that "the noise of the thundering
+of His waters" was an anthem that
+struck the highest chords of his nature.
+What is really sublime takes us out of
+ourselves, so that we have no room for
+personal terror, and we mingle with the
+elemental roar in spirit as with something
+kindred to us. I guessed this, and meditated
+on it, while I stopped my ears and
+shut my eyes and trembled with overwhelming
+terror myself. Clearly, I am a
+coward, in spite of my admiration of the
+sublime. The Dominie, being as good as
+he is great, does not require a woman
+to be sublime, luckily; and I think, as I
+like him all the better for his strength,
+he really does not object to a moderate
+amount of weakness on my part, which
+is unaffected and not to be helped. When
+animal magnetism becomes a science, it
+will be seen why some spirits revel and
+soar, and some cower and shrink, at the
+same amount of electricity. So the Dominie
+says now; and then&mdash;he said nothing.</p>
+
+
+<p>XV.</p>
+
+<p>In the fright, excitement, and thorough
+wetting, I forgot about the boat,&mdash;or rather,
+no misgiving seized me as to its safety.
+But, on coming to breakfast the next
+morning, we felt that there was a great
+commotion in the house. Everybody was
+out on the piazza, and a crowd was gathered
+a short distance off. Somebody had
+taken off the doors from the south entrance,
+and there was a sort of procession
+already formed on each side of these
+two doors. We went out in front of the
+house to listen to a rough fisherman who
+described the storm in which the little
+boat capsized. He had stood on the
+shore and just finished fastening his own
+boat, for he well knew the signs of the
+storm, when he caught sight of the little
+sail scudding with lightning-speed to the
+landing. Suddenly it stopped short, shook
+all over as if in an ague, and capsized in
+an instant. The storm broke, and although
+he tried to discern some traces
+of the boat or its occupants, nothing
+could be seen but the white foam on the
+black water, glistening like a shark's
+teeth when he has seized his prey. In
+the early morning he had found two
+bodies on the sand. The water, he said,
+must have tossed them with considerable
+force,&mdash;yet not against the rocks at all,
+for they were not disfigured, nor their
+clothing much torn. As the man ceased
+relating the story, the bodies were brought
+past us, covered by a piano-cloth which
+somebody had considerately snatched up
+and taken to the shore. They were placed
+in the long parlor on a table.</p>
+
+<p>My husband beckoned to me to come
+to him. Turning down the cloth, he
+showed me the faces I dreamily expected
+to see. I don't know when I thought of
+it, but suppose I recognized the air and
+movement so familiar, even in the distant
+dimness. No matter how clearly and
+fully death is expected, when it comes
+it is with a death-shock,&mdash;how much<a name="Page_593" id="Page_593"></a>
+more, coming as this did, as if with a bolt
+from the clear sky!</p>
+
+<p>In their prime,&mdash;in their beauty,&mdash;in
+their pride of youth,&mdash;in their pleasure,
+they died. What was the strong man or
+the smiling woman,&mdash;what was the smooth
+sea, the shining sail,&mdash;what was strength,
+skill, loveliness, against the great and terrible
+wind of the Lord?</p>
+
+<p>So here they lay, white and quiet as
+sculptured stone, and as placid as if they
+had only fallen asleep in the midst of the
+tempestuous uproar. All the clamor and
+talking about the house had subsided in
+the real presence of death; and every
+one went lightly and softly around, as if
+afraid of wakening the sleepers.</p>
+
+<p>She had never looked so beautiful,
+even in her utmost pride of health and
+bloom. Her dark luxuriant hair lay in
+masses over brow and bosom, and her
+face expressed the unspeakable calm and
+perfect peace which are suggested only by
+the sleep of childhood. The long eyelashes
+seemed to say, in their close adherence
+to the cheek, how gladly they shut
+out the tumult of life; and the whole cast
+of the face was so elevated by death as
+to look rather angelic than mortal.</p>
+
+<p>His face was quiet, too,&mdash;the manliness
+and massive character of the features
+giving a majestic and severe cast to the
+whole countenance, far more elevated
+than it had while living.</p>
+
+<p>We could only weep over these relics.
+But where was the deepest mourner?
+No one had even seen these two before,
+or could give any account of them.</p>
+
+<p>On making stricter inquiry and looking
+at the books, we found that Mr. and
+Mrs. Lewis had arrived first. Mr. Lewis
+had taken his gun and a boat, and gone
+out at once to shoot. The lady had
+been in her room but a short time, when
+another gentleman arrived, wrote his
+name, and ordered a boat. She had
+scarcely seen any one, but the boatman
+saw her step into the boat, and described
+her dress.</p>
+
+<p>A message was at once sent to "the
+Glades," where Mr. Lewis had gone, and
+where he was detained, as we had supposed,
+by the storm. Before he reached
+the house, however, all necessary arrangements
+were completed for removing
+any associations of suffering. No confusion
+remained; the room was gently darkened,
+and the bodies, robed in white, lay
+in such peaceful silence as soothes and
+quiets the mourner.</p>
+
+<p>As the carriage drew up to the door,
+we both hastened to meet Mr. Lewis, to
+take him by the hand, and to lead him,
+by our evident sympathy, to accept his
+terrible affliction with somethin<a name="Page_594" id="Page_594"></a>g like
+composure. In our entire uncertainty
+as to his feelings, we could only weep
+silently, and hold his hands, which were
+as cold as death.</p>
+
+<p>He looked surprised a little at seeing
+us, but otherwise his face was like stone.
+His eyes,&mdash;they, too, looked stony, and as
+if all the expression and life were turned
+inward. Outwardly, there seemed hardly
+consciousness. He sat down between
+us, while we related all the particulars
+of the accident, which he seemed greedy
+to hear,&mdash;turning, as one ceased, to the
+other, with an eager, hungry look, most
+painful to witness. He made us describe,
+repeatedly, our last glimpse of the unconscious
+victims, and then, pressing our
+hands with a vice-cold grip, said, in a dry
+whisper,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Where are they?"</p>
+
+<p>We led him to the door. He went in,
+and we softly closed it after him. As we
+went up-stairs to our own room we heard
+deep groans of anguish. We knew that
+his heart could not relieve itself by tears.
+My husband read the "prayer for persons
+in great affliction," and then we sat
+silently looking out on the peaceful sea.
+In the great stillness of the house, we
+heard the calm wave plash up on the
+smiling sands, and watched the silver
+specks in the distance as they hovered
+over the blue sea. So soft, so still, it had
+been the day before,&mdash;and where we
+now saw the placid wave we had seen it
+then. Yet there had two lives gone out,
+as suddenly as one quenches a lamp.</p>
+
+<p>Thinking, but not speaking, we waited.
+The report of a pistol in the house
+struck us to the heart. I believe we felt
+sure, both of us, of what it must be. He
+had loved her so much! And now we
+were sure, that in the tension of his
+grief, reason had given way. When we
+saw them next, there were three where
+two had been, in the marble calm of
+death.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_FORMATION_OF_GLACIERS" id="THE_FORMATION_OF_GLACIERS"></a>THE FORMATION OF GLACIERS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The long summer was over. For ages
+a tropical climate had prevailed over a
+great part of the earth, and animals whose
+home is now beneath the Equator roamed
+over the world from the far South to
+the very borders of the Arctics. The
+gigantic quadrupeds, the Mastodons, Elephants,
+Tigers, Lions, Hyenas, Bears,
+whose remains are found in Europe from
+its southern promontories to the northernmost
+limits of Siberia and Scandinavia,
+and in America from the Southern States
+to Greenland and the Melville Islands,
+may indeed be said to have possessed the
+earth in those days. But their reign was
+over. A sudden intense winter, that was
+also to last for ages, fell upon our globe;
+<a name="Page_595" id="Page_595"></a>it spread over the very countries where
+these tropical animals had their homes,
+and so suddenly did it come upon them
+that they were embalmed beneath masses
+of snow and ice, without time even
+for the decay which follows death. The
+Elephant whose story was told at length
+in the preceding article was by no means
+a solitary specimen; upon further investigation
+it was found that the disinterment
+of these large tropical animals in
+Northern Russia and Asia was no unusual
+occurrence. Indeed, their frequent
+discoveries of this kind had given rise
+among the ignorant inhabitants to the
+singular superstition already alluded to,
+that gigantic moles lived under the earth,
+which crumbled away and turned to dust
+as soon as they came to the upper air.
+This tradition, no doubt, arose from the
+fact, that, when in digging they came
+upon the bodies of these animals, they
+often found them perfectly preserved under
+the frozen ground, but the moment
+they were exposed to heat and light
+they decayed and fell to pieces at once.
+Admiral Wrangel, whose Arctic explorations
+have been so valuable to science,
+tells us that the remains of these animals
+are heaped up in such quantities in certain
+parts of Siberia that he and his men
+climbed over ridges and mounds consisting
+entirely of the bones of Elephants,
+Rhinoceroses, etc. From these facts it
+would seem that they roamed over all
+these northern regions in troops as large
+and numerous as the Buffalo herds that
+wander over our Western prairies now.
+We are indebted to Russian naturalists,
+and especially to Rathke, for the most minute
+investigations of these remains, in
+which even the texture of the hair, the
+skin, and flesh has been subjected by him
+to microscopic examination as accurate
+as if made upon any living animal.</p>
+
+<p>We have as yet no clue to the source
+of this great and sudden change of climate.
+Various suggestions have been
+made,&mdash;among others, that formerly the
+inclination of the earth's axis was greater,
+or that a submersion of the continents under
+water might have produced a decided
+increase of cold; but none of these
+explanations are satisfactory, and science
+has yet to find any cause which accounts
+for all the phenomena connected with it.
+It seems, however, unquestionable that
+since the opening of the Tertiary age a
+cosmic summer and winter have succeeded
+each other, during which a Tropical
+heat and an Arctic cold have alternately
+prevailed over a great portion of the
+globe. In the so-called drift (a superficial
+deposit subsequent to the Tertiaries,
+of the origin of which I shall speak presently)
+there are found far to the south
+of their present abode the remains of animals
+whose home now is in the Arctics
+or the coldest parts of the Temperate
+Zones. Among them are the Musk-Ox,
+the Reindeer, the Walrus, the Seal, and
+many kinds of Shells characteristic of
+the Arctic regions. The northernmost
+part of Norway and Sweden is at this
+day the southern limit of the Reindeer
+in Europe; but their fossil remains are
+found in large quantities in the drift about
+the neighborhood of Paris, where their
+presence would, of course, indicate a climate
+similar to the one now prevailing
+in Northern Scandinavia. Side by side
+with the remains of the Reindeer are
+<a name="Page_596" id="Page_596"></a>found those of the European Marmot,
+whose present home is in the mountains,
+about six thousand feet above the level
+of the sea. The occurrence of these
+animals in the superficial deposits of the
+plains of Central Europe, one of which is
+now confined to the high North, and the
+other to mountain-heights, certainly indicates
+an entire change of climatic conditions
+since the time of their existence.
+European Shells now confined to the
+Northern Ocean are found as fossils in
+Italy,&mdash;showing, that, while the present
+Arctic climate prevailed in the Temperate
+Zone, that of the Temperate Zone
+extended much farther south to the regions
+we now call sub-tropical. In America
+there is abundant evidence of the
+same kind; throughout the recent marine
+deposits of the Temperate Zone,
+covering the low lands above tide-water
+on this continent, are found fossil Shells
+whose present home is on the shores of
+Greenland. It is not only in the Northern
+hemisphere that these remains occur,
+but in Africa and in South America,
+wherever there has been an opportunity
+for investigation, the drift is found to
+contain the traces of animals whose presence
+indicates a climate many degree
+colder than that now prevailing there.</p>
+
+<p>But these organic remains are not the
+only evidence of the geological winter.
+There are a number of phenomena indicating
+that during this period two vast
+caps of ice stretched from the Northern
+pole southward and from the Southern
+pole northward, extending in each case
+far toward the Equator,&mdash;and that ice-fields,
+such as now spread over the Arctics,
+covered a great part of the Temperate
+Zones, while the line of perpetual
+ice and snow in the tropical mountain-ranges
+descended far below its present
+limits. As the explanation of these facts
+has been drawn from the study of glacial
+action, I shall devote this and subsequent
+articles to some account of glaciers and
+of the phenomena connected with them.</p>
+
+<p>The first essential condition for the
+formation of glaciers in mountain-ranges
+is the shape of their valleys. Glaciers
+are by no means in proportion to the
+height and extent of mountains. There
+are many mountain-chains as high or
+higher than the Alps, which can boast
+of but few and small glaciers, if, indeed,
+they have any. In the Andes, the
+Rocky Mountains, the Pyrenees, the
+Caucasus, the few glaciers remaining
+from the great ice-period are insignificant
+in size. The volcanic, cone-like
+shape of the Andes gives, indeed, but little
+chance for the formation of glaciers,
+though their summits are capped with
+snow. The glaciers of the Rocky Mountains
+have been little explored, but it is
+known that they are by no means extensive.
+In the Pyrenees there is but one
+great glacier, though the height of these
+mountains is such, that, were the shape
+of their valleys favorable to the accumulation
+of snow, they might present beautiful
+glaciers. In the Tyrol, on the cont<a name="Page_597" id="Page_597"></a>rary,
+as well as in Norway and Sweden, we
+find glaciers almost as fine as those of
+Switzerland, in mountain-ranges much
+lower than either of the above-named
+chains. But they are of diversified forms,
+and have valleys widening upward on
+the slope of long crests. The glaciers on
+the Caucasus are very small in proportion
+to the height of the range; but on
+the northern side of the Himalaya there
+are large and beautiful ones, while the
+southern slope is almost destitute of
+them. Spitzbergen and Greenland are
+famous for their extensive glaciers, coming
+down to the sea-shore, where huge
+masses of ice, many hundred feet in
+thickness, break off and float away into
+the ocean as icebergs. At the Aletsch in
+Switzerland, where a little lake lies in a
+deep cup between the mountains, with
+the glacier coming down to its brink, we
+have these Arctic phenomena on a small
+scale; a miniature iceberg may often be
+seen to break off from the edge of the
+larger mass, and float out upon the surface
+of the water. Icebergs were first
+traced back to their true origin by the
+nature of the land-ice of which they are
+always composed, and which is quite distinct
+in structure and consistency from
+the marine ice produced by frozen sea-water,
+and called "ice-flow" by the Arctic
+explorers, as well as from the pond
+or river ice, resulting from the simple
+congelation of fresh water.</p>
+
+<p>Water is changed to ice at a certain
+temperature under the same law of crystallization
+by which any inorganic bodies
+in a fluid state may assume a solid condition,
+taking the shape of perfectly regular
+crystals, which combine at certain
+angles with mathematical precision. The
+frost does not form a solid, continuous
+sheet of ice over an expanse of water,
+but produces crystals, little ice-blades, as
+it were, which shoot into each other at
+angles of thirty or sixty degrees, forming
+the closest net-work. Of course, under
+the process of alternate freezing and
+thawing, these crystals lose their regularity,
+and soon become merged in each
+other. But even then a mass of ice is not
+continuous or compact throughout, for it
+is rendered completely porous by air-bubbles,
+the presence of which is easily explained.
+Ice being in a measure transparent
+to heat, the water below any frozen
+surface is nearly as susceptible to the elevation
+of the temperature without as if it
+were in immediate contact with it. Such
+changes of temperature produce air-bubbles,
+which float upward against the lower
+surface of the ice and are stranded
+there. At night there may come a severe
+frost; new ice is then formed below<a name="Page_598" id="Page_598"></a>
+the air-bubbles, and they are thus caught
+and imprisoned, a layer of air-bubbles
+between two layers of ice, and this process
+may be continued until we have a
+succession of such parallel layers, forming
+a body of ice more or less permeated
+with air. These air-bubbles have the
+power also of extending their own area,
+and thus rendering the whole mass still
+more porous; for, since the ice offers little
+or no obstacle to the passage of heat, such
+an air-bubble may easily become heated
+during the day; the moment it reaches
+a temperature above thirty-two degrees,
+it melts the ice around it, thus clearing
+a little space for itself, and rises through
+the water produced by the action of its
+own warmth. The spaces so formed are
+so many vertical tubes in the ice, filled
+with water, and having an air-bubble at
+the upper extremity.</p>
+
+<p>Ice of this kind, resulting from the direct
+congelation of water, is easily recognized
+under all circumstances by its
+regular stratification, the alternate beds
+varying in thickness according to the intensity
+of the cold, and its continuance
+below the freezing-point during a longer
+or shorter period. Singly, these layers
+consist of irregular crystals confusedly
+blended together, as in large masses of
+crystalline rocks in which a crystalline
+structure prevails, though regular crystals
+occur but rarely. The appearance of
+stratification is the result of the circumstances
+under which the water congeals.
+The temperature varies much more rapidly
+in the atmosphere around the earth
+than in the waters upon its surface.
+When the atmosphere above any sheet
+of water sinks below the freezing-point,
+there stretches over its surface a stratum
+of cold air, determining by its intensity
+and duration the formation of the first
+stratum of ice. According to the alternations
+of temperature, this process goes
+on with varying activity until the sheet
+of ice is so thick that it becomes itself a
+shelter to the water below, and protects
+it, to a certain degree, from the cold
+without. Thus a given thickness of ice
+may cause a suspension of the freezing
+process, and the first ice-stratum may
+even be partially thawed before the cold
+is renewed with such intensity as to continue
+the thickening of the ice-sheet by
+the addition of fresh layers. The strata
+or beds of ice increase gradually in this
+manner, their separation being rendered
+still more distinct by the accumulation of
+air-bubbles, which, during a hot and clear
+day, may rise from a muddy bottom in
+great numbers. In consequence of these
+occasional collections of air-bubbles, the
+layers differ, not only in density and
+closeness, but also in color, the more
+compact strata being blue and transparent,
+while those containing a greater
+quantity of air-bubbles are opaque and
+whitish, like water beaten to froth.</p>
+
+<p>A cake of pond-ice, such as is daily
+left in summer at our doors, if held against
+the light and turned in different directions,
+will exhibit all these phenomena<a name="Page_599" id="Page_599"></a>
+very distinctly, and we may learn still
+more of its structure by watching its gradual
+melting. The process of decomposition
+is as different in fresh-water ice and
+in land-or glacier-ice and that of their formation.
+Pond-ice, in contact with warm
+air, melts uniformly over its whole surface,
+the mass being thus gradually reduces
+from the exterior till it vanishes
+completely. If the process be slow, the
+temperature of the air-bubbles contained
+in it may be so raised as to form the vertical
+funnels or tubes alluded to above.
+By the anastomosing of these funnels, the
+whole mass may be reduced to a collection
+of angular pyramids, more or less
+closely united by cross-beams of ice, and it
+finally falls to pieces when the spaces in
+the interior have become for numerous as
+to render it completely cavernous. Such
+a breaking-up of ice is always caused
+by the enlargement of the open spaces
+produces by the elevated temperature
+of the air-bubbles, these spaces being
+necessarily more or less parallel with one
+another, and vertical in their position, owing
+to the natural tendency of the air-bubbles
+to work their way upward till they
+reach the surface, where they escape. A
+sheet of ice, of this kind, floating upon
+water, dissolves in the same manner, melting
+wholly from the surface, if the process
+be sufficiently rapid, or falling to pieces,
+if the air-bubbles are gradually raised in
+their temperature sufficiently to render
+the whole mass cavernous and incoherent.
+If we now compare these facts with
+what is known of the structure of land-ice,
+we shall see that the mode of formation
+in the two cases differs essentially.</p>
+
+<p>Land-ice, of which both the ice-fields
+of the Arctics and glaciers consist, is produced
+by the slow and gradual transformation
+of snow into ice; and though the
+ice thus formed may eventually be as
+clear and transparent as the purest pond- or
+river-ice, its structure is nevertheless
+entirely distinct. We may trace these
+different processes during any moderately
+cold winter in the ponds and snow-meadows
+immediately about us. We need
+not join an Arctic exploring expedition,
+nor even undertake a more tempting trip
+to the Alps, in order to investigate these
+phenomena for ourselves, if we have any
+curiosity to do so. The first warm day
+after a thick fall of light, dry snow, such
+as occurs in the coldest of our winter
+weather, is sufficient to melt its surface.
+As this snow is porous, the water readily
+penetrates it, having also a tendency to
+sink by its own weight, so that the whole
+mass becomes more or less filled with
+moisture in the course of the day. Daring
+the lower temperature of the night, however,
+the water is frozen again, and the
+snow is now filled with new ice-particles.
+Let this process be continued long enough,
+and the mass of snow is changed to a kind
+of ice-gravel, or, if the grains adhere together,
+to something like what we call<a name="Page_600" id="Page_600"></a>
+pudding-stone, allowing, of course, for
+the difference of material; the snow,
+which has been rendered cohesive by the
+process of partial melting and regelation,
+holding the ice-globules together, just as
+the loose materials of the pudding-stone
+are held together by the cement which
+unites them.</p>
+
+<p>Within this mass, air is intercepted and
+held inclosed between the particles of ice.
+The process by which snow-flakes or snow-crystals
+are transformed into grains of
+ice, more or less compact, is easily understood.
+It is the result of a partial thawing,
+under a temperature maintained very
+nearly at thirty-two degrees, falling sometimes
+a little below, and then rising a
+little above the freezing-point, and thus
+producing constant alternations of freezing
+and thawing in the same mass of
+snow. This process amounts to a kind of
+kneading of the snow, and when combined
+with the cohesion among the particles
+more closely held together in one snow-flake,
+it produces granular ice. Of course,
+the change takes place gradually, and is
+unequal in its progress at different depths
+in the same bed of recently fallen snow.
+It depends greatly on the amount of moisture
+infiltrating the mass, whether derived
+from the melting of its own surface,
+or from the accumulation of dew or the
+falling of rain or mist upon it. The
+amount of water retained within the
+mass will also be greatly affected by the
+bottom on which it rests and by the state
+of the atmosphere. Under a certain temperature,
+the snow may only be glazed
+at the surface by the formation of a thin,
+icy crust, an outer membrane, as it were,
+protecting the mass below from a deeper
+transformation into ice; or it may be
+rapidly soaked throughout its whole bulk,
+the snow being thus changed into a kind
+of soft pulp, what we commonly call slosh,
+which, upon freezing, becomes at once
+compact ice; or, the water sinking rapidly,
+the lower layers only may be soaked,
+while the upper portion remains comparatively
+dry. But, under all these various
+circumstances, frost will transform the
+crystalline snow into more or less compact
+ice, the mass of which will be composed
+of an infinite number of aggregated
+snow-particles, very unequal in regularity
+of outline, and cemented by ice of
+another kind, derived from the freezing
+of the infiltrated moisture, the whole being
+interspersed with air. Let the temperature
+rise, and such a mass, rigid before,
+will resolve itself again into disconnected
+ice-particles, like grains more or
+less rounded. The process may be repeated
+till the whole mass is transformed
+into very compact, almost uniformly
+transparent and blue ice, broken only
+by the intervening air-bubbles. Such a
+mass of ice, when exposed to a temperature
+sufficiently high to dissolve it, does
+not melt from the surface and disappear
+by a gradual diminution of its bulk, like
+pond-ice, but crumbles into its original
+granular fragments, each one of which
+melts separately. This accounts for the
+sudden disappearance icebergs, which,
+instead of slowly dissolving into the ocean,
+are often seen to fall to pi<a name="Page_601" id="Page_601"></a>eces and vanish
+at once.</p>
+
+<p>Ice of this kind may be seen forming
+every winter on our sidewalks, on the
+edge of the little ditches which drain
+them, or on the summits of broad gateposts
+when capped with snow. Of such
+ice glaciers are composed; but, in the
+glacier, another element comes in which
+we have not considered as yet,&mdash;that of
+immense pressure in consequence of the
+vast accumulations of snow within circumscribed
+spaces. We see the same effects
+produced on a small scale, when
+snow is transformed into a snowball between
+the hands. Every boy who balls
+a mass of snow in his hands illustrates
+one side of glacial phenomena. Loose
+snow, light and porous, and pure white
+from the amount of air contained in it,
+is in this way presently converted into
+hard, compact, almost transparent ice.
+This change will take place sooner, if the
+snow be damp at first,&mdash;but if dry, the
+action of the hand will presently produce
+moisture enough to complete the process.
+In this case, mere pressure produces the
+same effect which, in the cases we have
+been considering above, was brought
+about by alternate thawing and freezing,&mdash;only
+that in the latter the ice is
+distinctly granular, instead of being uniform
+throughout, as when formed under
+pressure. In the glaciers we have the
+two processes combined. But the investigators
+of glacial phenomena have considered
+too exclusively one or the other:
+some of them attributing glacial motion
+wholly to the dilatation produced by the
+freezing of infiltrated moisture in the
+mass of snow; others accounting for it
+entirely by weight and pressure. There
+is yet a third class, who, disregarding the
+real properties of ice, would have us believe,
+that, because tar, for instance, is
+viscid when it moves, therefore ice is
+viscid because it moves. We shall see
+hereafter that the phenomena exhibited
+in the onward movement of glaciers are
+far more diversified than has generally
+been supposed.</p>
+
+<p>There is no chain of mountains in
+which the shape of the valleys is more
+favorable to the formation of glaciers
+than the Alps. Contracted at their lower
+extremity, these valleys widen upward,
+spreading into deep, broad, trough-like
+depressions. Take, for instance, the
+valley of Hassli, <a name="Page_602" id="Page_602"></a>which is not more than
+half a mile wide where you enter it
+above Meyringen; it opens gradually upward,
+till, above the Grimsel, at the foot
+of the Finster-Aarhorn, it measures several
+miles across. These huge mountain-troughs
+form admirable cradles for the
+snow, which collects in immense quantities
+within them, and, as it moves slowly
+down from the upper ranges, is transformed
+into ice on its way, and compactly
+crowded into the narrower space below.
+At the lower extremity of the glacier
+the ice is pure, blue and transparent,
+but, as we ascend, it appears less
+compact, more porous and granular, assuming
+gradually the character of snow,
+till in the higher regions the snow is as
+light, as shifting, and incoherent, as the
+sand of the desert. A snow-storm on a
+mountain-summit is very different from
+a snow-storm on the plain, on account of
+the different degrees of moisture in the
+atmosphere. At great heights, there is
+never dampness enough to allow the
+fine snow-crystals to coalesce and form
+what are called "snow-flakes." I have
+even stood on the summit of the Jungfrau
+when a frozen cloud filled the air
+with ice-needles, while I could see the
+same cloud pouring down sheet of rain
+upon Lauterbrunnen below. I remember
+this spectacle as one of the most impressive
+I have witnessed in my long experience
+of Alpine scenery. The air immediately
+about me seemed filled with
+rainbow-dust, for the ice-needles glittered
+with a thousand hues under the decomposition
+of light upon them, while
+the dark storm in the valley below offered
+a strange contract to the brilliancy
+of the upper region in which I stood.
+One wonder where even so much vapor
+as may be transformed into the
+finest snow should come from at such
+heights. But the warm winds, creeping
+up the sides of the valleys, the walls of
+which become heated during the middle
+of the day, come laden with moisture
+which is changed to a dry snow like dust
+as soon as it comes into contact with the
+intense cold above.</p>
+
+<p>Currents of warm air affect the extent
+of the glaciers, and influence also the
+line of perpetual snow, which is by no
+means at the same level even in neighboring
+localities. The size of glaciers, of
+course, determines to a great degree the
+height at which they terminate, simply
+because a small mass of ice will melt
+more rapidly, and at a lower temperature,
+than a large<a name="Page_603" id="Page_603"></a>r one. Thus, the small
+glaciers, such as those of the Rothhorn or
+of Trift, above the Grimsel, terminate at
+a considerable height above the plain,
+while the Mer de Glace, fed from the great
+snow-caldrons of Mont Blanc, forces its
+way down to the bottom of the valley of
+Chamouni, and the glacier of Grindelwald,
+constantly renewed from the deep
+reservoirs where the Jungfrau hoards her
+vast supplies of snow, descends to about
+four thousand feet above the sea-level.
+But the glacier of the Aar, though also
+very large, comes to a pause at about six
+thousand feet above the level of the sea;
+for the south wind from the other side of
+the Alps, the warm sirocco of Italy, blows
+across it, and it consequently melts at a
+higher level than either the Mer de Glace
+or the Grindelwald. It is a curious fact,
+that in the valley of Hassli the temperature
+frequently rises instead of falling as
+you ascend; at the Grimsel, the temperature
+is at times higher than at Meyringen
+below, where the warmer winds are
+not felt so directly. The glacier of
+Aletsch, on the southern slope of the
+Jungfrau, and into which many other
+glaciers enter, terminates also at a considerable
+height, because it turns into the
+valley of the Rhone, through which the
+southern winds blow constantly.</p>
+
+<p>Under ordinary conditions, vegetation
+fades in these mountains at the height of
+six thousand feet, but, in consequence of
+prevailing winds, and the sheltering influence
+of the mountain-walls, there is no
+uniformity in the limit of perpetual snow
+and ice. Where currents of warm air
+are very constant, glaciers do not occur
+at all, even where other circumstances are
+favorable to their formation. There are
+valleys in the Alps far above six thousand
+feet which have no glaciers, and where
+perpetual snow is seen only on their
+northern sides. These contrasts in temperature
+lead to the most wonderful contrasts
+in the aspect of the soil; summer
+and winter lie side by side, and bright
+flowers look out from the edge of snows
+that never melt. Where the warm winds
+prevail, there may be sheltered spots at
+a height of ten or eleven thousand feet,
+isolated nooks opening southward where
+the most exquisite flowers bloom in the
+midst of perpetual snow and ice; and
+occasionally I have seen a bright little
+flower with a cap of snow over it that
+seemed to be its shelter. The flowers
+give, indeed, a peculiar charm to these
+high Alpine regions.<a name="Page_604" id="Page_604"></a> Occurring often in
+beds of the same kind, forming green,
+blue or yellow patches, they seem nestled
+close together in sheltered spots, or even
+in fissures and chasms of the rock, where
+they gather in dense quantities. Even
+in the sternest scenery of the Alps some
+sign of vegetation lingers; and I remember
+to have found a tuft of lichen
+growing on the only rock which pierced
+through the ice on the summit of the
+Jungfrau. The absolute solitude, the intense
+stillness of the upper Alps is most
+impressive; no cattle, no pasturage, no
+bird, nor any sound of life,&mdash;and, indeed,
+even if there were, the rarity of the air
+in these high regions is such that sound
+is hardly transmissible. The deep repose,
+the purity of aspect of every object,
+the snow, broken only by ridges
+of angular rocks, produce an effect no
+less beautiful than solemn. Sometimes,
+in the midst of the wide expanse, one
+comes upon a patch of the so-called red
+snow of the Alps. At a distance, one
+would say that such a spot marked some
+terrible scene of blood, but, as you come
+nearer, the hues are so tender and delicate,
+as they fade from deep red to rose,
+and so die into the pure colorless snow
+around, that the first impression is completely
+dispelled. This red snow is an
+organic growth, a plant springing up in
+such abundance that it colors extensive
+surfaces, just as the microscopic plants
+dye our pools with green in the spring.
+It is an <i>Alga</i> well known in the Arctics,
+where it forms wide fields in the summer.
+With the above facts before us concerning
+the materials of which glaciers are
+composed, we may now proceed to consider
+their structure more fully in connection
+with their movements and the
+effects they produce on the surfaces over
+which they extend. It has already been
+stated that the ice of the glaciers has not
+the same appearance everywhere, but differs
+according to the level at which it
+stands. In consequence of this we distinguish
+three very distinct regions in
+these frozen fields, the uppermost of
+which, upon the sides of the steepest and
+highest slopes of the mountain-ridges, consists
+chiefly of layers of snow piled one
+above another by the successive snowfalls
+of the colder seasons, and which
+would remain in uniform superposition
+but for the change to which they are subjected
+in consequence of a gradual downward
+movement, causing the mass to descend
+by slow degrees, while new accumulations
+in the higher regions ann<a name="Page_605" id="Page_605"></a>ually
+replace the snow which has been thus
+removed to an inferior level. We shall
+consider hereafter the process by which
+this change of position is brought about.
+For the present it is sufficient to state
+that such a transfer, by which a balance
+is preserved in the distribution of the
+snow, takes place in all glaciers, so that,
+instead of increasing indefinitely in the
+upper regions, where on account of the
+extreme cold there is little melting, they
+permanently preserve about the same
+thickness, being yearly reduced by their
+downward motion in a proportion equal to
+their annual increase by fresh additions
+of snow. Indeed, these reservoirs of snow
+maintain themselves at the same level,
+much as a stream, into which many rivulets
+empty, remains within its usual limits
+in consequence of the drainage of the
+average supply. Of course, very heavy
+rains or sudden thaws at certain seasons
+or in particular years may cause an occasional
+overflow of such a stream; and
+irregularities of the same kind are observed
+during certain years or at different
+periods of the same year in the accumulations
+of snow, in consequence of
+which the successive strata may vary in
+thickness. But in ordinary times layers
+from six to eight feet deep are regularly
+added annually to the accumulation of
+snow in the higher regions,&mdash;not taking
+into account, of course, the heavy drifts
+heaped up in particular localities, but estimating
+the uniform average increase
+over wide fields. This snow is gradually
+transformed into more or less compact
+ice, passing through an intermediate condition
+analogous to the slosh of our roads,
+and in that condition chiefly occupies the
+upper part of the extensive troughs into
+which these masses descend from the loftier
+heights. This region is called the
+region of the <i>n&eacute;v&eacute;</i>. It is properly the
+birthplace of the glaciers, for it is here
+that the transformation of the snow into
+ice begins. The <i>n&eacute;v&eacute;</i> ice, though varying
+in the degree of its compactness and
+solidity, is always very porous and whitish
+in color, resembling somewhat frozen
+slosh, while lower down in the region of
+the glacier proper the ice is close, solid,
+transparent, and of a bluish tint.</p>
+
+<p>But besides the differences in solidity
+and in external appearance, there are
+also many other important changes taking
+place in the ice of these diffe<a name="Page_606" id="Page_606"></a>rent regions,
+to which we shall return presently.
+Such modifications arise chiefly from the
+pressure to which it is subjected in its
+downward progress, and to the alterations,
+in consequence of this displacement,
+in the relative position of the snow- and
+ice-beds, as well as to the influence exerted
+by the form of the valleys themselves,
+not only upon the external aspect
+of the glaciers, but upon their internal
+structure also. The surface of a glacier
+varies greatly in character in these different
+regions. The uniform even surfaces
+of the upper snow-fields gradually
+pass into a more undulating outline, the
+pure white fields become strewn with
+dust and sand in the lower levels, while
+broken bits of stone and larger fragments
+of rock collect upon them, which assume
+a regular arrangement, and produce a
+variety of features most startling and
+incomprehensible at first sight, but more
+easily understood when studied in connection
+with the whole series of glacial
+phenomena. They are then seen to be
+the consequence of the general movement
+of the glacier, and of certain effects
+which the course of the seasons,
+the action of the sun, the rain, the reflected
+heat from the sides of the valley,
+or the disintegration of its rocky walls,
+may produce upon the surface of the ice.
+In the next article we shall consider in
+detail all these phenomena, and trace
+them in their natural connection. Once
+familiar with these facts, it will not be
+difficult correctly to appreciate the movement
+of the glacier and the cause of its
+inequalities. We shall see, that, in consequence
+of the greater or less rapidity
+in the movement of certain portions of
+the mass, its centre progressing faster
+than its sides, and the upper, middle, and
+lower regions of the same glacier advancing
+at different rates, the strata which
+in the higher ranges of the snow-fields
+were evenly spread over wide expanses,
+become bent and folded to such a degree
+that the primitive stratification is nearly
+obliterated, while the internal mass of
+the ice has also assumed new features
+under these new circumstances. There
+is, indeed, as much difference between the
+newly formed beds of snow in the upper
+region and the condition of the ice at the
+lower end of a glacier as between a recent
+deposit of coral sand or a mud-bed
+in an estuary and the metamorphic limestone
+or clay slate twisted and broken as
+they are seen in the very chains of moun<a name="Page_607" id="Page_607"></a>tains
+from which the glaciers descend. A
+geologist, familiar with all the changes to
+which a bed of rock may be subjected
+from the time it was deposited in horizontal
+layers up to the time when it was
+raised by Plutonic agencies along the
+sides of a mountain-ridge, bent and distorted
+in a thousand directions, broken
+through the thickness of its mass, and
+traversed by innumerable fissures which
+are themselves filled with new materials,
+will best be able to understand how the
+stratification of snow may be modified
+by pressure and displacement so as finally
+to appear like a laminated mass full
+of cracks and crevices, in which the original
+stratification is recognized only by
+the practical student. I trust in my next
+article I shall be able to explain intelligibly
+to my readers even these extreme
+alterations in the condition of the primitive
+snow of the Alpine summits.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="TWO_SCENES_FROM_THE_LIFE_OF_BLONDEL" id="TWO_SCENES_FROM_THE_LIFE_OF_BLONDEL"></a>TWO SCENES FROM THE LIFE OF BLONDEL.</h2>
+
+
+<p>SCENE I.&mdash;<i>Near a Castle in Germany.</i></p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Twere no hard task, perchance, to win<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The popular laurel for my song;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Twere only to comply with sin,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And own the crown, though snatched by wrong:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Rather Truth's chaplet let me wear,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Though sharp as death its thorns may sting;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Loyal to Loyalty, I bear<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">No badge but of my rightful king.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Patient by town and tower I wait,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or o'er the blustering moorland go;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I buy no praise at cheaper rate,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or what faint hearts may fancy so:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For me, no joy in lady's bower,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or hall, or tourney, will I sing,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till the slow stars wheel round the hour<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That crowns my hero and my king.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">While all the land runs red with strife,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And wealth is won by peddler-crimes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Let who will find content in life<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And tinkle in unmanly rhymes:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I wait and seek; through dark and light,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Safe in my heart my hope I bring,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till I once more my faith may plight<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To him my whole soul owns her king.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">When power is filched by drone and dolt,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, with caught breath and flashing eye,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Her knuckles whitening round the bolt,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Vengeance leans eager from the sky,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While this and that the people guess,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And to the skirts of praters cling,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who court the crowd they should compress,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I turn in scorn to seek my king.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Shut in what tower of darkling chance<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or dungeon of a narrow doom,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Dream'st thou of battle-axe and lance<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That for the cross make crashing room?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Come! with strained eyes the battle waits<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In the wild van thy mace's swing;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While doubters parley with their fates,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Make thou thine own and ours, my king!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Oh, strong to keep upright the old,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And wise to buttress with the new,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Prudent, as only are the bold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Clear-eyed, as only are the true,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To foes benign, to friendship stern,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Intent to imp Law's broken wing,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who would not die, if death might earn<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The right to kiss thy hand, my king?<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>SCENE II.&mdash;<i>An Inn near the Ch&acirc;teau of Chalus.</i></p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Well, the whole thing is over, and here I sit<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With one arm in a sling and a milk-score of gashes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And this flagon of Cyprus must e'en warm my wit,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Since what's left of youth's flame is a head flecked with ashes.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I remember I sat in this very same inn,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I was young then, and one young man thought I was handsome,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I had found out what prison King Richard was in,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And was spurring for England to push on the ransom.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">How I scorned the dull souls that sat guzzling around,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And knew not my secret nor recked my derision!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Let the world sink or swim, John or Richard be crowned,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All one, so the beer-tax got lenient revision.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How little I dreamed, as I tramped up and down,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That granting our wish one of Fate's saddest jokes is!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I had mine with a vengeance,&mdash;my king got his crown,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And made his whole business to break other folks's.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I might as well join in the safe old <i>tum</i>, <i>tum</i>:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A hero's an excellent loadstar,&mdash;but, bless ye,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What infinite odds 'twixt a hero to come<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And your only too palpable hero <i>in esse</i>!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Precisely the odds (such examples are rife)<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Twixt the poem conceived and the rhyme we make show of,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Twixt the boy's morning dream and the wake-up of life,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Twixt the Blondel God meant and a Blondel I know of!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But the world's better off, I'm convinced of it now,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Than if heroes, like buns, could be bought for a penny,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To regard all mankind as their haltered milch-cow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And just care for themselves. Well, God cares for the many;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And somehow the poor old Earth blunders along,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Each son of hers adding his mite of unfitness,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, choosing the sure way of coming out wrong,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Gets to port, as the next generation will witness.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">You think her old ribs have come all crashing through,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">If a whisk of Fate's broom snap your cobweb asunder;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But her rivets were clinched by a wiser than you,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And our sins cannot push the Lord's right hand from under.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Better one honest man who can wait for God's mind,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In our poor shifting scene here, though heroes were plenty!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Better one bite, at forty, of truth's bitter rind<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Than the hot wine that gushed from the vintage of twenty!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I see it all now: when I wanted a king,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Twas the kingship that failed in myself I was seeking,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Tis so much less easy to do than to sing,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So much simpler to reign by a proxy than <i>be</i> king!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yes, I think I <i>do</i> see: after all's said and sung,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Take this one rule of life and you never will rue it,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Tis but do your own duty and hold your own tongue,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And Blondel were royal himself, if he knew it!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="NIGHT_AND_MOONLIGHT" id="NIGHT_AND_MOONLIGHT"></a>NIGHT AND MOONLIGHT.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Chancing to take a memorable walk
+by moonlight some years ago, I resolved
+to take more such walks, and make acquaintance
+with another side of Nature.
+I have done so.</p>
+
+<p>According to Pliny, there is a stone in
+Arabia called Selenites, "wherein is a
+white, which increases and decreases with
+the moon." My journal for the last year
+or two has been <i>selenitic</i> in this sense.</p>
+
+<p>Is not the midnight like Central Africa
+to most of us? Are we not tempted to
+explore it,&mdash;to penetrate to the shores
+of its Lake Tchad, and discover the source
+of its Nile, perchance the Mountains of
+the Moon? Who knows what fertility
+and beauty, moral and natural, are there
+to be found<a name="Page_610" id="Page_610"></a>? In the Mountains of the
+Moon, in the Central Africa of the night,
+there is where all Niles have their hidden
+heads. The expeditions up the Nile as
+yet extend but to the Cataracts, or perchance
+to the mouth of the White Nile;
+but it is the Black Nile that concerns
+us.</p>
+
+<p>I shall be a benefactor, if I conquer
+some realms from the night,&mdash;if I report
+to the gazettes anything transpiring about
+us at that season worthy of their attention,&mdash;if
+I can show men that there is
+some beauty awake while they are asleep,&mdash;if
+I add to the domains of poetry.</p>
+
+<p>Night is certainly more novel and less
+profane than day. I soon discovered that
+I was acquainted only with its complexion;
+and as for the moon, I had seen her
+only as it were through a crevice in a
+shutter, occasionally. Why not walk a
+little way in her light?</p>
+
+<p>Suppose you attend to the suggestions
+which the moon makes for one month,
+commonly in vain, will it not be very
+different from anything in literature or
+religion? But why not study this Sanscrit?
+What if one moon has come and
+gone, with its world of poetry, its weird
+teachings, its oracular suggestions,&mdash;so
+divine a creature freighted with hints for
+me, and I have not used her,&mdash;one moon
+gone by unnoticed?</p>
+
+<p>I think it was Dr. Chalmers who said,
+criticizing Coleridge, that for his part
+he wanted ideas which he could see all
+round, and not such as he must look at
+away up in the heavens. Such a man,
+one would say, would never look at the
+moon, because she never turns her other
+side to us. The light which comes from
+ideas which have their orbit as distant
+from the earth, and which is no less
+cheering and enlightening to the benighted
+traveller than that of the moon
+and stars, is naturally reproached or nicknamed
+as moonshine by such. They are
+moonshine, are they? Well, then, do
+your night-travelling when there is no
+moon to light you; but I will be thankful
+for the light that reaches me from the
+star of least magnitude. Stars are lesser
+or greater only as they appear to us so.
+I will be thankful that I see so much as
+one side of a celestial idea, one side of the
+rainbow and the sunset sky.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_611" id="Page_611"></a></p>
+<p>Men talk glibly enough about moonshine,
+as if they knew its qualities very
+well, and despised them,&mdash;as owls might
+talk of sunshine. None of your sunshine!&mdash;but
+this word commonly means merely
+something which they do not understand,
+which they are abed and asleep to, however
+much it may be worth their while to
+be up and awake to it.</p>
+
+<p>It must be allowed that the light of the
+moon, sufficient though it is for the pensive
+walker, and not disproportionate to
+the inner light we have, is very inferior
+in quality and intensity to that of the
+sun. But the moon is not to be judged
+alone by the quantity of light she sends to
+us, but also by her influence on the earth
+and its inhabitants. "The moon gravitates
+toward the earth, and the earth reciprocally
+toward the moon." The poet
+who walks by moonlight is conscious of a
+tide in his thought which is to be referred
+to lunar influence. I will endeavor to
+separate the tide in my thoughts from the
+current distractions of the day. I would
+warn my hearers that they must not try
+my thoughts by a daylight standard, but
+endeavor to realize that I speak out of
+the night. All depends on your point
+of view. In Drake's "Collection of
+Voyages," Wafer says of some Albinos
+among the Indians of Darien,&mdash;"They
+are quite white, but their whiteness is
+like that of a horse, quite different from
+the fair or pale European, as they have
+not the least tincture of a blush or sanguine
+complexion.... Their eyebrows
+are milk-white, as is likewise the hair of
+their heads, which is very fine....
+They seldom go abroad in the daytime,
+the sun being disagreeable to them, and
+causing their eyes, which are weak and
+poring, to water, especially if it shines
+towards them; yet they see very well by
+moonlight, from which we call them mooneyed."</p>
+
+<p>Neither in our thoughts in these moonlight
+walks, methinks, is there "the least
+tincture of a blush or sanguine complexion,"
+but we are intellectually and morally
+Albinos,&mdash;children of Endymion,&mdash;such
+is the effect of conversing much with
+the moon.</p>
+
+<p>I complain of Arctic voyages that they
+do not enough remind us of the constant
+peculiar dreariness of the scenery, and
+the perpetual twilight of the Arctic night.
+So he whose theme is moonlight, though
+he may find it difficult, must, as it were,
+illustrate it with the light of the moon
+alone.</p>
+<p><a name="Page_612" id="Page_612"></a></p>
+<p>Many men walk by day; few walk
+by night. It is a very different season.
+Take a July night, for instance. About
+ten o'clock,&mdash;when man is asleep, and
+day fairly forgotten,&mdash;the beauty of
+moonlight is seen over lonely pastures
+where cattle are silently feeding. On all
+sides novelties present themselves. Instead
+of the sun, there are the moon and
+stars; instead of the wood-thrush, there
+is the whippoorwill; instead of butterflies
+in the meadows, fire-flies, winged
+sparks of fire!&mdash;who would have believed
+it? What kind of cool, deliberate life
+dwells in those dewy abodes associated
+with a spark of fire? So man has fire in
+his eyes, or blood, or brain. Instead of
+singing-birds, the half-throttled note of a
+cuckoo flying over, the croaking of frogs,
+and the intenser dream of crickets,&mdash;but
+above all, the wonderful trump of the
+bull-frog, ringing from Maine to Georgia.
+The potato-vines stand upright, the corn
+grows apace, the bushes loom, the grain-fields
+are boundless. On our open river-terraces,
+once cultivated by the Indian,
+they appear to occupy the ground like
+an army,&mdash;their heads nodding in the
+breeze. Small trees and shrubs are seen
+in the midst, overwhelmed as by an inundation.
+The shadows of rocks and
+trees and shrubs and hills are more
+conspicuous than the objects themselves.
+The slightest irregularities in the ground
+are revealed by the shadows, and what
+the feet find comparatively smooth appears
+rough and diversified in consequence.
+For the same reason the whole
+landscape is more variegated and picturesque
+than by day. The smallest recesses
+in the rocks are dim and cavernous;
+the ferns in the wood appear of tropical
+size. The sweet-fern and indigo in
+overgrown wood-paths wet you with dew
+up to your middle. The leaves of the
+shrub-oak are shining as if a liquid
+were flowing over them. The pools seen
+through the trees are as full of light as
+the sky. "The light of the day takes refuge
+in their bosoms," as the Purana says
+of the ocean. All white objects are more
+remarkable than by day. A distant cliff
+looks like a phosphorescent space on a
+hill-side. The woods are heavy and dark.
+Nature slumbers. You see the moonlight
+reflected from particular stumps in the
+recesses of the forest, as if she selected
+what to shine on. These small fractions
+of her light remind one of the plant
+called moon-seed,&mdash;as if the moon were
+sowing it in such places.</p><p><a name="Page_613" id="Page_613"></a></p>
+
+<p>In the night the eyes are partly closed,
+or retire into the head. Other senses
+take the lead. The walker is guided as
+well by the sense of smell. Every plant
+and field and forest emits its odor now,&mdash;swamp-pink
+in the meadow, and tansy in
+the road; and there is the peculiar dry
+scent of corn which has begun to show
+its tassels. The senses both of hearing
+and smelling are more alert. We hear
+the tinkling of rills which we never detected
+before. From time to time, high
+up on the sides of hills, you pass through
+a stratum of warm air: a blast which
+has come up from the sultry plains of
+noon. It tells of the day, of sunny noon-tide
+hours and banks, of the laborer wiping
+his brow and the bee humming amid
+flowers. It is an air in which work has
+been done,&mdash;which men have breathed.
+It circulates about from wood-side to hill-side,
+like a dog that has lost its master,
+now that the sun is gone. The rocks retain
+all night the warmth of the sun which
+they have absorbed. And so does the
+sand: if you dig a few inches into it,
+you find a warm bed.</p>
+
+<p>You lie on your back on a rock in a
+pasture on the top of some bare hill at
+midnight, and speculate on the height of
+the starry canopy. The stars are the
+jewels of the night, and perchance surpass
+anything which day has to show.
+A companion with whom I was sailing,
+one very windy, but bright moonlight
+night, when the stars were few and faint,
+thought that a man could get along with
+<i>them</i>, though he was considerably reduced
+in his circumstances,&mdash;that they were
+a kind of bread and cheese that never
+failed.</p>
+
+<p>No wonder that there have been astrologers,&mdash;that
+some have conceived
+that they were personally related to particular
+stars. Du Bartas, as translated
+by Sylvester, says he'll</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i1">"not believe that the Great Architect<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With all these fires the heavenly arches decked<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Only for shew, and with these glistering shields,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'T awake poor shepherds, watching in the fields,"&mdash;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>he'll</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"not believe that the least flower which pranks<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our garden-borders or our common banks,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the least stone that in her warming lap<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our Mother Earth doth covetously wrap,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Hath some peculiar virtue of its own,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And that the glorious stars of heaven have none."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>And Sir Walter Raleigh well says,
+"The stars are instruments of far greater
+use than to give an obscure light, and for
+men to gaze on after sunset"; and he
+quotes Plotinus as affirming that they
+"are significant, but not efficient"; and
+also Augustine as saying, "<i>Deus regit
+inferiora corpora per superiora</i>": God
+rules the bodies below by those above.
+But best of all is this, which another
+writer has expressed: "<i>Sapiens adjuvabit
+opus astrorum quemadmodum agricola
+terr&aelig; naturam</i>": A wise man assisteth
+the work of the stars as the husbandman
+helpeth the nature of the soil.</p>
+
+<p>It does not concern men who are asleep
+in their beds, but it is very important to
+the traveller, whether the moon shines
+brightly or is obscured. It is not easy to
+realize the serene joy of all the earth,
+when she commences to shine unobstructedly,
+unless you have often been abroad
+alone in moonlight nights. She seems
+to be waging continual war with the
+clouds in your behalf. Yet we fancy the
+clouds to be <i>her</i> foes also. She comes on
+magnifying her dangers by her light, revealing,
+displaying them in all their hugeness
+and blackness,&mdash;then suddenly casts
+them behind into the light concealed, and
+goes her way triumphant through a small
+space of clear sky.</p>
+
+<p>In short, the moon traversing, or appearing
+to traverse, the small clouds which
+lie in her way, now obscured by them,
+now easily dissipating and shining through
+them, makes the drama of the moonlight
+night to all watchers and night-travellers.
+Sailors speak of it as the moon eating up
+the clouds. The traveller all alone, the
+moon all alone, except for his sympathy,
+overcoming with incessant victory whole
+squadrons of clouds above the forests and
+lakes and hills. When she is obscured,
+he so sympathizes with her that he could
+whip a dog for her relief, as Indians do.
+When she enters on a clear field of great
+extent in the heavens, and shines unobstructedly,
+he is glad. And when she
+has fought her way through all the squadron
+of her foes, and rides majestic in a
+clear sky unscathed, and t<a name="Page_615" id="Page_615"></a>here are no
+more any obstructions in her path, he
+cheerfully and confidently pursues his
+way, and rejoices in his heart, and the
+cricket also seems to express joy in its
+song.</p>
+
+<p>How insupportable would be the days,
+if the night, with its dews and darkness,
+did not come to restore the drooping
+world! As the shades begin to gather
+around us, our primeval instincts are
+aroused, and we steal forth from our
+lairs, like the inhabitants of the jungle,
+in search of those silent and brooding
+thoughts which are the natural prey of
+the intellect.</p>
+
+<p>Richter says, that "the earth is every
+day overspread with the veil of night for
+the same reason as the cages of birds are
+darkened, namely, that we may the more
+readily apprehend the higher harmonies
+of thought in the hush and quiet of darkness.
+Thoughts which day turns into
+smoke and mist stand about us in the
+night as light and flames; even as the
+column which fluctuates above the crater
+of Vesuvius in the daytime appears a
+pillar of cloud, but by night a pillar of
+fire."</p>
+
+<p>There are nights in this climate of such
+serene and majestic beauty, so medicinal
+and fertilizing to the spirit, that methinks
+a sensitive nature would not devote them
+to oblivion, and perhaps there is no man
+but would be better and wiser for spending
+them out of doors, though he should
+sleep all the next day to pay for it,
+should sleep an Endymion sleep, as the
+ancients expressed it,&mdash;nights which
+warrant the Grecian epithet <i>ambrosial</i>,
+when, as in the land of Beulah, the atmosphere
+is charged with dewy fragrance,
+and with music, and we take our repose
+and have our dreams awake,&mdash;when the
+moon, not secondary to the sun,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i3">"gives us his blaze again,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Void of its flame, and sheds a softer day.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Now through the passing cloud she seems to stoop,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Now up the pure cerulean rides sublime."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Diana still hunts in the New-England
+sky.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"In heaven queen she is among the spheres;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She, mistress-like, makes all things to be pure;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Eternity in her oft change she bears;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">She Beauty is; by her the fair endure.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Time wears her not; she doth his chariot guide;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mortality below her orb is placed;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By her the virtues of the stars down slide;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By her is Virtue's perfect image cast."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><a name="Page_616" id="Page_616"></a>The Hindoos compare the moon to a
+saintly being who has reached the last
+stage of bodily existence.</p>
+
+<p>Great restorer of antiquity, great enchanter!
+In a mild night, when the harvest
+or hunter's moon shines unobstructedly,
+the houses in our village, whatever
+architect they may have had by day, acknowledge
+only a master. The village
+street is then as wild as the forest. New
+and old things are confounded. I know
+not whether I am sitting on the ruins of
+a wall, or on the material which is to
+compose a new one. Nature is an instructed
+and impartial teacher, spreading
+no crude opinions, and flattering
+none; she will be neither radical nor
+conservative. Consider the moonlight,
+so civil, yet so savage!</p>
+
+<p>The light is more proportionate to our
+knowledge than that of day. It is no
+more dusky in ordinary nights than our
+mind's habitual atmosphere, and the
+moonlight is as bright as our most illuminated
+moments are.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"In such a night let me abroad remain<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till morning breaks, and all's confused again."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Of what significance the light of day,
+if it is not the reflection of an inward
+dawn?&mdash;to what purpose is the veil of
+night withdrawn, if the morning reveals
+nothing to the soul? It is merely garish
+and glaring.</p>
+
+<p>When Ossian, in his address to the
+Sun, exclaims,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Where has darkness its dwelling?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where is the cavernous home of the stars,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When thou quickly followest their steps,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Pursuing them like a hunter in the sky,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thou climbing the lofty hills,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They descending on barren mountains?"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>who does not in his thought accompany
+the stars to their "cavernous home," "descending"
+with them "on barren mountains"?</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, even by night the sky is
+blue and not black; for we see through
+the shadow of the earth into the distant
+atmosphere of day, where the sunbeams
+are revelling.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="ANDANTE" id="ANDANTE"></a>ANDANTE.</h2>
+<p><a name="Page_617" id="Page_617"></a></p>
+<h3>BEETHOVEN'S SIXTH SYMPHONY.</h3>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Sounding above the warring of the years,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Over their stretch of toils and pains and fears,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Comes the well-loved refrain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">That ancient voice again.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Sweeter than when beside the river's marge<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">We lay and watched, like Innocence at large,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The changeful waters flow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Speaks this brave music now.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Tender as sunlight upon childhood's head,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Serene as moonlight upon childhood's bed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Comes the remembered power<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Of that forgotten hour.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The little brook with merry voice and low,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The gentle ripples rippling far below,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Talked with no idle voice,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Though idling were their choice.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Now through the tumult and the pride of life,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Gentler, yet firmly soothing all its strife,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Nature draws near once more,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And knocks at the world's door.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">She walks within her wild, harmonious maze,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Evolving melodies from doubt and haze,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And leaves us freed from care,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Like children standing there.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_BROTHERS" id="THE_BROTHERS"></a>THE BROTHERS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Doctor Franck came in as I sat
+sewing up the rents in an old shirt, that
+Tom might go tidily to his grave. New
+shirts were needed for the living, and
+there was no wife or mother to "dress
+him handsome when he went to meet the
+Lord," as one woman said, describing the
+fine funeral she had pinched herself to
+give her son.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Dane, I'm in a quandary," began
+the Doctor, with that expression of
+countenance which says as plainly as
+words, "I want to ask a favor, but I
+wish you'd save me the trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"Can I help you out of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Faith! I don't like to propose it, but
+you certainly can, if you please."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_618" id="Page_618"></a></p>
+<p>"Then give it a name, I beg."</p>
+
+<p>"You see a Reb has just been brought
+in crazy with typhoid; a bad case every
+way; a drunken, rascally little captain
+somebody took the trouble to capture, but
+whom nobody wants to take the trouble
+to cure. The wards are full, the ladies
+worked to death, and willing to be for
+our own boys, but rather slow to risk their
+lives for a Reb. Now you've had the fever,
+you like queer patients, your mate
+will see to your ward for a while, and I
+will find you a good attendant. The fellow
+won't last long, I fancy; but he can't
+die without some sort of care, you know.
+I've put him in the fourth story of the
+west wing, away from the rest. It is airy,
+quiet, and comfortable there. I'm on that
+ward, and will do my best for you in every
+way. Now, then, will you go?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I will, out of perversity,
+if not common charity; for some of these
+people think that because I'm an abolitionist
+I am also a heathen, and I should
+rather like to show them, that, though I
+cannot quite love my enemies, I am willing
+to take care of them."</p>
+
+<p>"Very good; I thought you'd go;
+and speaking of abolition reminds me
+that you can have a contraband for servant,
+if you like. It is that fine mulatto
+fellow who was found burying his Rebel
+master after the fight, and, being badly
+cut over the head, our boys brought him
+along. Will you have him?"</p>
+
+<p>"By all means,&mdash;for I'll stand to my
+guns on that point, as on the other; these
+black boys are far more faithful and handy
+than some of the white scamps given me
+to serve, instead of being served by. But
+is this man well enough?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, for that sort of work, and I
+think you'll like him. He must have
+been a handsome fellow before he got his
+face slashed; not much darker than myself;
+his master's son, I dare say, and the
+white blood makes him rather high and
+haughty about some things. He was in
+a bad way when he came in, but vowed
+he'd die in the street rather than turn in
+with the black fellows below; so I put
+him up in the west wing, to be out of the
+way, and he's seen to the captain all the
+morning. "When can you go up?"</p>
+
+<p>"As soon <a name="Page_619" id="Page_619"></a>as Tom is laid out, Skinner
+moved, Haywood washed, Marble dressed,
+Charley rubbed, Downs taken up,
+Upham laid down, and the whole forty
+fed."</p>
+
+<p>We both laughed, though the Doctor
+was on his way to the dead-house and I
+held a shroud on my lap. But in a hospital
+one learns that cheerfulness is one's
+salvation; for, in an atmosphere of suffering
+and death, heaviness of heart would
+soon paralyze usefulness of hand, if the
+blessed gift of smiles had been denied us.</p>
+
+<p>In an hour I took possession of my new
+charge, finding a dissipated-looking boy
+of nineteen or twenty raving in the solitary
+little room, with no one near him but
+the contraband in the room adjoining.
+Feeling decidedly more interest in the
+black man than in the white, yet remembering
+the Doctor's hint of his being
+"high and haughty," I glanced furtively
+at him as I scattered chloride of
+lime about the room to purify the air,
+and settled matters to suit myself. I had
+seen many contrabands, but never one
+so attractive as this. All colored men
+are called "boys," even if their heads
+are white; this boy was five-and-twenty
+at least, strong-limbed and manly, and
+had the look of one who never had been
+cowed by abuse or worn with oppressive
+labor. He sat on his bed doing nothing;
+no book, no pipe, no pen or paper anywhere
+appeared, yet anything less indolent
+or listless than his attitude and expression
+I never saw. Erect he sat, with
+a hand on either knee, and eyes fixed on
+the bare wall opposite, so rapt in some
+absorbing thought as to be unconscious
+of my presence, though the door stood
+wide open and my movements were by
+no means noiseless. His face was half
+averted, but I instantly approved the
+Doctor's taste, for the profile which I saw
+possessed all the attributes of comeliness
+belonging to his mixed race. He was
+more quadroon than mulatto, with Saxon
+features, Spanish complexion darkened
+by exposure, color in lips and cheek, waving
+hair, and an eye full of the passionate
+melancholy which in such men always
+seems to utter a mute protest against the
+broken law that doomed them at their
+birth. What could he be thinking of?
+The sick boy cursed and raved, I rustled
+to and fro, steps passed the door, bells
+rang, and the steady rumble of army-wagons
+came up from the street, still he
+<a name="Page_620" id="Page_620"></a>never stirred. I had seen colored people
+in what they call "the black sulks," when,
+for days, they neither smiled nor spoke,
+and scarcely ate. But this was something
+more than that; for the man was not
+dully brooding over some small grievance;
+he seemed to see an all-absorbing
+fact or fancy recorded on the wall, which
+was a blank to me. I wondered if it were
+some deep wrong or sorrow, kept alive by
+memory and impotent regret; if he mourned
+for the dead master to whom he had
+been faithful to the end; or if the liberty
+now his were robbed of half its sweetness
+by the knowledge that some one near
+and dear to him still languished in the
+hell from which he had escaped. My
+heart quite warmed to him at that idea;
+I wanted to know and comfort him; and,
+following the impulse of the moment, I
+went in and touched him on the shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>In an instant the man vanished and the
+slave appeared. Freedom was too new a
+boon to have wrought its blessed changes
+yet, and as he started up, with his hand
+at his temple and an obsequious "Yes,
+Ma'am," any romance that had gathered
+round him fled away, leaving the saddest
+of all sad facts in living guise before me.
+Not only did the manhood seem to die
+out of him, but the comeliness that first
+attracted me; for, as he turned, I saw
+the ghastly wound that had laid open
+cheek and forehead. Being partly healed,
+it was no longer bandaged, but held
+together with strips of that transparent
+plaster which I never see without a shiver
+and swift recollections of the scenes
+with which it is associated in my mind.
+Part of his black hair had been shorn
+away, and one eye was nearly closed;
+pain so distorted, and the cruel sabre-cut
+so marred that portion of his face, that,
+when I saw it, I felt as if a fine medal
+had been suddenly reversed, showing me
+a far more striking type of human suffering
+and wrong than Michel Angelo's
+bronze prisoner. By one of those inexplicable
+processes that often teach us how
+little we understand ourselves, my purpose
+was suddenly changed, and though
+I went in to offer comfort as a friend, I
+merely gave an order as a mistress.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you open these windows? this
+man needs more air."</p>
+
+<p>He obeyed at once, and, as he slowly
+urged up the unruly sash, the handsome
+profile was again turned toward me, and
+again I was possessed by my first impression
+so strongly that I involuntarily
+said,&mdash;</p><p><a name="Page_621" id="Page_621"></a></p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Sir."</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps it was fancy, but I thought
+that in the look of mingled surprise and
+something like reproach which he gave
+me there was also a trace of grateful
+pleasure. But he said, in that tone of
+spiritless humility these poor souls learn
+so soon,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I a'n't a white man, Ma'am, I'm a
+contraband."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I know it; but a contraband is
+a free man, and I heartily congratulate
+you."</p>
+
+<p>He liked that; his face shone, he squared
+his shoulders, lifted his head, and looked
+me full in the eye with a brisk&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Thank ye, Ma'am; anything more
+to do fer yer?"</p>
+
+<p>"Doctor Franck thought you would
+help me with this man, as there are many
+patients and few nurses or attendants.
+Have you had the fever?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Ma'am."</p>
+
+<p>"They should have thought of that
+when they put him here; wounds and
+fevers should not be together. I'll try
+to get you moved."</p>
+
+<p>He laughed a sudden laugh,&mdash;if he
+had been a white man, I should have called
+it scornful; as he was a few shades
+darker than myself, I suppose it must be
+considered an insolent, or at least an unmannerly
+one.</p>
+
+<p>"It don't matter, Ma'am. I'd rather
+be up here with the fever than down with
+those niggers; and there a'n't no other
+place fer me."</p>
+
+<p>Poor fellow! that was true. No ward
+in all the hospital would take him in to
+lie side by side with the most miserable
+white wreck there. Like the bat in
+&AElig;sop's fable, he belonged to neither
+race; and the pride of one, the helplessness
+of the other, kept him hovering alone
+in the twilight a great sin has brought
+to overshadow the whole land.</p>
+
+<p>"You shall stay, then; <a name="Page_622" id="Page_622"></a>for I would far
+rather have you than my lazy Jack. But
+are you well and strong enough?"</p>
+
+<p>"I guess I'll do, Ma'am."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke with a passive sort of acquiescence,&mdash;as
+if it did not much matter,
+if he were not able, and no one would
+particularly rejoice, if he were.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I think you will. By what name
+shall I call you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Bob, Ma'am."</p>
+
+<p>Every woman has her pet whim; one
+of mine was to teach the men self-respect
+by treating them respectfully. Tom,
+Dick, and Harry would pass, when lads
+rejoiced in those familiar abbreviations;
+but to address men often old enough to
+be my father in that style did not suit
+my old-fashioned ideas of propriety. This
+"Bob" would never do; I should have
+found it as easy to call the chaplain "Gus"
+as my tragical-looking contraband by a
+title so strongly associated with the tail
+of a kite.</p>
+
+<p>"What is your other name?" I asked.
+"I like to call my attendants by their
+last names rather than by their first."</p>
+
+<p>"I've got no other, Ma'am; we have
+our masters' names, or do without. Mine's
+dead, and I won't have anything of his
+about me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll call you Robert, then, and
+you may fill this pitcher for me, if you
+will be so kind."</p>
+
+<p>He went; but, through all the tame
+obedience years of servitude had taught
+him, I could see that the proud spirit his
+father gave him was not yet subdued, for
+the look and gesture w<a name="Page_623" id="Page_623"></a>ith which he repudiated
+his master's name were a more
+effective declaration of independence
+than any Fourth-of-July orator could
+have prepared.</p>
+
+<p>We spent a curious week together.
+Robert seldom left his room, except upon
+my errands; and I was a prisoner all day,
+often all night, by the bedside of the
+Rebel. The fever burned itself rapidly
+away, for there seemed little vitality to
+feed it in the feeble frame of this old
+young man, whose life had been none of
+the most righteous, judging from the revelations
+made by his unconscious lips; since
+more than once Robert authoritatively
+silenced him, when my gentler hushings
+were of no avail, and blasphemous wanderings
+or ribald camp-songs made my
+cheeks burn and Robert's face assume an
+aspect of disgust. The captain was a
+gentleman in the world's eye, but the
+contraband was the gentleman in mine;&mdash;I
+was a fanatic, and that accounts for
+such depravity of taste, I hope. I never
+asked Robert of himself, feeling that
+somewhere there was a spot still too sore
+to bear the lightest touch; but, from his
+language, manner, and intelligence, I inferred
+that his color had procured for him
+the few advantages within the reach of a
+quick-witted, kindly treated slave. Silent,
+grave, and thoughtful, but most serviceable,
+was my contraband; glad of the
+books I brought him, faithful in the performance
+of the duties I assigned to him,
+grateful for the friendliness I could not
+but feel and show toward him. Often I
+longed to ask what purpose was so visibly
+altering his aspect with such daily deepening
+gloom. But I never dared, and no
+one else had either time or desire to pry
+into the past of this specimen of one
+branch of the chivalrous "F.F.Vs."</p>
+
+<p>On the seventh night, Dr. Franck suggested
+that it would be well for some one,
+besides the general watchman of the ward,
+to be with the captain, as it might be
+his last. Although the greater part of
+the two preceding nights had been spent
+there, of course I offered to remain,&mdash;for
+there is a strange fascination in these
+scenes, which renders one careless of
+fatigue and unconscious of fear until the
+crisis is passed.</p>
+
+<p>"Give him water as long as he can
+drink, and if he drops into a natural
+sleep, it may save him. I'll look in at
+midnight, when some change will probably
+take place. Nothing but sleep or
+a miracle will keep him now. Good
+night."</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_624" id="Page_624"></a>Away went the Doctor; and, devouring
+a whole mouthful of gapes, I lowered
+the lamp, wet the captain's head, and sat
+down on a hard stool to begin my watch.
+The captain lay with his hot, haggard face
+turned toward me, filling the air with his
+poisonous breath, and feebly muttering,
+with lips and tongue so parched that the
+sanest speech would have been difficult
+to understand. Robert was stretched on
+his bed in the inner room, the door of
+which stood ajar, that a fresh draught
+from his open window might carry the
+fever-fumes away through mine. I could
+just see a long, dark figure, with the lighter
+outline of a face, and, having little else
+to do just then, I fell to thinking of this
+curious contraband, who evidently prized
+his freedom highly, yet seemed in no
+haste to enjoy it. Doctor Franck had
+offered to send him on to safer quarters,
+but he had said, "No, thank yer, Sir, not
+yet," and then had gone away to fall into
+one of those black moods of his, which began
+to disturb me, because I had no power
+to lighten them. As I sat listening to
+the clocks from the steeples all about us,
+I amused myself with planning Robert's
+future, as I often did my own, and had
+dealt out to him a generous hand of
+trumps wherewith to play this game of
+life which hitherto had gone so cruelly
+against him, when a harsh, choked voice
+called,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Lucy!"</p>
+
+<p>It was the captain, and some new terror
+seemed to have gifted him with momentary
+strength.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, here's Lucy," I answered, hoping
+that by following the fancy I might
+quiet him,&mdash;for his face was damp with
+the clammy moisture, and his frame shaken
+with the nervous tremor that so often
+precedes death. His dull eye fixed upon
+me, dilating with a bewildered look of
+incredulity and wrath, till he broke out
+fiercely,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"That's a lie! she's dead,&mdash;and so's
+Bob, damn him!"</p>
+
+<p>Finding speech a failure, I began to
+sing the quiet tune that had often soothed
+delirium like this; but hardly had the
+line,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"See gentle patience smile on pain,"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>passed my lips, when he clutched me by
+the wrist, w<a name="Page_625" id="Page_625"></a>hispering like one in mortal
+fear,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Hush! she used to sing that way to
+Bob, but she never would to me. I
+swore I'd whip the Devil out of her, and
+I did; but you know before she cut her
+throat she said she'd haunt me, and
+there she is!"</p>
+
+<p>He pointed behind me with an aspect
+of such pale dismay, that I involuntarily
+glanced over my shoulder and started as
+if I had seen a veritable ghost; for, peering
+from the gloom of that inner room, I
+saw a shadowy face, with dark hair all
+about it, and a glimpse of scarlet at the
+throat. An instant showed me that it
+was only Robert leaning from his bed's-foot,
+wrapped in a gray army-blanket,
+with his red shirt just visible above it,
+and his long hair disordered by sleep.
+But what a strange expression was on
+his face! The unmarred side was toward
+me, fixed and motionless as when
+I first observed it,&mdash;less absorbed now,
+but more intent. His eye glittered, his
+lips were apart like one who listened
+with every sense, and his whole aspect
+reminded me of a hound to which some
+wind had brought the scent of unsuspected
+prey.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know him, Robert? Does
+he mean you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Lord, no, Ma'am; they all own half a
+dozen Bobs: but hearin' my name woke
+me; that's all."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke quite naturally, and lay
+down again, while I returned to my
+charge, thinking that this paroxysm was
+probably his last. But by another hour
+I perceived a hopeful change, for the
+tremor had subsided, the cold dew was
+gone, his breathing was more regular, and
+Sleep, the healer, had descended to save
+or take him gently away. Doctor Franck
+looked in at midnight, bade me keep all
+cool and quiet, and not fail to administer
+a certain draught as soon as the captain
+woke. Very much relieved, I laid my
+head on my arms, uncomfortably folded
+on the little table, and fancied I was
+about to perform one of the feats which
+practice renders possible,&mdash;"sleeping
+with one eye open," as we say: a half-and-half
+doze, for all senses sleep but
+that of hearing; the faintest murmur,
+sigh, or motion will break it, and give
+one back one's wits much brightened by
+the brief permission to "stand at ease."
+On this night, the experiment was a failure,
+for previous vigils, confinement, a<a name="Page_626" id="Page_626"></a>nd
+much care had rendered naps a dangerous
+indulgence. Having roused half a
+dozen times in an hour to find all quiet,
+I dropped my heavy head on my arms,
+and, drowsily resolving to look up again
+in fifteen minutes, fell fast asleep.</p>
+
+<p>The striking of a deep-voiced clock
+woke me with a start. "That is one,"
+thought I, but, to my dismay, two more
+strokes followed; and in remorseful haste
+I sprang up to see what harm my long
+oblivion had done. A strong hand put
+me back into my seat, and held me there.
+It was Robert. The instant my eye met
+his my heart began to beat, and all along
+my nerves tingled that electric flash which
+foretells a danger that we cannot see.
+He was very pale, his mouth grim, and
+both eyes full of sombre fire,&mdash;for even
+the wounded one was open now, all the
+more sinister for the deep scar above and
+below. But his touch was steady, his
+voice quiet, as he said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Sit still, Ma'am; I won't hurt yer, nor
+even scare yer, if I can help it, but yer
+waked too soon."</p>
+
+<p>"Let me go, Robert,&mdash;the, captain is
+stirring,&mdash;I must give him something."</p>
+
+<p>"No, Ma'am, yer can't stir an inch.
+Look here!"</p>
+
+<p>Holding me with one hand, with the
+other he took up the glass in which I had
+left the draught, and showed me it was
+empty.</p>
+
+<p>"Has he taken it?" I asked, more and
+more bewildered.</p>
+
+<p>"I flung it out o' winder, Ma'am; he'll
+have to do without."</p>
+
+<p>"But why, Robert? why did you do
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I hate him!"</p>
+
+<p>Impossible to doubt the truth of that;
+his whole face showed it, as he spoke
+through his set teeth, and launched a
+fiery glance at the unconscious captain.
+I could only hold my breath and stare
+blankly at him, wondering what mad act
+was coming next. I suppose I shook and
+turned white, as women have a foolish
+habit of doing when sudden danger daunts
+them; for Robert released my arm, sat
+down upon the bedside just in front of
+me, and said, with the ominous quietude
+that made me cold to see and hear,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Don't yer be frightened, Ma'am:
+don't try to run away, fer the door's
+locked an' the key in my pocket; don't
+yer cry out, fer yer'd have to scream a
+long while, with my hand on yer mouth,
+before yer was heard. Be still, an' I'l<a name="Page_627" id="Page_627"></a>l
+tell yer what I'm goin' to do."</p>
+
+<p>"Lord help us! he has taken the
+fever in some sudden, violent way, and
+is out of his head. I must humor him till
+some one comes"; in pursuance of which
+swift determination, I tried to say, quite
+composedly,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I will be still and hear you; but open
+the window. Why did you shut it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry I can't do it, Ma'am; but
+yer'd jump out, or call, if I did, an' I'm
+not ready yet. I shut it to make yer
+sleep, an' heat would do it quicker 'n
+anything else I could do."</p>
+
+<p>The captain moved, and feebly muttered,
+"Water!" Instinctively I rose,
+to give it to him, but the heavy hand
+came down upon my shoulder, and in the
+same decided tone Robert said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The water went with the physic; let
+him call."</p>
+
+<p>"Do let me go to him! he'll die without
+care!"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean he shall;&mdash;don't yer interfere,
+if yer please, Ma'am."</p>
+
+<p>In spite of his quiet tone and respectful
+manner, I saw murder in his eyes, and
+turned faint with fear; yet the fear excited
+me, and, hardly knowing what I
+did, I seized the hands that had seized
+me, crying,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, you shall not kill him! it is
+base to hurt a helpless man. Why do
+you hate him? He is not your master?"</p>
+
+<p>"He's my brother."</p>
+
+<p>I felt that answer from head to foot,
+and seemed to fathom what was coming,
+with a prescience vague, but unmistakable.
+One appeal was left to me, and I
+made it.</p>
+
+<p>"Robert, tell me what it means? Do
+not commit a crime and make me accessory
+to it. There is a better way of righting
+wrong than by violence;&mdash;let me
+help you find it."</p>
+
+<p>My voice trembled as I spoke, and
+I heard the frightened flutter of my
+heart; so did he, and if any little act of
+mine had ever won affection or respect
+from him, the memory of it served me
+then. He looked down, and seemed to
+put some question to himself; whatever
+it was, the answer was in my favor, for
+<a name="Page_628" id="Page_628"></a>when his eyes rose again, they were
+gloomy, but not desperate.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>will</i> tell you, Ma'am; but mind,
+this makes no difference; the boy is mine.
+I'll give the Lord a chance to take him
+fust; if He don't, I shall."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no! remember, he is your brother."</p>
+
+<p>An unwise speech; I felt it as it passed
+my lips, for a black frown gathered on
+Robert's face, and his strong hands closed
+with an ugly sort of grip. But he did
+not touch the poor soul gasping there behind
+him, and seemed content to let the
+slow suffocation of that stifling room end
+his frail life.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not like to forget that, Ma'am,
+when I've been thinkin' of it all this
+week. I knew him when they fetched
+him in, an' would 'a' done it long 'fore
+this, but I wanted to ask where Lucy
+was; he knows,&mdash;he told to-night&mdash;an'
+now he's done for."</p>
+
+<p>"Who is Lucy?" I asked hurriedly,
+intent on keeping his mind busy with any
+thought but murder.</p>
+
+<p>With one of the swift transitions of a
+mixed temperament like this, at my question
+Robert's deep eyes filled, the clenched
+hands were spread before his face, and
+all I heard were the broken words,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My wife,&mdash;he took her"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>In that instant every thought of fear
+was swallowed up in burning indignation
+for the wrong, and a perfect passion of
+pity for the desperate man so tempted to
+avenge an injury for which there seemed
+no redress but this. He was no longer
+slave or contraband, no drop of black
+blood marred him in my sight, but an infinite
+compassion yearned to save, to help,
+to comfort him. Words seemed so powerless
+I offered none, only put my hand
+on his poor head, wounded, homeless,
+bowed down with grief for which I had
+no cure, and softly smoothed the long
+neglected hair, pitifully wondering the
+while where was the wife who must have
+loved this tender-hearted man so well.</p>
+
+<p>The captain moaned again, and faintly
+whispered, "Air!" but I never stirred.
+God forgive me! just then I hated him
+as only a woman thinking of a sister
+woman's wrong could hate. Robert looked
+up; his eyes were dry again, his mouth
+grim. I saw that, said, "Tell me more,"
+and he did,&mdash;for sympathy is a gift the
+poorest may give, the proudest stoop to
+receive.</p>
+
+<p>"Yer see, Ma'am, his father,&mdash;I might
+say ours, if I warn't ashamed of both of
+'em,&mdash;his father died two years ago, an'
+left us al<a name="Page_629" id="Page_629"></a>l to Marster Ned,&mdash;that's him
+here, eighteen then. He always hated
+me, I looked so like old Marster: he don't,&mdash;only
+the light skin an' hair. Old Marster
+was kind to all of us, me 'specially,
+an' bought Lucy off the next plantation
+down there in South Car'lina, when he
+found I liked her. I married her, all I
+could, Ma'am; it warn't much, but we
+was true to one another till Marster Ned
+come home a year after an' made hell
+fur both of us. He sent my old mother to
+be used up in his rice-swamp in Georgy;
+he found me with my pretty Lucy, an'
+though young Miss cried, an' I prayed to
+him on my knees, an' Lucy run away,
+he wouldn't have no mercy; he brought
+her back, an'&mdash;took her, Ma'am."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! what did you do?" I cried, hot
+with helpless pain and passion.</p>
+
+<p>How the man's outraged heart sent the
+blood flaming up into his face and deepened
+the tones of his impetuous voice, as
+he stretched his arm across the bed, saying,
+with a terribly expressive gesture,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I half murdered him, an' to-night
+I'll finish."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, yes,&mdash;but go on now; what
+came next?"</p>
+
+<p>He gave me a look that showed no
+white man could have felt a deeper degradation
+in remembering and confining
+these last acts of brotherly oppression.</p>
+
+<p>"They whipped me till I couldn't
+stand, an' then they sold me further
+South. Yer thought I was a white man
+once;&mdash;look here!"</p>
+
+<p>With a sudden wrench he tore the
+shirt from neck to waist, and on his strong
+brown shoulders showed me furrows deeply
+ploughed, wounds which, though healed,
+were ghastlier to me than any in that
+house. I could not speak to him, and,
+with the pathetic dignity a great grief
+lends the humblest sufferer, he ended his
+brief tragedy by simply saying,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"That's all, Ma'am. I've never seen
+her since, an' now I never shall in this
+world,&mdash;maybe not in t' other."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Robert, why think her dead?
+The captain was wandering when he said
+those sad things; perhaps he will retract
+them when he is sane. Don't despair;
+don't give up yet."</p>
+<p><a name="Page_630" id="Page_630"></a></p>
+<p>"No, Ma'am, I guess he's right; she
+was too proud to bear that long. It's
+like her to kill herself. I told her to, if
+there was no other way; an' she always
+minded me, Lucy did. My poor girl!
+Oh, it warn't right! No, by God, it
+warn't!"</p>
+
+<p>As the memory of this bitter wrong,
+this double bereavement, burned in his
+sore heart, the devil that lurks in every
+strong man's blood leaped up; he put
+his hand upon his brother's throat, and,
+watching the white face before him, muttered
+low between his teeth,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I'm lettin' him go too easy; there's
+no pain in this; we a'n't even yet. I
+wish he knew me. Marster Ned! it's
+Bob; where's Lucy?"</p>
+
+<p>From the captain's lips there came a
+long faint sigh, and nothing but a flutter
+of the eyelids showed that he still lived.
+A strange stillness filled the room as the
+elder brother held the younger's life suspended
+in his hand, while wavering between
+a dim hope and a deadly hate. In
+the whirl of thoughts that went on in my
+brain, only one was clear enough to act
+upon. I must prevent murder, if I could,&mdash;but
+how? What could I do up there
+alone, locked in with a dying man and a
+lunatic?&mdash;for any mind yielded utterly to
+any unrighteous impulse is mad while the
+impulse rules it. Strength I had not, nor
+much courage, neither time nor wit for
+stratagem, and chance only could bring
+me help before it was too late. But one
+weapon I possessed,&mdash;a tongue,&mdash;often
+a woman's best defence; and sympathy,
+stronger than fear, gave me power to
+use it. What I said Heaven only knows,
+but surely Heaven helped me; words
+burned on my lips, tears streamed from
+my eyes, and some good angel prompted
+me to use the one name that had power
+to arrest my hearer's hand and touch his
+heart. For at that moment I heartily believed
+that Lucy lived, and this earnest
+faith rousted in him a like belief.</p>
+
+<p>He listened with the lowering look of
+one in whom brute instinct was sovereign
+for the time,&mdash;a look that makes the noblest
+countenance base. He was but a
+man,&mdash;a poor, untaught, outcast, outraged
+man. Life had few joys for him; the
+world offered him no honors, no success,
+no home, no love. What future would
+this crime mar? and why should he deny
+himself that sweet, yet bitter morsel called
+revenge? How many white men,
+with all New England's freedom, culture,
+Christianity, would not have felt as he
+felt then? Should I have reproached<a name="Page_631" id="Page_631"></a>
+him for a human anguish, a human longing
+for redress, all now left him from the
+ruin of his few poor hopes? Who had
+taught him that self-control, self-sacrifice,
+are attributes that make men masters of
+the earth and lift them nearer heaven?
+Should I have urged the beauty of forgiveness,
+the duty of devout submission?
+He had no religion, for he was no saintly
+"Uncle Tom," and Slavery's black shadow
+seemed to darken all the world to him
+and shut out God. Should I have warned
+him of penalties, of judgments, and the
+potency of law? What did he know of
+justice, or the mercy that should temper
+that stern virtue, when every law, human
+and divine, had been broken on his hearthstone?
+Should I have tried to touch him
+by appeals to filial duty, to brotherly
+love? How had his appeals been answered?
+What memories had father and
+brother stored up in his heart to plead
+for either now? No,&mdash;all these influences,
+these associations, would have proved
+worse than useless, had I been calm enough
+to try them. I was not; but instinct,
+subtler than reason, showed me the one
+safe clue by which to lead this troubled
+soul from the labyrinth in which it groped
+and nearly fell. When I paused, breathless,
+Robert turned to me, asking, as if
+human assurances could strengthen his
+faith in Divine Omnipotence,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Do you believe, if I let Marster Ned
+live, the Lord will give me back my Lucy?"</p>
+
+<p>"As surely as there is a Lord, you will
+find her here or in the beautiful hereafter,
+where there is no black or white, no
+master and no slave."</p>
+
+<p>He took his hand from his brother's
+throat, lifted his eyes from my face to the
+wintry sky beyond, as if searching for that
+blessed country, happier even than the
+happy North. Alas, it was the darkest
+hour before the dawn!&mdash;there was no star
+above, no light below but the pale glimmer
+of the lamp that showed the brother
+who had made him desolate. Like a blind
+man who believes there is a sun, yet cannot
+see it, he shook his head, let his arms
+drop nervelessly upon his knees, and sat
+there dumbly asking that question which
+many a soul whose faith is firmer fixed
+than his has asked in hours less dark than
+this,&mdash;"Where is God?" I saw the tide
+had turned, and strenuously tried to keep
+this rudderless life-boat from slipping back
+into the whirlpool wherein it had been so
+nearly lost.</p>
+
+<p>"I have listened to you, Robert; now
+hear me, and heed what I sa<a name="Page_632" id="Page_632"></a>y, because
+my heart is full of pity for you, full of
+hope for your future, and a desire to help
+you now. I want you to go away from
+here, from the temptation of this place,
+and the sad thoughts that haunt it. You
+have conquered yourself once, and I honor
+you for it, because, the harder the battle,
+the more glorious the victory; but it is
+safer to put a greater distance between
+you and this man. I will write you letters,
+give you money, and send you to
+good old Massachusetts to begin your new
+life a freeman,&mdash;yes, and a happy man;
+for when the captain is himself again, I
+will learn where Lucy is, and move heaven
+and earth to find and give her back to
+you. Will you do this, Robert?"</p>
+
+<p>Slowly, very slowly, the answer came;
+for the purpose of a week, perhaps a year,
+was hard to relinquish in an hour.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Ma'am, I will."</p>
+
+<p>"Good! Now you are the man I thought
+you, and I'll work for you with all my
+heart. You need sleep, my poor fellow;
+go, and try to forget. The captain is
+still alive, and as yet you are spared that
+sin. No, don't look there; I'll care for
+him. Come, Robert, for Lucy's sake."</p>
+
+<p>Thank Heaven for the immortality of
+love! for when all other means of salvation
+failed, a spark of this vital fire softened
+the man's iron will until a woman's
+hand could bend it. He let me take from
+him the key, let me draw him gently away
+and lead him to the solitude which now
+was the most healing balm I could bestow.
+Once in his little room, he fell down on
+his bed and lay there as if spent with the
+sharpest conflict of his life. I slipped the
+bolt across his door, and unlocked my
+own, flung up the window, steadied myself
+with a breath of air, then rushed
+to Doctor Franck. He came; and till
+dawn we worked together, saving one
+brother's life, and taking earnest thought
+how best to secure the other's liberty.
+When the sun came up as blithely as if it
+shone only upon happy homes, the Doctor
+went to Robert. For an hour I heard
+the murmur of their voices; once I caught
+the sound of heavy sobs, and for a time
+a reverent hush, as if in the silence that
+good man were ministering to soul as well
+as sense. When he departed he took
+Robert with him, pausing to tell me he
+should get him off as soon as possible, but
+not before we met again.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing more was seen of them all
+day; another surgeon came to see the
+captain, and another attendant came to
+fill the empty place. I tried to rest, but
+could not, wi<a name="Page_633" id="Page_633"></a>th the thought of poor Lucy
+tugging at my heart, and was soon back
+at my post again, anxiously hoping that
+my contraband had not been too hastily
+spirited away. Just as night fell there
+came a tap, and opening, I saw Robert
+literally "clothed and in his right mind."
+The Doctor had replaced the ragged suit
+with tidy garments, and no trace of that
+tempestuous night remained but deeper
+lines upon the forehead and the docile
+look of a repentant child. He did not
+cross the threshold, did not offer me his
+hand,&mdash;only took off his cap, saying,
+with a traitorous falter in his voice,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"God bless you, Ma'am! I'm goin'."</p>
+
+<p>I put out both my hands, and held his
+fast.</p>
+
+<p>"Good bye, Robert! Keep up good
+heart, and when I come home to Massachusetts
+we'll meet in a happier place
+than this. Are you quite ready, quite
+comfortable for your journey?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Ma'am, yes; the Doctor's fixed
+everything; I'm goin' with a friend
+of his; my papers are all right, an' I'm
+as happy as I can be till I find"&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>He stopped there; then went on, with
+a glance into the room,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I'm glad I didn't do it, an' I thank
+yer, Ma'am, fer hinderin' me,&mdash;thank
+yer hearty; but I'm afraid I hate him
+jest the same."</p>
+
+<p>Of course he did; and so did I; for
+these faulty hearts of ours cannot turn
+perfect in a night, but need frost and fire,
+wind and rain, to ripen and make them
+ready for the great harvest-home. Wishing
+to divert his mind, I put my poor
+mite into his hand, and, remembering
+the magic of a certain little book, I gave
+him mine, on whose dark cover whitely
+shone the Virgin Mother and the Child,
+the grand history of whose life the book
+contained. The money went into Robert's
+pocket with a grateful murmur, the
+book into his bosom with a long look and
+a tremulous&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I never saw <i>my</i> baby, Ma'am."</p>
+
+<p>I broke down then; and though my
+eyes were too dim to see, I felt the touch
+of lips upon my hands, heard the sound
+of departing feet, and knew my contraband
+was gone.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Page_634" id="Page_634"></a>When one feels an intense dislike, the
+less one says about the subject of it the
+better; therefore I shall merely record
+that the captain lived,&mdash;in time was
+exchanged; and that, whoever the other
+party was, I am convinced the Government
+got the best of the bargain. But
+long before this occurred, I had fulfilled
+my promise to Robert; for as soon as
+my patient recovered strength of memory
+enough to make his answer trustworthy,
+I asked, without any circumlocution,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Fairfax, where is Lucy?"</p>
+
+<p>And too feeble to be angry, surprised,
+or insincere, he straightway answered,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Dead, Miss Dane."</p>
+
+<p>"And she killed herself, when you sold
+Bob?"</p>
+
+<p>"How the Devil did you know that?"
+he muttered, with an expression half-remorseful,
+half-amazed; but I was satisfied,
+and said no more.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, this went to Robert, waiting
+far away there in a lonely home,&mdash;waiting,
+working, hoping for his Lucy. It
+almost broke my heart to do it; but delay
+was weak, deceit was wicked; so I
+sent the heavy tidings, and very soon the
+answer came,&mdash;only three lines; but I
+felt that the sustaining power of the man's
+life was gone.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought I'd never see her any
+more; I'm glad to know she's out of
+trouble. I thank yer, Ma'am; an' if
+they let us, I'll fight fer yer till I'm
+killed, which I hope will be 'fore long."</p>
+
+<p>Six months later he had his wish, and
+kept his word.</p>
+
+<p>Every one knows the story of the attack
+on Fort Wagner; but we should
+not tire yet of recalling how our Fifty-Fourth,
+spent with three sleepless nights,
+a day's fast, and a march under the
+July sun, stormed the fort as night fell,
+facing death in many shapes, following
+their brave leaders through a fiery rain
+of shot and shell, fighting valiantly for
+"God and Governor Andrew,"&mdash;how
+the regiment that went into action seven
+hundred strong came out having had
+nearly half its number captured, killed,
+or wounded, leaving their young commander
+to be buried, like a chief of earlier
+times, with his body-guard around
+him, faithful to the death. Surely, the
+insult turns to honor, and the wide grave
+<a name="Page_635" id="Page_635"></a>needs no monument but the heroism that
+consecrates it in our sight; surely, the
+hearts that held him nearest see through
+their tears a noble victory in the seeming
+sad defeat; and surely, God's benediction
+was bestowed, when this loyal
+soul answered, as Death called the roll,
+"Lord, here am I, with the brothers
+Thou hast given me!"</p>
+
+<p>The future must show how well that
+fight was fought; for though Fort Wagner
+still defies us, public prejudice is
+down; and through the cannon-smoke
+of that black night the manhood of the
+colored race shines before many eyes that
+would not see, rings in many ears that
+would not hear, wins many hearts that
+would not hitherto believe.</p>
+
+<p>When the news came that we were
+needed, there was none so glad as I to
+leave teaching contrabands, the new work
+I had taken up, and go to nurse "our
+boys," as my dusky flock so proudly called
+the wounded of the Fifty-Fourth.
+Feeling more satisfaction, as I assumed
+my big apron and turned up my cuffs,
+than if dressing for the President's levee,
+I fell to work on board the hospital-ship
+in Hilton-Head harbor. The scene was
+most familiar, and yet strange; for only
+dark faces looked up at me from the pallets
+so thickly laid along the floor, and I
+missed the sharp accent of my Yankee
+boys in the slower, softer voices calling
+cheerily to one another, or answering my
+questions with a stout, "We'll never give
+it up, Ma'am, till the last Reb's dead,"
+or, "If our people's free, we can afford
+to die."</p>
+
+<p>Passing from bed to bed, intent on
+making one pair of hands do the work
+of three, at least, I gradually washed, fed,
+and bandaged my way down the long
+line of sable heroes, and coming to the
+very last, found that he was my contraband.
+So old, so worn, so deathly weak
+and wan, I never should have known
+him but for the deep scar on his cheek.
+That side lay uppermost, and caught my
+eye at once; but even then I doubted,
+such an awful change had come upon him,
+when, turning to the ticket just above his
+head, I saw the name, "Robert Dane."
+That both assured and touched me, for,
+remembering that he had no name, I
+knew that he had taken mine. I longed
+for him to speak to me, to tell how he
+had fared since I lost sight of him, and
+<a name="Page_636" id="Page_636"></a>let me perform some little service for him
+in return for many he had done for me;
+but he seemed asleep; and as I stood reliving
+that strange night again, a bright
+lad, who lay next him softly waving an
+old fan across both beds, looked up and
+said,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I guess you know him, Ma'am?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are right. Do you?"</p>
+
+<p>"As much as any one was able to,
+Ma'am."</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you say 'was,' as if the
+man were dead and gone?"</p>
+
+<p>"I s'pose because I know he'll have
+to go. He's got a bad jab in the breast,
+an' is bleedin' inside, the Doctor says.
+He don't suffer any, only gets weaker
+'n' weaker every minute. I've been
+fannin' him this long while, an' he's
+talked a little; but he don't know me
+now, so he's most gone, I guess."</p>
+
+<p>There was so much sorrow and affection
+in the boy's face, that I remembered
+something, and asked, with redoubled interest,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Are you the one that brought him
+off? I was told about a boy who nearly
+lost his life in saving that of his mate."</p>
+
+<p>I dare say the young fellow blushed,
+as any modest lad might have done; I
+could not see it, but I heard the chuckle
+of satisfaction that escaped him, as
+he glanced from his shattered arm and
+bandaged side to the pale figure opposite.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord, Ma'am, that's nothin'; we
+boys always stan' by one another, an'
+I warn't goin' to leave him to be tormented
+any more by them cussed Rebs.
+He's been a slave once, though he don't
+look half so much like it as me, an' I
+was born in Boston."</p>
+
+<p>He did not; for the speaker was as
+black as the ace of spades,&mdash;being a sturdy
+specimen, the knave of clubs would
+perhaps be a fitter representative,&mdash;but
+the dark freeman looked at the white
+slave with the pitiful, yet puzzled expression
+I have so often seen on the faces of
+our wisest men, when this tangled question
+of Slavery presents itself, asking to
+be cut or patiently undone.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me what you know of this man;
+for, even if he were awake, he is too weak
+to talk."</p><p><a name="Page_637" id="Page_637"></a></p>
+
+<p>"I never saw him till I joined the regiment,
+an' no one 'peared to have got
+much out of him. He was a shut-up sort
+of feller, an' didn't seem to care for
+anything but gettin' at the Rebs. Some
+say he was the fust man of us that enlisted;
+I know he fretted till we were off,
+an' when we pitched into old Wagner,
+he fought like the Devil."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you with him when he was
+wounded? How was it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Ma'am. There was somethin'
+queer about it; for he 'peared to know
+the chap that killed him, an' the chap
+knew him. I don't dare to ask, but I
+rather guess one owned the other some
+time,&mdash;for, when they clinched, the chap
+sung out, 'Bob!' an' Dane, 'Marster
+Ned!'&mdash;then they went at it."</p>
+
+<p>I sat down suddenly, for the old anger
+and compassion struggled in my heart,
+and I both longed and feared to hear
+what was to follow.</p>
+
+<p>"You see, when the Colonel&mdash;Lord
+keep an' send him back to us!&mdash;it a'n't
+certain yet, you know, Ma'am, though it's
+two days ago we lost him&mdash;well, when
+the Colonel shouted, 'Rush on, boys,
+rush on!' Dane tore away as if he was
+goin' to take the fort alone; I was next
+him, an' kept close as we went through
+the ditch an' up the wall. Hi! warn't
+that a rusher!" and the boy flung up his
+well arm with a whoop, as if the mere
+memory of that stirring moment came
+over him in a gust of irrepressible excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"Were you afraid?" I said,&mdash;asking
+the question women often put, and receiving
+the answer they seldom fail to
+get.</p>
+
+<p>"No, Ma'am!"&mdash;emphasis on the
+"Ma'am,"&mdash;"I never thought of anything
+but the damn' Rebs, that scalp,
+slash, an' cut our ears off, when they git
+us. I was bound to let daylight into one
+of 'em at least, an' I did. Hope he liked it!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is evident that you did, and I
+don't blame you in the least. Now go on
+about Robert, for I should be at work."</p>
+
+<p>"He was one of the fust up; I was
+just behind, an' though the whole thing
+happened in a minute, I remember how
+it was, for all I was yellin' an' knockin'
+round like mad. Just where we were,
+some sort of an officer was wavin' his
+sword an' cheerin' on his men; Dane
+saw him by a big flash that come by;<a name="Page_638" id="Page_638"></a>
+he flung away his gun, give a leap, an'
+went at that feller as if he was Jeff, Beauregard,
+an' Lee, all in one. I scrabbled
+after as quick as I could, but was only up
+in time to see him git the sword straight
+through him an' drop into the ditch.
+You needn't ask what I did next, Ma'am,
+for I don't quite know myself; all I'm
+clear about is, that I managed somehow
+to pitch that Reb into the fort as dead as
+Moses, git hold of Dane, an' bring him
+off. Poor old feller! we said we went
+in to live or die; he said he went in to
+die, an' he's done it."</p>
+
+<p>I had been intently watching the excited
+speaker; but as he regretfully added
+those last words I turned again, and
+Robert's eyes met mine,&mdash;those melancholy
+eyes, so full of an intelligence that
+proved he had heard, remembered, and
+reflected with that preternatural power
+which often outlives all other faculties.
+He knew me, yet gave no greeting; was
+glad to see a woman's face, yet had no
+smile wherewith to welcome it; felt that
+he was dying, yet uttered no farewell.
+He was too far across the river to return
+or linger now; departing thought,
+strength, breath, were spent in one grateful
+look, one murmur of submission to the
+last pang he could ever feel. His lips
+moved, and, bending to them, a whisper
+chilled my cheek, as it shaped the broken
+words,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I would have done it,&mdash;but it's better
+so,&mdash;I'm satisfied."</p>
+
+<p>Ah! well he might be,&mdash;for, as he turned
+his face from the shadow of the life
+that was, the sunshine of the life to be
+touched it with a beautiful content, and
+in the drawing of a breath my contraband
+found wife and home, eternal liberty and God.</p>
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_SAM_ADAMS_REGIMENTS_IN_THE_TOWN_OF_BOSTON_CONCLUDED" id="THE_SAM_ADAMS_REGIMENTS_IN_THE_TOWN_OF_BOSTON_CONCLUDED"></a>THE SAM ADAMS REGIMENTS IN THE TOWN OF BOSTON.&mdash;CONCLUDED.</h2>
+
+<p>THE REMOVAL.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
+
+
+<p>"I have been in constant panic,"
+wrote Franklin in London to Dr. Cooper
+in Boston, "since I heard of troops
+assembling in Boston, lest the madness
+of mobs, or the interference of soldiers,
+or both, when too near each other, might
+occasion some mischief difficult to be prevented
+or repaired, and which might
+spread far and wide."</p>
+
+<p>The people wore indignant at the introduction
+of the troops, and the cro<a name="Page_639" id="Page_639"></a>wn
+officials were arrogant and goading; but
+so wise and forbearing were the popular
+leaders, that, for ten months, from October,
+1768, to August, 1769, no detriment
+came to their cause from the madness
+of mobs or the insolence of soldiers.
+The Loyalists, in this public order, saw
+the wholesome terror with which military
+force had imbued the community; they
+said this "had prevented, if it had not
+put a final period to, its most pestilential
+town-meetings": but they termed this
+quiet "only a truce procured from the
+dread of the bayonet"; and they held
+that nothing would reach and suppress
+the rising spirit of independence but a
+radical stroke at the democratic element
+in the local Constitution. They relied on
+physical force to carry out such a policy,
+and hence they looked on the demand of
+the people for a withdrawal of the troops
+as equivalent to a demand for the abandonment
+of their policy and the abdication
+of the Government. The partial
+removal already made caused great chagrin.
+The report, at first, was hardly
+credited in British political circles, and,
+when confirmed, was construed into inability,
+inconsistency, and concession by
+the Administration, and a sign that things
+were growing worse in America.</p>
+
+<p>General Gage had withdrawn the Sixty-Fourth
+and Sixty-Fifth Regiments, the
+detachment of the Fifty-Ninth, and the
+company of artillery, which left the
+Fourteenth Regiment under Lieutenant-Colonel
+Dalrymple and the Twenty-Ninth
+under Lieutenant-Colonel Carr,&mdash;the
+two regiments which Lord North
+termed "the Sam Adams Regiments,"&mdash;not
+enough, if the Ministers intended
+to govern by military force, and too
+many, if they did not intend this. They
+continued under General Mackay until
+he left for England, when the command
+devolved on Lieutenant-Colonel Dalrymple,
+the senior officer, under whom they
+had landed, who was exacting, severe in
+his judgment on the Patriots, and impatient
+of professional service. Commodore
+Hood and his family also sailed for Halifax.
+Both Mackay and Hood, aiming at
+reconciliation, and liberal in non-essentials,
+easily won the general good-will.
+The disuse of the press-gang, which even
+"Junius" was now justifying, and which
+England had not learned to abominate,
+but which rowelled the differently trained
+mind of the Colonies, was regarded as
+a great concession to personal liberty;
+and the discontinuance of parades and
+horse-racing on Sundays was accepted as
+a concession to a religious sentiment that
+was very general, and which, so far from
+deser<a name="Page_640" id="Page_640"></a>ving the sneer of being hypocritical,
+indicated the wide growth of respect
+for things noble and divine. These officers
+seemed, at least, to steer clear of
+political matters, to keep to the line of
+their profession, and to make the best
+of an irksome duty. They lived on good
+terms with the popular leaders, were invited
+to visit the common-schools with
+the Selectmen, appeared at the public
+festivals, and, on their departure, were
+handsomely complimented in both the
+Whig and Tory journals for the manner
+in which they had discharged their duties.
+They were, however, no mere lookers-on,
+and their official representations and
+conclusions were no more far-reaching
+than those of their superiors. Hood, from
+Halifax, wrote in harsh terms of Boston,
+although he put on record severe and true
+things of that chronic local infliction, the
+Commissioners of the Customs. His official
+letters, printed this year, were open to
+sharp criticism, which they received in the
+journals. Not, however, until the publication
+of the Cavendish Debates was it
+known that General Mackay, who was
+regarded as uncommonly liberal, received
+every personal attention, and was the
+most complimented by the press, stood
+up in the House of Commons, soon after
+his arrival in England, and maligned
+Boston in severe terms. He charged the
+town with being without government;
+said it was tyrannized over by a set
+of men hardly respectable, in point of
+fortune; and even had the hardihood to
+say that some of the troops he commanded
+there had been sold for slaves!</p>
+
+<p>Boston, now a subject of speculation in
+Continental courts, as well as of abuse in
+Parliament, was destined to undergo a
+still severer trial for the succeeding seven
+months, from August, 1769, to March,
+1770, during the continuance of the two
+remaining regiments. This was an eventful
+period, characterized by violent agitation
+in the Colonies to promote a repeal of
+the revenue acts and an abandonment of
+the intermeddling and aggressive policy of
+the Ministry; and it was marked by uncommon
+political activity in Boston. The
+popular leaders, as though no British
+troops were lookers-on, and in spite, too,
+of the protests and commands of the
+crown officials, steadily guided the deliberations
+of the people in Faneuil Hall;
+and at times the disorderly also, in violations
+of law and personal liberty that
+can never be justified, intrepidly carried
+out their projects. The events of this
+period tended powerfully to inflame the
+public mind. The appeals of the Patriots,
+through the press, show their appreciation
+of the danger of an outbreak,
+and yet <a name="Page_641" id="Page_641"></a>their determination to meet their
+whole duty. They endeavored to restrain
+the rash among the Sons of Liberty
+within the safe precincts of the law;
+yet, repelling all thought of submission to
+arbitrary power, they strove to lift up the
+general mind to the high plane of action
+which a true patriotism demanded, and
+prepare it, if need were, for the majestic
+work of revolution.</p>
+
+<p>The executive, during an interval thus
+exciting and important, was in a transition-state,
+from Francis Bernard to Thomas
+Hutchinson. It was semi-officially announced
+in the journals, when the Governor
+sailed for England, that the Administration
+had no intention of superseding
+his commission; and it was intimated
+that the Lieutenant-Governor
+would administer the functions of the
+office until the return of the chief magistrate
+to his post. These officials, for nine
+years, had been warm personal friends
+and intimate political associates. Indeed,
+so close had been their private and public
+relations, that Bernard ascribed the
+origin of his administrative difficulties to
+his adoption of the quarrels of Hutchinson.
+For a long time, the Governor had
+been seeking and expecting something
+better in the political line than his present
+office, as a substantial recognition of
+his zeal; and he had urged, and was now
+urging, the selection of the Lieutenant-Governor
+for his successor in office. He
+represented that Hutchinson was well
+versed in the local affairs,&mdash;knew the
+motives of the Governor,&mdash;warmly approved
+the policy of the Ministry,&mdash;had
+been, on critical occasions, a trusted confidential
+adviser,&mdash;and, in fact, had become
+so thoroughly identified with public
+affairs, that, of the two officials, he
+(Hutchinson) was the most hated by the
+faction, which the Governor seemed to
+consider a special recommendation. He
+favored this appointment as a measure
+that would be equivalent to an indorsement
+of his own administration, and therefore
+a compliment to himself and a blow
+at the faction. "It would be," he said,
+"a peculiarly happy stroke; for while it
+would discourage the Sons of Liberty, it
+would afford another great instance of rewarding
+faithful servants to the Crown."</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Hutchinson, descended from
+one of the most respected families of New
+England, and the son of an honored merchant
+of Boston, was now fifty-seven
+years of age. He was a pupil at the Old<a name="Page_642" id="Page_642"></a>
+North Grammar School, and was graduated
+at Harvard College, when he entered
+upon a mercantile life. He was not
+successful as a merchant. Thus early,
+however, he evinced the untiring industry
+that marked his whole career. He
+had a decided political turn, and, with
+uncommon natural talent, had the capacity
+and the ambition for public life. An
+irreproachable private character, pleasing
+manners, common-sense views of
+things, and politics rather adroit than
+high-toned, secured him a run of popular
+favor and executive confidence so long
+that he had now (1769) been thirty-three
+years uninterruptedly engaged in
+public affairs; and he confessed to his
+friends that this concern in politics had
+created a hankering for them which a
+return to business-pursuits could not overcome.
+He had reason to be gratified at
+the tokens of public approbation. He
+was so faithful to the municipal interests
+as a Selectman that the town intrusted
+him with an important mission to England,
+which he satisfactorily executed; his
+wide commercial knowledge, familiarity
+with constitutional law and history, decided
+ability in debate, and reputed disinterestedness,
+gave him large influence
+as a Representative in the General Court;
+he showed as Councillor an ever ready
+zeal for the prerogative, and thus won
+the most confidential relations with so obsequious
+a courtier as Bernard; as Judge
+of Probate, he was attentive, kind to the
+widow, accurate, and won general commendation;
+and as a member of the Superior
+Court, he administered the law,
+in the main, satisfactorily. He had been
+Chief Justice for nine years, and for eleven
+years the Lieutenant-Governor. He
+had also prepared two volumes of his History,
+which, though rough in narrative, is
+a valuable authority, and his volume of
+"Collections" was now announced. His
+fame at the beginning of the Revolutionary
+controversy was at its zenith; for,
+according to John Adams, "he had been<a name="Page_643" id="Page_643"></a>
+admired, revered, rewarded, and almost
+adored; and the idea was common that he
+was the greatest and best man in America."
+He was now, and had been for years,
+the master-spirit of the Loyalist party. It
+Is an anomaly that he should have attained
+to this position. He had had practical
+experience, as a merchant, of the intolerable
+injustice of the old mercantile system,
+and yet he sided with its friends;
+he had dealt, as a politician, to a greater
+degree than most men, with the rights
+and privileges which the people prized,
+conceded that they had made no ill use
+of them, and yet urged that they ought
+to be abridged; as a patriot, when he
+loved his native land wisely, he remonstrated
+against the imposition of the
+Stamp Tax, and yet he grew into one of
+the sturdiest of the defenders of the supremacy
+of Parliament in all cases whatsoever.
+He exhibited the usual characteristics
+of public men who from unworthy
+considerations change their principles
+and desert their party. No man
+urged a more arbitrary course; no man
+passed more discreditable judgments on
+his patriot contemporaries; and if in that
+way he won the smiles of the court which
+he was swift to serve, he earned the hatred
+of the land which he professed to
+love. The more his political career is
+studied, the greater will be the wonder
+that one who was reared on republican
+soil, and had antecedents so honorable,
+should have become so complete an exponent
+of arbitrary power.</p>
+
+<p>Hutchinson was not so blinded by
+party-spirit or love of money or of place
+as not to see the living realities of his
+time; for he wrote that a thirst for liberty
+seemed to be the ruling passion, not
+only of America, but of the age, and
+that a mighty empire was rising on this
+continent, the progress of which would
+be a theme for speculative and ingenious
+minds in distant ages. It was the
+vision of the cold and clear intellect,
+distrusting the march of events and the
+capacity and intelligence of the people,
+he had no heart to admire, he had not
+even the justice to recognize, the greatness
+that was making an immortal record,&mdash;the
+sublime faith, the divine enthusiasm,
+the dauntless resolve, the priceless
+co<a name="Page_644" id="Page_644"></a>nsciousness of being in the right,
+that were the life and inspiration of the
+lovers of freedom. He conceded, however,
+that the body of the people were honest,
+but acted on the belief, inspired by
+wrong-headed leaders, that their liberties
+were in danger; and while, with the calculation
+of the man of the world, he dreaded,
+and endeavored to stem, still, with a
+statesman's foresight, he appreciated and
+held in respect, the mysterious element
+of public opinion. He felt that it was
+rising as a power. He saw this power
+already intrenched in the impregnable
+lines of free institutions. Seeking to
+know its springs, he was a close and at
+times a shrewd observer, as well from a
+habit of research, in tracing the currents
+of the past, as from occupying a position
+which made it a duty to watch the growth
+of what influenced the present. His letters,
+very voluminous, deal with causes
+as well as with facts, and are often fine
+tributes to the life-giving power of vital
+political ideas, from the pen of a subtle
+and determined enemy.</p>
+
+<p>When the executive functions devolved
+on Hutchinson, it had been semi-officially
+announced that the Ministry, wholly
+out of commercial considerations, intended
+to propose, at the next session of
+Parliament, a repeal of a portion of the
+revenue acts; and the Patriots were
+pressing, with more zeal than ever, the
+non-importation agreement, in the hope
+of obtaining, as matter of constitutional
+right, a total repeal. To enforce this
+agreement, the merchants had held a
+public meeting in Faneuil Hall, adopted
+a series of spirited resolves, and adjourned
+to a future day; and Hutchinson's first
+important gubernatorial decision had reference
+to this meeting. He had urged
+the necessity of troops to sustain the authority
+of the Government. He had
+awarded to them the credit of preventing
+a great catastrophe. He had written
+that they would make the Boston saints
+as tame as lambs. It was his settled conviction
+that the Americans never would
+set armies in the field against Great Britain,
+and if they did, that "a few troops
+would be sufficient to quell them." He
+was now importuned to use the troops at
+his command to disperse the merchants'
+meeting at its adjournment. He held
+that this meeting was contrary to law.
+He characterized its resolves as contemptuous
+and insolent, and derogatory<a name="Page_645" id="Page_645"></a>
+to the authority of Parliament. He never
+grew weary of holding up to reprobation
+the objects which the merchants
+had in view. And his political friends
+now asked him to make good his professions
+by acts. But he declined to interfere
+with this meeting. The merchants
+proceeded to a close with their business.
+Hutchinson's explanation of his course to
+the Ministry, on this occasion, applies to
+the popular demonstrations which took
+place, at intervals, down to the military
+crisis. "I am very sensible," are his
+words, "that the whole proceeding is
+unwarrantable; but it is so generally
+countenanced in this and in several of
+the Colonies, and the authority of Government
+is so feeble, that an attempt to
+put a stop to it would have no other
+effect than still further to inflame the
+minds of the people. I can do no more
+than represent to your Lordship, and
+wait for such instructions as may be
+thought proper." And he continued to
+present these combinations of the merchants
+as "a most certain evidence of
+the lost authority of Government," and
+as exhibiting "insolence and contempt of
+Parliament." But he complains that they
+were not so much regarded in England
+as he expected they would be, and that
+he was left to act on his own judgment.
+He soon saw pilloried in the newspapers
+the names of a son of Governor Bernard
+and two of his own sons, in a list of Boston
+merchants who "audaciously counteracted
+the united sentiments of the
+body of merchants throughout North
+America by importing British goods contrary
+to agreement."</p>
+
+<p>The Lieutenant-Governor again kept
+quiet, as a town-meeting went on, which
+he watched with the keenest interest,
+freely commented on in his letters, and
+which is far too important to be overlooked
+in any review of these times.
+William Bollan, the Colonial Agent in
+London, sent to the popular leaders a
+selection from the letters of Governor
+Bernard, General Gage, Commodore
+Hood, and others, bearing on the introduction
+of the troops, which were judged
+to have aspersed the character, affected
+the rights, and injured the interests of
+the town. Their publication made a
+profound impression on the public mind,
+and they became the theme of every circle.
+At one of the political clubs, in which
+the Adamses, the Coopers, Warren, and
+others were wont to discuss public affairs,
+Otis, in a blaze of indignation, charged
+the crown officials with haughtiness, arbitrary
+dispositions, and the insolence of of<a name="Page_646" id="Page_646"></a>fice,
+and vehemently urged a town-meeting.
+One was soon summoned by the Selectmen,
+which deliberated with dignity
+and order, and made answer to the official
+indictment in a strong, conclusive,
+and grand "Appeal to the World," and
+appointed, as a committee to circulate it,
+Thomas Cushing, Samuel Adams, Joseph
+Warren, Richard Dana, Joshua Henshaw,
+Joseph Jackson, and Benjamin
+Kent,&mdash;men of sterling character, and
+bearing names that have shed lustre on
+the whole country. Reason and truth,
+thus put forth, exerted an influence.
+Hutchinson felt the force of this. "We
+find, my Lord, by experience," he advised
+Lord Hillsborough, October 19, 1769,
+"that associations and assemblies pretending
+to be legal and constitutional, assuming
+powers that belong only to established
+authority, prove more fatal to this
+authority than mobs, riots, or the most
+tumultuous disorders; for such assemblies,
+from erroneous or imperfect notions of
+the nature of government, very often
+meet with the approbation of the body
+of the people, and in such case there is
+no internal power which can be exerted
+to suppress them. Such case we are in
+at present, and shall probably continue
+in it until the wisdom of Parliament delivers
+us from it."</p>
+
+<p>It would be difficult to say what power
+the people now assumed that belonged
+only to established authority; they assumed
+only the right of public meeting and
+of liberty of discussion, which are unquestionable
+in every free country; but the
+ruling spirit of Hutchinson is seen in this
+fine tribute to the instrumentality of the
+town-meeting, for he regarded the American
+custom of corporate presentation of
+political matters as illegal, and the power
+of Parliament as sufficient to meet it
+with pains and penalties. As the committee
+already named sent forth the doings
+of the town, they said, (October 23,
+1769,) "The people will never think their
+grievances redressed till every revenue
+act is repealed, the Board of Commissioners
+dissolved, and the troops removed."</p>
+
+<p>A few days after this the Lieutenant-Governor
+was obliged to deal with a mob,
+which grew out of the meanness of importers,
+whose selfish course proved to
+be a great strain on the forbearing policy
+of the popular leaders. The merchants
+on the Tory side, among whom
+were two of Hutchinson's sons, persisted
+in importing goods; and he writes,
+with a good deal of pride, as though it
+were meritorious, that since the agreement
+was formed these two sons had imported
+two hundred chests of tea, which
+they had been so clever as to sell. But
+such was the public indignation at this
+course, that they,<a name="Page_647" id="Page_647"></a> too, were compelled
+to give in to the non-importation agreement;
+and Hutchinson's letters are now
+severer than ever on the Patriots. He
+characterizes "the confederacy of merchants"
+as a very high offence, and the
+Sons of Liberty as the greatest tyrants
+ever known. But as he continually predicted
+a crisis, he said, "I can find nobody
+to join with me in an attempt to
+discourage them." He adds, "If any tumults
+should happen, I shall be under less
+difficulty than if my own children had
+been the pretended occasion of them;
+and for this reason Dalrymple tells me
+he is very glad they have done as they
+have." The immediate occasion of the
+mob was the dealing of the people with
+an informer on the twenty-eighth of October.
+They got track of him about
+noon, and, after a long search, found him
+towards evening, when they immediately
+prepared to tar and feather him. It was
+quite dark. A formidable procession
+carted the culprit from one quarter of
+the town to another, and threatened to
+break the windows of all houses which
+were without lights. The Lieutenant-Governor
+summoned such of the members
+of the Council as were at hand,
+and the justices of the county, to meet
+him at the Council-Chamber; he requested
+Dalrymple to order the force
+under his command "to be ready to
+march when the occasion required"; and
+he "kept persons employed to give him
+immediate notice of every new motion of
+the mob." Dalrymple, with a soldier's
+alacrity, complied with the official request;
+but the mob went on its course,
+for "none of the justices nor the sheriff,"
+writes Hutchinson, "thought it safe
+for them to restrain so great a body of
+people in a dark evening,"&mdash;and the only
+work done by the soldiers was to protect
+Mien, the printer, who, being goaded into
+discharging a pistol among the crowd,
+fled to the main guard for safety. The
+finale of this mob is thus related by Hutchinson:&mdash;"Between
+eight and nine o'clock
+they dispersed of their own account, and
+the town was quiet."</p>
+
+<p>The intrepid and yet prudent course
+of the popular leaders and of the people,
+in standing manfully for the common
+cause in presence of the British troops,
+was now eliciting the warmest encomiums
+on the town from the friends of liberty
+in England and in the Colonies. The
+generous praise was copied into the local
+journals, and, so far from being received
+with assumption, became a powerful
+incentive to worthy action. "Your
+Bostonians," a Southern letter runs,
+"shine with renewed lustre. Their last<a name="Page_648" id="Page_648"></a>
+efforts were indeed like themselves, full
+of wisdom, prudence, and magnanimity.
+Such a conduct must silence every pretended
+suspicion, and baffle every vile attempt
+to calumniate their noble and generous
+struggles in the cause of American
+Liberty." "So much wisdom and virtue,"
+says a New-Hampshire letter, "as
+hath been conspicuous in the Bostonians,
+will not go unrewarded. You will in all
+respects increase until you become the
+glory of New England, the pride of British
+kings, the scourge of tyrants, and the
+joy of the whole earth," "The patriotism
+of Boston," says another letter, "will
+be revered through every age." One of
+these tributes, from a Southern journal,
+in the Boston papers of December 18,
+1769, runs,&mdash;"The noble conduct of the
+Representatives, Selectmen, and principal
+merchants of Boston, in defending and
+supporting the rights of America and the
+British Constitution, cannot fail to excite
+love and gratitude in the heart of every
+worthy person in the British empire.
+They discover a dignity of soul worthy
+the human mind, which is the true glory
+of man, and merits the applause of all
+rational beings. Their names will shine
+unsullied in the bright records of Panic to
+the latest ages, and unborn millions will
+rise up and call them blessed."</p>
+
+<p>This eulogy on Boston is a great fact
+of these times, and therefore ought to
+have a place in a history of them. It
+was not of a local cast, for it appears in
+several Colonies and in England; it was
+not a manufacture of politicians, for it is
+seen in the private letters of the friends
+of constitutional liberty which have come
+to light subsequently to the events; it was
+not a transient enthusiasm, for the same
+strain was continued during the years
+preceding the war. The praise was bestowed
+on a town small in territory and
+comparatively small in population. Such
+were the cities of Greece in the era of
+their renown. "The territories of Athens,
+Sparta, and their allies," remarks Gibbon,
+"do not exceed a moderate province of
+France or England; but after the trophies
+of Salamis or Plat&aelig;a, they expand in our
+fancy to the gigantic size of Asia, which
+had been trampled under the feet of the
+victorious Greeks." No trophies had been
+gathered in an American Plat&aelig;a;
+there had been no great civic triumph; there
+was no hero upon whom public affection
+centred; nor was there here a field on
+which to weave a web of court-intrigue,
+or to play a game of criminal ambition;&mdash;there
+was, indeed, little that common
+constructors of history would consider
+to be history. Yet it was now written,<a name="Page_649" id="Page_649"></a>
+and made common thought by an unfettered
+press,&mdash;"Nobler days nor deeds
+were never seen than at this time."<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> This
+was an instinctive appreciation of a great
+truth; for the real American Revolution
+was going on in the tidal flow of thought
+and feeling, and in the formation of public
+opinion. A people inspired by visions
+of better days for humanity, luxuriating
+in the emotions of hope and faith, yearning
+for the right, mastering the reasoning
+on which it was based, were steadily
+taking their fit place on the national
+stage, in the belief of the nearness of
+a mighty historic hour. And their spontaneous
+praise was for a community heroically
+acting on national principles and
+for a national cause. Because of this
+did they predict that unborn millions
+would hold up the men of Boston as worthy
+to be enrolled in the shining record
+of Fame.</p>
+
+<p>As the new year (1770) came in, the
+people were looking forward to a meeting
+of the General Court, always a season of
+peculiar interest, and more so now than
+ever, for it was certain that the debates
+in this body would turn on the foremost
+local subject, the removal of the troops.
+But the subject was no longer merely local,
+for it had become a general issue, one
+affecting not only Boston and Massachusetts,
+but other towns and Colonies, and
+the interest felt in the controversy was
+wide and deep. "In this day of constitutional
+light," a New-York essay copied
+into a Boston newspaper runs, "it is monstrous
+that troops should be kept, not to
+protect the right, but to enslave the continent."
+While it was thus put by the
+journals, the policy was meant to be of
+this significance by the Ministry; and the
+letters printed for the first time in this
+monograph attest the accuracy of the Patriot
+judgment. On purely local grounds,
+also, the presence of the troops continued
+to be deplored. "The troops," Dr. Cooper
+wrote, January 1, 1770, "greatly corrupt
+our morals, and are in every sense
+an oppression. May Heaven soon deliver
+us from this great evil!" Samuel Adams
+said, "The troops must move to the
+Castle; it must be the first business of the
+General Court to move them out of town";
+and James Otis said. "The Governor has
+the power to move them under the Constitution."
+Hutchinson endeavored to conciliate
+the people by making arrangements
+with General Gage for a removal
+of the main guard from its location near
+the Town-House, being informed that
+this might satisfy the greater part of the members.</p>
+
+<p>Having taken this precaution, Hutchinson
+was really anxious for a meeting of<a name="Page_650" id="Page_650"></a>
+the General Court. He was in great uncertainty
+both as to public and private
+affairs. He knew now that Bernard was
+not to return, but he did not know who
+was to be the successor; he conjectured
+that it might be "that the government
+was to be put on a new establishment,
+and a person of rank appointed Governor";
+and he confessed that he was
+"ignorant of the Ministerial plan" as to
+the Colonies. The Legislature was appointed
+to convene on the tenth of January.
+But the November packet from
+England, happening to make an uncommonly
+short passage, brought him a peremptory
+order, which he received on the
+evening of the third of January, to prorogue
+the time of the sitting of the General
+Court; and the journals of the next
+morning contain his Proclamation, setting
+forth that "by His Majesty's command"
+the Legislature was prorogued to
+the second Wednesday in March. "I
+guess," Hutchinson writes, "that the
+Court is prorogued to a particular day
+with an intention that something from
+the King or the Parliament shall be then
+laid before them." "Some of the distant
+members will be on their journey before
+the Proclamation reaches them; and if
+the packet had not had a better passage
+than common, my orders would have
+found the Court sitting." As a consequence
+of this unlooked-for prorogation,
+the main guard continued to be stationed
+near the Town-House, until a portion of
+it played its tragic part on the memorable
+fifth of March.</p>
+
+<p>The Lieutenant-Governor was apprehensive
+that this sudden prorogation would
+cause a great clamor; but he judged that
+the popular leaders were rather humbled
+and mortified than roused and enraged
+by it; and he soon expressed the conviction
+that this was the right step. But
+the favorite organ of the Patriots, the
+"Boston Gazette," in its next issue, of
+January the eighth, indicates anything
+but humility. Through it James Otis,
+John Hancock, and Samuel Adams spoke
+kindling words to a community who received
+words from them as things. Otis,
+in a card elicited by strictures on the
+"unmanly assault, battery, and barbarous
+wounding" of himself by Robinson,
+declared that "a clear stage and no favor
+were all he ever wished or wanted
+in court, country, camp, or city"; Hancock,
+in a card commenting on the report
+that he had violated the merchant<a name="Page_651" id="Page_651"></a>s'
+agreement, "publicly defied all mankind"
+to prove the allegation, and pledged
+his co&ouml;peration "in every legal and
+laudable measure to redress the grievances
+under which the Province and the
+Continent had so long labored"; and
+Samuel Adams, under the signature of
+"Vindex," tested the legality of the prorogation
+by the terms of the Charter,
+and adjured every man to make it the
+subject of his contemplation. "We all
+remember," are his weighty words, "that,
+no longer ago than last year, the extraordinary
+dissolution by Governor Bernard,
+in which he declared he was purely
+Ministerial, produced another assembly,
+which, though legal in all its proceedings,
+awaked an attention in the very
+soul of the British empire." He claimed
+that a Massachusetts executive ought to
+act from the dictates of his own judgment.
+"It is not to be expected that in
+ordinary times, much less at such an important
+period as this, any man, though
+endowed with the wisdom of Solomon, at
+the distance of three thousand miles, can
+be an adequate judge of the expediency
+of proroguing, and in effect of putting an
+end to, an American legislative assembly."</p>
+
+<p>The Lieutenant-Governor had now to
+meet the severest pressure brought to
+bear on him by the Tory faction for
+the employment of the troops, occasioned
+by a violation on the part of his sons
+of their agreement as to a sale of goods.
+They had stipulated with the merchants
+that an importation of teas made by them
+should remain unsold, and, as security,
+had given to the committee of inspection
+the key of the building in which
+it was stored. Yet they secretly made
+sales, broke the lock, and delivered the
+teas. This was done when the non-importation
+agreement was the paramount
+measure,&mdash;when fidelity to it was patriotism,
+was honor, was union, was country,&mdash;and
+when all eyes were looking
+to see Boston faithful. "If this agreement
+of the merchants," said "Determinatus"
+in the "Boston Gazette," "is of
+that consequence to all America which
+our brethren in all the other governments
+and in Great Britain itself think it to be,&mdash;if
+the fate of unborn millions is suspended
+upon it, verily it behooves not the
+merchants only, but every individual of
+every class in city and country to aid and
+support them, and peremptorily to insist
+upon its being strictly adhered to. And
+yet what is most astonishing is, that some
+two or three persons, of very little consequence
+in themselves, have dared openly
+to give out that they will vend the
+goods they have imported, thoug<a name="Page_652" id="Page_652"></a>h they
+have solemnly pledged their faith to the
+body of merchants that they should remain
+in store till a general importation
+takes place." The merchants met in
+Faneuil Hall in a large and commanding
+gathering; for it was composed of the
+solid men of the town. After deliberation,
+they proceeded in a body to the
+residence of the Lieutenant-Governor
+to remonstrate against the course of his
+sons. Meantime, the ultra Loyalists pressed
+him to order the troops to disperse
+the meeting; the Commissioners savagely
+urged, that "there could not be a better
+time for trying the strength of the government";
+and others said, "It were
+best to bring matters to extremities."
+The commanding officers of the troops
+now expected work, and prepared for
+it. Dalrymple dealt out twelve rounds
+of cartridges to the men. But Hutchinson
+involuntarily shrank from the bloody
+business of this programme. He tried
+other means than force. He appealed to
+the justices of the peace, and through
+the sheriff he commanded the meeting,
+in His Majesty's name, to disperse. But
+the intrepid merchants, in a written paper,
+in Hancock's handwriting, averred
+that law warranted their proceeding;
+and so they calmly adhered to the action
+that patriotism dictated. Hutchinson at
+length sent for the Moderator, William
+Phillips, of fragrant Revolutionary renown
+and of educational fame, and stipulated
+to deposit a sum of money to stand
+for the tea that had been sold, and to return
+the balance of it to the store. The
+concession was accepted. In explanation
+of his course, and with special reference
+to the action of the Commissioners in this
+case, Hutchinson pleaded a want of power,
+under the Constitution, to comply with
+their demand. "They did not consider
+the Constitution," he remarked, "and
+that by the Charter I can do nothing without
+the Council, the major part of whom
+are against me, and the civil magistrates,
+many of whom made a part of the body
+which was to be suppressed; so that there
+could not have been a worse occasion
+[to call out the troops], and I think anything
+tragical would have set the whole
+Province in a flame, and maybe spread
+farther."</p>
+
+<p>Thus Hutchinson, as well as Franklin,
+dreaded the effect of a serious collision
+between the citizens and the troops. At
+this time the feeling was one of sullen
+acquiescence in their presence. "Molineaux,"
+he says, February 18, 1770, "to
+whom the Sons of Liberty have given the
+name of Paoli, and some others, are restless;
+but there seems to be no disposition
+to any general muster of the people
+again." And yet the newspapers were
+now crowded with unusually exciting
+matter, and so continued up to the first
+week in March: articles about the Liberty-Pole
+in New York being cut down
+by the military and replaced in a triumphal
+procession by the people; about<a name="Page_653" id="Page_653"></a>
+McDougal's imprisonment for printing
+free comments on the Assembly for voting
+supplies to the troops; the famous
+address of "Junius" to the King, in
+which one count is his alienation of a
+people who left their native land for freedom
+and found it in a desert; the details
+of the shooting, by an informer, of Christopher
+Snider, the son of a poor German,
+and of the imposing funeral, which
+moved from the Liberty-Tree to the
+burial-place. The importers now feared
+an assault on their houses; whereupon
+soldiers were allowed as a guard to some,
+while others slept with loaded guns at
+their bedsides. These things deserve to
+be borne in mind; for they show how
+much there was to exasperate, when the
+popular leaders were called upon to meet
+a paroxysm without a precedent in the
+Colonies.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to the Patriots astonishing
+that the Ministry persisted in keeping
+troops in Boston. There was no spirit
+of resistance to law; there was no plot
+maturing to resist the Government; the
+avocations of life went on as usual; the
+popular leaders, men of whom any community
+might be proud, averred that
+their opposition to public measures had
+been prudent and legal, and that they
+had not taken "a single step that could
+not be fully justified on constitutional
+grounds"; and the demand in the public
+prints was continuous to know what
+the troops were wanted for, and how they
+were to be used. On the other hand,
+the ultra Loyalists as continuously represented
+that the town was full of a rebellious
+spirit, was a nest of disorder, and
+threatened the leaders in it with transportation.
+Hutchinson seems to have apprehended
+that this misrepresentation had
+been carried so far as to be suicidal; for
+he advised Lord Hillsborough, that, "in
+matters that had no relation to the dispute
+between the Kingdom and the Colonies,
+government retained its vigor, and the
+administration of it was attended with no
+unusual difficulty." This is to the point,
+and conclusive. This was the truth on
+which the popular leaders rested; and
+hence it seemed to them a marvel that
+the Ministry, to use the words of Samuel
+Adams, should employ troops only "to
+parade the streets of Boston, and, by
+their ridiculous merry-andrew tricks, to
+become the objects of contempt of the
+women and children."</p>
+
+<p>It would be a tedious and profitless task
+to go over the bickerings and quarrels
+that occurred between the inhabitants
+and the soldiers. The high-spirited citizens,
+on being challenged in their walk<a name="Page_654" id="Page_654"></a>s,
+could not keep their temper; the roughs,
+here as in every place, would have their
+say; and the coarse British soldier could
+not be restrained by discipline; yet in
+all the brawls, for seventeen months, not
+a gun was fired in an affray. Fist had
+been met with fist, and club with club;
+and not unfrequently these quarrels were
+settled in the courts. The nature of such
+emergency as would justify the troops in
+firing on the people was acutely discussed
+in the newspapers, and undoubtedly
+the subject was talked about in private
+circles and in the political clubs. "What
+shall I say?" runs an article in the "Gazette."
+"I shudder at the thought. Surely
+no provincial magistrate could be found
+so steeled against the sensations of humanity
+and justice as wantonly to order
+troops to fire on an unarmed populace,
+and more than repeat in Boston the
+tragic scene exhibited in St. George's
+Fields." It was a wanton fire on an
+unarmed populace that was protected
+against; and the protest was by men who
+involuntarily shrank from mob-law as
+they would from the hell of anarchy.
+They apprehended an impromptu collision
+between the people and the troops; they
+knew that an illegal and wanton fire on
+the people would produce such collision;
+the danger of this result formed, undoubtedly,
+a large portion of the common talk;
+and the frequency and manner in which
+the subject was discussed elicited from
+General Gage the rather sweeping remark,
+that every citizen in Boston was a
+lawyer. Every citizen was interested in
+the support of public liberty and public
+order, and might well regard with deep
+concern the threats that were continually
+made, which, if executed, would disturb
+both. Hutchinson, in one of his
+letters, thus states the conclusions that
+were reached:&mdash;"Our heroes for liberty
+say that no troops dare to fire on the
+people without the order of the civil
+magistrate, and that no civil magistrate,
+would dare to give such orders. In the
+first part of their opinion they may be
+right; in the second they cannot be sure
+until they have made the trial."</p>
+
+<p>On Friday, the second of March, in
+the forenoon, as three soldiers were at
+Gray's Ropewalks, near the head of India
+Wharf, they were asked by one of the
+workmen to empty a vault. Sharp altercation
+followed this insult, and the soldiers
+went off, bu<a name="Page_655" id="Page_655"></a>t soon returned with a
+party of their comrades, when there was
+a challenge to a boxing-match, and this
+grew into a fight, the rope-makers using
+their "wouldring-sticks," and the soldiers
+clubs and cutlasses. It proved to be the
+most serious quarrel that had occurred.
+Lieutenant-Colonel Carr, commander of
+the Twenty-Ninth, which, Hutchinson
+said, was composed of such bad fellows
+that discipline could not restrain them,
+made a complaint to the Lieutenant-Governor
+relative to the provoking conduct
+of the rope-maker which brought on the
+affray; and thus this affair became the
+occasion of political consultation, which
+tended to intensify the animosity between
+the parties.</p>
+
+<p>On Saturday, the report was circulated
+that the parties who were engaged in
+this affray would renew the fight on
+Monday evening; on Sunday, Carr and
+other officers went into the ropewalk,
+giving out that they were searching for a
+sergeant of their regiment; but though
+on these days there was much irritation,
+the town was comparatively quiet.</p>
+
+<p>On Monday, the Lieutenant-Governor
+laid the complaint of Lieutenant-Colonel
+Carr before the Council, and asked the advice
+of this body, which gave rise to debate
+about the removal of the troops,&mdash;members
+freely expressing the opinion, that
+the way to prevent collisions between the
+military and the people was to withdraw
+the two regiments to the Castle. No important
+action was taken by the Council,
+although the apprehension was expressed
+that the ropewalk affair might grow into
+a general quarrel. And it is worthy
+of remark, that, ominous as the signs
+were, the Lieutenant-Governor took no
+precautionary measures, not even the
+obvious step of having the troops restrained
+to their barracks. His letters,
+and, indeed, his whole course, up to
+the eventful evening of this day, indicate
+confidence in the opinion that there
+was no intention on the part of the popular
+leaders to molest the troops, and
+that the troops, without an order from
+the civil authority, would not fire on the citizens.</p>
+
+<p>Nor was there now, as zealous Loyalists
+alleged, any plan formed by the popular
+leaders, or by any persons of consideration,
+to expel the troops by force from the
+town, much less the obnoxious Commissioners
+of the Customs; nor is there any
+evidence to support the allegation on the
+other side, that the crown officials, civil
+or military, meditated or stimulated an
+attack on the inhabitants. The Patriots
+regarded what had occurred and what
+was threatened, like much that ha<a name="Page_656" id="Page_656"></a>d taken
+place during the last seventeen months, as
+the motions of a rod of power needlessly
+held over the people to overawe them,
+serving no earthly good, but souring their
+minds and embittering their passions; the
+crown officials represented this chafing of
+the free spirit at the incidents of military
+rule as a sign of the lost authority of Government
+and of a desire for independence.
+Among the fiery spirits, accurately on
+both sides the mob-element, the ropewalk
+affair was regarded as a drawn game,
+and a renewal of the fight was desired
+on the ground that honor was at stake;
+while to spirit up the roughs among the
+Whigs, to use Dr. Gordon's words,&mdash;"the
+newspapers had a pompous account of a
+victory obtained by the inhabitants of
+New York over the soldiers there in an
+affray, while the Boston newspapers could
+present but a tame relation of the result
+of the affray here." These facts account
+satisfactorily for the intimations
+and warnings given during the day to
+prominent characters on both sides, and
+for the handbill that was circulated in
+the afternoon. The course things took
+fully justifies the remark of Gordon, that
+"everything tended to a crisis, and it
+is rather wonderful that it did not exist
+sooner, when so many circumstances
+united to hasten its approach."</p>
+
+<p>There was a layer of ice on the ground,
+a slight fall of snow during the day, and
+a young moon in the evening. At an
+early hour, as though something uncommon
+was expected, parties of boys, apprentices,
+and soldiers strolled through
+the streets, and neither side was sparing
+of insult. Ten or twelve soldiers went
+from the main guard, in King Street,
+across this street to Murray's Barracks,
+in Brattle Street, about three hundred
+yards from King Street; and another
+party came out of these barracks, armed
+with clubs and cutlasses, bent on a
+stroll. A little after eight o'clock, quite
+a crowd collected near the Brattle-Street
+Church, many of whom had canes and
+sticks; and after a spell of bantering
+wretched abuse on both sides, things
+grew into a fight. As it became more
+and more threatening, a few North-Enders
+ran to the Old Brick Meeting-House,
+on what is now Washington Street, at the
+head of King Street, and lifted a boy into
+a window, who rang the bell. About
+the same time, Captain Goldfinch, of the
+army, who was on his way to Murray's
+Barracks,<a name="Page_657" id="Page_657"></a> crossed King Street, near the
+Custom-House, at the corner of Exchange
+Lane, where a sentinel had long been
+stationed; and as he was passing along,
+he was taunted by a barber's apprentice
+as a mean fellow for not paying for dressing
+his hair, when the sentinel ran after
+the boy and gave him a severe blow with
+his musket. The boy went away crying,
+and told several persons of the assault,
+while the Captain passed on towards Murray's
+Barracks, but found the passage into
+the yard obstructed by the affray going
+on here,&mdash;the crowd pelting the soldiers
+with snowballs, and the latter defending
+themselves. Being the senior officer, he
+ordered the men into the barracks; the
+gate of the yard was then shut, and the
+promise was made that no more men
+should be let out that evening. In this
+way the affray here was effectually stopped.</p>
+
+<p>For a little time, perhaps twenty minutes,
+there was nothing to attract to a
+centre the people who were drawn by
+the alarm-bell out of their homes on this
+frosty, moonlight, memorable evening;
+and in various places individuals were
+asking where the fire was. King Street,
+then, as now, the commercial centre of
+Boston, was quiet. A group was standing
+before the main guard with firebags
+and buckets in their hands; a few
+persons were moving along in other parts
+of the street; and the sentinel at the
+Custom-House, with his firelock on his
+shoulder, was pacing his beat quite unmolested.
+In Dock Square, a small gathering,
+mostly of participants in the affair
+just over, were harangued by a large,
+tall man, who wore a red cloak and a
+white wig; and as he closed, there was
+a hurrah, and the cry, "To the main
+guard!" In another street, a similar
+cry was raised, "To the main guard!&mdash;that
+is the nest!" But no assault was
+made on the main guard. The word
+went round that there was no fire, "only
+a rumpus with the soldiers," who had
+been driven to their quarters; and well-disposed
+citizens, as they withdrew, were
+saying, "Every man to his home!"</p>
+
+<p>But at about fifteen minutes past nine,
+an excited party passed up Royal Exchange
+Lane, (now Exchange Street,)
+leading into King Street; and as they
+came near the Custom-House, on the
+corner, one of the numbe<a name="Page_658" id="Page_658"></a>r, who knew of
+the assault on the apprentice-boy, said,
+"Here is the soldier who did it," when
+they gathered round the sentinel. The
+barber's boy now came up and said,
+"This is the soldier who knocked me
+down with the butt-end of his musket."
+Some now said, "Kill him! knock him
+down!" The sentinel moved back up
+the steps of the Custom-House, and
+loaded his gun. Missiles were thrown at
+him, when he presented his musket, warned
+the party to keep off, and called for
+help. Some one ran to Captain Preston,
+the officer of the day, and informed him
+that the people were about to assault the
+sentinel, when he hastened to the main
+guard, on the opposite side of the street,
+about forty rods from the Custom-House,
+and sent from here a sergeant, a very
+young officer, with a file of seven men, to
+protect the sentinel. They went over in
+a kind of trot, using rough words and actions
+towards those who went with them,
+and, coming near the party round the
+sentinel, rudely pushed them aside, pricking
+some with their bayonets, and formed
+in a half-circle near the sentry-box.
+The sentinel now came down the steps
+and fell in with the file, when they were
+ordered to prime and load. Captain
+Preston almost immediately joined his
+men. The file now numbered nine.</p>
+
+<p>The number of people here at this time
+is variously estimated from thirty to a
+hundred,&mdash;"between fifty and sixty" being
+the most common statement. Some
+of them were fresh from the affray at the
+barracks, and some of the soldiers had
+been in the affair at the ropewalks. There
+was aggravation on both sides. The crowd
+were unarmed, or had merely sticks, which
+they struck defiantly against each other,&mdash;having
+no definite object, and doing
+no greater mischief than, in retaliation of
+uncalled-for military roughness, to throw
+snowballs, hurrah, whistle through their
+fingers, use oaths and foul language, call
+the soldiers names, hustle them, and dare
+them to fire. One of the file was struck
+with a stick. There were good men trying
+to prevent a riot, and some assured
+the soldiers that they would not be hurt.
+Among others, Henry Knox, subsequently
+General, was present, who saw nothing
+to justify the use of fire-arms, and,
+with others, remonstrated against their
+employment; but Captain Preston, as he
+was talking with Knox, saw his men
+pressing the people with their bayonets,
+when, in great agitation, he rushed in
+among them. Then, with or without orders,
+but certainly without any legal form
+or warning, seven of the file, one after another,
+discharged their muskets upon the<a name="Page_659" id="Page_659"></a>
+citizens; and the result indicates the malignity
+and precision of their aim. Crispus
+Attucks, an intrepid mulatto, who was a
+leader in the affair at Murray's Barracks,
+was killed as he stood leaning and resting
+his breast on a stout "cord-wood stick";
+Samuel Gray, one of the rope-makers,
+was shot as he stood with his hands in his
+bosom, and just as he had said, "My lads,
+they will not fire"; Patrick Carr, on hearing
+the alarm-bell, had left his house full
+of fight, and, as he was crossing the street,
+was mortally wounded; James Caldwell,
+in like manner summoned from his home,
+was killed as he was standing in the
+middle of the street; Samuel Maverick,
+a lad of seventeen, ran out of the house
+to go to a fire, and was shot as he was
+crossing the street; six others were wounded.
+But fifteen or twenty minutes had
+elapsed from the time the sergeant went
+from the main guard to the time of the
+firing. The people, on the report of the
+guns, fell back, but instinctively and instantly
+returned for the killed and wounded,
+when the infuriated soldiers prepared
+to fire again, but were checked by
+Captain Preston, and were withdrawn
+across the street to the main guard. The
+drums beat; several companies of the
+Twenty-Ninth Regiment, under Colonel
+Carr, promptly appeared in the street,
+and were formed in three divisions in
+front of the main guard, the front division
+near the northeast corner of the Town-House,
+in the kneeling posture for street-firing.
+The Fourteenth Regiment was
+ordered under arms, but remained at
+their barracks.</p>
+
+<p>The report now spread that "the
+troops had risen on the people"; and the
+beat of drums, the church-bells, and the
+cry of fire summoned the inhabitants from
+their homes, and they rushed through the
+streets to the place of alarm. In a few
+minutes thousands collected, and the cry
+was, "To arms! to arms!" The whole
+town was in the utmost confusion; while
+in King Street there was, what the Patriots
+had so long predicted, dreaded, and
+vainly endeavored to avert, an indignant
+population and an exasperated soldiery
+face to face. The excitement was terrible.
+The care of the popular leaders
+for their cause, since the mob-days of the
+Stamp Act, had been like the care of
+their personal honor: it drew them forth
+as the prompt and brave controlling power
+in every crisis; and they were among
+the concourse on this "night of consternation."
+Joseph Warren<a name="Page_660" id="Page_660"></a>, early on the
+ground to act the good physician as well
+as the fearless patriot, gives the impression
+produced on himself and his co-laborers
+as they saw the first blood flowing
+that was shed for American liberty.
+"Language," he says, "is too feeble to
+paint the emotions of our souls, when our
+streets were stained with the blood of
+our brethren, when our ears were wounded
+by the groans of the dying, and our
+eyes were tormented by the sight of the
+mangled bodies of the dead." "Our
+hearts beat to arms; we snatched our
+weapons, almost resolved by one decisive
+stroke to avenge the death of our
+slaughtered brethren."</p>
+
+<p>Meantime the Lieutenant-Governor,
+at his residence in North Square, heard
+the sound of the church-bell near by, and
+supposed it was an alarm of fire. But
+soon, at nearly ten o'clock, a number
+of the inhabitants came running into
+the house, entreating him to go to King
+Street immediately, otherwise, they said,
+"the town would be all in blood." He
+immediately started for the scene of danger.
+On his way, in the Market-Place,
+he found himself amidst a great body of
+people, some armed with clubs, others
+with cutlasses, and all calling for fire-arms.
+He made himself known to them,
+but pleaded in vain for a hearing; and,
+to insure his safety, he retreated into a
+dwelling-house, and thence went by a
+private way into King Street, where he
+found an excited multitude anxiously
+awaiting his arrival. He first called for
+Captain Preston; and a natural indignation
+at a high-handed act is expressed in
+the stern and searching questions which
+the civilian put to the soldier, bearing on
+the vital point of the subordination of
+the military to the civil power.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you the commanding officer?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know, Sir, you have no power
+to fire on any body of people collected
+together, except you have a civil magistrate
+with you to give orders?"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Preston replied,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I was obliged to, to save the sentry."</p>
+
+<p>So great was the confusion that Preston's
+reply was heard but by few. The
+cry was raised, "To the Town-House!
+to the Town-House!" when Hutchinson,
+by the irresistible violence of the crowd,
+was forced into the building, and up to
+the Council-Chamber; and in a few minutes
+he appeared on the balcony. Near
+him were prominent citizens, both Loyalists
+and Whigs; below him, on the one
+side, were his indignant townsmen, who
+had conferred on him every honor in
+their power, and on the other side, the
+regiment in its defiant attitude. He
+could speak with eloquence and power;
+throughout this strange and trying
+scene he bore himself with dignity
+and self-possession; and as in the <a name="Page_661" id="Page_661"></a>stillness
+of night he expressed great concern
+at the unhappy event, and made solemn
+pledges to the people, his manner must
+have been uncommonly earnest. "The
+law," he averred, "should have its course;
+he would live and die by the law." He
+promised to order an inquiry in the morning,
+and requested all to retire to their
+homes. But words now were not satisfactory
+to the people; and those near
+him urged that the course of justice had
+always been evaded or obstructed in favor
+of the soldiery, and that the people
+were determined not to disperse until
+Captain Preston was arrested. In consequence,
+Hutchinson ordered an immediate
+court of inquiry. The Patriots
+also entreated the Lieutenant-Governor
+to order the troops to their barracks.
+He replied, that it was not in his power
+to give such an order, but he would consult
+the officers. They now came on to
+the balcony,&mdash;Dalrymple of the Fourteenth
+Regiment being present,&mdash;and
+after an interview with Hutchinson returned
+to the troops. The men now rose
+from their kneeling posture; the order
+to "shoulder arms" was heard; and the
+people were greatly relieved by seeing
+the troops move towards their barracks.</p>
+
+<p>The people now began to disperse, but
+slowly, however. Meanwhile, the court
+of inquiry on Captain Preston was in session,
+and, after an examination that lasted
+three hours, he was bound over for
+trial. Later, the file of soldiers were also
+arrested. It was three o'clock in the
+morning before the Lieutenant-Governor
+left the scene of the massacre. And now
+all, excepting about a hundred of the
+people, who formed themselves into a
+watch, left the streets. Thus wise action
+by the crown officials, the activity of the
+popular leaders, and the habitual respect
+of the people for law, proved successful
+in preventing further carnage. "It was
+Royal George's livery," said Warren,
+"that proved a shield to the soldiery, and
+saved them from destruction." Hence,
+a contemporary versifier and participator
+in these scenes was able to write,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"No sudden rage the ruffian soldier bore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or drenched the pavements with his vital gore;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Deliberate thought did all our souls compose,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till veiled in gloom the low'ry morning rose."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>During the night, the popular leaders
+sent expresses to the neighboring towns,
+bearing intelligence of what had occurred,
+and summoning people from their
+beds to go to the aid of Boston; but as
+the efforts to restore quiet were proving
+successful, the summons was countermanded.
+This action accounts for the
+numbers who, very early in the morning
+of the sixth of March, flocked into
+the town. They could learn details of
+the tragedy from the actors in it,&mdash;could
+see the blood, the brains even, of the
+slaughtered inhabitants,&mdash;could hear the
+groans of the wounded,&mdash;could view the
+bodies of the dead. This terrible revelation
+of the work of arbitrary power, to
+a people habitually tender of regard for
+human life, naturally shocked the sensibilities
+of all; and thus the public temper
+was again wrought up to a fearful
+pitch of indignation. It required the
+strongest moral influence to restrain the
+rash, and to guide in the forms of law a
+righteous demand for a redress of grievance
+and for future security.</p>
+
+<p>The Lieutenant-Governor, during the
+night, had summoned such members of
+the Council as were within reach to meet
+in the Council-Chamber in the morning;
+and on joining them, he found the
+Selectmen, with most of the justices of
+the county, waiting for him, to represent,
+as he says, "their opinion of the
+absolute necessity of the troops being at
+a distance, that there might be no intercourse
+between the inhabitants and them,
+in order to prevent a further effusion of
+blood." Such was the logic of events
+which now forced the seventeen months'
+question of the removal of the troops on
+the civil and military authorities with an
+imperativeness that could not be resisted.</p>
+
+<p>The question, however, came up now<a name="Page_663" id="Page_663"></a>
+in a new shape. To put it in the simplest
+way, and in the very words used on
+that day,&mdash;the people were so excited
+by the shedding of blood on the preceding
+night, that they were resolved no longer
+to acquiesce in the decision of the constituted
+authorities as to the troops; but, failing
+in other means, they were determined
+to effect their removal by force, let the act
+be deemed rebellion or otherwise. Not
+that any conspiracy existed; not that any
+plan had been matured to do this; but
+circumstances had transferred the question
+from the domain of reason to that of
+physical force; and the only point with
+the crown officials, during this whole day's
+deliberations, was, whether they would be
+justified in what appeared to them lowering
+the national standard at the demand
+of a power which they habitually
+represented as "the faction," or whether
+they might venture to take the responsibility
+of resisting the demand and of
+meeting the consequences. Well might
+John Adams say, "This was a dangerous
+and difficult crisis."</p>
+
+<p>The Selectmen expressed to the Lieutenant-Governor
+the opinion, that "the
+inhabitants would be under no restraint
+whilst the troops were in town." "I
+let them know," Hutchinson says, "that
+I had no power to remove the troops."
+They also informed him that they had
+been requested to call a town-meeting,
+which was the special dread of Hutchinson.
+As the settled determination of the
+people became revealed, the anxiety of the
+Lieutenant-Governor naturally deepened
+as to what the day might bring forth; and
+he sent for Colonels Dalrymple and Carr
+to be present in Council and act as military
+advisers. But the discussions here
+were interrupted by the entrance of a
+messenger from another assembly, bearing
+the ominous summons for the immediate
+presence among them of the Selectmen.</p>
+
+<p>This summons invites attention to the
+movements of the people, who had been
+constantly coming in from the neighboring
+towns, and had now gathered in great
+numbers in and around Faneuil Hall, to
+use Hutchinson's words, "in a perfect
+frenzy." It was, however, the general
+disposition, volcanic as were the elements,<a name="Page_664" id="Page_664"></a>
+to act with caution, deliberation, and in
+a spirit of unity, and, doubtless, with the
+consideration that the eyes of the friends
+of their cause were upon them, and the
+name and fame of Boston were at stake.
+The hours passed, and no warrant appeared
+calling a town-meeting; when, at
+eleven o'clock, the town-records say,
+"the freeholders and other inhabitants"
+held a meeting, "occasioned, by the massacre
+made in King Street by the soldiery."
+The town-clerk, William Cooper,
+acted as the chairman. This true and
+intrepid patriot held this office forty-nine
+years, which speaks for his fidelity to duty,
+intelligence, devotion to principle, and
+moral worth. "The Selectmen," his clear,
+round record reads, "not being present,
+and the inhabitants being informed that
+they were in the Council-Chamber, it was
+voted that Mr. William Greenleaf be desired
+to proceed there and acquaint the
+Selectmen that the inhabitants desire
+and expect their attendance at the Hall."
+This was virtually a command, and the
+Selectmen immediately repaired thither.
+Thomas Cushing was chosen the
+Moderator. He was now the Speaker
+of the House of Representatives; and
+though not of such shining abilities as
+to cause him to be looked up to in Boston
+as a leader, and of the moderate
+class of Patriots, yet, by urbanity of
+manner, a high personal character, diligent
+public service, and fidelity to the
+cause, he won a large influence. It was
+next voted that Constable Wallace wait
+upon the Reverend Dr. Cooper and acquaint
+him that the inhabitants desired
+him to open the meeting with prayer.
+This great divine was a brother of the
+town-clerk, and the pastor of the Brattle-Street
+Church. He was devoted to the
+Patriot cause, and on the most confidential
+terms with the popular leaders; and
+besides being rich in genius and learning,
+he had, says Dr. Eliot, a gift in
+prayer peculiar and very excellent. He
+complied with the request, but no reporter
+has transmitted the words of this righteous
+man, or described this solemn assembly,
+as fervent prayer now went up
+for country.</p>
+
+<p>The meeting next voted to invite any
+citizen to give information of the massacre
+of the preceding evening, "that the
+same might be minuted by the town-clerk";
+whereupon several persons related
+details of the tragedy. One said he
+heard a soldier, after the firing, say, that
+<a name="Page_665" id="Page_665"></a>"the Devil might give quarter, he should
+give none"; another said he heard a soldier
+say, that "his officer told him, that, if
+the soldiers went out that night, they must
+go armed and in companies"; another related
+a soldier's story of a scheme formed
+to kill the inhabitants; another said,
+he "descried a soldier who struck down
+the inhabitants." These homely words
+are life-like glimpses of the spirit of the
+hour. No speech could have been more
+eloquent, because none could have been
+better calculated to deepen the general
+conviction and minister to the common
+emotion. However, so many witnesses
+were ready to testify, that it was found
+to be impracticable to hear all; and a
+committee was appointed to receive and
+digest the evidence.</p>
+
+<p>Samuel Adams addressed this remarkable
+meeting. He spoke with a pathos
+peculiar to himself. His manner, naturally
+impressive, was rendered more so by
+the solemnity of the occasion, and every
+heart was moved. The great hour demanded
+dignity and discretion in unison
+with firmness, and they were combined
+in the action of the meeting. It resolved
+that the inhabitants would submit no
+longer to the insult of military rule. A
+committee of fifteen was chosen to wait
+on the Lieutenant-Governor, and acquaint
+him that it was the unanimous
+opinion of the meeting that the inhabitants
+and soldiery could no longer dwell
+together in safety, and that nothing could
+be rationally expected to restore the
+peace of the town and prevent additional
+scenes of blood and carnage but the
+immediate removal of the troops; and
+to say, further, that they most fervently
+prayed his Honor that his power and
+influence might be exerted in order
+that this removal might be instantly effected.
+This committee well represented
+the intelligence, the patriotism, the
+varied interests, and whatever there was
+of true greatness in Boston. The meeting
+now dissolved; when the Selectmen
+issued a warrant for a regular town-meeting
+to convene at the same place, at
+three o'clock in the afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>It was about noon when the Lieutenant-Governor
+received the committee of
+the town at the Council-Chamber, the
+Council being in session. I have found
+no details of what was said by the committee
+at this interview, in urging a
+compliance with the demand. Hutchinson
+said he was not prepared to reply,
+but would give an answer in writing,
+when the commi<a name="Page_666" id="Page_666"></a>ttee withdrew into another
+room; and he gives glimpses of
+what then occurred. "I told the Council,"
+he says, "that a removal of the
+troops was not with me; and I desired
+them to consider what answer I could
+give to this application of the town,
+whilst Colonel Dalrymple, who had the
+command, was present." Some of the
+members, who were among the truest
+Patriots, urged a compliance, when the
+Lieutenant-Governor declared that "he
+would upon no consideration whatever
+give orders for their removal." The result
+reached this morning was an advice
+for the removal of one regiment, in which
+the commanding officer concurred. As
+Hutchinson rose from this sitting, he declared
+that "he meant to receive no further
+application on the subject."</p>
+
+<p>Things wore a gloomy aspect during
+the interval between the session of the
+Council and the time of the afternoon
+meeting; for the natural effect of the
+unbending tone of the crown officials was
+to give firmness to the determined spirit
+of the people. There were consultations
+between members of the Council, the popular
+leaders, and the commanding officers;
+and now the very men who were
+branded as incendiaries, enemies of Great
+Britain, and traitors, were again seen quietly
+endeavoring to prevent a catastrophe.
+Hutchinson, in his History, says it
+was intimated to members of the Council,
+that, though the commanding officer
+should receive no authoritative order to
+remove all the troops, yet the expression
+of a desire by the Lieutenant-Governor
+and Council that it should be done
+would cause him to do it; and on this
+basis Hutchinson was prevailed upon to
+meet the Council in the afternoon. This
+was a great point gained for the popular
+cause.</p>
+
+<p>At three o'clock, Faneuil Hall was
+filled to overflowing with the excited
+population assembled in legal town-meeting.
+Thomas Cushing was again chosen
+the Moderator; but the place would hold
+only about thirteen hundred, and the
+record reads, "The Hall not being spacious
+enough to receive the inhabitants
+who attended, it was voted to adjourn
+to Dr. Sewall's meeting-house,"&mdash;the
+Old South. The most convenient way
+for the people would be to pass into
+King Street, up by the Council-Chamber,
+and along what is now Washington
+Street, to the church. As they went, no
+mention is made of mottoes or banners
+or flags, of cheers or of jeers. Thomas
+dishing said his countrymen "were like
+the old British commoners, grave and sad
+men"; and it was said in the Council to
+Hutchinson, "That multitude are not such
+as pulled down your house"; but they are
+"men of the best characters," "men of
+estates and men of religion," "men who
+pray over what they do." With similar
+men, men who feared God an<a name="Page_667" id="Page_667"></a>d were devoted
+to public liberty, Cromwell won at
+Marston Moor; and so striking was the
+analogy, that at this hour it virtually
+forced itself on the well-read Hutchinson:
+for men of this stamp had once made a
+revolution in Boston, and as he looked
+out on this scene, perhaps scanned the
+concourse who passed from Faneuil Hall
+to the Old South, and read in their faces
+the sign of resolute hearts, he judged
+"their spirit to be as high as was the
+spirit of their ancestors when they imprisoned
+Andros, while they were four
+times as numerous." As the burden of
+official responsibility pressed heavily on
+him, he realized that he had to deal with
+an element far more potent than "the
+faction" which officials had long represented
+as composing the Patriot band,
+and that much depended on dealing with
+it wisely. This was not a dependent and
+starved host wildly urging the terrible
+demand of "Bread or blood"; nor was
+it fanaticism in a season of social discontent
+claiming impossibilities at the hand
+of power: the craving was moral and
+intellectual: it was an intelligent public
+opinion, a people with well-grounded
+and settled convictions, making a just
+demand on arbitrary power. Was such
+public opinion about to be scorned as
+though it were but a faction, and by officials
+who bore high the party-standard?
+And were men of such resoluteness of
+character and purpose about to be involved
+in a work of carnage? or would the
+wielders of British authority avoid the
+extremity by concession? Boston, indeed
+America, had seen no hour of intenser
+interest, of deeper solemnity, of
+more instant peril, or of truer moral sublimity;
+and as this assembly deliberated
+with the sounds of the fife and drum in
+their ears, and with the soldiery in their
+sight, questions like these must have been
+on every lip,&mdash;and they are of the civil-war
+questions that cause an involuntary
+shudder in every home.</p>
+
+<p>The Old South was not large enough
+to hold the people, and they stood in the
+street and near the Town-House awaiting
+the report of the committee of fifteen,
+chosen in the morning. The Lieutenant-Governor
+was now at the Council-Chamber,
+where, in addition to Colonels Dalrymple
+and Carr, there had been summoned
+Captain Caldwell of the Rose frigate;
+and Hutchinson would, he says, have
+summoned other crown officers, but he
+knew the Council would not consent to
+it. He took care to repeat to the committee,
+he says, the declaration which he
+had made in the morning to the Selectmen,
+the Justices, and the Council,&mdash;that
+"the ordering of the troops did not lie
+with him." As the committee, with Samuel
+Adams at the head, appeared on the
+Town-House steps, the people were in
+motion, and the word passed, "Make way
+for the committee!" Adams uncovered
+his head, and, as he went towards the
+church, he bowed alternately to those on
+each side of the lane that was formed,
+and repeated the words, "Both regiments
+or none." The answer of the Lieutenant-Governor
+to the morning demand for a<a name="Page_668" id="Page_668"></a>
+total removal of the troops was read to
+the meeting in the church. It was to the
+effect, that he had conferred with the
+commanders of the two regiments, who
+received orders from the General in New
+York, and it was not in his power to countermand
+these orders; but the Council
+desired their removal, and Colonel Dalrymple
+had signified that because of the
+part which the Twenty-Ninth Regiment
+had taken in the differences it should
+be placed without delay in the barracks
+at the Castle, and also that the main
+guard should be removed; while the
+Fourteenth Regiment should be so disposed
+and laid under such restraint that
+all occasion for future differences might be
+prevented. And now resounded through
+the excited assembly, from a thousand
+tongues, the words, "Both regiments or
+none!"</p>
+
+<p>A short debate occurred, when the answer
+was voted to be unsatisfactory. Then
+another committee was chosen. It was
+resolved that John Hancock, Samuel Adams,
+William Molineaux, William Phillips,
+Joseph Warren, Joshua Henshaw,
+and Samuel Pemberton be a committee
+to inform the Lieutenant-Governor that
+it was the unanimous opinion of the people
+that the reply was by no means satisfactory,
+and that nothing less would satisfy
+them than a total and immediate removal
+of the troops. This committee was
+one worthy of a great occasion. Hancock,
+Henshaw, and Pemberton, besides being
+individually of large and just influence
+from their ability, patriotism, worth, and
+wealth, were members of the Board of
+Selectmen, and therefore represented the
+municipality; Phillips, who had served on
+this Board, was a type of the upright and
+liberal merchant; Molineaux was one of
+the most determined and zealous of the
+Patriots, and a stirring business-man;
+Warren, ardent and bold, of rising fame
+as a leader, personified the generous devotion
+and noble enthusiasm of the young
+men; Adams, though not the first-named
+on the committee, played so prominent a
+part in its doings, that he appears as its
+chairman. He was so widely and favorably
+known now that he was addressed
+as "the Father of America." Of middling
+stature, plain in dress, quiet in manner,
+unpretending in deportment, he exhibited
+nothing extraordinary in common
+affairs; but on great occasions, when his
+deeper nature was called into action, he
+rose, without the smallest affectation, into
+an upright dignity of figure and bearing,&mdash;with
+a harmony of voice and a
+power of speech which made a strong
+impression, the more lasting from the purity
+and nervous eloquence of his style
+and the logical co<a name="Page_669" id="Page_669"></a>nsistency of his argument.
+Such were the men selected to
+speak and act for Boston in this hour of
+deep passion and of high resolve.</p>
+
+<p>The committee, about four o'clock, repaired
+to the Council-Chamber. It was a
+room respectable in size and not without
+ornament and historic memorials. On its
+walls were representatives of the two
+elements now in conflict,&mdash;of the Absolutism
+that was passing away, in full-length
+portraits of Charles II. and James
+II. robed in the royal ermine, and of a
+Republicanism which had grown robust
+and self-reliant, in the heads of Belcher
+and Bradstreet and Endicott and Winthrop.
+Around a long table were seated
+the Lieutenant-Governor and the members
+of the Council with the military officers,&mdash;the
+scrupulous and sumptuous costumes
+of civilians in authority, gold and
+silver lace, scarlet cloaks, and large wigs,
+mingled with the brilliant uniforms of
+the British army and navy. Into such
+imposing presence was now ushered the
+plainly attired committee of the town.</p>
+
+<p>At this time the Lieutenant-Governor,
+a portion of the Council, the military officers,
+and, among other officials now in
+the Town-House, though not in the Council,
+the Secretary of the Province, were
+sternly resolved to refuse compliance with
+the demand of the people. On the vote
+of the meeting being presented to the
+Lieutenant-Governor, Adams remarked
+at length on the illegality of quartering
+troops on the inhabitants in time of peace
+and without the consent of the legislature,
+urged that the public service did
+not require them, adverted with sensibility
+and warmth to the late tragedy,
+painted the misery in which the town
+would be involved, if the troops were suffered
+to remain, and urged the necessity
+of an immediate compliance with the vote
+of the people. The Lieutenant-Governor,
+in a brief reply, defended both the
+legality and the necessity of the troops,
+and renewed his old assertion that they
+were not subject to his authority. Adams
+again rose, and attention was riveted
+on him as he paused and gave a searching
+look at the Lieutenant-Governor.
+There was in his countenance and attitude
+a silent eloquence that words could
+not express; his manner showed that the
+energies of his soul were roused; and, in
+a tone not loud, but deep and earnest, he
+again addressed himself to Hutchinson,
+"It is well known," he said, "that, acting
+as Governor of the Province, you are, by
+its Charter, the Commander-in-Chief of
+the military forces within it, and, as such,
+the troops now in the capital are subject
+to your orders. If you, or Colonel Dalrymple
+under you, have the power to remove
+one regiment, you have the power
+to remove both; and nothing short of their
+total removal will satisfy the people or
+preserve the peace of the Province. A
+multitude, highly incensed, now wait the
+result of this application. The voice of ten
+thousand freemen demands that both regimen<a name="Page_670" id="Page_670"></a>ts
+be forthwith removed. Their voice
+must be respected,&mdash;their demand obeyed.
+Fail, then, at your peril, to comply
+with this requisition. On you alone rests
+the responsibility of the decision; and if
+the just expectations of the people are
+disappointed, you must be answerable to
+God and your country for the fatal consequences
+that must ensue. The committee
+have discharged their duty, and
+it is for you to discharge yours. They
+wait your final determination." As Adams,
+while speaking, intently eyed Hutchinson,
+he says, "I observed his knees to
+tremble; I saw his face grow pale; and
+I enjoyed the sight."</p>
+
+<p>A spell of silence followed this appeal.
+Then there was low conversation, to a
+whisper, between the Lieutenant-Governor
+and Colonel Dalrymple, who, in
+the spirit of the unbending soldier, was
+for resisting this demand, as he had been
+for summary proceedings in the case of
+the meetings. "It is impossible for me,"
+he had said this afternoon, "to go any further
+lengths in this matter. The information
+given of the intended rebellion is
+sufficient reason against the removal of
+His Majesty's troops." But he now said in
+a loud tone, "I am ready to obey your
+orders," which threw the responsibility
+on Hutchinson. All the members of the
+committee urged the demand. "Every
+one of them," Hutchinson says, "deliberately
+gave his opinion at large, and
+generally gave this reason to support it,&mdash;that
+the people would most certainly
+drive out the troops, and that the inhabitants
+of the other towns would join in it;
+and several of the gentlemen, declared
+that they did not judge from the general
+temper of the people only, but they knew
+it to be the determination, not of a mob,
+but of the generality of the principal inhabitants;
+and they added, that all the
+blood would be charged to me alone, for
+refusing to follow their unanimous advice,
+in desiring that the quarters of a single
+regiment might be changed, in order to
+put an end to the animosities between
+the troops and the inhabitants, seeing
+Colonel Dalrymple would consent to it."
+After the committee withdrew, the debates
+of the Council were long and earnest;
+and, as they went on, Hutchinson
+asked, "What protection would there be
+for the Commissioners, if both regiments
+were ordered to the Castle?" Several
+said, "They would be safe, and always
+had been safe." "As safe," said Gray,
+"without the troops as with them." And
+Irving said, "They never had been in
+danger, and he would pawn his life that
+they should receive no injury." "Unless
+the troops were removed," it was
+said, "before evening there would be
+ten thousand men on the Common."
+"The people in general," Tyler said,
+"were resolved to have the troops removed,
+without which they would not be
+satisfied; that, failing of other means,
+they were determined to effect their removal
+by force, let the act be deemed
+rebellion or otherwise." As the Council
+deliberated, the people were impatient,
+and the members were repeatedly called
+out to give information as to the result,
+This at length was unanimity. This
+body resolved, that, to preserve the peace,
+it was absolutely necessary that the troops
+should be removed; and they advised the
+Lieutenant-Governor to communicate
+that conclusion to Colonel Dalrymple,
+and to request that he would order his
+whole command to Castle William.</p>
+
+<p>The remark of Dalrymple, as well
+as the decision of the Council, became
+known to the people, and the word passed round,
+"that Colonel Dalrymple had
+yielded, and that the Lieutenant-Governor
+only held out." This circumstance
+was communicated to Hutchinson, and
+he says, "It now lay upon me to choose
+that side which had the fewest and least
+difficulties; and I weighed and compared
+them as well as the time I had for
+them would permit. I knew it was most
+regular for me to leave this matter entire
+to the commanding officer. I was
+sensible the troops were designed to be,
+upon occasion, employed under the direction
+of the civil magistrate, and that
+at the Castle they would be too remote,
+in most cases, to answer that purpose.
+But then I considered they never had
+been used for that purpose, and there
+was no probability they ever would be,
+because no civil magistrate could be found
+under whose directions they might act;
+and they could be considered only as
+having a tendency to keep the inhabitants
+in some degree of awe, and even
+this was every day lessening; and the
+affronts the troops received were such
+that there was no avoiding quarrels and
+slaughter." Still he hesitated substantially
+to retract his word; for now a request
+from him, he knew, was equivalent
+to an order; and before he determined,
+he consulted three officers of the
+crown, who, though not present in the
+Council, were in the building, and the
+Secretary, Oliver. All agreed that he
+ought to comply with the advice of the
+Council. He then formally recommended
+Colonel Dalrymple to remove all the
+troops, who gave his word of honor that
+he would commence preparations in the
+morning for a removal, and that there
+should be no unnecessary delay in quartering
+both regiments at the Castle.</p>
+
+<p>It was dark when the committee bore
+back to the meeting the great report of
+their success. It was received with expressions
+of the highest satisfaction. What
+a burden was lifted from the hearts of
+the Patriots! They did not, however,
+regard their work as quite done. They
+voted that a strong watch was necessary
+through the night, when the committee
+who had waited on the Lieutenant-Governor
+tendered their services to make a
+part of the watch, and the whole matter
+was placed in their hands as "a committee
+of safety." They were authorized to
+accept the service of such inhabitants as
+they might deem proper. The meeting,
+then dissolved. A few days after, the
+two regiments were removed to the Castle.</p>
+
+<p>The withdrawal of the troops caused
+great surprise in England, and long deliberations
+by the Ministry. "It is put
+out of all doubt," Governor Bernard
+wrote Hutchinson, "that the attacking
+the soldiers was preconcerted in order to
+oblige them to fire, and then make it necessary
+to quit the town, in consequence
+of their doing what they were forced to
+do. It is considered by thinking men
+wholly as a man&#339;uvre to support the
+cause of non-importation." The Opposition
+termed it an indignity put upon
+Great Britain, and called upon the Ministry
+to resent it upon a system, or to resign
+their offices. Lord Barrington, who
+approved of the soldiers' retiring to the
+Castle, said, that, "where there was no
+magistracy there should be no soldiers;
+and if they intended to have soldiers sent
+there again, they should provide for a
+magistracy, which could not be done but
+by appointing a royal Council, instead
+of the present democratical one." The
+Government were perplexed; but the
+expectation was general, that General
+Gage, without waiting for orders from
+the Government, would send a reinforcement
+to Boston, and order the whole of
+the troops into the town. "Every one,"
+Governor Bernard wrote, "without exception,
+says it must be immediately done.
+Those in opposition are as loud as any.
+Lord Shelburne told a gentleman, who
+reported it to me, that it was now high
+time for Great Britain to act with spirit."
+The Governor advised Hutchinson,
+that, should it turn out that he had been
+successful in preventing Captain Preston
+from being murdered by the mob, "Government
+might be reconciled to the removal
+of the troops." There was much
+outside clamor, and those who indulged
+in it could not reconcile to themselves
+"six hundred regular troops giving way
+to two or three thousand common people,
+who, they say, would not have dared
+to attack them, if they had stood their
+ground"; and this class regarded the affair
+"as a successful bully." Colonel
+Barr&eacute;, in the House of Commons, disposed
+of the question in a few words: "The
+officers agreed in sending the soldiers to
+Castle William; what Minister will dare
+to send them back to Boston?"</p>
+
+<p>These events stirred the public mind
+in the Colonies profoundly. The Spirit
+evinced by the people of Boston in the
+whole transaction raised the town still
+higher in the estimation of the Patriots;
+annual commemorative orations kept
+alive the tragic scene; and thus the introduction
+of the troops, the question involved
+in their removal, and the massacre
+and triumph of the people, contributed
+powerfully to bring about that
+change in affections and principles which
+finally resulted in American Independence.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="WET-WEATHER_WORK" id="WET-WEATHER_WORK"></a>WET-WEATHER WORK.</h2>
+
+<h3>BY A FARMER.</h3>
+
+
+<p>IV.</p>
+
+<p>We are fairly on English ground now;
+of course, it is wet weather. The phenomena
+of the British climate have not
+changed much since the time when the
+rains "let fall their horrible pleasure"
+upon the head of the poor, drenched outcast,
+Lear. Thunder and lightning, however,
+which belonged to that particular
+war of the elements, are rare in England.
+The rain is quiet, fine, insinuating, constant
+as a lover,&mdash;not wasting its resources
+in sudden, explosive outbreaks.</p>
+
+<p>During a foot-tramp of some four hundred
+miles, which I once had the pleasure
+of making upon English soil, and which led
+me from the mouth of the Thames to its
+sources, and thence through Derbyshire,
+the West Riding of Yorkshire, and all of
+the Lake counties, I do not think that the
+violence of the rain kept me housed for
+more than five days out of forty. Not to
+say that the balance showed sunshine and
+a bonny sky; on the contrary, a soft, lubricating
+mist is the normal condition of
+the British atmosphere; and a neutral tint
+of gray sky, when no wet is falling, is almost
+sure to call out from the country-landlord,
+if communicative, an explosive
+and authoritative, "Fine morning, this,
+Sir!"</p>
+
+<p>The really fine, sunny days&mdash;days
+you believed in rashly, upon the sunny
+evidence of such blithe poets as Herrick&mdash;are
+so rare, that, after a month of British
+travel, you can count them on your
+fingers. On such a one, by a piece of
+good fortune, I saw all the parterres of
+Hampton Court,&mdash;its great vine, its labyrinthine
+walks, its stately alleys, its ruddy
+range of brick, its clipped lindens, its
+rotund and low-necked beauties of Sir
+Peter Lely, and the red geraniums flaming
+on the window-sills of once royal
+apartments, where the pensioned dowagers
+now dream away their lives. On
+another such day, Twickenham, and all
+its delights of trees, bowers, and villas,
+were flashing in the sun as brightly as
+ever in the best days of Horace Walpole
+or of Pope. And on yet another, after
+weary tramp, I toiled up to the inn-door
+of "The Bear," at Woodstock; and after
+a cut or two into a ripe haunch of
+Oxfordshire mutton, with certain "tiny
+kickshaws," I saw, for the first time, under
+the light of a glorious sunset, that
+exquisite velvety stretch of the park of
+Woodstock, dimpled with water, dotted
+with forest&mdash;clumps, where companies of
+sleek fallow-deer were grazing by the
+hundred, where pheasants whirred away
+down the aisles of wood, where memories
+of Fair Rosamond and of Rochester and
+of Alice Lee lingered,&mdash;and all brought
+to a ringing close by Southey's ballad of
+"Blenheim," as the shadow of the gaunt
+Marlborough column slanted across the
+path.</p>
+
+<p>There are other notable places, however,
+which seem&mdash;so dependent are we
+on first impressions&mdash;to be always bathed
+in a rain-cloud. It is quite impossible,
+for instance, for me to think of London
+Bridge save as a great reeking thoroughfare,
+slimy with thin mud, with piles
+of umbrellas crowding over it, like an
+army of turtles, and its balustrade steaming
+with wet. The charming little Dulwich
+Gallery, with its Bonningtons and
+Murillos, I remember as situated somewhere
+(for I could never find it again of
+my own head) at a very rainy distance
+from London, under the spout of an interminable
+waterfall. The guide-books
+talk of a pretty neighborhood, and of a
+thousand rural charms thereabout; I remember
+only one or two draggled policemen
+in oil-skin capes, and with heads
+slanted to the wind, and my cabby, in a
+four-caped coat, shaking himself like a
+water-dog, in the area. Exeter, Gloucester,
+and Glasgow are three great wet cities
+in my memory,&mdash;a damp cathedral in
+each, with a damp-coated usher to each,
+who shows damp tombs, and whose talk
+is dampening to the last degree. I suppose
+they have sunshine in these places,
+and in the light of the sun I am sure that
+marvellous gray tower of Gloucester must
+make a rare show; but all the reports in
+the world will not avail to dry up the image
+of those wet days of visit.</p>
+
+<p>Considering how very much the fair
+days are overbalanced by the dirty, thick,
+dropping, misty weather of England, I
+think we take a too sunny aspect of her
+history: it has not been under the full-faced
+smiles of heaven that her battles,
+revolutions, executions, and pageants have
+held their august procession; the rain has
+wet many a May-day and many a harvesting,
+whose traditional color (through
+tender English verses) is gaudy with yellow
+sunshine. The revellers of the "Midsummer
+Night's Dream" would find a
+wet turf eight days out of ten to disport
+upon. We think of Bacon without an
+umbrella, and of Cromwell without a
+mackintosh; yet I suspect both of them
+carried these, or their equivalents, pretty
+constantly. Raleigh, indeed, threw his
+velvet cloak into the mud for the Virgin
+Queen to tread upon,&mdash;from which we
+infer a recent shower; but it is not often
+that an historical incident is so suggestive
+of the true state of the atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>History, however, does not mind the
+rain: agriculture must. More especially
+in any view of British agriculture, whether
+old or new, and in any estimate of its
+theories or progress, due consideration
+must be had for the generous dampness
+of the British atmosphere. To this cause
+is to be attributed primarily that wonderful
+velvety turf which is so unmatchable
+elsewhere; to the same cause, and to the
+accompanying even temperature, is to be
+credited very much of the success of the
+turnip-culture, which has within a century
+revolutionized the agriculture of
+Kugland; yet again, the magical effects
+of a thorough system of drainage are nowhere
+so demonstrable as in a soil constantly
+wetted, and giving a steady flow,
+however small, to the discharging tile.
+Measured by inches, the rain-fall is greater
+in most parts of America than in Great
+Britain; but this fall is so capricious with
+us, often so sudden and violent, that
+there must be inevitably a large surface-discharge,
+even though the tile, three
+feet below, is in working order. The
+true theory of skilful drainage is, not to
+carry away the quick flush of a shower,
+but to relieve a soil too heavily saturated
+by opening new outflows, setting new
+currents astir of both air and moisture,
+and thus giving new life and an enlarged
+capacity to lands that were dead with
+a stagnant over-soak.</p>
+
+<p>Bearing in mind, then, the conditions
+of the British climate, which are so much
+in keeping with the "wet weather" of
+these studies, let us go back again to old
+Markham's day, and amble along&mdash;armed
+with our umbrellas&mdash;through the current
+of the seventeenth century.</p>
+
+<p>James I., that conceited old pedant,
+whose "Counterblast to Tobacco" has
+worked the poorest of results, seems to
+have had a nice taste for fruits; and
+Sir Henry Wotton, his ambassador at
+Venice, writing from that city in 1622,
+says,&mdash;"I have sent the choicest melon-seeds
+of all kinds, which His Majesty doth
+expect, as I had order both from ray Lord
+Holderness and from Mr. Secretary Calvert."
+Sir Henry sent also with the seeds
+very particular directions for the culture
+of the plants, obtained probably from
+some head-gardener of a Priuli or a Morosini,
+whose melons had the full beat of
+Italian sunshine upon the south slopes of
+the Vicentine mountains. The same ambassador
+sends at that date to Lord Holderness
+"a double-flowering yellow rose,
+of no ordinary nature";<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> and it would
+be counted of no ordinary nature now,
+if what he avers be true, that "it flowreth
+every month from May till almost
+Christmas."</p>
+
+<p>King James took special interest in the
+establishment of his garden at the Theobald
+Palace in Hertfordshire: there were
+clipped hedges, neat array of linden avenues,
+fountains, and a Mount of Venus
+within a labyrinth; twelve miles of wall
+encircled the park, and the soldiers of
+Cromwell found fine foraging-ground in
+it, when they entered upon the premises
+a few years later. The schoolmaster-king
+formed also a guild of gardeners
+in the city of London, at whose hands
+certificates of capacity for garden-work
+were demanded, and these to be given
+only after proper examination of the applicants.
+Lord Bacon possessed a beautiful
+garden, if we may trust his own
+hints to that effect, and the added praises
+of Wotton. Cashiobury, Holland House,
+and Greenwich gardens were all noted
+in this time; and the experiments and
+successes of the proprietor of Bednall-Greene
+garden I have already alluded
+to. But the country-gentleman, who lived
+upon his land and directed the cultivation
+of his property, was but a very
+savage type of the Bedford or Oxfordshire
+landholders of our day. It involved
+a muddy drag over bad roads, after a
+heavy Flemish mare, to bring either one's
+self or one's crops to market.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Thomas Overbury, who draws such
+a tender picture of a "Milke-Mayde," is
+severe, and, I dare say, truthful, upon
+the country-gentleman. "His conversation,"
+says he, "amongst his tenants is
+desperate: but amongst his equals full of
+doubt. His travel is seldome farther than
+the next market towne, and his inquisition
+is about the price of corne: when
+he travelleth, he will goe ten mile out of
+the way to a cousins house of his to save
+charges; and rewards servants by taking
+them by the hand when hee departs.
+Nothing under a <i>sub-p&#339;na</i> can draw him
+to <i>London</i>: and when he is there, he
+sticks fast upon every object, casts his
+eyes away upon gazing, and becomes the
+prey of every cut-purse. When he comes
+home, those wonders serve him for his
+holy-day talke. If he goe to court, it is
+in yellow stockings: and if it be in winter,
+in a slight tafety cloake, and pumps
+and pantofles."</p>
+
+<p>The portrait of the smaller farmer,
+who, in this time, tilled his own ground,
+is even more severely sketched by Bishop
+Earle. "A plain country fellow is one
+that manures his ground well, but lets
+himself lye fallow and unfilled. He has
+reason enough to do his business, and not
+enough to be idle or melancholy.... His
+hand guides the plough, and the
+plough his thoughts, and his ditch and
+land-mark is the very mound of his meditations.
+He expostulates with his oxen
+very understandingly, and speaks <i>gee</i>,
+and <i>ree</i>, better than English. His mind
+is not much distracted with objects, but
+if a good fat cow come in his way, he
+stands dumb and astonished, and though
+his haste be never so great, wilt fix here
+half an hours contemplation. His habitation
+is some poor thatched roof, distinguished
+from his barn by the loop-holes
+that let out smoak, which the rain had
+long since washed through, but for the
+double ceiling of bacon on the inside,
+which has hung there from his grand-sires
+time, and is yet to make rashers for
+posterity. He apprehends Gods blessings
+only in a good year, or a fat pasture,
+and never praises him but on <i>good
+ground</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Such were the men who were to be
+reached by the agricultural literature of
+the day! Yet, notwithstanding this unpromising
+audience, scarcely a year passed
+but some talker was found who felt
+himself competent to expound the whole
+art and mystery of husbandry.</p>
+
+<p>Adam Speed, Gent., (from which title
+we may presume that he was no Puritan,)
+published a little book in the year 1626,
+which he wittily called "Adam out of
+Eden." In this he undertakes to show
+how Adam, under the embarrassing circumstance
+of being shut out of Paradise,
+may increase the product of a farm from
+two hundred pounds to two thousand
+pounds a year by the rearing of rabbits
+on furze and broom! It is all mathematically
+computed; there is nothing to
+disappoint in the figures; but I suspect
+there might be in the rabbits.</p>
+
+<p>Gentleman Speed speaks of turnips,
+clover, and potatoes; he advises the
+boiling of "butchers' blood" for poultry,
+and mixing the "pudding" with bran
+and other condiments, which will "feed
+the beasts very fat."</p>
+
+<p>The author of "Adam out of Eden"
+also indulges himself in verse, which is
+certainly not up to the measure of "Paradise
+Lost." This is its taste:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Each soyl hath no liking of every grain,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nor barley nor wheat is for every vein;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet know I no country so barren of soyl<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But some kind of come may be gotten with toyl.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Though husband at home be to count the cost what,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Yet thus huswife within is as needful as that:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">What helpeth in store to have never so much,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Half lost by ill-usage, ill huswifes, and such?"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The papers of Bacon upon subjects
+connected with rural life are so familiar
+that I need not recur to them. His
+particular suggestions, however sound
+in themselves, (and they generally are
+sound,) did by no means measure the
+extent of his contribution to the growth
+of good husbandry. But the more thorough
+methods of investigation which he
+instituted and encouraged gave a new
+and healthier direction to inquiries connected
+not only with agriculture, but
+with every experimental art.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, Gabriel Platte, publishing his
+"Observations and Improvements in
+Husbandry," about the year 1638, thinks
+it necessary to sustain and illustrate them
+with a record of "twenty experiments."</p>
+
+<p>Sir Richard Weston, too, a sensible
+up-country knight, has travelled through
+Flanders about the same time, and has
+seen such success attending upon the turnip
+and the clover culture there, that he
+urges the same upon his fellow-landholders,
+in a "Discourse of Husbandrie."</p>
+
+<p>The book was published under the
+name of Hartlib,&mdash;the same Master Samuel
+Hartlib to whom Milton addressed
+his tractate "Of Education," and of
+whom the great poet speaks as "a person
+sent hither [to England] by some
+good Providence from a far country, to
+be the occasion and incitement of great
+good to this island."</p>
+
+<p>This mention makes us curious to know
+something more of Master Samuel Hartlib.
+I find that he was the son of a
+Polish merchant, of Lithuania, was himself
+engaged for a time in commercial
+transactions, and came to England about
+the year 1640. He wrote several theological
+tracts, edited sundry agricultural
+works, including, among others, those
+of Sir Richard Weston, and published
+his own observations upon the shortcomings
+of British husbandry. He also proposed
+a grandiose scheme for an agricultural
+college, in order to teach youths
+"the theorick and practick parts of this
+most ancient, noble, and honestly gainfull
+art, trade, or mystery." The work published
+under his name entitled "The Legacy,"
+besides notices of the Brabant husbandry,
+embraces epistles from various
+farmers, who may be supposed to represent
+the progressive agriculture of England.
+Among these letters I note one
+upon "Snaggreet," (shelly earth from
+river-beds); another upon "Seaweeds";
+a third upon "Sea-sand"; and a fourth
+upon "Woollen-rags."</p>
+
+<p>Hartlib was in good odor during the
+days of the Commonwealth; for he lived
+long enough to see that bitter tragedy of
+the executed king before Whitehall Palace,
+and to hold over to the early years
+of the Restoration. But he was not in
+favor with the people about Charles II.;
+the small pension that Cromwell had bestowed
+fell into sad arrearages; and the
+story is, that he died miserably poor.</p>
+
+<p>It is noticeable that Hartlib, and a
+great many sensible old gentlemen of his
+date, spoke of the art of husbandry as a
+mystery. And so it is; a mystery then,
+and a mystery now. Nothing tries my
+patience more than to meet one of those
+billet-headed farmers who&mdash;whether in
+print or in talk&mdash;pretend to have solved
+the mystery and mastered it.</p>
+
+<p>Take my own crop of corn yonder upon
+the flat, which I have watched since
+the day when it first shot up its little
+dainty spears of green, until now it spindles
+has been faithfully ploughed and fed and
+tilled; but how gross appliances all these,
+to the fine fibrous feeders that have been
+searching, day by day, every cranny of
+the soil,&mdash;to the broad leaflets that, week
+by week, have stolen out from their green
+sheaths to wanton with the wind and
+caress the dews! Is there any quick-witted
+farmer who shall tell us with anything
+like definiteness what the phosphates have
+contributed to all this, and how much the
+nitrogenous manures, and to what degree
+the deposits of <i>humus</i>? He may establish
+the conditions of a sure crop, thirty,
+forty, or sixty bushels to the acre, (seasons
+favoring); but how short a reach is
+this toward determining the final capacity
+of either soil or plant! How often
+the most petted experiments laugh us in
+the face! The great miracle of the vital
+laboratory in the plant remains to mock
+us. We test it; we humor it; we fondly
+believe that we have detected its secret:
+but the mystery stays.</p>
+
+<p>A bumpkin may rear a crop that shall
+keep him from starvation; but to develop
+the <i>utmost</i> capacity of a given soil by fertilizing
+appliances, or by those of tillage,
+is the work, I suspect, of a wiser man than
+belongs to our day. And when I find
+one who fancies he has resolved all the
+conditions which contribute to this miracle
+of God's, and can control and fructify
+at his will, I have less respect for his
+head than for a good one&mdash;of Savoy
+cabbage. The great problem of Adam's
+curse is not worked out so easily. The
+sweating is not over yet.</p>
+
+<p>If we are confronted with mystery, it
+is not blank, hopeless, fathomless mystery.
+Our plummet-lines are only too
+short; but they are growing longer. It is
+a lively mystery, that piques and tempts
+and rewards endeavor. It unfolds with
+an appetizing delay. Every year a new
+secret is laid bare, which, in the flush of
+triumph, seems a crowning development;
+whereas it presently appears that we
+have only opened a new door upon some
+further labyrinth.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout the seventeenth century,
+the progress in husbandry, without being
+at any one period very brilliant, was decided
+and constant. If there was anything
+like a relapse, and neglect of good
+culture, it was most marked shortly after
+the Restoration. The country-gentlemen,
+who had entertained a wholesome
+horror of Cromwell and his troopers, had,
+during the Commonwealth, devoted themselves
+to a quiet life upon their estates, repairing
+the damages which the Civil War
+had wrought in their fortunes and in their
+lands. The high price of farm-products
+stimulated their efforts, and their country-isolation
+permitted a harmless show of the
+chivalrous contempt they entertained for
+the <i>novi homines</i> of the Commonwealth.
+With the return of Charles they abandoned
+their estates once more to the bailiffs,
+and made a rush for the town and
+for their share of the "leeks and onions."</p>
+
+<p>But the earnest men were at work.
+Sainfoin and turnips were growing every
+year into credit. The potato was becoming
+a crop of value; and in the year
+1664 a certain John Foster devoted a treatise
+to it, entitled, "England's Happiness
+increased, or a Sure Remedy against all
+Succeeding Dear Years, by a Plantation
+of Roots called Potatoes."</p>
+
+<p>For a long time the crop had been
+known, and Sir Thomas Overbury had
+made it the vehicle of one of his sharp
+witticisms against people who were forever
+boasting of their ancestry,&mdash;their
+best part being below ground. But Foster
+anticipates the full value of what had
+before been counted a novelty and a curiosity.
+He advises how custards, paste,
+puddings, and even bread, may be made
+from the flour of potatoes.</p>
+
+<p>John Worlidge (1669) gives a full system
+of husbandry, advising green fallows,
+and even recommending and describing
+a drill for the putting in of seed,
+and for distributing with it a fine fertilizer.</p>
+
+<p>Evelyn, also, about this time, gave a
+dignity to rural pursuits by his "Sylva"
+and "Terra," both these treatises having
+been recited before the Royal Society.
+The "Terra" is something muddy,<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> and
+is by no means exhaustive; but the "Sylva"
+for more than a century was the British
+planter's hand-book, being a judicious,
+sensible, and eloquent treatise upon a subject
+as wide and as beautiful as its title.
+Even Walter Scott,&mdash;himself a capital
+woodsman,&mdash;when he tells (in "Kenilworth")
+of the approach of Tressilian
+and his Doctor companion to the neighborhood
+of Say's Court, cannot forego his
+tribute to the worthy and cultivated author
+who once lived there, and who in
+his "Sylva" gave a manual to every
+British planter, and in his life an exemplar
+to every British gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>Evelyn was educated at Oxford, travelled
+widely upon the Continent, was a
+firm adherent of the royal party, and at
+one time a member of Prince Rupert's
+famous troop. He married the daughter
+of the British ambassador in Paris,
+through whom he came into possession
+of Say's Court, which he made a gem of
+beauty. But in his later years he had
+the annoyance of seeing his fine parterres
+and shrubbery trampled down by that
+Northern boor, Peter the Great, who
+made his residence there while studying
+the mysteries of ship-building at Deptford,
+and who had as little reverence
+for a parterre of flowers as for any other
+of the tenderer graces of life.</p>
+
+<p>The British monarchs have always
+been more regardful of those interests
+which were the object of Evelyn's tender
+devotion. I have already alluded
+to the horticultural fancies of James I.
+His son Charles was an extreme lover of
+flowers, as well as of a great many luxuries
+which hedged him against all Puritan
+sympathy. "Who knows not," says
+Milton, in his reply to the &#917;&#921;&#922;&#937;&#925; &#914;&#923;&#917;&#921;&#923;&#921;&#922;&#919;,
+"the licentious remissness of his
+Sunday's theatre, accompanied with that
+reverend statute for dominical jigs and
+May-poles, published in his own name,"
+etc.?</p>
+
+<p>But the poor king was fated to have
+little enjoyment of either jigs or May-poles;
+harsher work belonged to his reign;
+and all his garden-delights came to be
+limited finally to a little pot of flowers
+upon his prison-window. And I can easily
+believe that the elegant, wrong-headed,
+courteous gentleman tended these
+poor flowers daintily to the very last,
+and snuffed their fragrance with a Christian
+gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>Charles was an appreciative lover of
+poetry, too, as well as of Nature. I wonder
+if it ever happened to him, in his
+prison-hours at Carisbrooke, to come
+upon Milton's "L'Allegro," (first printed
+in the very year of the Battle of
+Naseby,) and to read,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"In thy right hand lead with thee<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The mountain nymph, sweet Liberty;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And if I give thee honor due,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mirth, admit me of thy crew<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To live with her, and live with thee,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In unreprov&egrave;d pleasures free;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To hear the lark begin his flight,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, singing, startle the dull night,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From his watch-tower in the skies,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till the dappled dawn doth rise;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then to come, in spite of sorrow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And at my window bid good-morrow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Through the sweetbrier, or the vine,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or the twisted eglantine."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>How it must have smitten the King's
+heart to remember that the tender poet,
+whose rhythm none could appreciate better
+than he, was also the sturdy Puritan
+pamphleteer whose blows had thwacked
+so terribly upon the last props that held
+up his tottering throne!</p>
+
+<p>Cromwell, as we have seen, gave Master
+Hartlib a pension; but whether on
+the score of his theological tracts, or his
+design for an agricultural college, would
+be hard to say. I suspect that the hop
+was the Protector's favorite among flowering
+plants, and that his admiration of
+trees was measured by their capacity for
+timber. Yet that rare masculine energy,
+which he and his men carried with them
+in their tread all over England, was a
+very wakeful stimulus to productive agriculture.</p>
+
+<p>Charles II. loved tulips, and befriended
+Evelyn. In his long residence at Paris
+he had grown into a great fondness for
+the French gardens. He afterward sent
+for Le Notre&mdash;who had laid out Versailles
+at an expense of twenty millions
+of dollars&mdash;to superintend the planting
+of Greenwich and St. James. Fortunately,
+no strict imitation of Versailles
+was entered upon. The splendors of
+Chatsworth Garden grew in this time
+out of the exaggerated taste, and must
+have delighted the French heart of
+Charles. Other artists have had the
+handling of this great domain since the
+days of Le Notre. A crazy wilderness
+of rock-work, amid which the artificial
+waters commit freak upon freak, has
+been strewed athwart the lawn; a stately
+conservatory has risen, under which
+the Duke may drive, if he choose, in
+coach and four, amid palm-trees, and
+the monster-vegetation of the Eastern
+archipelago; the little glass temple is
+in the gardens, under which the Victoria
+lily was first coaxed into British
+bloom; a model village has sprung up
+at the Park gates, in which each cottage
+is a gem, and seems transplanted from
+the last book on rural ornamentation.
+But the sight of the village oppresses one
+with a strange incongruity; the charm
+of realism is wanting; it needs a population
+out of one of Watteau's pictures,&mdash;clean
+and deft as the painted figures;
+flesh and blood are too gross, too prone
+to muddy shoes, and to&mdash;sneeze. The
+rock-work, also, is incongruous; it belongs
+on no such wavy roll of park-land;
+you see it a thousand times grander, a
+half-hour's drive away, toward Matlock.
+And the stiff parterres, terraces, and alleys
+of Le Notre are equally out of place
+in such a scene. If, indeed, as at Versailles,
+they bounded and engrossed the
+view, so that natural surfaces should have
+no claim upon your eye,&mdash;if they were
+the mere setting to a monster palace,
+whose colonnades and balusters of marble
+edged away into colonnades and balusters
+of box-wood, and these into a limitless
+extent of long green lines, which are
+only lost to the eye where a distant fountain
+dashes its spray of golden dust into
+the air,&mdash;as at Versailles,&mdash;there would
+be keeping. But the Devonshire palace
+has quite other setting. Blue Derbyshire
+hills are behind it; a grand, billowy slope
+of the comeliest park-land in England
+rolls down from its terrace-foot to where
+the Derwent, under hoary oaks, washes
+its thousand acres of meadow-vale, with
+a flow as charming and limpid as one of
+Virgil's eclogues. It is such a setting that
+carries the great quadrangle of Chatsworth
+Palace and its flanking artificialities
+of rock and garden, like a black
+patch upon the face of a fine woman of
+Charles's court.</p>
+
+<p>This brings us upon our line of march
+again. Charles II. loved stiff gardens;
+James II. loved stiff gardens; and William,
+with his Low-Country tastes, out-stiffened
+both, with his</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"topiary box a-row."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Lord Bacon has commended the formal
+style to public admiration by his advocacy
+and example. The lesson was repeated
+at Cashiobury by the most noble
+the Earl of Essex (of whom Evelyn
+writes,&mdash;"My Lord is not illiterate beyond
+the rate of most noblemen of his
+age"). So also that famous garden of
+Moor-Park in Hertfordshire, laid out by
+the witty Duchess of Bedford, to whom
+Dr. Donne addresses some of his piquant
+letters, was a model of old-fashioned and
+stately graces. Sir William Temple praises
+it beyond reason in his "Garden of
+Epicurus," and cautions readers against
+undertaking any of those irregularities
+of garden-figures which the Chinese so
+much affect. He admires only stateliness
+and primness. "Among us," he
+says, "the Beauty of Building and Planting
+is placed chiefly in some certain Proportions,
+Symmetries, or Uniformities;
+our Walks and our Trees ranged so as
+to answer one another, and at exact Distances."</p>
+
+<p>From all these it is clear what was the
+garden-drift of the century. Even Waller,
+the poet,&mdash;whose moneys, if he were
+like most poets, could not be thrown away
+idly,&mdash;spent a large sum in levelling the
+hills about his rural home at Beaconsfields.
+(We shall find a different poet
+and treatment by-and-by in Shenstone.)</p>
+
+<p>Only Milton, speaking from the very
+arcana of the Puritan rigidities, breaks
+in upon these geometric formalities with
+the rounded graces of the garden which
+he planted in Eden. There</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i17">"the crisped brooks,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Rolling on orient pearl and sands of gold<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With mazy error under pendent shades,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ran nectar, visiting each plant, and fed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Flowers worthy of Paradise, which not nice Art<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In beds and curious knots, but Nature boon<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Poured forth profuse on hill and dale and plain."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Going far behind all conventionalities,
+he credited to Paradise&mdash;the ideal
+of man's happiest estate&mdash;variety, irregularity,
+profusion, luxuriance; and
+to the fallen estate, precision, formality,
+and an inexorable Art, which, in place
+of concealing, glorified itself. In the
+next century, when Milton comes to be
+illustrated by Addison and the rest, we
+shall find gardens of a different style from
+those of Waller and of Hampton Court.</p>
+
+<p>And now from some look-out point
+near to the close of the seventeenth century,
+when John Evelyn, in his age, is
+repairing the damages that Peter the
+Great has wrought in his pretty Deptford
+home, let us take a bird's-eye glance at
+rural England.</p>
+
+<p>It is raining; and the clumsy Bedford
+coach, drawn by stout Flemish mares,&mdash;for
+thorough-breds are as yet unknown,&mdash;is
+covered with a sail-cloth to keep the
+wet away from the six "insides." The
+grass, wherever the land is stocked with
+grass, is as velvety as now. The wheat
+in the near county of Herts is fair, and
+will turn twenty bushels to the acre;
+here and there an enterprising landholder
+has a small field of dibbled grain, which
+will yield a third more. John Worlidge's
+drill is not in request, and is only talked
+of by a few wiseacres who prophesy its
+ultimate adoption. The fat bullocks of
+Bedford will not dress more than seven
+hundred a head; and the cows, if killed,
+would not overrun five hundred weight.
+There are occasional fields of sainfoin
+and of turnips; but these latter are
+small, and no ridging or hurdling is yet
+practised. From time to time appears
+a patch of barren moorland, which has
+been planted with forest-trees, in accordance
+with the suggestions of Mr. Evelyn,
+and under the wet sky the trees are
+thriving. Wide reaches of fen, measured
+by hundreds of miles, (which now bear
+great crops of barley,) are saturated with
+moisture, and tenanted only by ghost-like
+companies of cranes.</p>
+
+<p>The gardens attached to noble houses,
+under the care of some pupil of Wise,
+or of Parkinson, have their espaliers,&mdash;their
+plums, their pears,<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> and their
+grapes. These last are rare, however,
+(Parkinson says sour, too,) and bear a
+great price in the London market. One
+or two horticulturists of extraordinary
+enterprise have built greenhouses, warmed,
+Evelyn says, "in a most ingenious
+way, by passing a brick flue underneath
+the beds."</p>
+
+<p>The lesser country-gentlemen, who
+have no establishments in town, rarely
+venture up, for fear of the footpads on
+the heath, and the insolence of the black-guard
+Cockneys. Their wives are staid
+dames, learned at the brew-tub and in
+the buttery,&mdash;but not speaking French,
+nor wearing hoops or patches. A great
+many of the older exotic plants have
+become domesticated; and the goodwife
+has a flaming parterre at her door,&mdash;but
+not valued one half so much as her bed
+of marjoram and thyme. She may read
+King James's Bible, or, if a Non-Conformist,
+Baxter's "Saint's Rest"; while
+the husband regales himself with a thumb-worn
+copy of "Sir Fopling Flutter," or,
+if he live well into the closing years of
+the century, with De Foe's "True-born
+Englishman."</p>
+
+<p>Poetic feeling was more lacking in the
+country-life than in the illustrative literature
+of the century. To say nothing of
+Milton's brilliant little poems, "L'Allegro"
+and "Il Penseroso," which flash
+all over with the dews, there are the
+charming "Characters" of Sir Thomas
+Overbury, and the graceful discourse of
+Sir William Temple. The poet Drummond
+wrought a music out of the woods
+and waters which lingers alluringly even
+now around the delightful cliffs and valleys
+of Hawthornden. John Dryden,
+though a thorough cit, and a man who
+would have preferred his arm-chair at
+Will's Coffee-House to Chatsworth and
+the fee of all its lands, has yet touched
+most tenderly the "daisies white" and
+the spring, in his "Flower and the Leaf."</p>
+
+<p>But we skip a score of the poets, and
+bring our wet day to a close with the
+naming of two honored pastorals. The
+first, in sober prose, is nothing more nor
+less than Walton's "Angler." Its homeliness,
+its calm, sweet pictures of fields
+and brooks, its dainty perfume of flowers,
+its delicate shadowing-forth of the Christian
+sentiment which lived by old English
+firesides, its simple, artless songs,
+(not always of the highest style, but of
+a hearty naturalness that is infinitely
+better,)&mdash;these make the "Angler" a
+book that stands among the thumb-worn.
+There is good marrowy English in it; I
+know very few fine writers of our times
+who could make a better book on such a
+subject to-day,&mdash;with all the added information,
+and all the practice of the newspaper-columns.
+What Walton wants to
+say he says. You can make no mistake
+about his meaning; all is as lucid as the
+water of a spring. He does not play upon
+your wonderment with tropes. There
+is no chicane of the pen; he has some
+pleasant matters to tell of, and he tells
+of them&mdash;straight.</p>
+
+<p>Another great charm about Walton is
+his childlike truthfulness. I think he is
+almost the only earnest trout-fisher I ever
+knew (unless Sir Humphrey Davy be
+excepted) whose report could be relied
+upon for the weight of a trout. I have
+many excellent friends&mdash;capital fishermen&mdash;whose
+word is good upon most
+concerns of life, but in this one thing they
+cannot be confided in. I excuse it; I
+take off twenty per cent. from their estimates
+without either hesitation, anger, or
+reluctance.</p>
+
+<p>I do not think I should have trusted
+in such a matter Charles Cotton, although
+he was agricultural as well as piscatory,&mdash;having
+published a "Planter's Manual."
+I think he could, and did, draw a long
+bow. I suspect innocent milkmaids were
+not in the habit of singing Kit Marlowe's
+songs to the worshipful Mr. Cotton.</p>
+
+<p>One pastoral remains to mention, published
+at the very opening of the year
+1600, and spending its fine forest-aroma
+thenceforward all down the century. I
+mean Shakspeare's play of "As You Like
+It."</p>
+
+<p>From beginning to end the grand old
+forest of Arden is astir overhead; from
+beginning to end the brooks brawl in
+your ear; from beginning to end you
+smell the bruised ferns and the delicate-scented
+wood-flowers. It is Theocritus
+again, with the civilization of the added
+centuries contributing its spangles of reason,
+philosophy, and grace. Who among
+all the short-kirtled damsels of all the
+eclogues will match us this fair, lithe, witty,
+capricious, mirthful, buxom Rosalind?
+Nowhere in books have we met with her
+like,&mdash;but only at some long-gone picnic
+in the woods, where we worshipped
+"blushing sixteen" in dainty boots and
+white muslin. There, too, we met a match
+for sighing Orlando,&mdash;mirrored in the
+water; there, too, some diluted Jaques
+may have "moralized" the excursion for
+next day's "Courier," and some lout of a
+Touchstone (there are always such in picnics)
+passed the ices, made poor puns, and
+won more than his share of the smiles.</p>
+
+<p>Walton is English all over; but "As
+You Like It" is as broad as the sky, or
+love, or folly, or hope.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_FRENCH_STRUGGLE_FOR_NAVAL_AND_COLONIAL_POWER" id="THE_FRENCH_STRUGGLE_FOR_NAVAL_AND_COLONIAL_POWER"></a>THE FRENCH STRUGGLE FOR NAVAL AND COLONIAL POWER.</h2>
+
+
+<p>In comparison with our national misfortunes
+all beside seems trifling. Else
+nothing would so fasten our attention as
+the French invasion and conquest of Mexico.
+A dependency of France established
+at our door! The most restless, ambitious,
+and warlike nation in Europe our
+neighbor! Who shall tell what results,
+momentous and lasting, may follow in the
+train of such events?</p>
+
+<p>What is the explanation of this conquest?
+Is it the freak of an ambitious
+despot? Or is it only a stroke in the
+line of a settled policy? one fact, which
+we see, amid a great number of facts
+which we do not see?</p>
+
+<p>This particular enterprise comes close
+to us. It affronts our pride and tramples
+upon our political traditions. It establishes,
+what we did not wish to see on this
+Western Continent, another foreign jurisdiction.
+But for more than twenty-five
+years France has been engaged in a series
+of like enterprises. In places not so
+near to us, by the same arbitrary methods,
+she has already achieved conquests
+as important. With soft-footed ambition,
+she has planted her flag and reared her
+strongholds on spots full of natural advantages.
+But the aim is the same everywhere:
+the re&euml;stablishment of her lost colonial
+and naval power. And the hope
+of France is, that in the race for mercantile
+and naval greatness she may yet challenge
+and vanquish the Sovereign of the
+Seas.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The peace of 1815 left France with
+her naval and colonial power broken apparently
+beyond hope. Even in the thirteen
+years preceding that peace England
+had taken or destroyed not less than six
+hundred of her war-ships. In the Mediterranean,
+on the Atlantic, amid the islands
+of the West Indies, in the far-off
+golden East, wherever contending, fleet
+against fleet, or ship with ship, everywhere
+she had been vanquished and driven
+from the sea. That boundless colonial
+empire, of which Dupleix in the East
+dreamed, and for whose establishment in
+the West Montcalm fought and died,
+had shrunk to a few fishing-ports off the
+Gulf of St. Lawrence, a few sugar-islands
+in the West Indies, and some unarmed
+factories dotting the coasts of Africa
+and the shores of Hindostan, and
+existing by British grace and permission.
+To so low an estate had fallen
+that towering ambition which thought to
+exercise uncontrolled dominion over this
+continent, to rule with more than regal
+sway the rich islands and peninsulas
+of Asia, and to dictate peace to fallen
+England from the guns of her armadas.
+After five wars waged with no craven
+spirit in less than three-quarters of a century,
+after she had exhausted every resource
+and more than once banded against
+her island foe every naval power in Europe,
+she was forced to succumb to British
+perseverance and to the gallantry of
+British sailors. The peace, which came
+not a moment too soon, found her with a
+navy literally annihilated, and with little
+remaining of her colonial empire but the
+memory. When we compare this hopeless
+failure with the mercantile activity
+and naval force of Modern France,&mdash;when
+we call up, in imagination, her new colonies,
+the germs almost of empires,&mdash;we
+cannot admire too much the courage and
+energy which have called into existence
+such magnificent resources. To what are
+we to attribute this stupendous change?
+What have been the methods of this
+growth? By what steps has this grand
+progress from weakness to strength been
+achieved?</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>In such a work of restoration, France
+had everything to create,&mdash;ships, armaments,
+machinery, and sailors even, to
+replace those who had fallen in the front
+of battle. To produce capacity of production
+was her first work,&mdash;to establish
+new ports or replenish old ones, to build
+docks, to rear workshops, to gather materials.
+This is what she has been doing.
+Silently and steadily she has been laying
+the foundations of maritime greatness.
+Her ports, in everything which contributes
+to naval efficiency,&mdash;in size, in mechanical
+appliances, in concentration upon
+one spot of all the trades and all the
+resources necessary for the construction
+and repair of war-ships,&mdash;excel all other
+naval depots in the world.</p>
+
+<p>This is no exaggeration. There is the
+port of Cherbourg. Originally it was little
+more than an open bay, hollowed by
+the waters of the English Channel in the
+French coast, with a rocky shore exposed
+to every northern blast. But it was situated
+just where France needed a harbor,
+midway on her northern coast, facing
+England. Across this open bay, as a
+chord subtends its arc, a gigantic sea-wall
+has been stretched. Built in deep water
+more than a mile from the head of the
+bay, it extends almost from shore to shore.
+It is nearly three miles long. It is scarcely
+less than nine hundred feet wide at its
+base. Rising from the bed of the sea sixty-six
+feet, it is firm enough to bear up
+fortresses strong as human engineering
+can rear. This is the famous <i>digue</i> of
+Cherbourg. Its construction has been a
+seventy years' battle with the elements.
+Many times the waves have destroyed the
+work of years. Once a furious tempest
+swept away the whole superstructure,
+with its forts, armaments, barracks, and
+even garrison. But failure has only awakened
+fresh energy, and it stands now complete
+and rooted in the sea like a reef.
+At each end of the <i>digue</i>, between it and
+the main land, are broad ship-channels,
+affording a free passage at all tides to the
+largest ships. Thus science has called
+into existence a safe harbor, protected
+from the assaults of the sea by its granite
+barrier,&mdash;protected none the less from
+man's assaults by the concentric fire of
+more than six hundred guns.</p>
+
+<p>This is but the exterior of Cherbourg.
+In the bosom of the rocky cliffs of its
+western shore three basins or docks have
+been hewn with gigantic toil. The first,
+finished in 1813, is 950 feet long, 768 feet
+wide, and 55 feet deep, and will hold securely
+fifteen ships of the line. The second,
+of somewhat smaller dimensions, was
+completed in 1829, and will float a dozen
+ships. The third, far larger than either,
+was opened with great ceremony in 1858:
+it is 1365 feet long, 650 feet wide, and
+60 feet deep, and will contain eighteen
+or twenty ships of the largest size. On
+the sides of these basins are twelve building-slips
+and seven docks. And radiating
+from them, and in close contiguity,
+are arsenals, storehouses, timber-yards,
+ropewalks, sail-lofts, bakeries, and machine-shops
+capable of turning out marine
+engines, anchors, cables, and indeed every
+piece of iron-work which enters into
+the construction of a ship. It is no vain
+boast that an army of a hundred thousand
+men can be embarked any fine morning
+at Cherbourg, and that the fleet necessary
+for its transport can be built and
+armed and equipped and protected to the
+hour of its departure in this fortified
+haven.</p>
+
+<p>Yet Cherbourg is but one of five ports
+equally efficient, equally protected, and
+equally furnished with the products of
+mechanic and nautical invention. Brest,
+L'Orient, and Rochefort, on the west,
+have far greater natural and scarcely
+less acquired advantages; while the old
+port of Toulon on the Mediterranean,
+old only in name, has been so enlarged
+and strengthened, that it can supply for
+the southern waters all and more than
+Cherbourg does for the northern. One
+fact will show to what an extent this
+power of naval production has been carried.
+In these five ports are some eighty
+building-slips or houses, and twenty-five
+docks, and, connected with them, all the
+materials, all the trades, all the labor-saving
+machines, all the mechanical forces,
+which the nineteenth century knows.
+If she wished, France could build at the
+same time forty ships of the line and forty
+frigates, while twenty-five more were
+undergoing repairs. The result of all this
+activity is, that, in extent, in completeness,
+in concentration of forces upon the
+right spot, the naval ports and dockyards
+of France are absolutely unequalled.
+And the work goes on. To-day
+twenty-two thousand men are employed
+upon naval works. Within six months a
+wet dock has been completed at Toulon,
+and another at L'Orient, while at Brest
+great ranges of workshops are hastening
+to completion; and it is whispered that
+at Cherbourg another basin is, like its
+predecessors, to be chiselled out of the
+solid rock.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Do we ask now what France has gained,
+in fleets and armaments, from this immense
+work of preparation? Everything.
+Not to dwell upon sailing-ships,
+which the progress of invention has made
+of inferior worth, she has a steam-navy
+second to that of no power in Europe.
+Her present ruler has fully appreciated
+the importance of that new element in
+naval warfare, steam,&mdash;an element all
+the more important to France, that it
+tends to lower the value of mere seamanship,
+in which she has always been deficient,
+and to increase the value of scientific
+knowledge and training, in which
+she has ever been with the foremost. For
+ten years her energy has been tasked to
+produce steamships of the greatest power
+and of the finest models. Since 1852 her
+ships of the line have increased from two
+to forty, and her frigates from twenty-one
+to forty-six. A fleet has thus been created
+which is numerically equal to that of
+England, and which, so far as these things
+depend upon the stanchness of the ships
+and the weight of the armaments, is perhaps
+in force and efficiency superior.</p>
+
+<p>If we turn our attention to iron-clad
+ships, we shall see best displayed the sagacity,
+energy, and secretiveness of Louis
+Napoleon. In the Crimean War, three
+floating batteries covered with iron slabs,
+and each mounting eighteen fifty-pounders,
+silenced the Russian fort at Kinburn.
+This was a lesson it would seem that any
+one might learn. Louis Napoleon did not
+fail to learn it. If a ship can be made
+invulnerable, or nearly so, in every part,
+then of what avail is that strategy which
+secures choice of position, and which, of
+old, almost decided the battle? Will not
+he come off victor who can produce guns
+from which the heaviest shot may be hurled
+at the highest velocity, and gunners
+who shall launch them on their errand
+of destruction with the greatest accuracy?
+The French emperor has fairly
+overreached his island rivals. While
+they were experimenting, he laid the
+keels of two iron-clads of six thousand
+tons burden. In 1859 he ordered the
+construction of twenty steel-clad frigates
+and fifty gunboats. Lord Clarence Paget
+declared in debate last March, that, while
+England had, finished or constructing,
+only sixteen iron-clad frigates, France
+had thirty-one. And even this takes no
+account of floating-batteries and gunboats,
+wholly or in part protected, and
+of which, if we are to trust her papers,
+France has an almost fabulous number.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>But who shall man this fleet? Where
+are the skilful mariners to make efficient
+these tremendous elements of naval
+power? It was Lord Nelson, I think,
+who exclaimed, when he saw the stanch
+ships of Spain, "Thank God, Spaniards
+cannot build men!" The recent changes
+in naval construction, decreasing perhaps
+the relative worth of mere seamanship,
+may have made the exclamation
+less pertinent than of old. But, after all,
+on the rude and stormy ocean, proverbially
+fickle and uncertain, nothing can
+take the place of sailors,&mdash;of brave and
+skilful men, trained by long struggle with
+wind and wave, calm in danger, apt in
+emergencies, finding the narrow path of
+safety where common eyes see only peril
+and ruin. France understands tins. She
+knows how many of her past humiliations
+can be traced directly to defective seamanship.
+But where to seek the remedy?
+How to find or make sailors fit to
+contend with those who were almost born
+and bred on the restless surge? By what
+methods, with a slender commercial marine
+and a people reluctant to encounter
+the hardships and dangers of sea-life, to
+fill up the scanty roll of her able seamen?
+That is the problem France had to solve;
+and she has done everything to solve it,&mdash;but
+remove impossibilities.</p>
+
+<p>The first counsel of wisdom was to
+make the number of her sailors greater.
+France has, at the most liberal estimate,
+only one hundred and fifty thousand men
+at all conversant with the sea; while
+England has, including boatmen, fishermen,
+coasters, and sailors of long voyages,
+the enormous number of eight hundred
+thousand. Remove this disproportion and
+you settle the whole question. Unfortunately,
+this is a matter in which government
+can do but little, while national
+tastes and habits do everything. No despotism
+can make a commercial marine
+where no commercial spirit is. And no
+voice, charm it ever so wisely, can draw
+the peasant of France from his vine-clad
+hills and plains. The French rulers have
+done what they could. They have fostered,
+with a steady and liberal hand, the
+fisheries. Every spring, twenty thousand
+men have set sail to that best nursery of
+seamanship,&mdash;the Banks of Newfoundland.
+These men are paid a bounty by
+Government, and, in return, are subjected
+to a naval discipline, and, upon an
+emergency, are liable at a moment's notice
+to enter into the naval service. To
+quicken mercantile enterprise, by which
+alone mariners can be called into existence,
+enormous subsidies have been paid
+to the great lines of steamers to Brazil
+and the East. And the yearning for
+colonies, which in our day has led to
+almost simultaneous attempts to found
+settlements in both hemispheres and in
+all waters, has no doubt for a leading
+cause the desire to build up a mercantile
+marine, and with it a numerous body of
+expert seamen. If these efforts have
+not accomplished all that their projectors
+could wish, it is not because their plans
+lacked sagacity, but because it is hard
+to put the genius of the sea into the
+breasts of men who are essentially landsmen.</p>
+
+<p>To increase the number of French
+sailors would unquestionably be the best
+possible method of adding to French naval
+power. But suppose that this cannot
+be done. Supposes that there is in the
+heart of the French people an invincible
+attachment to the soil, which makes them
+deaf to every siren of the sea. What
+is the next counsel of wisdom? This, is
+it not? To make what sailors you have
+efficient and available for naval emergencies.
+In this respect the French
+authorities have achieved an entire success.
+Every sailor, nay, every man whose
+employment savors at all of maritime
+life, though he be only a boatman plying
+the river, or a laborer in harbor or
+dock, is enrolled in what is called the
+marine inscription,&mdash;thenceforward in
+all times of need to be called into active
+service. This puts the whole seafaring
+population at the disposal of Government.
+Nor is this all. Regular drafts are made
+upon the seamen; and it is computed
+that in every period of nine years all
+the sailors of France serve in their turn
+in the navy. They are trained in all
+that belongs to naval duty: in the use
+of ships' guns, in the sailing of great
+ships, and in the evolutions of fleets. No
+matter how sudden the call, or from what
+direction the sailors are taken, no French
+fleet leaves or can leave port with a
+crew of green hands.</p>
+
+<p>The training which is given to sailors
+actually in service is an equally important
+matter. The French Admiralty
+keeps no drones in its employ; certainly
+it does not promote them to places of
+trust. Honors are won, not bought.
+Every step up, from midshipman to admiral,
+must be the result of honorable
+service, and actual proficiency both in
+the theory and practice of a sailor's profession.
+The modern French naval officer
+is master of his business, fit to compete
+with the best skill of the best maritime
+races. Then the sailors themselves
+are trained. Even in time of peace,
+twenty-five thousand are kept in service.
+Gathered on board great experimental
+fleets, officers and men alike are schooled
+in all branches of nautical duty. In port
+or out of it, they are not idle. Every
+day a prescribed routine of exercise is
+rigidly enforced. Great have been the
+results. The French sailor of 1863 is not
+a reproduction of the sailor of 1800. In
+alertness, in knowledge, in silent obedience,
+he is a great improvement upon his
+predecessor. Actual experiment shows
+that a French crew will weigh anchor,
+spread and furl sail, replace spars or
+running-ringing, lower or raise topmasts, or
+perform any other duty pertaining to a
+ship, with as much celerity as the crew of
+any other nation. And no confusion, no
+babbling of many voices, such as the British
+writers of the last generations delighted
+to describe, mars the beauty of the
+evolutions. One mind directs, and one
+voice alone breaks the stillness. Since
+the Crimean War, the English speak
+with respect of French seamanship; and
+though they do not believe that it is
+equal to their own, they do not scruple
+to allow that a naval battle would be disputed
+now with a fierceness hitherto unknown.</p>
+
+<p>All that sagacity and experience would
+prompt has been attempted. All that
+training and discipline can do has already
+been accomplished. Yet there is one
+source of weakness for which there can
+be no remedy. France has no naval reserves.
+And if she war with England,
+she will need them. To put her marine
+on a war-basis would require all her available
+seamen. To fill the gaps of war,
+she has not, and she cannot have, until
+a truly commercial spirit grows up in the
+hearts of her people, the multitudes of
+reserved men, more familiar with the sea
+than the land, such as swarm in English
+ports. Yet, with every deduction, her
+capacity of naval production, her strong
+fleets, and her trained seamen make her
+a naval power whose might no one can
+estimate, and whose assault any nation
+may well shun by all means except the
+sacrifice of honor and rights.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>If now we turn from the naval progress
+of France to her recent colonial enterprises,
+we shall find fresh evidence that
+she has resumed that contest which came
+to so disastrous a close fifty years ago.
+The old dream of colonial empire has
+come back again. This was inevitable.
+A great nation like France cannot always
+drink the cup of humiliation. With
+an ambition no less high and arrogant
+than that which pervades the British
+mind, she would plant far and wide
+French ideas and civilization. While
+England has colonies scattered in every
+part of the habitable globe, while Holland
+has almost monopolized the rich islands
+of the Eastern Archipelago, and
+while even Spain has Manila in the East
+and Cuba in the West, it could hardly
+be expected that France, the equal of
+either, and in some respects the superior
+of all, should rest content with a virtual
+exclusion from everything but her narrow
+home-possessions.</p>
+
+<p>And then, however disguised, there is
+in the heart of France an intense naval
+rivalry of England. Though the stern
+logic of events has been against her
+more than once, she does not accept the
+verdict. She means to revise it with a
+strong hand. But she must have a navy,
+and a navy cannot exhibit its highest vigor,
+unless it have a just foundation in an
+energetic, wide-ranging commerce. And
+such a commerce cannot exist except it
+have its depots and its agencies, its outlets
+and its markets, everywhere. Above
+all, we are to seek the source of this new
+colonial ambition in the character and
+purposes of that singular man who controls
+the destinies of France. Not even
+his enemies would now question his ability.
+The power he wields in Europe, the
+impression he has stamped upon its policy,
+the skill with which he has made even
+his foes minister to his greatness, all bear
+witness to it. But no one can study him
+in the light of the past and not see that
+his is no ordinary ambition. To be the
+ruler of one kingdom does not fill out
+its measure. To be the arbiter of the
+fortunes of states, the genius who shall
+change the current of affairs and shape
+the destiny of the future,&mdash;to exercise
+a power in every part of the globe, and
+to have a name familiar in every land
+and beneath every sun,&mdash;this is his ambition.
+No wonder that under such a ruler
+France has embarked in a career of colonial
+aggrandizement whose limit no one
+can foresee. The same hand which curbed
+the despot of the North, and made the
+fair vision of Italian unity a solid reality,
+may well think to place a puppet king on
+the throne of the Aztecs, or to carve rich
+provinces out of Farther India.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>France made her first practical essay
+in colonization by her conquest of Algiers.
+A Dey once said to an English consul,
+"The Algerines are a company of rogues,
+and I am their captain." The definition
+cannot be improved. That such a power
+should have been permitted to exist and
+ravage is one of the anomalies of modern
+history. Yet within the memory of living
+men this hoard of pirates flaunted its
+barbarism in the face of the civilization
+of the nineteenth century. But in 1830
+the Dey filled the cup of wrath to the
+brim. He inflicted upon the French consul,
+in full levee, the gross insult of a blow
+in the face. The expedition sent to revenge
+the insult showed upon what a hollow
+foundation this savage power rested.
+The army landed without opposition. In
+five days it swept before it in hopeless
+rout the wreck of the Algerine forces.
+In three weeks it breached and captured
+the corsair's strongholds. The history of
+the French occupation of Algeria is a
+tale of unceasing martial exploits, by
+which France has extended her empire
+six hundred miles along the shores of the
+Mediterranean, and inland fifty miles,&mdash;two
+hundred miles, according, we had almost
+said, to the position of the last Arab
+or Kabyle raid and insurrection.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever else Algeria may or may
+not have done for France, it certainly
+has furnished a field whereon to train soldiers.
+Here seventy-five thousand men,
+day and night, have watched and fought
+a wily foe. Here all the great soldiers of
+the Empire, Arnand, Pelissier, Canrobert,
+Bosquet, have won their first laurels.
+Here, amid the exigencies of wild
+desert and mountain campaigning, has
+grown up that marvellous body of soldiers,
+the Zouaves: "picked men, short
+of stature, broad-shouldered, deep-chested,
+bull-necked," agile as goats, tolerant
+of thirst and hunger, outmarching,
+outfighting, and outenduring the Desert
+Arab; men who have never turned their
+backs upon a foe. Subtract from the army
+of Louis Napoleon the heroes of Algeria,
+and you leave behind a body out
+of which the fiery soul has fled.</p>
+
+<p>The commercial results are not quite so
+satisfactory. The exports, indeed, have
+risen to fifteen millions of dollars, and the
+imports to twenty-five millions more;
+while some two hundred thousand Europeans
+have made their home in the Colony,
+and a few hundred square miles have
+been subjected to European culture. But
+as the yearly cost of the occupation is fifteen
+million of dollars, the net profit cannot
+be great. Algeria, however, is the
+safety-valve of France, giving active employment
+to the idle, the discontented,
+and the revolutionary; and the Government,
+on that account, may consider that
+the money is well expended.</p>
+
+<p>One consequence of the occupation of
+Algeria has generally been overlooked,&mdash;its
+naval result. Hitherto France had
+absolutely no good port in the Mediterranean
+(if we except those of Corsica)
+but Toulon and Marseilles. It was absolutely
+less at home in its own sea than
+England. The new conquest gave it a
+strip of coast on the southern border
+of the sea, but no port. The harbor
+of Algiers, with the exception of a little
+haven artificially protected and capable
+of holding insecurely a dozen vessels,
+was much like that of Cherbourg, an
+open bay, facing northward. The storms
+sweep it with such fury that not less
+than twenty vessels have been driven
+ashore in one gale. But the French genius
+seems to delight in such struggles for
+empire with the waves. Almost with the
+taking of the citadel the engineer began
+his work. Two jetties, as they are called,
+were pushed out from the land into deep
+water,&mdash;one from the mole on the north,
+half a mile long, and the other from
+Point Bab-Azoum on the south, a third
+of a mile long. In 1850 these were so far
+complete as to inclose a safe harbor of
+two hundred acres. But not content, the
+French have already planned, and possibly
+are now finished, still other works,
+by which the perilous roadstead outside
+this harbor shall be transformed into a secure
+anchorage of sixteen hundred acres.
+Past events warrant us in believing that
+these improvements will be pursued with
+no slack hand, until astonished Europe
+finds another Cherbourg, a safe harbor,
+ample means of repair, and frowning
+guns to repel all invaders. Imprudent
+Young France, indeed, whispers now
+that Algiers makes the Mediterranean a
+French lake. But that is a little premature.
+While Gibraltar and Malta hold
+safely their harbors, and England's naval
+power is unbroken, no nation can truly
+make this boast.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The next enterprise of France was
+hardly so creditable to her as the Algerine
+conquest. Midway in the Pacific is
+the island of Tahita or Otaheite,&mdash;as fair
+a gem as the sun ever looked down upon.
+The soft and balmy air,&mdash;the undulating
+surface, rising to mountains and sinking
+into deep valleys, luxuriant with tropical
+verdure,&mdash;the distant girdle of coral
+reefs, which holds the island set in a circlet
+of tranquil blue waters,&mdash;the gentle
+and indolent temper of the natives,&mdash;have
+all conspired to throw an air of romance
+around the very name Otaheite. The
+Christian world is bound to it by another
+tie. For thither came Protestant missionaries,
+drawn by the reports of the
+tractable disposition of the islanders, and
+labored with such success that in 1817
+the king and all his subjects espoused
+Christianity.</p>
+
+<p>Into this island Eden discord came in
+the guise of a Roman catechist, who
+was sent thither for the express purpose
+of proselyting. As if aware of the
+nature of his ungracious task, he disguised
+his real character. But he was
+detected, and, together with a companion
+who had joined him, was dismissed from
+the island by Queen Pomare, who dreaded
+the sectarian strife his presence would
+awaken. This was her whole offence.
+Four years later, in 1838, when the whole
+transaction might well have been forgotten,
+Captain De Petit Thouars appeared
+in the French frigate Venus, and demanded
+and obtained satisfaction in the sum
+of two thousand piastres Spanish, and
+freedom for Catholic worship. In two
+subsequent visits, though no new offence
+had been given, he increased the severity
+of his demands, first putting the island
+under a protectorate, and finally, in 1843,
+taking full possession of it as a French
+colony. The helpless Queen appealed
+to Louis Philippe, who returned the island,
+but reaffirmed the protectorate.</p>
+
+<p>This same French protectorate is a
+rare piece of ponderous irony. The
+French governor collects all export and
+import duties, writes all state-papers, assembles
+and dismisses the island legislature
+according to his good pleasure, doles
+out to the Queen a yearly allowance of
+a thousand pounds, puts her in duress in
+her own house, if her conduct displeases
+him, and will not allow her to see strangers,
+except by his permission. Few will
+believe that zeal for the honor of the
+Catholic Church prompted Louis Philippe
+to inflict so disproportioned a punishment.
+That the island is the best victualling-station
+in the South Pacific is a far greater
+sin, and one for which there could be in
+covetous eyes no adequate punishment,
+except that seizure which is so modestly
+termed a protectorate.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Pass now from the Pacific to the Indian
+Ocean. There is the little rocky
+island of St. Paul, situated in the same
+latitude as Cape Town and Melbourne;
+and, planted with singular accuracy equidistant
+from the two, it is the only place
+of shelter in the long route between them.
+Its harbor, if harbor it may be called, is
+the most secure, the most secluded, and
+the most romantic, perhaps, in the whole
+world. St. Paul is of volcanic origin. It
+is, indeed, little more than an extinct
+crater with a narrow rim of land around
+it to separate it from the sea. Through
+this rim the waters of the great Indian
+Ocean have cut a channel. The crater
+has thus become a beautiful salt lake, a
+mile in diameter, clear, deep, almost circular,
+and from whose border, on every
+side, rise the old volcanic walls draped
+in verdure. The strait connecting it with
+the sea is but three hundred feet wide,
+and at high tide ten feet deep,&mdash;thus
+affording an easy passage for small vessels
+into this most delightful seclusion;
+and no doubt the strait might be so deepened
+as to float the largest ships. St.
+Paul is not at present much frequented.
+But in a sea which is every year becoming
+more populous with the commerce of
+every nation, who shall tell what such a
+central station may become? Its title was
+somewhat uncertain. England thought
+she held it as a dependency of Mauritius.
+But in 1847 the governor of Bourbon,
+with a happy audacity, took possession
+of it, as an outpost of his own island, and
+planted a little French colony of fishermen.
+We have not heard that the assumption
+has been disputed.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>No doubt, most of our readers may
+have observed in the daily prints occasional
+allusions to the French War in
+Cochin China. Probably few have understood
+the full meaning of the facts so
+quietly chronicled. Perhaps none have
+dreamed that they were reading the first
+notices of a new Eastern conquest, which,
+in extent and importance, may yet be
+second only to that which has already
+been achieved by the British in Hindostan.
+Yet so it is. The Cambodia is the
+largest river in Southern Asia, and, together
+with the smaller and parallel river
+of Saigon, drains a tract of not less than
+five hundred thousand square miles. The
+region for which the French have been
+contending includes the provinces which
+cluster around the mouths of these two
+rivers, and command them. No position
+could be happier. For while on the one
+hand it controls the outlet of a river
+stretching up into a rich and fertile country
+eighteen hundred miles, on the other
+it projects into the Chinese Sea at a point
+nearly midway between Singapore and
+Hong Kong, and so secures to its possessor
+a just influence in that commercial
+highway. The ostensible cause of the
+war in this region was the murder of a
+French missionary. If this was ever the
+real cause, it long since gave way to a
+settled purpose of conquest.</p>
+
+<p>In the latter part of the year 1862 the
+Emperor of Cochin China was forced to
+cede to France the coveted provinces.
+Already new fortifications have arisen at
+Saigon, and dock-yards and coal-depots
+been established, and all steps taken for
+a permanent occupation of the territory.
+The following advertisement appeared in
+the London "Times" for January 23,
+1863,&mdash;"Contract for transportation from
+Glasgow to Saigon of a floating iron dock
+in pieces. Notice to ship-owners. The
+administration of the Imperial Navy of
+France have at Glasgow a floating iron
+dock in pieces, which they require to
+be transported from that port to Saigon,
+Cochin China. The said dock, with machinery,
+pumps, anchors, and instruments
+necessary to its working, will weigh from
+two thousand to twenty-five hundred
+tons. Ship-owners disposed to undertake
+the transport are requested to forward
+their tenders to the Minister of Marine
+and Colonies previous to the fifth of
+February next." Now, if we consider
+that the news of the cession of these provinces
+did not reach France until the close
+of the year 1862, that this advertisement
+is dated January 23, 1863, and that a
+dock of the magnitude described could
+hardly be constructed short of many
+months, we shall be satisfied, that, long
+before any definite articles of peace had
+been proposed, the Emperor had settled
+in his own mind just what region he
+would annex to his dominions.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>We shall not need much argument
+to convince us that the subjugation of
+Mexico does not, either in character or
+methods, differ much from other acts
+of the French ruler. Nevertheless, the
+details are curious and instructive. It
+must be allowed that Mexico had given
+the Allies causes of offence. She left
+unpaid large sums due from her to foreign
+bond-holders. The subjects of the
+allied powers, temporarily resident in
+Mexico, were robbed by forced loans, and
+sometimes imprisoned, and even murdered.
+To redress these grievances, an expedition
+was fitted out by the combined
+powers of England, France, and Spain.
+The objects of the expedition were, first,
+to obtain satisfaction for past wrongs,
+and, second, some security against their
+recurrence in the future. It was expressly
+agreed by all parties, that the
+Mexicans should be left entirely free to
+choose for themselves their own form of
+government. Later events would seem
+to prove that England and Spain were
+sincere in their professions.</p>
+
+<p>Everything went on smoothly until the
+capture of Vera Cruz. Then the French
+Emperor unfolded secret plans which were
+not contained in the original programme.
+They were these: To take advantage of
+the weakness of the United States to establish
+in Mexico a European influence;
+to take possession of its capital city; and
+thence to impose upon the Mexican people
+a government more agreeable than
+the present to the Allies. England and
+Spain retired from the expedition with
+scarcely concealed disgust, declaring, in
+almost so many words, that they did not
+come into Mexico to rob another people
+of their rights, but to gain redress and
+protection for their own subjects. Louis
+Napoleon does not even seek to conceal
+his intentions from us. "We propose,"
+he says, "to restore to the Latin race
+on the other side of the Atlantic all its
+strength and prestige. We have an interest,
+indeed, in the Republic of the United
+States being powerful and prosperous;
+but not that she should take possession
+of the whole Gulf of Mexico, thence to
+command the Antilles as well as South
+America, and to be the only dispenser of
+the products of the New World." This
+is plain enough. What will be the final
+form of settlement we do not even conjecture.
+It is probable that the Emperor
+does not himself know. With our fortunes
+so unsettled, and with so many
+European jealousies to conciliate, even
+his astute genius may well be puzzled
+as to the wisest policy. But it is of no
+consequence what particular government
+France may impose upon the conquered
+State,&mdash;monarchical, vice-regal, or
+republican,&mdash;Maximilian,
+a Bonaparte, or
+some one of the seditious Mexican chiefs.
+In either case, if the French plan succeeds,
+the broad country which Cort&eacute;s won
+and Spain lost, will be virtually a
+dependency of France.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Even while we write, France has embarked
+in yet other schemes of colonial
+aggrandizement. She has just purchased
+the port of Oboch on the eastern coast of
+Africa, near the entrance of the Red Sea.
+The place is not laid down upon the maps;
+nor is its naval and commercial importance
+known; but its proximity to Aden
+suggests that it may be intended as a
+checkmate to that English stronghold.
+In the great island of Madagascar she is
+founding mercantile establishments whose
+exact character have not as yet been divulged;
+but experience teaches us that
+these enterprises are likely to be pursued
+with promptness and vigor.</p>
+
+<p>Thus France is displaying in colonial
+affairs an aggressive activity which was
+scarcely to have been expected. To
+what extent she may perfect her plans
+no one can prophesy. That she will be
+able to girdle the earth with her possessions,
+and rear strongholds in every sea,
+is not probable. England has chosen almost
+at her leisure what spots of commercial
+advantage or military strength
+she will occupy; and the whole world
+hardly affords the material for another
+colonial system as wide and comprehensive.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>There is one consideration which ought
+not to be overlooked. It is this: the
+relations which Louis Napoleon has succeeded
+in maintaining between himself
+and that power which had the most interest
+in defeating his schemes, and the
+most ability to do it. Under the Bourbons,
+the whole policy of France was
+based upon a principle of settled and unchangeable
+enmity to England. As a result,
+war always broke out while French
+preparations were incomplete; and the
+concentrated English navy swept from the
+sea almost every vestige of an opposing
+force. The present French emperor has
+adopted an altogether different course.
+He has sought the friendship of England.
+He has multiplied occasions of mutual
+action. He has sedulously avoided occasions
+of offence. Kinglake, in his
+"Crimean War," intimates that Louis
+Napoleon desired this alliance with England
+and her noble Queen to cover up
+the terrible wrongs by which he had obtained
+his authority. It is more likely
+far that he sought it in order that under
+its shadow he might build himself up
+to resistless power: just as an oak planted
+beneath the shade of other trees grows
+to strength and majesty only to cut down
+its benefactors.</p>
+
+<p>This proposal for alliance was unquestionably
+received by the English people
+at first with feelings akin to disgust. The
+memory of the bad faith by which power
+had been won, of the wrongs and exile
+of the greatest statesmen and soldiers of
+France, and of the red carnage of the
+Boulevards, was too recent to make such
+a friendship attractive. Though acceptance
+of it might be good policy, yet it
+could not be yielded without profound
+reluctance. But soon this early sentiment
+gave way to something like pride.
+It was so satisfactory to think that the
+allied powers were wellnigh irresistible;
+that they had only to speak and it must
+be done; that they could dictate terms
+to the world; that they could scourge
+back even the Russian despot, seeking
+to pour down his hordes from the icy
+North to more genial climes. It is hardly
+surprising, then, that men came to
+congratulate themselves upon so favorable
+an alliance, and concluded to overlook
+the defect in his title in consideration
+of the solid benefits which the occupant
+of the French throne conferred.</p>
+
+<p>But this feeling could not last. When
+the people of England saw how inevitably
+Louis Napoleon reaped from every
+conflict some selfish advantage, how the
+Crimean War gave him all the prestige,
+and the Italian War the coveted province
+of Nice, they began to doubt his
+fair professions. And this jealousy is
+fast deepening into fear. The English
+people have an instinct of approaching
+danger. Any one can see that the "<i>entente
+cordiale</i>" is not quite what it once
+was. When a British Lord of Admiralty
+can rise in his place in Parliament,
+and, after alluding to the powerful and
+increasing naval force of France, add,&mdash;"I
+say that any Ministry who did not
+act upon that statement, and did not at
+once set about putting the country in the
+position she ought to occupy in respect to
+her navy, would deserve to be sent to the
+Tower or penitentiary,"&mdash;we may be
+sure that England has as much jealousy
+as trust, and perhaps quite as much alarm
+as either.</p>
+
+<p>But we have only to look at her acts
+to know what England is thinking. For
+six years she has been engaged in an unceasing
+war with France,&mdash;not, indeed,
+with swords and bayonets, but as really
+with her workshops and dockyards. She
+has tasked these to their uttermost to
+maintain and increase her naval superiority.
+And this is not the only evidence
+we have of her true feeling. The building
+of new fortifications for her ports, and
+the enlargement and strengthening of
+the old defences, all tell the same story
+of profound distrust. "Plymouth has
+been made secure. The mouth of the
+Thames is thought to be impregnable."
+That is the way English papers write.
+Around Portsmouth and Gosport she has
+thrown an immense girdle of forts. We
+may think what we will of Cherbourg,
+England views it in the light of a perpetual
+menace. To the proud challenge
+she has sent back a sturdy defiance.
+Right opposite to it, on her nearest shore,
+she has reared a "Gibraltar of the Channel."
+If you take your map, you will perceive,
+facing Cherbourg, and projecting
+from the southern coast of England, the
+little island of Portland, which at low
+tide becomes a peninsula, and is connected
+with the main land by Chesil Bank,
+a low ridge of shingle ten miles long.
+On the extreme north of this island,
+looking down into Weymouth Bay, is a
+little cluster of rocky hills, rising sharply
+to a considerable height, and occupying,
+perhaps, a space of sixty acres. This is
+where the fortress, or Veme, as it is called,
+is built. On the northern side, the
+cliff lifts itself up from the waters of the
+bay almost in a perpendicular line, and
+is absolutely inaccessible. On all other
+sides the Veme has been isolated by a
+tremendous chasm, which makes the dry
+ditch of the fort. This chasm has been
+blasted into the solid rock, and is nowhere
+less than a hundred feet wide and
+eighty feet deep. At the angles of the
+fortress it widens to two hundred feet,
+and sinks beneath the batteries in a
+sheer perpendicular of one hundred and
+thirty feet. Two bastions jut from the
+main work into it, protecting it from approach
+by a terrible cross-fire. All the
+appointments are upon the same scale.
+The magazines, the storehouses, the water-tanks,
+are built to furnish supplies for
+a siege, not of months, but of years. On
+every side the rocky surface of the hills
+has been shaved down below the level
+of its guns; so that there is not a spot
+seaward or landward that may not be
+swept by its tremendous batteries. Such
+is this remarkable stronghold which is
+rising to completion opposite Cherbourg.
+Yet it is but one of several strong forts
+which are to protect the single harbor
+of Weymouth Bay. Was this Titanic
+work reared in the spirit of trust? Does
+it speak of England's hope of abiding
+friendship with France? No; it tells
+us that beneath seeming amity a deadly
+struggle is going on,&mdash;that every dock
+hollowed, every ship launched, every colony
+seized, and every fortress reared, is
+but another step in a silent, but real, contest
+for supremacy.</p>
+
+<p>When this hidden fire shall burst forth
+into a devouring flame, when this seeming
+alliance shall change into open enmity
+and bitter war, no one can prophesy.
+But no doubt sooner or later. For
+between nations, as well as in the bosom
+of communities, there are irrepressible
+conflicts, which no alliances, no compacts,
+and no motives of wisdom or interest can
+forever hold in check. And when it
+shall burst forth, no one can foretell what
+its end shall be. That dread uncertainty,
+more than all these things else, keeps the
+peace. We can but think that the naval
+pre&euml;minence of England has grown out
+of the real character of her people and of
+their pursuits,&mdash;and that the same causes
+which, in the long, perilous conflicts of
+the past, have enabled her to secure the
+sovereignty of the seas, will strengthen
+her to maintain that sovereignty in all
+the conflicts which in the future may
+await her. But, whatever may be the
+result, to whomsoever defeat may come,
+nothing can obliterate from the pages of
+history the record of the sagacity, perseverance,
+and courage with which the
+French people and their ruler have striven
+to overcome a maritime inferiority,
+whose origin, perhaps, is in the structure
+of their society and in the nature
+of their race.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="SOMETHING_LEFT_UNDONE" id="SOMETHING_LEFT_UNDONE"></a>SOMETHING LEFT UNDONE.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Labor with what zeal we will,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Something still remains undone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Something, uncompleted still,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Waits the rising of the sun.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">By the bedside, on the stair,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">At the threshold, near the gates,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With its menace or its prayer,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like a mendicant it waits:<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Waits, and will not go away,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Waits, and will not be gainsaid.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By the cares of yesterday<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Each to-day is heavier made,<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Till at length it is, or seems,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Greater than our strength can bear,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As the burden of our dreams,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Pressing on us everywhere;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And we stand from day to day<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like the dwarfs of times gone by,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who, as Northern legends say,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On their shoulders held the sky.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_GREAT_INSTRUMENT" id="THE_GREAT_INSTRUMENT"></a>THE GREAT INSTRUMENT.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Early in the month of November
+the mysterious curtain which has hidden
+the work long in progress at the Boston
+Music Hall will be lifted, and the public
+will throng to look upon and listen to the
+GREAT ORGAN.</p>
+
+<p>It is the most interesting event in the
+musical history of the New World. The
+masterpiece of Europe's master-builder is
+to uncover its veiled front and give voice
+to its long-brooding harmonies. The most
+precious work of Art that ever floated
+from one continent to the other is to be
+formally displayed before a great assembly.
+The occasion is one of well-earned
+rejoicing, almost of loud triumph; for it
+is the crowning festival which rewards an
+untold sum of devoted and conscientious
+labor, carried on, without any immediate
+recompense, through a long series of
+years, to its now perfect consummation.
+The whole community will share in the
+deep satisfaction with which the public-spirited
+citizens who have encouraged
+this noble undertaking, and the enterprising;
+and untiring lover of science and
+art who has conducted it from the first,
+may look upon their completed task.</p>
+
+<p>What is this wondrous piece of mechanism
+which has cost so much time and
+money, and promises to become one of
+the chief attractions of Boston and a
+source of honest pride to all cultivated
+Americans? The organ, as its name implies,
+is <i>the instrument</i>, in distinction from
+all other and less noble instruments. We
+might almost think it was called organ
+as being a part of an unfinished <i>organism</i>,
+a kind of Frankenstein-creation, half
+framed and half vitalized. It breathes
+like an animal, but its huge lungs must
+be filled and emptied by alien force. It
+has a wilderness of windpipes, each furnished
+with its own vocal adjustment, or
+larynx. Thousands of long, delicate tendons
+govern its varied internal movements,
+themselves obedient to the human
+muscles which are commanded by the
+human brain, which again is guided in its
+volitions by the voice of the great half-living
+creature. A strange cross between
+the form and functions of animated beings,
+on the one hand, and the passive conditions
+of inert machinery, on the other!
+Its utterance rises through all the gamut
+of Nature's multitudinous voices, and has
+a note for all her outward sounds and
+inward moods. Its thunder is deep as
+that of billows that tumble through ocean-caverns,
+and its whistle is sharper than
+that of the wind through their narrowest
+crevice. It roars louder than the lion of
+the desert, and it can draw out a thread
+of sound as fine as the locust spins at hot
+noon on his still tree-top. Its clustering
+columns are as a forest in which every
+music-flowering tree and shrub finds its
+representative. It imitates all instruments;
+it cheats the listener with the
+sound of singing choirs; it strives for a
+still purer note than can be strained from
+human throats, and emulates the host of
+heaven with its unearthly "voice of angels."
+Within its breast all the passions
+of humanity seem to reign in turn. It
+moans with the dull ache of grief, and
+cries with the sudden thrill of pain; it
+sighs, it shouts, it laughs, it exults, it
+wails, it pleads, it trembles, it shudders, it
+threatens, it storms, it rages, it is soothed,
+it slumbers.</p>
+
+<p>Such is the organ, man's nearest approach
+to the creation of a true organism.</p>
+
+<p>But before the audacious conception
+of this instrument ever entered the imagination
+of man, before he had ever
+drawn a musical sound from pipe or
+string, the chambers where the royal
+harmonies of his grandest vocal mechanism
+were to find worthy reception were
+shaped in his own marvellous structure.
+The <i>organ</i> of hearing was finished by its
+Divine Builder while yet the morning
+stars sang together, and the voices of
+the young creation joined in their first
+choral symphony. We have seen how
+the mechanism of the artificial organ
+takes on the likeness of life; we shall attempt
+to describe the living organ in common
+language by the aid of such images
+as our ordinary dwellings furnish us. The
+unscientific reader need not take notice
+of the words in parentheses.</p>
+
+<p>The annexed diagram may render it
+easier to follow the description.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 384px;">
+<img src="images/644image.png" width="384" height="362" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The structure which is to admit Sound
+as a visitor is protected and ornamented
+at its entrance by a light movable awning
+(the external ear). Beneath and
+within this opens a recess or passage,
+(<i>meatus auditorium externus</i>,) at the farther
+end of which is the parchment-like
+front-door, D (<i>membrana tympani</i>).</p>
+
+<p>Beyond this is the hall or entry, H,
+(cavity of the <i>tympanum</i>,) which has a
+ventilator, V, (Eustachian tube,) communicating
+with the outer air, and two windows,
+one oval, <i>o</i>, (<i>fenestra ovalis</i>,) one
+round, <i>r</i>, (<i>fenestra rotunda</i>,) both filled
+with parchment-like membrane, and looking
+upon the inner suite of apartments
+(labyrinth).</p>
+
+<p>This inner suite of apartments consists
+of an antechamber, A, (vestibule,) an
+arched chamber, B, (semicircular canals,)
+and a spiral chamber, S, (<i>cochlea</i>,) with
+a partition, P, dividing it across, except
+for a small opening at one end. The antechamber
+opens freely into the arched
+chamber, and into one side of the partitioned
+spiral chamber. The other side of
+this spiral chamber looks on the hall by
+the round window already mentioned;
+the oval window looking on the hall belongs
+to the antechamber. From the
+front-door to the oval window of the antechamber
+extends a chain, <i>c</i>, (<i>ossicula
+audit&ucirc;s</i>,) so connected that a knock on
+the first is transmitted instantly to the
+second. But as the round window of the
+spiral chamber looks into the hall, the
+knock at the front-door will also make
+itself heard at and through that window,
+being conveyed along the hall.</p>
+
+<p>In each division of the inner suite of
+apartments are the watchmen, (branches
+of the auditory nerve,) listening for the
+approach of Sound. The visitor at length
+enters the porch, and knocks at the front-door.
+The watchmen in the antechamber
+hear the blow close to them, as it is repeated,
+through the chain, on the window
+of their apartment. The impulse travels
+onward into the arched chamber, and
+startles its tenants. It is transmitted into
+one half of the partitioned spiral chamber,
+and rouses the recumbent guardians in
+that apartment. Some portion of it even
+passes the small opening in the partition,
+and reaches the watchmen in the other
+half of the room. But they also hear it
+through the round window, not as it comes
+through the chain, but as it resounds along
+the hall.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the summons of Sound reaches
+all the watchmen, but not all of them
+through the same channels or with the
+same force. It is not known how their
+several precise duties are apportioned, but
+it seems probable that the watchmen in
+the spiral chamber observe the pitch of
+the audible impulse which reaches them,
+while the others take cognizance of its
+intensity and perhaps of its direction.</p>
+
+<p>Such is the plan of the organ of hearing
+as an architect might describe it. But
+the details of its special furnishing are so
+intricate and minute that no anatomist
+has proved equal to their entire and exhaustive
+delineation. An Italian nobleman,
+the Marquis Corti, has hitherto
+proved most successful in describing the
+wonderful <i>key-board</i> found in the spiral
+chamber, the complex and symmetrical
+beauty of which is absolutely astonishing
+to those who study it by the aid of the
+microscope. The figure annexed shows
+a small portion of this extraordinary
+structure. It is from K&ouml;lliker's well-known
+work on Microscopic Anatomy.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 410px;">
+<img src="images/655image.png" width="410" height="276" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Enough has been said to show that the
+ear is as carefully adjusted to respond
+to the blended impressions of sound as
+the eye to receive the mingled rays of
+light; and that as the telescope presupposes
+the lens and the retina, so the organ
+presupposes the resonant membranes,
+the labyrinthine chambers, and the delicately
+suspended or exquisitely spread-out
+nervous filaments of that other organ,
+whose builder is the Architect of the universe
+and the Master of all its harmonies.</p>
+
+<p>Not less an object of wonder is that
+curious piece of mechanism, the most perfect,
+within its limited range of powers, of
+all musical instruments, the <i>organ</i> of the
+human voice. It is the highest triumph
+of our artificial contrivances to reach a
+tone like that of a singer, and among a
+hundred organ-stops none excites such
+admiration as the <i>vox humana</i>; a brief
+account of the vocal organ will not, therefore,
+be out of place. The principles of
+the action of the larynx are easily illustrated
+by reference to the simpler musical
+instruments. In a flute or flageolet
+the musical sound is produced by the vibration
+of a column of air contained in its
+interior. In a clarionet or a bassoon another
+source of sound is added in the form
+of a thin slip of wood contained in the
+mouth-piece, and called the <i>reed</i>, the vibrations
+of which give a superadded nasal
+thrill to the resonance of the column of air.</p>
+
+<p>The human organ of voice is like the
+clarionet and the bassoon. The windpipe
+is the tube containing the column of
+air. The larynx is the mouth-piece containing
+the reed. But the reed is double,
+consisting of two very thin membranous
+edges, which are made tense or relaxed,
+and have the interval between them
+through which the air rushes narrowed
+or widened by the instinctive, automatic
+action of a set of little muscles. The vibration
+of these membranous edges (<i>chord&aelig;
+vocales</i>) produces a musical sound, just
+as the vibration of the edge of a finger-bowl
+produces one when a wet finger is
+passed round it. The cavities of the nostrils,
+and their side-chambers, with their
+light, elastic sounding-boards of thin bone,
+are essential to the richness of the tone, as
+all singers find out when those passages
+are obstructed by a cold in the head.</p>
+
+<p>The human voice, perfect as it may be
+in tone, is yet always very deficient in
+compass, as is obvious from the fact that
+the bass voice, the barytone, the contralto,
+and the soprano have all different
+registers, and are all required to produce
+a complete vocal harmony. If we could
+make organ-pipes with movable, self-regulating
+lips, with self-shortening and
+self-lengthening tubes, so that each tube
+should command the two or three octaves
+of the human voice, a very limited number
+of them would be required. But as
+each tube has but a single note, we understand
+why we have those immense
+clusters of hollow columns. As we wish
+to produce different effects, sometimes
+using the pure flute-sounds, at other times
+preferring the nasal thrill of the reed-instruments,
+we see why some of the tubes
+have simple mouths and others are furnished
+with vibratory tongues. And,
+lastly, we can easily understand that the
+great interior spaces of the organ must
+of themselves furnish those resonant surfaces
+which we saw provided for, on a
+small scale, in the nasal passages,&mdash;the
+sounding-board of the human larynx.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The great organ of the Music Hall is a
+choir of nearly six thousand vocal throats.
+Its largest windpipes are thirty-two feet
+in length, and a man can crawl through
+them. Its finest tubes are too small for a
+baby's whistle. Eighty-nine <i>stops</i> produce
+the various changes and combinations of
+which its immense orchestra is capable,
+from the purest solo of a singing nun to
+the loudest chorus in which all its groups
+of voices have their part in the full flow of
+its harmonies. Like all instruments of its
+class, it contains several distinct systems
+of pipes, commonly spoken of as separate
+organs, and capable of being played
+alone or in connection with each other.
+Four <i>manuals</i>, or hand key-boards, and
+two <i>pedals</i>, or foot key-boards, command
+these several systems,&mdash;the <i>solo</i> organ,
+the <i>choir</i> organ, the <i>swell</i> organ, and the
+<i>great</i> organ, and the <i>piano</i> and <i>forte</i> pedal-organ.
+Twelve pairs of bellows, which
+it is intended to move by water-power,
+derived from the Cochituate reservoirs,
+furnish the breath which pours itself forth
+in music. Those beautiful effects, for
+which the organ is incomparable, the
+<i>crescendo</i> and <i>diminuendo</i>,&mdash;the gradual
+rise of the sound from the lowest murmur
+to the loudest blast, and the dying fall by
+which it steals gently back into silence,&mdash;the
+<i>dissolving views</i>, so to speak, of harmony,&mdash;are
+not only provided for in the
+swell-organ, but may be obtained by special
+adjustments from the several systems
+of pipes and from the entire instrument.</p>
+
+<p>It would be anticipating the proper
+time for judgment, if we should speak of
+the excellence of the musical qualities of
+the great organ before having had the
+opportunity of hearing its full powers displayed.
+We have enjoyed the privilege,
+granted to few as yet, of listening to some
+portions of the partially mounted instrument,
+from which we can confidently infer
+that its effect, when all its majestic
+voices find utterance, must be noble and
+enchanting beyond all common terms of
+praise. But even without such imperfect
+trial, we have a right, merely from a
+knowledge of its principles of construction,
+of the pre&euml;minent skill of its builder,
+of the time spent in its construction,
+of the extraordinary means taken to
+insure its perfection, and of the liberal
+scale of expenditure which has rendered
+all the rest possible, to feel sure that we
+are to hear the instrument which is and
+will probably long remain beyond dispute
+the first of the New World and
+second to none in the Old in the sum of
+its excellences and capacities.</p>
+
+<p>The mere comparison of numbers of
+pipes and of stops, or of external dimensions,
+though it gives an approximative
+idea of the scale of an organ, is not so
+decisive as it might seem as to its real
+musical effectiveness. In some cases,
+many of the stops are rather nominal
+than of any real significance. Even in
+the Haarlem organ, which has only about
+two-thirds as many as the Boston one,
+Dr. Burney says, "The variety they afford
+is by no means what might be expected."
+It is obviously easy to multiply
+the small pipes to almost any extent.
+The dimensions of an organ, in its external
+aspect, must depend a good deal on
+the height of the edifice in which it is
+contained. Thus, the vaulted roof of the
+Cathedral of Ulm permitted the builder
+of our Music-Hall organ to pile the <i>fa&ccedil;ade</i>
+of the one he constructed for that
+edifice up to the giddy elevation of almost
+a hundred feet, while the famous
+instrument in the Town Hall of Birmingham
+has only three-quarters of the height
+of our own, which is sixty feet. It is obvious
+also that the effective power of an
+organ does not depend merely on its
+size, but that the perfection of all its
+parts will have quite as much to do with
+it. In judging a vocalist, we can form
+but a very poor guess of the compass,
+force, quality of the voice, from a mere
+inspection of the throat and chest. In
+the case of the organ, however, we have
+the advantage of being able to minutely
+inspect every throat and larynx, to
+walk into the interior of the working
+mechanism, and to see the adaptation
+of each part to its office. In absolute
+power and compass the Music-Hall organ
+ranks among the three or four mightiest
+instruments ever built. In the perfection
+of all its parts, and in its whole
+arrangements, it challenges comparison
+with, any the world can show.</p>
+
+<p>Such an instrument ought to enshrine
+itself in an outward frame that should
+correspond in some measure to the grandeur
+and loveliness of its own musical character.
+It has been a dream of metaphysicians,
+that the soul shaped its own body.
+If this many-throated singing creature
+could have sung itself into an external
+form, it could hardly have moulded one
+more expressive of its own nature. We
+must leave to those more skilled in architecture
+the detailed description of that
+noble <i>fa&ccedil;ade</i> which fills the eye with music
+as the voices from behind it fill the
+mind through the ear with vague, dreamy
+pictures. For us it loses all technical
+character in its relations to the soul of
+which it is the body. It is as if a glorious
+anthem had passed into outward solid
+form in the very ecstasy of its grandest
+chorus. Milton has told us of such a
+miracle, wrought by fallen angels, it is
+true, but in a description rich with all
+his opulence of caressing and ennobling
+language:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Anon out of the earth a fabric huge<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Rose, like an exhalation, with the sound<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of dulcet symphonies and voices sweet,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Built like a temple, where pilasters round<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Were set, and Doric pillars overlaid<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With golden architrave; nor did there want<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Cornice or frieze with bossy sculptures grav'n."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The structure is of black walnut, and is
+covered with carved statues, busts, masks,
+and figures in the boldest relief. In the
+centre a richly ornamented arch contains
+the niche for the key-boards and stops.
+A colossal mask of a singing woman looks
+from over its summit. The pediment
+above is surmounted by the bust of Johann
+Sebastian Bach. Behind this rises
+the lofty central division, containing pipes,
+and crowning it is a beautiful sitting
+statue of Saint Cecilia, holding her lyre.
+On each side of her a griffin sits as guardian.
+This centre is connected by harp-shaped
+compartments, filled with pipes,
+to the two great round towers, one on
+each side, and each of them containing
+three colossal pipes. These magnificent
+towers come boldly forward into
+the hall, being the most prominent, as
+they are the highest and stateliest, part
+of the <i>fa&ccedil;ade</i>. At the base of each a
+gigantic half-caryatid, in the style of
+the ancient <i>herm&aelig;</i>, but finished to the
+waist, bends beneath the superincumbent
+weight, like Atlas under the globe. These
+figures are of wonderful force, the muscular
+development almost excessive, but in
+keeping with their superhuman task. At
+each side of the base two lion-<i>herm&aelig;</i> share
+in the task of the giant. Over the base
+rise the round pillars which support the
+dome and inclose the three great pipes
+already mentioned. Graceful as these
+look in their position, half a dozen men
+might creep into one of them and lie hidden.
+A man of six feet high went up a
+ladder, and standing at the base of one
+of them could just reach to put his hand
+into the mouth at its lower part, above
+the conical foot. The three great pipes
+are crowned by a heavily sculptured, ribbed,
+rounded dome; and this is surmounted,
+on each side, by two cherubs, whose
+heads almost touch the lofty ceiling. This
+whole portion of the sculpture is of eminent
+beauty. The two exquisite cherubs
+of one side are playing on the lyre and the
+lute; those of the other side on the flute
+and the horn. All the reliefs that run
+round the lower portion of the dome are
+of singular richness. We have had an
+opportunity of seeing one of the artist's
+photographs, which showed in detail the
+full-length figures and the large central
+mask of this portion of the work, and
+found them as beautiful on close inspection
+as the originals at a distance.</p>
+
+<p>Two other lateral compartments, filled
+with pipes, and still more suggestive of
+the harp in their form, lead to the square
+lateral towers. Over these compartments,
+close to the round tower, sits on each
+side a harper, a man on the right, a woman
+on the left, with their harps, all apparently
+of natural size. The square towers,
+holding pipes in their open interior,
+are lower than the round towers, and fall
+somewhat back from the front. Below,
+three colossal <i>herm&aelig;</i> of Sibyl-like women
+perform for them the office which the
+giants and the lion-shapes perform for the
+round towers. The four pillars which rise
+from the base are square, and the dome
+which surmounts them is square also.
+Above the dome is a vase-like support,
+upon which are disposed figures of the
+lyre and other musical symbols.</p>
+
+<p>The whole base of the instrument, in
+the intervals of the figures described, is
+covered with elaborate carvings. Groups
+of musical instruments, standing out almost
+detached from the background, occupy
+the panels. Ancient and modern,
+clustered with careless grace and quaint
+variety, from the violin down to a string
+of sleigh-bells, they call up all the echoes
+of forgotten music, such as the thousand-tongued
+organ blends together in one
+grand harmony.</p>
+
+<p>The instrument is placed upon a low
+platform, the outlines of which are in accordance
+with its own. Its whole height is
+about sixty feet, its breadth forty-eight
+feet, and its average depth twenty-four
+feet. Some idea of its magnitude may
+be got from the fact that the wind-machinery
+and the swell-organ alone fill up
+the whole recess occupied by the former
+organ, which was not a small one. All
+the other portions of the great instrument
+come forward into the hall.</p>
+
+<p>In front of its centre stands Crawford's
+noble bronze statue of Beethoven,
+the gift of our townsman, Mr. Charles C.
+Perkins. It might be suggested that so
+fine a work of Art should have a platform
+wholly to itself; but the eye soon
+reconciles itself to the position of the
+statue, and the tremulous atmosphere
+which surrounds the vibrating organ is
+that which the almost breathing figure
+would seem to delight in, as our imagination
+invests it with momentary consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>As we return to the impression produced
+by the grand <i>fa&ccedil;ade</i>, we are more
+and more struck with the subtile art displayed
+in its adaptations and symbolisms.
+Never did any structure we have looked
+upon so fully justify Madame de Sta&euml;l's
+definition of architecture, as "frozen music."
+The outermost towers, their pillars
+and domes, are all <i>square</i>, their outlines
+thus passing without too sudden transitions
+from the sharp square angles of the
+vaulted ceiling and the rectangular lines
+of the walls of the hall itself into the
+more central parts of the instrument,
+where a smoother harmony of outline is
+predominant. For in the great towers,
+which step forward, as it were, to represent
+the meaning of the entire structure,
+the lines are all curved, as if the slight
+discords which gave sharpness and variety
+to its less vital portions were all resolved
+as we approached its throbbing
+heart. And again, the half fantastic repetitions
+of musical forms in the principal
+outlines&mdash;the lyre-like shape of the
+bases of the great towers, the harp-like
+figure of the connecting wings, the clustering
+reeds of the columns&mdash;fill the mind
+with musical suggestions, and dispose the
+wondering spectator to become the entranced
+listener.</p>
+
+<p>The great organ would be but half known,
+if it were not played in a place
+fitted for it in dimensions. In the open
+air the sound would be diluted and lost;
+in an ordinary hall the atmosphere would
+be churned into a mere tumult by the
+vibrations. The Boston Music Hall is of
+ample size to give play to the waves of
+sound, yet not so large that its space will
+not be filled and saturated with the overflowing
+resonance. It is one hundred and
+thirty feet in length by seventy-eight in
+breadth and sixty-five in height, being
+thus of somewhat greater dimensions than
+the celebrated Town Hall of Birmingham.
+At the time of building it, (1852,) its
+great height was ordered partly with reference
+to the future possibility of its being
+furnished with a large organ. It
+will be observed that the three dimensions
+above given are all multiples of the
+same number, thirteen, the length being
+ten times, the breadth six times and the
+height five times this number. This is
+in accordance with Mr. Scott Russell's
+recommendation, and has been explained
+by the fact that vibrating solids divide
+into <i>harmonic lengths</i>, separated by <i>nodal
+points</i> of rest, and that these last
+are equally distributed at aliquot parts
+of its whole length. If the whole extent
+of the walls be in vibration, its angles
+should come in at the nodal points in order
+to avoid the confusion arising from
+different vibrating lengths; and for this
+reason they are placed at aliquot parts
+of its entire length. Thus the hall is itself
+a kind of passive musical instrument,
+or at least a sounding-board, constructed
+on theoretical principles. Whatever is
+thought of the theory, it proves in practice
+to possess the excellence which is liable
+to be lost in the construction of the
+best-designed edifice.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>We have thus attempted to give our
+readers some imperfect idea of the great
+instrument, illustrating it by the objects
+of comparison with which we are most
+familiar, and leaving to others the more
+elaborate work of subjecting it to a thorough
+artistic survey, and the rigorous
+analysis necessary to bring out the various
+degrees of excellence in its special
+qualities, which, as in a human character,
+will be found to mark its individuality.
+We shall proceed to give some account
+of the manner in which the plan
+of obtaining the best instrument the Old
+World could furnish to the New was
+formed, matured, and carried into successful
+execution.</p>
+
+<p>It is mainly to the persistent labors of
+a single individual that our community
+is indebted for the privilege it now enjoys
+in possessing an instrument of the
+supreme order, such as make cities illustrious
+by their presence. That which is
+on the lips of all it can wrong no personal
+susceptibilities to tell in print; and
+when we say that Boston owes the Great
+Organ chiefly to the personal efforts of
+the present President of the Music-Hall
+Association, Dr. J. Baxter Upham, the
+statement is only for the information of
+distant readers.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Upham is widely known to the
+medical profession in connection with important
+contributions to practical science.
+His researches on typhus fever, as observed
+by him at different periods, during
+and since the years 1847 and 1848, in
+this country, and as seen at Dublin and
+in the London Fever Hospital, were recognized
+as valuable contributions to the
+art of medicine. More recently, as surgeon
+in charge of the Stanley General
+Hospital, Eighteenth Army Corps, he
+has published an account of the "Congestive
+Fever" prevailing at Newborn,
+North Carolina, during the winter and
+spring of 1862-63. We must add to
+these practical labors the record of his
+most ingenious and original investigations
+of the circulation in the singular
+case of M. Groux, which had puzzled so
+many European experts, and to which,
+with the tact of a musician, he applied
+the electro-magnetic telegraphic apparatus
+so as to change the rapid consecutive
+motions of different parts of the
+heart, which puzzled the eye, into successive
+<i>sounds</i> of a character which the
+ear could recognize in their order. It
+was during these experiments, many of
+which we had the pleasure of witnessing,
+that the "side-show" was exhibited of
+counting the patient's pulse, through the
+wires, at the Observatory in Cambridge,
+while it was beating in Dr. Upham's parlor
+in Boston. Nor should we forget that
+other ingenious contrivance of his, the
+system of <i>sound-signals</i>, devised during
+his recent term of service as surgeon,
+and applied with the most promising results,
+as a means of intercommunication
+between different portions of the same
+armament.</p>
+
+<p>In the summer of 1853, less than a
+year after the Music Hall was opened
+to the public, Dr. Upham, who had been
+for some time occupied with the idea of
+procuring an organ worthy of the edifice,
+made a tour in Europe with the express
+object of seeing some of the most famous
+instruments of the Continent and of
+Great Britain. He examined many, especially
+in Germany, and visited some of
+the great organ-builders, going so far as
+to obtain specifications from Mr. Walcker
+of Ludwigsburg, and from Weigl, his pupil
+at Stuttgart. On returning to this
+country, he brought the proposition of
+procuring a great instrument in Europe
+in various ways before the public, among
+the rest by his "Reminiscences of a Summer
+Tour," published in "Dwight's Journal
+of Music." After this he laid the
+matter before the members of the Harvard
+Musical Association, and, having
+thus gradually prepared the way, presented
+it for consideration before the Board
+of Directors of the Music-Hall Association.
+A committee was appointed "to
+consider." There was some division of
+opinion as to the expediency of the more
+ambitious plan of sending abroad for a
+colossal instrument. There was a majority
+report in its favor, and a verbal minority
+report advocating a more modest instrument
+of home manufacture. Then followed
+the anaconda-torpor which marks
+the process of digestion of a huge and
+as yet crude project by a multivertebrate
+corporation.</p>
+
+<p>On the first of March, 1856, the day of
+the inauguration of Beethoven's statue,
+a subscription-paper was started, headed
+by Dr. Upham, for raising the sum of
+ten thousand dollars. At a meeting in
+June the plan was brought before the
+stockholders of the Music Hall, who unanimously
+voted to appropriate ten thousand
+dollars and the proceeds of the old
+organ, on condition that fifteen thousand
+dollars should be raised by private subscription.
+In October it was reported
+to the Directors that ten thousand dollars
+of this sum were already subscribed, and
+Dr. Upham, President of the Board,
+pledged himself to raise the remainder
+on certain conditions, which were accepted.
+He was then authorized to go
+abroad to investigate the whole subject,
+with full powers to select the builder and
+to make the necessary contracts.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Upham had already made an examination
+of the best organs and organ-factories
+in New England, New York,
+and elsewhere in this country, and received
+several specifications and plans
+from builders. He proceeded at once,
+therefore, to Europe, examined the great
+English instruments, made the acquaintance
+of Mr. Hopkins, the well-known organist
+and recognized authority on all
+matters pertaining to the instrument, and
+took lessons of him in order to know better
+the handling of the keys and the resources
+of the instrument. In his company,
+Dr. Upham examined some of the
+best instruments in London. He made
+many excursions among the old churches
+of Sir Christopher Wren's building, where
+are to be found the fine organs of "Father
+Smith," John Snetzler, and other
+famous builders of the past. He visited
+the workshops of Hill, Gray and Davidson,
+Willis, Robson, and others. He
+made a visit to Oxford to examine the
+beautiful organ in Trinity College. He
+found his way into the organ-lofts of St.
+Paul's, of Westminster Abbey, and the
+Temple Church, during the playing at
+morning and evening service. He inspected
+Thompson's <i>enharmonic</i> organ,
+and obtained models of various portions
+of organ-structure.</p>
+
+<p>From London Dr. Upham went to
+Holland, where he visited the famous instruments
+at Haarlem, Amsterdam, and
+Rotterdam, and the organ-factory at
+Utrecht, the largest and best in Holland.
+Thence to Cologne, where, as well as at
+Utrecht, he obtained plans and schemes
+of instruments; to Hamburg, where are
+fine old organs, some of them built two
+or three centuries ago; to Lubeck, Dresden,
+Breslau, Leipsic, Halle, Merseburg.
+Here he found a splendid organ, built by
+Ladergast, whose instruments excel especially
+in their tone-effects. A letter from
+Liszt, the renowned pianist, recommended
+this builder particularly to Dr. Upham's
+choice. At Frankfort and at Stuttgart
+he found two magnificent instruments,
+built by Walcker of Ludwigsburg, to
+which place he repaired in order to examine
+his factories carefully, for the second
+time. Thence the musical tourist proceeded
+to Ulm, where is the sumptuous
+organ, the work of the same builder, ranking,
+we believe, first in point of dimensions
+of all in the world. Onward still, to Munich,
+Bamberg, Augsburg, Nuremberg,
+along the Lake of Constance to Weingarten,
+where is that great organ claiming to
+have sixty-six stops and six thousand six
+hundred and sixty-six pipes; to Freyburg,
+in Switzerland, where is another great organ,
+noted for the rare beauty of its <i>vox-humana</i>
+stop, the mechanism of which had
+been specially studied by Mr. Walcker,
+who explained it to Dr. Upham.</p>
+
+<p>Returning to Ludwigsburg, Dr. Upham
+received another specification from Mr.
+Walcker. He then passed some time at
+Frankfort examining the specifications
+already received and the additional ones
+which came to him while there.</p>
+
+<p>At last, by the process of exclusion,
+the choice was narrowed down to three
+names, Schultze, Ladergast, and Walcker,
+then to the two last. There was still
+a difficulty in deciding between these.
+Dr. Upham called in Mr. Walcker's partner
+and son, who explained every point
+on which he questioned them with the
+utmost minuteness. Still undecided, he
+revisited Merseburg and Weissenfels, to
+give Ladergast's instruments another
+trial. The result was that he asked Mr.
+Walcker for a third specification, with
+certain additions and alterations which
+he named. This he received, and finally
+decided in his favor,&mdash;but with the condition
+that Mr. Walcker should meet him
+in Paris for the purpose of examining the
+French organs with reference to any excellences
+of which he might avail himself,
+and afterwards proceed to London
+and inspect the English instruments with
+the same object.</p>
+
+<p>The details of this joint tour are very
+interesting, but we have not space for
+them. The frank enthusiasm with which
+the great German organ-builder was
+received in France contrasted forcibly
+with the quiet, not to say cool, way in
+which the insular craftsmen received him,
+gradually, however, warming, and at last,
+with a certain degree of effort, admitting
+him to their confidence.</p>
+
+<p>A fortnight was spent by Dr. Upham
+in company with Walcker and Mr. Hopkins
+in studying and perfecting the specification,
+which was at last signed in German
+and English, and stamped with the
+notarial seal, and thus the contract made
+binding.</p>
+
+<p>A long correspondence relating to the
+instrument followed between Dr. Upham,
+the builder, and Mr. Hopkins, ending
+only with the shipment of the instrument.
+A most interesting part of this
+was Dr. Upham's account of his numerous
+original experiments with the natural
+larynx, made with reference to determining
+the conditions requisite for the
+successful imitation of the human voice
+in the arrangement called <i>vox humana</i>.
+Mr. Walcker has availed himself of the
+results of these experiments in the stop
+as made for this organ, but with what
+success we are unable to say, as the pipes
+have not been set in place at the time
+of our writing. As there is always great
+curiosity to hear this particular stop, we
+will guard our readers against disappointment
+by quoting a few remarks about
+that of the Haarlem organ, made by the
+liveliest of musical writers, Dr. Burney.</p>
+
+<p>"As to the <i>vox humana</i>, which is so
+celebrated, it does not at all resemble a
+human voice, though a very good stop of
+the kind; but the world is very apt to
+be imposed upon by names; the instant
+a common hearer is told that an organist
+is playing upon a stop which resembles
+the human voice, he supposes it to be
+very fine, and never inquires into the
+propriety of the name, or exactness of
+the imitation. However, with respect to
+our own feelings, we must confess, that,
+of all the stops which we have yet heard,
+that have been honored with the appellation
+of <i>vox humana</i>, no one in the treble
+part has ever reminded us of anything
+human, so much as the cracked voice of
+an old woman of ninety, or, in the lower
+parts, of Punch singing through a comb."
+Let us hope that this most irreverent
+description will not apply to the <i>vox humana</i>
+of our instrument, after all the science
+and skill that have been expended
+upon it. Should it prove a success like
+that of the Freyburg organ, there will
+be pilgrimages from the shores of the
+Pacific and the other side of the Atlantic
+to listen to the organ that can <i>sing</i>: and
+what can be a more miraculous triumph
+of art than to cheat the ear with such an
+enchanting delusion?</p>
+
+<p>Before the organ could be accepted, it
+was required by the terms of the contract
+to be set up at the factory, and tested by
+three persons: one to be selected by the
+Organ Committee of the Music-Hall Association,
+one by the builder, and a third
+to be chosen by them. Having been
+approved by these judges, and also by
+the State-Commissioner of W&uuml;rtemberg,
+according to the State ordinance, the result
+of the trial was transmitted to the
+President and Directors of the Music-Hall
+Association, and the organ was accepted.</p>
+
+<p>The war broke out in the mean time,
+and there were fears lest the vessel in
+which the instrument might be shipped
+should fall a victim to some of the British
+corsairs sailing under Confederate colors.
+But the Dutch brig "Presto," though slow,
+was safe from the licensed pirates, unless
+an organ could be shown to be contraband
+of war. She was out so long, however,&mdash;nearly
+three months from Rotterdam,&mdash;that
+the insurance-office presidents
+shook their heads over her, fearing
+that she had gone down with all her precious
+freight.</p>
+
+<p>"At length," to borrow Dr. Upham's
+words, "one stormy Sunday in March
+she was telegraphed from the marine station
+down in the bay, and the next morning,
+among the marine intelligence, in the
+smallest possible type, might be read the
+invoice of her cargo thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"'Sunday Mar. 22</p>
+
+<p>"'Arr. Dutch brig Presto, Van Wyngarten, Rotterdam,
+Jan. 1. Helvoet, 10th Had terrific gales from SW the greater
+part of the passage. 40 casks gin JD &amp; M Williams 8 sheep
+Chenery &amp; Co 200 bags coffee 2 casks herrings 1 case cheese
+W. Winsel 1 organ JB Upham 20 pipes 6 casks gin JD
+Richards 6 casks nutmegs J Schumaker 20 do gin 500 bags
+chickory root Order,' etc., etc.</p></div>
+
+<p>"And this was the heralding of this
+greatest marvel of a high and noble art,
+after the labor of seven years bestowed
+upon it, having been tried and pronounced
+complete by the most fastidious and
+competent of critics, the wonder and admiration
+of music-loving Germany, the
+pride of W&uuml;rtemberg, bringing a new
+phase of civilization to our shores in the
+darkest hour of our country's trouble."</p>
+
+<p>It remains to give a brief history of the
+construction of the grand and imposing
+architectural frame which we have already
+attempted to describe. Many organ-fronts
+were examined with reference
+to their effects, during Dr. Upham's visits
+of which we have traced the course,
+and photographs and sketches obtained
+for the same purpose. On returning,
+the task of procuring a fitting plan was
+immediately undertaken. We need not
+detail the long series of trials which were
+necessary before the requirements of the
+President and Directors of the Music-Hall
+Association were fully satisfied. As the
+result of these, it was decided that the
+work should be committed to the brothers
+Herter, of New York, European artists,
+educated at the Royal Academy of
+Art in Stuttgart. The general outline
+of the <i>fa&ccedil;ade</i> followed a design made by
+Mr. Hammatt Billings, to whom also are
+due the drawings from which the Saint
+Cecilia and the two groups of cherubs
+upon the round towers were modelled.
+These figures were executed at Stuttgart;
+the other carvings were all done
+in New York, under Mr. Herter's direction,
+by Italian and German artists, one
+of whom had trained his powers particularly
+to the shaping of colossal figures.
+In the course of the work, one of the
+brothers Herter visited Ludwigsburg for
+the special purpose of comparing his plans
+with the structure to which they were to
+be adapted, and was received with enthusiasm,
+the design for the front being greatly
+admired.</p>
+
+<p>The contract was made with Mr. Herter
+in April, 1860, and the work, having
+been accepted, was sent to Boston during
+the last winter, and safely stored in the
+lecture-room beneath the Music Hall. In
+March the <i>Great Work</i> arrived from Germany,
+and was stored in the hall above.</p>
+
+<p>"The seven-years' task is done,&mdash;the
+danger from flood and fire so far escaped,&mdash;the
+gantlet of the pirates safely run,&mdash;the
+perils of the sea and the rail surmounted
+by <i>the good Providence of God</i>."</p>
+
+<p>The devout gratitude of the President
+of the Association, under whose auspices
+this great undertaking has been successfully
+carried through, will be shared by
+all lovers of Art and all the friends of
+American civilization and culture. We
+cannot naturalize the Old-World cathedrals,
+for they were the architectural embodiment
+of a form of worship belonging to
+other ages and differently educated races.
+But the organ was only lent to human
+priesthoods for their masses and requiems;
+it belongs to Art, a religion of which God
+himself appoints the high-priests. At first
+it appears almost a violence to transplant
+it from those awful sanctuaries, out of
+whose arches its forms seemed to grow,
+and whose echoes seemed to hold converse
+with it, into our gay and gilded
+halls, to utter its majestic voice before
+the promiscuous multitude. Our hasty
+impression is a wrong one. We have undertaken,
+for the first time in the world's
+history, to educate a nation. To teach a
+people to know the Creator in His glorious
+manifestations through the wondrous
+living organs is a task for which no implement
+of human fabrication is too sacred;
+for all true culture is a form of worship,
+and to every rightly ordered mind a
+setting forth of the Divine glory.</p>
+
+<p>This consummate work of science and
+skill reaches us in the midst of the discordant
+sounds of war, the prelude of
+that blessed harmony which will come
+whenever the jarring organ of the State
+has learned once more to obey its keys.</p>
+
+<p>God grant that the <i>Miserere</i> of a people
+in its anguish may soon be followed
+by the <i>Te Deum</i> of a redeemed Nation!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_KINGS_WINE" id="THE_KINGS_WINE"></a>THE KING'S WINE.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The small green grapes in countless clusters grew,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Feeding on mystic moonlight and white dew<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And mellow sunshine, the long summer through:<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Till, with blind motion in her veins, the Vine<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Felt the delicious pulses of the wine,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the grapes ripened in the year's decline.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And day by day the Virgins watched their charge;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And when, at last, beyond the horizon's marge<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The harvest-moon dropt beautiful and large,<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The subtile spirit in the grape was caught,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And to the slowly dying Monarch brought<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">In a great cup fantastically wrought,<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Whereof he drank; then straightway from his brain<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Went the weird malady, and once again<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He walked the Palace free of scar or pain,&mdash;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">But strangely changed, for somehow he had lost<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Body and voice: the courtiers, as he crost<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The royal chambers, whispered,&mdash;"<i>The King's Ghost</i>!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="MONOGRAPH_FROM_AN_OLD_NOTE-BOOK_WITH_A_POSTSCRIPT" id="MONOGRAPH_FROM_AN_OLD_NOTE-BOOK_WITH_A_POSTSCRIPT"></a>MONOGRAPH FROM AN OLD NOTE-BOOK; WITH A POSTSCRIPT.</h2>
+
+<h3>"ERIPUIT C&#338;LO FULMEN, SCEPTRUMQUE TYRANNIS."</h3>
+
+
+<p>In a famous speech, made in the House
+of Lords, March 16, 1838, against the
+Eastern slave-trade, Lord Brougham arrests
+the current of his eloquence by the
+following illustrative diversion:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I have often heard it disputed among
+critics, which of all quotations was the
+most appropriate, the most closely applicable
+to the subject-matter illustrated;
+<i>and the palm in generally awarded to that
+which applied to Dr. Franklin the line in
+Claudian</i>,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Eripuit fulmen c&#339;lo, mox sceptra tyrannis';<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>yet still there is a difference of opinion,
+and even that citation, admirably close
+as it is, has rivals."</p>
+
+<p>The British orator errs in attributing
+this remarkable verse to Claudian; and
+he errs also in the language of the verse
+itself, which he fails to quote with entire
+accuracy. And this double mistake becomes
+more noticeable, when it appears
+not merely in the contemporary report,
+but in the carefully prepared collection
+of speeches, revised at leisure, and preserved
+in permanent volumes.<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></p>
+
+<p>The beauty of this verse, even in its
+least accurate form, will not be questioned,
+especially as applied to Franklin,
+who, before the American Revolution,
+in which it was his fortune to perform so
+illustrious a part, had already awakened
+the world's admiration by drawing the
+lightning from the skies. But beyond its
+acknowledged beauty, this verse has an
+historic interest which has never been
+adequately appreciated. Appearing at
+the moment it did, it is closely associated
+with the acknowledgment of American
+Independence. Plainly interpreted, it
+calls George III. "tyrant," and announces
+that the sceptre has been snatched
+from his hands. It was a happy ally to
+Franklin in France, and has ever since
+been an inspiring voice. Latterly it has
+been adopted by the city of Boston, and
+engraved on granite in letters of gold,&mdash;in
+honor of its greatest child and citizen.
+It may not be entirely superfluous to recount
+the history of a verse which has
+justly attracted so much attention, and
+which, in the history of civilization, has
+been of more value than the whole State
+of South Carolina.</p>
+
+<p>From its first application to Franklin,
+this verse has excited something more
+than curiosity. Lord Brougham tells us
+that it is often discussed in private circles.
+There is other evidence of the interest it
+has created. For instance, in an early
+number of "Notes and Queries"<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> there
+is the following inquiry:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"Can you tell me who wrote the line
+on Franklin, '<i>Eripuit</i>,'etc.?</p>
+
+<p>"HENRY H. BREEN.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>St. Lucia</i>."</p></div>
+
+<p>A subsequent writer in this same work,
+after calling the verse "a parody" of a
+certain line of antiquity, says,&mdash;"I am
+unable to say who adapted these words
+to Franklin's career. Was it Condorcet?"<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>
+Another writer in the same
+work says,&mdash;"The inscription was written
+by Mirabeau."<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></p>
+
+<p>I remember well a social entertainment
+in Boston, where a most distinguished
+scholar of our country, in reply to an inquiry
+made at the table, said that the
+verse was founded on the following line
+from the "Astronomicon"<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> of Manilius,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Eripuit Jovi fulmen, viresque tonandi."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>John Quincy Adams, who was present,
+seemed to concur. Mr. Sparks, in his
+notes to the correspondence of Franklin,
+attributes it to the same origin.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> But
+there are other places where its origin is
+traced with more precision. One of the
+correspondents of "Notes and Queries"
+says that he has read, but does not remember
+where, "that this line was <i>immediately</i>
+taken from one in the 'Anti-Lucretius'
+of Cardinal Polignac."<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> Another
+correspondent shows the intermediate
+authority.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> My own notes were
+originally made without any knowledge
+of these studies, which, while fixing its
+literary origin, fail to exhibit the true
+character of the verse, both in its meaning
+and in the time when it was uttered.</p>
+
+<p>The verse cannot be found in any ancient
+writer,&mdash;not Claudian or anybody
+else. It is clear that it does not come
+from antiquity, unless indirectly; nor does
+it appear that at the time of its first production
+it was in any way referred to
+any ancient writer. Manilius was not
+mentioned. The verse is of modern invention,
+and was composed after the arrival
+of Franklin in Paris on his eventful
+mission. At first it was anonymous; but
+it was attributed sometimes to D'Alembert
+and sometimes to Turgot. Beyond question,
+it was not the production of D'Alembert,
+while it will be found in the Works
+of Turgot,<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> published after his death, in
+the following form:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Eripuit c&#339;lo fulmen, sceptrumque tyrannis."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>There is no explanation by the editor of
+the circumstances under which the verse
+was written; but it is given among poetical
+miscellanies of the author, immediately
+after a translation into French of
+Pope's "Essay on Man," and is entitled
+"Inscription for a Portrait of Benjamin
+Franklin." It appears that Turgot also
+tried his hand in these French verses,
+having the same idea:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Le voil&agrave; ce mortel dont l'heureuse industrie<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sut encha&icirc;ner la Foudre et lui donner des loix,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Dont la sagesse active et l'&eacute;loquente voix<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">D'un pouvoir oppresseur affranchit sa Patrie,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Qui d&eacute;sarma les Dieux, qui r&eacute;prime les Rois."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The single Latin verse is a marvellous
+substitute for these diffuse and feeble
+lines.</p>
+
+<p>If there were any doubt upon its authorship,
+it would be removed by the positive
+statement of Condorcet, who, in his
+Life of Turgot, written shortly after the
+death of this great man, says, "There is
+known from Turgot but one Latin verse,
+designed for a portrait of Franklin";<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>
+and he gives the verse in this form:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Eripuit c&#339;lo fulmen, mox sceptra tyrannis."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But Sparks and Mignet, in their biographies,<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>
+and so also both the biographical
+dictionaries of France,&mdash;that of Michaud
+and that of Didot,&mdash;while ascribing the
+verse to Turgot, concur in the form already
+quoted from Turgot's Works, which
+was likewise adopted by Ginguen&eacute;, the
+scholar who has done so much to illustrate
+Italian literature, on the title-page
+of his "Science du Bon-Homme Richard,"
+with an abridged Life of Franklin,
+in 1794, and by Cabanis, who lived
+in such intimacy with Franklin.<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> It cannot
+be doubted that it was the final form
+which this verse assumed,&mdash;as it is unquestionably
+the best.</p>
+
+<p>To appreciate the importance of this
+verse, as marking and helping a great
+epoch, there are certain dates which must
+not be forgotten. Franklin reached Paris
+on his mission towards the close of 1776.
+He had already signed the Declaration
+of Independence, and his present duty
+was to obtain the recognition of France
+for the new power. The very clever
+Madame Du Deffant, in her amusing correspondence
+with Horace Walpole, describes
+him in a visit to her "with his
+fur cap on his head and his spectacles on
+his nose," in the same small circle with
+Madame de Luxembourg, a great lady of
+the time, and the Duke de Choiseul, late
+Prime-Minister. This was on the thirty-first
+of December, 1776.<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> A pretty good
+beginning. More than a year of effort
+and anxiety ensued, brightened at last by
+the news that Burgoyne had surrendered
+at Saratoga. On the sixth of February,
+1778, the work of the American Plenipotentiary
+was crowned by the signature of
+the two Treaties of Alliance and Commerce
+by which France acknowledged our
+Independence and pledged her belligerent
+support. On the fifteenth of March,
+one of these treaties, with a diplomatic
+note announcing that the Colonies were
+free and independent States, was communicated
+to the British Government, at
+London, which was promptly encountered
+by a declaration of war from Great
+Britain. On the twenty-second of March,
+Franklin was received by the King at
+Versailles, and this remarkable scene is
+described by the same feminine pen to
+which we are indebted for the early
+glimpse of him on his arrival in Paris.<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>
+But throughout this intervening period
+he had not lived unknown. Indeed, he
+had become at once a celebrity. Lacretelle,
+the eminent French historian, says,
+"By the effect which Franklin produced,
+he appears to have fulfilled his mission,
+not with a court, but with a free people.
+His virtues and renown negotiated for
+him."<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
+
+<p>Condorcet, who was a part of that intellectual
+society which welcomed the new
+Plenipotentiary, has left a record of his
+reception. "The celebrity of Franklin
+in the sciences," he says, "gave him the
+friendship of all who love or cultivate
+them, that is, of all who exert a real and
+durable influence upon public opinion.
+At his arrival he became an object of veneration
+to all enlightened men, and of curiosity
+to others. He submitted to this
+curiosity with the natural facility of his
+character, and with the conviction that
+in this way he served the cause of his
+country. It was an honor to have seen
+him. People repeated what they had
+heard him say. Every <i>f&ecirc;te</i> which he
+consented to receive, every house where
+he consented to go, spread in society
+new admirers, <i>who became so many partisans
+of the American Revolution</i>....
+Men whom the works of philosophy had
+disposed secretly to the love of liberty
+were impassioned for that of a strange
+people. A general cry was soon raised
+in favor of the American War, and the
+friends of peace dared not even complain
+that peace was sacrificed to the cause of
+liberty."<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> This is an animated picture
+by an eye-witness. But all authorities
+concur in its truthfulness. Even Capefigue&mdash;whose
+business is to belittle all
+that is truly great, and especially to efface
+those names which are associated
+with human liberty, while, like another
+Old Mortality, he furbishes the tombstones
+of royal mistresses&mdash;is yet constrained
+to bear witness to the popularity
+and influence which Franklin achieved.
+The critic dwells on what he styles
+his "Quaker garb," "his linen so white
+under clothes so brown," and also the elaborate
+art of the philosopher, who understood
+France and knew well "that a popular
+man became soon more powerful
+than power itself"; but he cannot deny
+that the philosopher "fulfilled his duties
+with great superiority," or that he became
+at once famous.<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></p>
+
+<p>The arrival of Franklin was followed
+very soon by the departure of the youthful
+Lafayette, who crossed the sea to offer
+his generous sword to the service of
+American liberty. Our cause was now
+widely known. In the thronged <i>caf&eacute;s</i>
+and the places of public resort it was discussed
+with sympathy and admiration.<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a>
+And so completely was Franklin recognized
+as the representative of new ideas,
+that the Emperor Joseph II. of Austria,&mdash;professed
+reformer as he was,&mdash;on
+one of his visits to France under the
+travelling-name of Count Falkenstein,
+is reported to have firmly avoided all
+temptation to see him, saying, "My business
+is to be a Royalist,"&mdash;thus doing
+homage to the real character of Franklin,
+in whom the Republic was personified.</p>
+
+<p>Franklin was at once, by natural attraction,
+the welcome guest of that brilliant
+company of philosophers who exercised
+such influence over the eighteenth
+century. The "Encyclop&eacute;die" was their
+work, and they were masters at the Academy.
+He was received into their guild.
+At the famous table of the Baron D'Holbach,
+where twice a week, Sunday and
+Thursday, at dinner, lasting from two till
+seven o'clock, the wits of that time were
+gathered, he found a hospitable chair.
+But he was most at home with Madame
+Helv&eacute;tius, the widow of the rich and
+handsome philosopher, whose name, derived
+from Holland, is now almost unknown.
+At her house he met in social
+familiarity D'Alembert, Diderot, D'Holbach,
+Morellet, Cabanis, and Condorcet,
+with their compeers. There, also, was
+Turgot, the greatest of all. There was
+another person in some respects as famous
+as any of these, but leading a very
+different life, whom Franklin saw often,&mdash;I
+refer to Caron de Beaumarchais, the
+author already of the "Barbier de S&eacute;ville,"
+as he was afterwards of the "Mariage
+de Figaro," who, turning aside from
+an unsurpassed success at the theatre,
+exerted his peculiar genius to enlist the
+French Government on the side of the
+struggling Colonies, predicted their triumph,
+and at last, under the assumed
+name of a mercantile house, became the
+agent of the Comte de Vergennes in furnishing
+clandestine supplies of arms even
+before the recognition of Independence.
+It is supposed that through this popular
+dramatist Franklin maintained communications
+with the French Government
+until the mask was thrown aside.<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
+
+<p>Beyond all doubt, Turgot is one of
+the most remarkable intelligences which
+France has produced. He was by nature
+a philosopher and a reformer, but
+he was also a statesman, who for a time
+held a seat in the cabinet of Louis XVI.,
+first as Minister of the Marine, and then
+as Comptroller of the Finances. Perhaps
+no minister ever studied more completely
+the good of the people. His administration
+was one constant benefaction.
+But he was too good for the age
+in which he lived,&mdash;or rather, the age
+was not good enough for him. The King
+was induced to part with him, saying,
+when he yielded,&mdash;"You and I are the
+only two persons who really love the
+people." This was some time in May,
+1776; so that Franklin, on his arrival,
+found this eminent Frenchman free from
+all the constraints of a ministerial position.
+The character of Turgot shows
+how naturally he sympathized with the
+Colonies struggling for independence, especially
+when represented by a person
+like Franklin. In a prize essay of his
+youth, written in 1750, when he was only
+twenty-three years of age, he had foretold
+the American Revolution. These are
+his remarkable words on that occasion:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Colonies are like fruits, which do not
+hold to the tree after their maturity.
+Having become sufficient in themselves,
+they do that which Carthage did, <i>that
+which America will one day do</i>."<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a></p>
+
+<p>One of his last acts before leaving the
+Ministry was to prepare a memoir on the
+American War, for the information of the
+Comte de Vergennes, in which he says
+"that the idea of the absolute separation
+of the Colonies and the mother-country
+seems infinitely probable; that, when the
+independence of the Colonies shall be
+entire and acknowledged by the English,
+there will be a total revolution in
+the political and commercial relations of
+Europe and America; and that all the
+mother-countries will be forced to abandon
+all empire over their colonies, to
+leave them entire liberty of commerce
+with all nations, and to be content in
+sharing with others this liberty, and in
+preserving with their colonies the bonds
+of amity and fraternity."<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> This memoir
+of the French statesman bears date the
+sixth of April, 1776, nearly three months
+before the Declaration of Independence.</p>
+
+<p>On leaving the Ministry, Turgot devoted
+himself to literature, science, and
+charity, translating Odes of Horace and
+Eclogues of Virgil, studying geometry
+with Bossut, chemistry with Lavoisier,
+and astronomy with Rochon, and interesting
+himself in every thing by which human
+welfare could be advanced. Such
+a character, with such an experience of
+government, and the prophet of American
+independence, was naturally prepared
+to welcome Franklin, not only as
+philosopher, but as statesman also.</p>
+
+<p>But the classical welcome of Turgot
+was partially anticipated,&mdash;at least in
+an unsuccessful attempt. Baron Grimm,
+in that interesting and instructive "Correspondance,"
+prepared originally for the
+advantage of distant courts, but now constituting
+one of the literary and social
+monuments of the period, mentions, under
+date of October, 1777, that the following
+French verses were made for a
+portrait of Franklin by Cochin, engraved
+by St. Aubin:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"C'est l'honneur et l'appui du nouvel h&eacute;misph&egrave;re;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Les flots de l'Oc&eacute;an s'abaissent &agrave; sa voix;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Il r&eacute;prime ou dirige &agrave; son gr&eacute; le tonnerre;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Qui d&eacute;sarme les dieux, peut-il craindre les rois?"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>These verses seem to contain the very
+idea in the verse of Turgot. But they
+were suppressed at the time by the censor
+on the ground that they were "blasphemous,"&mdash;although
+it is added in a note
+that "they concerned only the King of
+England." Was it that the negotiations
+with Franklin were not yet sufficiently
+advanced? And here mark the dates.</p>
+
+<p>It was only after the communication to
+Great Britain of the Treaty of Alliance
+and the reception of Franklin at Versailles,
+that the seal seems to have been
+broken. Baron Grimm, in his "Correspondance,"<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a>
+under date of April, 1778,
+makes the following entry:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"A very beautiful Latin verse has been
+made for the portrait of Dr. Franklin,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Eripuit c&#339;lo fulmen, sceptrumque tyrannis.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It is a happy imitation of a verse of the
+'Anti-Lucretius,'&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Eripuitque Jovi fulmen, Ph&#339;boque sagittas.'"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Here is the earliest notice of this verse,
+authenticating its origin. Nothing further
+is said of the "Anti-Lucretius"; for in
+that day it was familiar to every lettered
+person. But I shall speak of it before I
+close.</p>
+
+<p>Only a few days later the verse appears
+in the correspondence of Madame
+D'&Eacute;pinay, whose intimate relations with
+Baron Grimm&mdash;the subject of curiosity
+and scandal&mdash;will explain her early
+knowledge of it. She records it in a
+letter to the very remarkable Italian
+Abb&eacute; Galiani, under date of May 3d,
+1778.<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> And she proceeds to give a translation
+in French verse, which she says
+"D'Alembert made the other day between
+sleeping and waking." Galiani,
+who was himself a master of Latin versification,
+and followed closely the fortunes
+of America, must have enjoyed the
+tribute. In a letter written shortly afterwards,
+he enters into all the grandeur of
+the occasion. "You have," says he, "at
+this hour decided the greatest question
+of the globe,&mdash;that is, if it is America
+which shall reign over Europe, or Europe
+which shall continue to reign over America.
+I would wager in favor of America."<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a>
+In these words the Neapolitan
+said as much as Turgot.</p>
+
+<p>A little later the verse appears in a
+different scene. It had reached the <i>salons</i>
+of Madame Doublet, whence it was
+transferred to the "M&eacute;moires Secrets de
+Bachaumont," under date of June 8th,
+1778, as "a very beautiful verse, proper
+to characterize M. Franklin and to serve
+as an inscription for his portrait." These
+Memoirs, as is well known, are the record
+of conversations and news gathered in
+the circle of that venerable Egeria of
+gossip;<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> and here is evidence of the publicity
+which this welcome had already obtained.</p>
+
+<p>The verse was now fairly launched.
+War was flagrant between France and
+Great Britain. There was no longer any
+reason why the new alliance between
+France and the United States should
+not be placed under the auspices of genius,
+and why the same hand which had
+snatched the lightning from the skies
+should not have the fame of snatching
+the sceptre from King George III. The
+time for free speech had come. It was
+no longer "blasphemous."</p>
+
+<p>But it will be observed that these records
+of this verse fail to mention the immediate
+author. Was he unknown at
+the time? Or did the fact that he was
+recently a cabinet-minister induce him
+to hide behind a mask? Turgot was a
+master of epigram,&mdash;as witness the terrible
+lines on Frederick of Prussia; but
+he was very prudent in conduct. "Nobody,"
+said Voltaire, "so skilful to launch
+the shaft without showing the hand."
+But there is a letter from no less a
+person than D'Alembert, which reveals
+something of the "filing" which this
+verse underwent, and something of the
+persons consulted. Unhappily, the letter
+is without date; nor does it appear to
+whom it was addressed, except that the
+"<i>cher confr&egrave;re</i>" seems to imply that it was
+to a brother of the Academy. This letter
+will be found in a work which is now
+known to have been the compilation of
+the Marquis Ga&euml;tan de La Rochefoucauld,<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a>
+entitled, "M&eacute;moires de Condorcet
+sur la R&eacute;volution Fran&ccedil;aise, extraits
+de sa Correspondance et de celle de ses
+Amis."<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> It is introduced by the following
+words from the Marquis:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"It is known how Franklin had been
+f&ecirc;ted when he came to Paris, because
+he was the representative of a republic.
+The philosophers, especially, received him
+with enthusiasm. It may be said, among
+other things, that D'Alembert lost his
+sleep; and we are going to prove it by
+a letter which he wrote, where he put
+himself to the torture in order to versify
+in honor of Franklin."</p>
+
+<p>The letter is then given as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"<i>Friday Morning</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"MY DEAR COLLEAGUE,&mdash;You are
+acquainted with the Franklin verse,&mdash;</p></div>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Eripuit c&#339;lo fulmen, <i>mox sceptra</i> tyrannis.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>You should surely cause it to be put in
+the Paris paper, if it is not there already.</p>
+
+<p>"I should agree with La Harpe that
+<i>sceptrumque</i> is better: first, because <i>mox
+sceptra</i> is a little hard, and then because
+<i>mox</i>, according to the dictionary of Gesner,
+who collects examples, signifies equally
+<i>statim</i> or <i>deinde</i>, which causes a double
+meaning, <i>mox eripuit</i> or <i>mox eripiet</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"However, here is how I have attempted
+to translate this verse for the
+portrait of Franklin:&mdash;</p></div>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">'Tu vois le sage courageux<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Dont l'heureux et m&acirc;le g&eacute;nie<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Arracha le tonnerre aux dieux<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Et le sceptre &agrave; la tyrannie.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>If you find these verses sufficiently supportable,
+so that people will not laugh at
+me, you can put them into the Paris paper,
+even with my name. I shall honor
+myself in rendering this homage to
+Franklin, but on condition that you find
+the verses <i>printable</i>. As I make no pretension
+on account of them, I shall be
+perfectly content, if you reject them as
+bad.</p>
+
+<p>"The third verse can be put,&mdash;<i>A ravi
+le tonnerre aux cieux</i>, or <i>aux dieux</i>."</p></div>
+
+<p>From this letter it appears that the
+critical judgment of La Harpe, confirmed
+by D'Alembert, sided for <i>sceptrumque</i> as
+better than <i>mox sceptra</i>.</p>
+
+<p>But the verse of Turgot was not alone
+in its testimony. There was an incident
+precisely contemporaneous, which shows
+how completely France had fallen under
+the fascination of the American cause.
+Voltaire, the acknowledged chief of
+French literature in the brilliant eighteenth
+century, after many years of busy
+exile at Ferney, in the neighborhood of
+Geneva, where he had wielded his far-reaching
+sceptre, was induced, in his old
+age, to visit Paris once again before he
+died. He left his Swiss retreat on the
+sixth of February, 1778, the very day
+on which Franklin signed the Alliance
+with France, and after a journey which
+resembled the progress of a sovereign, he
+reached Paris on the twelfth of February.
+He was at once surrounded by the homage
+of all that was most illustrious in
+literature and science, while the theatre,
+grateful for his contributions to the drama,
+vied with the Academy. But there
+were two characters on whom the patriarch,
+as he was fondly called, lavished a
+homage of his own. He had already addressed
+to Turgot a most remarkable epistle
+in verse, the mood of which may be
+seen in its title, "&Eacute;pitre &agrave; un Homme";
+but on seeing the discarded statesman,
+who had been so true to benevolent ideas,
+he came forward to meet him, saying,
+with his whole soul, "Let me kiss
+the hand which signed the salvation of
+the people." The scene with Franklin
+was more touching still. Voltaire began
+in English, which he had spoken early
+in life, but, having lost the habit, he soon
+charted to French, saying that he "could
+not resist the desire of speaking for one
+moment the language of Franklin." The
+latter had brought with him his grandson,
+for whom he asked a benediction.
+"God and Liberty," said Voltaire, putting
+his hands upon the head of the child;
+"this is the only benediction proper for
+the grandson of Franklin." A few days
+afterward, at a public session of the
+Academy, they were placed side by side,
+when, amidst the applause of the enlightened
+company, the two old men rose and
+embraced. The political triumphs of
+Franklin and the dramatic triumphs of
+Voltaire caused the exclamation, that
+"Solon embraced Sophocles." But it was
+more than this. It was France embracing
+America, beneath the benediction of
+"God and Liberty." Only a few days
+later, Voltaire died. But the alliance
+with France had received a new assurance,
+and the cause of American Independence
+an unalterable impulse.</p>
+
+<p>Turgot did not live to enjoy the final
+triumph of the cause to which he had
+given such remarkable expression. He
+died March 30th, 1781, several months
+before that "crowning mercy," the capture
+of Cornwallis, and nearly two years
+before the Provisional Articles of Peace,
+by which the Colonies were recognized
+as free and independent States. But
+his attachment to Franklin was one of
+the enjoyments of his latter years.<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> Besides
+the verse to which so much reference
+has been made, there is an interesting
+incident which attests the communion
+of ideas between them, if not
+the direct influence of Turgot. Captain
+Cook, the eminent navigator, who "steered
+Britain's oak into a world unknown,"
+was in distant seas on a voyage of discovery.
+Such an enterprise naturally
+interested Franklin, and, in the spirit of
+a refined humanity, he sought to save it
+from the chances of war. Accordingly,
+he issued a passport, addressed "To all
+captains and commanders of armed ships,
+acting by commission from the Congress of
+the United States of America, now in war
+with Great Britain," where, after setting
+forth the nature of the voyage of the English
+navigator, he proceeded to say,&mdash;"This
+is most earnestly to recommend to
+every one of you, that, in case the said
+ship, which is now expected to be soon in
+the European seas on her return, should
+happen to fall into your hands, you would
+not consider her as an enemy, nor suffer
+any plunder to be made of the effects
+contained in her, nor obstruct her immediate
+return to England; but that you
+would treat the said Captain Cook and
+his people with all civility and kindness,
+affording them, as common friends to
+mankind, all the assistance in your power
+which they may happen to stand in need
+of."<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> This document bears date March
+10th, 1779. But Turgot had anticipated
+Franklin. At the first outbreak
+of the war, he had submitted a memoir
+to the French Government, on which it
+was ordered that Captain Cook should
+not be treated as an enemy, but as a
+benefactor of all European nations.<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a>
+Here was a triumph of civilization, by
+which we have all been gainers; for such
+an example is immortal in its influence.</p>
+
+<p>There is yet another circumstance
+which should be mentioned, in order to
+exhibit the identity of sympathies in these
+two eminent persons. Each sought to
+marry Madame Helv&eacute;tius: Turgot early
+in life, while she was still Mademoiselle
+Ligniville, belonging to a family of
+twenty-one children, from a chateau in
+Lorraine, and the niece of Madame de
+Graffigny, the author of the "Peruvian
+Letters"; Franklin in his old age, while
+a welcome guest in the intellectual circle
+which this widowed lady continued to
+gather about her. Throughout his stay
+in France he was in unbroken relations
+with this circle, dining with it
+very often, and adding much to its gayety,
+while Madame Helv&eacute;tius, with her
+friends, dined with him once a week. It
+was with tears in his eyes that he parted
+from her, whom he never expected to see
+again in this life; and on reaching his
+American home, he addressed her in
+words of touching tenderness:&mdash;"I stretch
+out my arms towards you, notwithstanding
+the immensity of the seas which separate
+us, while I wait the heavenly kiss which
+I firmly trust one day to give you."<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a></p>
+
+<p>But the story of the verse is not yet
+finished. And here it mingles with the
+history of Franklin in Paris, constituting
+in itself an episode of the American Revolution.
+The verse was written for a portrait.
+And now that the ice was broken,
+the portrait of Franklin was to be seen
+everywhere,&mdash;in painting, in sculpture,
+and in engraving. I have counted, in
+the superb collection of the Biblioth&egrave;que
+Imp&eacute;riale at Paris, nearly a hundred engraved
+heads of him. At the royal exposition
+of pictures the republican portrait
+found a place, and the name of
+Franklin was printed at length in the
+catalogue,&mdash;a circumstance which did
+not pass unobserved at the time; for the
+"Espion Anglais," in recording it, treats
+it as "announcing that he began to come
+out from his obscurity."<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> The same curious
+authority, describing a festival at
+Marseilles, says, under date of March 20th,
+1779,&mdash;"I was struck, on entering the
+hall, to observe a crowd of portraits representing
+the insurgents; but that of M.
+Franklin especially drew my attention,
+on account of the device, '<i>Eripuit c&#339;lo</i>,'
+etc. This was inscribed recently, and
+<i>every one admired the sublime truth</i>."<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a>
+Thus completely was France, not merely
+in its social centre, where fashion gives
+the law, but in its distant borders, pledged
+to the cause of which Franklin was
+the representative.</p>
+
+<p>As in the halls of science and in popular
+resorts, so was our Plenipotentiary
+even in the palace of princes. The biographer
+of the Prince de Cond&eacute; dwells
+with admiration upon the illustrious character
+who, during the great debate and
+the negotiations which ensued, had fixed
+the regards of Paris, of Versailles, of the
+whole kingdom indeed,&mdash;although in his
+simple and farmer-like exterior so unlike
+those gilded plenipotentiaries to whom
+France was accustomed,&mdash;and he recounts,
+most sympathetically, that the
+Prince, after an interview of two hours,
+declared that "Franklin appeared to
+him above even his reputation."<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> And
+here again we encounter the unwilling
+testimony of Capefigue, who says that
+he was followed everywhere, taking possession
+of "hearts and minds," and that
+"his image, under the simple garb of a
+Quaker, was to be found at the hearth of
+the poor and in the boudoir of the beautiful";<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a>&mdash;all
+of which is in harmony with
+the more sympathetic record of Lacretelle,
+who says that "portraits of Franklin
+were everywhere, with this inscription,
+<i>Eripuit c&#339;lo</i>, etc., <i>which the Court
+itself found just and sublime</i>."<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a></p>
+
+<p>But it was at court, even in the precincts
+of Versailles, that the portrait and
+the inscription had their most remarkable
+experience. Of this there is an authentic
+account in the Memoirs of Marie Antoinette
+by her attendant, Madame Campan.
+This feminine chronicler relates
+that Franklin appeared at court in the
+dress of an American farmer. His flat
+hair without powder, his round hat, his
+coat of brown cloth contrasted with the
+bespangled and embroidered dresses, the
+powdered and perfumed hair of the courtiers
+of Versailles. The novelty charmed
+the lively imagination of French ladies.
+Elegant <i>f&ecirc;tes</i> were given to the
+man who was said to unite in himself the
+renown of a great, natural philosopher
+with "those patriotic virtues which had
+made him embrace the noble part of
+Apostle of Liberty." Madame Campan
+records that she assisted at one of these
+<i>f&ecirc;tes</i>, where the most beautiful among
+three hundred ladies was designated to
+place a crown of laurel upon the white
+head of the American philosopher, and
+two kisses upon the cheeks of the old
+man. Even in the palace, at the exposition
+of the S&egrave;vres porcelain, the medallion
+of Franklin, with the legend, "<i>Eripuit
+c&#339;lo</i>", etc., was sold directly under the
+eyes of the King. Madame Campan adds,
+however, that the King avoided expressing
+himself on this enthusiasm, which, she
+says, "without doubt, his sound sense
+made him blame." But an incident,
+called "a pleasantry," which has remained
+quite unknown, goes beyond speech
+in the way of explaining the secret sentiments
+of Louis XVI. The Comtesse
+Diane de Polignac, devoted to Marie
+Antoinette, shared warmly the "infatuation"
+with regard to Franklin. The
+King observed it. But here the story
+shall be told in the language of the eminent
+lady who records it:&mdash;"Il fit faire
+&agrave; la manufacture de S&egrave;vres un vase de
+nuit, an fond duquel &eacute;tait plac&eacute; le m&eacute;daillon
+avec la l&eacute;gende <i>si fort en vogue</i>, et
+l'envoya en pr&eacute;sent d'&eacute;trennes &agrave; la Comtesse
+Diane."<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> Such was the exceptional
+treatment of Franklin, and of the inscription
+in his honor which was so much
+in vogue. Giving to this incident its natural
+interpretation, it is impossible to resist
+the conclusion, that the French people,
+and not the King, sanctioned American
+Independence.</p>
+
+<p>The conduct of the Queen on this special
+occasion is not recorded; although
+we are told by the same communicative
+chronicler who had been Her Majesty's
+companion, that she did not hesitate to
+express herself more openly than the
+King on the part which France took in
+favor of the independence of the American
+Colonies, to which she was constantly
+opposed. A letter from Mario Antoinette,
+addressed to Madame de Polignac,
+under the date of April 9th, 1787, declares
+unavailing regret, saying,&mdash;"The
+time of illusions is past, and to-day we
+pay dear on account of our infatuation
+and enthusiasm for the American War."<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a>
+It is evident that Marie Antoinette, like
+her brother Joseph, thought that her
+"business was to be a Royalist."</p>
+
+<p>But the name of Franklin triumphed
+in France. So long as he continued to
+reside there he was received with honor,
+and when, after the achievement of Independence,
+and the final fulfilment of
+all that was declared in the verse of
+Turgot, he undertook to return home,
+the Queen&mdash;who had looked with so
+little favor upon the cause which he so
+grandly represented&mdash;sent a litter to
+receive his sick body and carry him gently
+to the sea. As the great Revolution
+began to show itself, his name was hailed
+with new honor; and this was natural, for
+the great Revolution was the outbreak
+of that spirit which had risen to welcome
+him. In snatching the sceptre from a
+tyrant he had given a lesson to France.
+His death, when at last it occurred, was
+the occasion of a magnificent eulogy from
+Mirabeau, who, borrowing the idea of
+Turgot, exclaimed from the tribune of
+the National Assembly,&mdash;"Antiquity
+would have raised altars to the powerful
+genius, who, for the good of man, embracing
+in his thought heaven and earth,
+<i>could subdue lightning and tyrants</i>."<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a>
+On his motion, France went into mourning
+for Franklin. His bust was a favorite
+ornament, and, during the festival of
+Liberty, it was carried, with those of Sidney,
+Rousseau, and Voltaire, before the
+people to receive their veneration.<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> A
+little later, the eminent medical character,
+Cabanis, who had lived in intimate
+association with Franklin, added his testimony,
+saying that the enfranchisement of
+the United States was in many respects his
+work, and that the Revolution, the most
+important to the happiness of men which
+had then been accomplished on earth,
+united with one of the most brilliant discoveries
+of physical science to consecrate
+his memory; and he concludes by quoting
+the verse of Turgot.<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> Long afterwards,
+his last surviving companion in
+the cheerful circle of Madame Helv&eacute;tius,
+still loyal to the idea of Turgot, hailed
+him as "that great man who had placed
+his country in the number of independent
+states, and made one of the
+most important discoveries of the age."<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a></p>
+
+<p>But it is time to look at this verse in
+its literary relations, from which I have
+been diverted by its commanding interest
+as a political event. Its importance
+on this account must naturally enhance
+the interest in its origin.</p>
+
+<p>The poem which furnished the prototype
+of the famous verse was "Anti-Lucretius,
+sive de Deo et Natura," by the
+Cardinal Melchior de Polignac. Its author
+was of that patrician house which is
+associated so closely with Marie Antoinette
+in the earlier Revolution, and with
+Charles X. in the later Revolution, having
+its cradle in the mountains of Auvergne,
+near the cradle of Lafayette, and
+its present tomb in the historic cemetery
+of Picpus, near the tomb of Lafayette, so
+that these two great names, representing
+opposite ideas, begin and end side by
+side. He was not merely an author, but
+statesman and diplomatist also, under
+Louis XIV. and the Regent. Through
+his diplomacy a French prince was elected
+King of Poland. He represented
+France at the Peace of Utrecht, where
+he bore himself very proudly towards the
+Dutch. By the nomination of the Pretender,
+at that time in France, he obtained
+the hat of a cardinal. At Rome
+he was a favorite, and he was also, with
+some interruptions, a favorite at Versailles.
+His personal appearance, his
+distinguished manners, his genius, and
+his accomplishments, all commended him.
+Literary honors were superadded to political
+and ecclesiastical. He succeeded
+to the chair of Bossuet at the Academy.
+But he was not without the vicissitudes
+of political life. Falling into disgrace at
+court, he was banished to the abbacy of
+Bonport. There the scholarly ecclesiastic
+occupied himself with a refutation of Lucretius,
+in Latin verse.</p>
+
+<p>The origin of the poem is not without
+interest. Meeting Bayle in Holland, the
+ecclesiastic found the indefatigable skeptic
+most persistently citing Lucretius, in
+whose elaborate verse the atheistic materialism
+of Epicurus is developed and exalted.
+Others had already answered the
+philosopher directly; but the indignant
+Christian was moved to answer the poet
+through whom the dangerous system was
+proclaimed. His poem was, therefore, a
+vindication of God and religion, in direct
+response to a master-poem of antiquity,
+in which these are assailed. The attempt
+was lofty, especially when the champion
+adopted the language of Lucretius. Perhaps,
+since Sannazaro, no modern production
+in Latin verse has found equal
+success. Even before its publication, in
+1747, it was read at court, and was admired
+in the princely circle of Sceaux. It
+appeared in elegant, editions, was translated
+into French prose by Bougainville,
+and into French verse by Jeanty-Laurans,
+also most successfully into Italian
+verse by Ricci. At the latter part of
+the last century, when Franklin reached
+Paris, it was hardly less known in literary
+circles than a volume of Grote's History
+in our own day. Voltaire, the arbiter
+of literary fame at that time, regarding
+the author only on the side of
+literature, said of him, in his "Temple
+du Go&ucirc;t,"&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Le Cardinal, oracle de la France,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">R&eacute;unissaut Virgile avec Platon,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>Vengeur du ciel et vainqueur de Lucr&egrave;ce</i>."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The last line of this remarkable eulogy
+has a movement and balance not unlike
+the Latin verse of Turgot, or that which
+suggested it in the poem of Polignac;
+but the praise which it so pointedly offers
+attests the fame of the author; nor was
+this praise confined to the "fine frenzy"
+of verse. The "Anti-Lucretius" was
+gravely pronounced the "rival of the
+poem which it answered,"&mdash;"with verses
+as flowing as Ovid, sometimes approaching
+the elegant simplicity of Horace and
+sometimes the nobleness of Virgil,"&mdash;and
+then again, with a philosophy and a poetry
+combined "which would not be disavowed
+either by Descartes or by Virgil."<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a></p>
+
+<p>Turning now to the poem itself, we
+shall see how completely the verse of Turgot
+finds its prototype there. Epicurus is
+indignantly described as denying to the
+gods all power, and declaring man independent,
+so as to act for himself; and
+here the poet says, "Braving the thunderous
+recesses of heaven, <i>he snatched the
+lightning from Jove and the arrows from
+Apollo</i>, and, liberating the mortal race,
+ordered it to dare all things,"&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"C&#339;li et tonitralia templa lacessens,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>Eripuit fulmenque Jovi, Ph&#339;boque sagittas</i>;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Et mortale manumittens genus, omnia jussit<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Audere."<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>To deny the power of God and to declare
+independence of His commands,
+which the poet here holds up to judgment,
+is very unlike the life of Franklin,
+all whose service was in obedience to
+God's laws, whether in snatching the
+lightning from the skies or the sceptre
+from tyrants; and yet it is evident that
+the verse which pictured Epicurus in
+his impiety suggested the picture of the
+American plenipotentiary in his double
+labors of science and statesmanship.</p>
+
+<p>But the present story will not be complete
+without an allusion to that poem
+of antiquity which was supposed to have
+suggested the verse of Turgot, and which
+doubtless did suggest the verse of the
+"Anti-Lucretius." Manilius is a poet little
+known. It is difficult to say when he
+lived or what he was. He is sometimes
+supposed to have lived under Augustus,
+and sometimes under Theodosius. He
+is sometimes supposed to have been a
+Roman slave, and sometimes a Roman
+senator. His poem, under the name of
+"Astronomicon," is a treatise on astronomy
+in verse, which recounts the origin
+of the material universe, exhibits the relations
+of the heavenly bodies, and vindicates
+this ancient science. It is while describing
+the growth of knowledge, which
+gradually mastered Nature, that the poet
+says,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Eriputque Jovi fulmen, viresque tonandi."<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The meaning of this line will be seen
+in the context, which, for plainness as
+well as curiosity, I quote from a metrical
+version of the first book of the poem,<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a>
+entitled, "The Sphere of Marcus Manilius
+made an English Poem, by Edward
+Sherburne," which was dedicated
+to Charles II.:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Nor put they to their curious search an end<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till reason had scaled heaven, thence viewed this round<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And Nature latent in its causes found:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Why thunder does the suffering clouds assail;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Why winter's snow more soft than summer's hail;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Whence earthquakes come and subterranean fires;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Why showers descend, what force the wind inspires:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">From error thus the wondering minds uncharmed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>Unsceptred Jove, the Thunderer disarmed</i>."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Enough has been said on the question
+of origin; but there is yet one other aspect
+of the story.</p>
+
+<p>The verse was hardly divulged when
+it became the occasion of various efforts
+in the way of translation. Turgot
+had already done it into French; so
+had D'Alembert. M. Nogaret wrote to
+Franklin, inclosing an attempted translation,
+and says in his letter,&mdash;"The
+French have done their best to translate
+the Latin verse, where justice is done
+you in so few words. They have appeared
+as jealous of transporting this eulogy
+into their language as they are of possessing
+you. But nobody has succeeded,
+and I think nobody will succeed."<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> He
+then quotes a translation which he thinks
+defective, although it appeared in the
+"Almanach des Muses" as the best:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Cet homme que tu vois, sublime en tous les tems,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">D&eacute;robe aux dieux la foudre et le sceptre aux tyrans."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>To this letter Dr. Franklin made the
+following reply:<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>"<i>Passy, 8 March, 1781</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"SIR,&mdash;I received the letter you
+have done me the honor of writing to
+me the 2d instant, wherein, after overwhelming
+me with a flood of compliments,
+which I can never hope to merit, you request
+my opinion of your translation of a
+Latin verse that has been applied to me.
+If I were, which I really am not, sufficiently
+skilled in your excellent language
+to be a proper judge of its poesy, the
+supposition of my being the subject must
+restrain me from giving any opinion on
+that line, except that it ascribes too much
+to me, especially in what relates to the
+tyrant, the Revolution having been the
+work of many able and brave men, wherein
+it is sufficient honor for me, if I am allowed
+a small share. I am much obliged
+by the favorable sentiments you are pleased
+to entertain of me.</p>
+
+<p>"With regard, I have the honor to be,
+Sir, etc.,</p>
+
+<p>"B. FRANKLIN."</p></div>
+
+<p>In his acknowledgment of this letter
+M. Nogaret says,&mdash;"Paris is pleased
+with the translation of your '<i>Eripuit</i>,' and
+your portrait, as I had foreseen, makes
+the fortune of the engraver."<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> But it
+does not appear to which translation he
+refers.</p>
+
+<p>Here is another attempt:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Il a par ses travaux, toujours plus &eacute;tonnans,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ravi la foudre aux Dieux et le sceptre aux tyrans."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>There are other verses which adopt
+the idea of Turgot. Here, for instance,
+is a part of a song by the Abb&eacute; Morellet,
+written for one of the dinners of
+Madame Helv&eacute;tius:<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Comme un aigle audacieux,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Il a vol&eacute; jusqu'aux cieux,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>Et d&eacute;rob&eacute; le tonnerre</i><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Dont ils effrayaient la terre,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Heureux larcin<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">De l'habile Benjamin.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"L'Am&eacute;ricain indompt&eacute;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>Recouvre sa libert&eacute;</i>;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Et ce g&eacute;n&eacute;reux ouvrage,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Autre exploit de notre sage,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Est mis &agrave; fin<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Par Louis et Benjamin."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Mr. Sparks found among Franklin's
+papers the following paraphrastic version:<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a>&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Franklin sut arr&ecirc;ter la foudre dans les airs,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Et c'est le moindre bien qu'il fit &agrave; sa patrie;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Au milieu de climats divers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">O&ugrave; dominait la tyrannie,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Il fit r&eacute;gner les arts, les m&#339;urs, et le g&eacute;nie;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Et voil&agrave; le h&eacute;ros que j'offre &agrave; l'univers."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Nor should I omit a translation into
+English by Mr. Elphinstone:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"He snatched the bolt from Heaven's avenging hand,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Disarmed and drove the tyrant from the land."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In concluding this sketch, I wish to
+say that the literary associations of the
+subject did not tempt me; but I could
+not resist the inducement to present in
+its proper character an interesting incident
+which can be truly comprehended
+only when it is recognized in its political
+relations. To this end it was important
+to exhibit its history, even in details, so
+that the verse which has occupied so
+much attention should be seen not only
+in its scholarly fascination, but in its
+wide-spread influence in the circles of the
+learned and the circles even of the fashionable
+in Paris and throughout France,
+binding this great nation by an unchangeable
+vow to the support of American liberty.
+Words are sometimes things; but
+never were words so completely things
+as those with which Turgot welcomed
+Franklin. The memory of that welcome
+cannot be forgotten in America. Can it
+ever be forgotten in France?</p>
+
+
+<p>POSTSCRIPT.</p>
+
+<p>And now the country is amazed by
+the report that the original welcome of
+France to America and the inspired
+welcome of Turgot to Franklin are forgotten
+by the France of this day, or,
+rather let me say, forgotten by the Emperor,
+whose memory for the time is the
+memory of France. It is said that Louis
+Napoleon is concerting an alliance with
+the Rebel slavemongers of our country,
+founded on the recognition of their independence,
+so that they may take their
+place as a new power in the family of
+nations. Indeed, we have been told,
+through the columns of the official organ,
+the "Moniteur," that he wishes to
+do this thing. Perhaps he imagines that
+he follows the great example of the last
+century.</p>
+
+<p>What madness!</p>
+
+<p>The two cases are in perfect contrast,&mdash;as
+opposite as the poles, as unlike as
+Liberty and Slavery.</p>
+
+<p>The struggle for American Independence
+was a struggle for Liberty, and was
+elevated throughout by this holy cause.
+But the struggle for Slavemonger Independence
+is necessarily and plainly a
+struggle for Slavery, and is degraded
+throughout by the unutterable vileness
+of all its barefaced pretensions.</p>
+
+<p>The earlier struggle, adopted by the
+enlightened genius of France, was solemnly
+placed under the benediction of
+"God and Liberty." The present struggle,
+happily thus far discarded by that
+same enlightened genius, can have no
+other benediction than "Satan and Slavery."</p>
+
+<p>The earlier struggle was to snatch the
+sceptre from a kingly tyrant. The present
+struggle is to put whips into the hands
+of Rebel slavemongers with which <i>to
+compel work without wages</i>, and thus give
+wicked power to vulgar tyrants without
+number.</p>
+
+<p>The earlier struggle was fitly pictured
+by the welcome of Turgot to Franklin.
+But another spirit must be found, and other
+words must be invented, to picture the
+struggle which it is now proposed to place
+under the protection of France.</p>
+
+<p>The earlier struggle was grandly represented
+by Benjamin Franklin, who was
+already known by a sublime discovery in
+science. The present struggle is characteristically
+represented by John Slidell,
+whose great fame is from the electioneering
+frauds by which he sought to control
+a Presidential election; so that his whole
+life is fitly pictured, when it is said, that
+he thrust fraudulent votes into the ballot-box,
+and whips into the hands of task-masters.</p>
+
+<p>The earlier struggle was predicted by
+Turgot, who said, that, in the course of
+Nature, colonies must drop from the parent
+stem, like ripe fruit. But where is
+the Turgot who has predicted, that, in
+the course of Nature, the great Republic
+must be broken, in order to found a new
+power on the corner-stone of Slavery?</p>
+
+<p>The earlier struggle gathered about it
+the sympathy of the learned, the good,
+and the wise, while the people of France
+rose up to call it blessed. The present
+struggle can expect nothing but detestation
+from all who are not lost to duty and
+honor, while the people of France must
+cover it with curses.</p>
+
+<p>The earlier struggle enjoyed the favor
+of France, whether in assemblies of learning
+or of fashion, in spite of its King. It
+remains to be seen if the present struggle
+must not ignobly fail in France, still
+mindful of its early vows, in spite of its
+Emperor.</p>
+
+<p>Where duty and honor are so plain, it
+is painful to think that even for a moment
+there can be any hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>Alas for France!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="REVIEWS_AND_LITERARY_NOTICES" id="REVIEWS_AND_LITERARY_NOTICES"></a>REVIEWS AND LITERARY NOTICES.</h2>
+
+
+<p><i>History of Spanish Literature.</i> By GEORGE
+TICKNOR. In Three Volumes. Third
+American Edition, corrected and enlarged.
+Boston: Ticknor &amp; Fields.</p>
+
+<p>The first edition of this work was published
+in 1849, in three volumes octavo,
+and it is hardly necessary for us to add,
+that it was received with very great favor
+both at home and abroad. Indeed, we may
+go farther, and say that it was received with
+the highest favor by those who were best
+qualified to pronounce upon its merits.
+The audience which it addressed was small
+at home, and not numerous anywhere; for
+the literature of Spain, in general, does not
+present strong attractions to those who are
+not natives of the Peninsula. In our country,
+at the time of its publication, there
+was hardly a man competent to examine
+and criticize it; and in Europe, outside of
+Spain itself, the number of thorough Spanish
+scholars was and is but small, and of
+these a large proportion is found in Germany.
+But by these, whether in Germany,
+France, or England, Mr. Ticknor's
+History was received with a generous and
+hearty admiration which must have been
+to him as authentic a token of the worth
+of his book as the voice of posterity itself.
+But, of course, it was exposed to the severest
+trial in Spain, the people of which
+are intensely national, loving their literature,
+like everything else which belongs to
+them, with a passionate and exclusive love,
+and not disposed to treat with any tenderness
+a foreign writer who should lay an
+incompetent hand upon any of their great
+writers, though in a friendly and liberal
+spirit. But by the scholars and men of letters
+in Spain it was greeted with a kindliness
+of welcome which nothing but the
+most substantial excellence could have assured.
+Universal assent to the views of a
+foreigner and a Protestant was not to be
+expected: this or that particular judgment
+was questioned; but no one said, or could
+say, that Mr. Ticknor's History was superficial,
+or hastily prepared, or prejudiced,
+or wanting in due proportions. On the
+other hand, a most hearty tribute of admiration
+was paid to its thorough learning,
+its minute and patient research, its accurate
+judgments, its candid temper and generous
+spirit. Cultivated Spaniards were
+amazed that a foreigner had so thoroughly
+traced the stream of their literature from
+its fountain-heads, omitting nothing, overlooking
+nothing, and doing justice to all.</p>
+
+<p>Such a work could never attain any very
+wide popularity, and this from the nature
+of its subject. To the general reader books
+about books are never so attractive as histories
+and biographies, which deal with the
+doings of men, and glow with the warmth
+of human interests. But every man of literary
+taste, though but superficially acquainted
+with Spanish literature, could
+recognize the merits of Mr. Ticknor's
+work, its philosophical spirit, its lucid arrangement,
+its elegant and judicious criticisms,
+and its neat, correct, and accurate
+style. He could not fail to see that the
+works of Bouterwek and Sismondi were,
+by comparison, merely a series of graceful
+sketches, with no claim to be called a complete
+and thorough history. It took its
+place at once as the highest authority in
+any language upon the subject of which it
+treated, as the very first book which everybody
+would consult who wanted any information
+upon that subject.</p>
+
+<p>The present edition of the "History of
+Spanish Literature" is by no means identical
+with those which have preceded it.
+It omits nearly the whole of the inedited,
+primitive Castilian poems which have heretofore
+filled about seventy pages at the end
+of the last volume; and in other parts of
+the work a corresponding, and even more
+than a corresponding, amount of new matter
+has been introduced, which will, it is
+believed, be accounted of greater interest
+than the early poetry it displaces. These
+additions and changes have been derived
+from very various sources. In the first
+place, Mr. Ticknor was in Europe himself
+in 1856 and 1857, and visited the principal
+libraries, public and private, in England,
+France, Germany, and Italy, in which any
+considerable collection of Spanish books
+was to be found, and by examination of
+these supplied any wants there might be
+in his own very ample stores. In the
+second place, his History has been translated
+into German and Spanish, the former
+version being illustrated with notes
+by Dr. Ferdinand Wolf, perhaps the best
+Spanish scholar in Germany, and the latter
+by Don Pascual de Gayangos, one of
+the best scholars in Spain. From the results
+of the labors of these distinguished
+annotators Mr. Ticknor has taken&mdash;with
+generous acknowledgment&mdash;everything
+which, in his judgment, could add value,
+interest, or completeness to the present
+revised edition. And lastly, in the period
+between the publication of the first edition
+and the present time much has been done
+for the illustration of Spanish literature,
+both in the Peninsula and out of it. This
+is due in part to the interest in the subject
+which Mr. Ticknor himself awakened;
+and in Spain it is one of the consequences
+of the rapid progress in material development
+and vital energy which that country
+has been making during the last fifteen
+years. New lives of some of its principal
+writers have been published, and new editions
+of their works have been prepared.
+From all these sources a very ample supply
+of new materials has been derived, so
+that, while the work remains substantially
+the same in plan, outline, and spirit, there
+are hardly three consecutive pages in it
+which do not contain additions and improvements.
+We will briefly mention a
+few of the more prominent of these.</p>
+
+<p>In the first volume, pages 446-455, the
+life of Garcilasso de la Vega is almost entirely
+rewritten from materials found in a
+recent biography by Don Eustaquio Navarrete,
+which Mr. Ticknor pronounces
+"an important contribution to Spanish literary
+history." The writer is the son of
+the learned Don Martin Navarrete.</p>
+
+<p>In the second volume, pages 75-81,
+many new and interesting facts are stated
+in regard to the life of Luis de Leon, derived
+from a recently published report of
+the entire official record of his trial before
+the Inquisition, of which Mr. Ticknor says
+that it is "by far the most important authentic
+statement known to me respecting
+the treatment of men of letters who were
+accused before that formidable tribunal,
+and probably the most curious and important
+one in existence, whether in manuscript
+or in print. Its multitudinous documents
+fill more than nine hundred pages,
+everywhere teeming with instruction and
+warning on the subject of ecclesiastical
+usurpations, and the noiseless, cold, subtle
+means by which they crush the intellectual
+freedom and manly culture of a people."</p>
+
+<p>In the same volume, pages 118-119,
+some new and interesting facts are stated
+which prove beyond a doubt, that Lope de
+Vega was actuated by ungenerous feelings
+towards his great contemporary, Cervantes.
+The evidence is found in some autograph
+letters of Lope, extracts from which
+were made by Duran, and are now published
+by Von Schack, an excellent Spanish
+scholar.</p>
+
+<p>In the same volume, page 191, is a copy
+of the will of Lope de Vega, recently discovered,
+and obtained from the late Lord
+Holland.</p>
+
+<p>In the same volume, pages 354-357, is
+a learned bibliographical note upon the
+publication and various editions of the
+plays of Calderon.</p>
+
+<p>In the third volume, Appendix B., pages
+408-414, is a learned bibliographical note
+on the Romanceros.</p>
+
+<p>In the same volume, Appendix C., pages
+419-422, is an elaborate note on the Centon
+Epistolario, in reply to an article by the
+Marques de Pidal.</p>
+
+<p>In the same volume, Appendix D., pages
+432-434, is a new postscript on the clever
+literary forgery, <i>El Buscapi&eacute;</i>.</p>
+
+<p>At the close of the third volume there
+are seven pages giving a brief and condensed
+account of the several works connected
+with Spanish literature which have
+been published within two or three years
+past, and since the stereotype plates for
+the present work were cast.</p>
+
+<p>The present edition is in a duodecimo,
+instead of an octavo form, and is sold at
+a less price than the previous ones.</p>
+
+<p>In the closing sentences of the preface
+to this edition, Mr. Ticknor says: "Its
+preparation has been a pleasant task, scattered
+lightly over the years that have
+elapsed since the first edition of this work
+was published, and that have been passed,
+like the rest of my life, almost entirely
+among my own books. That I shall ever
+recur to this task again, for the purpose
+of further changes or additions, is not at
+all probable. My accumulated years forbid
+any such anticipation; and therefore,
+with whatever of regret I may part from
+what has entered into the happiness of so
+considerable a portion of my life, I feel
+that now I part from it for the last time.
+<i>Extremum hoc munus habeto</i>." This is a
+very natural feeling, and gracefully expressed;
+but whatever of sadness there
+may be in parting from a book which has
+so long been a constant resource, a daily
+companion, may in this case be tempered
+by the thought that the work, as now dismissed,
+is so well founded, so symmetrically
+proportioned, so firmly built, as to defy
+the sharpest criticism&mdash;that of Time itself.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="RECENT_AMERICAN_PUBLICATIONS" id="RECENT_AMERICAN_PUBLICATIONS"></a>RECENT AMERICAN PUBLICATIONS</h2>
+
+<h3>RECEIVED BY THE EDITORS OF THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY.</h3>
+
+
+<p>The History, Civil, Political, and Military,
+of the Southern Rebellion, from its Incipient
+Stages to its Close. Comprehending, also, all
+Important State-Papers, Ordinances of Secession,
+Proclamations, Proceedings of Congress,
+Official Reports of Commanders, etc., etc. By
+Orville J. Victor. New York. James D. Torrey.
+Vols. I. and II. 8vo. pp. viii., 531;
+viii., 537. per vol. $2.50.</p>
+
+<p>Biographical Sketches of Illinois Officers engaged
+in the War against the Rebellion of
+1861. By James Grant Wilson, Major commanding
+Fifteenth Illinois Cavalry. Enlarged
+Edition. Illustrated with Portraits. Chicago,
+James Barnet. 8vo. paper. pp. 120. 50 cts.</p>
+
+<p>Leaves from the Diary of an Army-Surgeon;
+or, Incidents of Field, Camp, and Hospital
+Life. By Thomas T. Ellis, M.D., late Post-Surgeon
+at New York, and Acting Medical
+Director at Whitehouse, Va. New York.
+John Bradburn. 12mo. pp. 312. $1.00.</p>
+
+<p>The Actress in High Life: An Episode in
+Winter Quarters. New York. John Bradburn.
+12mo. pp. 416. $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>Americans in Rome. By Henry P. Leland.
+New York. Charles T. Evans. 12mo. pp. 311.
+$1.25.</p>
+
+<p>The Castle's Heir: A Novel in Real Life.
+By Mrs. Henry Wood. In Two Volumes.
+Philadelphia. T.B. Peterson &amp; Brothers. 8vo.
+paper. pp. 144, 260. $1.00.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> The circumstances connected with the introduction
+of the British troops into Boston
+will be found related in the "Atlantic Monthly"
+for June, 1862; and the number for the
+following August contains a view of the relation
+of the question of removal to the arbitrary
+policy contemplated for the Colonies.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Boston, printed in the "Gazette" of
+February 12, 1770. A letter printed in the
+"Boston Evening Post," October 9, 1789, from
+London, received by the last ship, after eulogizing
+"the noble stand of the colonists,"
+says, "I am charmed with the prudent conduct
+of the Bostonians in particular, and that
+you have been able lo preserve so much tranquillity
+among you, while the spirits of the people
+must have been so soured and agitated by
+oppression. You have certainly very wise and
+prudent men concerned in the conduct of your
+affairs." A Tory view of Boston in these times,
+(by "Sagittarius,") is as follows:&mdash;"The
+Town-Meeting at Boston is the hot-bed of sedition.
+It is there that all their dangerous insurrections
+are engendered; it is there that the
+flame of discord and rebellion was first lighted
+up and disseminated over the Provinces; it is
+therefore greatly to be wished that Parliament
+may rescue the loyal inhabitants of that town
+and Province from the merciless hand of an
+ignorant mob, led on and inflamed by self-interested
+and profligate men."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> <i>Reliq. Wotton.</i>, p. 317, et seq.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Of clay he says, "It is a cursed step-dame
+to almost all vegetation, as having few or no
+meatuses for the percolation of alimental showers."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> Sir William Temple gives this list of his
+pears:&mdash;Blanquet, Robin, Rousselet, Pepin,
+Jargonel; and for autumn: Buree, Vertlongue,
+and Bergamot.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Brougham's <i>Speeches</i>, Vol. II. p. 233.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> Vol. IV. p. 443, First Series.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> <i>Notes and Queries</i>, Vol. V. p. 17.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> <i>Ibid.</i></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Lib. I. v. 104.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Sparks's <i>Works of Franklin</i>, Vol. VIII. p. 538.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> <i>Notes and Queries</i>, Vol. V. p. 549, First Series.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> <i>Ibid</i>. Vol. V. p. 140. See, also, <i>Ibid.</i> Vol. V.
+p. 571; Vol. VI. p. 88; <i>Dublin Review</i> for March,
+1847, p. 212; <i>Quarterly Review</i> for June, 1850.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> <i>&#338;uvres de Turgot</i>, Tom. IX. p. 140.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> <i>&#338;uvres de Condorcet</i>, par O'Connor, Tom.
+V. p. 162.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Sparks's <i>Works of Franklin</i>, Vol. VIII.
+p. 537; Mignet, <i>Notices et Portraits</i>, Tom. II.
+p. 480.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Cabania, <i>Oeuvres</i>, Tom. V. p. 251.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> <i>Lettres de Madame Du Deffant</i>, Tom. III.
+p. 367.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> <i>Ibid</i>. Tom. IV. p. 35.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Lacretelle, <i>Histoire de France</i>, Tom. V.
+p. 90.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> <i>Oeuvres de Condorcet</i>, par O'Connor, Tom.
+V. pp. 406, 407.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> Capefigue, <i>Louis XVI</i>, Tom. II. pp. 12,
+13, 42, 49, 50. The rose-water biographer of
+Diane de Poitiers, Madame de Pompadour, and
+Madame du Barry would naturally disparage
+Franklin.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Mignet, <i>Notices at Portraits</i>, Tom. II. p. 427.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> <i>La Gazette Secr&egrave;te</i>, 15 Jan. 1777; Capefigue,
+<i>Louis XVI.</i>, Tom. II. p. 15.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> <i>&#338;uvres de Turgot</i>, Tom. II. p. 66.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> <i>&#338;uvres de Turgot</i>, Tom. VIII. p. 496.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> Vol. X. p. 107.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires de Madame D'&Eacute;pinay</i>, Tom. III. p. 431.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> Galiani, <i>Correspondance</i>, Tom. II. p. 275,
+<i>Lettre de 25 Juillet</i>, 1778. Nobody saw America
+with a more prophetic eye than this inspired
+Pulcinello of Naples. As far back as the eighteenth
+of May, 1776, several weeks before the
+Declaration of Independence, he wrote,&mdash;"The
+epoch is come for the total fall of Europe and
+its transmigration to America. Do not buy
+your house in the Chauss&eacute;e d'Antin, but at
+Philadelphia. The misfortune for me is that
+there are no abbeys in America." Tom. II.
+p. 203. See also Grimm, <i>Correspondence</i>, Tom.
+IX. p. 285 (1776).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> The dictionaries of Michaud and Didot
+concur in the date of her death; but there is
+reason to suppose that they are both mistaken.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> See Qu&eacute;rard, <i>La France Litt&eacute;raire</i>, article
+<i>La Rochefoucauld</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Tom. I. p. 168.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> <i>Oeuvres de Turgot</i>, Tom. I. p. 416.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> Franklin, <i>Works</i>, by Sparks, Vol. V. p. 124.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> <i>Oeuvres de Turgot</i>, Tom. I. p. 414; Tom.
+IX. p. 416; <i>Oeuvres de Condorcet</i>, Tom. V.
+p. 162.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> Cabanis, <i>Oeuvres</i>, Tom. V. p. 261; Mignet,
+<i>Notices et Portraits</i>, Tom. II. p. 475. See, also,
+Morellet, <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, Tom. I. p. 290. Cabanis
+and Morellet both lived for many years under
+the hospitable roof of Madame Helv&eacute;tius. It
+is the former who has preserved the interesting
+extract from the letter of Franklin. Nobody
+who has visited the Imperial Library at Paris
+can forget the very pleasant autograph note
+of Franklin in French to Madame Helv&eacute;tius,
+which is exhibited in the same case with an
+autograph note of Henry IV. to Gabrielle
+d'Estr&eacute;es.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> Tom. II. p. 83. See, also, p. 337.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> Tom. II. p. 465. See, also, the letter of
+the Marquis de Chastellux to Professor Madison
+on the Fine Arts in America, where the
+generous Frenchman recommends for all our
+great towns a portrait of Franklin, "with the
+Latin verse inscribed in France below his portrait."
+Chastellux, <i>Travels in North America</i>,
+Vol. II. p. 372.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> Chambelland, <i>Vie du Prince de Bourbon-Cond&eacute;</i>,
+Tom. I. p. 374.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> Capefigue, <i>Louis XVI.</i>, Tom. II. pp. 49, 50.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> Lacretelle, <i>Histoire de France pendant le 18me Si&egrave;cle</i>,
+Tom. V. p. 91. The historian errs in putting this success in 1777,
+before the date of the Treaty; and he errs also with regard to the
+Court, if he meant to embrace the King and Queen.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> <i>M&eacute;moires sur Marie Antoinette</i>, par Madame
+Campan, Tom. I. p. 251.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> <i>Bulletin de l'Alliance des Arts</i>, 10 Octobre,
+1843. See also Goncourt, <i>Histoire de Marie
+Antoinette</i>, p. 221.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> Grimm, <i>Correspondance</i>, Tom. XVI. p. 407.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> Louis Blanc, <i>Histoire de la Revolution</i>,
+Tom. VI. pp. 234, 316.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> Cabanis, <i>Oeuvres</i>, Tom. V. p. 251.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> Morellet, <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, Tom. I. p. 290.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> <i>L'Anit-Lucr&egrave;ce</i>, traduit de Bougainville,
+<i>&Eacute;pitre D&eacute;dicatoire, Discours Pr&eacute;liminaire</i>,
+p. 69.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> Lib. I. v. 95.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> Lib. I. v. 104. <i>Tonandi</i> is sometimes
+changed to <i>tonantis</i>, and also <i>tonanti</i>. (See
+<i>Notes and Queries</i>, Vol. V. p. 140.)</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> It is understood that there is a metrical
+version of this poem by the Rev. Dr. Frothingham
+of Boston, which he does not choose to
+publish, although, like everything from this
+refined scholar, it must be marked by taste
+and accuracy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> Sparks's <i>Works of Franklin</i>, Vol. VIII.
+p. 538, note.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> Ibid. p. 537.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> Sparks's <i>Works of Franklin</i>, Vol. VIII.
+p. 539, note.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> Morellet, <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, Tom. I. p. 288. Nothing
+is more curious with regard to Franklin
+than these <i>M&eacute;moires</i>, including especially the
+engraving from an original design by him. In
+some copies this engraving is wanting. It is,
+probably, the gayeties here recorded, and, perhaps,
+the "infatuation" of the court-ladies,
+that suggested the scandalous charges which
+Dr. Julius has strangely preserved in his <i>Nordamerikas
+Sittliche, Zust&auml;nde</i>, Vol. I. p. 98.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> Sparks's <i>Works of Franklin</i>, Vol. VIII.
+p. 539, note.</p></div>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 73,
+November, 1863, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ATLANTIC MONTHLY, VOLUME 12 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 16028-h.htm or 16028-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 73,
+November, 1863, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 73, November, 1863
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: June 9, 2005 [EBook #16028]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ATLANTIC MONTHLY, VOLUME 12 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Josephine
+Paolucci and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+ATLANTIC MONTHLY.
+
+A MAGAZINE OF LITERATURE, ART, AND POLITICS.
+
+VOL. XII.--NOVEMBER, 1863.--NO. LXXIII.
+
+Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1863, by TICKNOR AND
+FIELDS, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of
+Massachusetts.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SPANIARD AND THE HERETIC.
+
+[In the August number of the "Atlantic," under the title of "The
+Fleur-de-Lis in Florida," will be found a narrative of the Huguenot
+attempts to occupy that country, which, exciting the jealousy of Spain,
+gave rise to the crusade whose history is recorded below.]
+
+
+The monk, the inquisitor, the Jesuit, these were the lords of
+Spain,--sovereigns of her sovereign, for they had formed and fed the
+dark and narrow mind of that tyrannical recluse. They had formed and fed
+the minds of her people, quenched in blood every spark of rising heresy,
+and given over a noble nation to bigotry, dark, blind, inexorable as the
+doom of fate. Linked with pride, ambition, avarice, every passion of a
+rich, strong nature, potent for good and ill, it made the Spaniard of
+that day a scourge as dire as ever fell on man.
+
+Day was breaking on the world. Light, hope, freedom, pierced with
+vitalizing ray the clouds and the miasma that hung so thick over the
+prostrate Middle Age, once noble and mighty, now a foul image of decay
+and death. Kindled with new life, the nations teemed with a progeny of
+heroes, and the stormy glories of the sixteenth century rose on awakened
+Europe. But Spain was the citadel of darkness,--a monastic cell, an
+inquisitorial dungeon, where no ray could pierce. She was the bulwark of
+the Church, against whose adamantine front the wrath of innovation beat
+in vain. In every country of Europe the party of freedom and reform was
+the national party, the party of reaction and absolutism was the Spanish
+party, leaning on Spain, looking to her for help. Above all, it was so
+in France; and while within her bounds there was a semblance of peace,
+the national and religious rage burst forth on a wilder theatre. Thither
+it is for us to follow it, where, on the shores of Florida, the Spaniard
+and the Frenchman, the bigot and the Huguenot, met in the grapple of
+death.
+
+In a corridor of the Escurial, Philip II. was met by a man who had long
+stood waiting his approach, and who with proud reverence placed a
+petition in the hand of the pale and sombre King. The petitioner was
+Pedro Menendez de Aviles, one of the ablest and most distinguished
+officers of the Spanish marine. He was born of an ancient Asturian
+family. His boyhood had been wayward, ungovernable, and fierce. He ran
+off at eight years of age, and when, after a search of six months, he
+was found and brought back, he ran off again. This time he was more
+successful, escaping on board a fleet bound against the Barbary
+corsairs, when his precocious appetite for blood and blows had
+reasonable contentment. A few years later, he found means to build a
+small vessel in which he cruised against the corsairs and the French,
+and, though still little more than a boy, displayed a singular address
+and daring. The wonders of the New World now seized his imagination. He
+made a voyage thither, and the ships under his charge came back
+freighted with wealth. War with France was then at its height. As
+captain-general of the fleet, he was sent with troops to Flanders, and
+to their prompt arrival was due, it is said, the victory of St. Quentin,
+Two years later, he commanded the luckless armada which bore back Philip
+to his native shore, and nearly drowned him in a storm off the port of
+Laredo. This mischance, or his own violence and insubordination, wrought
+to the prejudice of Menendez. He complained that his services were ill
+repaid. Philip lent him a favoring ear, and despatched him to the Indies
+as general of the fleet and army. Here he found means to amass vast
+riches; and, in 1561, returning to Spain, charges were brought against
+him of a nature which his too friendly biographer does not explain. The
+Council of the Indies arrested him. He was imprisoned and sentenced to a
+heavy fine, but, gaining his release, hastened to Madrid to throw
+himself on the royal clemency.
+
+His petition was most graciously received. Philip restored his command,
+but remitted only half his fine, a strong presumption of his guilt.
+
+Menendez kissed the royal hand; he had still a petition in reserve. His
+son had been wrecked near the Bermudas, and he would fain go thither to
+find tidings of his fate. The pious King bade him trust in God, and
+promised that he should be despatched without delay to the Bermudas and
+to Florida with a commission to make an exact survey of those perilous
+seas for the profit of future voyagers; but Menendez was ill content
+with such an errand. He knew, he said, nothing of greater moment to His
+Majesty than the conquest and settlement of Florida. The climate was
+healthful, the soil fertile; and, worldly advantages aside, it was
+peopled by a race sunk in the thickest shades of infidelity. "Such
+grief," he pursued, "seizes me, when I behold this multitude of wretched
+Indians, that I should choose the conquest and settling of Florida above
+all commands, offices, and dignities which your Majesty might bestow."
+Those who think this hypocrisy do not know the Spaniard of the sixteenth
+century.
+
+The King was edified by his zeal. An enterprise of such spiritual and
+temporal promise was not to be slighted, and Menendez was empowered to
+conquer and convert Florida at his own cost. The conquest was to be
+effected within three years. Menendez was to take with him five hundred
+men, and supply them with five hundred slaves, besides horses, cattle,
+sheep, and hogs. Villages were to be built, with forts to defend them;
+and sixteen ecclesiastics, of whom four should be Jesuits, were to form
+the nucleus of a Floridian church. The King, on his part, granted
+Menendez free trade with Hispaniola, Porto Rico, Cuba, and Spain, the
+office of Adelantado of Florida for life, joined to the right of naming
+his successor, and large emoluments to be drawn from the expected
+conquest.
+
+The compact struck, Menendez hastened to his native Asturias to raise
+money among his relatives. Scarcely was he gone, when tidings for the
+first time reached Madrid that Florida was already occupied by a colony
+of French Protestants, and that a reinforcement, under Ribaut, was on
+the point of sailing thither. A French historian of high authority
+declares that these advices came from the Catholic party at the French
+court, in whom all sense of the national interest and honor was
+smothered under their hatred of Coligny and the Huguenots. Of this there
+can be little doubt, though information also came from the buccaneer
+Frenchmen captured in the West Indies.
+
+Foreigners had invaded the territory of Spain. The trespassers, too,
+were heretics, foes of God and liegemen of the Devil. Their doom was
+fixed. But how would France endure an assault, in time of peace, on
+subjects who had gone forth on an enterprise sanctioned by the crown,
+undertaken in its name, and under its commission?
+
+The throne of France, where the corruption of the nation seemed gathered
+to a head, was trembling between the two parties of the Catholics and
+the Huguenots, whose chiefs aimed at royalty. Flattering both, caressing
+both, betraying both, playing one against the other, Catherine de
+Medicis, by a thousand crafty arts and expedients of the moment, sought
+to retain the crown on the heads of her weak and vicious sons. Of late
+her crooked policy had drawn her towards the Catholic party, in other
+words, the party of Spain; and already she had given ear to the savage
+Duke of Alva, urging her to the course which, seven years later, led to
+the carnage of St. Bartholomew. In short, the Spanish policy was
+ascendant, and no thought of the national interest or honor could
+restrain that basest of courts from consigning by hundreds to the
+national enemy those whom, itself, it was meditating to immolate by
+thousands.
+
+Menendez was summoned back in haste to the court. There was counsel,
+deep and ominous, in the chambers of the Escurial. His force must be
+strengthened. Three hundred and ninety-four men were added at the royal
+charge, and a corresponding number of transport and supply ships. It was
+a holy war, a crusade, and as such was preached by priest and monk along
+the western coasts of Spain. All the Biscayan ports flamed with zeal,
+and adventurers crowded to enroll themselves; since to plunder heretics
+is good for the soul as well as the purse, and broil and massacre have
+double attraction, when promoted to a means of salvation: a fervor, deep
+and hot, but not of celestial kindling; nor yet that buoyant and
+inspiring zeal, which, when the Middle Age was in its youth and prime,
+glowed in the soul of Tancred, Godfrey, and St. Louis, and which, when
+its day was long since past, could still find its home in the great
+heart of Columbus. A darker spirit urged the new crusade,--born, not of
+hope, but of fear, slavish in its nature, the creature and the tool of
+despotism. For the typical Spaniard of the sixteenth century was not in
+strictness a fanatic; he was bigotry incarnate.
+
+Heresy was a plague-spot, an ulcer to be eradicated with fire and the
+knife, and this foul abomination was infecting the shores which the
+Vicegerent of Christ had given to the King of Spain, and which the Most
+Catholic King had given to the Adelantado. Thus would countless heathen
+tribes be doomed to an eternity of flame, shut out from that saving
+communion with Holy Church, to which, by the sword and the whip and the
+fagot, dungeons and slavery, they would otherwise have been mercifully
+driven, to the salvation of their souls, and the greater glory of God.
+And, for the Adelantado himself, should the vast outlays, the vast
+debts, of his bold Floridian venture be all in vain? Should his fortunes
+be wrecked past redemption through these tools of Satan? As a Catholic,
+as a Spaniard, as an adventurer, his course was clear. Woe, then, to the
+Huguenot in the gripe of Pedro Menendez!
+
+But what was the scope of this enterprise, and the limits of the
+Adelantado's authority? He was invested with power almost absolute, not
+merely over the peninsula which now retains the name of Florida, but
+over all North America, from Labrador to Mexico,--for this was the
+Florida of the old Spanish geographers, and the Florida designated in
+the commission of Menendez. It was a continent which he was to conquer
+and occupy out of his own purse. The impoverished King contracted with
+his daring and ambitious subject to win and hold for him the territory
+of the future United States and British Provinces. His plan, as
+subsequently developed and exposed at length in his unpublished letters
+to Philip II., was, first, to plant a garrison at Port Royal, and next
+to fortify strongly on Chesapeake Bay, called by him St. Mary's. He
+believed that this bay was an arm of the sea, running northward and
+eastward, and communicating with the Gulf of St. Lawrence, thus making
+New England, with adjacent districts, an island. His proposed fort on
+the Chesapeake, giving access, by this imaginary passage, to the seas of
+Newfoundland, would enable the Spaniards to command the fisheries, on
+which both the French and the English had long encroached, to the great
+prejudice of Spanish rights. Doubtless, too, these inland waters gave
+access to the South Sea, and their occupation was necessary to prevent
+the French from penetrating thither; for that ambitious people, since
+the time of Cartier, had never abandoned their schemes of seizing this
+portion of the dominions of the King of Spain. Five hundred soldiers and
+one hundred sailors must, he urges, take possession, without delay, of
+Port Royal and the Chesapeake.
+
+Preparation for his enterprise was pushed with a furious energy. His
+force amounted to two thousand six hundred and forty-six persons, in
+thirty-four vessels, one of which, the San Pelayo, bearing Menendez
+himself, was of more than nine hundred tons' burden, and is described as
+one of the finest ships afloat. There were twelve Franciscans and eight
+Jesuits, besides other ecclesiastics; and many knights of Galicia,
+Biscay, and the Asturias bore part in the expedition. With a slight
+exception, the whole was at the Adelantado's charge. Within the first
+fourteen months, according to his admirer, Barcia, the adventure cost
+him a million ducats.
+
+Before the close of the year, Sancho de Arciniega was commissioned to
+join Menendez with an additional force of fifteen hundred men.
+
+Red-hot with a determined purpose, he would brook no delay. To him, says
+the chronicler, every day seemed a year. He was eager to anticipate
+Ribaut, of whose designs and whose force he seems to have been informed
+to the minutest particular, but whom he hoped to thwart and ruin by
+gaining Fort Caroline before him. With eleven ships, then, he sailed
+from Cadiz on the 29th of June, 1565, leaving the smaller vessels of his
+fleet to follow with what speed they might. He touched first at the
+Canaries, and on the eighth of July left them, steering for Dominica. A
+minute account of the voyage has come down to us from the pen of
+Mendoza, chaplain of the expedition, a somewhat dull and illiterate
+person, who busily jots down the incidents of each passing day, and is
+constantly betraying, with a certain awkward simplicity, how the cares
+of this world and the next jostle each other in his thoughts.
+
+On Friday, the twentieth of July, a storm fell upon them with appalling
+fury. The pilots lost head, the sailors gave themselves up to their
+terrors. Throughout the night, they beset Mendoza for confession and
+absolution, a boon not easily granted, for the seas swept the crowded
+decks in cataracts of foam, and the shriekings of the gale in the
+rigging drowned the exhortations of the half-drowned priest. Cannon,
+cables, spars, water-casks, were thrown overboard, and the chests of the
+sailors would have followed, had not the latter, despite their fright,
+raised such a howl of remonstrance that the order was revoked. At length
+day dawned. At least there was light to die by. Plunging, reeling, half
+submerged, quivering under the crashing shock of the seas, whose
+mountain ridges rolled down upon her before the gale, the ship lay in
+deadly jeopardy from Friday till Monday noon. Then the storm abated; the
+sun broke forth; and again she held her course.
+
+They reached Dominica on Sunday, the fifth of August. The chaplain
+tells us how he went on shore to refresh himself,--how, while his
+Italian servant washed his linen at a brook, he strolled along the beach
+and picked up shells,--and how he was scared, first, by a prodigious
+turtle, and next by a vision of the cannibal natives, which caused his
+prompt retreat to the boats.
+
+On the tenth, they anchored in the harbor of Porto Rico, where they
+found two of their companion-ships, from which they had parted in the
+storm. One of them was the San Pelayo, with Menendez on board. Mendoza
+informs us that in the evening the officers came on board his ship, when
+he, the chaplain, regaled them with sweetmeats, and that Menendez
+invited him not only to supper that night, but to dinner the next day,
+"for the which I thanked him, as reason was," says the gratified
+churchman.
+
+Here thirty men deserted, and three priests also ran off, of which
+Mendoza bitterly complains, as increasing his own work. The motives of
+the clerical truants may perhaps be inferred from a worldly temptation
+to which the chaplain himself was subjected. "I was offered the service
+of a chapel where I should have got a _peso_ for every mass I said, the
+whole year round; but I did not accept it, for fear that what I hear
+said of the other three would be said of me. Besides, it is not a place
+where one can hope for any great advancement, and I wished to try
+whether, in refusing a benefice for the love of the Lord, He will not
+repay me with some other stroke of fortune before the end of the voyage;
+for it is my aim to serve God and His blessed Mother."
+
+The original design had been to rendezvous at Havana, but, with the
+Adelantado, the advantages of despatch outweighed every other
+consideration. He resolved to push directly for Florida. Five of his
+scattered ships had by this time rejoined company, comprising, exclusive
+of officers, a force of about five hundred soldiers, two hundred
+sailors, and one hundred colonists. Bearing northward, he advanced by an
+unknown and dangerous course along the coast of Hayti and through the
+intricate passes of the Bahamas. On the night of the twenty-sixth, the
+San Pelayo struck three times on the shoals; "but," says the chaplain,
+"inasmuch as our enterprise was undertaken for the sake of Christ and
+His blessed Mother, two heavy seas struck her abaft, and set her afloat
+again."
+
+At length the ships lay becalmed in the Bahama Channel, slumbering on
+the dead and glassy sea, torpid with the heats of a West-Indian August.
+Menendez called a council of the commanders. There was doubt and
+indecision. Perhaps Ribaut had already reached the French fort, and then
+to attack the united force would be a stroke of desperation. Far better
+to await their lagging comrades. But the Adelantado was of another mind;
+and, even had his enemy arrived, he was resolved that he should have no
+time to fortify himself.
+
+"It is God's will," he said, "that our victory should be due, not to our
+numbers, but to His all-powerful aid. Therefore has He stricken us with
+tempests and scattered our ships." And he gave his voice for instant
+advance.
+
+There was much dispute; even the chaplain remonstrated; but nothing
+could bend the iron will of Menendez. Nor was a sign of celestial
+approval wanting. At nine in the evening, a great meteor burst forth in
+mid-heaven, and, blazing like the sun, rolled westward towards the
+Floridian coast. The fainting spirits of the crusaders were kindled
+anew. Diligent preparation was begun. Prayers and masses were said; and,
+that the temporal arm might not be wanting, the men were daily practised
+on deck in shooting at marks, in order, says the chronicle, that the
+recruits might learn not to be afraid of their guns.
+
+The dead calm continued. "We were all very tired," says the chaplain,
+"and I above all, with praying to God for a fair wind. To-day, at about
+two in the afternoon, He took pity on us, and sent us a breeze." Before
+night they saw land,--the faint line of forest, traced along the watery
+horizon, that marked the coast of Florida. But where in all this vast
+monotony was the lurking-place of the French? Menendez anchored, and
+sent fifty men ashore, who presently found a band of Indians in the
+woods, and gained from them the needed information. He stood northward,
+till, on the afternoon of Tuesday, the fourth of September, he descried
+four ships anchored near the mouth of a river. It was the river St.
+John's, and the ships were four of Ribaut's squadron. The prey was in
+sight. The Spaniards prepared for battle, and bore down upon the
+Lutherans; for, with them, all reformers alike were branded with the
+name of the arch-heretic. Slowly, before the faint breeze, the ships
+glided on their way; but while, excited and impatient, the fierce crews
+watched the decreasing space, and while they were still three leagues
+from their prize, the air ceased to stir, the sails flapped against the
+mast, a black cloud with thunder rose above the coast, and the warm rain
+of the South descended on the breathless sea. It was dark before the
+wind moved again, and the ships resumed their course. At half past
+eleven they reached the French. The San Pelayo slowly moved to windward
+of Ribaut's flag-ship, the Trinity, and anchored very near her. The
+other ships took similar stations. While these preparations were making,
+a work of two hours, the men labored in silence, and the French,
+thronging their gangways, looked on in equal silence. "Never, since I
+came into the world," writes the chaplain, "did I know such a
+stillness."
+
+It was broken, at length, by a trumpet from the deck of the San Pelayo.
+A French trumpet answered. Then Menendez, "with much courtesy," says his
+Spanish eulogist, demanded, "Gentlemen, whence does this fleet come?"
+
+"From France," was the reply.
+
+"What are you doing here?" pursued the Adelantado.
+
+"Bringing soldiers and supplies for a fort which the King of France has
+in this country, and for many others which he soon will have."
+
+"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?"
+
+Many voices cried together, "Lutherans, of the new religion"; then, in
+their turn, they demanded who Menendez was, and whence he came. The
+latter answered,--
+
+"I am Pedro Menendez, General of the fleet of the King of Spain, Don
+Philip the Second, who have come to this country to hang and behead all
+Lutherans whom I shall find by land or sea, according to instructions
+from my King, so precise that I have power to pardon none whomsoever;
+and these commands I shall fulfil, as you shall know. At daybreak I
+shall board your ships, and if I find there any Catholic, he shall be
+well treated; but every heretic shall die."
+
+The French with one voice raised a cry of wrath and defiance.
+
+"If you are a brave man, don't wait till day. Come on now, and see what
+you will get!"
+
+And they assailed the Adelantado with a shower of scoffs and insults.
+
+Menendez broke into a rage, and gave the order to board. The men slipped
+the cables, and the sullen black hulk of the San Pelayo drifted down
+upon the Trinity. The French by no means made good their defiance.
+Indeed, they were incapable of resistance, Ribaut with his soldiers
+being ashore at Fort Caroline. They cut their cables, left their
+anchors, made sail, and fled. The Spaniards fired, the French replied.
+The other Spanish ships had imitated the movement of the San Pelayo;
+"but," writes the chaplain, Mendoza, "these devils run mad are such
+adroit sailors, and manoeuvred so well, that we did not catch one of
+them." Pursuers and pursued ran out to sea, firing useless volleys at
+each other.
+
+In the morning Menendez gave over the chase, turned, and, with the San
+Pelayo alone, ran back for the St. John's. But here a welcome was
+prepared for him. He saw bands of armed men drawn up on the beach, and
+the smaller vessels of Ribaut's squadron, which had crossed the bar
+several days before, anchored behind it to oppose his landing. He would
+not venture an attack, but, steering southward, skirted the coast till
+he came to an inlet which he named St. Augustine.
+
+Here he found three of his ships, already debarking their troops, guns,
+and stores. Two officers, Patino and Vicente, had taken possession of
+the dwelling of Seloy, an Indian chief, a huge barn-like structure,
+strongly framed of entire trunks of trees, and thatched with
+palmetto-leaves. Around it they were throwing up intrenchments of
+fascines and sand. Gangs of negroes, with pick, shovel, and spade, were
+toiling at the work. Such was the birth of St. Augustine, the oldest
+town of the United States, and such the introduction of slave-labor upon
+their soil.
+
+On the eighth, Menendez took formal possession of his domain. Cannon
+were fired, trumpets sounded, and banners displayed, as, at the head of
+his officers and nobles, he landed in state. Mendoza, crucifix in hand,
+came to meet him, chanting, "_Te Deum laudamus_," while the Adelantado
+and all his company, kneeling, kissed the cross, and the congregated
+Indians gazed in silent wonder.
+
+Meanwhile the tenants of Fort Caroline were not idle. Two or three
+soldiers, strolling along the beach in the afternoon, had first seen the
+Spanish ships and hastily summoned Ribaut. He came down to the mouth of
+the river, followed by an anxious and excited crowd; but, as they
+strained their eyes through the darkness, they could see nothing but the
+flashes of the distant guns. The returning light showed them at length,
+far out at sea, the Adelantado in hot chase of their flying comrades.
+Pursuers and pursued were soon out of sight. The drums beat to arms.
+After many hours of suspense, the San Pelayo reappeared, hovering about
+the mouth of the river, then bearing away towards the south. More
+anxious hours ensued, when three other sail came in sight, and they
+recognized three of their own returning ships. Communication was opened,
+a boat's crew landed, and they learned from Captain Cosette, that,
+confiding in the speed of his ship, he had followed the Spaniards to St.
+Augustine, reconnoitred their position, and seen them land their negroes
+and intrench themselves.
+
+In his chamber at Fort Caroline, Laudonniere lay sick in bed, when
+Ribaut entered, and with him La Grange, Ste. Marie, Ottigny, Yonville,
+and other officers. At the bedside of the displaced commandant they held
+their council of war. There were three alternatives: first, to remain
+where they were and fortify; next, to push overland for St. Augustine,
+and attack the invaders in their intrenchments; and, finally, to embark,
+and assail them by sea. The first plan would leave their ships a prey to
+the Spaniards; and so too, in all likelihood, would the second, besides
+the uncertainties of an overland march through an unknown wilderness. By
+sea, the distance was short and the route explored. By a sudden blow
+they could capture or destroy the Spanish ships, and master the troops
+on shore before their reinforcements could arrive, and before they had
+time to complete their defences.
+
+Such were the views of Ribaut, with which, not unnaturally, Laudonniere
+finds fault, and Le Moyne, judging by results, echoes the censures of
+his chief. And yet the plan seems as well-conceived as it was bold,
+lacking nothing but success. The Spaniards, stricken with terror, owed
+their safety to the elements, or, as they affirm, to the special
+interposition of the Holy Virgin. Let us be just to Menendez. He was a
+leader fit to stand with Cortes and Pizarro; but he was matched with a
+man as cool, skilful, prompt, and daring as himself. The traces that
+have come down to us indicate, in Ribaut, one far above the common
+stamp: "a distinguished man, of many high qualities," as even the
+fault-finding Le Moyne calls him, devout after the best spirit of the
+Reform, and with a human heart under his steel breastplate.
+
+La Grange and other officers took part with Laudonniere and opposed the
+plan of an attack by sea; but Ribaut's conviction was unshaken, and the
+order was given. All his own soldiers fit for duty embarked in haste,
+and with them went La Caille, Arlac, and, as it seems, Ottigny, with the
+best of Laudonniere's men. Even Le Moyne, though wounded in the fight
+with Outina's warriors, went on board to bear his part in the fray, and
+would have sailed with the rest, had not Ottigny, seeing his disabled
+condition, ordered him back to the fort.
+
+On the tenth, the ships, crowded with troops, set sail. Ribaut was gone,
+and with him the pith and sinew of the colony. The miserable remnant
+watched his receding sails with dreary foreboding, a foreboding which
+seemed but too just, when, on the next day, a storm, more violent than
+the Indians had ever known, howled through the forest and lashed the
+ocean into fury, Most forlorn was the plight of these exiles, left, it
+might be, the prey of a band of ferocious bigots more terrible than the
+fiercest hordes of the wilderness. And when night closed on the stormy
+river and the gloomy waste of pines, what dreams of terror may not have
+haunted the helpless women who crouched under the hovels of Fort
+Caroline!
+
+The fort was in a ruinous state, the palisade on the water side broken
+down, and three breaches in the rampart. In the driving rain, urged by
+the sick Laudonniere, the men, bedrenched and disheartened, labored as
+they might to strengthen their defences. Their muster-roll shows but a
+beggarly array. "Now," says Laudonniere, "let them which have bene bold
+to say that I had men ynongh left me, so that I had meanes to defend my
+selfe, give care a little now vnto mee, and if they have eyes in their
+heads, let them see what men I had." Of Ribaut's followers left at the
+fort, only nine or ten had weapons, while only two or three knew how to
+use them. Four of them were boys, who kept Ribaut's dogs, and another
+was his cook. Besides these, he had left a brewer, an old
+crossbow-maker, two shoemakers, a player on the spinet, four valets, a
+carpenter of threescore--Challeux, no doubt, who has left us the story
+of his woes,--and a crowd of women, children, and eighty-six
+camp-followers. To these were added the remnant of Laudonniere's men, of
+whom seventeen could bear arms, the rest being sick or disabled by
+wounds received in the fight with Outina.
+
+Laudonniere divided his force, such as it was, into two watches, over
+which he placed two officers, St. Cler and La Vigne, gave them lanterns
+to go the rounds, and an hour-glass to set the time; while he himself,
+giddy with weakness and fever, was every night at the guard-room.
+
+It was the night of the nineteenth of September; floods of rain
+bedrenched the sentries on the rampart, and as day dawned on the
+dripping barracks and deluged parade, the storm increased in violence.
+What enemy could have ventured forth on such a night? La Vigne, who had
+the watch, took pity on the sentries and on himself, dismissed them, and
+went to his quarters. He little knew what mortal energies, urged by
+ambition, avarice, bigotry, desperation, will dare and do.
+
+To return to the Spaniards at St. Augustine. On the morning of the
+eleventh, the crew of one of their smaller vessels, lying outside the
+bar, saw through the twilight of early dawn two of Ribaut's ships close
+upon them. Not a breath of air was stirring. There was no escape, and
+the Spaniards fell on their knees in supplication to Our Lady of Utrera,
+explaining to her that the heretics were upon them, and begging her to
+send them a little wind. "Forthwith," says Mendoza, "one would have said
+that Our Lady herself came down upon the vessel." A wind sprang up, and
+the Spaniards found refuge behind the bar. The returning day showed to
+their astonished eyes all the ships of Ribaut, their decks black with
+men, hovering off the entrance of the port; but Heaven had them in its
+charge, and again they experienced its protecting care. The breeze sent
+by Our Lady of Utrera rose to a gale, then to a furious tempest; and the
+grateful Adelantado saw through rack and mist the ships of his enemy
+tossed wildly among the raging waters as they struggled to gain an
+offing. With exultation at his heart the skilful seaman read their
+danger, and saw them in his mind's eye dashed to utter wreck among the
+sand-bars and breakers of the lee-shore.
+
+A bold thought seized him. He would march overland with five hundred men
+and attack Fort Caroline while its defenders were absent. First he
+ordered a mass; then he called a council. Doubtless, it was in that
+great Indian lodge of Seloy, where he had made his head-quarters; and
+here, in this dim and smoky concave, nobles, officers, priests, gathered
+at his summons. There were fears and doubts and murmurings, but Menendez
+was desperate. Not the mad desperation that strikes wildly and at
+random, but the still red heat that melts and burns and seethes with a
+steady, unquenchable fierceness. "Comrades," he said, "the time has come
+to show our courage and our zeal. This is God's war, and we must not
+flinch. It is a war with Lutherans, and we must wage it with blood and
+fire."
+
+But his hearers would not respond. They had not a million of ducats at
+stake, and were nowise ready for a cast so desperate. A clamor of
+remonstrance rose from the circle. Many voices, that of Mendoza among
+the rest, urged waiting till their main forces should arrive. The
+excitement spread to the men without, and the swarthy, black-bearded
+crowd broke into tumults mounting almost to mutiny, while an officer was
+heard to say that he would not go on such a hare-brained errand to be
+butchered like a beast. But nothing could move the Adelantado. His
+appeals or his threats did their work at last; the confusion was
+quelled, and preparation was made for the march.
+
+Five hundred arquebusiers and pikemen were drawn up before the camp.
+
+To each was given a sack of bread and a flagon of wine. Two Indians and
+a renegade Frenchman, called Francois Jean, were to guide them, and
+twenty Biscayan axe-men moved to the front to clear the way. Through
+floods of driving rain, a hoarse voice shouted the word of command, and
+the sullen march began.
+
+With dire misgiving, Mendoza watched the last files as they vanished in
+the tempestuous forest. Two days of suspense ensued, when a messenger
+came back with a letter from the Adelantado announcing that he had
+nearly reached the French fort, and that on the morrow, September
+twentieth, at sunrise, he hoped to assault it. "May the Divine Majesty
+deign to protect us, for He knows that we have need of it," writes the
+scared chaplain; "the Adelantado's great zeal and courage make us hope
+he will succeed, but for the good of His Majesty's service he ought to
+be a little less ardent in pursuing his schemes."
+
+Meanwhile the five hundred had pushed their march through forest and
+quagmire, through swollen streams and inundated savannas, toiling
+knee-deep through mud, rushes, and the rank, tangled grass,--hacking
+their way through thickets of the _yucca_ or Spanish bayonet, with its
+clumps of dagger-like leaves, or defiling in gloomy procession through
+the drenched forest, to the moan, roar, and howl of the storm-racked
+pines. As they bent before the tempest, the water trickling from the
+rusty headpiece crept clammy and cold betwixt the armor and the skin;
+and when they made their wretched bivouac, their bed was the spongy
+soil, and the exhaustless clouds their tent.
+
+The night of Wednesday, the nineteenth, found their vanguard in a deep
+forest of pines, less than a mile from Fort Caroline, and near the low
+hills which extended in its rear, and formed a continuation of St.
+John's Bluff. All around was one great morass. In pitchy darkness,
+knee-deep in weeds and water, half starved, worn with toil and lack of
+sleep, drenched to the skin, their provision spoiled, their ammunition
+wet, their spirit chilled out of them, they stood in shivering groups,
+cursing the enterprise and the author of it. Menendez heard an ensign
+say aloud to his comrades,--
+
+"This Asturian _corito_, who knows no more of war on shore than an ass,
+has ruined us all. By ----, if my advice had been followed, he would have
+had his deserts the day he set out on this cursed journey!"
+
+The Adelantado pretended not to hear.
+
+Two hours before dawn he called his officers about him. All night, he
+said, he had been praying to God and the Virgin.
+
+"Senores, what shall we resolve on? Our ammunition and provisions are
+gone. Our case is desperate." And he urged a bold rush on the fort.
+
+But men and officers alike were disheartened and disgusted. They
+listened coldly and sullenly; many were for returning at every risk;
+none were in a mood for fight. Menendez put forth all his eloquence,
+till at length the dashed spirits of his followers were so far rekindled
+that they consented to follow him.
+
+All fell on their knees in the marsh; then, rising, they formed their
+ranks and began to advance, guided by the renegade Frenchman, whose
+hands, to make sure of him, were tied behind his back. Groping and
+stumbling in the dark among trees, roots, and underbrush, buffeted by
+wind and rain, and slashed in the face by the recoiling boughs which
+they could not see, they soon lost their way, fell into confusion, and
+came to a stand, in a mood more savagely desponding than before. But
+soon a glimmer of returning day came to their aid, and showed them the
+dusky sky, and the dark columns of the surrounding pines. Menendez
+ordered the men forward on pain of death. They obeyed, and presently,
+emerging from the forest, could dimly discern the ridge of a low hill,
+behind which, the Frenchman told them, was the fort. Menendez, with a
+few officers and men, cautiously mounted to the top. Beneath lay Fort
+Caroline, three gunshots distant; but the rain, the imperfect light, and
+a cluster of intervening houses prevented his seeing clearly, and he
+sent two officers to reconnoitre. Descending, they met a solitary
+Frenchman, a straggler from the fort. They knocked him down with a
+sheathed sword, took him prisoner, then stabbed him in cold blood. This
+done, and their observations made, they returned to the top of the hill,
+behind which, clutching their weapons in fierce expectancy, all the gang
+stood waiting.
+
+"Santiago!" cried Menendez. "At them! God is with us!"
+
+And, shouting their hoarse war-cries, the Spaniards rushed down the
+slope like starved wolves.
+
+Not a sentry was on the rampart. La Vigne, the officer of the guard, had
+just gone to his quarters, but a trumpeter, who chanced to remain, saw,
+through sheets of rain, the black swarm of assailants sweeping down the
+hill. He blew the alarm, and at his shrill summons a few half-naked
+soldiers ran wildly out of the barracks. It was too late. Through the
+breaches, over the ramparts, the Spaniards came pouring in.
+
+"Santiago! Santiago! Down with the Lutherans!"
+
+Sick men leaped from their beds. Women and children, blind with fright,
+darted shrieking from the houses. A fierce gaunt visage, the thrust of a
+pike or blow of a rusty halberd,--such was the greeting that met all
+alike. Laudonniere snatched his sword and target, and ran towards the
+principal breach, calling to his soldiers. A rush of Spaniards met him;
+his men were cut down around him; and he, with a soldier named
+Bartholomew, was forced back into the courtyard of his house. Here a
+tent was pitched, and as the pursuers stumbled among the cords, he
+escaped behind Ottigny's house, sprang through the breach in the western
+rampart, and fled for the woods.
+
+Le Moyne had been one of the guard. Scarcely had he thrown himself into
+a hammock which was slung in his room, when a savage shout, and a wild
+uproar of shrieks, outcries, and the clash of weapons, brought him to
+his feet. He rushed past two Spaniards in the door-way, ran behind the
+guard-house leaped through an embrasure into the ditch, and escaped to
+the forest.
+
+Challeux, the carpenter, was going betimes to his work, a chisel in his
+hand. He was old, but pike and partisan brandished at his back gave
+wings to his flight. In the ecstasy of his terror, he leaped upward at
+the top of the palisade, and, clutching it, threw himself over with the
+agility of a boy. He ran up the hill, no one pursuing, and as he neared
+the edge of the forest, turned and looked back. From the high ground
+where he stood he could see the butchery, the fury of the conquerors,
+the agonized gestures of the victims. He turned again in horror, and
+plunged into the woods. As he tore his way through the briers and
+thickets, he met several fugitives, escaped like himself. Others
+presently came up, haggard and wild, like men broke loose from the jaws
+of fate. They gathered and consulted together. One of them, in great
+repute for his knowledge of the Bible, was for returning and
+surrendering to the Spaniards. "They are men," he said; "perhaps when
+their fury is over they will spare our lives, and even if they kill us,
+it will only be a few moments' pain. Better so than to starve here in
+the woods or be torn to pieces by wild beasts."
+
+The greater part of the naked and despairing company assented, but
+Challeux was of a different mind. The old Huguenot quoted Scripture, and
+called up the names of prophets and apostles to witness, that, in direst
+extremity, God would not abandon those who rested their faith in Him.
+Six of the fugitives, however, still held to their desperate purpose.
+Issuing from the woods, they descended towards the fort, and as with
+beating hearts their comrades watched the result, a troop of Spaniards
+rushed forth, hewed them down with swords and halberds, and dragged
+their bodies to the brink of the river, where the victims of the
+massacre were already flung in heaps.
+
+Le Moyne, with a soldier named Grandchemin, whom he had met in his
+flight, toiled all day through the woods, in the hope of reaching the
+small vessels anchored behind the bar. Night found them in a morass. No
+vessels could be seen, and the soldier, in despair, broke into angry
+upbraidings against his companion,--saying that he would go back and
+give himself up. Le Moyne at first opposed him, then yielded. But when
+they drew near the fort, and heard the howl of savage revelry that rose
+from within, the artist's heart failed him. He embraced his companion,
+and the soldier advanced alone. A party of Spaniards came out to meet
+him. He kneeled, and begged for his life. He was answered by a
+death-blow; and the horrified Le Moyne, from his hiding-place in the
+thickets, saw his limbs hacked apart, thrust on pikes, and borne off in
+triumph.
+
+Meanwhile, Menendez, mustering his followers, had offered thanks to God
+for their victory; and this pious butcher wept with emotion as he
+recounted the favors which Heaven had showered upon their enterprise.
+His admiring historian gives it in proof of his humanity, that, after
+the rage of the assault was spent, he ordered that women, infants, and
+boys under fifteen should thenceforth be spared. Of these, by his own
+account, there were about fifty. Writing in October to the King, he says
+that they cause him great anxiety, since he fears the anger of God,
+should he now put them to death, while, on the other hand, he is in
+dread lest the venom of their heresy should infect his men.
+
+A hundred and forty-two persons were slain in and around the fort, and
+their bodies lay heaped together on the shore. Nearly opposite was
+anchored a small vessel, called the Pearl, commanded by James Ribaut,
+son of the Admiral. The ferocious soldiery, maddened with victory and
+drunk with blood, crowded to the beach, shouting insults to those on
+board, mangling the corpses, tearing out their eyes, and throwing them
+towards the vessel from the points of their daggers. Thus did the Most
+Catholic Philip champion the cause of Heaven in the New World.
+
+It was currently believed in France, and, though no eye-witness attests
+it, there is reason to think it true, that among those murdered at Fort
+Caroline there were some who died a death of peculiar ignominy.
+Menendez, it is affirmed, hanged his prisoners on trees, and placed over
+them the inscription, "I do this, not as to Frenchmen, but as to
+Lutherans."
+
+The Spaniards gained a great booty: armor, clothing, and provision.
+"Nevertheless," says the devout Mendoza, after closing his inventory of
+the plunder, "the greatest profit of this victory is the triumph which
+our Lord has granted us, whereby His holy gospel will be introduced into
+this country, a thing so needful for saving so many souls from
+perdition." Again, he writes in his journal,--"We owe to God and His
+Mother, more than to human strength, this victory over the adversaries
+of the holy Catholic religion."
+
+To whatever influence, celestial or other, the exploit may best be
+ascribed, the victors were not yet quite content with their success. Two
+small French vessels, besides that of James Ribaut, still lay within
+range of the fort. When the storm had a little abated, the cannon were
+turned on them. One of them was sunk, but Ribaut, with the others,
+escaped down the river, at the mouth of which several light craft,
+including that bought from the English, had been anchored since the
+arrival of his father's squadron.
+
+While this was passing, the wretched fugitives were flying from the
+scene of massacre through a tempest, of whose pertinacious violence all
+the narratives speak with wonder. Exhausted, starved, half-clothed,--for
+most of them had escaped in their shirts,--they pushed their toilsome
+way amid the ceaseless howl of the elements. A few sought refuge in
+Indian villages; but these, it is said, were afterwards killed by the
+Spaniards. The greater number attempted to reach the vessels at the
+mouth of the river. Of the latter was Le Moyne, who, despite his former
+failure, was toiling through the maze of tangled forests when he met a
+Belgian soldier with the woman described as Laudonniere's maid-servant,
+the latter wounded in the breast, and, urging their flight towards the
+vessels, they fell in with other fugitives, among them Laudonniere
+himself. As they struggled through the salt-marsh, the rank sedge cut
+their naked limbs, and the tide rose to their waists. Presently they
+descried others, toiling like themselves through the matted vegetation,
+and recognized Challeux and his companions, also in quest of the
+vessels. The old man still, as he tells us, held fast to his chisel,
+which had done good service in cutting poles to aid the party to cross
+the deep creeks that channelled the morass. The united band, twenty-six
+in all, were relieved at length by the sight of a moving sail. It was
+the vessel of Captain Mallard, who, informed of the massacre, was
+standing along-shore in the hope of picking up some of the fugitives. He
+saw their signals, and sent boats to their rescue; but such was their
+exhaustion, that, had not the sailors, wading to their armpits among the
+rushes, borne them out on their shoulders, few could have escaped.
+Laudonniere was so feeble that nothing but the support of a soldier, who
+held him upright in his arms, had saved him from drowning in the marsh.
+
+Gaining the friendly decks, the fugitives counselled together. One and
+all, they sickened for the sight of France.
+
+After waiting a few days, and saving a few more stragglers from the
+marsh, they prepared to sail. Young Ribaut, though ignorant of his
+father's fate, assented with something more than willingness; indeed,
+his behavior throughout had been stamped with weakness and poltroonery.
+On the twenty-fifth of September, they put to sea in two vessels; and,
+after a voyage whose privations were fatal to many of them, they
+arrived, one party at Rochelle, the other at Swansea, in Wales.
+
+In suspense and fear, hourly looking seaward for the dreaded fleet of
+John Ribaut, the chaplain Mendoza and his brother priests held watch and
+ward at St. Augustine, in the Adelantado's absence. Besides the
+celestial guardians whom they ceased not to invoke, they had as
+protectors Bartholomew Menendez, the brother of the Adelantado, and
+about a hundred soldiers. Day and night, the latter toiled to throw up
+earthworks and strengthen their position.
+
+A week elapsed, when they saw a man running towards their fort, shouting
+as he ran.
+
+Mendoza went out to meet him.
+
+"Victory! Victory!" gasped the breathless messenger. "The French fort is
+ours!" And he flung his arms about the chaplain's neck.
+
+"To-day," writes the latter in his journal, "Monday, the twenty-fourth,
+came our good general himself, with fifty soldiers, very tired, like all
+those who were with him. As soon as they told me he was coming, I ran to
+my lodging, took a new cassock, the best I had, put on my surplice, and
+went out to meet him with a crucifix in my hand; whereupon he, like a
+gentleman and a good Christian, kneeled down with all his followers, and
+gave the Lord a thousand thanks for the great favors he had received
+from Him."
+
+In solemn procession, four priests in front chanting the _Te Deum_, the
+victors entered St. Augustine in triumph.
+
+On the twenty-eighth, when the weary Adelantado was taking his _siesta_
+under the sylvan roof of Seloy, a troop of Indians came in with news
+that quickly roused him from his slumbers. They had seen a French vessel
+wrecked on the coast towards the south. Those who escaped from her were
+some four leagues off, on the banks of a river or arm of the sea, which
+they could not cross.
+
+Menendez instantly sent forty or fifty men in boats to reconnoitre.
+Next, he called the chaplain,--for he would fain have him at his elbow
+to countenance the devilish deeds he meditated,--and embarked, with him,
+twelve soldiers, and two Indian guides, in another boat. They rowed
+along the channel between Anastasia Island and the main shore; then
+landed, struck across the country on foot, traversed plains and marshes,
+readied the sea towards night, and searched along-shore till ten o'clock
+to find their comrades who had gone before. At length, with mutual joy,
+the two parties met, and bivouacked together on the sands. Not far
+distant they could see lights. They were the camp-fires of the
+shipwrecked French.
+
+And now, to relate the fortunes of these unhappy men. To do so with
+precision is impossible, for henceforward the French narratives are no
+longer the narratives of eye-witnesses.
+
+It has been seen how, when on the point of assailing the Spaniards of
+St. Augustine, John Ribaut was thwarted by a gale which the former
+hailed as a divine interposition. The gale rose to a tempest of strange
+fury. Within a few days, all the French ships were cast on shore, the
+greater number near Cape Canaveral. According to the letter of Menendez,
+many of those on board were lost, but others affirm that all escaped but
+the captain, La Grange, an officer of high merit, who was washed from a
+floating mast. One of the ships was wrecked at a point farther northward
+than the rest, and it was her company whose camp-fires were seen by the
+Spaniards at their bivouac among the sands of Anastasia Island. They
+were endeavoring to reach Fort Caroline, of whose fate they knew
+nothing, while Ribaut with the remainder was farther southward,
+struggling through the wilderness towards the same goal. What befell the
+latter will appear hereafter. Of the fate of the former party there is
+no French record. What we know of it is due to three Spanish writers,
+Mendoza, Doctor Solis de las Meras, and Menendez himself. Solis was a
+priest, and brother-in-law to Menendez. Like Mendoza, he minutely
+describes what he saw, and, like him, was a red-hot zealot, lavishing
+applause on the darkest deeds of his chief. Before me lie the long
+despatches, now first brought to light from the archives of Seville,
+which Menendez sent from Florida to the King, a cool record of
+atrocities never surpassed, and inscribed on the back with the royal
+indorsement,--"Say to him that he has done well."
+
+When the Adelantado saw the French fires in the distance, he lay close
+in his bivouac, and sent two soldiers to reconnoitre. At two in the
+morning they came back and reported that it was impossible to get at the
+enemy, since they were on the farther side of an arm of the sea,
+probably Matanzas Inlet. Menendez, however, gave orders to march, and
+before daybreak reached the hither bank, where he hid his men in a bushy
+hollow. Thence, as it grew light, they could discern the enemy, many of
+whom were searching along the sands and shallows for shell-fish, for
+they were famishing. A thought struck Menendez, an inspiration, says
+Mendoza, of the Holy Spirit. He put on the clothes of a sailor, entered
+a boat which had been brought to the spot, and rowed towards the
+shipwrecked men, the better to learn their condition. A Frenchman swam
+out to meet him. Menendez demanded what men they were.
+
+"Followers of Ribaut," answered the swimmer, "Viceroy of the King of
+France."
+
+"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?"
+
+"All Lutherans."
+
+A brief dialogue ensued, during which the Adelantado declared his name
+and character. The Frenchman swam back to his companions, but soon
+returned, and asked safe conduct for his captain and four other
+gentlemen who wished to hold conference with the Spanish general.
+Menendez gave his word for their safety, and, returning to the shore,
+sent his boat to bring them over. On their landing, he met them very
+courteously. His followers were kept at a distance, so disposed behind
+hills and clumps of bushes as to give an exaggerated idea of their
+force,--a precaution the more needful as they were only about sixty in
+number, while the French, says Solis, were above two hundred, though
+Menendez declares that they did not exceed a hundred and forty. The
+French officer told him the story of their shipwreck, and begged him to
+lend them a boat to aid them in crossing the rivers which lay between
+them and a fort of their King, whither they were making their way.
+
+Then came again the ominous question,--
+
+"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?"
+
+"We are Lutherans."
+
+"Gentlemen," pursued Menendez, "your fort is taken, and all in it put to
+the sword." And in proof of his declaration he caused articles plundered
+from Fort Caroline to be shown to the unhappy petitioners. He then left
+them, to breakfast with his officers, first ordering food to be placed
+before them. His repast over, he returned to them.
+
+"Are you convinced now," he asked, "that what I have told you is true?"
+
+The French captain assented, and implored him to lend them ships in
+which to return home. Menendez answered, that he would do so willingly,
+if they were Catholics, and if he had ships to spare, but he had none.
+The supplicants then expressed the hope, that, at least, they and their
+followers would be allowed to remain with the Spaniards till ships could
+be sent to their relief, since there was peace between the two nations,
+whose kings were friends and brothers.
+
+"All Catholics," retorted the Spaniard, "I will befriend; but as you are
+of the New Sect, I hold you as enemies, and wage deadly war against you;
+and this I will do with all cruelty [_crueldad_] in this country, where
+I command as Viceroy and Captain-General for my King. I am here to plant
+the holy gospel, that the Indians may be enlightened and come to the
+knowledge of the holy Catholic faith of our Lord Jesus Christ, as the
+Roman Church teaches it. If you will give up your arms and banners, and
+place yourselves at my mercy, you may do so, and I will act towards you
+as God shall give me grace. Do as you will, for other than this you can
+have neither truce nor friendship with me."
+
+Such were the Adelantado's words, as reported by a by-stander, his
+admiring brother-in-law; and that they contain an implied assurance of
+mercy has been held, not only by Protestants, but by Catholics and
+Spaniards. The report of Menendez himself is more brief and sufficiently
+equivocal:--
+
+"I answered, that they could give up their arms and place themselves
+under my mercy,--that I should do with them what our Lord should order;
+and from that I did not depart, nor would I, unless God our Lord should
+otherwise inspire."
+
+One of the Frenchmen recrossed to consult with his companions. In two
+hours he returned, and offered fifty thousand ducats to secure their
+lives; but Menendez, says his brother-in-law, would give no pledges. On
+the other hand, expressions in his own despatches point to the inference
+that a virtual pledge was given, at least to certain individuals.
+
+The starving French saw no resource but to yield themselves to his
+mercy. The boat was again sent across the river. It returned, laden with
+banners, arquebuses, swords, targets, and helmets. The Adelantado
+ordered twenty soldiers to bring over the prisoners by tens at a time.
+He then took the French officers aside behind a ridge of sand, two
+gunshots from the bank. Here, with courtesy on his lips and murder
+reeking at his heart, he said,--
+
+"Gentlemen, I have but few men, and you are so many, that, if you were
+free, it would be easy for you to take your satisfaction on us for the
+people we killed when we took your fort. Therefore it is necessary that
+you should go to my camp, four leagues from this place, with your hands
+tied."
+
+Accordingly, as each party landed, they were led out of sight behind the
+sand-hill, and their hands tied at their backs with the match-cords of
+the arquebuses,--though not before each had been supplied with food. The
+whole day passed before all were brought together, bound and helpless,
+under the eye of the inexorable Adelantado. But now Mendoza interposed.
+"I was a priest," he says, "and had the bowels of a man." He asked,
+that, if there were Christians, that is to say Catholics, among the
+prisoners, they should be set apart. Twelve Breton sailors professed
+themselves to be such; and these, together with four carpenters and
+calkers, "of whom," writes Menendez, "I was in great need," were put on
+board the boat and sent to St. Augustine. The rest were ordered to march
+thither by land.
+
+The Adelantado walked in advance till he came to a lonely spot, not far
+distant, deep among the bush-covered hills. Here he stopped, and with
+his cane drew a line in the sand. The sun was set when the captive
+Huguenots, with their escort, reached the fatal goal thus marked out.
+And now let the curtain drop; for here, in the name of Heaven, the
+hounds of hell were turned loose, and the savage soldiery, like wolves
+in a sheepfold, rioted in slaughter. Of all that wretched company, not
+one was left alive.
+
+"I had their hands tied behind their backs," writes the chief criminal,
+"and themselves passed under the knife. It appeared to me, that, by thus
+chastising them, God our Lord and your Majesty were served; whereby in
+future they will leave us more free from their evil sect, to plant the
+gospel in these parts."
+
+Again Menendez returned triumphant to St. Augustine, and behind him
+marched his band of butchers, steeped in blood to the elbows, but still
+unsated. Great as had been his success, he still had cause for anxiety.
+There was ill news of his fleet. Some of the ships were lost, others
+scattered, or lagging tardily on their way. Of his whole force, but a
+fraction had reached Florida, and of this a large part was still at Fort
+Caroline. Ribaut could not be far off; and whatever might be the
+condition of his shipwrecked company, their numbers would make them
+formidable, unless taken at advantage. Urged by fear and fortified by
+fanaticism, Menendez had well begun his work of slaughter; but rest for
+him there was none; a darker deed was behind.
+
+On the next day, Indians came with the tidings that at the spot where
+the French had been found was now another party, still larger. This
+murder-loving race looked with great respect on Menendez for his
+wholesale butchery of the night before,--an exploit rarely equalled in
+their own annals of massacre. On his part, he doubted not that Ribaut
+was at hand. Marching with a hundred and fifty men, he reached the inlet
+at midnight, and again, like a savage, ambushed himself on the bank. Day
+broke, and he could plainly see the French on the farther side. They had
+made a raft, which lay in the water, ready for crossing. Menendez and
+his men showed themselves, when, forthwith, the French displayed their
+banners, sounded drums and trumpets, and set their sick and starving
+ranks in array of battle. But the Adelantado, regardless of this warlike
+show, ordered his men to seat themselves at breakfast, while he with
+three officers walked unconcernedly along the shore. His coolness had
+its effect. The French blew a trumpet of parley, and showed a white
+flag. The Spaniards replied. A Frenchman came out upon the raft, and,
+shouting across the water, asked that a Spanish envoy should be sent
+over.
+
+"You have a raft," was the reply; "come yourselves."
+
+An Indian canoe lay under the bank on the Spanish side. A French sailor
+swam to it, paddled back unmolested, and presently returned, bringing
+with him La Caille, Ribaut's sergeant-major. He told Menendez that the
+French were three hundred and fifty in all, on their way to Fort
+Caroline; and, like the officers of the former party, begged for boats
+to aid them in crossing the river.
+
+"My brother," said Menendez, "go and tell your general, that, if he
+wishes to speak with me, he may come with four or six companions, and
+that I pledge my word he shall go back safe."
+
+La Caille returned; and Ribaut, with eight gentlemen, soon came over in
+the canoe. Menendez met them courteously, caused wine and preserved
+fruits to be placed before them,--he had come with well-stocked larder
+on his errand of blood,--and next led Ribaut to the reeking Golgotha,
+where, in heaps upon the sands, lay the corpses of his slaughtered
+followers. Ribaut was prepared for the spectacle; La Caille had already
+seen it; but he would not believe that Fort Caroline was taken till a
+part of the plunder was shown him. Then, mastering his despair, he
+turned to the conqueror.
+
+"What has befallen us," he said, "may one day befall you." And, urging
+that the kings of France and Spain were brothers and close friends, he
+begged, in the name of that friendship, that the Spaniard would aid him
+in conveying his followers home. Menendez gave him the same equivocal
+answer that he had given the former party, and Ribaut returned to
+consult with his officers. After three hours of absence, he came back in
+the canoe, and told the Adelantado that some of his people were ready to
+surrender at discretion, but that many refused.
+
+"They can do as they please," was the reply.
+
+In behalf of those who surrendered Ribaut offered a ransom of a hundred
+thousand ducats.
+
+"It grieves me much," said Menendez, "that I cannot accept it; for I
+have great need of it."
+
+Ribaut was much encouraged. Menendez could scarcely forego such a prize,
+and he thought, says the Spanish narrator, that the lives of his
+followers would now be safe. He asked to be allowed the night for
+deliberation, and at sunset recrossed the river. In the morning he
+reappeared among the Spaniards and reported that two hundred of his men
+had retreated from the spot, but that the remaining one hundred and
+fifty would surrender. At the same time he gave into the hands of
+Menendez the royal standard and other flags, with his sword, dagger,
+helmet, buckler, and his official seal, given him by Coligny. Menendez
+directed an officer to enter the boat and bring over the French by
+tens. He next led Ribaut among the bushes behind the neighboring
+sand-hill, and ordered his hands to be bound fast. Then the scales fell
+from the prisoner's eyes. Face to face his hideous fate rose up before
+him. He saw his followers and himself entrapped,--the dupe of words
+artfully framed to lure them to their ruin. The day wore on; and, as
+band after band of prisoners was brought over, they were led behind the
+sand-hill, out of sight from the farther shore, and bound like their
+general. At length the transit was complete. With bloodshot eyes and
+weapons bared, the fierce Spaniards closed around their victims.
+
+"Are you Catholics or Lutherans? and is there any one among you who will
+go to confession?"
+
+Ribaut answered,--
+
+"I and all here are of the Reformed Faith."
+
+And he recited the Psalm, "_Domine, memento mei_."
+
+"We are of earth," he continued, "and to earth we must return; twenty
+years more or less can matter little"; and, turning to the Adelantado,
+he bade him do his will.
+
+The stony-hearted bigot gave the signal; and those who will may paint to
+themselves the horrors of the scene. A few, however, were spared.
+
+"I saved," writes Menendez, "the lives of two young gentlemen of about
+eighteen years of age, as well as of three others, the fifer, the
+drummer, and the trumpeter; and I caused Jean Ribaut with all the rest
+to be passed under the knife, judging this to be expedient for the
+service of God our Lord, and of your Majesty. And I consider it great
+good fortune that he (Jean Ribaut) should be dead, for the King of
+France could effect more with him and five hundred ducats than with
+other men and five thousand, and he would do more in one year than
+another in ten, for he was the most experienced sailor and naval
+commander ever known, and of great skill in this passage to the Indies
+and the coast of Florida. He was, besides, greatly liked in England, in
+which kingdom his reputation is such that he was appointed
+Captain-General of all the British fleet against the French Catholics in
+the war between England and France some years ago."
+
+Such is the sum of the Spanish accounts,--the self-damning testimony of
+the author and abettors of the crime. A picture of lurid and awful
+coloring; and yet there is reason to believe that the truth was more
+hideous still. Among those spared was one Christophe le Breton, who was
+carried to Spain, escaped to France, and told his story to Challeux.
+Among those struck down in the carnage was a sailor of Dieppe, stunned
+and left for dead under a heap of corpses. In the night he revived,
+contrived to draw his knife, cut the cords that bound his hands, and
+make his way to an Indian village. The Indians, though not without
+reluctance, abandoned him to the Spaniards. The latter sold him as a
+slave; but on his way in fetters to Portugal, the ship was taken by the
+Huguenots, the sailor set free, and his story published in the narrative
+of Le Moyne. When the massacre was known in France, the friends and
+relatives of the victims sent to the King, Charles IX., a vehement
+petition for redress; and their memorial recounts many incidents of the
+tragedy. From these three sources is to be drawn the French version of
+the story. The following is its substance:--
+
+Famished and desperate, the followers of Ribaut were toiling northward
+to seek refuge at Fort Caroline, when they found the Spaniards in their
+path. Some were filled with dismay; others, in their misery, almost
+hailed them as deliverers. La Caille, the sergeant-major, crossed the
+river. Menendez met him with a face of friendship, and protested that he
+would spare the lives of the shipwrecked men, sealing the promise with
+an oath, a kiss, and many signs of the cross. He even gave it in
+writing, under seal. Still, there were many among the French who would
+not place themselves in his power. The most credulous crossed the river
+in a boat. As each successive party landed, their hands were bound fast
+at their backs; and thus, except a few who were set apart, they were all
+driven towards the fort, like cattle to the shambles, with curses and
+scurrilous abuse. Then, at sound of drums and trumpets, the Spaniards
+fell upon them, striking them down with swords, pikes, and halberds.
+Ribaut vainly called on the Adelantado to remember his oath. By the
+latter's order, a soldier plunged a dagger into his heart; and Ottigny,
+who stood near, met a similar fate. Ribaut's beard was cut off, and
+portions of it sent in a letter to Philip II. His head was hewn into
+four parts, one of which was displayed on the point of a lance at each
+corner of Fort St. Augustine. Great fires were kindled, and the bodies
+of the murdered burned to ashes.
+
+Such is the sum of the French accounts. The charge of breach of faith
+contained in them was believed by Catholics as well as Protestants, and
+it was as a defence against this charge that the narrative of the
+Adelantado's brother-in-law was published. That Ribaut, a man whose good
+sense and bravery were both reputed high, should have submitted himself
+and his men to Menendez without positive assurance of safety is scarcely
+credible; nor is it lack of charity to believe that a miscreant so
+savage in heart and so perverted in conscience would act on the maxim,
+current among the bigots of the day, that faith ought not to be kept
+with heretics.
+
+It was night when the Adelantado again entered St. Augustine. Some there
+were who blamed his cruelty; but many applauded. "Even if the French had
+been Catholics,"--such was their language,--"he would have done right,
+for, with the little provision we have, they would all have starved;
+besides, there were so many of them that they would have cut our
+throats."
+
+And now Menendez again addressed himself to the despatch, already begun,
+in which he recounts to the King his labors and his triumphs, a
+deliberate and business-like document, mingling narratives of butchery
+with recommendations for promotions, commissary details, and petitions
+for supplies; enlarging, too, on the vast schemes of encroachment which
+his successful generalship had brought to nought. The French, he says,
+had planned a military and naval depot at Los Martires, whence they
+would make a descent upon Havana, and another at the Bay of Ponce de
+Leon, whence they could threaten Vera Cruz. They had long been
+encroaching on Spanish rights at Newfoundland, from which a great arm of
+the sea--the St. Lawrence--would give them access to the Moluccas and
+other parts of the East Indies. Moreover, he adds in a later despatch,
+by this passage they may reach the mines of Zacatecas and St. Martin, as
+well as every part of the South Sea. And, as already mentioned, he urges
+immediate occupation of Chesapeake Bay, which, by its supposed
+water-communication with the St. Lawrence, would enable Spain to
+vindicate her rights, control the fisheries of Newfoundland, and thwart
+her rival in her vast designs of commercial and territorial
+aggrandizement. Thus did France and Spain dispute the possession of
+North America long before England became a party to the strife.
+
+Some twenty days after Menendez returned to St. Augustine, the Indians,
+enamored of carnage, and exulting to see their invaders mowed down, came
+to tell him that on the coast southward, near Cape Canaveral, a great
+number of Frenchmen were intrenching themselves. They were those of
+Ribaut's party who had refused to surrender. Retreating to the spot
+where their ships had been cast ashore, they were endeavoring to build a
+vessel from the fragments of the wrecks.
+
+In all haste Menendez despatched messengers to Fort Caroline,--named by
+him San Mateo,--ordering a reinforcement of a hundred and fifty men. In
+a few days they came. He added some of his own soldiers, and, with a
+united force of two hundred and fifty, set forth, as he tells us, on
+the second of November, pushing southward along the shore with such
+merciless energy that some of his men dropped dead with wading night and
+day through the loose sands. When, from behind their frail defences, the
+French saw the Spanish pikes and partisans glittering into view, they
+fled in a panic, and took refuge among the hills. Menendez sent a
+trumpet to summon them, pledging his honor for their safety. The
+commander and several others told the messenger that they would sooner
+be eaten by the savages than trust themselves to Spaniards; and,
+escaping, they fled to the Indian towns. The rest surrendered; and
+Menendez kept his word. The comparative number of his own men made his
+prisoners no longer dangerous. They were led back to St. Augustine,
+where, as the Spanish writer affirms, they were well treated. Those of
+good birth sat at the Adelantado's table, eating the bread of a homicide
+crimsoned with the slaughter of their comrades. The priests essayed
+their pious efforts, and, under the gloomy menace of the Inquisition,
+some of the heretics renounced their errors. The fate of the captives
+may be gathered from the indorsement, in the handwriting of the King, on
+the back of the despatch of Menendez of December twelfth.
+
+"Say to him," writes Philip II., "that, as to those he has killed, he
+has done well, and as for those he has saved, they shall be sent to the
+galleys."
+
+Thus did Spain make good her claim to North America, and crush the upas
+of heresy in its germ. Within her bounds the tidings were hailed with
+acclamation, while in France a cry of horror and execration rose from
+the Huguenots, and found an echo even among the Catholics. But the weak
+and ferocious son of Catherine de Medicis gave no response. The victims
+were Huguenots, disturbers of the realm, followers of Coligny, the man
+above all others a thorn in his side. True, the enterprise was a
+national enterprise, undertaken at the national charge, with royal
+commission, and under the royal standard. True, it had been assailed in
+time of peace by a power professing the closest amity. Yet Huguenot
+influence, had prompted and Huguenot hands executed it. That influence
+had now ebbed low; Coligny's power had waned; and the Spanish party was
+ascendant. Charles IX., long vacillating, was fast subsiding into the
+deathly embrace of Spain, for whom, at last, on the bloody eve of St.
+Bartholomew, he was destined to become the assassin of his own best
+subjects.
+
+In vain the relatives of the slain petitioned him for redress; and had
+the honor of the nation rested in the keeping of her king, the blood of
+hundreds of murdered Frenchmen would have cried from the ground in vain.
+But it was not so to be. Injured humanity found an avenger, and outraged
+France a champion. Her chivalrous annals may be searched in vain for a
+deed of more romantic daring than the vengeance of Dominic de Gourgue.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WEARINESS.
+
+
+ O little feet, that such long years
+ Must wander on through doubts and fears,
+ Must ache and bleed beneath your load!
+ I, nearer to the way-side inn
+ Where toil shall cease and rest begin,
+ Am weary, thinking of your road.
+
+ O little hands, that, weak or strong,
+ Have still to serve or rule so long,
+ Have still so long to give or ask!
+ I, who so much with book and pen
+ Have toiled among my fellow-men,
+ Am weary, thinking of your task.
+
+ O little hearts, that throb and beat
+ With such impatient, feverish heat,
+ Such limitless and strong desires!
+ Mine, that, so long has glowed and burned,
+ With passions into ashes turned,
+ Now covers and conceals its fires.
+
+ O little souls, as pure and white
+ And crystalline as rays of light
+ Direct from heaven, their source divine!
+ Refracted through the mist of years,
+ How red my setting sun appears,
+ How lurid looks this soul, of mine!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MRS. LEWIS.
+
+A STORY IN THREE PARTS.
+
+PART III.
+
+
+XI.
+
+When we returned from our journey, Lulu was among the first to greet us,
+and with a cordial animation quite unlike the gentle, dawdling way she
+used to have. Indeed, I was struck the first evening with a new impulse,
+and a healthful mental current, that gave glow and freshness to
+everything she said. Mr. Lewis was gone to Cuba, she told us, and would
+be away a month more, but "George" was with her continually, and the
+days were all too short for what they had to do. She seemed to have
+attacked all the arts and sciences simultaneously, and with an eagerness
+very amusing to see. George had begun a numismatic collection for her,
+and she had made out an historic table from the coins, writing down all
+that was most important under each king's reign. George had brought home
+some fine specimens of stones, and had interested her much in
+mineralogy. George liked riding, and had taught her to ride; and she now
+perpetually made her appearance in her riding-habit and little
+jockey-cap, wishing she could do something for me here or there. George
+moulded, and taught her to mould; and she was dabbling in clay and
+plaster of Paris all the morning. George painted beautifully in
+water-colors, and taught her to sketch from Nature, which she often did
+now, in their rides, when the days were pleasant enough. George not only
+thrummed a Spanish guitar, but liked singing; so music went on with
+wonderful force and improvement. Nothing that George liked better than
+botany, metaphysics, and micrology. And now Lulu was screaming at
+dreadful dragons' heads on a pin's point, or delighted with
+diamond-beetles and spiders' eyes. She fairly revelled in the new worlds
+that were opened to her eager eye and hungry mind. No more long,
+tiresome mornings now. Every hour was occupied. Intelligent smiles
+dimpled her beautiful mouth; the weary, unoccupied, childish look
+vanished from her eyes; and her talk was animated and animating. For
+though she might not tell much that was new, she told it in a new way
+and with the fresh light of recent experience. Thus she became in a
+wonderfully short time a quite different woman from the Lulu of the
+early winter.
+
+We acknowledged that she was become an agreeable companion. In a few
+weeks of home-education her soul had expanded to a tropical and rich
+growth. This we were talking over one night, when Lulu had been with us,
+and when George had come for her and extinguished us with his great
+hearty laugh and abundant health and activity, as the sun's effulgence
+does a house-candle.
+
+"I don't like that Remington, either," said the minister, after we were
+left in this state of darkness.
+
+"But, surely, he has given Lulu's mind a most desirable impulse and
+direction. How glad Mr. Lewis will be to see her so happy, so animated,
+and so sensible, when he comes home!"
+
+"If that makes him happy, he could have had it before, I suppose. But do
+you notice anything unhealthy in this mental cultivation,--anything
+forced in this luxuriant flowering? Now the light of heaven expands the
+whole nature, I hold, into healthy and proportioned beauty. If anything
+is lacking or exuberant, the influence is not heavenly, be sure. What do
+you think of this statement?"
+
+"Very sensible, but very Hebrew to me."
+
+"I never thought Lulu's were 'household eyes,'--but now she never speaks
+of husband or children, of house or home. Now that is not a suitable
+mental condition. Let us hope that this intellectual effervescence will
+subside, and leave her some thoughtfulness and care for others, and the
+meditation which will make her accomplishments something to enrich and
+strengthen, rather than excite and overrun her mind."
+
+"Ah! well, it is only a few weeks, not more than six, since she found
+out she had a soul. No wonder she feels she has been such a laggard in
+the race, she must keep on the gallop now to make up for lost time."
+
+"But,--about the husband and children?"
+
+"Oh, they will come in in due time and take their true place. She is a
+young artist, and hasn't got her perspectives arranged. Be sure they
+will be in the foreground presently," said I, cheerfully.
+
+"Let us hope so. For a wife, mother, and house-mistress to be racing
+after so many ologies, and ignoring her daily duties, is a spectacle of
+doubtful utility to me."
+
+To tell the truth, this want of domestic interest had often struck me
+also. One day, as we were talking about my children, Lulu had said that
+she believed herself destitute of the maternal instinct; for although
+she liked to see the children, of course, yet she did not miss them
+when away from her. And after the death of young Lewis, which happened
+while they were at Cuba, and which distressed my Johnnie so much that he
+could not for a long time bear either books or play, for want of his
+beloved playmate, his mother, apparently, did not lament him at all.
+
+"I never liked to have him with me," she said to me,--"partly, I
+suppose, because he reminded me of Montalli, and of a period of great
+suffering in my life. I should be glad never to think of him again. But
+William seemed to love and pity him always. Gave him his name, and
+always treated him like an only and elder son. And William is fond of
+the little girls, too. I don't mean that I am not fond of them, but not
+as he is. He will go and spend a week at a time playing and driving with
+them."
+
+Indeed, she very often reminded me of Undine in her soulless days.
+
+As she scarcely went into society, during the absence of Mr. Lewis, Lulu
+had time for all this multifarious culture that I have been describing,
+and she was gradually coming also to reason and reflect on what she read
+and heard, though her appetite for knowledge continued with the same
+keenness. Her artistic eye, which naturally grouped and arranged with
+taste whatever was about her, stood her in good stead of experience; and
+with a very little instruction, she was able to do wonders in both a
+plastic and pictorial way.
+
+One day she showed me a fine drawing of the Faun of Praxiteles, with
+some verses written beneath. The lines seemed to me full of vigor and
+harmony. They implied and breathed, too, such an intimacy with classical
+thought, that I was astonished when, in answer to my inquiry, she told
+me she wrote them herself.
+
+"How delighted Mr. Lewis will be with this!" I exclaimed, looking at the
+beautifully finished drawing; "to think how you have improved, Lulu!"
+
+"You think so?" she answered, with glistening eyes. "I, too, feel that I
+have, and am so happy!"
+
+"I am sure Mr. Lewis will be so, too," I continued, persistently.
+
+She answered in a sharp tone, dropping her eyes, and, as it were, all
+the joy out of them,--
+
+"Surely, I have told you often enough that Mr. Lewis hates literary
+women! I am not goose enough to expect him to sympathize with any
+intellectual pursuits of mine. No. Fatima in the harem, or Nourmahal
+thrumming her lute under a palm-tree, is his _belle-ideale_; failing
+that, a housekeeper and drudge."
+
+I cannot describe the scorn with which she said this. She changed the
+subject, however, at once, instead of pursuing it as she would formerly
+have done, and soon after left me for a drive over Milton Hills with
+George, with a hammer and sketch-book in the chaise.
+
+Mr. Lewis's business in Cuba was prolonged into May. He had estates
+there, and desired to dispose of them, Lulu said, so that they might for
+the future live entirely at the North, which they both liked better.
+
+I could not help seeing that her affections drifted farther and farther
+every week from their lawful haven, and I wished Mr. Lewis safe back
+again and overlooking his Northern estates. I guessed how, through her
+pride of awakened intellect, Lulu's gratitude had wrought a deep
+interest in her cousin. He had rescued her from the idleness and inanity
+of her daily life, pointed out to her the broad fields of literary
+enjoyment and excellence, and inevitably associated his own image with
+all the new and varied occupations with which her now busy days were
+filled. The poetry she read he brought to her; the songs she sang were
+of his selection. His mind and taste, his observations and reflections,
+were all written over every page she read, over every hour of her life.
+She had been on a desert island in her intellectual loneliness. She
+could hardly help loving the hand that had guided her to the palm-tree
+and the fountain, especially when she glanced back at the long sandy
+reach of her life.
+
+Naturally enough, I watched and distrusted Mr. Remington, who was a man
+of the world, and knew very well what he was about. Of all things, he
+dearly loved to be excited, occupied, and amused. Of course, I was not
+disturbed about his heart, nor seriously supposed he would get into any
+entanglement of the affections and the duties of life, but I thought he
+might do a great deal of harm for all that.
+
+At last, in the middle of May, Mr. Lewis returned, having failed in his
+desired arrangement for a permanent residence in New England. The first
+evening I saw them together without company, I perceived that he was
+struck with the new life in Lulu's manner and conversation. He watched
+and listened to her with an astonishment which he could not conceal.
+
+I never saw anything like jealousy in Mr. Lewis's manner, either at this
+time, or before. He was always tender and dignified, when speaking to or
+of her. If he felt any uneasiness now, he did not betray it. In looking
+back, I am sure of this. Afterwards, in company, where he might be
+supposed to be proud of his wife, he often looked at her with the same
+astonishment, and sometimes with unaffected admiration. He could not
+help seeing the great change in her,--that the days were taken up with
+rational and elegant pursuits, and that the hours were vocal with poetry
+and taste. The illuminating mind had brought her tulip beauty into a
+brighter and more gorgeous glow, and her movements were full of graceful
+meaning. Everything was touched and inspired but the heart. I don't know
+that he felt this, or that he missed anything. She had the same easy
+self-possession in his presence which she had always had,--the same pet
+names of endearment. It was always "Willie, dear," or "Yes, my love,"
+which makes the usual matrimonial vocabulary, and which does not reward
+study. But he always looked at her with a calm delight, perfectly
+satisfied with all she said and did, and with a Southern indolence of
+mind and body, that precluded effort. I think he never once lost entire
+confidence in her, or was jealous of the hand that had unlocked such
+mental treasures for her.
+
+Meanwhile her eager lip quaffed the bright cup so cautiously presented,
+and drained it with ever new delight. If it was mingled with delicate
+flattery, it only sparkled more merrily; and if there were poison there,
+I am sure she never guessed it, even when it burnt in her cheek or
+thrilled in her dancing veins.
+
+
+XII.
+
+The Lewises, with Mr. Remington and a large party of pleasure-seekers,
+went about this time on a tour to Quebec and the Falls of Montmorency.
+They decided to shut their house in Boston, and Lulu asked me if I would
+employ and look after a _protegee_ of hers, in whom she took some
+interest. The woman was a tolerable seamstress, she said, and would come
+to me the next day. She knew nothing about her except that she was poor
+and could sew.
+
+When the woman came in, I was puzzled to think where I could have seen
+her, which I was sure I had done somewhere, though I could not recall
+the where or when. In answer to my particular inquiries, as she could
+give me no references, she told me her husband was living, but was sick
+and could do nothing for his family,--in fact, that she and three
+children were kept alive by her efforts of various sorts. These were,
+sewing when she could get it, washing and scrubbing when she could not.
+She was very poorly dressed, but had a Yankee, go-ahead expression, as
+if she would get a living on the top of a bare rock.
+
+Still puzzling over the likeness in her face to somebody I had known, I
+continued to ask questions and to observe face, manner, and voice, in
+hope to catch the clue of which I was in search. When she admitted that
+her husband's intemperance had lost him his place and forbade his
+getting another, and said his name was Jim Ruggles, "a light broke in
+upon my brain." I remembered my vision of the fresh young girl who had
+sprung out on our path like a morning-glory, on our way to New York
+seven years before. The poor morning-glory was sadly trodden in the
+dust. It hadn't done "no good," as the driver had remarked, to forewarn
+her of the consequences of marrying a sponge. She had accepted her lot,
+and, strangely enough, was quite happy in it. There could be no mistake
+in the cheerful expression of her worn face. Whatever Jim might be to
+other people, she said, he was always good to her and the children; and
+she pitied him, loved him, and took care of him. It wasn't at all in the
+fashion the Temperance Society would have liked; for when I first went
+to the house, I found her pouring out a glass of strong waters for him,
+and handing it to his pale and trembling lips herself. As soon as I was
+seated, she locked bottle and glass carefully. Before I left her, she
+had given him stimulants of various sorts from the same source, which he
+received with grateful smiles, and then went on coughing as before.
+
+"It's no time now for him to be forming new habits," said she, in answer
+to my open-eyed surprise; "and it's best he should have all the comfort
+and ease he can get. As long as I can get it for him, he shall have it."
+
+She spoke very quietly, but very much as if the same will of her own
+which had led her to marry Jim Ruggles, when a gay, dissipated fellow,
+kept her determined to give him what he wanted, even to the doubtful
+extreme I saw. So she struggled bravely on during the next four weeks of
+Jim's existence, keeping herself and her three children on hasty
+pudding, and buying for Jim's consumptively craving appetite rich
+mince-pies and platefuls of good rich food from an eating-house hard by.
+At the end of the four weeks he died most peacefully and suddenly,
+having not five minutes before swallowed a glass of gin sling, prepared
+by the loving hand of his wife, and saying to her, with a firm, clear
+voice, and a grateful smile, "Good Amy! always good!" So the weak man's
+soul passed away. And as Amy told me about it, with sorrowful sobs, I
+was not ready to say or think she had done wrong, although both her
+conduct and my opinion were entirely uncanonical.
+
+Before Mrs. Lewis returned, Amy was one day at my room and asked me when
+I expected her back.
+
+"Is Mr. Lewis with her, Ma'am?" said she, hesitatingly.
+
+"Of course; at least, I suppose so. Why, what makes you ask?" said I,
+with surprise at her downcast eyes and flushed face.
+
+"I heard he had gone away. And that--_that_ Mr. Remington was there with
+her. But you know about it, most likely."
+
+"No, I know nothing about it, Amy."
+
+"It was their old cook told me, Mrs. Butler. And she said,--oh! all
+sorts of things, that I am sure couldn't be true, for Mrs. Lewis is such
+a kind, beautiful woman! I couldn't believe a word she said!"
+
+In my quality of minister's wife, and with a general distrust of cooks'
+opinions, I told Amy that there was always scandal enough, and it was a
+waste of time to listen to it. But after she left me, I confess to a
+whole hour wasted in speculations and anxious reflections on Amy's
+communication, and also to having taken the Dominie away from his sermon
+for a like space of time to consider the matter fully.
+
+I was relieved when the whole party came back, and when the blooming,
+happy face of Lulu showed that she, at least, had neither thought nor
+done anything very bad.
+
+The summer was becoming warm and oppressive in Boston, and we prepared
+to take the children and go to Weston for a few weeks. While we should
+be among the mountains, the Lewises proposed a voyage to Scotland, and
+we hoped that sometime in the early autumn we should all be together
+once more. The evening before our departure Mr. Remington and Lulu
+spent with us, Mr. Lewis coming in at a later hour. I remember vividly
+the conversation during the whole of that last evening we ever passed
+together.
+
+
+XIII.
+
+While Mrs. Lewis and I were chatting in one corner on interests
+specially feminine, the Dominie had got Mr. Remington into a
+metaphysical discussion of some length. From time to time we heard,
+"Pascal's idea seems to be," and then, "The notion of Descartes and all
+that school of thinkers"; and feeling that they were plunging quite
+beyond our depth, we continued babbling of dry goods, and what was
+becoming, till Mr. Remington leaned back laughing to us, and said,--
+
+"What do you think, ladies? or are you of the opinion of somebody who
+said of metaphysics, 'Whoever troubles himself to skin a flint should
+have the skin for his pains'?"
+
+"But that is a most unfair comparison!" said the minister, eagerly, "and
+what I will by no means allow. By so much more as the mind is better
+than the body, nay, because the mind is all that is worth anything about
+a man, metaphysics is the noblest science, and most worthy"--
+
+"I give in! I am down!" said Remington.
+
+"But what are you disputing about?" said I.
+
+"Oh, only Infinity!" said Remington. "But then you know metaphysics does
+not hesitate at anything. I say, it is impossible for the mind to go
+back to a first cause, and if the mind of a man cannot conceive an idea,
+why of course that idea can never be true to him. I can think of no
+cause that may not be an effect."
+
+"Nor of infinite space, nor of infinite time?" said the minister.
+
+"No,--of nothing that cannot be divided, and nothing that cannot be
+extended."
+
+"Very good. Perhaps you can't. I suppose we cannot comprehend infinity,
+because we are essentially finite ourselves. But it by no means follows
+that we cannot apprehend and believe in attributes which we are unable
+to comprehend. We can certainly do that."
+
+"No. After you reach your limit of comprehension, you may say, all
+beyond that is infinite,--but you only push the object of your thought
+out of view. After you have reiterated the years till you are tired, you
+say, beyond that is infinite. You only mean that you are tired of
+computing and adding."
+
+"Then you cannot believe in an Infinite Creator?" said the minister.
+
+"I can believe in nothing that is not founded on reason. I should be
+very glad to believe in an Infinite Creator, only it is entirely
+impossible, you see, for the mind to conceive of a being who is not
+himself created."
+
+"Yet you can believe in a world that is not created?" said the minister.
+"You can believe that a world full of adaptations, full of signs of
+intelligence and design, could be uncreated. How do you make that out?"
+
+"There remains no greater difficulty to me," said Remington, "in
+believing in an uncreated world than you have in believing in an
+uncreated God. Why is it stranger that Chaos should produce harmony than
+that Nothing should produce God?"
+
+He looked at us, smiling as he said this, which he evidently considered
+unanswerable.
+
+"You are quite right," said my husband, gravely. "It is impossible that
+nothing should produce God, and therefore I say God is eternal. It is
+not impossible that something should produce the world, and therefore I
+believe the world is not eternal. That point is the one on which the
+whole argument hangs in my mind."
+
+"It does not become me to dispute a clergyman," said Mr. Remington,
+smiling affectedly, as if only courtesy prevented his coming in with an
+entirely demolishing argument.
+
+To my great surprise Lulu instantly answered, and with an intelligence
+that showed she had followed the argument entirely,--
+
+"I am certain, George, that Mr. Prince has altogether the best of it.
+Yours is merely a technical difficulty,--merely words. You can conceive
+a thousand things which you can never fully comprehend. And this, too,
+is a proof of the Infinite Father in our very reasoning,--that, if we
+could comprehend Him, we should be ourselves infinite. As it is, we can
+believe and adore,--and, more than that, rejoice that we cannot in this
+finite life of ours do more."
+
+"If we believed we could comprehend Him," said I, "we should soon begin
+to meddle with God's administration of affairs."
+
+"Yes,--and in fatalism I have always thought there was a profound
+reverence," said Lulu.
+
+"Oh, are you going into theological mysteries, too?" said Remington,
+with a laugh in which none of us joined; "what care you, Lulu, for the
+quiddities of Absolute Illimitation and Infinite Illimitation? After
+all, what matters it whether one believes in a God, who you allow to be
+the personation of all excellence, if only one endeavors to act up to
+the highest conceivable standard of perfection,--I mean of human
+perfection,--leaving, of course, a liberal margin for human frailties
+and defects? One wouldn't like to leave out mercy, you know."
+
+Whatever might be the real sentiments of the man, there was an air of
+levity in his mode of treating the most important subjects of thought
+which displeased me, especially when he said, "You adore the
+Incomprehensible; I am contented to adore, with silent reverence, the
+lovely works of His hand." He pointed his remark without hesitation at
+LuLu, who sat looking into the fire, and did not notice him or it.
+
+"You are quite right, Mr. Prince, and my cousin, is quite wrong," said
+she, looking up with a docile, childlike expression, at the minister.
+"One feels that all through, though one may not be able to reason or
+argue about it."
+
+"And the best evidence of all truth, my dear," answered the delighted
+Dominie, "is that intuition which is before all reasoning, and by which
+we must try reasoning itself. The moral is before the intellectual; and
+that is why we preachers continually insist on faith as an illuminator
+of the reason."
+
+"You mean that we should cultivate faith," I said.
+
+"Yes: not the faith that is blind, but the faith that sees, that is
+positive; that which leads, not that which follows; the faith that
+weighs argument and decides on it; in short, the native intuitions which
+are a necessary part of the mind."
+
+"I see, and I shall remember," said Lulu. "I shall never forget all you
+say, Mr. Prince."
+
+It was this sweet frankness, and the clearness with which her lately
+developed intellect acted, that made us begin to respect Lulu as well as
+to love her. She seemed to be getting right-minded at last.
+
+When Mr. Lewis came, the conversation turned on other subjects; but it
+was quite late at night before we were willing to part with our friends.
+The shadow of misgiving which hangs over even short separations was
+deeper than usual with me from the thought of the voyage. Lulu had been
+so many times across the sea that she had no fear of it; and she went
+up-stairs with me to say last words and give last commissions with her
+usual cheerfulness. Notwithstanding the relief which I had felt during
+the evening from her expressions of a moral and religious kind, I yet
+had a brooding fear of the effect of association with a mind so lively
+and so full of error as Remington's. What help or what sustaining power
+for her there might be in her husband I could not tell; but be it more
+or less, I feared she would not avail herself of it. Indeed, I feared
+that she was daily becoming more alienated from him, as she pursued
+onward and upward the bright mental track on which she had entered. And
+it was seeing that she had not yet begun to con the alphabet of true
+knowledge, that disturbed me most. If I could have seen her thoughtful
+for others, humble in her endeavor after duty, I should have hailed,
+rejoicingly, her intellectual illumination. As it was, I could not help
+saying to her, anxiously, before we went downstairs,--
+
+"I don't like Mr. Remington's notions at all, my dear!--I don't mean
+merely his theological notions, but his ideas of life and duty seem to
+me wrong and poor. You will forgive me, if I say, you cannot be too
+careful how you allow his views to act on your own sense of right and
+wrong."
+
+"What!--George? Oh, dear friend, it is only his nonsense! He will take
+any side for the time, only to hear himself talk. But he _is_ the best
+fellow that ever breathed. Oh, if you only knew his excellence as well
+as I do!"
+
+"My dear Lulu!" I expostulated, greatly pained to see her glowing face
+and the almost tearful sparkle of her eyes, as she defended her cousin,
+"your husband is a great deal the best guide for you,--in action, and I
+presume in opinion. At all events, you are safest under the shadow of
+his wing. There is the truest peace for a wife."
+
+Whether she guessed what was in my mind I don't know; I did not try much
+to conceal it. But she shook her curls away from her face as if
+irritated, and answered in a tone from which all the animation had been
+quenched,--
+
+"No. I have been a child. I am one no longer. Don't ask me to go back. I
+am a living, feeling, understanding woman! George himself allows it is
+perfectly shocking to be treated as I am,--a mere toy! a plaything!"
+
+George again! I could scarcely restrain my impatience. Yet how to make
+her understand?
+
+"Don't you see, Lulu, that George ought never to have dared to name the
+subject of your and your husband's differences? and do you not see that
+you can never discuss the subject with anybody with propriety? If,
+unhappily, all is not as you, as we, wish it, let us hope for the effect
+of time and right feeling in both; but don't, don't allow any gentleman
+to talk to you of your husband's treatment of you!"
+
+Lulu listened in quiet wonderment, while, with agitated voice and
+trembling mouth, I addressed her as I had never before done. I had
+constantly avoided speaking to her on the subject. She looked at me now
+with clear, innocent eyes, (I am so glad to remember them!) and placed
+her two hands affectionately on my shoulders.
+
+"I know what you mean,--and what you fear. That I shall say something,
+or do something undignified, or possibly wrong. But that, with God's
+help, I shall never do. Such happiness as I can procure, aside from my
+husband, and which I had a right to expect through him,--such enjoyment
+as comes from intellectual improvement and the exercise of my faculties,
+this is surely innocent pleasure, this I shall have. And George,--you
+must not blame him for being indignant, when he sees me treated so
+unworthily,--or for calling Lewis a Pacha, as he always does. You must
+think, my dear, that it isn't pleasant to be treated only like a
+Circassian slave, and that one may have something better to do in life
+than to twirl jewelled armlets, or to light my lord's _chibouk!_"
+
+She looked all radiant with scorn, as she said this,--her eyes flashing,
+and her very forehead crimson. I could see she was remembering long
+months and years in that moment of indignant anger. Seeing them with her
+eyes, I could not say she was unjust, or that her estrangement was
+unnatural.
+
+"Now, then, good friend, good bye! Don't look anxious. Don't fear for
+me. I am not happy, but I shall know how to keep myself from misery. You
+and your excellent husband have done more for me than you know or think;
+and I shall try to keep right."
+
+She left me with this, and we parted from both with a lingering sweet
+friendliness that dwells still in our memories.
+
+"It would be horrible to be on these terms, if she loved him," said the
+minister, that night, after I had told him of our parting interview.
+
+"Well, she don't, you see. Did she ever?"
+
+"With such mind and heart as she had, I suppose. On the other hand, what
+did he marry?"
+
+"Grace and beauty--and promise. Of course, like every man in love, he
+took everything good for granted."
+
+"The sweetest flower in my garden," said the minister, "should perfume
+no stranger's vase, however, nor dangle at a knave's button-hole."
+
+"Because you would watch it and care for it, water and train it, and
+make it doubly your own. But if you did neither?"
+
+"I should deserve my fate," said he, sorrowfully.
+
+
+XIV.
+
+The first letter we received from Mrs. Lewis was from the North of
+Scotland, where the party of three, increased to one much larger, were
+making the tour of the Hebrides. I cannot say much for either the
+penmanship or the orthography of the letter, which was incorrect as
+usual; but the abundant beauty of her descriptions, and the fine sense
+she seemed to have of lofty and wild scenery, made her journey a living
+picture. All her keen sense of external life was brought into activity,
+and she projected on the paper before her groups of people, or groups of
+mountains, with a vividness that showed she had only to transfer them
+from the retina: they had no need of any additional processes. She made
+no remarks on society, or inferences from what she saw in the present to
+what had been in the past or might be in the future. It was simply a
+power of representation, unequalled in its way, and yet more remarkable
+to us for what it failed of doing than for what it did.
+
+We could not but perceive two things. One, that she never spoke of
+home-ties, or children, or husband: not an allusion to either. The
+other, that every hill and every vale, the mounting mist and the resting
+shadow, all that gave life and beauty to her every-day pursuits, which
+seemed, indeed, all pictorial,--all these were informed and permeated,
+as it were, with one influence,--that of Remington. An uncomfortable
+sense of this made me say, as I finished the letter,--
+
+"I am sorry for the poor bird!"
+
+"So am I," answered the minister, with a clouded brow; "and the more, as
+I think I see the bird is limed."
+
+"How?" I said, with a sort of horrified retreat from the expressed
+thought, though the thought itself haunted me.
+
+My husband seemed thinking the matter over, as if to clear it in his own
+mind before he spoke again.
+
+"I suppose there is a moral disease, which, through its connection with
+a newly awakened and brilliant intellect, does not enervate the whole
+character. I mean that this connection of moral weakness with the
+intellect gives a fatal strength to the character,--do you take me?"
+
+"Yes, I think so," said I.
+
+"She is lofty, self-poised,--confident in what never yet supported any
+one. Pride of character does not keep us from falling. Humility would
+help us in that way. Unfortunately, that, too, is often bought dearly. I
+mean that this virtue of humbleness, which makes us tender of others and
+afraid for ourselves, is at the expense of sorrowful and humiliating
+experience."
+
+"You speak as if you feared more for her than I do," said I, struck by
+the foreboding look in his face.
+
+"You women judge only by your own hearts, or by solitary instances; and
+you forget the inevitable downward course of wrong tendencies. Besides,
+she has neither lofty principle nor a strong will. You will think I
+mistake here; but I don't mean she has not wilfulness enough. A strong
+will generally excludes wilfulness,--and the converse."
+
+This conversation made me nervous.
+
+I had such an intense anxiety for her now, that I could not avoid
+expressing it often and strongly in my letters to her. I wondered Lewis
+was not more open-eyed. I blamed him for letting her run on so
+heedlessly into habits which might compromise her reputation for dignity
+and discretion, if no worse. Then I would recall her manner the last
+evening she was with us, when, although her want of self-regulation was
+very apparent, not less so was the native nobleness and purity of her
+soul. I could not think of this "unsphered angel wofully astray" without
+inward tears that dimmed the vision of my foreboding heart.
+
+Could Lewis mistake her indifference? Could he avoid suffering from it?
+Could he, for a moment, accept her conventional expletives in place of
+the irrepressible and endearing tokens of a real love? Could he see what
+had weaned her from him, and was still, like a baleful star, wiling her
+farther and farther on its treacherously lighted path? Could he
+see,--feel?--had he a heart? These questions I incessantly asked myself.
+
+In the last days of summer we went with the children to Nantasket Beach.
+
+We had walked to a point of rocks at some distance from the bay, above
+which we lodged, and were sitting in the luxury of quiet companionship,
+gazing out on the water.
+
+The ineffable, still beauty of Nature, separated from the usual noises
+of actual life,--the brilliant effect of the long reaches of color from
+the plunging sun, as it dipped, and reappeared, and dipped again, as
+loath to leave its field of beauty,--then the still plash against the
+rocks, and the subsidence in murmurs of the retiring wave, with all its
+gathered treasure of pebbles and shells,--all these sounds and sights of
+reposeful life suggested unspeakable thoughts and memories that clung to
+silence. We had not been without so much sorrow in life as does not well
+afford to dwell on its own images; and we rose to retrace our steps to
+the measure of the eternal and significant psalm of the sea.
+
+As we turned away, we both perceived at once a sail in the distance,
+against the western sky. It had just rounded the nearest point and was
+coming slowly in with a gentle breeze, when it suddenly tacked and put
+out to sea again. It had come so near, however, that with our glass we
+saw that it was a small boat, holding two persons, and with a single
+sail.
+
+Immediately after, a dead calm succeeded the light wind which had before
+rippled the distant waves, and we watched the boat, lying as if asleep
+and floating lazily on the red water against the blazing sky,--or
+rather, itself like a cradle, so pavilioned was it with gorgeous
+cloud-curtains, and fit home for the two water-sprites lying in the
+slant sunbeams.
+
+Walking slowly borne, we felt the air to be full of oppressive languor,
+and turned now and then to see if the distant sail were yet lightened by
+the coming breeze. When we reached the inner bay, we mounted a rock,
+from which, with the lessened interval between us, I could distinctly
+see the boat. One of the occupants--a lady--wore a dark hat with a
+scarlet plume drooping from it. She leaned over the gunwale, dipping her
+hands in the blazing water and holding them up against the light, as if
+playing rainbows in the sunset. The other figure was busy in fastening
+up the sail, ready to catch the first breath of wind.
+
+As we stood looking, the water, which during the last few minutes had
+changed from flaming red to the many-colored hues of a dolphin's back,
+suddenly turned slate-colored, almost black. Then a low scud crept
+stealthily and quickly along the surface, bringing with it a steady
+breeze, for perhaps five minutes. We watched the little boat, as it
+yielded gracefully to the welcome impetus, and swept rapidly to the
+shore. Fearing, however, from the sudden change of weather, that it
+would soon rain, we cast a parting look at the boat, and started on a
+rapid walk to the house.
+
+This last glimpse of the boat showed us a tall figure standing upright
+against the mast, and fastening or holding something to it, while the
+lady still played with the water, bending her head so low that the red
+plume in her hat almost touched it. She seemed in a pleasant reverie,
+and rocked softly with the rocking waves. It was a peaceful
+picture,--the sail set, and full of heaven's breath, as it seemed.
+
+Before we could grasp anything,--even if there had been anything to
+grasp on the level sand,--we were both taken at once off our feet and
+thrown violently to the ground. I had felt the force of water before,
+but never that of wind, and had no idea of the utter helplessness of man
+or woman before a wind that is really in earnest. It was with a very
+novel sense of more than childish incapacity that I suffered the Dominie
+to gather up capes, canes, hats, and shawls, and, last of all, an
+astonished woman, and put them on their way homewards. However, long
+before we reached the house-door we were drenched to the skin. The rain
+poured in blinding sheets, and the thunder was like a hundred cannon
+about our ears. It was so sudden and so frightful to me that I had but
+one idea, that of getting into the piazza, where was comparative safety.
+Having reached it, we turned to face the elements. Nothing could be seen
+through the thick deluge. The ocean itself, tossing and tumbling in
+angry darkness, seemed fighting with the other ocean that poured from
+the black wall above, and all was one tumult of thunderous fury. This
+elemental war lasted but a short time, and gave place to a quiet as
+sudden as its angry burst. It was my first experience of a squall. It is
+always difficult for me to feel that a storm is a natural
+occurrence,--so that I have a great reverence for a Dominie who stands
+with head uncovered, with calm eyes, looking tranquilly out on the
+loudest tempest.
+
+"Beautiful! wonderful!" he murmured, as the lightning fiercely shot over
+us, and the roar died away in long billows of heavy sound.
+
+Afterwards he told me he had the same unbounded delight in a great storm
+as he had at the foot of Niagara, or in looking at the stars on a winter
+night: that it stirred in his soul all that was loftiest,--that for the
+time he could comprehend Deity, and that "the noise of the thundering of
+His waters" was an anthem that struck the highest chords of his nature.
+What is really sublime takes us out of ourselves, so that we have no
+room for personal terror, and we mingle with the elemental roar in
+spirit as with something kindred to us. I guessed this, and meditated on
+it, while I stopped my ears and shut my eyes and trembled with
+overwhelming terror myself. Clearly, I am a coward, in spite of my
+admiration of the sublime. The Dominie, being as good as he is great,
+does not require a woman to be sublime, luckily; and I think, as I like
+him all the better for his strength, he really does not object to a
+moderate amount of weakness on my part, which is unaffected and not to
+be helped. When animal magnetism becomes a science, it will be seen why
+some spirits revel and soar, and some cower and shrink, at the same
+amount of electricity. So the Dominie says now; and then--he said
+nothing.
+
+
+XV.
+
+In the fright, excitement, and thorough wetting, I forgot about the
+boat,--or rather, no misgiving seized me as to its safety. But, on
+coming to breakfast the next morning, we felt that there was a great
+commotion in the house. Everybody was out on the piazza, and a crowd was
+gathered a short distance off. Somebody had taken off the doors from the
+south entrance, and there was a sort of procession already formed on
+each side of these two doors. We went out in front of the house to
+listen to a rough fisherman who described the storm in which the little
+boat capsized. He had stood on the shore and just finished fastening his
+own boat, for he well knew the signs of the storm, when he caught sight
+of the little sail scudding with lightning-speed to the landing.
+Suddenly it stopped short, shook all over as if in an ague, and capsized
+in an instant. The storm broke, and although he tried to discern some
+traces of the boat or its occupants, nothing could be seen but the white
+foam on the black water, glistening like a shark's teeth when he has
+seized his prey. In the early morning he had found two bodies on the
+sand. The water, he said, must have tossed them with considerable
+force,--yet not against the rocks at all, for they were not disfigured,
+nor their clothing much torn. As the man ceased relating the story, the
+bodies were brought past us, covered by a piano-cloth which somebody had
+considerately snatched up and taken to the shore. They were placed in
+the long parlor on a table.
+
+My husband beckoned to me to come to him. Turning down the cloth, he
+showed me the faces I dreamily expected to see. I don't know when I
+thought of it, but suppose I recognized the air and movement so
+familiar, even in the distant dimness. No matter how clearly and fully
+death is expected, when it comes it is with a death-shock,--how much
+more, coming as this did, as if with a bolt from the clear sky!
+
+In their prime,--in their beauty,--in their pride of youth,--in their
+pleasure, they died. What was the strong man or the smiling woman,--what
+was the smooth sea, the shining sail,--what was strength, skill,
+loveliness, against the great and terrible wind of the Lord?
+
+So here they lay, white and quiet as sculptured stone, and as placid as
+if they had only fallen asleep in the midst of the tempestuous uproar.
+All the clamor and talking about the house had subsided in the real
+presence of death; and every one went lightly and softly around, as if
+afraid of wakening the sleepers.
+
+She had never looked so beautiful, even in her utmost pride of health
+and bloom. Her dark luxuriant hair lay in masses over brow and bosom,
+and her face expressed the unspeakable calm and perfect peace which are
+suggested only by the sleep of childhood. The long eyelashes seemed to
+say, in their close adherence to the cheek, how gladly they shut out the
+tumult of life; and the whole cast of the face was so elevated by death
+as to look rather angelic than mortal.
+
+His face was quiet, too,--the manliness and massive character of the
+features giving a majestic and severe cast to the whole countenance, far
+more elevated than it had while living.
+
+We could only weep over these relics. But where was the deepest mourner?
+No one had even seen these two before, or could give any account of
+them.
+
+On making stricter inquiry and looking at the books, we found that Mr.
+and Mrs. Lewis had arrived first. Mr. Lewis had taken his gun and a
+boat, and gone out at once to shoot. The lady had been in her room but a
+short time, when another gentleman arrived, wrote his name, and ordered
+a boat. She had scarcely seen any one, but the boatman saw her step into
+the boat, and described her dress.
+
+A message was at once sent to "the Glades," where Mr. Lewis had gone,
+and where he was detained, as we had supposed, by the storm. Before he
+reached the house, however, all necessary arrangements were completed
+for removing any associations of suffering. No confusion remained; the
+room was gently darkened, and the bodies, robed in white, lay in such
+peaceful silence as soothes and quiets the mourner.
+
+As the carriage drew up to the door, we both hastened to meet Mr. Lewis,
+to take him by the hand, and to lead him, by our evident sympathy, to
+accept his terrible affliction with something like composure. In our
+entire uncertainty as to his feelings, we could only weep silently, and
+hold his hands, which were as cold as death.
+
+He looked surprised a little at seeing us, but otherwise his face was
+like stone. His eyes,--they, too, looked stony, and as if all the
+expression and life were turned inward. Outwardly, there seemed hardly
+consciousness. He sat down between us, while we related all the
+particulars of the accident, which he seemed greedy to hear,--turning,
+as one ceased, to the other, with an eager, hungry look, most painful
+to witness. He made us describe, repeatedly, our last glimpse of the
+unconscious victims, and then, pressing our hands with a vice-cold grip,
+said, in a dry whisper,--
+
+"Where are they?"
+
+We led him to the door. He went in, and we softly closed it after him.
+As we went up-stairs to our own room we heard deep groans of anguish. We
+knew that his heart could not relieve itself by tears. My husband read
+the "prayer for persons in great affliction," and then we sat silently
+looking out on the peaceful sea. In the great stillness of the house, we
+heard the calm wave plash up on the smiling sands, and watched the
+silver specks in the distance as they hovered over the blue sea. So
+soft, so still, it had been the day before,--and where we now saw the
+placid wave we had seen it then. Yet there had two lives gone out, as
+suddenly as one quenches a lamp.
+
+Thinking, but not speaking, we waited. The report of a pistol in the
+house struck us to the heart. I believe we felt sure, both of us, of
+what it must be. He had loved her so much! And now we were sure, that in
+the tension of his grief, reason had given way. When we saw them next,
+there were three where two had been, in the marble calm of death.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FORMATION OF GLACIERS.
+
+
+The long summer was over. For ages a tropical climate had prevailed over
+a great part of the earth, and animals whose home is now beneath the
+Equator roamed over the world from the far South to the very borders of
+the Arctics. The gigantic quadrupeds, the Mastodons, Elephants, Tigers,
+Lions, Hyenas, Bears, whose remains are found in Europe from its
+southern promontories to the northernmost limits of Siberia and
+Scandinavia, and in America from the Southern States to Greenland and
+the Melville Islands, may indeed be said to have possessed the earth in
+those days. But their reign was over. A sudden intense winter, that was
+also to last for ages, fell upon our globe; it spread over the very
+countries where these tropical animals had their homes, and so suddenly
+did it come upon them that they were embalmed beneath masses of snow and
+ice, without time even for the decay which follows death. The Elephant
+whose story was told at length in the preceding article was by no means
+a solitary specimen; upon further investigation it was found that the
+disinterment of these large tropical animals in Northern Russia and Asia
+was no unusual occurrence. Indeed, their frequent discoveries of this
+kind had given rise among the ignorant inhabitants to the singular
+superstition already alluded to, that gigantic moles lived under the
+earth, which crumbled away and turned to dust as soon as they came to
+the upper air. This tradition, no doubt, arose from the fact, that, when
+in digging they came upon the bodies of these animals, they often found
+them perfectly preserved under the frozen ground, but the moment they
+were exposed to heat and light they decayed and fell to pieces at once.
+Admiral Wrangel, whose Arctic explorations have been so valuable to
+science, tells us that the remains of these animals are heaped up in
+such quantities in certain parts of Siberia that he and his men climbed
+over ridges and mounds consisting entirely of the bones of Elephants,
+Rhinoceroses, etc. From these facts it would seem that they roamed over
+all these northern regions in troops as large and numerous as the
+Buffalo herds that wander over our Western prairies now. We are
+indebted to Russian naturalists, and especially to Rathke, for the most
+minute investigations of these remains, in which even the texture of the
+hair, the skin, and flesh has been subjected by him to microscopic
+examination as accurate as if made upon any living animal.
+
+We have as yet no clue to the source of this great and sudden change of
+climate. Various suggestions have been made,--among others, that
+formerly the inclination of the earth's axis was greater, or that a
+submersion of the continents under water might have produced a decided
+increase of cold; but none of these explanations are satisfactory, and
+science has yet to find any cause which accounts for all the phenomena
+connected with it. It seems, however, unquestionable that since the
+opening of the Tertiary age a cosmic summer and winter have succeeded
+each other, during which a Tropical heat and an Arctic cold have
+alternately prevailed over a great portion of the globe. In the
+so-called drift (a superficial deposit subsequent to the Tertiaries, of
+the origin of which I shall speak presently) there are found far to the
+south of their present abode the remains of animals whose home now is in
+the Arctics or the coldest parts of the Temperate Zones. Among them are
+the Musk-Ox, the Reindeer, the Walrus, the Seal, and many kinds of
+Shells characteristic of the Arctic regions. The northernmost part of
+Norway and Sweden is at this day the southern limit of the Reindeer in
+Europe; but their fossil remains are found in large quantities in the
+drift about the neighborhood of Paris, where their presence would, of
+course, indicate a climate similar to the one now prevailing in Northern
+Scandinavia. Side by side with the remains of the Reindeer are found
+those of the European Marmot, whose present home is in the mountains,
+about six thousand feet above the level of the sea. The occurrence of
+these animals in the superficial deposits of the plains of Central
+Europe, one of which is now confined to the high North, and the other to
+mountain-heights, certainly indicates an entire change of climatic
+conditions since the time of their existence. European Shells now
+confined to the Northern Ocean are found as fossils in Italy,--showing,
+that, while the present Arctic climate prevailed in the Temperate Zone,
+that of the Temperate Zone extended much farther south to the regions we
+now call sub-tropical. In America there is abundant evidence of the same
+kind; throughout the recent marine deposits of the Temperate Zone,
+covering the low lands above tide-water on this continent, are found
+fossil Shells whose present home is on the shores of Greenland. It is
+not only in the Northern hemisphere that these remains occur, but in
+Africa and in South America, wherever there has been an opportunity for
+investigation, the drift is found to contain the traces of animals whose
+presence indicates a climate many degree colder than that now prevailing
+there.
+
+But these organic remains are not the only evidence of the geological
+winter. There are a number of phenomena indicating that during this
+period two vast caps of ice stretched from the Northern pole southward
+and from the Southern pole northward, extending in each case far toward
+the Equator,--and that ice-fields, such as now spread over the Arctics,
+covered a great part of the Temperate Zones, while the line of perpetual
+ice and snow in the tropical mountain-ranges descended far below its
+present limits. As the explanation of these facts has been drawn from
+the study of glacial action, I shall devote this and subsequent articles
+to some account of glaciers and of the phenomena connected with them.
+
+The first essential condition for the formation of glaciers in
+mountain-ranges is the shape of their valleys. Glaciers are by no means
+in proportion to the height and extent of mountains. There are many
+mountain-chains as high or higher than the Alps, which can boast of but
+few and small glaciers, if, indeed, they have any. In the Andes, the
+Rocky Mountains, the Pyrenees, the Caucasus, the few glaciers remaining
+from the great ice-period are insignificant in size. The volcanic,
+cone-like shape of the Andes gives, indeed, but little chance for the
+formation of glaciers, though their summits are capped with snow. The
+glaciers of the Rocky Mountains have been little explored, but it is
+known that they are by no means extensive. In the Pyrenees there is but
+one great glacier, though the height of these mountains is such, that,
+were the shape of their valleys favorable to the accumulation of snow,
+they might present beautiful glaciers. In the Tyrol, on the contrary, as
+well as in Norway and Sweden, we find glaciers almost as fine as those
+of Switzerland, in mountain-ranges much lower than either of the
+above-named chains. But they are of diversified forms, and have valleys
+widening upward on the slope of long crests. The glaciers on the
+Caucasus are very small in proportion to the height of the range; but on
+the northern side of the Himalaya there are large and beautiful ones,
+while the southern slope is almost destitute of them. Spitzbergen and
+Greenland are famous for their extensive glaciers, coming down to the
+sea-shore, where huge masses of ice, many hundred feet in thickness,
+break off and float away into the ocean as icebergs. At the Aletsch in
+Switzerland, where a little lake lies in a deep cup between the
+mountains, with the glacier coming down to its brink, we have these
+Arctic phenomena on a small scale; a miniature iceberg may often be seen
+to break off from the edge of the larger mass, and float out upon the
+surface of the water. Icebergs were first traced back to their true
+origin by the nature of the land-ice of which they are always composed,
+and which is quite distinct in structure and consistency from the marine
+ice produced by frozen sea-water, and called "ice-flow" by the Arctic
+explorers, as well as from the pond or river ice, resulting from the
+simple congelation of fresh water.
+
+Water is changed to ice at a certain temperature under the same law of
+crystallization by which any inorganic bodies in a fluid state may
+assume a solid condition, taking the shape of perfectly regular
+crystals, which combine at certain angles with mathematical precision.
+The frost does not form a solid, continuous sheet of ice over an expanse
+of water, but produces crystals, little ice-blades, as it were, which
+shoot into each other at angles of thirty or sixty degrees, forming the
+closest net-work. Of course, under the process of alternate freezing and
+thawing, these crystals lose their regularity, and soon become merged in
+each other. But even then a mass of ice is not continuous or compact
+throughout, for it is rendered completely porous by air-bubbles, the
+presence of which is easily explained. Ice being in a measure
+transparent to heat, the water below any frozen surface is nearly as
+susceptible to the elevation of the temperature without as if it were in
+immediate contact with it. Such changes of temperature produce
+air-bubbles, which float upward against the lower surface of the ice and
+are stranded there. At night there may come a severe frost; new ice is
+then formed below the air-bubbles, and they are thus caught and
+imprisoned, a layer of air-bubbles between two layers of ice, and this
+process may be continued until we have a succession of such parallel
+layers, forming a body of ice more or less permeated with air. These
+air-bubbles have the power also of extending their own area, and thus
+rendering the whole mass still more porous; for, since the ice offers
+little or no obstacle to the passage of heat, such an air-bubble may
+easily become heated during the day; the moment it reaches a temperature
+above thirty-two degrees, it melts the ice around it, thus clearing a
+little space for itself, and rises through the water produced by the
+action of its own warmth. The spaces so formed are so many vertical
+tubes in the ice, filled with water, and having an air-bubble at the
+upper extremity.
+
+Ice of this kind, resulting from the direct congelation of water, is
+easily recognized under all circumstances by its regular
+stratification, the alternate beds varying in thickness according to the
+intensity of the cold, and its continuance below the freezing-point
+during a longer or shorter period. Singly, these layers consist of
+irregular crystals confusedly blended together, as in large masses of
+crystalline rocks in which a crystalline structure prevails, though
+regular crystals occur but rarely. The appearance of stratification is
+the result of the circumstances under which the water congeals. The
+temperature varies much more rapidly in the atmosphere around the earth
+than in the waters upon its surface. When the atmosphere above any sheet
+of water sinks below the freezing-point, there stretches over its
+surface a stratum of cold air, determining by its intensity and duration
+the formation of the first stratum of ice. According to the alternations
+of temperature, this process goes on with varying activity until the
+sheet of ice is so thick that it becomes itself a shelter to the water
+below, and protects it, to a certain degree, from the cold without. Thus
+a given thickness of ice may cause a suspension of the freezing process,
+and the first ice-stratum may even be partially thawed before the cold
+is renewed with such intensity as to continue the thickening of the
+ice-sheet by the addition of fresh layers. The strata or beds of ice
+increase gradually in this manner, their separation being rendered still
+more distinct by the accumulation of air-bubbles, which, during a hot
+and clear day, may rise from a muddy bottom in great numbers. In
+consequence of these occasional collections of air-bubbles, the layers
+differ, not only in density and closeness, but also in color, the more
+compact strata being blue and transparent, while those containing a
+greater quantity of air-bubbles are opaque and whitish, like water
+beaten to froth.
+
+A cake of pond-ice, such as is daily left in summer at our doors, if
+held against the light and turned in different directions, will exhibit
+all these phenomena very distinctly, and we may learn still more of its
+structure by watching its gradual melting. The process of decomposition
+is as different in fresh-water ice and in land-or glacier-ice and that
+of their formation. Pond-ice, in contact with warm air, melts uniformly
+over its whole surface, the mass being thus gradually reduces from the
+exterior till it vanishes completely. If the process be slow, the
+temperature of the air-bubbles contained in it may be so raised as to
+form the vertical funnels or tubes alluded to above. By the anastomosing
+of these funnels, the whole mass may be reduced to a collection of
+angular pyramids, more or less closely united by cross-beams of ice, and
+it finally falls to pieces when the spaces in the interior have become
+for numerous as to render it completely cavernous. Such a breaking-up of
+ice is always caused by the enlargement of the open spaces produces by
+the elevated temperature of the air-bubbles, these spaces being
+necessarily more or less parallel with one another, and vertical in
+their position, owing to the natural tendency of the air-bubbles to work
+their way upward till they reach the surface, where they escape. A sheet
+of ice, of this kind, floating upon water, dissolves in the same manner,
+melting wholly from the surface, if the process be sufficiently rapid,
+or falling to pieces, if the air-bubbles are gradually raised in their
+temperature sufficiently to render the whole mass cavernous and
+incoherent. If we now compare these facts with what is known of the
+structure of land-ice, we shall see that the mode of formation in the
+two cases differs essentially.
+
+Land-ice, of which both the ice-fields of the Arctics and glaciers
+consist, is produced by the slow and gradual transformation of snow into
+ice; and though the ice thus formed may eventually be as clear and
+transparent as the purest pond- or river-ice, its structure is
+nevertheless entirely distinct. We may trace these different processes
+during any moderately cold winter in the ponds and snow-meadows
+immediately about us. We need not join an Arctic exploring expedition,
+nor even undertake a more tempting trip to the Alps, in order to
+investigate these phenomena for ourselves, if we have any curiosity to
+do so. The first warm day after a thick fall of light, dry snow, such as
+occurs in the coldest of our winter weather, is sufficient to melt its
+surface. As this snow is porous, the water readily penetrates it, having
+also a tendency to sink by its own weight, so that the whole mass
+becomes more or less filled with moisture in the course of the day.
+Daring the lower temperature of the night, however, the water is frozen
+again, and the snow is now filled with new ice-particles. Let this
+process be continued long enough, and the mass of snow is changed to a
+kind of ice-gravel, or, if the grains adhere together, to something like
+what we call pudding-stone, allowing, of course, for the difference of
+material; the snow, which has been rendered cohesive by the process of
+partial melting and regelation, holding the ice-globules together, just
+as the loose materials of the pudding-stone are held together by the
+cement which unites them.
+
+Within this mass, air is intercepted and held inclosed between the
+particles of ice. The process by which snow-flakes or snow-crystals are
+transformed into grains of ice, more or less compact, is easily
+understood. It is the result of a partial thawing, under a temperature
+maintained very nearly at thirty-two degrees, falling sometimes a little
+below, and then rising a little above the freezing-point, and thus
+producing constant alternations of freezing and thawing in the same mass
+of snow. This process amounts to a kind of kneading of the snow, and
+when combined with the cohesion among the particles more closely held
+together in one snow-flake, it produces granular ice. Of course, the
+change takes place gradually, and is unequal in its progress at
+different depths in the same bed of recently fallen snow. It depends
+greatly on the amount of moisture infiltrating the mass, whether derived
+from the melting of its own surface, or from the accumulation of dew or
+the falling of rain or mist upon it. The amount of water retained within
+the mass will also be greatly affected by the bottom on which it rests
+and by the state of the atmosphere. Under a certain temperature, the
+snow may only be glazed at the surface by the formation of a thin, icy
+crust, an outer membrane, as it were, protecting the mass below from a
+deeper transformation into ice; or it may be rapidly soaked throughout
+its whole bulk, the snow being thus changed into a kind of soft pulp,
+what we commonly call slosh, which, upon freezing, becomes at once
+compact ice; or, the water sinking rapidly, the lower layers only may be
+soaked, while the upper portion remains comparatively dry. But, under
+all these various circumstances, frost will transform the crystalline
+snow into more or less compact ice, the mass of which will be composed
+of an infinite number of aggregated snow-particles, very unequal in
+regularity of outline, and cemented by ice of another kind, derived from
+the freezing of the infiltrated moisture, the whole being interspersed
+with air. Let the temperature rise, and such a mass, rigid before, will
+resolve itself again into disconnected ice-particles, like grains more
+or less rounded. The process may be repeated till the whole mass is
+transformed into very compact, almost uniformly transparent and blue
+ice, broken only by the intervening air-bubbles. Such a mass of ice,
+when exposed to a temperature sufficiently high to dissolve it, does not
+melt from the surface and disappear by a gradual diminution of its bulk,
+like pond-ice, but crumbles into its original granular fragments, each
+one of which melts separately. This accounts for the sudden
+disappearance icebergs, which, instead of slowly dissolving into the
+ocean, are often seen to fall to pieces and vanish at once.
+
+Ice of this kind may be seen forming every winter on our sidewalks, on
+the edge of the little ditches which drain them, or on the summits of
+broad gateposts when capped with snow. Of such ice glaciers are
+composed; but, in the glacier, another element comes in which we have
+not considered as yet,--that of immense pressure in consequence of the
+vast accumulations of snow within circumscribed spaces. We see the same
+effects produced on a small scale, when snow is transformed into a
+snowball between the hands. Every boy who balls a mass of snow in his
+hands illustrates one side of glacial phenomena. Loose snow, light and
+porous, and pure white from the amount of air contained in it, is in
+this way presently converted into hard, compact, almost transparent ice.
+This change will take place sooner, if the snow be damp at first,--but
+if dry, the action of the hand will presently produce moisture enough to
+complete the process. In this case, mere pressure produces the same
+effect which, in the cases we have been considering above, was brought
+about by alternate thawing and freezing,--only that in the latter the
+ice is distinctly granular, instead of being uniform throughout, as when
+formed under pressure. In the glaciers we have the two processes
+combined. But the investigators of glacial phenomena have considered too
+exclusively one or the other: some of them attributing glacial motion
+wholly to the dilatation produced by the freezing of infiltrated
+moisture in the mass of snow; others accounting for it entirely by
+weight and pressure. There is yet a third class, who, disregarding the
+real properties of ice, would have us believe, that, because tar, for
+instance, is viscid when it moves, therefore ice is viscid because it
+moves. We shall see hereafter that the phenomena exhibited in the onward
+movement of glaciers are far more diversified than has generally been
+supposed.
+
+There is no chain of mountains in which the shape of the valleys is more
+favorable to the formation of glaciers than the Alps. Contracted at
+their lower extremity, these valleys widen upward, spreading into deep,
+broad, trough-like depressions. Take, for instance, the valley of
+Hassli, which is not more than half a mile wide where you enter it above
+Meyringen; it opens gradually upward, till, above the Grimsel, at the
+foot of the Finster-Aarhorn, it measures several miles across. These
+huge mountain-troughs form admirable cradles for the snow, which
+collects in immense quantities within them, and, as it moves slowly down
+from the upper ranges, is transformed into ice on its way, and compactly
+crowded into the narrower space below. At the lower extremity of the
+glacier the ice is pure, blue and transparent, but, as we ascend, it
+appears less compact, more porous and granular, assuming gradually the
+character of snow, till in the higher regions the snow is as light, as
+shifting, and incoherent, as the sand of the desert. A snow-storm on a
+mountain-summit is very different from a snow-storm on the plain, on
+account of the different degrees of moisture in the atmosphere. At great
+heights, there is never dampness enough to allow the fine snow-crystals
+to coalesce and form what are called "snow-flakes." I have even stood on
+the summit of the Jungfrau when a frozen cloud filled the air with
+ice-needles, while I could see the same cloud pouring down sheet of rain
+upon Lauterbrunnen below. I remember this spectacle as one of the most
+impressive I have witnessed in my long experience of Alpine scenery. The
+air immediately about me seemed filled with rainbow-dust, for the
+ice-needles glittered with a thousand hues under the decomposition of
+light upon them, while the dark storm in the valley below offered a
+strange contract to the brilliancy of the upper region in which I stood.
+One wonder where even so much vapor as may be transformed into the
+finest snow should come from at such heights. But the warm winds,
+creeping up the sides of the valleys, the walls of which become heated
+during the middle of the day, come laden with moisture which is changed
+to a dry snow like dust as soon as it comes into contact with the
+intense cold above.
+
+Currents of warm air affect the extent of the glaciers, and influence
+also the line of perpetual snow, which is by no means at the same level
+even in neighboring localities. The size of glaciers, of course,
+determines to a great degree the height at which they terminate, simply
+because a small mass of ice will melt more rapidly, and at a lower
+temperature, than a larger one. Thus, the small glaciers, such as those
+of the Rothhorn or of Trift, above the Grimsel, terminate at a
+considerable height above the plain, while the Mer de Glace, fed from
+the great snow-caldrons of Mont Blanc, forces its way down to the bottom
+of the valley of Chamouni, and the glacier of Grindelwald, constantly
+renewed from the deep reservoirs where the Jungfrau hoards her vast
+supplies of snow, descends to about four thousand feet above the
+sea-level. But the glacier of the Aar, though also very large, comes to
+a pause at about six thousand feet above the level of the sea; for the
+south wind from the other side of the Alps, the warm sirocco of Italy,
+blows across it, and it consequently melts at a higher level than either
+the Mer de Glace or the Grindelwald. It is a curious fact, that in the
+valley of Hassli the temperature frequently rises instead of falling as
+you ascend; at the Grimsel, the temperature is at times higher than at
+Meyringen below, where the warmer winds are not felt so directly. The
+glacier of Aletsch, on the southern slope of the Jungfrau, and into
+which many other glaciers enter, terminates also at a considerable
+height, because it turns into the valley of the Rhone, through which the
+southern winds blow constantly.
+
+Under ordinary conditions, vegetation fades in these mountains at the
+height of six thousand feet, but, in consequence of prevailing winds,
+and the sheltering influence of the mountain-walls, there is no
+uniformity in the limit of perpetual snow and ice. Where currents of
+warm air are very constant, glaciers do not occur at all, even where
+other circumstances are favorable to their formation. There are valleys
+in the Alps far above six thousand feet which have no glaciers, and
+where perpetual snow is seen only on their northern sides. These
+contrasts in temperature lead to the most wonderful contrasts in the
+aspect of the soil; summer and winter lie side by side, and bright
+flowers look out from the edge of snows that never melt. Where the warm
+winds prevail, there may be sheltered spots at a height of ten or eleven
+thousand feet, isolated nooks opening southward where the most exquisite
+flowers bloom in the midst of perpetual snow and ice; and occasionally I
+have seen a bright little flower with a cap of snow over it that seemed
+to be its shelter. The flowers give, indeed, a peculiar charm to these
+high Alpine regions. Occurring often in beds of the same kind, forming
+green, blue or yellow patches, they seem nestled close together in
+sheltered spots, or even in fissures and chasms of the rock, where they
+gather in dense quantities. Even in the sternest scenery of the Alps
+some sign of vegetation lingers; and I remember to have found a tuft of
+lichen growing on the only rock which pierced through the ice on the
+summit of the Jungfrau. The absolute solitude, the intense stillness of
+the upper Alps is most impressive; no cattle, no pasturage, no bird, nor
+any sound of life,--and, indeed, even if there were, the rarity of the
+air in these high regions is such that sound is hardly transmissible.
+The deep repose, the purity of aspect of every object, the snow, broken
+only by ridges of angular rocks, produce an effect no less beautiful
+than solemn. Sometimes, in the midst of the wide expanse, one comes upon
+a patch of the so-called red snow of the Alps. At a distance, one would
+say that such a spot marked some terrible scene of blood, but, as you
+come nearer, the hues are so tender and delicate, as they fade from deep
+red to rose, and so die into the pure colorless snow around, that the
+first impression is completely dispelled. This red snow is an organic
+growth, a plant springing up in such abundance that it colors extensive
+surfaces, just as the microscopic plants dye our pools with green in the
+spring. It is an _Alga_ well known in the Arctics, where it forms wide
+fields in the summer. With the above facts before us concerning the
+materials of which glaciers are composed, we may now proceed to
+consider their structure more fully in connection with their movements
+and the effects they produce on the surfaces over which they extend. It
+has already been stated that the ice of the glaciers has not the same
+appearance everywhere, but differs according to the level at which it
+stands. In consequence of this we distinguish three very distinct
+regions in these frozen fields, the uppermost of which, upon the sides
+of the steepest and highest slopes of the mountain-ridges, consists
+chiefly of layers of snow piled one above another by the successive
+snowfalls of the colder seasons, and which would remain in uniform
+superposition but for the change to which they are subjected in
+consequence of a gradual downward movement, causing the mass to descend
+by slow degrees, while new accumulations in the higher regions annually
+replace the snow which has been thus removed to an inferior level. We
+shall consider hereafter the process by which this change of position is
+brought about. For the present it is sufficient to state that such a
+transfer, by which a balance is preserved in the distribution of the
+snow, takes place in all glaciers, so that, instead of increasing
+indefinitely in the upper regions, where on account of the extreme cold
+there is little melting, they permanently preserve about the same
+thickness, being yearly reduced by their downward motion in a proportion
+equal to their annual increase by fresh additions of snow. Indeed, these
+reservoirs of snow maintain themselves at the same level, much as a
+stream, into which many rivulets empty, remains within its usual limits
+in consequence of the drainage of the average supply. Of course, very
+heavy rains or sudden thaws at certain seasons or in particular years
+may cause an occasional overflow of such a stream; and irregularities of
+the same kind are observed during certain years or at different periods
+of the same year in the accumulations of snow, in consequence of which
+the successive strata may vary in thickness. But in ordinary times
+layers from six to eight feet deep are regularly added annually to the
+accumulation of snow in the higher regions,--not taking into account, of
+course, the heavy drifts heaped up in particular localities, but
+estimating the uniform average increase over wide fields. This snow is
+gradually transformed into more or less compact ice, passing through an
+intermediate condition analogous to the slosh of our roads, and in that
+condition chiefly occupies the upper part of the extensive troughs into
+which these masses descend from the loftier heights. This region is
+called the region of the _neve_. It is properly the birthplace of the
+glaciers, for it is here that the transformation of the snow into ice
+begins. The _neve_ ice, though varying in the degree of its compactness
+and solidity, is always very porous and whitish in color, resembling
+somewhat frozen slosh, while lower down in the region of the glacier
+proper the ice is close, solid, transparent, and of a bluish tint.
+
+But besides the differences in solidity and in external appearance,
+there are also many other important changes taking place in the ice of
+these different regions, to which we shall return presently. Such
+modifications arise chiefly from the pressure to which it is subjected
+in its downward progress, and to the alterations, in consequence of this
+displacement, in the relative position of the snow- and ice-beds, as
+well as to the influence exerted by the form of the valleys themselves,
+not only upon the external aspect of the glaciers, but upon their
+internal structure also. The surface of a glacier varies greatly in
+character in these different regions. The uniform even surfaces of the
+upper snow-fields gradually pass into a more undulating outline, the
+pure white fields become strewn with dust and sand in the lower levels,
+while broken bits of stone and larger fragments of rock collect upon
+them, which assume a regular arrangement, and produce a variety of
+features most startling and incomprehensible at first sight, but more
+easily understood when studied in connection with the whole series of
+glacial phenomena. They are then seen to be the consequence of the
+general movement of the glacier, and of certain effects which the course
+of the seasons, the action of the sun, the rain, the reflected heat from
+the sides of the valley, or the disintegration of its rocky walls, may
+produce upon the surface of the ice. In the next article we shall
+consider in detail all these phenomena, and trace them in their natural
+connection. Once familiar with these facts, it will not be difficult
+correctly to appreciate the movement of the glacier and the cause of its
+inequalities. We shall see, that, in consequence of the greater or less
+rapidity in the movement of certain portions of the mass, its centre
+progressing faster than its sides, and the upper, middle, and lower
+regions of the same glacier advancing at different rates, the strata
+which in the higher ranges of the snow-fields were evenly spread over
+wide expanses, become bent and folded to such a degree that the
+primitive stratification is nearly obliterated, while the internal mass
+of the ice has also assumed new features under these new circumstances.
+There is, indeed, as much difference between the newly formed beds of
+snow in the upper region and the condition of the ice at the lower end
+of a glacier as between a recent deposit of coral sand or a mud-bed in
+an estuary and the metamorphic limestone or clay slate twisted and
+broken as they are seen in the very chains of mountains from which the
+glaciers descend. A geologist, familiar with all the changes to which a
+bed of rock may be subjected from the time it was deposited in
+horizontal layers up to the time when it was raised by Plutonic agencies
+along the sides of a mountain-ridge, bent and distorted in a thousand
+directions, broken through the thickness of its mass, and traversed by
+innumerable fissures which are themselves filled with new materials,
+will best be able to understand how the stratification of snow may be
+modified by pressure and displacement so as finally to appear like a
+laminated mass full of cracks and crevices, in which the original
+stratification is recognized only by the practical student. I trust in
+my next article I shall be able to explain intelligibly to my readers
+even these extreme alterations in the condition of the primitive snow of
+the Alpine summits.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TWO SCENES FROM THE LIFE OF BLONDEL.
+
+
+SCENE I.--_Near a Castle in Germany._
+
+ 'Twere no hard task, perchance, to win
+ The popular laurel for my song;
+ 'Twere only to comply with sin,
+ And own the crown, though snatched by wrong:
+ Rather Truth's chaplet let me wear,
+ Though sharp as death its thorns may sting;
+ Loyal to Loyalty, I bear
+ No badge but of my rightful king.
+
+ Patient by town and tower I wait,
+ Or o'er the blustering moorland go;
+ I buy no praise at cheaper rate,
+ Or what faint hearts may fancy so:
+ For me, no joy in lady's bower,
+ Or hall, or tourney, will I sing,
+ Till the slow stars wheel round the hour
+ That crowns my hero and my king.
+
+ While all the land runs red with strife,
+ And wealth is won by peddler-crimes,
+ Let who will find content in life
+ And tinkle in unmanly rhymes:
+ I wait and seek; through dark and light,
+ Safe in my heart my hope I bring,
+ Till I once more my faith may plight
+ To him my whole soul owns her king.
+
+ When power is filched by drone and dolt,
+ And, with caught breath and flashing eye,
+ Her knuckles whitening round the bolt,
+ Vengeance leans eager from the sky,--
+ While this and that the people guess,
+ And to the skirts of praters cling,
+ Who court the crowd they should compress,--
+ I turn in scorn to seek my king.
+
+ Shut in what tower of darkling chance
+ Or dungeon of a narrow doom,
+ Dream'st thou of battle-axe and lance
+ That for the cross make crashing room?
+ Come! with strained eyes the battle waits
+ In the wild van thy mace's swing;
+ While doubters parley with their fates,
+ Make thou thine own and ours, my king!
+
+ Oh, strong to keep upright the old,
+ And wise to buttress with the new,
+ Prudent, as only are the bold,
+ Clear-eyed, as only are the true,
+ To foes benign, to friendship stern,
+ Intent to imp Law's broken wing,--
+ Who would not die, if death might earn
+ The right to kiss thy hand, my king?
+
+
+SCENE II.--_An Inn near the Chateau of Chalus._
+
+ Well, the whole thing is over, and here I sit
+ With one arm in a sling and a milk-score of gashes,
+ And this flagon of Cyprus must e'en warm my wit,
+ Since what's left of youth's flame is a head flecked with ashes.
+ I remember I sat in this very same inn,--
+ I was young then, and one young man thought I was handsome,--
+ I had found out what prison King Richard was in,
+ And was spurring for England to push on the ransom.
+
+ How I scorned the dull souls that sat guzzling around,
+ And knew not my secret nor recked my derision!
+ Let the world sink or swim, John or Richard be crowned,
+ All one, so the beer-tax got lenient revision.
+ How little I dreamed, as I tramped up and down,
+ That granting our wish one of Fate's saddest jokes is!
+ I had mine with a vengeance,--my king got his crown,
+ And made his whole business to break other folks's.
+
+ I might as well join in the safe old _tum_, _tum_:
+ A hero's an excellent loadstar,--but, bless ye,
+ What infinite odds 'twixt a hero to come
+ And your only too palpable hero _in esse_!
+ Precisely the odds (such examples are rife)
+ 'Twixt the poem conceived and the rhyme we make show of,
+ 'Twixt the boy's morning dream and the wake-up of life,
+ 'Twixt the Blondel God meant and a Blondel I know of!
+
+ But the world's better off, I'm convinced of it now,
+ Than if heroes, like buns, could be bought for a penny,
+ To regard all mankind as their haltered milch-cow,
+ And just care for themselves. Well, God cares for the many;
+ And somehow the poor old Earth blunders along,
+ Each son of hers adding his mite of unfitness,
+ And, choosing the sure way of coming out wrong,
+ Gets to port, as the next generation will witness.
+
+ You think her old ribs have come all crashing through,
+ If a whisk of Fate's broom snap your cobweb asunder;
+ But her rivets were clinched by a wiser than you,
+ And our sins cannot push the Lord's right hand from under.
+ Better one honest man who can wait for God's mind,
+ In our poor shifting scene here, though heroes were plenty!
+ Better one bite, at forty, of truth's bitter rind
+ Than the hot wine that gushed from the vintage of twenty!
+
+ I see it all now: when I wanted a king,
+ 'Twas the kingship that failed in myself I was seeking,--
+ 'Tis so much less easy to do than to sing,
+ So much simpler to reign by a proxy than _be_ king!
+ Yes, I think I _do_ see: after all's said and sung,
+ Take this one rule of life and you never will rue it,--
+ 'Tis but do your own duty and hold your own tongue,
+ And Blondel were royal himself, if he knew it!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NIGHT AND MOONLIGHT.
+
+
+Chancing to take a memorable walk by moonlight some years ago, I
+resolved to take more such walks, and make acquaintance with another
+side of Nature. I have done so.
+
+According to Pliny, there is a stone in Arabia called Selenites,
+"wherein is a white, which increases and decreases with the moon." My
+journal for the last year or two has been _selenitic_ in this sense.
+
+Is not the midnight like Central Africa to most of us? Are we not
+tempted to explore it,--to penetrate to the shores of its Lake Tchad,
+and discover the source of its Nile, perchance the Mountains of the
+Moon? Who knows what fertility and beauty, moral and natural, are there
+to be found? In the Mountains of the Moon, in the Central Africa of the
+night, there is where all Niles have their hidden heads. The expeditions
+up the Nile as yet extend but to the Cataracts, or perchance to the
+mouth of the White Nile; but it is the Black Nile that concerns us.
+
+I shall be a benefactor, if I conquer some realms from the night,--if I
+report to the gazettes anything transpiring about us at that season
+worthy of their attention,--if I can show men that there is some beauty
+awake while they are asleep,--if I add to the domains of poetry.
+
+Night is certainly more novel and less profane than day. I soon
+discovered that I was acquainted only with its complexion; and as for
+the moon, I had seen her only as it were through a crevice in a shutter,
+occasionally. Why not walk a little way in her light?
+
+Suppose you attend to the suggestions which the moon makes for one
+month, commonly in vain, will it not be very different from anything in
+literature or religion? But why not study this Sanscrit? What if one
+moon has come and gone, with its world of poetry, its weird teachings,
+its oracular suggestions,--so divine a creature freighted with hints for
+me, and I have not used her,--one moon gone by unnoticed?
+
+I think it was Dr. Chalmers who said, criticizing Coleridge, that for
+his part he wanted ideas which he could see all round, and not such as
+he must look at away up in the heavens. Such a man, one would say, would
+never look at the moon, because she never turns her other side to us.
+The light which comes from ideas which have their orbit as distant from
+the earth, and which is no less cheering and enlightening to the
+benighted traveller than that of the moon and stars, is naturally
+reproached or nicknamed as moonshine by such. They are moonshine, are
+they? Well, then, do your night-travelling when there is no moon to
+light you; but I will be thankful for the light that reaches me from the
+star of least magnitude. Stars are lesser or greater only as they appear
+to us so. I will be thankful that I see so much as one side of a
+celestial idea, one side of the rainbow and the sunset sky.
+
+Men talk glibly enough about moonshine, as if they knew its qualities
+very well, and despised them,--as owls might talk of sunshine. None of
+your sunshine!--but this word commonly means merely something which they
+do not understand, which they are abed and asleep to, however much it
+may be worth their while to be up and awake to it.
+
+It must be allowed that the light of the moon, sufficient though it is
+for the pensive walker, and not disproportionate to the inner light we
+have, is very inferior in quality and intensity to that of the sun. But
+the moon is not to be judged alone by the quantity of light she sends to
+us, but also by her influence on the earth and its inhabitants. "The
+moon gravitates toward the earth, and the earth reciprocally toward the
+moon." The poet who walks by moonlight is conscious of a tide in his
+thought which is to be referred to lunar influence. I will endeavor to
+separate the tide in my thoughts from the current distractions of the
+day. I would warn my hearers that they must not try my thoughts by a
+daylight standard, but endeavor to realize that I speak out of the
+night. All depends on your point of view. In Drake's "Collection of
+Voyages," Wafer says of some Albinos among the Indians of Darien,--"They
+are quite white, but their whiteness is like that of a horse, quite
+different from the fair or pale European, as they have not the least
+tincture of a blush or sanguine complexion.... Their eyebrows are
+milk-white, as is likewise the hair of their heads, which is very
+fine.... They seldom go abroad in the daytime, the sun being
+disagreeable to them, and causing their eyes, which are weak and poring,
+to water, especially if it shines towards them; yet they see very well
+by moonlight, from which we call them mooneyed."
+
+Neither in our thoughts in these moonlight walks, methinks, is there
+"the least tincture of a blush or sanguine complexion," but we are
+intellectually and morally Albinos,--children of Endymion,--such is the
+effect of conversing much with the moon.
+
+I complain of Arctic voyages that they do not enough remind us of the
+constant peculiar dreariness of the scenery, and the perpetual twilight
+of the Arctic night. So he whose theme is moonlight, though he may find
+it difficult, must, as it were, illustrate it with the light of the moon
+alone.
+
+Many men walk by day; few walk by night. It is a very different season.
+Take a July night, for instance. About ten o'clock,--when man is asleep,
+and day fairly forgotten,--the beauty of moonlight is seen over lonely
+pastures where cattle are silently feeding. On all sides novelties
+present themselves. Instead of the sun, there are the moon and stars;
+instead of the wood-thrush, there is the whippoorwill; instead of
+butterflies in the meadows, fire-flies, winged sparks of fire!--who
+would have believed it? What kind of cool, deliberate life dwells in
+those dewy abodes associated with a spark of fire? So man has fire in
+his eyes, or blood, or brain. Instead of singing-birds, the
+half-throttled note of a cuckoo flying over, the croaking of frogs, and
+the intenser dream of crickets,--but above all, the wonderful trump of
+the bull-frog, ringing from Maine to Georgia. The potato-vines stand
+upright, the corn grows apace, the bushes loom, the grain-fields are
+boundless. On our open river-terraces, once cultivated by the Indian,
+they appear to occupy the ground like an army,--their heads nodding in
+the breeze. Small trees and shrubs are seen in the midst, overwhelmed as
+by an inundation. The shadows of rocks and trees and shrubs and hills
+are more conspicuous than the objects themselves. The slightest
+irregularities in the ground are revealed by the shadows, and what the
+feet find comparatively smooth appears rough and diversified in
+consequence. For the same reason the whole landscape is more variegated
+and picturesque than by day. The smallest recesses in the rocks are dim
+and cavernous; the ferns in the wood appear of tropical size. The
+sweet-fern and indigo in overgrown wood-paths wet you with dew up to
+your middle. The leaves of the shrub-oak are shining as if a liquid were
+flowing over them. The pools seen through the trees are as full of light
+as the sky. "The light of the day takes refuge in their bosoms," as the
+Purana says of the ocean. All white objects are more remarkable than by
+day. A distant cliff looks like a phosphorescent space on a hill-side.
+The woods are heavy and dark. Nature slumbers. You see the moonlight
+reflected from particular stumps in the recesses of the forest, as if
+she selected what to shine on. These small fractions of her light remind
+one of the plant called moon-seed,--as if the moon were sowing it in
+such places.
+
+In the night the eyes are partly closed, or retire into the head. Other
+senses take the lead. The walker is guided as well by the sense of
+smell. Every plant and field and forest emits its odor now,--swamp-pink
+in the meadow, and tansy in the road; and there is the peculiar dry
+scent of corn which has begun to show its tassels. The senses both of
+hearing and smelling are more alert. We hear the tinkling of rills which
+we never detected before. From time to time, high up on the sides of
+hills, you pass through a stratum of warm air: a blast which has come up
+from the sultry plains of noon. It tells of the day, of sunny noon-tide
+hours and banks, of the laborer wiping his brow and the bee humming amid
+flowers. It is an air in which work has been done,--which men have
+breathed. It circulates about from wood-side to hill-side, like a dog
+that has lost its master, now that the sun is gone. The rocks retain all
+night the warmth of the sun which they have absorbed. And so does the
+sand: if you dig a few inches into it, you find a warm bed.
+
+You lie on your back on a rock in a pasture on the top of some bare hill
+at midnight, and speculate on the height of the starry canopy. The stars
+are the jewels of the night, and perchance surpass anything which day
+has to show. A companion with whom I was sailing, one very windy, but
+bright moonlight night, when the stars were few and faint, thought that
+a man could get along with _them_, though he was considerably reduced in
+his circumstances,--that they were a kind of bread and cheese that never
+failed.
+
+No wonder that there have been astrologers,--that some have conceived
+that they were personally related to particular stars. Du Bartas, as
+translated by Sylvester, says he'll
+
+ "not believe that the Great Architect
+ With all these fires the heavenly arches decked
+ Only for shew, and with these glistering shields,
+ 'T awake poor shepherds, watching in the fields,"--
+
+he'll
+
+ "not believe that the least flower which pranks
+ Our garden-borders or our common banks,
+ And the least stone that in her warming lap
+ Our Mother Earth doth covetously wrap,
+ Hath some peculiar virtue of its own,
+ And that the glorious stars of heaven have none."
+
+And Sir Walter Raleigh well says, "The stars are instruments of far
+greater use than to give an obscure light, and for men to gaze on after
+sunset"; and he quotes Plotinus as affirming that they "are significant,
+but not efficient"; and also Augustine as saying, "_Deus regit inferiora
+corpora per superiora_": God rules the bodies below by those above. But
+best of all is this, which another writer has expressed: "_Sapiens
+adjuvabit opus astrorum quemadmodum agricola terrae naturam_": A wise man
+assisteth the work of the stars as the husbandman helpeth the nature of
+the soil.
+
+It does not concern men who are asleep in their beds, but it is very
+important to the traveller, whether the moon shines brightly or is
+obscured. It is not easy to realize the serene joy of all the earth,
+when she commences to shine unobstructedly, unless you have often been
+abroad alone in moonlight nights. She seems to be waging continual war
+with the clouds in your behalf. Yet we fancy the clouds to be _her_ foes
+also. She comes on magnifying her dangers by her light, revealing,
+displaying them in all their hugeness and blackness,--then suddenly
+casts them behind into the light concealed, and goes her way triumphant
+through a small space of clear sky.
+
+In short, the moon traversing, or appearing to traverse, the small
+clouds which lie in her way, now obscured by them, now easily
+dissipating and shining through them, makes the drama of the moonlight
+night to all watchers and night-travellers. Sailors speak of it as the
+moon eating up the clouds. The traveller all alone, the moon all alone,
+except for his sympathy, overcoming with incessant victory whole
+squadrons of clouds above the forests and lakes and hills. When she is
+obscured, he so sympathizes with her that he could whip a dog for her
+relief, as Indians do. When she enters on a clear field of great extent
+in the heavens, and shines unobstructedly, he is glad. And when she has
+fought her way through all the squadron of her foes, and rides majestic
+in a clear sky unscathed, and there are no more any obstructions in her
+path, he cheerfully and confidently pursues his way, and rejoices in his
+heart, and the cricket also seems to express joy in its song.
+
+How insupportable would be the days, if the night, with its dews and
+darkness, did not come to restore the drooping world! As the shades
+begin to gather around us, our primeval instincts are aroused, and we
+steal forth from our lairs, like the inhabitants of the jungle, in
+search of those silent and brooding thoughts which are the natural prey
+of the intellect.
+
+Richter says, that "the earth is every day overspread with the veil of
+night for the same reason as the cages of birds are darkened, namely,
+that we may the more readily apprehend the higher harmonies of thought
+in the hush and quiet of darkness. Thoughts which day turns into smoke
+and mist stand about us in the night as light and flames; even as the
+column which fluctuates above the crater of Vesuvius in the daytime
+appears a pillar of cloud, but by night a pillar of fire."
+
+There are nights in this climate of such serene and majestic beauty, so
+medicinal and fertilizing to the spirit, that methinks a sensitive
+nature would not devote them to oblivion, and perhaps there is no man
+but would be better and wiser for spending them out of doors, though he
+should sleep all the next day to pay for it, should sleep an Endymion
+sleep, as the ancients expressed it,--nights which warrant the Grecian
+epithet _ambrosial_, when, as in the land of Beulah, the atmosphere is
+charged with dewy fragrance, and with music, and we take our repose and
+have our dreams awake,--when the moon, not secondary to the sun,
+
+ "gives us his blaze again,
+ Void of its flame, and sheds a softer day.
+ Now through the passing cloud she seems to stoop,
+ Now up the pure cerulean rides sublime."
+
+Diana still hunts in the New-England sky.
+
+ "In heaven queen she is among the spheres;
+ She, mistress-like, makes all things to be pure;
+ Eternity in her oft change she bears;
+ She Beauty is; by her the fair endure.
+
+ "Time wears her not; she doth his chariot guide;
+ Mortality below her orb is placed;
+ By her the virtues of the stars down slide;
+ By her is Virtue's perfect image cast."
+
+The Hindoos compare the moon to a saintly being who has reached the last
+stage of bodily existence.
+
+Great restorer of antiquity, great enchanter! In a mild night, when the
+harvest or hunter's moon shines unobstructedly, the houses in our
+village, whatever architect they may have had by day, acknowledge only a
+master. The village street is then as wild as the forest. New and old
+things are confounded. I know not whether I am sitting on the ruins of a
+wall, or on the material which is to compose a new one. Nature is an
+instructed and impartial teacher, spreading no crude opinions, and
+flattering none; she will be neither radical nor conservative. Consider
+the moonlight, so civil, yet so savage!
+
+The light is more proportionate to our knowledge than that of day. It is
+no more dusky in ordinary nights than our mind's habitual atmosphere,
+and the moonlight is as bright as our most illuminated moments are.
+
+ "In such a night let me abroad remain
+ Till morning breaks, and all's confused again."
+
+Of what significance the light of day, if it is not the reflection of an
+inward dawn?--to what purpose is the veil of night withdrawn, if the
+morning reveals nothing to the soul? It is merely garish and glaring.
+
+When Ossian, in his address to the Sun, exclaims,--
+
+ "Where has darkness its dwelling?
+ Where is the cavernous home of the stars,
+ When thou quickly followest their steps,
+ Pursuing them like a hunter in the sky,--
+ Thou climbing the lofty hills,
+ They descending on barren mountains?"
+
+who does not in his thought accompany the stars to their "cavernous
+home," "descending" with them "on barren mountains"?
+
+Nevertheless, even by night the sky is blue and not black; for we see
+through the shadow of the earth into the distant atmosphere of day,
+where the sunbeams are revelling.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ANDANTE.
+
+BEETHOVEN'S SIXTH SYMPHONY.
+
+
+ Sounding above the warring of the years,
+ Over their stretch of toils and pains and fears,
+ Comes the well-loved refrain,
+ That ancient voice again.
+
+ Sweeter than when beside the river's marge
+ We lay and watched, like Innocence at large,
+ The changeful waters flow,
+ Speaks this brave music now.
+
+ Tender as sunlight upon childhood's head,
+ Serene as moonlight upon childhood's bed,
+ Comes the remembered power
+ Of that forgotten hour.
+
+ The little brook with merry voice and low,
+ The gentle ripples rippling far below,
+ Talked with no idle voice,
+ Though idling were their choice.
+
+ Now through the tumult and the pride of life,
+ Gentler, yet firmly soothing all its strife,
+ Nature draws near once more,
+ And knocks at the world's door.
+
+ She walks within her wild, harmonious maze,
+ Evolving melodies from doubt and haze,
+ And leaves us freed from care,
+ Like children standing there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BROTHERS.
+
+
+Doctor Franck came in as I sat sewing up the rents in an old shirt, that
+Tom might go tidily to his grave. New shirts were needed for the living,
+and there was no wife or mother to "dress him handsome when he went to
+meet the Lord," as one woman said, describing the fine funeral she had
+pinched herself to give her son.
+
+"Miss Dane, I'm in a quandary," began the Doctor, with that expression
+of countenance which says as plainly as words, "I want to ask a favor,
+but I wish you'd save me the trouble."
+
+"Can I help you out of it?"
+
+"Faith! I don't like to propose it, but you certainly can, if you
+please."
+
+"Then give it a name, I beg."
+
+"You see a Reb has just been brought in crazy with typhoid; a bad case
+every way; a drunken, rascally little captain somebody took the trouble
+to capture, but whom nobody wants to take the trouble to cure. The wards
+are full, the ladies worked to death, and willing to be for our own
+boys, but rather slow to risk their lives for a Reb. Now you've had the
+fever, you like queer patients, your mate will see to your ward for a
+while, and I will find you a good attendant. The fellow won't last long,
+I fancy; but he can't die without some sort of care, you know. I've put
+him in the fourth story of the west wing, away from the rest. It is
+airy, quiet, and comfortable there. I'm on that ward, and will do my
+best for you in every way. Now, then, will you go?"
+
+"Of course I will, out of perversity, if not common charity; for some of
+these people think that because I'm an abolitionist I am also a heathen,
+and I should rather like to show them, that, though I cannot quite love
+my enemies, I am willing to take care of them."
+
+"Very good; I thought you'd go; and speaking of abolition reminds me
+that you can have a contraband for servant, if you like. It is that fine
+mulatto fellow who was found burying his Rebel master after the fight,
+and, being badly cut over the head, our boys brought him along. Will you
+have him?"
+
+"By all means,--for I'll stand to my guns on that point, as on the
+other; these black boys are far more faithful and handy than some of the
+white scamps given me to serve, instead of being served by. But is this
+man well enough?"
+
+"Yes, for that sort of work, and I think you'll like him. He must have
+been a handsome fellow before he got his face slashed; not much darker
+than myself; his master's son, I dare say, and the white blood makes him
+rather high and haughty about some things. He was in a bad way when he
+came in, but vowed he'd die in the street rather than turn in with the
+black fellows below; so I put him up in the west wing, to be out of the
+way, and he's seen to the captain all the morning. "When can you go up?"
+
+"As soon as Tom is laid out, Skinner moved, Haywood washed, Marble
+dressed, Charley rubbed, Downs taken up, Upham laid down, and the whole
+forty fed."
+
+We both laughed, though the Doctor was on his way to the dead-house and
+I held a shroud on my lap. But in a hospital one learns that
+cheerfulness is one's salvation; for, in an atmosphere of suffering and
+death, heaviness of heart would soon paralyze usefulness of hand, if the
+blessed gift of smiles had been denied us.
+
+In an hour I took possession of my new charge, finding a
+dissipated-looking boy of nineteen or twenty raving in the solitary
+little room, with no one near him but the contraband in the room
+adjoining. Feeling decidedly more interest in the black man than in the
+white, yet remembering the Doctor's hint of his being "high and
+haughty," I glanced furtively at him as I scattered chloride of lime
+about the room to purify the air, and settled matters to suit myself. I
+had seen many contrabands, but never one so attractive as this. All
+colored men are called "boys," even if their heads are white; this boy
+was five-and-twenty at least, strong-limbed and manly, and had the look
+of one who never had been cowed by abuse or worn with oppressive labor.
+He sat on his bed doing nothing; no book, no pipe, no pen or paper
+anywhere appeared, yet anything less indolent or listless than his
+attitude and expression I never saw. Erect he sat, with a hand on either
+knee, and eyes fixed on the bare wall opposite, so rapt in some
+absorbing thought as to be unconscious of my presence, though the door
+stood wide open and my movements were by no means noiseless. His face
+was half averted, but I instantly approved the Doctor's taste, for the
+profile which I saw possessed all the attributes of comeliness belonging
+to his mixed race. He was more quadroon than mulatto, with Saxon
+features, Spanish complexion darkened by exposure, color in lips and
+cheek, waving hair, and an eye full of the passionate melancholy which
+in such men always seems to utter a mute protest against the broken law
+that doomed them at their birth. What could he be thinking of? The sick
+boy cursed and raved, I rustled to and fro, steps passed the door, bells
+rang, and the steady rumble of army-wagons came up from the street,
+still he never stirred. I had seen colored people in what they call "the
+black sulks," when, for days, they neither smiled nor spoke, and
+scarcely ate. But this was something more than that; for the man was not
+dully brooding over some small grievance; he seemed to see an
+all-absorbing fact or fancy recorded on the wall, which was a blank to
+me. I wondered if it were some deep wrong or sorrow, kept alive by
+memory and impotent regret; if he mourned for the dead master to whom he
+had been faithful to the end; or if the liberty now his were robbed of
+half its sweetness by the knowledge that some one near and dear to him
+still languished in the hell from which he had escaped. My heart quite
+warmed to him at that idea; I wanted to know and comfort him; and,
+following the impulse of the moment, I went in and touched him on the
+shoulder.
+
+In an instant the man vanished and the slave appeared. Freedom was too
+new a boon to have wrought its blessed changes yet, and as he started
+up, with his hand at his temple and an obsequious "Yes, Ma'am," any
+romance that had gathered round him fled away, leaving the saddest of
+all sad facts in living guise before me. Not only did the manhood seem
+to die out of him, but the comeliness that first attracted me; for, as
+he turned, I saw the ghastly wound that had laid open cheek and
+forehead. Being partly healed, it was no longer bandaged, but held
+together with strips of that transparent plaster which I never see
+without a shiver and swift recollections of the scenes with which it is
+associated in my mind. Part of his black hair had been shorn away, and
+one eye was nearly closed; pain so distorted, and the cruel sabre-cut so
+marred that portion of his face, that, when I saw it, I felt as if a
+fine medal had been suddenly reversed, showing me a far more striking
+type of human suffering and wrong than Michel Angelo's bronze prisoner.
+By one of those inexplicable processes that often teach us how little we
+understand ourselves, my purpose was suddenly changed, and though I went
+in to offer comfort as a friend, I merely gave an order as a mistress.
+
+"Will you open these windows? this man needs more air."
+
+He obeyed at once, and, as he slowly urged up the unruly sash, the
+handsome profile was again turned toward me, and again I was possessed
+by my first impression so strongly that I involuntarily said,--
+
+"Thank you, Sir."
+
+Perhaps it was fancy, but I thought that in the look of mingled surprise
+and something like reproach which he gave me there was also a trace of
+grateful pleasure. But he said, in that tone of spiritless humility
+these poor souls learn so soon,--
+
+"I a'n't a white man, Ma'am, I'm a contraband."
+
+"Yes, I know it; but a contraband is a free man, and I heartily
+congratulate you."
+
+He liked that; his face shone, he squared his shoulders, lifted his
+head, and looked me full in the eye with a brisk--
+
+"Thank ye, Ma'am; anything more to do fer yer?"
+
+"Doctor Franck thought you would help me with this man, as there are
+many patients and few nurses or attendants. Have you had the fever?"
+
+"No, Ma'am."
+
+"They should have thought of that when they put him here; wounds and
+fevers should not be together. I'll try to get you moved."
+
+He laughed a sudden laugh,--if he had been a white man, I should have
+called it scornful; as he was a few shades darker than myself, I suppose
+it must be considered an insolent, or at least an unmannerly one.
+
+"It don't matter, Ma'am. I'd rather be up here with the fever than down
+with those niggers; and there a'n't no other place fer me."
+
+Poor fellow! that was true. No ward in all the hospital would take him
+in to lie side by side with the most miserable white wreck there. Like
+the bat in AEsop's fable, he belonged to neither race; and the pride of
+one, the helplessness of the other, kept him hovering alone in the
+twilight a great sin has brought to overshadow the whole land.
+
+"You shall stay, then; for I would far rather have you than my lazy
+Jack. But are you well and strong enough?"
+
+"I guess I'll do, Ma'am."
+
+He spoke with a passive sort of acquiescence,--as if it did not much
+matter, if he were not able, and no one would particularly rejoice, if
+he were.
+
+"Yes, I think you will. By what name shall I call you?"
+
+"Bob, Ma'am."
+
+Every woman has her pet whim; one of mine was to teach the men
+self-respect by treating them respectfully. Tom, Dick, and Harry would
+pass, when lads rejoiced in those familiar abbreviations; but to address
+men often old enough to be my father in that style did not suit my
+old-fashioned ideas of propriety. This "Bob" would never do; I should
+have found it as easy to call the chaplain "Gus" as my tragical-looking
+contraband by a title so strongly associated with the tail of a kite.
+
+"What is your other name?" I asked. "I like to call my attendants by
+their last names rather than by their first."
+
+"I've got no other, Ma'am; we have our masters' names, or do without.
+Mine's dead, and I won't have anything of his about me."
+
+"Well, I'll call you Robert, then, and you may fill this pitcher for me,
+if you will be so kind."
+
+He went; but, through all the tame obedience years of servitude had
+taught him, I could see that the proud spirit his father gave him was
+not yet subdued, for the look and gesture with which he repudiated his
+master's name were a more effective declaration of independence than any
+Fourth-of-July orator could have prepared.
+
+We spent a curious week together. Robert seldom left his room, except
+upon my errands; and I was a prisoner all day, often all night, by the
+bedside of the Rebel. The fever burned itself rapidly away, for there
+seemed little vitality to feed it in the feeble frame of this old young
+man, whose life had been none of the most righteous, judging from the
+revelations made by his unconscious lips; since more than once Robert
+authoritatively silenced him, when my gentler hushings were of no avail,
+and blasphemous wanderings or ribald camp-songs made my cheeks burn and
+Robert's face assume an aspect of disgust. The captain was a gentleman
+in the world's eye, but the contraband was the gentleman in mine;--I was
+a fanatic, and that accounts for such depravity of taste, I hope. I
+never asked Robert of himself, feeling that somewhere there was a spot
+still too sore to bear the lightest touch; but, from his language,
+manner, and intelligence, I inferred that his color had procured for him
+the few advantages within the reach of a quick-witted, kindly treated
+slave. Silent, grave, and thoughtful, but most serviceable, was my
+contraband; glad of the books I brought him, faithful in the performance
+of the duties I assigned to him, grateful for the friendliness I could
+not but feel and show toward him. Often I longed to ask what purpose was
+so visibly altering his aspect with such daily deepening gloom. But I
+never dared, and no one else had either time or desire to pry into the
+past of this specimen of one branch of the chivalrous "F.F.Vs."
+
+On the seventh night, Dr. Franck suggested that it would be well for
+some one, besides the general watchman of the ward, to be with the
+captain, as it might be his last. Although the greater part of the two
+preceding nights had been spent there, of course I offered to
+remain,--for there is a strange fascination in these scenes, which
+renders one careless of fatigue and unconscious of fear until the crisis
+is passed.
+
+"Give him water as long as he can drink, and if he drops into a natural
+sleep, it may save him. I'll look in at midnight, when some change will
+probably take place. Nothing but sleep or a miracle will keep him now.
+Good night."
+
+Away went the Doctor; and, devouring a whole mouthful of gapes, I
+lowered the lamp, wet the captain's head, and sat down on a hard stool
+to begin my watch. The captain lay with his hot, haggard face turned
+toward me, filling the air with his poisonous breath, and feebly
+muttering, with lips and tongue so parched that the sanest speech would
+have been difficult to understand. Robert was stretched on his bed in
+the inner room, the door of which stood ajar, that a fresh draught from
+his open window might carry the fever-fumes away through mine. I could
+just see a long, dark figure, with the lighter outline of a face, and,
+having little else to do just then, I fell to thinking of this curious
+contraband, who evidently prized his freedom highly, yet seemed in no
+haste to enjoy it. Doctor Franck had offered to send him on to safer
+quarters, but he had said, "No, thank yer, Sir, not yet," and then had
+gone away to fall into one of those black moods of his, which began to
+disturb me, because I had no power to lighten them. As I sat listening
+to the clocks from the steeples all about us, I amused myself with
+planning Robert's future, as I often did my own, and had dealt out to
+him a generous hand of trumps wherewith to play this game of life which
+hitherto had gone so cruelly against him, when a harsh, choked voice
+called,--
+
+"Lucy!"
+
+It was the captain, and some new terror seemed to have gifted him with
+momentary strength.
+
+"Yes, here's Lucy," I answered, hoping that by following the fancy I
+might quiet him,--for his face was damp with the clammy moisture, and
+his frame shaken with the nervous tremor that so often precedes death.
+His dull eye fixed upon me, dilating with a bewildered look of
+incredulity and wrath, till he broke out fiercely,--
+
+"That's a lie! she's dead,--and so's Bob, damn him!"
+
+Finding speech a failure, I began to sing the quiet tune that had often
+soothed delirium like this; but hardly had the line,
+
+ "See gentle patience smile on pain,"
+
+passed my lips, when he clutched me by the wrist, whispering like one in
+mortal fear,--
+
+"Hush! she used to sing that way to Bob, but she never would to me. I
+swore I'd whip the Devil out of her, and I did; but you know before she
+cut her throat she said she'd haunt me, and there she is!"
+
+He pointed behind me with an aspect of such pale dismay, that I
+involuntarily glanced over my shoulder and started as if I had seen a
+veritable ghost; for, peering from the gloom of that inner room, I saw a
+shadowy face, with dark hair all about it, and a glimpse of scarlet at
+the throat. An instant showed me that it was only Robert leaning from
+his bed's-foot, wrapped in a gray army-blanket, with his red shirt just
+visible above it, and his long hair disordered by sleep. But what a
+strange expression was on his face! The unmarred side was toward me,
+fixed and motionless as when I first observed it,--less absorbed now,
+but more intent. His eye glittered, his lips were apart like one who
+listened with every sense, and his whole aspect reminded me of a hound
+to which some wind had brought the scent of unsuspected prey.
+
+"Do you know him, Robert? Does he mean you?"
+
+"Lord, no, Ma'am; they all own half a dozen Bobs: but hearin' my name
+woke me; that's all."
+
+He spoke quite naturally, and lay down again, while I returned to my
+charge, thinking that this paroxysm was probably his last. But by
+another hour I perceived a hopeful change, for the tremor had subsided,
+the cold dew was gone, his breathing was more regular, and Sleep, the
+healer, had descended to save or take him gently away. Doctor Franck
+looked in at midnight, bade me keep all cool and quiet, and not fail to
+administer a certain draught as soon as the captain woke. Very much
+relieved, I laid my head on my arms, uncomfortably folded on the little
+table, and fancied I was about to perform one of the feats which
+practice renders possible,--"sleeping with one eye open," as we say: a
+half-and-half doze, for all senses sleep but that of hearing; the
+faintest murmur, sigh, or motion will break it, and give one back one's
+wits much brightened by the brief permission to "stand at ease." On this
+night, the experiment was a failure, for previous vigils, confinement,
+and much care had rendered naps a dangerous indulgence. Having roused
+half a dozen times in an hour to find all quiet, I dropped my heavy head
+on my arms, and, drowsily resolving to look up again in fifteen minutes,
+fell fast asleep.
+
+The striking of a deep-voiced clock woke me with a start. "That is one,"
+thought I, but, to my dismay, two more strokes followed; and in
+remorseful haste I sprang up to see what harm my long oblivion had done.
+A strong hand put me back into my seat, and held me there. It was
+Robert. The instant my eye met his my heart began to beat, and all along
+my nerves tingled that electric flash which foretells a danger that we
+cannot see. He was very pale, his mouth grim, and both eyes full of
+sombre fire,--for even the wounded one was open now, all the more
+sinister for the deep scar above and below. But his touch was steady,
+his voice quiet, as he said,--
+
+"Sit still, Ma'am; I won't hurt yer, nor even scare yer, if I can help
+it, but yer waked too soon."
+
+"Let me go, Robert,--the, captain is stirring,--I must give him
+something."
+
+"No, Ma'am, yer can't stir an inch. Look here!"
+
+Holding me with one hand, with the other he took up the glass in which I
+had left the draught, and showed me it was empty.
+
+"Has he taken it?" I asked, more and more bewildered.
+
+"I flung it out o' winder, Ma'am; he'll have to do without."
+
+"But why, Robert? why did you do it?"
+
+"Because I hate him!"
+
+Impossible to doubt the truth of that; his whole face showed it, as he
+spoke through his set teeth, and launched a fiery glance at the
+unconscious captain. I could only hold my breath and stare blankly at
+him, wondering what mad act was coming next. I suppose I shook and
+turned white, as women have a foolish habit of doing when sudden danger
+daunts them; for Robert released my arm, sat down upon the bedside just
+in front of me, and said, with the ominous quietude that made me cold to
+see and hear,--
+
+"Don't yer be frightened, Ma'am: don't try to run away, fer the door's
+locked an' the key in my pocket; don't yer cry out, fer yer'd have to
+scream a long while, with my hand on yer mouth, before yer was heard.
+Be still, an' I'll tell yer what I'm goin' to do."
+
+"Lord help us! he has taken the fever in some sudden, violent way, and
+is out of his head. I must humor him till some one comes"; in pursuance
+of which swift determination, I tried to say, quite composedly,--
+
+"I will be still and hear you; but open the window. Why did you shut
+it?"
+
+"I'm sorry I can't do it, Ma'am; but yer'd jump out, or call, if I did,
+an' I'm not ready yet. I shut it to make yer sleep, an' heat would do it
+quicker 'n anything else I could do."
+
+The captain moved, and feebly muttered, "Water!" Instinctively I rose,
+to give it to him, but the heavy hand came down upon my shoulder, and in
+the same decided tone Robert said,--
+
+"The water went with the physic; let him call."
+
+"Do let me go to him! he'll die without care!"
+
+"I mean he shall;--don't yer interfere, if yer please, Ma'am."
+
+In spite of his quiet tone and respectful manner, I saw murder in his
+eyes, and turned faint with fear; yet the fear excited me, and, hardly
+knowing what I did, I seized the hands that had seized me, crying,--
+
+"No, no, you shall not kill him! it is base to hurt a helpless man. Why
+do you hate him? He is not your master?"
+
+"He's my brother."
+
+I felt that answer from head to foot, and seemed to fathom what was
+coming, with a prescience vague, but unmistakable. One appeal was left
+to me, and I made it.
+
+"Robert, tell me what it means? Do not commit a crime and make me
+accessory to it. There is a better way of righting wrong than by
+violence;--let me help you find it."
+
+My voice trembled as I spoke, and I heard the frightened flutter of my
+heart; so did he, and if any little act of mine had ever won affection
+or respect from him, the memory of it served me then. He looked down,
+and seemed to put some question to himself; whatever it was, the answer
+was in my favor, for when his eyes rose again, they were gloomy, but not
+desperate.
+
+"I _will_ tell you, Ma'am; but mind, this makes no difference; the boy
+is mine. I'll give the Lord a chance to take him fust; if He don't, I
+shall."
+
+"Oh, no! remember, he is your brother."
+
+An unwise speech; I felt it as it passed my lips, for a black frown
+gathered on Robert's face, and his strong hands closed with an ugly sort
+of grip. But he did not touch the poor soul gasping there behind him,
+and seemed content to let the slow suffocation of that stifling room end
+his frail life.
+
+"I'm not like to forget that, Ma'am, when I've been thinkin' of it all
+this week. I knew him when they fetched him in, an' would 'a' done it
+long 'fore this, but I wanted to ask where Lucy was; he knows,--he told
+to-night--an' now he's done for."
+
+"Who is Lucy?" I asked hurriedly, intent on keeping his mind busy with
+any thought but murder.
+
+With one of the swift transitions of a mixed temperament like this, at
+my question Robert's deep eyes filled, the clenched hands were spread
+before his face, and all I heard were the broken words,--
+
+"My wife,--he took her"--
+
+In that instant every thought of fear was swallowed up in burning
+indignation for the wrong, and a perfect passion of pity for the
+desperate man so tempted to avenge an injury for which there seemed no
+redress but this. He was no longer slave or contraband, no drop of black
+blood marred him in my sight, but an infinite compassion yearned to
+save, to help, to comfort him. Words seemed so powerless I offered none,
+only put my hand on his poor head, wounded, homeless, bowed down with
+grief for which I had no cure, and softly smoothed the long neglected
+hair, pitifully wondering the while where was the wife who must have
+loved this tender-hearted man so well.
+
+The captain moaned again, and faintly whispered, "Air!" but I never
+stirred. God forgive me! just then I hated him as only a woman thinking
+of a sister woman's wrong could hate. Robert looked up; his eyes were
+dry again, his mouth grim. I saw that, said, "Tell me more," and he
+did,--for sympathy is a gift the poorest may give, the proudest stoop to
+receive.
+
+"Yer see, Ma'am, his father,--I might say ours, if I warn't ashamed of
+both of 'em,--his father died two years ago, an' left us all to Marster
+Ned,--that's him here, eighteen then. He always hated me, I looked so
+like old Marster: he don't,--only the light skin an' hair. Old Marster
+was kind to all of us, me 'specially, an' bought Lucy off the next
+plantation down there in South Car'lina, when he found I liked her. I
+married her, all I could, Ma'am; it warn't much, but we was true to one
+another till Marster Ned come home a year after an' made hell fur both
+of us. He sent my old mother to be used up in his rice-swamp in Georgy;
+he found me with my pretty Lucy, an' though young Miss cried, an' I
+prayed to him on my knees, an' Lucy run away, he wouldn't have no mercy;
+he brought her back, an'--took her, Ma'am."
+
+"Oh! what did you do?" I cried, hot with helpless pain and passion.
+
+How the man's outraged heart sent the blood flaming up into his face and
+deepened the tones of his impetuous voice, as he stretched his arm
+across the bed, saying, with a terribly expressive gesture,--
+
+"I half murdered him, an' to-night I'll finish."
+
+"Yes, yes,--but go on now; what came next?"
+
+He gave me a look that showed no white man could have felt a deeper
+degradation in remembering and confining these last acts of brotherly
+oppression.
+
+"They whipped me till I couldn't stand, an' then they sold me further
+South. Yer thought I was a white man once;--look here!"
+
+With a sudden wrench he tore the shirt from neck to waist, and on his
+strong brown shoulders showed me furrows deeply ploughed, wounds which,
+though healed, were ghastlier to me than any in that house. I could not
+speak to him, and, with the pathetic dignity a great grief lends the
+humblest sufferer, he ended his brief tragedy by simply saying,--
+
+"That's all, Ma'am. I've never seen her since, an' now I never shall in
+this world,--maybe not in t' other."
+
+"But, Robert, why think her dead? The captain was wandering when he said
+those sad things; perhaps he will retract them when he is sane. Don't
+despair; don't give up yet."
+
+"No, Ma'am, I guess he's right; she was too proud to bear that long.
+It's like her to kill herself. I told her to, if there was no other way;
+an' she always minded me, Lucy did. My poor girl! Oh, it warn't right!
+No, by God, it warn't!"
+
+As the memory of this bitter wrong, this double bereavement, burned in
+his sore heart, the devil that lurks in every strong man's blood leaped
+up; he put his hand upon his brother's throat, and, watching the white
+face before him, muttered low between his teeth,--
+
+"I'm lettin' him go too easy; there's no pain in this; we a'n't even
+yet. I wish he knew me. Marster Ned! it's Bob; where's Lucy?"
+
+From the captain's lips there came a long faint sigh, and nothing but a
+flutter of the eyelids showed that he still lived. A strange stillness
+filled the room as the elder brother held the younger's life suspended
+in his hand, while wavering between a dim hope and a deadly hate. In the
+whirl of thoughts that went on in my brain, only one was clear enough to
+act upon. I must prevent murder, if I could,--but how? What could I do
+up there alone, locked in with a dying man and a lunatic?--for any mind
+yielded utterly to any unrighteous impulse is mad while the impulse
+rules it. Strength I had not, nor much courage, neither time nor wit for
+stratagem, and chance only could bring me help before it was too late.
+But one weapon I possessed,--a tongue,--often a woman's best defence;
+and sympathy, stronger than fear, gave me power to use it. What I said
+Heaven only knows, but surely Heaven helped me; words burned on my lips,
+tears streamed from my eyes, and some good angel prompted me to use the
+one name that had power to arrest my hearer's hand and touch his heart.
+For at that moment I heartily believed that Lucy lived, and this earnest
+faith rousted in him a like belief.
+
+He listened with the lowering look of one in whom brute instinct was
+sovereign for the time,--a look that makes the noblest countenance base.
+He was but a man,--a poor, untaught, outcast, outraged man. Life had few
+joys for him; the world offered him no honors, no success, no home, no
+love. What future would this crime mar? and why should he deny himself
+that sweet, yet bitter morsel called revenge? How many white men, with
+all New England's freedom, culture, Christianity, would not have felt as
+he felt then? Should I have reproached him for a human anguish, a human
+longing for redress, all now left him from the ruin of his few poor
+hopes? Who had taught him that self-control, self-sacrifice, are
+attributes that make men masters of the earth and lift them nearer
+heaven? Should I have urged the beauty of forgiveness, the duty of
+devout submission? He had no religion, for he was no saintly "Uncle
+Tom," and Slavery's black shadow seemed to darken all the world to him
+and shut out God. Should I have warned him of penalties, of judgments,
+and the potency of law? What did he know of justice, or the mercy that
+should temper that stern virtue, when every law, human and divine, had
+been broken on his hearthstone? Should I have tried to touch him by
+appeals to filial duty, to brotherly love? How had his appeals been
+answered? What memories had father and brother stored up in his heart to
+plead for either now? No,--all these influences, these associations,
+would have proved worse than useless, had I been calm enough to try
+them. I was not; but instinct, subtler than reason, showed me the one
+safe clue by which to lead this troubled soul from the labyrinth in
+which it groped and nearly fell. When I paused, breathless, Robert
+turned to me, asking, as if human assurances could strengthen his faith
+in Divine Omnipotence,--
+
+"Do you believe, if I let Marster Ned live, the Lord will give me back
+my Lucy?"
+
+"As surely as there is a Lord, you will find her here or in the
+beautiful hereafter, where there is no black or white, no master and no
+slave."
+
+He took his hand from his brother's throat, lifted his eyes from my face
+to the wintry sky beyond, as if searching for that blessed country,
+happier even than the happy North. Alas, it was the darkest hour before
+the dawn!--there was no star above, no light below but the pale glimmer
+of the lamp that showed the brother who had made him desolate. Like a
+blind man who believes there is a sun, yet cannot see it, he shook his
+head, let his arms drop nervelessly upon his knees, and sat there dumbly
+asking that question which many a soul whose faith is firmer fixed than
+his has asked in hours less dark than this,--"Where is God?" I saw the
+tide had turned, and strenuously tried to keep this rudderless life-boat
+from slipping back into the whirlpool wherein it had been so nearly
+lost.
+
+"I have listened to you, Robert; now hear me, and heed what I say,
+because my heart is full of pity for you, full of hope for your future,
+and a desire to help you now. I want you to go away from here, from the
+temptation of this place, and the sad thoughts that haunt it. You have
+conquered yourself once, and I honor you for it, because, the harder the
+battle, the more glorious the victory; but it is safer to put a greater
+distance between you and this man. I will write you letters, give you
+money, and send you to good old Massachusetts to begin your new life a
+freeman,--yes, and a happy man; for when the captain is himself again, I
+will learn where Lucy is, and move heaven and earth to find and give her
+back to you. Will you do this, Robert?"
+
+Slowly, very slowly, the answer came; for the purpose of a week, perhaps
+a year, was hard to relinquish in an hour.
+
+"Yes, Ma'am, I will."
+
+"Good! Now you are the man I thought you, and I'll work for you with all
+my heart. You need sleep, my poor fellow; go, and try to forget. The
+captain is still alive, and as yet you are spared that sin. No, don't
+look there; I'll care for him. Come, Robert, for Lucy's sake."
+
+Thank Heaven for the immortality of love! for when all other means of
+salvation failed, a spark of this vital fire softened the man's iron
+will until a woman's hand could bend it. He let me take from him the
+key, let me draw him gently away and lead him to the solitude which now
+was the most healing balm I could bestow. Once in his little room, he
+fell down on his bed and lay there as if spent with the sharpest
+conflict of his life. I slipped the bolt across his door, and unlocked
+my own, flung up the window, steadied myself with a breath of air, then
+rushed to Doctor Franck. He came; and till dawn we worked together,
+saving one brother's life, and taking earnest thought how best to secure
+the other's liberty. When the sun came up as blithely as if it shone
+only upon happy homes, the Doctor went to Robert. For an hour I heard
+the murmur of their voices; once I caught the sound of heavy sobs, and
+for a time a reverent hush, as if in the silence that good man were
+ministering to soul as well as sense. When he departed he took Robert
+with him, pausing to tell me he should get him off as soon as possible,
+but not before we met again.
+
+Nothing more was seen of them all day; another surgeon came to see the
+captain, and another attendant came to fill the empty place. I tried to
+rest, but could not, with the thought of poor Lucy tugging at my heart,
+and was soon back at my post again, anxiously hoping that my contraband
+had not been too hastily spirited away. Just as night fell there came a
+tap, and opening, I saw Robert literally "clothed and in his right
+mind." The Doctor had replaced the ragged suit with tidy garments, and
+no trace of that tempestuous night remained but deeper lines upon the
+forehead and the docile look of a repentant child. He did not cross the
+threshold, did not offer me his hand,--only took off his cap, saying,
+with a traitorous falter in his voice,--
+
+"God bless you, Ma'am! I'm goin'."
+
+I put out both my hands, and held his fast.
+
+"Good bye, Robert! Keep up good heart, and when I come home to
+Massachusetts we'll meet in a happier place than this. Are you quite
+ready, quite comfortable for your journey?"
+
+"Yes, Ma'am, yes; the Doctor's fixed everything; I'm goin' with a friend
+of his; my papers are all right, an' I'm as happy as I can be till I
+find"--
+
+He stopped there; then went on, with a glance into the room,--
+
+"I'm glad I didn't do it, an' I thank yer, Ma'am, fer hinderin'
+me,--thank yer hearty; but I'm afraid I hate him jest the same."
+
+Of course he did; and so did I; for these faulty hearts of ours cannot
+turn perfect in a night, but need frost and fire, wind and rain, to
+ripen and make them ready for the great harvest-home. Wishing to divert
+his mind, I put my poor mite into his hand, and, remembering the magic
+of a certain little book, I gave him mine, on whose dark cover whitely
+shone the Virgin Mother and the Child, the grand history of whose life
+the book contained. The money went into Robert's pocket with a grateful
+murmur, the book into his bosom with a long look and a tremulous--
+
+"I never saw _my_ baby, Ma'am."
+
+I broke down then; and though my eyes were too dim to see, I felt the
+touch of lips upon my hands, heard the sound of departing feet, and knew
+my contraband was gone.
+
+When one feels an intense dislike, the less one says about the subject
+of it the better; therefore I shall merely record that the captain
+lived,--in time was exchanged; and that, whoever the other party was, I
+am convinced the Government got the best of the bargain. But long before
+this occurred, I had fulfilled my promise to Robert; for as soon as my
+patient recovered strength of memory enough to make his answer
+trustworthy, I asked, without any circumlocution,--
+
+"Captain Fairfax, where is Lucy?"
+
+And too feeble to be angry, surprised, or insincere, he straightway
+answered,--
+
+"Dead, Miss Dane."
+
+"And she killed herself, when you sold Bob?"
+
+"How the Devil did you know that?" he muttered, with an expression
+half-remorseful, half-amazed; but I was satisfied, and said no more.
+
+Of course, this went to Robert, waiting far away there in a lonely
+home,--waiting, working, hoping for his Lucy. It almost broke my heart
+to do it; but delay was weak, deceit was wicked; so I sent the heavy
+tidings, and very soon the answer came,--only three lines; but I felt
+that the sustaining power of the man's life was gone.
+
+"I thought I'd never see her any more; I'm glad to know she's out of
+trouble. I thank yer, Ma'am; an' if they let us, I'll fight fer yer till
+I'm killed, which I hope will be 'fore long."
+
+Six months later he had his wish, and kept his word.
+
+Every one knows the story of the attack on Fort Wagner; but we should
+not tire yet of recalling how our Fifty-Fourth, spent with three
+sleepless nights, a day's fast, and a march under the July sun, stormed
+the fort as night fell, facing death in many shapes, following their
+brave leaders through a fiery rain of shot and shell, fighting valiantly
+for "God and Governor Andrew,"--how the regiment that went into action
+seven hundred strong came out having had nearly half its number
+captured, killed, or wounded, leaving their young commander to be
+buried, like a chief of earlier times, with his body-guard around him,
+faithful to the death. Surely, the insult turns to honor, and the wide
+grave needs no monument but the heroism that consecrates it in our
+sight; surely, the hearts that held him nearest see through their tears
+a noble victory in the seeming sad defeat; and surely, God's benediction
+was bestowed, when this loyal soul answered, as Death called the roll,
+"Lord, here am I, with the brothers Thou hast given me!"
+
+The future must show how well that fight was fought; for though Fort
+Wagner still defies us, public prejudice is down; and through the
+cannon-smoke of that black night the manhood of the colored race shines
+before many eyes that would not see, rings in many ears that would not
+hear, wins many hearts that would not hitherto believe.
+
+When the news came that we were needed, there was none so glad as I to
+leave teaching contrabands, the new work I had taken up, and go to nurse
+"our boys," as my dusky flock so proudly called the wounded of the
+Fifty-Fourth. Feeling more satisfaction, as I assumed my big apron and
+turned up my cuffs, than if dressing for the President's levee, I fell
+to work on board the hospital-ship in Hilton-Head harbor. The scene was
+most familiar, and yet strange; for only dark faces looked up at me from
+the pallets so thickly laid along the floor, and I missed the sharp
+accent of my Yankee boys in the slower, softer voices calling cheerily
+to one another, or answering my questions with a stout, "We'll never
+give it up, Ma'am, till the last Reb's dead," or, "If our people's free,
+we can afford to die."
+
+Passing from bed to bed, intent on making one pair of hands do the work
+of three, at least, I gradually washed, fed, and bandaged my way down
+the long line of sable heroes, and coming to the very last, found that
+he was my contraband. So old, so worn, so deathly weak and wan, I never
+should have known him but for the deep scar on his cheek. That side lay
+uppermost, and caught my eye at once; but even then I doubted, such an
+awful change had come upon him, when, turning to the ticket just above
+his head, I saw the name, "Robert Dane." That both assured and touched
+me, for, remembering that he had no name, I knew that he had taken mine.
+I longed for him to speak to me, to tell how he had fared since I lost
+sight of him, and let me perform some little service for him in return
+for many he had done for me; but he seemed asleep; and as I stood
+reliving that strange night again, a bright lad, who lay next him softly
+waving an old fan across both beds, looked up and said,--
+
+"I guess you know him, Ma'am?"
+
+"You are right. Do you?"
+
+"As much as any one was able to, Ma'am."
+
+"Why do you say 'was,' as if the man were dead and gone?"
+
+"I s'pose because I know he'll have to go. He's got a bad jab in the
+breast, an' is bleedin' inside, the Doctor says. He don't suffer any,
+only gets weaker 'n' weaker every minute. I've been fannin' him this
+long while, an' he's talked a little; but he don't know me now, so he's
+most gone, I guess."
+
+There was so much sorrow and affection in the boy's face, that I
+remembered something, and asked, with redoubled interest,--
+
+"Are you the one that brought him off? I was told about a boy who nearly
+lost his life in saving that of his mate."
+
+I dare say the young fellow blushed, as any modest lad might have done;
+I could not see it, but I heard the chuckle of satisfaction that escaped
+him, as he glanced from his shattered arm and bandaged side to the pale
+figure opposite.
+
+"Lord, Ma'am, that's nothin'; we boys always stan' by one another, an' I
+warn't goin' to leave him to be tormented any more by them cussed Rebs.
+He's been a slave once, though he don't look half so much like it as me,
+an' I was born in Boston."
+
+He did not; for the speaker was as black as the ace of spades,--being a
+sturdy specimen, the knave of clubs would perhaps be a fitter
+representative,--but the dark freeman looked at the white slave with the
+pitiful, yet puzzled expression I have so often seen on the faces of our
+wisest men, when this tangled question of Slavery presents itself,
+asking to be cut or patiently undone.
+
+"Tell me what you know of this man; for, even if he were awake, he is
+too weak to talk."
+
+"I never saw him till I joined the regiment, an' no one 'peared to have
+got much out of him. He was a shut-up sort of feller, an' didn't seem to
+care for anything but gettin' at the Rebs. Some say he was the fust man
+of us that enlisted; I know he fretted till we were off, an' when we
+pitched into old Wagner, he fought like the Devil."
+
+"Were you with him when he was wounded? How was it?"
+
+"Yes, Ma'am. There was somethin' queer about it; for he 'peared to know
+the chap that killed him, an' the chap knew him. I don't dare to ask,
+but I rather guess one owned the other some time,--for, when they
+clinched, the chap sung out, 'Bob!' an' Dane, 'Marster Ned!'--then they
+went at it."
+
+I sat down suddenly, for the old anger and compassion struggled in my
+heart, and I both longed and feared to hear what was to follow.
+
+"You see, when the Colonel--Lord keep an' send him back to us!--it a'n't
+certain yet, you know, Ma'am, though it's two days ago we lost
+him--well, when the Colonel shouted, 'Rush on, boys, rush on!' Dane tore
+away as if he was goin' to take the fort alone; I was next him, an' kept
+close as we went through the ditch an' up the wall. Hi! warn't that a
+rusher!" and the boy flung up his well arm with a whoop, as if the mere
+memory of that stirring moment came over him in a gust of irrepressible
+excitement.
+
+"Were you afraid?" I said,--asking the question women often put, and
+receiving the answer they seldom fail to get.
+
+"No, Ma'am!"--emphasis on the "Ma'am,"--"I never thought of anything but
+the damn' Rebs, that scalp, slash, an' cut our ears off, when they git
+us. I was bound to let daylight into one of 'em at least, an' I did.
+Hope he liked it!"
+
+"It is evident that you did, and I don't blame you in the least. Now go
+on about Robert, for I should be at work."
+
+"He was one of the fust up; I was just behind, an' though the whole
+thing happened in a minute, I remember how it was, for all I was yellin'
+an' knockin' round like mad. Just where we were, some sort of an officer
+was wavin' his sword an' cheerin' on his men; Dane saw him by a big
+flash that come by; he flung away his gun, give a leap, an' went at that
+feller as if he was Jeff, Beauregard, an' Lee, all in one. I scrabbled
+after as quick as I could, but was only up in time to see him git the
+sword straight through him an' drop into the ditch. You needn't ask what
+I did next, Ma'am, for I don't quite know myself; all I'm clear about
+is, that I managed somehow to pitch that Reb into the fort as dead as
+Moses, git hold of Dane, an' bring him off. Poor old feller! we said we
+went in to live or die; he said he went in to die, an' he's done it."
+
+I had been intently watching the excited speaker; but as he regretfully
+added those last words I turned again, and Robert's eyes met
+mine,--those melancholy eyes, so full of an intelligence that proved he
+had heard, remembered, and reflected with that preternatural power which
+often outlives all other faculties. He knew me, yet gave no greeting;
+was glad to see a woman's face, yet had no smile wherewith to welcome
+it; felt that he was dying, yet uttered no farewell. He was too far
+across the river to return or linger now; departing thought, strength,
+breath, were spent in one grateful look, one murmur of submission to the
+last pang he could ever feel. His lips moved, and, bending to them, a
+whisper chilled my cheek, as it shaped the broken words,--
+
+"I would have done it,--but it's better so,--I'm satisfied."
+
+Ah! well he might be,--for, as he turned his face from the shadow of the
+life that was, the sunshine of the life to be touched it with a
+beautiful content, and in the drawing of a breath my contraband found
+wife and home, eternal liberty and God.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE SAM ADAMS REGIMENTS IN THE TOWN OF BOSTON.--CONCLUDED.[1]
+
+THE REMOVAL.
+
+
+"I have been in constant panic," wrote Franklin in London to Dr. Cooper
+in Boston, "since I heard of troops assembling in Boston, lest the
+madness of mobs, or the interference of soldiers, or both, when too near
+each other, might occasion some mischief difficult to be prevented or
+repaired, and which might spread far and wide."
+
+The people wore indignant at the introduction of the troops, and the
+crown officials were arrogant and goading; but so wise and forbearing
+were the popular leaders, that, for ten months, from October, 1768, to
+August, 1769, no detriment came to their cause from the madness of mobs
+or the insolence of soldiers. The Loyalists, in this public order, saw
+the wholesome terror with which military force had imbued the community;
+they said this "had prevented, if it had not put a final period to, its
+most pestilential town-meetings": but they termed this quiet "only a
+truce procured from the dread of the bayonet"; and they held that
+nothing would reach and suppress the rising spirit of independence but a
+radical stroke at the democratic element in the local Constitution. They
+relied on physical force to carry out such a policy, and hence they
+looked on the demand of the people for a withdrawal of the troops as
+equivalent to a demand for the abandonment of their policy and the
+abdication of the Government. The partial removal already made caused
+great chagrin. The report, at first, was hardly credited in British
+political circles, and, when confirmed, was construed into inability,
+inconsistency, and concession by the Administration, and a sign that
+things were growing worse in America.
+
+General Gage had withdrawn the Sixty-Fourth and Sixty-Fifth Regiments,
+the detachment of the Fifty-Ninth, and the company of artillery, which
+left the Fourteenth Regiment under Lieutenant-Colonel Dalrymple and the
+Twenty-Ninth under Lieutenant-Colonel Carr,--the two regiments which
+Lord North termed "the Sam Adams Regiments,"--not enough, if the
+Ministers intended to govern by military force, and too many, if they
+did not intend this. They continued under General Mackay until he left
+for England, when the command devolved on Lieutenant-Colonel Dalrymple,
+the senior officer, under whom they had landed, who was exacting, severe
+in his judgment on the Patriots, and impatient of professional service.
+Commodore Hood and his family also sailed for Halifax. Both Mackay and
+Hood, aiming at reconciliation, and liberal in non-essentials, easily
+won the general good-will. The disuse of the press-gang, which even
+"Junius" was now justifying, and which England had not learned to
+abominate, but which rowelled the differently trained mind of the
+Colonies, was regarded as a great concession to personal liberty; and
+the discontinuance of parades and horse-racing on Sundays was accepted
+as a concession to a religious sentiment that was very general, and
+which, so far from deserving the sneer of being hypocritical, indicated
+the wide growth of respect for things noble and divine. These officers
+seemed, at least, to steer clear of political matters, to keep to the
+line of their profession, and to make the best of an irksome duty. They
+lived on good terms with the popular leaders, were invited to visit the
+common-schools with the Selectmen, appeared at the public festivals,
+and, on their departure, were handsomely complimented in both the Whig
+and Tory journals for the manner in which they had discharged their
+duties. They were, however, no mere lookers-on, and their official
+representations and conclusions were no more far-reaching than those of
+their superiors. Hood, from Halifax, wrote in harsh terms of Boston,
+although he put on record severe and true things of that chronic local
+infliction, the Commissioners of the Customs. His official letters,
+printed this year, were open to sharp criticism, which they received in
+the journals. Not, however, until the publication of the Cavendish
+Debates was it known that General Mackay, who was regarded as uncommonly
+liberal, received every personal attention, and was the most
+complimented by the press, stood up in the House of Commons, soon after
+his arrival in England, and maligned Boston in severe terms. He charged
+the town with being without government; said it was tyrannized over by a
+set of men hardly respectable, in point of fortune; and even had the
+hardihood to say that some of the troops he commanded there had been
+sold for slaves!
+
+Boston, now a subject of speculation in Continental courts, as well as
+of abuse in Parliament, was destined to undergo a still severer trial
+for the succeeding seven months, from August, 1769, to March, 1770,
+during the continuance of the two remaining regiments. This was an
+eventful period, characterized by violent agitation in the Colonies to
+promote a repeal of the revenue acts and an abandonment of the
+intermeddling and aggressive policy of the Ministry; and it was marked
+by uncommon political activity in Boston. The popular leaders, as
+though no British troops were lookers-on, and in spite, too, of the
+protests and commands of the crown officials, steadily guided the
+deliberations of the people in Faneuil Hall; and at times the disorderly
+also, in violations of law and personal liberty that can never be
+justified, intrepidly carried out their projects. The events of this
+period tended powerfully to inflame the public mind. The appeals of the
+Patriots, through the press, show their appreciation of the danger of an
+outbreak, and yet their determination to meet their whole duty. They
+endeavored to restrain the rash among the Sons of Liberty within the
+safe precincts of the law; yet, repelling all thought of submission to
+arbitrary power, they strove to lift up the general mind to the high
+plane of action which a true patriotism demanded, and prepare it, if
+need were, for the majestic work of revolution.
+
+The executive, during an interval thus exciting and important, was in a
+transition-state, from Francis Bernard to Thomas Hutchinson. It was
+semi-officially announced in the journals, when the Governor sailed for
+England, that the Administration had no intention of superseding his
+commission; and it was intimated that the Lieutenant-Governor would
+administer the functions of the office until the return of the chief
+magistrate to his post. These officials, for nine years, had been warm
+personal friends and intimate political associates. Indeed, so close had
+been their private and public relations, that Bernard ascribed the
+origin of his administrative difficulties to his adoption of the
+quarrels of Hutchinson. For a long time, the Governor had been seeking
+and expecting something better in the political line than his present
+office, as a substantial recognition of his zeal; and he had urged, and
+was now urging, the selection of the Lieutenant-Governor for his
+successor in office. He represented that Hutchinson was well versed in
+the local affairs,--knew the motives of the Governor,--warmly approved
+the policy of the Ministry,--had been, on critical occasions, a trusted
+confidential adviser,--and, in fact, had become so thoroughly identified
+with public affairs, that, of the two officials, he (Hutchinson) was the
+most hated by the faction, which the Governor seemed to consider a
+special recommendation. He favored this appointment as a measure that
+would be equivalent to an indorsement of his own administration, and
+therefore a compliment to himself and a blow at the faction. "It would
+be," he said, "a peculiarly happy stroke; for while it would discourage
+the Sons of Liberty, it would afford another great instance of rewarding
+faithful servants to the Crown."
+
+Thomas Hutchinson, descended from one of the most respected families of
+New England, and the son of an honored merchant of Boston, was now
+fifty-seven years of age. He was a pupil at the Old North Grammar
+School, and was graduated at Harvard College, when he entered upon a
+mercantile life. He was not successful as a merchant. Thus early,
+however, he evinced the untiring industry that marked his whole career.
+He had a decided political turn, and, with uncommon natural talent, had
+the capacity and the ambition for public life. An irreproachable private
+character, pleasing manners, common-sense views of things, and politics
+rather adroit than high-toned, secured him a run of popular favor and
+executive confidence so long that he had now (1769) been thirty-three
+years uninterruptedly engaged in public affairs; and he confessed to his
+friends that this concern in politics had created a hankering for them
+which a return to business-pursuits could not overcome. He had reason to
+be gratified at the tokens of public approbation. He was so faithful to
+the municipal interests as a Selectman that the town intrusted him with
+an important mission to England, which he satisfactorily executed; his
+wide commercial knowledge, familiarity with constitutional law and
+history, decided ability in debate, and reputed disinterestedness, gave
+him large influence as a Representative in the General Court; he showed
+as Councillor an ever ready zeal for the prerogative, and thus won the
+most confidential relations with so obsequious a courtier as Bernard; as
+Judge of Probate, he was attentive, kind to the widow, accurate, and won
+general commendation; and as a member of the Superior Court, he
+administered the law, in the main, satisfactorily. He had been Chief
+Justice for nine years, and for eleven years the Lieutenant-Governor. He
+had also prepared two volumes of his History, which, though rough in
+narrative, is a valuable authority, and his volume of "Collections" was
+now announced. His fame at the beginning of the Revolutionary
+controversy was at its zenith; for, according to John Adams, "he had
+been admired, revered, rewarded, and almost adored; and the idea was
+common that he was the greatest and best man in America." He was now,
+and had been for years, the master-spirit of the Loyalist party. It Is
+an anomaly that he should have attained to this position. He had had
+practical experience, as a merchant, of the intolerable injustice of the
+old mercantile system, and yet he sided with its friends; he had dealt,
+as a politician, to a greater degree than most men, with the rights and
+privileges which the people prized, conceded that they had made no ill
+use of them, and yet urged that they ought to be abridged; as a patriot,
+when he loved his native land wisely, he remonstrated against the
+imposition of the Stamp Tax, and yet he grew into one of the sturdiest
+of the defenders of the supremacy of Parliament in all cases whatsoever.
+He exhibited the usual characteristics of public men who from unworthy
+considerations change their principles and desert their party. No man
+urged a more arbitrary course; no man passed more discreditable
+judgments on his patriot contemporaries; and if in that way he won the
+smiles of the court which he was swift to serve, he earned the hatred of
+the land which he professed to love. The more his political career is
+studied, the greater will be the wonder that one who was reared on
+republican soil, and had antecedents so honorable, should have become so
+complete an exponent of arbitrary power.
+
+Hutchinson was not so blinded by party-spirit or love of money or of
+place as not to see the living realities of his time; for he wrote that
+a thirst for liberty seemed to be the ruling passion, not only of
+America, but of the age, and that a mighty empire was rising on this
+continent, the progress of which would be a theme for speculative and
+ingenious minds in distant ages. It was the vision of the cold and clear
+intellect, distrusting the march of events and the capacity and
+intelligence of the people, he had no heart to admire, he had not even
+the justice to recognize, the greatness that was making an immortal
+record,--the sublime faith, the divine enthusiasm, the dauntless
+resolve, the priceless consciousness of being in the right, that were
+the life and inspiration of the lovers of freedom. He conceded, however,
+that the body of the people were honest, but acted on the belief,
+inspired by wrong-headed leaders, that their liberties were in danger;
+and while, with the calculation of the man of the world, he dreaded, and
+endeavored to stem, still, with a statesman's foresight, he appreciated
+and held in respect, the mysterious element of public opinion. He felt
+that it was rising as a power. He saw this power already intrenched in
+the impregnable lines of free institutions. Seeking to know its springs,
+he was a close and at times a shrewd observer, as well from a habit of
+research, in tracing the currents of the past, as from occupying a
+position which made it a duty to watch the growth of what influenced the
+present. His letters, very voluminous, deal with causes as well as with
+facts, and are often fine tributes to the life-giving power of vital
+political ideas, from the pen of a subtle and determined enemy.
+
+When the executive functions devolved on Hutchinson, it had been
+semi-officially announced that the Ministry, wholly out of commercial
+considerations, intended to propose, at the next session of Parliament,
+a repeal of a portion of the revenue acts; and the Patriots were
+pressing, with more zeal than ever, the non-importation agreement, in
+the hope of obtaining, as matter of constitutional right, a total
+repeal. To enforce this agreement, the merchants had held a public
+meeting in Faneuil Hall, adopted a series of spirited resolves, and
+adjourned to a future day; and Hutchinson's first important
+gubernatorial decision had reference to this meeting. He had urged the
+necessity of troops to sustain the authority of the Government. He had
+awarded to them the credit of preventing a great catastrophe. He had
+written that they would make the Boston saints as tame as lambs. It was
+his settled conviction that the Americans never would set armies in the
+field against Great Britain, and if they did, that "a few troops would
+be sufficient to quell them." He was now importuned to use the troops at
+his command to disperse the merchants' meeting at its adjournment. He
+held that this meeting was contrary to law. He characterized its
+resolves as contemptuous and insolent, and derogatory to the authority
+of Parliament. He never grew weary of holding up to reprobation the
+objects which the merchants had in view. And his political friends now
+asked him to make good his professions by acts. But he declined to
+interfere with this meeting. The merchants proceeded to a close with
+their business. Hutchinson's explanation of his course to the Ministry,
+on this occasion, applies to the popular demonstrations which took
+place, at intervals, down to the military crisis. "I am very sensible,"
+are his words, "that the whole proceeding is unwarrantable; but it is so
+generally countenanced in this and in several of the Colonies, and the
+authority of Government is so feeble, that an attempt to put a stop to
+it would have no other effect than still further to inflame the minds of
+the people. I can do no more than represent to your Lordship, and wait
+for such instructions as may be thought proper." And he continued to
+present these combinations of the merchants as "a most certain evidence
+of the lost authority of Government," and as exhibiting "insolence and
+contempt of Parliament." But he complains that they were not so much
+regarded in England as he expected they would be, and that he was left
+to act on his own judgment. He soon saw pilloried in the newspapers the
+names of a son of Governor Bernard and two of his own sons, in a list of
+Boston merchants who "audaciously counteracted the united sentiments of
+the body of merchants throughout North America by importing British
+goods contrary to agreement."
+
+The Lieutenant-Governor again kept quiet, as a town-meeting went on,
+which he watched with the keenest interest, freely commented on in his
+letters, and which is far too important to be overlooked in any review
+of these times. William Bollan, the Colonial Agent in London, sent to
+the popular leaders a selection from the letters of Governor Bernard,
+General Gage, Commodore Hood, and others, bearing on the introduction of
+the troops, which were judged to have aspersed the character, affected
+the rights, and injured the interests of the town. Their publication
+made a profound impression on the public mind, and they became the theme
+of every circle. At one of the political clubs, in which the Adamses,
+the Coopers, Warren, and others were wont to discuss public affairs,
+Otis, in a blaze of indignation, charged the crown officials with
+haughtiness, arbitrary dispositions, and the insolence of office, and
+vehemently urged a town-meeting. One was soon summoned by the Selectmen,
+which deliberated with dignity and order, and made answer to the
+official indictment in a strong, conclusive, and grand "Appeal to the
+World," and appointed, as a committee to circulate it, Thomas Cushing,
+Samuel Adams, Joseph Warren, Richard Dana, Joshua Henshaw, Joseph
+Jackson, and Benjamin Kent,--men of sterling character, and bearing
+names that have shed lustre on the whole country. Reason and truth,
+thus put forth, exerted an influence. Hutchinson felt the force of this.
+"We find, my Lord, by experience," he advised Lord Hillsborough, October
+19, 1769, "that associations and assemblies pretending to be legal and
+constitutional, assuming powers that belong only to established
+authority, prove more fatal to this authority than mobs, riots, or the
+most tumultuous disorders; for such assemblies, from erroneous or
+imperfect notions of the nature of government, very often meet with the
+approbation of the body of the people, and in such case there is no
+internal power which can be exerted to suppress them. Such case we are
+in at present, and shall probably continue in it until the wisdom of
+Parliament delivers us from it."
+
+It would be difficult to say what power the people now assumed that
+belonged only to established authority; they assumed only the right of
+public meeting and of liberty of discussion, which are unquestionable in
+every free country; but the ruling spirit of Hutchinson is seen in this
+fine tribute to the instrumentality of the town-meeting, for he regarded
+the American custom of corporate presentation of political matters as
+illegal, and the power of Parliament as sufficient to meet it with pains
+and penalties. As the committee already named sent forth the doings of
+the town, they said, (October 23, 1769,) "The people will never think
+their grievances redressed till every revenue act is repealed, the Board
+of Commissioners dissolved, and the troops removed."
+
+A few days after this the Lieutenant-Governor was obliged to deal with a
+mob, which grew out of the meanness of importers, whose selfish course
+proved to be a great strain on the forbearing policy of the popular
+leaders. The merchants on the Tory side, among whom were two of
+Hutchinson's sons, persisted in importing goods; and he writes, with a
+good deal of pride, as though it were meritorious, that since the
+agreement was formed these two sons had imported two hundred chests of
+tea, which they had been so clever as to sell. But such was the public
+indignation at this course, that they, too, were compelled to give in to
+the non-importation agreement; and Hutchinson's letters are now severer
+than ever on the Patriots. He characterizes "the confederacy of
+merchants" as a very high offence, and the Sons of Liberty as the
+greatest tyrants ever known. But as he continually predicted a crisis,
+he said, "I can find nobody to join with me in an attempt to discourage
+them." He adds, "If any tumults should happen, I shall be under less
+difficulty than if my own children had been the pretended occasion of
+them; and for this reason Dalrymple tells me he is very glad they have
+done as they have." The immediate occasion of the mob was the dealing of
+the people with an informer on the twenty-eighth of October. They got
+track of him about noon, and, after a long search, found him towards
+evening, when they immediately prepared to tar and feather him. It was
+quite dark. A formidable procession carted the culprit from one quarter
+of the town to another, and threatened to break the windows of all
+houses which were without lights. The Lieutenant-Governor summoned such
+of the members of the Council as were at hand, and the justices of the
+county, to meet him at the Council-Chamber; he requested Dalrymple to
+order the force under his command "to be ready to march when the
+occasion required"; and he "kept persons employed to give him immediate
+notice of every new motion of the mob." Dalrymple, with a soldier's
+alacrity, complied with the official request; but the mob went on its
+course, for "none of the justices nor the sheriff," writes Hutchinson,
+"thought it safe for them to restrain so great a body of people in a
+dark evening,"--and the only work done by the soldiers was to protect
+Mien, the printer, who, being goaded into discharging a pistol among the
+crowd, fled to the main guard for safety. The finale of this mob is thus
+related by Hutchinson:--"Between eight and nine o'clock they dispersed
+of their own account, and the town was quiet."
+
+The intrepid and yet prudent course of the popular leaders and of the
+people, in standing manfully for the common cause in presence of the
+British troops, was now eliciting the warmest encomiums on the town from
+the friends of liberty in England and in the Colonies. The generous
+praise was copied into the local journals, and, so far from being
+received with assumption, became a powerful incentive to worthy action.
+"Your Bostonians," a Southern letter runs, "shine with renewed lustre.
+Their last efforts were indeed like themselves, full of wisdom,
+prudence, and magnanimity. Such a conduct must silence every pretended
+suspicion, and baffle every vile attempt to calumniate their noble and
+generous struggles in the cause of American Liberty." "So much wisdom
+and virtue," says a New-Hampshire letter, "as hath been conspicuous in
+the Bostonians, will not go unrewarded. You will in all respects
+increase until you become the glory of New England, the pride of British
+kings, the scourge of tyrants, and the joy of the whole earth," "The
+patriotism of Boston," says another letter, "will be revered through
+every age." One of these tributes, from a Southern journal, in the
+Boston papers of December 18, 1769, runs,--"The noble conduct of the
+Representatives, Selectmen, and principal merchants of Boston, in
+defending and supporting the rights of America and the British
+Constitution, cannot fail to excite love and gratitude in the heart of
+every worthy person in the British empire. They discover a dignity of
+soul worthy the human mind, which is the true glory of man, and merits
+the applause of all rational beings. Their names will shine unsullied in
+the bright records of Panic to the latest ages, and unborn millions will
+rise up and call them blessed."
+
+This eulogy on Boston is a great fact of these times, and therefore
+ought to have a place in a history of them. It was not of a local cast,
+for it appears in several Colonies and in England; it was not a
+manufacture of politicians, for it is seen in the private letters of the
+friends of constitutional liberty which have come to light subsequently
+to the events; it was not a transient enthusiasm, for the same strain
+was continued during the years preceding the war. The praise was
+bestowed on a town small in territory and comparatively small in
+population. Such were the cities of Greece in the era of their renown.
+"The territories of Athens, Sparta, and their allies," remarks Gibbon,
+"do not exceed a moderate province of France or England; but after the
+trophies of Salamis or Plataea, they expand in our fancy to the gigantic
+size of Asia, which had been trampled under the feet of the victorious
+Greeks." No trophies had been gathered in an American Plataea; there had
+been no great civic triumph; there was no hero upon whom public
+affection centred; nor was there here a field on which to weave a web of
+court-intrigue, or to play a game of criminal ambition;--there was,
+indeed, little that common constructors of history would consider to be
+history. Yet it was now written, and made common thought by an
+unfettered press,--"Nobler days nor deeds were never seen than at this
+time."[2] This was an instinctive appreciation of a great truth; for
+the real American Revolution was going on in the tidal flow of thought
+and feeling, and in the formation of public opinion. A people inspired
+by visions of better days for humanity, luxuriating in the emotions of
+hope and faith, yearning for the right, mastering the reasoning on which
+it was based, were steadily taking their fit place on the national
+stage, in the belief of the nearness of a mighty historic hour. And
+their spontaneous praise was for a community heroically acting on
+national principles and for a national cause. Because of this did they
+predict that unborn millions would hold up the men of Boston as worthy
+to be enrolled in the shining record of Fame.
+
+As the new year (1770) came in, the people were looking forward to a
+meeting of the General Court, always a season of peculiar interest, and
+more so now than ever, for it was certain that the debates in this body
+would turn on the foremost local subject, the removal of the troops. But
+the subject was no longer merely local, for it had become a general
+issue, one affecting not only Boston and Massachusetts, but other towns
+and Colonies, and the interest felt in the controversy was wide and
+deep. "In this day of constitutional light," a New-York essay copied
+into a Boston newspaper runs, "it is monstrous that troops should be
+kept, not to protect the right, but to enslave the continent." While it
+was thus put by the journals, the policy was meant to be of this
+significance by the Ministry; and the letters printed for the first time
+in this monograph attest the accuracy of the Patriot judgment. On purely
+local grounds, also, the presence of the troops continued to be
+deplored. "The troops," Dr. Cooper wrote, January 1, 1770, "greatly
+corrupt our morals, and are in every sense an oppression. May Heaven
+soon deliver us from this great evil!" Samuel Adams said, "The troops
+must move to the Castle; it must be the first business of the General
+Court to move them out of town"; and James Otis said. "The Governor has
+the power to move them under the Constitution." Hutchinson endeavored to
+conciliate the people by making arrangements with General Gage for a
+removal of the main guard from its location near the Town-House, being
+informed that this might satisfy the greater part of the members.
+
+Having taken this precaution, Hutchinson was really anxious for a
+meeting of the General Court. He was in great uncertainty both as to
+public and private affairs. He knew now that Bernard was not to return,
+but he did not know who was to be the successor; he conjectured that it
+might be "that the government was to be put on a new establishment, and
+a person of rank appointed Governor"; and he confessed that he was
+"ignorant of the Ministerial plan" as to the Colonies. The Legislature
+was appointed to convene on the tenth of January. But the November
+packet from England, happening to make an uncommonly short passage,
+brought him a peremptory order, which he received on the evening of the
+third of January, to prorogue the time of the sitting of the General
+Court; and the journals of the next morning contain his Proclamation,
+setting forth that "by His Majesty's command" the Legislature was
+prorogued to the second Wednesday in March. "I guess," Hutchinson
+writes, "that the Court is prorogued to a particular day with an
+intention that something from the King or the Parliament shall be then
+laid before them." "Some of the distant members will be on their journey
+before the Proclamation reaches them; and if the packet had not had a
+better passage than common, my orders would have found the Court
+sitting." As a consequence of this unlooked-for prorogation, the main
+guard continued to be stationed near the Town-House, until a portion of
+it played its tragic part on the memorable fifth of March.
+
+The Lieutenant-Governor was apprehensive that this sudden prorogation
+would cause a great clamor; but he judged that the popular leaders were
+rather humbled and mortified than roused and enraged by it; and he soon
+expressed the conviction that this was the right step. But the favorite
+organ of the Patriots, the "Boston Gazette," in its next issue, of
+January the eighth, indicates anything but humility. Through it James
+Otis, John Hancock, and Samuel Adams spoke kindling words to a community
+who received words from them as things. Otis, in a card elicited by
+strictures on the "unmanly assault, battery, and barbarous wounding" of
+himself by Robinson, declared that "a clear stage and no favor were all
+he ever wished or wanted in court, country, camp, or city"; Hancock, in
+a card commenting on the report that he had violated the merchants'
+agreement, "publicly defied all mankind" to prove the allegation, and
+pledged his cooeperation "in every legal and laudable measure to redress
+the grievances under which the Province and the Continent had so long
+labored"; and Samuel Adams, under the signature of "Vindex," tested the
+legality of the prorogation by the terms of the Charter, and adjured
+every man to make it the subject of his contemplation. "We all
+remember," are his weighty words, "that, no longer ago than last year,
+the extraordinary dissolution by Governor Bernard, in which he declared
+he was purely Ministerial, produced another assembly, which, though
+legal in all its proceedings, awaked an attention in the very soul of
+the British empire." He claimed that a Massachusetts executive ought to
+act from the dictates of his own judgment. "It is not to be expected
+that in ordinary times, much less at such an important period as this,
+any man, though endowed with the wisdom of Solomon, at the distance of
+three thousand miles, can be an adequate judge of the expediency of
+proroguing, and in effect of putting an end to, an American legislative
+assembly."
+
+The Lieutenant-Governor had now to meet the severest pressure brought to
+bear on him by the Tory faction for the employment of the troops,
+occasioned by a violation on the part of his sons of their agreement as
+to a sale of goods. They had stipulated with the merchants that an
+importation of teas made by them should remain unsold, and, as security,
+had given to the committee of inspection the key of the building in
+which it was stored. Yet they secretly made sales, broke the lock, and
+delivered the teas. This was done when the non-importation agreement was
+the paramount measure,--when fidelity to it was patriotism, was honor,
+was union, was country,--and when all eyes were looking to see Boston
+faithful. "If this agreement of the merchants," said "Determinatus" in
+the "Boston Gazette," "is of that consequence to all America which our
+brethren in all the other governments and in Great Britain itself think
+it to be,--if the fate of unborn millions is suspended upon it, verily
+it behooves not the merchants only, but every individual of every class
+in city and country to aid and support them, and peremptorily to insist
+upon its being strictly adhered to. And yet what is most astonishing is,
+that some two or three persons, of very little consequence in
+themselves, have dared openly to give out that they will vend the goods
+they have imported, though they have solemnly pledged their faith to the
+body of merchants that they should remain in store till a general
+importation takes place." The merchants met in Faneuil Hall in a large
+and commanding gathering; for it was composed of the solid men of the
+town. After deliberation, they proceeded in a body to the residence of
+the Lieutenant-Governor to remonstrate against the course of his sons.
+Meantime, the ultra Loyalists pressed him to order the troops to
+disperse the meeting; the Commissioners savagely urged, that "there
+could not be a better time for trying the strength of the government";
+and others said, "It were best to bring matters to extremities." The
+commanding officers of the troops now expected work, and prepared for
+it. Dalrymple dealt out twelve rounds of cartridges to the men. But
+Hutchinson involuntarily shrank from the bloody business of this
+programme. He tried other means than force. He appealed to the justices
+of the peace, and through the sheriff he commanded the meeting, in His
+Majesty's name, to disperse. But the intrepid merchants, in a written
+paper, in Hancock's handwriting, averred that law warranted their
+proceeding; and so they calmly adhered to the action that patriotism
+dictated. Hutchinson at length sent for the Moderator, William Phillips,
+of fragrant Revolutionary renown and of educational fame, and stipulated
+to deposit a sum of money to stand for the tea that had been sold, and
+to return the balance of it to the store. The concession was accepted.
+In explanation of his course, and with special reference to the action
+of the Commissioners in this case, Hutchinson pleaded a want of power,
+under the Constitution, to comply with their demand. "They did not
+consider the Constitution," he remarked, "and that by the Charter I can
+do nothing without the Council, the major part of whom are against me,
+and the civil magistrates, many of whom made a part of the body which
+was to be suppressed; so that there could not have been a worse occasion
+[to call out the troops], and I think anything tragical would have set
+the whole Province in a flame, and maybe spread farther."
+
+Thus Hutchinson, as well as Franklin, dreaded the effect of a serious
+collision between the citizens and the troops. At this time the feeling
+was one of sullen acquiescence in their presence. "Molineaux," he says,
+February 18, 1770, "to whom the Sons of Liberty have given the name of
+Paoli, and some others, are restless; but there seems to be no
+disposition to any general muster of the people again." And yet the
+newspapers were now crowded with unusually exciting matter, and so
+continued up to the first week in March: articles about the Liberty-Pole
+in New York being cut down by the military and replaced in a triumphal
+procession by the people; about McDougal's imprisonment for printing
+free comments on the Assembly for voting supplies to the troops; the
+famous address of "Junius" to the King, in which one count is his
+alienation of a people who left their native land for freedom and found
+it in a desert; the details of the shooting, by an informer, of
+Christopher Snider, the son of a poor German, and of the imposing
+funeral, which moved from the Liberty-Tree to the burial-place. The
+importers now feared an assault on their houses; whereupon soldiers were
+allowed as a guard to some, while others slept with loaded guns at their
+bedsides. These things deserve to be borne in mind; for they show how
+much there was to exasperate, when the popular leaders were called upon
+to meet a paroxysm without a precedent in the Colonies.
+
+It seemed to the Patriots astonishing that the Ministry persisted in
+keeping troops in Boston. There was no spirit of resistance to law;
+there was no plot maturing to resist the Government; the avocations of
+life went on as usual; the popular leaders, men of whom any community
+might be proud, averred that their opposition to public measures had
+been prudent and legal, and that they had not taken "a single step that
+could not be fully justified on constitutional grounds"; and the demand
+in the public prints was continuous to know what the troops were wanted
+for, and how they were to be used. On the other hand, the ultra
+Loyalists as continuously represented that the town was full of a
+rebellious spirit, was a nest of disorder, and threatened the leaders in
+it with transportation. Hutchinson seems to have apprehended that this
+misrepresentation had been carried so far as to be suicidal; for he
+advised Lord Hillsborough, that, "in matters that had no relation to the
+dispute between the Kingdom and the Colonies, government retained its
+vigor, and the administration of it was attended with no unusual
+difficulty." This is to the point, and conclusive. This was the truth on
+which the popular leaders rested; and hence it seemed to them a marvel
+that the Ministry, to use the words of Samuel Adams, should employ
+troops only "to parade the streets of Boston, and, by their ridiculous
+merry-andrew tricks, to become the objects of contempt of the women and
+children."
+
+It would be a tedious and profitless task to go over the bickerings and
+quarrels that occurred between the inhabitants and the soldiers. The
+high-spirited citizens, on being challenged in their walks, could not
+keep their temper; the roughs, here as in every place, would have their
+say; and the coarse British soldier could not be restrained by
+discipline; yet in all the brawls, for seventeen months, not a gun was
+fired in an affray. Fist had been met with fist, and club with club; and
+not unfrequently these quarrels were settled in the courts. The nature
+of such emergency as would justify the troops in firing on the people
+was acutely discussed in the newspapers, and undoubtedly the subject was
+talked about in private circles and in the political clubs. "What shall
+I say?" runs an article in the "Gazette." "I shudder at the thought.
+Surely no provincial magistrate could be found so steeled against the
+sensations of humanity and justice as wantonly to order troops to fire
+on an unarmed populace, and more than repeat in Boston the tragic scene
+exhibited in St. George's Fields." It was a wanton fire on an unarmed
+populace that was protected against; and the protest was by men who
+involuntarily shrank from mob-law as they would from the hell of
+anarchy. They apprehended an impromptu collision between the people and
+the troops; they knew that an illegal and wanton fire on the people
+would produce such collision; the danger of this result formed,
+undoubtedly, a large portion of the common talk; and the frequency and
+manner in which the subject was discussed elicited from General Gage the
+rather sweeping remark, that every citizen in Boston was a lawyer. Every
+citizen was interested in the support of public liberty and public
+order, and might well regard with deep concern the threats that were
+continually made, which, if executed, would disturb both. Hutchinson, in
+one of his letters, thus states the conclusions that were reached:--"Our
+heroes for liberty say that no troops dare to fire on the people without
+the order of the civil magistrate, and that no civil magistrate, would
+dare to give such orders. In the first part of their opinion they may be
+right; in the second they cannot be sure until they have made the
+trial."
+
+On Friday, the second of March, in the forenoon, as three soldiers were
+at Gray's Ropewalks, near the head of India Wharf, they were asked by
+one of the workmen to empty a vault. Sharp altercation followed this
+insult, and the soldiers went off, but soon returned with a party of
+their comrades, when there was a challenge to a boxing-match, and this
+grew into a fight, the rope-makers using their "wouldring-sticks," and
+the soldiers clubs and cutlasses. It proved to be the most serious
+quarrel that had occurred. Lieutenant-Colonel Carr, commander of the
+Twenty-Ninth, which, Hutchinson said, was composed of such bad fellows
+that discipline could not restrain them, made a complaint to the
+Lieutenant-Governor relative to the provoking conduct of the rope-maker
+which brought on the affray; and thus this affair became the occasion of
+political consultation, which tended to intensify the animosity between
+the parties.
+
+On Saturday, the report was circulated that the parties who were engaged
+in this affray would renew the fight on Monday evening; on Sunday, Carr
+and other officers went into the ropewalk, giving out that they were
+searching for a sergeant of their regiment; but though on these days
+there was much irritation, the town was comparatively quiet.
+
+On Monday, the Lieutenant-Governor laid the complaint of
+Lieutenant-Colonel Carr before the Council, and asked the advice of this
+body, which gave rise to debate about the removal of the
+troops,--members freely expressing the opinion, that the way to prevent
+collisions between the military and the people was to withdraw the two
+regiments to the Castle. No important action was taken by the Council,
+although the apprehension was expressed that the ropewalk affair might
+grow into a general quarrel. And it is worthy of remark, that, ominous
+as the signs were, the Lieutenant-Governor took no precautionary
+measures, not even the obvious step of having the troops restrained to
+their barracks. His letters, and, indeed, his whole course, up to the
+eventful evening of this day, indicate confidence in the opinion that
+there was no intention on the part of the popular leaders to molest the
+troops, and that the troops, without an order from the civil authority,
+would not fire on the citizens.
+
+Nor was there now, as zealous Loyalists alleged, any plan formed by the
+popular leaders, or by any persons of consideration, to expel the troops
+by force from the town, much less the obnoxious Commissioners of the
+Customs; nor is there any evidence to support the allegation on the
+other side, that the crown officials, civil or military, meditated or
+stimulated an attack on the inhabitants. The Patriots regarded what had
+occurred and what was threatened, like much that had taken place during
+the last seventeen months, as the motions of a rod of power needlessly
+held over the people to overawe them, serving no earthly good, but
+souring their minds and embittering their passions; the crown officials
+represented this chafing of the free spirit at the incidents of military
+rule as a sign of the lost authority of Government and of a desire for
+independence. Among the fiery spirits, accurately on both sides the
+mob-element, the ropewalk affair was regarded as a drawn game, and a
+renewal of the fight was desired on the ground that honor was at stake;
+while to spirit up the roughs among the Whigs, to use Dr. Gordon's
+words,--"the newspapers had a pompous account of a victory obtained by
+the inhabitants of New York over the soldiers there in an affray, while
+the Boston newspapers could present but a tame relation of the result of
+the affray here." These facts account satisfactorily for the intimations
+and warnings given during the day to prominent characters on both sides,
+and for the handbill that was circulated in the afternoon. The course
+things took fully justifies the remark of Gordon, that "everything
+tended to a crisis, and it is rather wonderful that it did not exist
+sooner, when so many circumstances united to hasten its approach."
+
+There was a layer of ice on the ground, a slight fall of snow during the
+day, and a young moon in the evening. At an early hour, as though
+something uncommon was expected, parties of boys, apprentices, and
+soldiers strolled through the streets, and neither side was sparing of
+insult. Ten or twelve soldiers went from the main guard, in King Street,
+across this street to Murray's Barracks, in Brattle Street, about three
+hundred yards from King Street; and another party came out of these
+barracks, armed with clubs and cutlasses, bent on a stroll. A little
+after eight o'clock, quite a crowd collected near the Brattle-Street
+Church, many of whom had canes and sticks; and after a spell of
+bantering wretched abuse on both sides, things grew into a fight. As it
+became more and more threatening, a few North-Enders ran to the Old
+Brick Meeting-House, on what is now Washington Street, at the head of
+King Street, and lifted a boy into a window, who rang the bell. About
+the same time, Captain Goldfinch, of the army, who was on his way to
+Murray's Barracks, crossed King Street, near the Custom-House, at the
+corner of Exchange Lane, where a sentinel had long been stationed; and
+as he was passing along, he was taunted by a barber's apprentice as a
+mean fellow for not paying for dressing his hair, when the sentinel ran
+after the boy and gave him a severe blow with his musket. The boy went
+away crying, and told several persons of the assault, while the Captain
+passed on towards Murray's Barracks, but found the passage into the yard
+obstructed by the affray going on here,--the crowd pelting the soldiers
+with snowballs, and the latter defending themselves. Being the senior
+officer, he ordered the men into the barracks; the gate of the yard was
+then shut, and the promise was made that no more men should be let out
+that evening. In this way the affray here was effectually stopped.
+
+For a little time, perhaps twenty minutes, there was nothing to attract
+to a centre the people who were drawn by the alarm-bell out of their
+homes on this frosty, moonlight, memorable evening; and in various
+places individuals were asking where the fire was. King Street, then, as
+now, the commercial centre of Boston, was quiet. A group was standing
+before the main guard with firebags and buckets in their hands; a few
+persons were moving along in other parts of the street; and the sentinel
+at the Custom-House, with his firelock on his shoulder, was pacing his
+beat quite unmolested. In Dock Square, a small gathering, mostly of
+participants in the affair just over, were harangued by a large, tall
+man, who wore a red cloak and a white wig; and as he closed, there was a
+hurrah, and the cry, "To the main guard!" In another street, a similar
+cry was raised, "To the main guard!--that is the nest!" But no assault
+was made on the main guard. The word went round that there was no fire,
+"only a rumpus with the soldiers," who had been driven to their
+quarters; and well-disposed citizens, as they withdrew, were saying,
+"Every man to his home!"
+
+But at about fifteen minutes past nine, an excited party passed up Royal
+Exchange Lane, (now Exchange Street,) leading into King Street; and as
+they came near the Custom-House, on the corner, one of the number, who
+knew of the assault on the apprentice-boy, said, "Here is the soldier
+who did it," when they gathered round the sentinel. The barber's boy now
+came up and said, "This is the soldier who knocked me down with the
+butt-end of his musket." Some now said, "Kill him! knock him down!" The
+sentinel moved back up the steps of the Custom-House, and loaded his
+gun. Missiles were thrown at him, when he presented his musket, warned
+the party to keep off, and called for help. Some one ran to Captain
+Preston, the officer of the day, and informed him that the people were
+about to assault the sentinel, when he hastened to the main guard, on
+the opposite side of the street, about forty rods from the Custom-House,
+and sent from here a sergeant, a very young officer, with a file of
+seven men, to protect the sentinel. They went over in a kind of trot,
+using rough words and actions towards those who went with them, and,
+coming near the party round the sentinel, rudely pushed them aside,
+pricking some with their bayonets, and formed in a half-circle near the
+sentry-box. The sentinel now came down the steps and fell in with the
+file, when they were ordered to prime and load. Captain Preston almost
+immediately joined his men. The file now numbered nine.
+
+The number of people here at this time is variously estimated from
+thirty to a hundred,--"between fifty and sixty" being the most common
+statement. Some of them were fresh from the affray at the barracks, and
+some of the soldiers had been in the affair at the ropewalks. There was
+aggravation on both sides. The crowd were unarmed, or had merely sticks,
+which they struck defiantly against each other,--having no definite
+object, and doing no greater mischief than, in retaliation of
+uncalled-for military roughness, to throw snowballs, hurrah, whistle
+through their fingers, use oaths and foul language, call the soldiers
+names, hustle them, and dare them to fire. One of the file was struck
+with a stick. There were good men trying to prevent a riot, and some
+assured the soldiers that they would not be hurt. Among others, Henry
+Knox, subsequently General, was present, who saw nothing to justify the
+use of fire-arms, and, with others, remonstrated against their
+employment; but Captain Preston, as he was talking with Knox, saw his
+men pressing the people with their bayonets, when, in great agitation,
+he rushed in among them. Then, with or without orders, but certainly
+without any legal form or warning, seven of the file, one after another,
+discharged their muskets upon the citizens; and the result indicates the
+malignity and precision of their aim. Crispus Attucks, an intrepid
+mulatto, who was a leader in the affair at Murray's Barracks, was killed
+as he stood leaning and resting his breast on a stout "cord-wood stick";
+Samuel Gray, one of the rope-makers, was shot as he stood with his hands
+in his bosom, and just as he had said, "My lads, they will not fire";
+Patrick Carr, on hearing the alarm-bell, had left his house full of
+fight, and, as he was crossing the street, was mortally wounded; James
+Caldwell, in like manner summoned from his home, was killed as he was
+standing in the middle of the street; Samuel Maverick, a lad of
+seventeen, ran out of the house to go to a fire, and was shot as he was
+crossing the street; six others were wounded. But fifteen or twenty
+minutes had elapsed from the time the sergeant went from the main guard
+to the time of the firing. The people, on the report of the guns, fell
+back, but instinctively and instantly returned for the killed and
+wounded, when the infuriated soldiers prepared to fire again, but were
+checked by Captain Preston, and were withdrawn across the street to the
+main guard. The drums beat; several companies of the Twenty-Ninth
+Regiment, under Colonel Carr, promptly appeared in the street, and were
+formed in three divisions in front of the main guard, the front division
+near the northeast corner of the Town-House, in the kneeling posture for
+street-firing. The Fourteenth Regiment was ordered under arms, but
+remained at their barracks.
+
+The report now spread that "the troops had risen on the people"; and the
+beat of drums, the church-bells, and the cry of fire summoned the
+inhabitants from their homes, and they rushed through the streets to the
+place of alarm. In a few minutes thousands collected, and the cry was,
+"To arms! to arms!" The whole town was in the utmost confusion; while in
+King Street there was, what the Patriots had so long predicted, dreaded,
+and vainly endeavored to avert, an indignant population and an
+exasperated soldiery face to face. The excitement was terrible. The care
+of the popular leaders for their cause, since the mob-days of the Stamp
+Act, had been like the care of their personal honor: it drew them forth
+as the prompt and brave controlling power in every crisis; and they were
+among the concourse on this "night of consternation." Joseph Warren,
+early on the ground to act the good physician as well as the fearless
+patriot, gives the impression produced on himself and his co-laborers as
+they saw the first blood flowing that was shed for American liberty.
+"Language," he says, "is too feeble to paint the emotions of our souls,
+when our streets were stained with the blood of our brethren, when our
+ears were wounded by the groans of the dying, and our eyes were
+tormented by the sight of the mangled bodies of the dead." "Our hearts
+beat to arms; we snatched our weapons, almost resolved by one decisive
+stroke to avenge the death of our slaughtered brethren."
+
+Meantime the Lieutenant-Governor, at his residence in North Square,
+heard the sound of the church-bell near by, and supposed it was an alarm
+of fire. But soon, at nearly ten o'clock, a number of the inhabitants
+came running into the house, entreating him to go to King Street
+immediately, otherwise, they said, "the town would be all in blood." He
+immediately started for the scene of danger. On his way, in the
+Market-Place, he found himself amidst a great body of people, some armed
+with clubs, others with cutlasses, and all calling for fire-arms. He
+made himself known to them, but pleaded in vain for a hearing; and, to
+insure his safety, he retreated into a dwelling-house, and thence went
+by a private way into King Street, where he found an excited multitude
+anxiously awaiting his arrival. He first called for Captain Preston; and
+a natural indignation at a high-handed act is expressed in the stern and
+searching questions which the civilian put to the soldier, bearing on
+the vital point of the subordination of the military to the civil power.
+
+"Are you the commanding officer?"
+
+"Yes, Sir."
+
+"Do you know, Sir, you have no power to fire on any body of people
+collected together, except you have a civil magistrate with you to give
+orders?"
+
+Captain Preston replied,--
+
+"I was obliged to, to save the sentry."
+
+So great was the confusion that Preston's reply was heard but by few.
+The cry was raised, "To the Town-House! to the Town-House!" when
+Hutchinson, by the irresistible violence of the crowd, was forced into
+the building, and up to the Council-Chamber; and in a few minutes he
+appeared on the balcony. Near him were prominent citizens, both
+Loyalists and Whigs; below him, on the one side, were his indignant
+townsmen, who had conferred on him every honor in their power, and on
+the other side, the regiment in its defiant attitude. He could speak
+with eloquence and power; throughout this strange and trying scene he
+bore himself with dignity and self-possession; and as in the stillness
+of night he expressed great concern at the unhappy event, and made
+solemn pledges to the people, his manner must have been uncommonly
+earnest. "The law," he averred, "should have its course; he would live
+and die by the law." He promised to order an inquiry in the morning, and
+requested all to retire to their homes. But words now were not
+satisfactory to the people; and those near him urged that the course of
+justice had always been evaded or obstructed in favor of the soldiery,
+and that the people were determined not to disperse until Captain
+Preston was arrested. In consequence, Hutchinson ordered an immediate
+court of inquiry. The Patriots also entreated the Lieutenant-Governor to
+order the troops to their barracks. He replied, that it was not in his
+power to give such an order, but he would consult the officers. They now
+came on to the balcony,--Dalrymple of the Fourteenth Regiment being
+present,--and after an interview with Hutchinson returned to the troops.
+The men now rose from their kneeling posture; the order to "shoulder
+arms" was heard; and the people were greatly relieved by seeing the
+troops move towards their barracks.
+
+The people now began to disperse, but slowly, however. Meanwhile, the
+court of inquiry on Captain Preston was in session, and, after an
+examination that lasted three hours, he was bound over for trial. Later,
+the file of soldiers were also arrested. It was three o'clock in the
+morning before the Lieutenant-Governor left the scene of the massacre.
+And now all, excepting about a hundred of the people, who formed
+themselves into a watch, left the streets. Thus wise action by the crown
+officials, the activity of the popular leaders, and the habitual respect
+of the people for law, proved successful in preventing further carnage.
+"It was Royal George's livery," said Warren, "that proved a shield to
+the soldiery, and saved them from destruction." Hence, a contemporary
+versifier and participator in these scenes was able to write,--
+
+ "No sudden rage the ruffian soldier bore,
+ Or drenched the pavements with his vital gore;
+ Deliberate thought did all our souls compose,
+ Till veiled in gloom the low'ry morning rose."
+
+During the night, the popular leaders sent expresses to the neighboring
+towns, bearing intelligence of what had occurred, and summoning people
+from their beds to go to the aid of Boston; but as the efforts to
+restore quiet were proving successful, the summons was countermanded.
+This action accounts for the numbers who, very early in the morning of
+the sixth of March, flocked into the town. They could learn details of
+the tragedy from the actors in it,--could see the blood, the brains
+even, of the slaughtered inhabitants,--could hear the groans of the
+wounded,--could view the bodies of the dead. This terrible revelation of
+the work of arbitrary power, to a people habitually tender of regard for
+human life, naturally shocked the sensibilities of all; and thus the
+public temper was again wrought up to a fearful pitch of indignation. It
+required the strongest moral influence to restrain the rash, and to
+guide in the forms of law a righteous demand for a redress of grievance
+and for future security.
+
+The Lieutenant-Governor, during the night, had summoned such members of
+the Council as were within reach to meet in the Council-Chamber in the
+morning; and on joining them, he found the Selectmen, with most of the
+justices of the county, waiting for him, to represent, as he says,
+"their opinion of the absolute necessity of the troops being at a
+distance, that there might be no intercourse between the inhabitants and
+them, in order to prevent a further effusion of blood." Such was the
+logic of events which now forced the seventeen months' question of the
+removal of the troops on the civil and military authorities with an
+imperativeness that could not be resisted.
+
+The question, however, came up now in a new shape. To put it in the
+simplest way, and in the very words used on that day,--the people were
+so excited by the shedding of blood on the preceding night, that they
+were resolved no longer to acquiesce in the decision of the constituted
+authorities as to the troops; but, failing in other means, they were
+determined to effect their removal by force, let the act be deemed
+rebellion or otherwise. Not that any conspiracy existed; not that any
+plan had been matured to do this; but circumstances had transferred the
+question from the domain of reason to that of physical force; and the
+only point with the crown officials, during this whole day's
+deliberations, was, whether they would be justified in what appeared to
+them lowering the national standard at the demand of a power which they
+habitually represented as "the faction," or whether they might venture
+to take the responsibility of resisting the demand and of meeting the
+consequences. Well might John Adams say, "This was a dangerous and
+difficult crisis."
+
+The Selectmen expressed to the Lieutenant-Governor the opinion, that
+"the inhabitants would be under no restraint whilst the troops were in
+town." "I let them know," Hutchinson says, "that I had no power to
+remove the troops." They also informed him that they had been requested
+to call a town-meeting, which was the special dread of Hutchinson. As
+the settled determination of the people became revealed, the anxiety of
+the Lieutenant-Governor naturally deepened as to what the day might
+bring forth; and he sent for Colonels Dalrymple and Carr to be present
+in Council and act as military advisers. But the discussions here were
+interrupted by the entrance of a messenger from another assembly,
+bearing the ominous summons for the immediate presence among them of the
+Selectmen.
+
+This summons invites attention to the movements of the people, who had
+been constantly coming in from the neighboring towns, and had now
+gathered in great numbers in and around Faneuil Hall, to use
+Hutchinson's words, "in a perfect frenzy." It was, however, the general
+disposition, volcanic as were the elements, to act with caution,
+deliberation, and in a spirit of unity, and, doubtless, with the
+consideration that the eyes of the friends of their cause were upon
+them, and the name and fame of Boston were at stake. The hours passed,
+and no warrant appeared calling a town-meeting; when, at eleven o'clock,
+the town-records say, "the freeholders and other inhabitants" held a
+meeting, "occasioned, by the massacre made in King Street by the
+soldiery." The town-clerk, William Cooper, acted as the chairman. This
+true and intrepid patriot held this office forty-nine years, which
+speaks for his fidelity to duty, intelligence, devotion to principle,
+and moral worth. "The Selectmen," his clear, round record reads, "not
+being present, and the inhabitants being informed that they were in the
+Council-Chamber, it was voted that Mr. William Greenleaf be desired to
+proceed there and acquaint the Selectmen that the inhabitants desire
+and expect their attendance at the Hall." This was virtually a command,
+and the Selectmen immediately repaired thither. Thomas Cushing was
+chosen the Moderator. He was now the Speaker of the House of
+Representatives; and though not of such shining abilities as to cause
+him to be looked up to in Boston as a leader, and of the moderate class
+of Patriots, yet, by urbanity of manner, a high personal character,
+diligent public service, and fidelity to the cause, he won a large
+influence. It was next voted that Constable Wallace wait upon the
+Reverend Dr. Cooper and acquaint him that the inhabitants desired him to
+open the meeting with prayer. This great divine was a brother of the
+town-clerk, and the pastor of the Brattle-Street Church. He was devoted
+to the Patriot cause, and on the most confidential terms with the
+popular leaders; and besides being rich in genius and learning, he had,
+says Dr. Eliot, a gift in prayer peculiar and very excellent. He
+complied with the request, but no reporter has transmitted the words of
+this righteous man, or described this solemn assembly, as fervent prayer
+now went up for country.
+
+The meeting next voted to invite any citizen to give information of the
+massacre of the preceding evening, "that the same might be minuted by
+the town-clerk"; whereupon several persons related details of the
+tragedy. One said he heard a soldier, after the firing, say, that "the
+Devil might give quarter, he should give none"; another said he heard a
+soldier say, that "his officer told him, that, if the soldiers went out
+that night, they must go armed and in companies"; another related a
+soldier's story of a scheme formed to kill the inhabitants; another
+said, he "descried a soldier who struck down the inhabitants." These
+homely words are life-like glimpses of the spirit of the hour. No speech
+could have been more eloquent, because none could have been better
+calculated to deepen the general conviction and minister to the common
+emotion. However, so many witnesses were ready to testify, that it was
+found to be impracticable to hear all; and a committee was appointed to
+receive and digest the evidence.
+
+Samuel Adams addressed this remarkable meeting. He spoke with a pathos
+peculiar to himself. His manner, naturally impressive, was rendered more
+so by the solemnity of the occasion, and every heart was moved. The
+great hour demanded dignity and discretion in unison with firmness, and
+they were combined in the action of the meeting. It resolved that the
+inhabitants would submit no longer to the insult of military rule. A
+committee of fifteen was chosen to wait on the Lieutenant-Governor, and
+acquaint him that it was the unanimous opinion of the meeting that the
+inhabitants and soldiery could no longer dwell together in safety, and
+that nothing could be rationally expected to restore the peace of the
+town and prevent additional scenes of blood and carnage but the
+immediate removal of the troops; and to say, further, that they most
+fervently prayed his Honor that his power and influence might be exerted
+in order that this removal might be instantly effected. This committee
+well represented the intelligence, the patriotism, the varied interests,
+and whatever there was of true greatness in Boston. The meeting now
+dissolved; when the Selectmen issued a warrant for a regular
+town-meeting to convene at the same place, at three o'clock in the
+afternoon.
+
+It was about noon when the Lieutenant-Governor received the committee of
+the town at the Council-Chamber, the Council being in session. I have
+found no details of what was said by the committee at this interview, in
+urging a compliance with the demand. Hutchinson said he was not prepared
+to reply, but would give an answer in writing, when the committee
+withdrew into another room; and he gives glimpses of what then occurred.
+"I told the Council," he says, "that a removal of the troops was not
+with me; and I desired them to consider what answer I could give to
+this application of the town, whilst Colonel Dalrymple, who had the
+command, was present." Some of the members, who were among the truest
+Patriots, urged a compliance, when the Lieutenant-Governor declared that
+"he would upon no consideration whatever give orders for their removal."
+The result reached this morning was an advice for the removal of one
+regiment, in which the commanding officer concurred. As Hutchinson rose
+from this sitting, he declared that "he meant to receive no further
+application on the subject."
+
+Things wore a gloomy aspect during the interval between the session of
+the Council and the time of the afternoon meeting; for the natural
+effect of the unbending tone of the crown officials was to give firmness
+to the determined spirit of the people. There were consultations between
+members of the Council, the popular leaders, and the commanding
+officers; and now the very men who were branded as incendiaries, enemies
+of Great Britain, and traitors, were again seen quietly endeavoring to
+prevent a catastrophe. Hutchinson, in his History, says it was intimated
+to members of the Council, that, though the commanding officer should
+receive no authoritative order to remove all the troops, yet the
+expression of a desire by the Lieutenant-Governor and Council that it
+should be done would cause him to do it; and on this basis Hutchinson
+was prevailed upon to meet the Council in the afternoon. This was a
+great point gained for the popular cause.
+
+At three o'clock, Faneuil Hall was filled to overflowing with the
+excited population assembled in legal town-meeting. Thomas Cushing was
+again chosen the Moderator; but the place would hold only about thirteen
+hundred, and the record reads, "The Hall not being spacious enough to
+receive the inhabitants who attended, it was voted to adjourn to Dr.
+Sewall's meeting-house,"--the Old South. The most convenient way for the
+people would be to pass into King Street, up by the Council-Chamber, and
+along what is now Washington Street, to the church. As they went, no
+mention is made of mottoes or banners or flags, of cheers or of jeers.
+Thomas dishing said his countrymen "were like the old British commoners,
+grave and sad men"; and it was said in the Council to Hutchinson, "That
+multitude are not such as pulled down your house"; but they are "men of
+the best characters," "men of estates and men of religion," "men who
+pray over what they do." With similar men, men who feared God and were
+devoted to public liberty, Cromwell won at Marston Moor; and so striking
+was the analogy, that at this hour it virtually forced itself on the
+well-read Hutchinson: for men of this stamp had once made a revolution
+in Boston, and as he looked out on this scene, perhaps scanned the
+concourse who passed from Faneuil Hall to the Old South, and read in
+their faces the sign of resolute hearts, he judged "their spirit to be
+as high as was the spirit of their ancestors when they imprisoned
+Andros, while they were four times as numerous." As the burden of
+official responsibility pressed heavily on him, he realized that he had
+to deal with an element far more potent than "the faction" which
+officials had long represented as composing the Patriot band, and that
+much depended on dealing with it wisely. This was not a dependent and
+starved host wildly urging the terrible demand of "Bread or blood"; nor
+was it fanaticism in a season of social discontent claiming
+impossibilities at the hand of power: the craving was moral and
+intellectual: it was an intelligent public opinion, a people with
+well-grounded and settled convictions, making a just demand on arbitrary
+power. Was such public opinion about to be scorned as though it were but
+a faction, and by officials who bore high the party-standard? And were
+men of such resoluteness of character and purpose about to be involved
+in a work of carnage? or would the wielders of British authority avoid
+the extremity by concession? Boston, indeed America, had seen no hour of
+intenser interest, of deeper solemnity, of more instant peril, or of
+truer moral sublimity; and as this assembly deliberated with the sounds
+of the fife and drum in their ears, and with the soldiery in their
+sight, questions like these must have been on every lip,--and they are
+of the civil-war questions that cause an involuntary shudder in every
+home.
+
+The Old South was not large enough to hold the people, and they stood in
+the street and near the Town-House awaiting the report of the committee
+of fifteen, chosen in the morning. The Lieutenant-Governor was now at
+the Council-Chamber, where, in addition to Colonels Dalrymple and Carr,
+there had been summoned Captain Caldwell of the Rose frigate; and
+Hutchinson would, he says, have summoned other crown officers, but he
+knew the Council would not consent to it. He took care to repeat to the
+committee, he says, the declaration which he had made in the morning to
+the Selectmen, the Justices, and the Council,--that "the ordering of the
+troops did not lie with him." As the committee, with Samuel Adams at the
+head, appeared on the Town-House steps, the people were in motion, and
+the word passed, "Make way for the committee!" Adams uncovered his head,
+and, as he went towards the church, he bowed alternately to those on
+each side of the lane that was formed, and repeated the words, "Both
+regiments or none." The answer of the Lieutenant-Governor to the morning
+demand for a total removal of the troops was read to the meeting in the
+church. It was to the effect, that he had conferred with the commanders
+of the two regiments, who received orders from the General in New York,
+and it was not in his power to countermand these orders; but the Council
+desired their removal, and Colonel Dalrymple had signified that because
+of the part which the Twenty-Ninth Regiment had taken in the differences
+it should be placed without delay in the barracks at the Castle, and
+also that the main guard should be removed; while the Fourteenth
+Regiment should be so disposed and laid under such restraint that all
+occasion for future differences might be prevented. And now resounded
+through the excited assembly, from a thousand tongues, the words, "Both
+regiments or none!"
+
+A short debate occurred, when the answer was voted to be unsatisfactory.
+Then another committee was chosen. It was resolved that John Hancock,
+Samuel Adams, William Molineaux, William Phillips, Joseph Warren, Joshua
+Henshaw, and Samuel Pemberton be a committee to inform the
+Lieutenant-Governor that it was the unanimous opinion of the people that
+the reply was by no means satisfactory, and that nothing less would
+satisfy them than a total and immediate removal of the troops. This
+committee was one worthy of a great occasion. Hancock, Henshaw, and
+Pemberton, besides being individually of large and just influence from
+their ability, patriotism, worth, and wealth, were members of the Board
+of Selectmen, and therefore represented the municipality; Phillips, who
+had served on this Board, was a type of the upright and liberal
+merchant; Molineaux was one of the most determined and zealous of the
+Patriots, and a stirring business-man; Warren, ardent and bold, of
+rising fame as a leader, personified the generous devotion and noble
+enthusiasm of the young men; Adams, though not the first-named on the
+committee, played so prominent a part in its doings, that he appears as
+its chairman. He was so widely and favorably known now that he was
+addressed as "the Father of America." Of middling stature, plain in
+dress, quiet in manner, unpretending in deportment, he exhibited nothing
+extraordinary in common affairs; but on great occasions, when his deeper
+nature was called into action, he rose, without the smallest
+affectation, into an upright dignity of figure and bearing,--with a
+harmony of voice and a power of speech which made a strong impression,
+the more lasting from the purity and nervous eloquence of his style and
+the logical consistency of his argument. Such were the men selected to
+speak and act for Boston in this hour of deep passion and of high
+resolve.
+
+The committee, about four o'clock, repaired to the Council-Chamber. It
+was a room respectable in size and not without ornament and historic
+memorials. On its walls were representatives of the two elements now in
+conflict,--of the Absolutism that was passing away, in full-length
+portraits of Charles II. and James II. robed in the royal ermine, and of
+a Republicanism which had grown robust and self-reliant, in the heads of
+Belcher and Bradstreet and Endicott and Winthrop. Around a long table
+were seated the Lieutenant-Governor and the members of the Council with
+the military officers,--the scrupulous and sumptuous costumes of
+civilians in authority, gold and silver lace, scarlet cloaks, and large
+wigs, mingled with the brilliant uniforms of the British army and navy.
+Into such imposing presence was now ushered the plainly attired
+committee of the town.
+
+At this time the Lieutenant-Governor, a portion of the Council, the
+military officers, and, among other officials now in the Town-House,
+though not in the Council, the Secretary of the Province, were sternly
+resolved to refuse compliance with the demand of the people. On the vote
+of the meeting being presented to the Lieutenant-Governor, Adams
+remarked at length on the illegality of quartering troops on the
+inhabitants in time of peace and without the consent of the legislature,
+urged that the public service did not require them, adverted with
+sensibility and warmth to the late tragedy, painted the misery in which
+the town would be involved, if the troops were suffered to remain, and
+urged the necessity of an immediate compliance with the vote of the
+people. The Lieutenant-Governor, in a brief reply, defended both the
+legality and the necessity of the troops, and renewed his old assertion
+that they were not subject to his authority. Adams again rose, and
+attention was riveted on him as he paused and gave a searching look at
+the Lieutenant-Governor. There was in his countenance and attitude a
+silent eloquence that words could not express; his manner showed that
+the energies of his soul were roused; and, in a tone not loud, but deep
+and earnest, he again addressed himself to Hutchinson, "It is well
+known," he said, "that, acting as Governor of the Province, you are, by
+its Charter, the Commander-in-Chief of the military forces within it,
+and, as such, the troops now in the capital are subject to your orders.
+If you, or Colonel Dalrymple under you, have the power to remove one
+regiment, you have the power to remove both; and nothing short of their
+total removal will satisfy the people or preserve the peace of the
+Province. A multitude, highly incensed, now wait the result of this
+application. The voice of ten thousand freemen demands that both
+regiments be forthwith removed. Their voice must be respected,--their
+demand obeyed. Fail, then, at your peril, to comply with this
+requisition. On you alone rests the responsibility of the decision; and
+if the just expectations of the people are disappointed, you must be
+answerable to God and your country for the fatal consequences that must
+ensue. The committee have discharged their duty, and it is for you to
+discharge yours. They wait your final determination." As Adams, while
+speaking, intently eyed Hutchinson, he says, "I observed his knees to
+tremble; I saw his face grow pale; and I enjoyed the sight."
+
+A spell of silence followed this appeal. Then there was low
+conversation, to a whisper, between the Lieutenant-Governor and Colonel
+Dalrymple, who, in the spirit of the unbending soldier, was for
+resisting this demand, as he had been for summary proceedings in the
+case of the meetings. "It is impossible for me," he had said this
+afternoon, "to go any further lengths in this matter. The information
+given of the intended rebellion is sufficient reason against the removal
+of His Majesty's troops." But he now said in a loud tone, "I am ready to
+obey your orders," which threw the responsibility on Hutchinson. All the
+members of the committee urged the demand. "Every one of them,"
+Hutchinson says, "deliberately gave his opinion at large, and generally
+gave this reason to support it,--that the people would most certainly
+drive out the troops, and that the inhabitants of the other towns would
+join in it; and several of the gentlemen, declared that they did not
+judge from the general temper of the people only, but they knew it to be
+the determination, not of a mob, but of the generality of the principal
+inhabitants; and they added, that all the blood would be charged to me
+alone, for refusing to follow their unanimous advice, in desiring that
+the quarters of a single regiment might be changed, in order to put an
+end to the animosities between the troops and the inhabitants, seeing
+Colonel Dalrymple would consent to it." After the committee withdrew,
+the debates of the Council were long and earnest; and, as they went on,
+Hutchinson asked, "What protection would there be for the Commissioners,
+if both regiments were ordered to the Castle?" Several said, "They would
+be safe, and always had been safe." "As safe," said Gray, "without the
+troops as with them." And Irving said, "They never had been in danger,
+and he would pawn his life that they should receive no injury." "Unless
+the troops were removed," it was said, "before evening there would be
+ten thousand men on the Common." "The people in general," Tyler said,
+"were resolved to have the troops removed, without which they would not
+be satisfied; that, failing of other means, they were determined to
+effect their removal by force, let the act be deemed rebellion or
+otherwise." As the Council deliberated, the people were impatient, and
+the members were repeatedly called out to give information as to the
+result, This at length was unanimity. This body resolved, that, to
+preserve the peace, it was absolutely necessary that the troops should
+be removed; and they advised the Lieutenant-Governor to communicate that
+conclusion to Colonel Dalrymple, and to request that he would order his
+whole command to Castle William.
+
+The remark of Dalrymple, as well as the decision of the Council, became
+known to the people, and the word passed round, "that Colonel Dalrymple
+had yielded, and that the Lieutenant-Governor only held out." This
+circumstance was communicated to Hutchinson, and he says, "It now lay
+upon me to choose that side which had the fewest and least difficulties;
+and I weighed and compared them as well as the time I had for them would
+permit. I knew it was most regular for me to leave this matter entire to
+the commanding officer. I was sensible the troops were designed to be,
+upon occasion, employed under the direction of the civil magistrate, and
+that at the Castle they would be too remote, in most cases, to answer
+that purpose. But then I considered they never had been used for that
+purpose, and there was no probability they ever would be, because no
+civil magistrate could be found under whose directions they might act;
+and they could be considered only as having a tendency to keep the
+inhabitants in some degree of awe, and even this was every day
+lessening; and the affronts the troops received were such that there was
+no avoiding quarrels and slaughter." Still he hesitated substantially to
+retract his word; for now a request from him, he knew, was equivalent to
+an order; and before he determined, he consulted three officers of the
+crown, who, though not present in the Council, were in the building, and
+the Secretary, Oliver. All agreed that he ought to comply with the
+advice of the Council. He then formally recommended Colonel Dalrymple to
+remove all the troops, who gave his word of honor that he would commence
+preparations in the morning for a removal, and that there should be no
+unnecessary delay in quartering both regiments at the Castle.
+
+It was dark when the committee bore back to the meeting the great report
+of their success. It was received with expressions of the highest
+satisfaction. What a burden was lifted from the hearts of the Patriots!
+They did not, however, regard their work as quite done. They voted that
+a strong watch was necessary through the night, when the committee who
+had waited on the Lieutenant-Governor tendered their services to make a
+part of the watch, and the whole matter was placed in their hands as "a
+committee of safety." They were authorized to accept the service of such
+inhabitants as they might deem proper. The meeting, then dissolved. A
+few days after, the two regiments were removed to the Castle.
+
+The withdrawal of the troops caused great surprise in England, and long
+deliberations by the Ministry. "It is put out of all doubt," Governor
+Bernard wrote Hutchinson, "that the attacking the soldiers was
+preconcerted in order to oblige them to fire, and then make it necessary
+to quit the town, in consequence of their doing what they were forced to
+do. It is considered by thinking men wholly as a manoeuvre to support
+the cause of non-importation." The Opposition termed it an indignity put
+upon Great Britain, and called upon the Ministry to resent it upon a
+system, or to resign their offices. Lord Barrington, who approved of the
+soldiers' retiring to the Castle, said, that, "where there was no
+magistracy there should be no soldiers; and if they intended to have
+soldiers sent there again, they should provide for a magistracy, which
+could not be done but by appointing a royal Council, instead of the
+present democratical one." The Government were perplexed; but the
+expectation was general, that General Gage, without waiting for orders
+from the Government, would send a reinforcement to Boston, and order the
+whole of the troops into the town. "Every one," Governor Bernard wrote,
+"without exception, says it must be immediately done. Those in
+opposition are as loud as any. Lord Shelburne told a gentleman, who
+reported it to me, that it was now high time for Great Britain to act
+with spirit." The Governor advised Hutchinson, that, should it turn out
+that he had been successful in preventing Captain Preston from being
+murdered by the mob, "Government might be reconciled to the removal of
+the troops." There was much outside clamor, and those who indulged in it
+could not reconcile to themselves "six hundred regular troops giving way
+to two or three thousand common people, who, they say, would not have
+dared to attack them, if they had stood their ground"; and this class
+regarded the affair "as a successful bully." Colonel Barre, in the House
+of Commons, disposed of the question in a few words: "The officers
+agreed in sending the soldiers to Castle William; what Minister will
+dare to send them back to Boston?"
+
+These events stirred the public mind in the Colonies profoundly. The
+Spirit evinced by the people of Boston in the whole transaction raised
+the town still higher in the estimation of the Patriots; annual
+commemorative orations kept alive the tragic scene; and thus the
+introduction of the troops, the question involved in their removal, and
+the massacre and triumph of the people, contributed powerfully to bring
+about that change in affections and principles which finally resulted in
+American Independence.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WET-WEATHER WORK.
+
+BY A FARMER.
+
+
+IV.
+
+We are fairly on English ground now; of course, it is wet weather. The
+phenomena of the British climate have not changed much since the time
+when the rains "let fall their horrible pleasure" upon the head of the
+poor, drenched outcast, Lear. Thunder and lightning, however, which
+belonged to that particular war of the elements, are rare in England.
+The rain is quiet, fine, insinuating, constant as a lover,--not wasting
+its resources in sudden, explosive outbreaks.
+
+During a foot-tramp of some four hundred miles, which I once had the
+pleasure of making upon English soil, and which led me from the mouth of
+the Thames to its sources, and thence through Derbyshire, the West
+Riding of Yorkshire, and all of the Lake counties, I do not think that
+the violence of the rain kept me housed for more than five days out of
+forty. Not to say that the balance showed sunshine and a bonny sky; on
+the contrary, a soft, lubricating mist is the normal condition of the
+British atmosphere; and a neutral tint of gray sky, when no wet is
+falling, is almost sure to call out from the country-landlord, if
+communicative, an explosive and authoritative, "Fine morning, this,
+Sir!"
+
+The really fine, sunny days--days you believed in rashly, upon the sunny
+evidence of such blithe poets as Herrick--are so rare, that, after a
+month of British travel, you can count them on your fingers. On such a
+one, by a piece of good fortune, I saw all the parterres of Hampton
+Court,--its great vine, its labyrinthine walks, its stately alleys, its
+ruddy range of brick, its clipped lindens, its rotund and low-necked
+beauties of Sir Peter Lely, and the red geraniums flaming on the
+window-sills of once royal apartments, where the pensioned dowagers now
+dream away their lives. On another such day, Twickenham, and all its
+delights of trees, bowers, and villas, were flashing in the sun as
+brightly as ever in the best days of Horace Walpole or of Pope. And on
+yet another, after weary tramp, I toiled up to the inn-door of "The
+Bear," at Woodstock; and after a cut or two into a ripe haunch of
+Oxfordshire mutton, with certain "tiny kickshaws," I saw, for the first
+time, under the light of a glorious sunset, that exquisite velvety
+stretch of the park of Woodstock, dimpled with water, dotted with
+forest--clumps, where companies of sleek fallow-deer were grazing by the
+hundred, where pheasants whirred away down the aisles of wood, where
+memories of Fair Rosamond and of Rochester and of Alice Lee
+lingered,--and all brought to a ringing close by Southey's ballad of
+"Blenheim," as the shadow of the gaunt Marlborough column slanted across
+the path.
+
+There are other notable places, however, which seem--so dependent are we
+on first impressions--to be always bathed in a rain-cloud. It is quite
+impossible, for instance, for me to think of London Bridge save as a
+great reeking thoroughfare, slimy with thin mud, with piles of umbrellas
+crowding over it, like an army of turtles, and its balustrade steaming
+with wet. The charming little Dulwich Gallery, with its Bonningtons and
+Murillos, I remember as situated somewhere (for I could never find it
+again of my own head) at a very rainy distance from London, under the
+spout of an interminable waterfall. The guide-books talk of a pretty
+neighborhood, and of a thousand rural charms thereabout; I remember only
+one or two draggled policemen in oil-skin capes, and with heads slanted
+to the wind, and my cabby, in a four-caped coat, shaking himself like a
+water-dog, in the area. Exeter, Gloucester, and Glasgow are three great
+wet cities in my memory,--a damp cathedral in each, with a damp-coated
+usher to each, who shows damp tombs, and whose talk is dampening to the
+last degree. I suppose they have sunshine in these places, and in the
+light of the sun I am sure that marvellous gray tower of Gloucester must
+make a rare show; but all the reports in the world will not avail to dry
+up the image of those wet days of visit.
+
+Considering how very much the fair days are overbalanced by the dirty,
+thick, dropping, misty weather of England, I think we take a too sunny
+aspect of her history: it has not been under the full-faced smiles of
+heaven that her battles, revolutions, executions, and pageants have held
+their august procession; the rain has wet many a May-day and many a
+harvesting, whose traditional color (through tender English verses) is
+gaudy with yellow sunshine. The revellers of the "Midsummer Night's
+Dream" would find a wet turf eight days out of ten to disport upon. We
+think of Bacon without an umbrella, and of Cromwell without a
+mackintosh; yet I suspect both of them carried these, or their
+equivalents, pretty constantly. Raleigh, indeed, threw his velvet cloak
+into the mud for the Virgin Queen to tread upon,--from which we infer a
+recent shower; but it is not often that an historical incident is so
+suggestive of the true state of the atmosphere.
+
+History, however, does not mind the rain: agriculture must. More
+especially in any view of British agriculture, whether old or new, and
+in any estimate of its theories or progress, due consideration must be
+had for the generous dampness of the British atmosphere. To this cause
+is to be attributed primarily that wonderful velvety turf which is so
+unmatchable elsewhere; to the same cause, and to the accompanying even
+temperature, is to be credited very much of the success of the
+turnip-culture, which has within a century revolutionized the
+agriculture of Kugland; yet again, the magical effects of a thorough
+system of drainage are nowhere so demonstrable as in a soil constantly
+wetted, and giving a steady flow, however small, to the discharging
+tile. Measured by inches, the rain-fall is greater in most parts of
+America than in Great Britain; but this fall is so capricious with us,
+often so sudden and violent, that there must be inevitably a large
+surface-discharge, even though the tile, three feet below, is in working
+order. The true theory of skilful drainage is, not to carry away the
+quick flush of a shower, but to relieve a soil too heavily saturated by
+opening new outflows, setting new currents astir of both air and
+moisture, and thus giving new life and an enlarged capacity to lands
+that were dead with a stagnant over-soak.
+
+Bearing in mind, then, the conditions of the British climate, which are
+so much in keeping with the "wet weather" of these studies, let us go
+back again to old Markham's day, and amble along--armed with our
+umbrellas--through the current of the seventeenth century.
+
+James I., that conceited old pedant, whose "Counterblast to Tobacco" has
+worked the poorest of results, seems to have had a nice taste for
+fruits; and Sir Henry Wotton, his ambassador at Venice, writing from
+that city in 1622, says,--"I have sent the choicest melon-seeds of all
+kinds, which His Majesty doth expect, as I had order both from ray Lord
+Holderness and from Mr. Secretary Calvert." Sir Henry sent also with the
+seeds very particular directions for the culture of the plants, obtained
+probably from some head-gardener of a Priuli or a Morosini, whose melons
+had the full beat of Italian sunshine upon the south slopes of the
+Vicentine mountains. The same ambassador sends at that date to Lord
+Holderness "a double-flowering yellow rose, of no ordinary nature";[3]
+and it would be counted of no ordinary nature now, if what he avers be
+true, that "it flowreth every month from May till almost Christmas."
+
+King James took special interest in the establishment of his garden at
+the Theobald Palace in Hertfordshire: there were clipped hedges, neat
+array of linden avenues, fountains, and a Mount of Venus within a
+labyrinth; twelve miles of wall encircled the park, and the soldiers of
+Cromwell found fine foraging-ground in it, when they entered upon the
+premises a few years later. The schoolmaster-king formed also a guild of
+gardeners in the city of London, at whose hands certificates of capacity
+for garden-work were demanded, and these to be given only after proper
+examination of the applicants. Lord Bacon possessed a beautiful garden,
+if we may trust his own hints to that effect, and the added praises of
+Wotton. Cashiobury, Holland House, and Greenwich gardens were all noted
+in this time; and the experiments and successes of the proprietor of
+Bednall-Greene garden I have already alluded to. But the
+country-gentleman, who lived upon his land and directed the cultivation
+of his property, was but a very savage type of the Bedford or
+Oxfordshire landholders of our day. It involved a muddy drag over bad
+roads, after a heavy Flemish mare, to bring either one's self or one's
+crops to market.
+
+Sir Thomas Overbury, who draws such a tender picture of a "Milke-Mayde,"
+is severe, and, I dare say, truthful, upon the country-gentleman. "His
+conversation," says he, "amongst his tenants is desperate: but amongst
+his equals full of doubt. His travel is seldome farther than the next
+market towne, and his inquisition is about the price of corne: when he
+travelleth, he will goe ten mile out of the way to a cousins house of
+his to save charges; and rewards servants by taking them by the hand
+when hee departs. Nothing under a _sub-poena_ can draw him to
+_London_: and when he is there, he sticks fast upon every object, casts
+his eyes away upon gazing, and becomes the prey of every cut-purse. When
+he comes home, those wonders serve him for his holy-day talke. If he goe
+to court, it is in yellow stockings: and if it be in winter, in a slight
+tafety cloake, and pumps and pantofles."
+
+The portrait of the smaller farmer, who, in this time, tilled his own
+ground, is even more severely sketched by Bishop Earle. "A plain country
+fellow is one that manures his ground well, but lets himself lye fallow
+and unfilled. He has reason enough to do his business, and not enough to
+be idle or melancholy.... His hand guides the plough, and the plough his
+thoughts, and his ditch and land-mark is the very mound of his
+meditations. He expostulates with his oxen very understandingly, and
+speaks _gee_, and _ree_, better than English. His mind is not much
+distracted with objects, but if a good fat cow come in his way, he
+stands dumb and astonished, and though his haste be never so great, wilt
+fix here half an hours contemplation. His habitation is some poor
+thatched roof, distinguished from his barn by the loop-holes that let
+out smoak, which the rain had long since washed through, but for the
+double ceiling of bacon on the inside, which has hung there from his
+grand-sires time, and is yet to make rashers for posterity. He
+apprehends Gods blessings only in a good year, or a fat pasture, and
+never praises him but on _good ground_."
+
+Such were the men who were to be reached by the agricultural literature
+of the day! Yet, notwithstanding this unpromising audience, scarcely a
+year passed but some talker was found who felt himself competent to
+expound the whole art and mystery of husbandry.
+
+Adam Speed, Gent., (from which title we may presume that he was no
+Puritan,) published a little book in the year 1626, which he wittily
+called "Adam out of Eden." In this he undertakes to show how Adam, under
+the embarrassing circumstance of being shut out of Paradise, may
+increase the product of a farm from two hundred pounds to two thousand
+pounds a year by the rearing of rabbits on furze and broom! It is all
+mathematically computed; there is nothing to disappoint in the figures;
+but I suspect there might be in the rabbits.
+
+Gentleman Speed speaks of turnips, clover, and potatoes; he advises the
+boiling of "butchers' blood" for poultry, and mixing the "pudding" with
+bran and other condiments, which will "feed the beasts very fat."
+
+The author of "Adam out of Eden" also indulges himself in verse, which
+is certainly not up to the measure of "Paradise Lost." This is its
+taste:--
+
+ "Each soyl hath no liking of every grain,
+ Nor barley nor wheat is for every vein;
+ Yet know I no country so barren of soyl
+ But some kind of come may be gotten with toyl.
+ Though husband at home be to count the cost what,
+ Yet thus huswife within is as needful as that:
+ What helpeth in store to have never so much,
+ Half lost by ill-usage, ill huswifes, and such?"
+
+The papers of Bacon upon subjects connected with rural life are so
+familiar that I need not recur to them. His particular suggestions,
+however sound in themselves, (and they generally are sound,) did by no
+means measure the extent of his contribution to the growth of good
+husbandry. But the more thorough methods of investigation which he
+instituted and encouraged gave a new and healthier direction to
+inquiries connected not only with agriculture, but with every
+experimental art.
+
+Thus, Gabriel Platte, publishing his "Observations and Improvements in
+Husbandry," about the year 1638, thinks it necessary to sustain and
+illustrate them with a record of "twenty experiments."
+
+Sir Richard Weston, too, a sensible up-country knight, has travelled
+through Flanders about the same time, and has seen such success
+attending upon the turnip and the clover culture there, that he urges
+the same upon his fellow-landholders, in a "Discourse of Husbandrie."
+
+The book was published under the name of Hartlib,--the same Master
+Samuel Hartlib to whom Milton addressed his tractate "Of Education," and
+of whom the great poet speaks as "a person sent hither [to England] by
+some good Providence from a far country, to be the occasion and
+incitement of great good to this island."
+
+This mention makes us curious to know something more of Master Samuel
+Hartlib. I find that he was the son of a Polish merchant, of Lithuania,
+was himself engaged for a time in commercial transactions, and came to
+England about the year 1640. He wrote several theological tracts, edited
+sundry agricultural works, including, among others, those of Sir Richard
+Weston, and published his own observations upon the shortcomings of
+British husbandry. He also proposed a grandiose scheme for an
+agricultural college, in order to teach youths "the theorick and
+practick parts of this most ancient, noble, and honestly gainfull art,
+trade, or mystery." The work published under his name entitled "The
+Legacy," besides notices of the Brabant husbandry, embraces epistles
+from various farmers, who may be supposed to represent the progressive
+agriculture of England. Among these letters I note one upon "Snaggreet,"
+(shelly earth from river-beds); another upon "Seaweeds"; a third upon
+"Sea-sand"; and a fourth upon "Woollen-rags."
+
+Hartlib was in good odor during the days of the Commonwealth; for he
+lived long enough to see that bitter tragedy of the executed king before
+Whitehall Palace, and to hold over to the early years of the
+Restoration. But he was not in favor with the people about Charles II.;
+the small pension that Cromwell had bestowed fell into sad arrearages;
+and the story is, that he died miserably poor.
+
+It is noticeable that Hartlib, and a great many sensible old gentlemen
+of his date, spoke of the art of husbandry as a mystery. And so it is; a
+mystery then, and a mystery now. Nothing tries my patience more than to
+meet one of those billet-headed farmers who--whether in print or in
+talk--pretend to have solved the mystery and mastered it.
+
+Take my own crop of corn yonder upon the flat, which I have watched
+since the day when it first shot up its little dainty spears of green,
+until now it spindles has been faithfully ploughed and fed and tilled;
+but how gross appliances all these, to the fine fibrous feeders that
+have been searching, day by day, every cranny of the soil,--to the broad
+leaflets that, week by week, have stolen out from their green sheaths to
+wanton with the wind and caress the dews! Is there any quick-witted
+farmer who shall tell us with anything like definiteness what the
+phosphates have contributed to all this, and how much the nitrogenous
+manures, and to what degree the deposits of _humus_? He may establish
+the conditions of a sure crop, thirty, forty, or sixty bushels to the
+acre, (seasons favoring); but how short a reach is this toward
+determining the final capacity of either soil or plant! How often the
+most petted experiments laugh us in the face! The great miracle of the
+vital laboratory in the plant remains to mock us. We test it; we humor
+it; we fondly believe that we have detected its secret: but the mystery
+stays.
+
+A bumpkin may rear a crop that shall keep him from starvation; but to
+develop the _utmost_ capacity of a given soil by fertilizing appliances,
+or by those of tillage, is the work, I suspect, of a wiser man than
+belongs to our day. And when I find one who fancies he has resolved all
+the conditions which contribute to this miracle of God's, and can
+control and fructify at his will, I have less respect for his head than
+for a good one--of Savoy cabbage. The great problem of Adam's curse is
+not worked out so easily. The sweating is not over yet.
+
+If we are confronted with mystery, it is not blank, hopeless, fathomless
+mystery. Our plummet-lines are only too short; but they are growing
+longer. It is a lively mystery, that piques and tempts and rewards
+endeavor. It unfolds with an appetizing delay. Every year a new secret
+is laid bare, which, in the flush of triumph, seems a crowning
+development; whereas it presently appears that we have only opened a new
+door upon some further labyrinth.
+
+Throughout the seventeenth century, the progress in husbandry, without
+being at any one period very brilliant, was decided and constant. If
+there was anything like a relapse, and neglect of good culture, it was
+most marked shortly after the Restoration. The country-gentlemen, who
+had entertained a wholesome horror of Cromwell and his troopers, had,
+during the Commonwealth, devoted themselves to a quiet life upon their
+estates, repairing the damages which the Civil War had wrought in their
+fortunes and in their lands. The high price of farm-products stimulated
+their efforts, and their country-isolation permitted a harmless show of
+the chivalrous contempt they entertained for the _novi homines_ of the
+Commonwealth. With the return of Charles they abandoned their estates
+once more to the bailiffs, and made a rush for the town and for their
+share of the "leeks and onions."
+
+But the earnest men were at work. Sainfoin and turnips were growing
+every year into credit. The potato was becoming a crop of value; and in
+the year 1664 a certain John Foster devoted a treatise to it, entitled,
+"England's Happiness increased, or a Sure Remedy against all Succeeding
+Dear Years, by a Plantation of Roots called Potatoes."
+
+For a long time the crop had been known, and Sir Thomas Overbury had
+made it the vehicle of one of his sharp witticisms against people who
+were forever boasting of their ancestry,--their best part being below
+ground. But Foster anticipates the full value of what had before been
+counted a novelty and a curiosity. He advises how custards, paste,
+puddings, and even bread, may be made from the flour of potatoes.
+
+John Worlidge (1669) gives a full system of husbandry, advising green
+fallows, and even recommending and describing a drill for the putting in
+of seed, and for distributing with it a fine fertilizer.
+
+Evelyn, also, about this time, gave a dignity to rural pursuits by his
+"Sylva" and "Terra," both these treatises having been recited before the
+Royal Society. The "Terra" is something muddy,[4] and is by no means
+exhaustive; but the "Sylva" for more than a century was the British
+planter's hand-book, being a judicious, sensible, and eloquent treatise
+upon a subject as wide and as beautiful as its title. Even Walter
+Scott,--himself a capital woodsman,--when he tells (in "Kenilworth") of
+the approach of Tressilian and his Doctor companion to the neighborhood
+of Say's Court, cannot forego his tribute to the worthy and cultivated
+author who once lived there, and who in his "Sylva" gave a manual to
+every British planter, and in his life an exemplar to every British
+gentleman.
+
+Evelyn was educated at Oxford, travelled widely upon the Continent, was
+a firm adherent of the royal party, and at one time a member of Prince
+Rupert's famous troop. He married the daughter of the British ambassador
+in Paris, through whom he came into possession of Say's Court, which he
+made a gem of beauty. But in his later years he had the annoyance of
+seeing his fine parterres and shrubbery trampled down by that Northern
+boor, Peter the Great, who made his residence there while studying the
+mysteries of ship-building at Deptford, and who had as little reverence
+for a parterre of flowers as for any other of the tenderer graces of
+life.
+
+The British monarchs have always been more regardful of those interests
+which were the object of Evelyn's tender devotion. I have already
+alluded to the horticultural fancies of James I. His son Charles was an
+extreme lover of flowers, as well as of a great many luxuries which
+hedged him against all Puritan sympathy. "Who knows not," says Milton,
+in his reply to the [Greek: EIKON BASIAIKE], "the licentious remissness
+of his Sunday's theatre, accompanied with that reverend statute for
+dominical jigs and May-poles, published in his own name," etc.?
+
+But the poor king was fated to have little enjoyment of either jigs or
+May-poles; harsher work belonged to his reign; and all his
+garden-delights came to be limited finally to a little pot of flowers
+upon his prison-window. And I can easily believe that the elegant,
+wrong-headed, courteous gentleman tended these poor flowers daintily to
+the very last, and snuffed their fragrance with a Christian gratitude.
+
+Charles was an appreciative lover of poetry, too, as well as of Nature.
+I wonder if it ever happened to him, in his prison-hours at Carisbrooke,
+to come upon Milton's "L'Allegro," (first printed in the very year of
+the Battle of Naseby,) and to read,--
+
+ "In thy right hand lead with thee
+ The mountain nymph, sweet Liberty;
+ And if I give thee honor due,
+ Mirth, admit me of thy crew
+ To live with her, and live with thee,
+ In unreproved pleasures free;
+ To hear the lark begin his flight,
+ And, singing, startle the dull night,
+ From his watch-tower in the skies,
+ Till the dappled dawn doth rise;
+ Then to come, in spite of sorrow,
+ And at my window bid good-morrow,
+ Through the sweetbrier, or the vine,
+ Or the twisted eglantine."
+
+How it must have smitten the King's heart to remember that the tender
+poet, whose rhythm none could appreciate better than he, was also the
+sturdy Puritan pamphleteer whose blows had thwacked so terribly upon the
+last props that held up his tottering throne!
+
+Cromwell, as we have seen, gave Master Hartlib a pension; but whether on
+the score of his theological tracts, or his design for an agricultural
+college, would be hard to say. I suspect that the hop was the
+Protector's favorite among flowering plants, and that his admiration of
+trees was measured by their capacity for timber. Yet that rare masculine
+energy, which he and his men carried with them in their tread all over
+England, was a very wakeful stimulus to productive agriculture.
+
+Charles II. loved tulips, and befriended Evelyn. In his long residence
+at Paris he had grown into a great fondness for the French gardens. He
+afterward sent for Le Notre--who had laid out Versailles at an expense
+of twenty millions of dollars--to superintend the planting of Greenwich
+and St. James. Fortunately, no strict imitation of Versailles was
+entered upon. The splendors of Chatsworth Garden grew in this time out
+of the exaggerated taste, and must have delighted the French heart of
+Charles. Other artists have had the handling of this great domain since
+the days of Le Notre. A crazy wilderness of rock-work, amid which the
+artificial waters commit freak upon freak, has been strewed athwart the
+lawn; a stately conservatory has risen, under which the Duke may drive,
+if he choose, in coach and four, amid palm-trees, and the
+monster-vegetation of the Eastern archipelago; the little glass temple
+is in the gardens, under which the Victoria lily was first coaxed into
+British bloom; a model village has sprung up at the Park gates, in which
+each cottage is a gem, and seems transplanted from the last book on
+rural ornamentation. But the sight of the village oppresses one with a
+strange incongruity; the charm of realism is wanting; it needs a
+population out of one of Watteau's pictures,--clean and deft as the
+painted figures; flesh and blood are too gross, too prone to muddy
+shoes, and to--sneeze. The rock-work, also, is incongruous; it belongs
+on no such wavy roll of park-land; you see it a thousand times grander,
+a half-hour's drive away, toward Matlock. And the stiff parterres,
+terraces, and alleys of Le Notre are equally out of place in such a
+scene. If, indeed, as at Versailles, they bounded and engrossed the
+view, so that natural surfaces should have no claim upon your eye,--if
+they were the mere setting to a monster palace, whose colonnades and
+balusters of marble edged away into colonnades and balusters of
+box-wood, and these into a limitless extent of long green lines, which
+are only lost to the eye where a distant fountain dashes its spray of
+golden dust into the air,--as at Versailles,--there would be keeping.
+But the Devonshire palace has quite other setting. Blue Derbyshire hills
+are behind it; a grand, billowy slope of the comeliest park-land in
+England rolls down from its terrace-foot to where the Derwent, under
+hoary oaks, washes its thousand acres of meadow-vale, with a flow as
+charming and limpid as one of Virgil's eclogues. It is such a setting
+that carries the great quadrangle of Chatsworth Palace and its flanking
+artificialities of rock and garden, like a black patch upon the face of
+a fine woman of Charles's court.
+
+This brings us upon our line of march again. Charles II. loved stiff
+gardens; James II. loved stiff gardens; and William, with his
+Low-Country tastes, out-stiffened both, with his
+
+ "topiary box a-row."
+
+Lord Bacon has commended the formal style to public admiration by his
+advocacy and example. The lesson was repeated at Cashiobury by the most
+noble the Earl of Essex (of whom Evelyn writes,--"My Lord is not
+illiterate beyond the rate of most noblemen of his age"). So also that
+famous garden of Moor-Park in Hertfordshire, laid out by the witty
+Duchess of Bedford, to whom Dr. Donne addresses some of his piquant
+letters, was a model of old-fashioned and stately graces. Sir William
+Temple praises it beyond reason in his "Garden of Epicurus," and
+cautions readers against undertaking any of those irregularities of
+garden-figures which the Chinese so much affect. He admires only
+stateliness and primness. "Among us," he says, "the Beauty of Building
+and Planting is placed chiefly in some certain Proportions, Symmetries,
+or Uniformities; our Walks and our Trees ranged so as to answer one
+another, and at exact Distances."
+
+From all these it is clear what was the garden-drift of the century.
+Even Waller, the poet,--whose moneys, if he were like most poets, could
+not be thrown away idly,--spent a large sum in levelling the hills
+about his rural home at Beaconsfields. (We shall find a different poet
+and treatment by-and-by in Shenstone.)
+
+Only Milton, speaking from the very arcana of the Puritan rigidities,
+breaks in upon these geometric formalities with the rounded graces of
+the garden which he planted in Eden. There
+
+ "the crisped brooks,
+ Rolling on orient pearl and sands of gold
+ With mazy error under pendent shades,
+ Ran nectar, visiting each plant, and fed
+ Flowers worthy of Paradise, which not nice Art
+ In beds and curious knots, but Nature boon
+ Poured forth profuse on hill and dale and plain."
+
+Going far behind all conventionalities, he credited to Paradise--the
+ideal of man's happiest estate--variety, irregularity, profusion,
+luxuriance; and to the fallen estate, precision, formality, and an
+inexorable Art, which, in place of concealing, glorified itself. In the
+next century, when Milton comes to be illustrated by Addison and the
+rest, we shall find gardens of a different style from those of Waller
+and of Hampton Court.
+
+And now from some look-out point near to the close of the seventeenth
+century, when John Evelyn, in his age, is repairing the damages that
+Peter the Great has wrought in his pretty Deptford home, let us take a
+bird's-eye glance at rural England.
+
+It is raining; and the clumsy Bedford coach, drawn by stout Flemish
+mares,--for thorough-breds are as yet unknown,--is covered with a
+sail-cloth to keep the wet away from the six "insides." The grass,
+wherever the land is stocked with grass, is as velvety as now. The wheat
+in the near county of Herts is fair, and will turn twenty bushels to the
+acre; here and there an enterprising landholder has a small field of
+dibbled grain, which will yield a third more. John Worlidge's drill is
+not in request, and is only talked of by a few wiseacres who prophesy
+its ultimate adoption. The fat bullocks of Bedford will not dress more
+than seven hundred a head; and the cows, if killed, would not overrun
+five hundred weight. There are occasional fields of sainfoin and of
+turnips; but these latter are small, and no ridging or hurdling is yet
+practised. From time to time appears a patch of barren moorland, which
+has been planted with forest-trees, in accordance with the suggestions
+of Mr. Evelyn, and under the wet sky the trees are thriving. Wide
+reaches of fen, measured by hundreds of miles, (which now bear great
+crops of barley,) are saturated with moisture, and tenanted only by
+ghost-like companies of cranes.
+
+The gardens attached to noble houses, under the care of some pupil of
+Wise, or of Parkinson, have their espaliers,--their plums, their
+pears,[5] and their grapes. These last are rare, however, (Parkinson
+says sour, too,) and bear a great price in the London market. One or two
+horticulturists of extraordinary enterprise have built greenhouses,
+warmed, Evelyn says, "in a most ingenious way, by passing a brick flue
+underneath the beds."
+
+The lesser country-gentlemen, who have no establishments in town, rarely
+venture up, for fear of the footpads on the heath, and the insolence of
+the black-guard Cockneys. Their wives are staid dames, learned at the
+brew-tub and in the buttery,--but not speaking French, nor wearing hoops
+or patches. A great many of the older exotic plants have become
+domesticated; and the goodwife has a flaming parterre at her door,--but
+not valued one half so much as her bed of marjoram and thyme. She may
+read King James's Bible, or, if a Non-Conformist, Baxter's "Saint's
+Rest"; while the husband regales himself with a thumb-worn copy of "Sir
+Fopling Flutter," or, if he live well into the closing years of the
+century, with De Foe's "True-born Englishman."
+
+Poetic feeling was more lacking in the country-life than in the
+illustrative literature of the century. To say nothing of Milton's
+brilliant little poems, "L'Allegro" and "Il Penseroso," which flash all
+over with the dews, there are the charming "Characters" of Sir Thomas
+Overbury, and the graceful discourse of Sir William Temple. The poet
+Drummond wrought a music out of the woods and waters which lingers
+alluringly even now around the delightful cliffs and valleys of
+Hawthornden. John Dryden, though a thorough cit, and a man who would
+have preferred his arm-chair at Will's Coffee-House to Chatsworth and
+the fee of all its lands, has yet touched most tenderly the "daisies
+white" and the spring, in his "Flower and the Leaf."
+
+But we skip a score of the poets, and bring our wet day to a close with
+the naming of two honored pastorals. The first, in sober prose, is
+nothing more nor less than Walton's "Angler." Its homeliness, its calm,
+sweet pictures of fields and brooks, its dainty perfume of flowers, its
+delicate shadowing-forth of the Christian sentiment which lived by old
+English firesides, its simple, artless songs, (not always of the highest
+style, but of a hearty naturalness that is infinitely better,)--these
+make the "Angler" a book that stands among the thumb-worn. There is good
+marrowy English in it; I know very few fine writers of our times who
+could make a better book on such a subject to-day,--with all the added
+information, and all the practice of the newspaper-columns. What Walton
+wants to say he says. You can make no mistake about his meaning; all is
+as lucid as the water of a spring. He does not play upon your wonderment
+with tropes. There is no chicane of the pen; he has some pleasant
+matters to tell of, and he tells of them--straight.
+
+Another great charm about Walton is his childlike truthfulness. I think
+he is almost the only earnest trout-fisher I ever knew (unless Sir
+Humphrey Davy be excepted) whose report could be relied upon for the
+weight of a trout. I have many excellent friends--capital
+fishermen--whose word is good upon most concerns of life, but in this
+one thing they cannot be confided in. I excuse it; I take off twenty per
+cent. from their estimates without either hesitation, anger, or
+reluctance.
+
+I do not think I should have trusted in such a matter Charles Cotton,
+although he was agricultural as well as piscatory,--having published a
+"Planter's Manual." I think he could, and did, draw a long bow. I
+suspect innocent milkmaids were not in the habit of singing Kit
+Marlowe's songs to the worshipful Mr. Cotton.
+
+One pastoral remains to mention, published at the very opening of the
+year 1600, and spending its fine forest-aroma thenceforward all down the
+century. I mean Shakspeare's play of "As You Like It."
+
+From beginning to end the grand old forest of Arden is astir overhead;
+from beginning to end the brooks brawl in your ear; from beginning to
+end you smell the bruised ferns and the delicate-scented wood-flowers.
+It is Theocritus again, with the civilization of the added centuries
+contributing its spangles of reason, philosophy, and grace. Who among
+all the short-kirtled damsels of all the eclogues will match us this
+fair, lithe, witty, capricious, mirthful, buxom Rosalind? Nowhere in
+books have we met with her like,--but only at some long-gone picnic in
+the woods, where we worshipped "blushing sixteen" in dainty boots and
+white muslin. There, too, we met a match for sighing Orlando,--mirrored
+in the water; there, too, some diluted Jaques may have "moralized" the
+excursion for next day's "Courier," and some lout of a Touchstone (there
+are always such in picnics) passed the ices, made poor puns, and won
+more than his share of the smiles.
+
+Walton is English all over; but "As You Like It" is as broad as the sky,
+or love, or folly, or hope.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FRENCH STRUGGLE FOR NAVAL AND COLONIAL POWER.
+
+
+In comparison with our national misfortunes all beside seems trifling.
+Else nothing would so fasten our attention as the French invasion and
+conquest of Mexico. A dependency of France established at our door! The
+most restless, ambitious, and warlike nation in Europe our neighbor! Who
+shall tell what results, momentous and lasting, may follow in the train
+of such events?
+
+What is the explanation of this conquest? Is it the freak of an
+ambitious despot? Or is it only a stroke in the line of a settled
+policy? one fact, which we see, amid a great number of facts which we do
+not see?
+
+This particular enterprise comes close to us. It affronts our pride and
+tramples upon our political traditions. It establishes, what we did not
+wish to see on this Western Continent, another foreign jurisdiction. But
+for more than twenty-five years France has been engaged in a series of
+like enterprises. In places not so near to us, by the same arbitrary
+methods, she has already achieved conquests as important. With
+soft-footed ambition, she has planted her flag and reared her
+strongholds on spots full of natural advantages. But the aim is the same
+everywhere: the reestablishment of her lost colonial and naval power.
+And the hope of France is, that in the race for mercantile and naval
+greatness she may yet challenge and vanquish the Sovereign of the Seas.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The peace of 1815 left France with her naval and colonial power broken
+apparently beyond hope. Even in the thirteen years preceding that peace
+England had taken or destroyed not less than six hundred of her
+war-ships. In the Mediterranean, on the Atlantic, amid the islands of
+the West Indies, in the far-off golden East, wherever contending, fleet
+against fleet, or ship with ship, everywhere she had been vanquished and
+driven from the sea. That boundless colonial empire, of which Dupleix in
+the East dreamed, and for whose establishment in the West Montcalm
+fought and died, had shrunk to a few fishing-ports off the Gulf of St.
+Lawrence, a few sugar-islands in the West Indies, and some unarmed
+factories dotting the coasts of Africa and the shores of Hindostan, and
+existing by British grace and permission. To so low an estate had fallen
+that towering ambition which thought to exercise uncontrolled dominion
+over this continent, to rule with more than regal sway the rich islands
+and peninsulas of Asia, and to dictate peace to fallen England from the
+guns of her armadas. After five wars waged with no craven spirit in less
+than three-quarters of a century, after she had exhausted every resource
+and more than once banded against her island foe every naval power in
+Europe, she was forced to succumb to British perseverance and to the
+gallantry of British sailors. The peace, which came not a moment too
+soon, found her with a navy literally annihilated, and with little
+remaining of her colonial empire but the memory. When we compare this
+hopeless failure with the mercantile activity and naval force of Modern
+France,--when we call up, in imagination, her new colonies, the germs
+almost of empires,--we cannot admire too much the courage and energy
+which have called into existence such magnificent resources. To what are
+we to attribute this stupendous change? What have been the methods of
+this growth? By what steps has this grand progress from weakness to
+strength been achieved?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In such a work of restoration, France had everything to create,--ships,
+armaments, machinery, and sailors even, to replace those who had fallen
+in the front of battle. To produce capacity of production was her first
+work,--to establish new ports or replenish old ones, to build docks, to
+rear workshops, to gather materials. This is what she has been doing.
+Silently and steadily she has been laying the foundations of maritime
+greatness. Her ports, in everything which contributes to naval
+efficiency,--in size, in mechanical appliances, in concentration upon
+one spot of all the trades and all the resources necessary for the
+construction and repair of war-ships,--excel all other naval depots in
+the world.
+
+This is no exaggeration. There is the port of Cherbourg. Originally it
+was little more than an open bay, hollowed by the waters of the English
+Channel in the French coast, with a rocky shore exposed to every
+northern blast. But it was situated just where France needed a harbor,
+midway on her northern coast, facing England. Across this open bay, as a
+chord subtends its arc, a gigantic sea-wall has been stretched. Built in
+deep water more than a mile from the head of the bay, it extends almost
+from shore to shore. It is nearly three miles long. It is scarcely less
+than nine hundred feet wide at its base. Rising from the bed of the sea
+sixty-six feet, it is firm enough to bear up fortresses strong as human
+engineering can rear. This is the famous _digue_ of Cherbourg. Its
+construction has been a seventy years' battle with the elements. Many
+times the waves have destroyed the work of years. Once a furious tempest
+swept away the whole superstructure, with its forts, armaments,
+barracks, and even garrison. But failure has only awakened fresh energy,
+and it stands now complete and rooted in the sea like a reef. At each
+end of the _digue_, between it and the main land, are broad
+ship-channels, affording a free passage at all tides to the largest
+ships. Thus science has called into existence a safe harbor, protected
+from the assaults of the sea by its granite barrier,--protected none the
+less from man's assaults by the concentric fire of more than six hundred
+guns.
+
+This is but the exterior of Cherbourg. In the bosom of the rocky cliffs
+of its western shore three basins or docks have been hewn with gigantic
+toil. The first, finished in 1813, is 950 feet long, 768 feet wide, and
+55 feet deep, and will hold securely fifteen ships of the line. The
+second, of somewhat smaller dimensions, was completed in 1829, and will
+float a dozen ships. The third, far larger than either, was opened with
+great ceremony in 1858: it is 1365 feet long, 650 feet wide, and 60 feet
+deep, and will contain eighteen or twenty ships of the largest size. On
+the sides of these basins are twelve building-slips and seven docks. And
+radiating from them, and in close contiguity, are arsenals, storehouses,
+timber-yards, ropewalks, sail-lofts, bakeries, and machine-shops capable
+of turning out marine engines, anchors, cables, and indeed every piece
+of iron-work which enters into the construction of a ship. It is no vain
+boast that an army of a hundred thousand men can be embarked any fine
+morning at Cherbourg, and that the fleet necessary for its transport can
+be built and armed and equipped and protected to the hour of its
+departure in this fortified haven.
+
+Yet Cherbourg is but one of five ports equally efficient, equally
+protected, and equally furnished with the products of mechanic and
+nautical invention. Brest, L'Orient, and Rochefort, on the west, have
+far greater natural and scarcely less acquired advantages; while the old
+port of Toulon on the Mediterranean, old only in name, has been so
+enlarged and strengthened, that it can supply for the southern waters
+all and more than Cherbourg does for the northern. One fact will show to
+what an extent this power of naval production has been carried. In these
+five ports are some eighty building-slips or houses, and twenty-five
+docks, and, connected with them, all the materials, all the trades, all
+the labor-saving machines, all the mechanical forces, which the
+nineteenth century knows. If she wished, France could build at the same
+time forty ships of the line and forty frigates, while twenty-five more
+were undergoing repairs. The result of all this activity is, that, in
+extent, in completeness, in concentration of forces upon the right spot,
+the naval ports and dockyards of France are absolutely unequalled. And
+the work goes on. To-day twenty-two thousand men are employed upon naval
+works. Within six months a wet dock has been completed at Toulon, and
+another at L'Orient, while at Brest great ranges of workshops are
+hastening to completion; and it is whispered that at Cherbourg another
+basin is, like its predecessors, to be chiselled out of the solid rock.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Do we ask now what France has gained, in fleets and armaments, from this
+immense work of preparation? Everything. Not to dwell upon
+sailing-ships, which the progress of invention has made of inferior
+worth, she has a steam-navy second to that of no power in Europe. Her
+present ruler has fully appreciated the importance of that new element
+in naval warfare, steam,--an element all the more important to France,
+that it tends to lower the value of mere seamanship, in which she has
+always been deficient, and to increase the value of scientific knowledge
+and training, in which she has ever been with the foremost. For ten
+years her energy has been tasked to produce steamships of the greatest
+power and of the finest models. Since 1852 her ships of the line have
+increased from two to forty, and her frigates from twenty-one to
+forty-six. A fleet has thus been created which is numerically equal to
+that of England, and which, so far as these things depend upon the
+stanchness of the ships and the weight of the armaments, is perhaps in
+force and efficiency superior.
+
+If we turn our attention to iron-clad ships, we shall see best displayed
+the sagacity, energy, and secretiveness of Louis Napoleon. In the
+Crimean War, three floating batteries covered with iron slabs, and each
+mounting eighteen fifty-pounders, silenced the Russian fort at Kinburn.
+This was a lesson it would seem that any one might learn. Louis Napoleon
+did not fail to learn it. If a ship can be made invulnerable, or nearly
+so, in every part, then of what avail is that strategy which secures
+choice of position, and which, of old, almost decided the battle? Will
+not he come off victor who can produce guns from which the heaviest shot
+may be hurled at the highest velocity, and gunners who shall launch them
+on their errand of destruction with the greatest accuracy? The French
+emperor has fairly overreached his island rivals. While they were
+experimenting, he laid the keels of two iron-clads of six thousand tons
+burden. In 1859 he ordered the construction of twenty steel-clad
+frigates and fifty gunboats. Lord Clarence Paget declared in debate last
+March, that, while England had, finished or constructing, only sixteen
+iron-clad frigates, France had thirty-one. And even this takes no
+account of floating-batteries and gunboats, wholly or in part protected,
+and of which, if we are to trust her papers, France has an almost
+fabulous number.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But who shall man this fleet? Where are the skilful mariners to make
+efficient these tremendous elements of naval power? It was Lord Nelson,
+I think, who exclaimed, when he saw the stanch ships of Spain, "Thank
+God, Spaniards cannot build men!" The recent changes in naval
+construction, decreasing perhaps the relative worth of mere seamanship,
+may have made the exclamation less pertinent than of old. But, after
+all, on the rude and stormy ocean, proverbially fickle and uncertain,
+nothing can take the place of sailors,--of brave and skilful men,
+trained by long struggle with wind and wave, calm in danger, apt in
+emergencies, finding the narrow path of safety where common eyes see
+only peril and ruin. France understands tins. She knows how many of her
+past humiliations can be traced directly to defective seamanship. But
+where to seek the remedy? How to find or make sailors fit to contend
+with those who were almost born and bred on the restless surge? By what
+methods, with a slender commercial marine and a people reluctant to
+encounter the hardships and dangers of sea-life, to fill up the scanty
+roll of her able seamen? That is the problem France had to solve; and
+she has done everything to solve it,--but remove impossibilities.
+
+The first counsel of wisdom was to make the number of her sailors
+greater. France has, at the most liberal estimate, only one hundred and
+fifty thousand men at all conversant with the sea; while England has,
+including boatmen, fishermen, coasters, and sailors of long voyages, the
+enormous number of eight hundred thousand. Remove this disproportion and
+you settle the whole question. Unfortunately, this is a matter in which
+government can do but little, while national tastes and habits do
+everything. No despotism can make a commercial marine where no
+commercial spirit is. And no voice, charm it ever so wisely, can draw
+the peasant of France from his vine-clad hills and plains. The French
+rulers have done what they could. They have fostered, with a steady and
+liberal hand, the fisheries. Every spring, twenty thousand men have set
+sail to that best nursery of seamanship,--the Banks of Newfoundland.
+These men are paid a bounty by Government, and, in return, are subjected
+to a naval discipline, and, upon an emergency, are liable at a moment's
+notice to enter into the naval service. To quicken mercantile
+enterprise, by which alone mariners can be called into existence,
+enormous subsidies have been paid to the great lines of steamers to
+Brazil and the East. And the yearning for colonies, which in our day has
+led to almost simultaneous attempts to found settlements in both
+hemispheres and in all waters, has no doubt for a leading cause the
+desire to build up a mercantile marine, and with it a numerous body of
+expert seamen. If these efforts have not accomplished all that their
+projectors could wish, it is not because their plans lacked sagacity,
+but because it is hard to put the genius of the sea into the breasts of
+men who are essentially landsmen.
+
+To increase the number of French sailors would unquestionably be the
+best possible method of adding to French naval power. But suppose that
+this cannot be done. Supposes that there is in the heart of the French
+people an invincible attachment to the soil, which makes them deaf to
+every siren of the sea. What is the next counsel of wisdom? This, is it
+not? To make what sailors you have efficient and available for naval
+emergencies. In this respect the French authorities have achieved an
+entire success. Every sailor, nay, every man whose employment savors at
+all of maritime life, though he be only a boatman plying the river, or a
+laborer in harbor or dock, is enrolled in what is called the marine
+inscription,--thenceforward in all times of need to be called into
+active service. This puts the whole seafaring population at the disposal
+of Government. Nor is this all. Regular drafts are made upon the seamen;
+and it is computed that in every period of nine years all the sailors of
+France serve in their turn in the navy. They are trained in all that
+belongs to naval duty: in the use of ships' guns, in the sailing of
+great ships, and in the evolutions of fleets. No matter how sudden the
+call, or from what direction the sailors are taken, no French fleet
+leaves or can leave port with a crew of green hands.
+
+The training which is given to sailors actually in service is an equally
+important matter. The French Admiralty keeps no drones in its employ;
+certainly it does not promote them to places of trust. Honors are won,
+not bought. Every step up, from midshipman to admiral, must be the
+result of honorable service, and actual proficiency both in the theory
+and practice of a sailor's profession. The modern French naval officer
+is master of his business, fit to compete with the best skill of the
+best maritime races. Then the sailors themselves are trained. Even in
+time of peace, twenty-five thousand are kept in service. Gathered on
+board great experimental fleets, officers and men alike are schooled in
+all branches of nautical duty. In port or out of it, they are not idle.
+Every day a prescribed routine of exercise is rigidly enforced. Great
+have been the results. The French sailor of 1863 is not a reproduction
+of the sailor of 1800. In alertness, in knowledge, in silent obedience,
+he is a great improvement upon his predecessor. Actual experiment shows
+that a French crew will weigh anchor, spread and furl sail, replace
+spars or running-ringing, lower or raise topmasts, or perform any other
+duty pertaining to a ship, with as much celerity as the crew of any
+other nation. And no confusion, no babbling of many voices, such as the
+British writers of the last generations delighted to describe, mars the
+beauty of the evolutions. One mind directs, and one voice alone breaks
+the stillness. Since the Crimean War, the English speak with respect of
+French seamanship; and though they do not believe that it is equal to
+their own, they do not scruple to allow that a naval battle would be
+disputed now with a fierceness hitherto unknown.
+
+All that sagacity and experience would prompt has been attempted. All
+that training and discipline can do has already been accomplished. Yet
+there is one source of weakness for which there can be no remedy. France
+has no naval reserves. And if she war with England, she will need them.
+To put her marine on a war-basis would require all her available seamen.
+To fill the gaps of war, she has not, and she cannot have, until a truly
+commercial spirit grows up in the hearts of her people, the multitudes
+of reserved men, more familiar with the sea than the land, such as swarm
+in English ports. Yet, with every deduction, her capacity of naval
+production, her strong fleets, and her trained seamen make her a naval
+power whose might no one can estimate, and whose assault any nation may
+well shun by all means except the sacrifice of honor and rights.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If now we turn from the naval progress of France to her recent colonial
+enterprises, we shall find fresh evidence that she has resumed that
+contest which came to so disastrous a close fifty years ago. The old
+dream of colonial empire has come back again. This was inevitable. A
+great nation like France cannot always drink the cup of humiliation.
+With an ambition no less high and arrogant than that which pervades the
+British mind, she would plant far and wide French ideas and
+civilization. While England has colonies scattered in every part of the
+habitable globe, while Holland has almost monopolized the rich islands
+of the Eastern Archipelago, and while even Spain has Manila in the East
+and Cuba in the West, it could hardly be expected that France, the equal
+of either, and in some respects the superior of all, should rest content
+with a virtual exclusion from everything but her narrow
+home-possessions.
+
+And then, however disguised, there is in the heart of France an intense
+naval rivalry of England. Though the stern logic of events has been
+against her more than once, she does not accept the verdict. She means
+to revise it with a strong hand. But she must have a navy, and a navy
+cannot exhibit its highest vigor, unless it have a just foundation in an
+energetic, wide-ranging commerce. And such a commerce cannot exist
+except it have its depots and its agencies, its outlets and its markets,
+everywhere. Above all, we are to seek the source of this new colonial
+ambition in the character and purposes of that singular man who controls
+the destinies of France. Not even his enemies would now question his
+ability. The power he wields in Europe, the impression he has stamped
+upon its policy, the skill with which he has made even his foes minister
+to his greatness, all bear witness to it. But no one can study him in
+the light of the past and not see that his is no ordinary ambition. To
+be the ruler of one kingdom does not fill out its measure. To be the
+arbiter of the fortunes of states, the genius who shall change the
+current of affairs and shape the destiny of the future,--to exercise a
+power in every part of the globe, and to have a name familiar in every
+land and beneath every sun,--this is his ambition. No wonder that under
+such a ruler France has embarked in a career of colonial aggrandizement
+whose limit no one can foresee. The same hand which curbed the despot of
+the North, and made the fair vision of Italian unity a solid reality,
+may well think to place a puppet king on the throne of the Aztecs, or to
+carve rich provinces out of Farther India.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+France made her first practical essay in colonization by her conquest of
+Algiers. A Dey once said to an English consul, "The Algerines are a
+company of rogues, and I am their captain." The definition cannot be
+improved. That such a power should have been permitted to exist and
+ravage is one of the anomalies of modern history. Yet within the memory
+of living men this hoard of pirates flaunted its barbarism in the face
+of the civilization of the nineteenth century. But in 1830 the Dey
+filled the cup of wrath to the brim. He inflicted upon the French
+consul, in full levee, the gross insult of a blow in the face. The
+expedition sent to revenge the insult showed upon what a hollow
+foundation this savage power rested. The army landed without opposition.
+In five days it swept before it in hopeless rout the wreck of the
+Algerine forces. In three weeks it breached and captured the corsair's
+strongholds. The history of the French occupation of Algeria is a tale
+of unceasing martial exploits, by which France has extended her empire
+six hundred miles along the shores of the Mediterranean, and inland
+fifty miles,--two hundred miles, according, we had almost said, to the
+position of the last Arab or Kabyle raid and insurrection.
+
+Whatever else Algeria may or may not have done for France, it certainly
+has furnished a field whereon to train soldiers. Here seventy-five
+thousand men, day and night, have watched and fought a wily foe. Here
+all the great soldiers of the Empire, Arnand, Pelissier, Canrobert,
+Bosquet, have won their first laurels. Here, amid the exigencies of wild
+desert and mountain campaigning, has grown up that marvellous body of
+soldiers, the Zouaves: "picked men, short of stature, broad-shouldered,
+deep-chested, bull-necked," agile as goats, tolerant of thirst and
+hunger, outmarching, outfighting, and outenduring the Desert Arab; men
+who have never turned their backs upon a foe. Subtract from the army of
+Louis Napoleon the heroes of Algeria, and you leave behind a body out of
+which the fiery soul has fled.
+
+The commercial results are not quite so satisfactory. The exports,
+indeed, have risen to fifteen millions of dollars, and the imports to
+twenty-five millions more; while some two hundred thousand Europeans
+have made their home in the Colony, and a few hundred square miles have
+been subjected to European culture. But as the yearly cost of the
+occupation is fifteen million of dollars, the net profit cannot be
+great. Algeria, however, is the safety-valve of France, giving active
+employment to the idle, the discontented, and the revolutionary; and the
+Government, on that account, may consider that the money is well
+expended.
+
+One consequence of the occupation of Algeria has generally been
+overlooked,--its naval result. Hitherto France had absolutely no good
+port in the Mediterranean (if we except those of Corsica) but Toulon and
+Marseilles. It was absolutely less at home in its own sea than England.
+The new conquest gave it a strip of coast on the southern border of the
+sea, but no port. The harbor of Algiers, with the exception of a little
+haven artificially protected and capable of holding insecurely a dozen
+vessels, was much like that of Cherbourg, an open bay, facing northward.
+The storms sweep it with such fury that not less than twenty vessels
+have been driven ashore in one gale. But the French genius seems to
+delight in such struggles for empire with the waves. Almost with the
+taking of the citadel the engineer began his work. Two jetties, as they
+are called, were pushed out from the land into deep water,--one from
+the mole on the north, half a mile long, and the other from Point
+Bab-Azoum on the south, a third of a mile long. In 1850 these were so
+far complete as to inclose a safe harbor of two hundred acres. But not
+content, the French have already planned, and possibly are now finished,
+still other works, by which the perilous roadstead outside this harbor
+shall be transformed into a secure anchorage of sixteen hundred acres.
+Past events warrant us in believing that these improvements will be
+pursued with no slack hand, until astonished Europe finds another
+Cherbourg, a safe harbor, ample means of repair, and frowning guns to
+repel all invaders. Imprudent Young France, indeed, whispers now that
+Algiers makes the Mediterranean a French lake. But that is a little
+premature. While Gibraltar and Malta hold safely their harbors, and
+England's naval power is unbroken, no nation can truly make this boast.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The next enterprise of France was hardly so creditable to her as the
+Algerine conquest. Midway in the Pacific is the island of Tahita or
+Otaheite,--as fair a gem as the sun ever looked down upon. The soft and
+balmy air,--the undulating surface, rising to mountains and sinking into
+deep valleys, luxuriant with tropical verdure,--the distant girdle of
+coral reefs, which holds the island set in a circlet of tranquil blue
+waters,--the gentle and indolent temper of the natives,--have all
+conspired to throw an air of romance around the very name Otaheite. The
+Christian world is bound to it by another tie. For thither came
+Protestant missionaries, drawn by the reports of the tractable
+disposition of the islanders, and labored with such success that in 1817
+the king and all his subjects espoused Christianity.
+
+Into this island Eden discord came in the guise of a Roman catechist,
+who was sent thither for the express purpose of proselyting. As if aware
+of the nature of his ungracious task, he disguised his real character.
+But he was detected, and, together with a companion who had joined him,
+was dismissed from the island by Queen Pomare, who dreaded the sectarian
+strife his presence would awaken. This was her whole offence. Four years
+later, in 1838, when the whole transaction might well have been
+forgotten, Captain De Petit Thouars appeared in the French frigate
+Venus, and demanded and obtained satisfaction in the sum of two thousand
+piastres Spanish, and freedom for Catholic worship. In two subsequent
+visits, though no new offence had been given, he increased the severity
+of his demands, first putting the island under a protectorate, and
+finally, in 1843, taking full possession of it as a French colony. The
+helpless Queen appealed to Louis Philippe, who returned the island, but
+reaffirmed the protectorate.
+
+This same French protectorate is a rare piece of ponderous irony. The
+French governor collects all export and import duties, writes all
+state-papers, assembles and dismisses the island legislature according
+to his good pleasure, doles out to the Queen a yearly allowance of a
+thousand pounds, puts her in duress in her own house, if her conduct
+displeases him, and will not allow her to see strangers, except by his
+permission. Few will believe that zeal for the honor of the Catholic
+Church prompted Louis Philippe to inflict so disproportioned a
+punishment. That the island is the best victualling-station in the South
+Pacific is a far greater sin, and one for which there could be in
+covetous eyes no adequate punishment, except that seizure which is so
+modestly termed a protectorate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Pass now from the Pacific to the Indian Ocean. There is the little rocky
+island of St. Paul, situated in the same latitude as Cape Town and
+Melbourne; and, planted with singular accuracy equidistant from the two,
+it is the only place of shelter in the long route between them. Its
+harbor, if harbor it may be called, is the most secure, the most
+secluded, and the most romantic, perhaps, in the whole world. St. Paul
+is of volcanic origin. It is, indeed, little more than an extinct
+crater with a narrow rim of land around it to separate it from the sea.
+Through this rim the waters of the great Indian Ocean have cut a
+channel. The crater has thus become a beautiful salt lake, a mile in
+diameter, clear, deep, almost circular, and from whose border, on every
+side, rise the old volcanic walls draped in verdure. The strait
+connecting it with the sea is but three hundred feet wide, and at high
+tide ten feet deep,--thus affording an easy passage for small vessels
+into this most delightful seclusion; and no doubt the strait might be so
+deepened as to float the largest ships. St. Paul is not at present much
+frequented. But in a sea which is every year becoming more populous with
+the commerce of every nation, who shall tell what such a central station
+may become? Its title was somewhat uncertain. England thought she held
+it as a dependency of Mauritius. But in 1847 the governor of Bourbon,
+with a happy audacity, took possession of it, as an outpost of his own
+island, and planted a little French colony of fishermen. We have not
+heard that the assumption has been disputed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No doubt, most of our readers may have observed in the daily prints
+occasional allusions to the French War in Cochin China. Probably few
+have understood the full meaning of the facts so quietly chronicled.
+Perhaps none have dreamed that they were reading the first notices of a
+new Eastern conquest, which, in extent and importance, may yet be second
+only to that which has already been achieved by the British in
+Hindostan. Yet so it is. The Cambodia is the largest river in Southern
+Asia, and, together with the smaller and parallel river of Saigon,
+drains a tract of not less than five hundred thousand square miles. The
+region for which the French have been contending includes the provinces
+which cluster around the mouths of these two rivers, and command them.
+No position could be happier. For while on the one hand it controls the
+outlet of a river stretching up into a rich and fertile country eighteen
+hundred miles, on the other it projects into the Chinese Sea at a point
+nearly midway between Singapore and Hong Kong, and so secures to its
+possessor a just influence in that commercial highway. The ostensible
+cause of the war in this region was the murder of a French missionary.
+If this was ever the real cause, it long since gave way to a settled
+purpose of conquest.
+
+In the latter part of the year 1862 the Emperor of Cochin China was
+forced to cede to France the coveted provinces. Already new
+fortifications have arisen at Saigon, and dock-yards and coal-depots
+been established, and all steps taken for a permanent occupation of the
+territory. The following advertisement appeared in the London "Times"
+for January 23, 1863,--"Contract for transportation from Glasgow to
+Saigon of a floating iron dock in pieces. Notice to ship-owners. The
+administration of the Imperial Navy of France have at Glasgow a floating
+iron dock in pieces, which they require to be transported from that port
+to Saigon, Cochin China. The said dock, with machinery, pumps, anchors,
+and instruments necessary to its working, will weigh from two thousand
+to twenty-five hundred tons. Ship-owners disposed to undertake the
+transport are requested to forward their tenders to the Minister of
+Marine and Colonies previous to the fifth of February next." Now, if we
+consider that the news of the cession of these provinces did not reach
+France until the close of the year 1862, that this advertisement is
+dated January 23, 1863, and that a dock of the magnitude described could
+hardly be constructed short of many months, we shall be satisfied, that,
+long before any definite articles of peace had been proposed, the
+Emperor had settled in his own mind just what region he would annex to
+his dominions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We shall not need much argument to convince us that the subjugation of
+Mexico does not, either in character or methods, differ much from other
+acts of the French ruler. Nevertheless, the details are curious and
+instructive. It must be allowed that Mexico had given the Allies causes
+of offence. She left unpaid large sums due from her to foreign
+bond-holders. The subjects of the allied powers, temporarily resident in
+Mexico, were robbed by forced loans, and sometimes imprisoned, and even
+murdered. To redress these grievances, an expedition was fitted out by
+the combined powers of England, France, and Spain. The objects of the
+expedition were, first, to obtain satisfaction for past wrongs, and,
+second, some security against their recurrence in the future. It was
+expressly agreed by all parties, that the Mexicans should be left
+entirely free to choose for themselves their own form of government.
+Later events would seem to prove that England and Spain were sincere in
+their professions.
+
+Everything went on smoothly until the capture of Vera Cruz. Then the
+French Emperor unfolded secret plans which were not contained in the
+original programme. They were these: To take advantage of the weakness
+of the United States to establish in Mexico a European influence; to
+take possession of its capital city; and thence to impose upon the
+Mexican people a government more agreeable than the present to the
+Allies. England and Spain retired from the expedition with scarcely
+concealed disgust, declaring, in almost so many words, that they did not
+come into Mexico to rob another people of their rights, but to gain
+redress and protection for their own subjects. Louis Napoleon does not
+even seek to conceal his intentions from us. "We propose," he says, "to
+restore to the Latin race on the other side of the Atlantic all its
+strength and prestige. We have an interest, indeed, in the Republic of
+the United States being powerful and prosperous; but not that she should
+take possession of the whole Gulf of Mexico, thence to command the
+Antilles as well as South America, and to be the only dispenser of the
+products of the New World." This is plain enough. What will be the final
+form of settlement we do not even conjecture. It is probable that the
+Emperor does not himself know. With our fortunes so unsettled, and with
+so many European jealousies to conciliate, even his astute genius may
+well be puzzled as to the wisest policy. But it is of no consequence
+what particular government France may impose upon the conquered
+State,--monarchical, vice-regal, or republican,--Maximilian, a
+Bonaparte, or some one of the seditious Mexican chiefs. In either case,
+if the French plan succeeds, the broad country which Cortes won and
+Spain lost, will be virtually a dependency of France.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Even while we write, France has embarked in yet other schemes of
+colonial aggrandizement. She has just purchased the port of Oboch on the
+eastern coast of Africa, near the entrance of the Red Sea. The place is
+not laid down upon the maps; nor is its naval and commercial importance
+known; but its proximity to Aden suggests that it may be intended as a
+checkmate to that English stronghold. In the great island of Madagascar
+she is founding mercantile establishments whose exact character have not
+as yet been divulged; but experience teaches us that these enterprises
+are likely to be pursued with promptness and vigor.
+
+Thus France is displaying in colonial affairs an aggressive activity
+which was scarcely to have been expected. To what extent she may perfect
+her plans no one can prophesy. That she will be able to girdle the earth
+with her possessions, and rear strongholds in every sea, is not
+probable. England has chosen almost at her leisure what spots of
+commercial advantage or military strength she will occupy; and the whole
+world hardly affords the material for another colonial system as wide
+and comprehensive.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There is one consideration which ought not to be overlooked. It is this:
+the relations which Louis Napoleon has succeeded in maintaining between
+himself and that power which had the most interest in defeating his
+schemes, and the most ability to do it. Under the Bourbons, the whole
+policy of France was based upon a principle of settled and unchangeable
+enmity to England. As a result, war always broke out while French
+preparations were incomplete; and the concentrated English navy swept
+from the sea almost every vestige of an opposing force. The present
+French emperor has adopted an altogether different course. He has sought
+the friendship of England. He has multiplied occasions of mutual action.
+He has sedulously avoided occasions of offence. Kinglake, in his
+"Crimean War," intimates that Louis Napoleon desired this alliance with
+England and her noble Queen to cover up the terrible wrongs by which he
+had obtained his authority. It is more likely far that he sought it in
+order that under its shadow he might build himself up to resistless
+power: just as an oak planted beneath the shade of other trees grows to
+strength and majesty only to cut down its benefactors.
+
+This proposal for alliance was unquestionably received by the English
+people at first with feelings akin to disgust. The memory of the bad
+faith by which power had been won, of the wrongs and exile of the
+greatest statesmen and soldiers of France, and of the red carnage of the
+Boulevards, was too recent to make such a friendship attractive. Though
+acceptance of it might be good policy, yet it could not be yielded
+without profound reluctance. But soon this early sentiment gave way to
+something like pride. It was so satisfactory to think that the allied
+powers were wellnigh irresistible; that they had only to speak and it
+must be done; that they could dictate terms to the world; that they
+could scourge back even the Russian despot, seeking to pour down his
+hordes from the icy North to more genial climes. It is hardly
+surprising, then, that men came to congratulate themselves upon so
+favorable an alliance, and concluded to overlook the defect in his title
+in consideration of the solid benefits which the occupant of the French
+throne conferred.
+
+But this feeling could not last. When the people of England saw how
+inevitably Louis Napoleon reaped from every conflict some selfish
+advantage, how the Crimean War gave him all the prestige, and the
+Italian War the coveted province of Nice, they began to doubt his fair
+professions. And this jealousy is fast deepening into fear. The English
+people have an instinct of approaching danger. Any one can see that the
+"_entente cordiale_" is not quite what it once was. When a British Lord
+of Admiralty can rise in his place in Parliament, and, after alluding to
+the powerful and increasing naval force of France, add,--"I say that any
+Ministry who did not act upon that statement, and did not at once set
+about putting the country in the position she ought to occupy in respect
+to her navy, would deserve to be sent to the Tower or penitentiary,"--we
+may be sure that England has as much jealousy as trust, and perhaps
+quite as much alarm as either.
+
+But we have only to look at her acts to know what England is thinking.
+For six years she has been engaged in an unceasing war with
+France,--not, indeed, with swords and bayonets, but as really with her
+workshops and dockyards. She has tasked these to their uttermost to
+maintain and increase her naval superiority. And this is not the only
+evidence we have of her true feeling. The building of new fortifications
+for her ports, and the enlargement and strengthening of the old
+defences, all tell the same story of profound distrust. "Plymouth has
+been made secure. The mouth of the Thames is thought to be impregnable."
+That is the way English papers write. Around Portsmouth and Gosport she
+has thrown an immense girdle of forts. We may think what we will of
+Cherbourg, England views it in the light of a perpetual menace. To the
+proud challenge she has sent back a sturdy defiance. Right opposite to
+it, on her nearest shore, she has reared a "Gibraltar of the Channel."
+If you take your map, you will perceive, facing Cherbourg, and
+projecting from the southern coast of England, the little island of
+Portland, which at low tide becomes a peninsula, and is connected with
+the main land by Chesil Bank, a low ridge of shingle ten miles long. On
+the extreme north of this island, looking down into Weymouth Bay, is a
+little cluster of rocky hills, rising sharply to a considerable height,
+and occupying, perhaps, a space of sixty acres. This is where the
+fortress, or Veme, as it is called, is built. On the northern side, the
+cliff lifts itself up from the waters of the bay almost in a
+perpendicular line, and is absolutely inaccessible. On all other sides
+the Veme has been isolated by a tremendous chasm, which makes the dry
+ditch of the fort. This chasm has been blasted into the solid rock, and
+is nowhere less than a hundred feet wide and eighty feet deep. At the
+angles of the fortress it widens to two hundred feet, and sinks beneath
+the batteries in a sheer perpendicular of one hundred and thirty feet.
+Two bastions jut from the main work into it, protecting it from approach
+by a terrible cross-fire. All the appointments are upon the same scale.
+The magazines, the storehouses, the water-tanks, are built to furnish
+supplies for a siege, not of months, but of years. On every side the
+rocky surface of the hills has been shaved down below the level of its
+guns; so that there is not a spot seaward or landward that may not be
+swept by its tremendous batteries. Such is this remarkable stronghold
+which is rising to completion opposite Cherbourg. Yet it is but one of
+several strong forts which are to protect the single harbor of Weymouth
+Bay. Was this Titanic work reared in the spirit of trust? Does it speak
+of England's hope of abiding friendship with France? No; it tells us
+that beneath seeming amity a deadly struggle is going on,--that every
+dock hollowed, every ship launched, every colony seized, and every
+fortress reared, is but another step in a silent, but real, contest for
+supremacy.
+
+When this hidden fire shall burst forth into a devouring flame, when
+this seeming alliance shall change into open enmity and bitter war, no
+one can prophesy. But no doubt sooner or later. For between nations, as
+well as in the bosom of communities, there are irrepressible conflicts,
+which no alliances, no compacts, and no motives of wisdom or interest
+can forever hold in check. And when it shall burst forth, no one can
+foretell what its end shall be. That dread uncertainty, more than all
+these things else, keeps the peace. We can but think that the naval
+preeminence of England has grown out of the real character of her people
+and of their pursuits,--and that the same causes which, in the long,
+perilous conflicts of the past, have enabled her to secure the
+sovereignty of the seas, will strengthen her to maintain that
+sovereignty in all the conflicts which in the future may await her. But,
+whatever may be the result, to whomsoever defeat may come, nothing can
+obliterate from the pages of history the record of the sagacity,
+perseverance, and courage with which the French people and their ruler
+have striven to overcome a maritime inferiority, whose origin, perhaps,
+is in the structure of their society and in the nature of their race.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SOMETHING LEFT UNDONE.
+
+
+ Labor with what zeal we will,
+ Something still remains undone,
+ Something, uncompleted still,
+ Waits the rising of the sun.
+
+ By the bedside, on the stair,
+ At the threshold, near the gates,
+ With its menace or its prayer,
+ Like a mendicant it waits:
+
+ Waits, and will not go away,--
+ Waits, and will not be gainsaid.
+ By the cares of yesterday
+ Each to-day is heavier made,
+
+ Till at length it is, or seems,
+ Greater than our strength can bear,--
+ As the burden of our dreams,
+ Pressing on us everywhere;
+
+ And we stand from day to day
+ Like the dwarfs of times gone by,
+ Who, as Northern legends say,
+ On their shoulders held the sky.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE GREAT INSTRUMENT.
+
+
+Early in the month of November the mysterious curtain which has hidden
+the work long in progress at the Boston Music Hall will be lifted, and
+the public will throng to look upon and listen to the GREAT ORGAN.
+
+It is the most interesting event in the musical history of the New
+World. The masterpiece of Europe's master-builder is to uncover its
+veiled front and give voice to its long-brooding harmonies. The most
+precious work of Art that ever floated from one continent to the other
+is to be formally displayed before a great assembly. The occasion is one
+of well-earned rejoicing, almost of loud triumph; for it is the crowning
+festival which rewards an untold sum of devoted and conscientious labor,
+carried on, without any immediate recompense, through a long series of
+years, to its now perfect consummation. The whole community will share
+in the deep satisfaction with which the public-spirited citizens who
+have encouraged this noble undertaking, and the enterprising; and
+untiring lover of science and art who has conducted it from the first,
+may look upon their completed task.
+
+What is this wondrous piece of mechanism which has cost so much time and
+money, and promises to become one of the chief attractions of Boston and
+a source of honest pride to all cultivated Americans? The organ, as its
+name implies, is _the instrument_, in distinction from all other and
+less noble instruments. We might almost think it was called
+organ as being a part of an unfinished _organism_, a kind of
+Frankenstein-creation, half framed and half vitalized. It breathes like
+an animal, but its huge lungs must be filled and emptied by alien force.
+It has a wilderness of windpipes, each furnished with its own vocal
+adjustment, or larynx. Thousands of long, delicate tendons govern its
+varied internal movements, themselves obedient to the human muscles
+which are commanded by the human brain, which again is guided in its
+volitions by the voice of the great half-living creature. A strange
+cross between the form and functions of animated beings, on the one
+hand, and the passive conditions of inert machinery, on the other! Its
+utterance rises through all the gamut of Nature's multitudinous voices,
+and has a note for all her outward sounds and inward moods. Its thunder
+is deep as that of billows that tumble through ocean-caverns, and its
+whistle is sharper than that of the wind through their narrowest
+crevice. It roars louder than the lion of the desert, and it can draw
+out a thread of sound as fine as the locust spins at hot noon on his
+still tree-top. Its clustering columns are as a forest in which every
+music-flowering tree and shrub finds its representative. It imitates all
+instruments; it cheats the listener with the sound of singing choirs; it
+strives for a still purer note than can be strained from human throats,
+and emulates the host of heaven with its unearthly "voice of angels."
+Within its breast all the passions of humanity seem to reign in turn. It
+moans with the dull ache of grief, and cries with the sudden thrill of
+pain; it sighs, it shouts, it laughs, it exults, it wails, it pleads, it
+trembles, it shudders, it threatens, it storms, it rages, it is soothed,
+it slumbers.
+
+Such is the organ, man's nearest approach to the creation of a true
+organism.
+
+But before the audacious conception of this instrument ever entered the
+imagination of man, before he had ever drawn a musical sound from pipe
+or string, the chambers where the royal harmonies of his grandest vocal
+mechanism were to find worthy reception were shaped in his own
+marvellous structure. The _organ_ of hearing was finished by its Divine
+Builder while yet the morning stars sang together, and the voices of the
+young creation joined in their first choral symphony. We have seen how
+the mechanism of the artificial organ takes on the likeness of life; we
+shall attempt to describe the living organ in common language by the aid
+of such images as our ordinary dwellings furnish us. The unscientific
+reader need not take notice of the words in parentheses.
+
+The annexed diagram may render it easier to follow the description.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The structure which is to admit Sound as a visitor is protected and
+ornamented at its entrance by a light movable awning (the external ear).
+Beneath and within this opens a recess or passage, (_meatus auditorium
+externus_,) at the farther end of which is the parchment-like
+front-door, D (_membrana tympani_).
+
+Beyond this is the hall or entry, H, (cavity of the _tympanum_,) which
+has a ventilator, V, (Eustachian tube,) communicating with the outer
+air, and two windows, one oval, _o_, (_fenestra ovalis_,) one round,
+_r_, (_fenestra rotunda_,) both filled with parchment-like membrane, and
+looking upon the inner suite of apartments (labyrinth).
+
+This inner suite of apartments consists of an antechamber, A,
+(vestibule,) an arched chamber, B, (semicircular canals,) and a spiral
+chamber, S, (_cochlea_,) with a partition, P, dividing it across, except
+for a small opening at one end. The antechamber opens freely into the
+arched chamber, and into one side of the partitioned spiral chamber. The
+other side of this spiral chamber looks on the hall by the round window
+already mentioned; the oval window looking on the hall belongs to the
+antechamber. From the front-door to the oval window of the antechamber
+extends a chain, _c_, (_ossicula auditus_,) so connected that a knock on
+the first is transmitted instantly to the second. But as the round
+window of the spiral chamber looks into the hall, the knock at the
+front-door will also make itself heard at and through that window, being
+conveyed along the hall.
+
+In each division of the inner suite of apartments are the watchmen,
+(branches of the auditory nerve,) listening for the approach of Sound.
+The visitor at length enters the porch, and knocks at the front-door.
+The watchmen in the antechamber hear the blow close to them, as it is
+repeated, through the chain, on the window of their apartment. The
+impulse travels onward into the arched chamber, and startles its
+tenants. It is transmitted into one half of the partitioned spiral
+chamber, and rouses the recumbent guardians in that apartment. Some
+portion of it even passes the small opening in the partition, and
+reaches the watchmen in the other half of the room. But they also hear
+it through the round window, not as it comes through the chain, but as
+it resounds along the hall.
+
+Thus the summons of Sound reaches all the watchmen, but not all of them
+through the same channels or with the same force. It is not known how
+their several precise duties are apportioned, but it seems probable that
+the watchmen in the spiral chamber observe the pitch of the audible
+impulse which reaches them, while the others take cognizance of its
+intensity and perhaps of its direction.
+
+Such is the plan of the organ of hearing as an architect might describe
+it. But the details of its special furnishing are so intricate and
+minute that no anatomist has proved equal to their entire and exhaustive
+delineation. An Italian nobleman, the Marquis Corti, has hitherto proved
+most successful in describing the wonderful _key-board_ found in the
+spiral chamber, the complex and symmetrical beauty of which is
+absolutely astonishing to those who study it by the aid of the
+microscope. The figure annexed shows a small portion of this
+extraordinary structure. It is from Koelliker's well-known work on
+Microscopic Anatomy.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Enough has been said to show that the ear is as carefully adjusted to
+respond to the blended impressions of sound as the eye to receive the
+mingled rays of light; and that as the telescope presupposes the lens
+and the retina, so the organ presupposes the resonant membranes, the
+labyrinthine chambers, and the delicately suspended or exquisitely
+spread-out nervous filaments of that other organ, whose builder is the
+Architect of the universe and the Master of all its harmonies.
+
+Not less an object of wonder is that curious piece of mechanism, the
+most perfect, within its limited range of powers, of all musical
+instruments, the _organ_ of the human voice. It is the highest triumph
+of our artificial contrivances to reach a tone like that of a singer,
+and among a hundred organ-stops none excites such admiration as the _vox
+humana_; a brief account of the vocal organ will not, therefore, be out
+of place. The principles of the action of the larynx are easily
+illustrated by reference to the simpler musical instruments. In a flute
+or flageolet the musical sound is produced by the vibration of a column
+of air contained in its interior. In a clarionet or a bassoon another
+source of sound is added in the form of a thin slip of wood contained in
+the mouth-piece, and called the _reed_, the vibrations of which give a
+superadded nasal thrill to the resonance of the column of air.
+
+The human organ of voice is like the clarionet and the bassoon. The
+windpipe is the tube containing the column of air. The larynx is the
+mouth-piece containing the reed. But the reed is double, consisting of
+two very thin membranous edges, which are made tense or relaxed, and
+have the interval between them through which the air rushes narrowed or
+widened by the instinctive, automatic action of a set of little muscles.
+The vibration of these membranous edges (_chordae vocales_) produces a
+musical sound, just as the vibration of the edge of a finger-bowl
+produces one when a wet finger is passed round it. The cavities of the
+nostrils, and their side-chambers, with their light, elastic
+sounding-boards of thin bone, are essential to the richness of the tone,
+as all singers find out when those passages are obstructed by a cold in
+the head.
+
+The human voice, perfect as it may be in tone, is yet always very
+deficient in compass, as is obvious from the fact that the bass voice,
+the barytone, the contralto, and the soprano have all different
+registers, and are all required to produce a complete vocal harmony. If
+we could make organ-pipes with movable, self-regulating lips, with
+self-shortening and self-lengthening tubes, so that each tube should
+command the two or three octaves of the human voice, a very limited
+number of them would be required. But as each tube has but a single
+note, we understand why we have those immense clusters of hollow
+columns. As we wish to produce different effects, sometimes using the
+pure flute-sounds, at other times preferring the nasal thrill of the
+reed-instruments, we see why some of the tubes have simple mouths and
+others are furnished with vibratory tongues. And, lastly, we can easily
+understand that the great interior spaces of the organ must of
+themselves furnish those resonant surfaces which we saw provided for, on
+a small scale, in the nasal passages,--the sounding-board of the human
+larynx.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The great organ of the Music Hall is a choir of nearly six thousand
+vocal throats. Its largest windpipes are thirty-two feet in length, and
+a man can crawl through them. Its finest tubes are too small for a
+baby's whistle. Eighty-nine _stops_ produce the various changes and
+combinations of which its immense orchestra is capable, from the purest
+solo of a singing nun to the loudest chorus in which all its groups of
+voices have their part in the full flow of its harmonies. Like all
+instruments of its class, it contains several distinct systems of pipes,
+commonly spoken of as separate organs, and capable of being played alone
+or in connection with each other. Four _manuals_, or hand key-boards,
+and two _pedals_, or foot key-boards, command these several
+systems,--the _solo_ organ, the _choir_ organ, the _swell_ organ, and
+the _great_ organ, and the _piano_ and _forte_ pedal-organ. Twelve pairs
+of bellows, which it is intended to move by water-power, derived from
+the Cochituate reservoirs, furnish the breath which pours itself forth
+in music. Those beautiful effects, for which the organ is incomparable,
+the _crescendo_ and _diminuendo_,--the gradual rise of the sound from
+the lowest murmur to the loudest blast, and the dying fall by which it
+steals gently back into silence,--the _dissolving views_, so to speak,
+of harmony,--are not only provided for in the swell-organ, but may be
+obtained by special adjustments from the several systems of pipes and
+from the entire instrument.
+
+It would be anticipating the proper time for judgment, if we should
+speak of the excellence of the musical qualities of the great organ
+before having had the opportunity of hearing its full powers displayed.
+We have enjoyed the privilege, granted to few as yet, of listening to
+some portions of the partially mounted instrument, from which we can
+confidently infer that its effect, when all its majestic voices find
+utterance, must be noble and enchanting beyond all common terms of
+praise. But even without such imperfect trial, we have a right, merely
+from a knowledge of its principles of construction, of the preeminent
+skill of its builder, of the time spent in its construction, of the
+extraordinary means taken to insure its perfection, and of the liberal
+scale of expenditure which has rendered all the rest possible, to feel
+sure that we are to hear the instrument which is and will probably long
+remain beyond dispute the first of the New World and second to none in
+the Old in the sum of its excellences and capacities.
+
+The mere comparison of numbers of pipes and of stops, or of external
+dimensions, though it gives an approximative idea of the scale of an
+organ, is not so decisive as it might seem as to its real musical
+effectiveness. In some cases, many of the stops are rather nominal than
+of any real significance. Even in the Haarlem organ, which has only
+about two-thirds as many as the Boston one, Dr. Burney says, "The
+variety they afford is by no means what might be expected." It is
+obviously easy to multiply the small pipes to almost any extent. The
+dimensions of an organ, in its external aspect, must depend a good deal
+on the height of the edifice in which it is contained. Thus, the vaulted
+roof of the Cathedral of Ulm permitted the builder of our Music-Hall
+organ to pile the _facade_ of the one he constructed for that edifice up
+to the giddy elevation of almost a hundred feet, while the famous
+instrument in the Town Hall of Birmingham has only three-quarters of the
+height of our own, which is sixty feet. It is obvious also that the
+effective power of an organ does not depend merely on its size, but that
+the perfection of all its parts will have quite as much to do with it.
+In judging a vocalist, we can form but a very poor guess of the compass,
+force, quality of the voice, from a mere inspection of the throat and
+chest. In the case of the organ, however, we have the advantage of being
+able to minutely inspect every throat and larynx, to walk into the
+interior of the working mechanism, and to see the adaptation of each
+part to its office. In absolute power and compass the Music-Hall organ
+ranks among the three or four mightiest instruments ever built. In the
+perfection of all its parts, and in its whole arrangements, it
+challenges comparison with, any the world can show.
+
+Such an instrument ought to enshrine itself in an outward frame that
+should correspond in some measure to the grandeur and loveliness of its
+own musical character. It has been a dream of metaphysicians, that the
+soul shaped its own body. If this many-throated singing creature could
+have sung itself into an external form, it could hardly have moulded one
+more expressive of its own nature. We must leave to those more skilled
+in architecture the detailed description of that noble _facade_ which
+fills the eye with music as the voices from behind it fill the mind
+through the ear with vague, dreamy pictures. For us it loses all
+technical character in its relations to the soul of which it is the
+body. It is as if a glorious anthem had passed into outward solid form
+in the very ecstasy of its grandest chorus. Milton has told us of such a
+miracle, wrought by fallen angels, it is true, but in a description rich
+with all his opulence of caressing and ennobling language:--
+
+ "Anon out of the earth a fabric huge
+ Rose, like an exhalation, with the sound
+ Of dulcet symphonies and voices sweet,
+ Built like a temple, where pilasters round
+ Were set, and Doric pillars overlaid
+ With golden architrave; nor did there want
+ Cornice or frieze with bossy sculptures grav'n."
+
+The structure is of black walnut, and is covered with carved statues,
+busts, masks, and figures in the boldest relief. In the centre a richly
+ornamented arch contains the niche for the key-boards and stops. A
+colossal mask of a singing woman looks from over its summit. The
+pediment above is surmounted by the bust of Johann Sebastian Bach.
+Behind this rises the lofty central division, containing pipes, and
+crowning it is a beautiful sitting statue of Saint Cecilia, holding her
+lyre. On each side of her a griffin sits as guardian. This centre is
+connected by harp-shaped compartments, filled with pipes, to the two
+great round towers, one on each side, and each of them containing three
+colossal pipes. These magnificent towers come boldly forward into the
+hall, being the most prominent, as they are the highest and stateliest,
+part of the _facade_. At the base of each a gigantic half-caryatid, in
+the style of the ancient _hermae_, but finished to the waist, bends
+beneath the superincumbent weight, like Atlas under the globe. These
+figures are of wonderful force, the muscular development almost
+excessive, but in keeping with their superhuman task. At each side of
+the base two lion-_hermae_ share in the task of the giant. Over the base
+rise the round pillars which support the dome and inclose the three
+great pipes already mentioned. Graceful as these look in their position,
+half a dozen men might creep into one of them and lie hidden. A man of
+six feet high went up a ladder, and standing at the base of one of them
+could just reach to put his hand into the mouth at its lower part, above
+the conical foot. The three great pipes are crowned by a heavily
+sculptured, ribbed, rounded dome; and this is surmounted, on each side,
+by two cherubs, whose heads almost touch the lofty ceiling. This whole
+portion of the sculpture is of eminent beauty. The two exquisite cherubs
+of one side are playing on the lyre and the lute; those of the other
+side on the flute and the horn. All the reliefs that run round the lower
+portion of the dome are of singular richness. We have had an opportunity
+of seeing one of the artist's photographs, which showed in detail the
+full-length figures and the large central mask of this portion of the
+work, and found them as beautiful on close inspection as the originals
+at a distance.
+
+Two other lateral compartments, filled with pipes, and still more
+suggestive of the harp in their form, lead to the square lateral towers.
+Over these compartments, close to the round tower, sits on each side a
+harper, a man on the right, a woman on the left, with their harps, all
+apparently of natural size. The square towers, holding pipes in their
+open interior, are lower than the round towers, and fall somewhat back
+from the front. Below, three colossal _hermae_ of Sibyl-like women
+perform for them the office which the giants and the lion-shapes perform
+for the round towers. The four pillars which rise from the base are
+square, and the dome which surmounts them is square also. Above the dome
+is a vase-like support, upon which are disposed figures of the lyre and
+other musical symbols.
+
+The whole base of the instrument, in the intervals of the figures
+described, is covered with elaborate carvings. Groups of musical
+instruments, standing out almost detached from the background, occupy
+the panels. Ancient and modern, clustered with careless grace and quaint
+variety, from the violin down to a string of sleigh-bells, they call up
+all the echoes of forgotten music, such as the thousand-tongued organ
+blends together in one grand harmony.
+
+The instrument is placed upon a low platform, the outlines of which are
+in accordance with its own. Its whole height is about sixty feet, its
+breadth forty-eight feet, and its average depth twenty-four feet. Some
+idea of its magnitude may be got from the fact that the wind-machinery
+and the swell-organ alone fill up the whole recess occupied by the
+former organ, which was not a small one. All the other portions of the
+great instrument come forward into the hall.
+
+In front of its centre stands Crawford's noble bronze statue of
+Beethoven, the gift of our townsman, Mr. Charles C. Perkins. It might be
+suggested that so fine a work of Art should have a platform wholly to
+itself; but the eye soon reconciles itself to the position of the
+statue, and the tremulous atmosphere which surrounds the vibrating organ
+is that which the almost breathing figure would seem to delight in, as
+our imagination invests it with momentary consciousness.
+
+As we return to the impression produced by the grand _facade_, we are
+more and more struck with the subtile art displayed in its adaptations
+and symbolisms. Never did any structure we have looked upon so fully
+justify Madame de Stael's definition of architecture, as "frozen music."
+The outermost towers, their pillars and domes, are all _square_, their
+outlines thus passing without too sudden transitions from the sharp
+square angles of the vaulted ceiling and the rectangular lines of the
+walls of the hall itself into the more central parts of the instrument,
+where a smoother harmony of outline is predominant. For in the great
+towers, which step forward, as it were, to represent the meaning of the
+entire structure, the lines are all curved, as if the slight discords
+which gave sharpness and variety to its less vital portions were all
+resolved as we approached its throbbing heart. And again, the half
+fantastic repetitions of musical forms in the principal outlines--the
+lyre-like shape of the bases of the great towers, the harp-like figure
+of the connecting wings, the clustering reeds of the columns--fill the
+mind with musical suggestions, and dispose the wondering spectator to
+become the entranced listener.
+
+The great organ would be but half known, if it were not played in a
+place fitted for it in dimensions. In the open air the sound would be
+diluted and lost; in an ordinary hall the atmosphere would be churned
+into a mere tumult by the vibrations. The Boston Music Hall is of ample
+size to give play to the waves of sound, yet not so large that its space
+will not be filled and saturated with the overflowing resonance. It is
+one hundred and thirty feet in length by seventy-eight in breadth and
+sixty-five in height, being thus of somewhat greater dimensions than the
+celebrated Town Hall of Birmingham. At the time of building it, (1852,)
+its great height was ordered partly with reference to the future
+possibility of its being furnished with a large organ. It will be
+observed that the three dimensions above given are all multiples of the
+same number, thirteen, the length being ten times, the breadth six times
+and the height five times this number. This is in accordance with Mr.
+Scott Russell's recommendation, and has been explained by the fact that
+vibrating solids divide into _harmonic lengths_, separated by _nodal
+points_ of rest, and that these last are equally distributed at aliquot
+parts of its whole length. If the whole extent of the walls be in
+vibration, its angles should come in at the nodal points in order to
+avoid the confusion arising from different vibrating lengths; and for
+this reason they are placed at aliquot parts of its entire length. Thus
+the hall is itself a kind of passive musical instrument, or at least a
+sounding-board, constructed on theoretical principles. Whatever is
+thought of the theory, it proves in practice to possess the excellence
+which is liable to be lost in the construction of the best-designed
+edifice.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We have thus attempted to give our readers some imperfect idea of the
+great instrument, illustrating it by the objects of comparison with
+which we are most familiar, and leaving to others the more elaborate
+work of subjecting it to a thorough artistic survey, and the rigorous
+analysis necessary to bring out the various degrees of excellence in its
+special qualities, which, as in a human character, will be found to mark
+its individuality. We shall proceed to give some account of the manner
+in which the plan of obtaining the best instrument the Old World could
+furnish to the New was formed, matured, and carried into successful
+execution.
+
+It is mainly to the persistent labors of a single individual that our
+community is indebted for the privilege it now enjoys in possessing an
+instrument of the supreme order, such as make cities illustrious by
+their presence. That which is on the lips of all it can wrong no
+personal susceptibilities to tell in print; and when we say that Boston
+owes the Great Organ chiefly to the personal efforts of the present
+President of the Music-Hall Association, Dr. J. Baxter Upham, the
+statement is only for the information of distant readers.
+
+Dr. Upham is widely known to the medical profession in connection with
+important contributions to practical science. His researches on typhus
+fever, as observed by him at different periods, during and since the
+years 1847 and 1848, in this country, and as seen at Dublin and in the
+London Fever Hospital, were recognized as valuable contributions to the
+art of medicine. More recently, as surgeon in charge of the Stanley
+General Hospital, Eighteenth Army Corps, he has published an account of
+the "Congestive Fever" prevailing at Newborn, North Carolina, during the
+winter and spring of 1862-63. We must add to these practical labors the
+record of his most ingenious and original investigations of the
+circulation in the singular case of M. Groux, which had puzzled so many
+European experts, and to which, with the tact of a musician, he applied
+the electro-magnetic telegraphic apparatus so as to change the rapid
+consecutive motions of different parts of the heart, which puzzled the
+eye, into successive _sounds_ of a character which the ear could
+recognize in their order. It was during these experiments, many of which
+we had the pleasure of witnessing, that the "side-show" was exhibited of
+counting the patient's pulse, through the wires, at the Observatory in
+Cambridge, while it was beating in Dr. Upham's parlor in Boston. Nor
+should we forget that other ingenious contrivance of his, the system of
+_sound-signals_, devised during his recent term of service as surgeon,
+and applied with the most promising results, as a means of
+intercommunication between different portions of the same armament.
+
+In the summer of 1853, less than a year after the Music Hall was opened
+to the public, Dr. Upham, who had been for some time occupied with the
+idea of procuring an organ worthy of the edifice, made a tour in Europe
+with the express object of seeing some of the most famous instruments of
+the Continent and of Great Britain. He examined many, especially in
+Germany, and visited some of the great organ-builders, going so far as
+to obtain specifications from Mr. Walcker of Ludwigsburg, and from
+Weigl, his pupil at Stuttgart. On returning to this country, he brought
+the proposition of procuring a great instrument in Europe in various
+ways before the public, among the rest by his "Reminiscences of a Summer
+Tour," published in "Dwight's Journal of Music." After this he laid the
+matter before the members of the Harvard Musical Association, and,
+having thus gradually prepared the way, presented it for consideration
+before the Board of Directors of the Music-Hall Association. A committee
+was appointed "to consider." There was some division of opinion as to
+the expediency of the more ambitious plan of sending abroad for a
+colossal instrument. There was a majority report in its favor, and a
+verbal minority report advocating a more modest instrument of home
+manufacture. Then followed the anaconda-torpor which marks the process
+of digestion of a huge and as yet crude project by a multivertebrate
+corporation.
+
+On the first of March, 1856, the day of the inauguration of Beethoven's
+statue, a subscription-paper was started, headed by Dr. Upham, for
+raising the sum of ten thousand dollars. At a meeting in June the plan
+was brought before the stockholders of the Music Hall, who unanimously
+voted to appropriate ten thousand dollars and the proceeds of the old
+organ, on condition that fifteen thousand dollars should be raised by
+private subscription. In October it was reported to the Directors that
+ten thousand dollars of this sum were already subscribed, and Dr. Upham,
+President of the Board, pledged himself to raise the remainder on
+certain conditions, which were accepted. He was then authorized to go
+abroad to investigate the whole subject, with full powers to select the
+builder and to make the necessary contracts.
+
+Dr. Upham had already made an examination of the best organs and
+organ-factories in New England, New York, and elsewhere in this country,
+and received several specifications and plans from builders. He
+proceeded at once, therefore, to Europe, examined the great English
+instruments, made the acquaintance of Mr. Hopkins, the well-known
+organist and recognized authority on all matters pertaining to the
+instrument, and took lessons of him in order to know better the handling
+of the keys and the resources of the instrument. In his company, Dr.
+Upham examined some of the best instruments in London. He made many
+excursions among the old churches of Sir Christopher Wren's building,
+where are to be found the fine organs of "Father Smith," John Snetzler,
+and other famous builders of the past. He visited the workshops of Hill,
+Gray and Davidson, Willis, Robson, and others. He made a visit to Oxford
+to examine the beautiful organ in Trinity College. He found his way into
+the organ-lofts of St. Paul's, of Westminster Abbey, and the Temple
+Church, during the playing at morning and evening service. He inspected
+Thompson's _enharmonic_ organ, and obtained models of various portions
+of organ-structure.
+
+From London Dr. Upham went to Holland, where he visited the famous
+instruments at Haarlem, Amsterdam, and Rotterdam, and the organ-factory
+at Utrecht, the largest and best in Holland. Thence to Cologne, where,
+as well as at Utrecht, he obtained plans and schemes of instruments; to
+Hamburg, where are fine old organs, some of them built two or three
+centuries ago; to Lubeck, Dresden, Breslau, Leipsic, Halle, Merseburg.
+Here he found a splendid organ, built by Ladergast, whose instruments
+excel especially in their tone-effects. A letter from Liszt, the
+renowned pianist, recommended this builder particularly to Dr. Upham's
+choice. At Frankfort and at Stuttgart he found two magnificent
+instruments, built by Walcker of Ludwigsburg, to which place he repaired
+in order to examine his factories carefully, for the second time. Thence
+the musical tourist proceeded to Ulm, where is the sumptuous organ, the
+work of the same builder, ranking, we believe, first in point of
+dimensions of all in the world. Onward still, to Munich, Bamberg,
+Augsburg, Nuremberg, along the Lake of Constance to Weingarten, where is
+that great organ claiming to have sixty-six stops and six thousand six
+hundred and sixty-six pipes; to Freyburg, in Switzerland, where is
+another great organ, noted for the rare beauty of its _vox-humana_ stop,
+the mechanism of which had been specially studied by Mr. Walcker, who
+explained it to Dr. Upham.
+
+Returning to Ludwigsburg, Dr. Upham received another specification from
+Mr. Walcker. He then passed some time at Frankfort examining the
+specifications already received and the additional ones which came to
+him while there.
+
+At last, by the process of exclusion, the choice was narrowed down to
+three names, Schultze, Ladergast, and Walcker, then to the two last.
+There was still a difficulty in deciding between these. Dr. Upham called
+in Mr. Walcker's partner and son, who explained every point on which he
+questioned them with the utmost minuteness. Still undecided, he
+revisited Merseburg and Weissenfels, to give Ladergast's instruments
+another trial. The result was that he asked Mr. Walcker for a third
+specification, with certain additions and alterations which he named.
+This he received, and finally decided in his favor,--but with the
+condition that Mr. Walcker should meet him in Paris for the purpose of
+examining the French organs with reference to any excellences of which
+he might avail himself, and afterwards proceed to London and inspect the
+English instruments with the same object.
+
+The details of this joint tour are very interesting, but we have not
+space for them. The frank enthusiasm with which the great German
+organ-builder was received in France contrasted forcibly with the
+quiet, not to say cool, way in which the insular craftsmen received him,
+gradually, however, warming, and at last, with a certain degree of
+effort, admitting him to their confidence.
+
+A fortnight was spent by Dr. Upham in company with Walcker and Mr.
+Hopkins in studying and perfecting the specification, which was at last
+signed in German and English, and stamped with the notarial seal, and
+thus the contract made binding.
+
+A long correspondence relating to the instrument followed between Dr.
+Upham, the builder, and Mr. Hopkins, ending only with the shipment of
+the instrument. A most interesting part of this was Dr. Upham's account
+of his numerous original experiments with the natural larynx, made with
+reference to determining the conditions requisite for the successful
+imitation of the human voice in the arrangement called _vox humana_. Mr.
+Walcker has availed himself of the results of these experiments in the
+stop as made for this organ, but with what success we are unable to say,
+as the pipes have not been set in place at the time of our writing. As
+there is always great curiosity to hear this particular stop, we will
+guard our readers against disappointment by quoting a few remarks about
+that of the Haarlem organ, made by the liveliest of musical writers, Dr.
+Burney.
+
+"As to the _vox humana_, which is so celebrated, it does not at all
+resemble a human voice, though a very good stop of the kind; but the
+world is very apt to be imposed upon by names; the instant a common
+hearer is told that an organist is playing upon a stop which resembles
+the human voice, he supposes it to be very fine, and never inquires into
+the propriety of the name, or exactness of the imitation. However, with
+respect to our own feelings, we must confess, that, of all the stops
+which we have yet heard, that have been honored with the appellation of
+_vox humana_, no one in the treble part has ever reminded us of anything
+human, so much as the cracked voice of an old woman of ninety, or, in
+the lower parts, of Punch singing through a comb." Let us hope that this
+most irreverent description will not apply to the _vox humana_ of our
+instrument, after all the science and skill that have been expended upon
+it. Should it prove a success like that of the Freyburg organ, there
+will be pilgrimages from the shores of the Pacific and the other side of
+the Atlantic to listen to the organ that can _sing_: and what can be a
+more miraculous triumph of art than to cheat the ear with such an
+enchanting delusion?
+
+Before the organ could be accepted, it was required by the terms of the
+contract to be set up at the factory, and tested by three persons: one
+to be selected by the Organ Committee of the Music-Hall Association, one
+by the builder, and a third to be chosen by them. Having been approved
+by these judges, and also by the State-Commissioner of Wuertemberg,
+according to the State ordinance, the result of the trial was
+transmitted to the President and Directors of the Music-Hall
+Association, and the organ was accepted.
+
+The war broke out in the mean time, and there were fears lest the vessel
+in which the instrument might be shipped should fall a victim to some of
+the British corsairs sailing under Confederate colors. But the Dutch
+brig "Presto," though slow, was safe from the licensed pirates, unless
+an organ could be shown to be contraband of war. She was out so long,
+however,--nearly three months from Rotterdam,--that the insurance-office
+presidents shook their heads over her, fearing that she had gone down
+with all her precious freight.
+
+"At length," to borrow Dr. Upham's words, "one stormy Sunday in March
+she was telegraphed from the marine station down in the bay, and the
+next morning, among the marine intelligence, in the smallest possible
+type, might be read the invoice of her cargo thus:--
+
+ "'Sunday Mar. 22
+
+ "'Arr. Dutch brig Presto, Van Wyngarten, Rotterdam, Jan. 1.
+ Helvoet, 10th Had terrific gales from SW the greater part of the
+ passage. 40 casks gin JD & M Williams 8 sheep Chenery & Co 200
+ bags coffee 2 casks herrings 1 case cheese W. Winsel 1 organ JB
+ Upham 20 pipes 6 casks gin JD Richards 6 casks nutmegs J Schumaker
+ 20 do gin 500 bags chickory root Order,' etc., etc.
+
+"And this was the heralding of this greatest marvel of a high and noble
+art, after the labor of seven years bestowed upon it, having been tried
+and pronounced complete by the most fastidious and competent of critics,
+the wonder and admiration of music-loving Germany, the pride of
+Wuertemberg, bringing a new phase of civilization to our shores in the
+darkest hour of our country's trouble."
+
+It remains to give a brief history of the construction of the grand and
+imposing architectural frame which we have already attempted to
+describe. Many organ-fronts were examined with reference to their
+effects, during Dr. Upham's visits of which we have traced the course,
+and photographs and sketches obtained for the same purpose. On
+returning, the task of procuring a fitting plan was immediately
+undertaken. We need not detail the long series of trials which were
+necessary before the requirements of the President and Directors of the
+Music-Hall Association were fully satisfied. As the result of these, it
+was decided that the work should be committed to the brothers Herter, of
+New York, European artists, educated at the Royal Academy of Art in
+Stuttgart. The general outline of the _facade_ followed a design made by
+Mr. Hammatt Billings, to whom also are due the drawings from which the
+Saint Cecilia and the two groups of cherubs upon the round towers were
+modelled. These figures were executed at Stuttgart; the other carvings
+were all done in New York, under Mr. Herter's direction, by Italian and
+German artists, one of whom had trained his powers particularly to the
+shaping of colossal figures. In the course of the work, one of the
+brothers Herter visited Ludwigsburg for the special purpose of comparing
+his plans with the structure to which they were to be adapted, and was
+received with enthusiasm, the design for the front being greatly
+admired.
+
+The contract was made with Mr. Herter in April, 1860, and the work,
+having been accepted, was sent to Boston during the last winter, and
+safely stored in the lecture-room beneath the Music Hall. In March the
+_Great Work_ arrived from Germany, and was stored in the hall above.
+
+"The seven-years' task is done,--the danger from flood and fire so far
+escaped,--the gantlet of the pirates safely run,--the perils of the sea
+and the rail surmounted by _the good Providence of God_."
+
+The devout gratitude of the President of the Association, under whose
+auspices this great undertaking has been successfully carried through,
+will be shared by all lovers of Art and all the friends of American
+civilization and culture. We cannot naturalize the Old-World cathedrals,
+for they were the architectural embodiment of a form of worship
+belonging to other ages and differently educated races. But the organ
+was only lent to human priesthoods for their masses and requiems; it
+belongs to Art, a religion of which God himself appoints the
+high-priests. At first it appears almost a violence to transplant it
+from those awful sanctuaries, out of whose arches its forms seemed to
+grow, and whose echoes seemed to hold converse with it, into our gay and
+gilded halls, to utter its majestic voice before the promiscuous
+multitude. Our hasty impression is a wrong one. We have undertaken, for
+the first time in the world's history, to educate a nation. To teach a
+people to know the Creator in His glorious manifestations through the
+wondrous living organs is a task for which no implement of human
+fabrication is too sacred; for all true culture is a form of worship,
+and to every rightly ordered mind a setting forth of the Divine glory.
+
+This consummate work of science and skill reaches us in the midst of the
+discordant sounds of war, the prelude of that blessed harmony which will
+come whenever the jarring organ of the State has learned once more to
+obey its keys.
+
+God grant that the _Miserere_ of a people in its anguish may soon be
+followed by the _Te Deum_ of a redeemed Nation!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE KING'S WINE.
+
+
+ The small green grapes in countless clusters grew,
+ Feeding on mystic moonlight and white dew
+ And mellow sunshine, the long summer through:
+
+ Till, with blind motion in her veins, the Vine
+ Felt the delicious pulses of the wine,
+ And the grapes ripened in the year's decline.
+
+ And day by day the Virgins watched their charge;
+ And when, at last, beyond the horizon's marge
+ The harvest-moon dropt beautiful and large,
+
+ The subtile spirit in the grape was caught,
+ And to the slowly dying Monarch brought
+ In a great cup fantastically wrought,
+
+ Whereof he drank; then straightway from his brain
+ Went the weird malady, and once again
+ He walked the Palace free of scar or pain,--
+
+ But strangely changed, for somehow he had lost
+ Body and voice: the courtiers, as he crost
+ The royal chambers, whispered,--"_The King's Ghost_!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MONOGRAPH FROM AN OLD NOTE-BOOK; WITH A POSTSCRIPT.
+
+"ERIPUIT COELO FULMEN, SCEPTRUMQUE TYRANNIS."
+
+
+In a famous speech, made in the House of Lords, March 16, 1838, against
+the Eastern slave-trade, Lord Brougham arrests the current of his
+eloquence by the following illustrative diversion:--
+
+"I have often heard it disputed among critics, which of all quotations
+was the most appropriate, the most closely applicable to the
+subject-matter illustrated; _and the palm in generally awarded to that
+which applied to Dr. Franklin the line in Claudian_,--
+
+ 'Eripuit fulmen coelo, mox sceptra tyrannis';
+
+yet still there is a difference of opinion, and even that citation,
+admirably close as it is, has rivals."
+
+The British orator errs in attributing this remarkable verse to
+Claudian; and he errs also in the language of the verse itself, which he
+fails to quote with entire accuracy. And this double mistake becomes
+more noticeable, when it appears not merely in the contemporary report,
+but in the carefully prepared collection of speeches, revised at
+leisure, and preserved in permanent volumes.[6]
+
+The beauty of this verse, even in its least accurate form, will not be
+questioned, especially as applied to Franklin, who, before the American
+Revolution, in which it was his fortune to perform so illustrious a
+part, had already awakened the world's admiration by drawing the
+lightning from the skies. But beyond its acknowledged beauty, this verse
+has an historic interest which has never been adequately appreciated.
+Appearing at the moment it did, it is closely associated with the
+acknowledgment of American Independence. Plainly interpreted, it calls
+George III. "tyrant," and announces that the sceptre has been snatched
+from his hands. It was a happy ally to Franklin in France, and has ever
+since been an inspiring voice. Latterly it has been adopted by the city
+of Boston, and engraved on granite in letters of gold,--in honor of its
+greatest child and citizen. It may not be entirely superfluous to
+recount the history of a verse which has justly attracted so much
+attention, and which, in the history of civilization, has been of more
+value than the whole State of South Carolina.
+
+From its first application to Franklin, this verse has excited something
+more than curiosity. Lord Brougham tells us that it is often discussed
+in private circles. There is other evidence of the interest it has
+created. For instance, in an early number of "Notes and Queries"[7]
+there is the following inquiry:--
+
+ "Can you tell me who wrote the line on Franklin, '_Eripuit_,'etc.?
+
+ "HENRY H. BREEN.
+
+ "_St. Lucia_."
+
+A subsequent writer in this same work, after calling the verse "a
+parody" of a certain line of antiquity, says,--"I am unable to say who
+adapted these words to Franklin's career. Was it Condorcet?"[8] Another
+writer in the same work says,--"The inscription was written by
+Mirabeau."[9]
+
+I remember well a social entertainment in Boston, where a most
+distinguished scholar of our country, in reply to an inquiry made at the
+table, said that the verse was founded on the following line from the
+"Astronomicon"[10] of Manilius,--
+
+ "Eripuit Jovi fulmen, viresque tonandi."
+
+John Quincy Adams, who was present, seemed to concur. Mr. Sparks, in his
+notes to the correspondence of Franklin, attributes it to the same
+origin.[11] But there are other places where its origin is traced with
+more precision. One of the correspondents of "Notes and Queries" says
+that he has read, but does not remember where, "that this line was
+_immediately_ taken from one in the 'Anti-Lucretius' of Cardinal
+Polignac."[12] Another correspondent shows the intermediate
+authority.[13] My own notes were originally made without any knowledge
+of these studies, which, while fixing its literary origin, fail to
+exhibit the true character of the verse, both in its meaning and in the
+time when it was uttered.
+
+The verse cannot be found in any ancient writer,--not Claudian or
+anybody else. It is clear that it does not come from antiquity, unless
+indirectly; nor does it appear that at the time of its first production
+it was in any way referred to any ancient writer. Manilius was not
+mentioned. The verse is of modern invention, and was composed after the
+arrival of Franklin in Paris on his eventful mission. At first it was
+anonymous; but it was attributed sometimes to D'Alembert and sometimes
+to Turgot. Beyond question, it was not the production of D'Alembert,
+while it will be found in the Works of Turgot,[14] published after his
+death, in the following form:--
+
+ "Eripuit coelo fulmen, sceptrumque tyrannis."
+
+There is no explanation by the editor of the circumstances under which
+the verse was written; but it is given among poetical miscellanies of
+the author, immediately after a translation into French of Pope's "Essay
+on Man," and is entitled "Inscription for a Portrait of Benjamin
+Franklin." It appears that Turgot also tried his hand in these French
+verses, having the same idea:--
+
+ "Le voila ce mortel dont l'heureuse industrie
+ Sut enchainer la Foudre et lui donner des loix,
+ Dont la sagesse active et l'eloquente voix
+ D'un pouvoir oppresseur affranchit sa Patrie,
+ Qui desarma les Dieux, qui reprime les Rois."
+
+The single Latin verse is a marvellous substitute for these diffuse and
+feeble lines.
+
+If there were any doubt upon its authorship, it would be removed by the
+positive statement of Condorcet, who, in his Life of Turgot, written
+shortly after the death of this great man, says, "There is known from
+Turgot but one Latin verse, designed for a portrait of Franklin";[15]
+and he gives the verse in this form:--
+
+ "Eripuit coelo fulmen, mox sceptra tyrannis."
+
+But Sparks and Mignet, in their biographies,[16] and so also both the
+biographical dictionaries of France,--that of Michaud and that of
+Didot,--while ascribing the verse to Turgot, concur in the form already
+quoted from Turgot's Works, which was likewise adopted by Ginguene, the
+scholar who has done so much to illustrate Italian literature, on the
+title-page of his "Science du Bon-Homme Richard," with an abridged Life
+of Franklin, in 1794, and by Cabanis, who lived in such intimacy with
+Franklin.[17] It cannot be doubted that it was the final form which this
+verse assumed,--as it is unquestionably the best.
+
+To appreciate the importance of this verse, as marking and helping a
+great epoch, there are certain dates which must not be forgotten.
+Franklin reached Paris on his mission towards the close of 1776. He had
+already signed the Declaration of Independence, and his present duty was
+to obtain the recognition of France for the new power. The very clever
+Madame Du Deffant, in her amusing correspondence with Horace Walpole,
+describes him in a visit to her "with his fur cap on his head and his
+spectacles on his nose," in the same small circle with Madame de
+Luxembourg, a great lady of the time, and the Duke de Choiseul, late
+Prime-Minister. This was on the thirty-first of December, 1776.[18] A
+pretty good beginning. More than a year of effort and anxiety ensued,
+brightened at last by the news that Burgoyne had surrendered at
+Saratoga. On the sixth of February, 1778, the work of the American
+Plenipotentiary was crowned by the signature of the two Treaties of
+Alliance and Commerce by which France acknowledged our Independence and
+pledged her belligerent support. On the fifteenth of March, one of these
+treaties, with a diplomatic note announcing that the Colonies were free
+and independent States, was communicated to the British Government, at
+London, which was promptly encountered by a declaration of war from
+Great Britain. On the twenty-second of March, Franklin was received by
+the King at Versailles, and this remarkable scene is described by the
+same feminine pen to which we are indebted for the early glimpse of him
+on his arrival in Paris.[19] But throughout this intervening period he
+had not lived unknown. Indeed, he had become at once a celebrity.
+Lacretelle, the eminent French historian, says, "By the effect which
+Franklin produced, he appears to have fulfilled his mission, not with a
+court, but with a free people. His virtues and renown negotiated for
+him."[20]
+
+Condorcet, who was a part of that intellectual society which welcomed
+the new Plenipotentiary, has left a record of his reception. "The
+celebrity of Franklin in the sciences," he says, "gave him the
+friendship of all who love or cultivate them, that is, of all who exert
+a real and durable influence upon public opinion. At his arrival he
+became an object of veneration to all enlightened men, and of curiosity
+to others. He submitted to this curiosity with the natural facility of
+his character, and with the conviction that in this way he served the
+cause of his country. It was an honor to have seen him. People repeated
+what they had heard him say. Every _fete_ which he consented to receive,
+every house where he consented to go, spread in society new admirers,
+_who became so many partisans of the American Revolution_.... Men whom
+the works of philosophy had disposed secretly to the love of liberty
+were impassioned for that of a strange people. A general cry was soon
+raised in favor of the American War, and the friends of peace dared not
+even complain that peace was sacrificed to the cause of liberty."[21]
+This is an animated picture by an eye-witness. But all authorities
+concur in its truthfulness. Even Capefigue--whose business is to
+belittle all that is truly great, and especially to efface those names
+which are associated with human liberty, while, like another Old
+Mortality, he furbishes the tombstones of royal mistresses--is yet
+constrained to bear witness to the popularity and influence which
+Franklin achieved. The critic dwells on what he styles his "Quaker
+garb," "his linen so white under clothes so brown," and also the
+elaborate art of the philosopher, who understood France and knew well
+"that a popular man became soon more powerful than power itself"; but he
+cannot deny that the philosopher "fulfilled his duties with great
+superiority," or that he became at once famous.[22]
+
+The arrival of Franklin was followed very soon by the departure of the
+youthful Lafayette, who crossed the sea to offer his generous sword to
+the service of American liberty. Our cause was now widely known. In the
+thronged _cafes_ and the places of public resort it was discussed with
+sympathy and admiration.[23] And so completely was Franklin recognized
+as the representative of new ideas, that the Emperor Joseph II. of
+Austria,--professed reformer as he was,--on one of his visits to France
+under the travelling-name of Count Falkenstein, is reported to have
+firmly avoided all temptation to see him, saying, "My business is to be
+a Royalist,"--thus doing homage to the real character of Franklin, in
+whom the Republic was personified.
+
+Franklin was at once, by natural attraction, the welcome guest of that
+brilliant company of philosophers who exercised such influence over the
+eighteenth century. The "Encyclopedie" was their work, and they were
+masters at the Academy. He was received into their guild. At the famous
+table of the Baron D'Holbach, where twice a week, Sunday and Thursday,
+at dinner, lasting from two till seven o'clock, the wits of that time
+were gathered, he found a hospitable chair. But he was most at home with
+Madame Helvetius, the widow of the rich and handsome philosopher, whose
+name, derived from Holland, is now almost unknown. At her house he met
+in social familiarity D'Alembert, Diderot, D'Holbach, Morellet, Cabanis,
+and Condorcet, with their compeers. There, also, was Turgot, the
+greatest of all. There was another person in some respects as famous as
+any of these, but leading a very different life, whom Franklin saw
+often,--I refer to Caron de Beaumarchais, the author already of the
+"Barbier de Seville," as he was afterwards of the "Mariage de Figaro,"
+who, turning aside from an unsurpassed success at the theatre, exerted
+his peculiar genius to enlist the French Government on the side of the
+struggling Colonies, predicted their triumph, and at last, under the
+assumed name of a mercantile house, became the agent of the Comte de
+Vergennes in furnishing clandestine supplies of arms even before the
+recognition of Independence. It is supposed that through this popular
+dramatist Franklin maintained communications with the French Government
+until the mask was thrown aside.[24]
+
+Beyond all doubt, Turgot is one of the most remarkable intelligences
+which France has produced. He was by nature a philosopher and a
+reformer, but he was also a statesman, who for a time held a seat in the
+cabinet of Louis XVI., first as Minister of the Marine, and then as
+Comptroller of the Finances. Perhaps no minister ever studied more
+completely the good of the people. His administration was one constant
+benefaction. But he was too good for the age in which he lived,--or
+rather, the age was not good enough for him. The King was induced to
+part with him, saying, when he yielded,--"You and I are the only two
+persons who really love the people." This was some time in May, 1776; so
+that Franklin, on his arrival, found this eminent Frenchman free from
+all the constraints of a ministerial position. The character of Turgot
+shows how naturally he sympathized with the Colonies struggling for
+independence, especially when represented by a person like Franklin. In
+a prize essay of his youth, written in 1750, when he was only
+twenty-three years of age, he had foretold the American Revolution.
+These are his remarkable words on that occasion:--
+
+"Colonies are like fruits, which do not hold to the tree after their
+maturity. Having become sufficient in themselves, they do that which
+Carthage did, _that which America will one day do_."[25]
+
+One of his last acts before leaving the Ministry was to prepare a memoir
+on the American War, for the information of the Comte de Vergennes, in
+which he says "that the idea of the absolute separation of the Colonies
+and the mother-country seems infinitely probable; that, when the
+independence of the Colonies shall be entire and acknowledged by the
+English, there will be a total revolution in the political and
+commercial relations of Europe and America; and that all the
+mother-countries will be forced to abandon all empire over their
+colonies, to leave them entire liberty of commerce with all nations, and
+to be content in sharing with others this liberty, and in preserving
+with their colonies the bonds of amity and fraternity."[26] This memoir
+of the French statesman bears date the sixth of April, 1776, nearly
+three months before the Declaration of Independence.
+
+On leaving the Ministry, Turgot devoted himself to literature, science,
+and charity, translating Odes of Horace and Eclogues of Virgil, studying
+geometry with Bossut, chemistry with Lavoisier, and astronomy with
+Rochon, and interesting himself in every thing by which human welfare
+could be advanced. Such a character, with such an experience of
+government, and the prophet of American independence, was naturally
+prepared to welcome Franklin, not only as philosopher, but as statesman
+also.
+
+But the classical welcome of Turgot was partially anticipated,--at least
+in an unsuccessful attempt. Baron Grimm, in that interesting and
+instructive "Correspondance," prepared originally for the advantage of
+distant courts, but now constituting one of the literary and social
+monuments of the period, mentions, under date of October, 1777, that the
+following French verses were made for a portrait of Franklin by Cochin,
+engraved by St. Aubin:--
+
+ "C'est l'honneur et l'appui du nouvel hemisphere;
+ Les flots de l'Ocean s'abaissent a sa voix;
+ Il reprime ou dirige a son gre le tonnerre;
+ Qui desarme les dieux, peut-il craindre les rois?"
+
+These verses seem to contain the very idea in the verse of Turgot. But
+they were suppressed at the time by the censor on the ground that they
+were "blasphemous,"--although it is added in a note that "they concerned
+only the King of England." Was it that the negotiations with Franklin
+were not yet sufficiently advanced? And here mark the dates.
+
+It was only after the communication to Great Britain of the Treaty of
+Alliance and the reception of Franklin at Versailles, that the seal
+seems to have been broken. Baron Grimm, in his "Correspondance,"[27]
+under date of April, 1778, makes the following entry:--
+
+"A very beautiful Latin verse has been made for the portrait of Dr.
+Franklin,--
+
+ 'Eripuit coelo fulmen, sceptrumque tyrannis.'
+
+It is a happy imitation of a verse of the 'Anti-Lucretius,'--
+
+ 'Eripuitque Jovi fulmen, Phoeboque sagittas.'"
+
+Here is the earliest notice of this verse, authenticating its origin.
+Nothing further is said of the "Anti-Lucretius"; for in that day it was
+familiar to every lettered person. But I shall speak of it before I
+close.
+
+Only a few days later the verse appears in the correspondence of Madame
+D'Epinay, whose intimate relations with Baron Grimm--the subject of
+curiosity and scandal--will explain her early knowledge of it. She
+records it in a letter to the very remarkable Italian Abbe Galiani,
+under date of May 3d, 1778.[28] And she proceeds to give a translation
+in French verse, which she says "D'Alembert made the other day between
+sleeping and waking." Galiani, who was himself a master of Latin
+versification, and followed closely the fortunes of America, must have
+enjoyed the tribute. In a letter written shortly afterwards, he enters
+into all the grandeur of the occasion. "You have," says he, "at this
+hour decided the greatest question of the globe,--that is, if it is
+America which shall reign over Europe, or Europe which shall continue to
+reign over America. I would wager in favor of America."[29] In these
+words the Neapolitan said as much as Turgot.
+
+A little later the verse appears in a different scene. It had reached
+the _salons_ of Madame Doublet, whence it was transferred to the
+"Memoires Secrets de Bachaumont," under date of June 8th, 1778, as "a
+very beautiful verse, proper to characterize M. Franklin and to serve as
+an inscription for his portrait." These Memoirs, as is well known, are
+the record of conversations and news gathered in the circle of that
+venerable Egeria of gossip;[30] and here is evidence of the publicity
+which this welcome had already obtained.
+
+The verse was now fairly launched. War was flagrant between France and
+Great Britain. There was no longer any reason why the new alliance
+between France and the United States should not be placed under the
+auspices of genius, and why the same hand which had snatched the
+lightning from the skies should not have the fame of snatching the
+sceptre from King George III. The time for free speech had come. It was
+no longer "blasphemous."
+
+But it will be observed that these records of this verse fail to mention
+the immediate author. Was he unknown at the time? Or did the fact that
+he was recently a cabinet-minister induce him to hide behind a mask?
+Turgot was a master of epigram,--as witness the terrible lines on
+Frederick of Prussia; but he was very prudent in conduct. "Nobody," said
+Voltaire, "so skilful to launch the shaft without showing the hand." But
+there is a letter from no less a person than D'Alembert, which reveals
+something of the "filing" which this verse underwent, and something of
+the persons consulted. Unhappily, the letter is without date; nor does
+it appear to whom it was addressed, except that the "_cher confrere_"
+seems to imply that it was to a brother of the Academy. This letter will
+be found in a work which is now known to have been the compilation of
+the Marquis Gaetan de La Rochefoucauld,[31] entitled, "Memoires de
+Condorcet sur la Revolution Francaise, extraits de sa Correspondance et
+de celle de ses Amis."[32] It is introduced by the following words from
+the Marquis:--
+
+"It is known how Franklin had been feted when he came to Paris, because
+he was the representative of a republic. The philosophers, especially,
+received him with enthusiasm. It may be said, among other things, that
+D'Alembert lost his sleep; and we are going to prove it by a letter
+which he wrote, where he put himself to the torture in order to versify
+in honor of Franklin."
+
+The letter is then given as follows:--
+
+ "_Friday Morning_.
+
+ "MY DEAR COLLEAGUE,--You are acquainted with the Franklin verse,--
+
+ 'Eripuit coelo fulmen, _mox sceptra_ tyrannis.'
+
+ You should surely cause it to be put in the Paris paper, if it is
+ not there already.
+
+ "I should agree with La Harpe that _sceptrumque_ is better: first,
+ because _mox sceptra_ is a little hard, and then because _mox_,
+ according to the dictionary of Gesner, who collects examples,
+ signifies equally _statim_ or _deinde_, which causes a double
+ meaning, _mox eripuit_ or _mox eripiet_.
+
+ "However, here is how I have attempted to translate this verse for
+ the portrait of Franklin:--
+
+ 'Tu vois le sage courageux
+ Dont l'heureux et male genie
+ Arracha le tonnerre aux dieux
+ Et le sceptre a la tyrannie.'
+
+ If you find these verses sufficiently supportable, so that people
+ will not laugh at me, you can put them into the Paris paper, even
+ with my name. I shall honor myself in rendering this homage to
+ Franklin, but on condition that you find the verses _printable_.
+ As I make no pretension on account of them, I shall be perfectly
+ content, if you reject them as bad.
+
+ "The third verse can be put,--_A ravi le tonnerre aux cieux_, or
+ _aux dieux_."
+
+From this letter it appears that the critical judgment of La Harpe,
+confirmed by D'Alembert, sided for _sceptrumque_ as better than _mox
+sceptra_.
+
+But the verse of Turgot was not alone in its testimony. There was an
+incident precisely contemporaneous, which shows how completely France
+had fallen under the fascination of the American cause. Voltaire, the
+acknowledged chief of French literature in the brilliant eighteenth
+century, after many years of busy exile at Ferney, in the neighborhood
+of Geneva, where he had wielded his far-reaching sceptre, was induced,
+in his old age, to visit Paris once again before he died. He left his
+Swiss retreat on the sixth of February, 1778, the very day on which
+Franklin signed the Alliance with France, and after a journey which
+resembled the progress of a sovereign, he reached Paris on the twelfth
+of February. He was at once surrounded by the homage of all that was
+most illustrious in literature and science, while the theatre, grateful
+for his contributions to the drama, vied with the Academy. But there
+were two characters on whom the patriarch, as he was fondly called,
+lavished a homage of his own. He had already addressed to Turgot a most
+remarkable epistle in verse, the mood of which may be seen in its title,
+"Epitre a un Homme"; but on seeing the discarded statesman, who had
+been so true to benevolent ideas, he came forward to meet him, saying,
+with his whole soul, "Let me kiss the hand which signed the salvation of
+the people." The scene with Franklin was more touching still. Voltaire
+began in English, which he had spoken early in life, but, having lost
+the habit, he soon charted to French, saying that he "could not resist
+the desire of speaking for one moment the language of Franklin." The
+latter had brought with him his grandson, for whom he asked a
+benediction. "God and Liberty," said Voltaire, putting his hands upon
+the head of the child; "this is the only benediction proper for the
+grandson of Franklin." A few days afterward, at a public session of the
+Academy, they were placed side by side, when, amidst the applause of the
+enlightened company, the two old men rose and embraced. The political
+triumphs of Franklin and the dramatic triumphs of Voltaire caused the
+exclamation, that "Solon embraced Sophocles." But it was more than this.
+It was France embracing America, beneath the benediction of "God and
+Liberty." Only a few days later, Voltaire died. But the alliance with
+France had received a new assurance, and the cause of American
+Independence an unalterable impulse.
+
+Turgot did not live to enjoy the final triumph of the cause to which he
+had given such remarkable expression. He died March 30th, 1781, several
+months before that "crowning mercy," the capture of Cornwallis, and
+nearly two years before the Provisional Articles of Peace, by which the
+Colonies were recognized as free and independent States. But his
+attachment to Franklin was one of the enjoyments of his latter
+years.[33] Besides the verse to which so much reference has been made,
+there is an interesting incident which attests the communion of ideas
+between them, if not the direct influence of Turgot. Captain Cook, the
+eminent navigator, who "steered Britain's oak into a world unknown," was
+in distant seas on a voyage of discovery. Such an enterprise naturally
+interested Franklin, and, in the spirit of a refined humanity, he sought
+to save it from the chances of war. Accordingly, he issued a passport,
+addressed "To all captains and commanders of armed ships, acting by
+commission from the Congress of the United States of America, now in war
+with Great Britain," where, after setting forth the nature of the voyage
+of the English navigator, he proceeded to say,--"This is most earnestly
+to recommend to every one of you, that, in case the said ship, which is
+now expected to be soon in the European seas on her return, should
+happen to fall into your hands, you would not consider her as an enemy,
+nor suffer any plunder to be made of the effects contained in her, nor
+obstruct her immediate return to England; but that you would treat the
+said Captain Cook and his people with all civility and kindness,
+affording them, as common friends to mankind, all the assistance in your
+power which they may happen to stand in need of."[34] This document
+bears date March 10th, 1779. But Turgot had anticipated Franklin. At the
+first outbreak of the war, he had submitted a memoir to the French
+Government, on which it was ordered that Captain Cook should not be
+treated as an enemy, but as a benefactor of all European nations.[35]
+Here was a triumph of civilization, by which we have all been gainers;
+for such an example is immortal in its influence.
+
+There is yet another circumstance which should be mentioned, in order to
+exhibit the identity of sympathies in these two eminent persons. Each
+sought to marry Madame Helvetius: Turgot early in life, while she was
+still Mademoiselle Ligniville, belonging to a family of twenty-one
+children, from a chateau in Lorraine, and the niece of Madame de
+Graffigny, the author of the "Peruvian Letters"; Franklin in his old
+age, while a welcome guest in the intellectual circle which this
+widowed lady continued to gather about her. Throughout his stay in
+France he was in unbroken relations with this circle, dining with it
+very often, and adding much to its gayety, while Madame Helvetius, with
+her friends, dined with him once a week. It was with tears in his eyes
+that he parted from her, whom he never expected to see again in this
+life; and on reaching his American home, he addressed her in words of
+touching tenderness:--"I stretch out my arms towards you,
+notwithstanding the immensity of the seas which separate us, while I
+wait the heavenly kiss which I firmly trust one day to give you."[36]
+
+But the story of the verse is not yet finished. And here it mingles with
+the history of Franklin in Paris, constituting in itself an episode of
+the American Revolution. The verse was written for a portrait. And now
+that the ice was broken, the portrait of Franklin was to be seen
+everywhere,--in painting, in sculpture, and in engraving. I have
+counted, in the superb collection of the Bibliotheque Imperiale at
+Paris, nearly a hundred engraved heads of him. At the royal exposition
+of pictures the republican portrait found a place, and the name of
+Franklin was printed at length in the catalogue,--a circumstance which
+did not pass unobserved at the time; for the "Espion Anglais," in
+recording it, treats it as "announcing that he began to come out from
+his obscurity."[37] The same curious authority, describing a festival at
+Marseilles, says, under date of March 20th, 1779,--"I was struck, on
+entering the hall, to observe a crowd of portraits representing the
+insurgents; but that of M. Franklin especially drew my attention, on
+account of the device, '_Eripuit coelo_,' etc. This was inscribed
+recently, and _every one admired the sublime truth_."[38] Thus
+completely was France, not merely in its social centre, where fashion
+gives the law, but in its distant borders, pledged to the cause of which
+Franklin was the representative.
+
+As in the halls of science and in popular resorts, so was our
+Plenipotentiary even in the palace of princes. The biographer of the
+Prince de Conde dwells with admiration upon the illustrious character
+who, during the great debate and the negotiations which ensued, had
+fixed the regards of Paris, of Versailles, of the whole kingdom
+indeed,--although in his simple and farmer-like exterior so unlike those
+gilded plenipotentiaries to whom France was accustomed,--and he
+recounts, most sympathetically, that the Prince, after an interview of
+two hours, declared that "Franklin appeared to him above even his
+reputation."[39] And here again we encounter the unwilling testimony of
+Capefigue, who says that he was followed everywhere, taking possession
+of "hearts and minds," and that "his image, under the simple garb of a
+Quaker, was to be found at the hearth of the poor and in the boudoir of
+the beautiful";[40]--all of which is in harmony with the more
+sympathetic record of Lacretelle, who says that "portraits of Franklin
+were everywhere, with this inscription, _Eripuit coelo_, etc., _which
+the Court itself found just and sublime_."[41]
+
+But it was at court, even in the precincts of Versailles, that the
+portrait and the inscription had their most remarkable experience. Of
+this there is an authentic account in the Memoirs of Marie Antoinette by
+her attendant, Madame Campan. This feminine chronicler relates that
+Franklin appeared at court in the dress of an American farmer. His flat
+hair without powder, his round hat, his coat of brown cloth contrasted
+with the bespangled and embroidered dresses, the powdered and perfumed
+hair of the courtiers of Versailles. The novelty charmed the lively
+imagination of French ladies. Elegant _fetes_ were given to the man who
+was said to unite in himself the renown of a great, natural philosopher
+with "those patriotic virtues which had made him embrace the noble part
+of Apostle of Liberty." Madame Campan records that she assisted at one
+of these _fetes_, where the most beautiful among three hundred ladies
+was designated to place a crown of laurel upon the white head of the
+American philosopher, and two kisses upon the cheeks of the old man.
+Even in the palace, at the exposition of the Sevres porcelain, the
+medallion of Franklin, with the legend, "_Eripuit coelo_", etc., was
+sold directly under the eyes of the King. Madame Campan adds, however,
+that the King avoided expressing himself on this enthusiasm, which, she
+says, "without doubt, his sound sense made him blame." But an incident,
+called "a pleasantry," which has remained quite unknown, goes beyond
+speech in the way of explaining the secret sentiments of Louis XVI. The
+Comtesse Diane de Polignac, devoted to Marie Antoinette, shared warmly
+the "infatuation" with regard to Franklin. The King observed it. But
+here the story shall be told in the language of the eminent lady who
+records it:--"Il fit faire a la manufacture de Sevres un vase de nuit,
+an fond duquel etait place le medaillon avec la legende _si fort en
+vogue_, et l'envoya en present d'etrennes a la Comtesse Diane."[42] Such
+was the exceptional treatment of Franklin, and of the inscription in his
+honor which was so much in vogue. Giving to this incident its natural
+interpretation, it is impossible to resist the conclusion, that the
+French people, and not the King, sanctioned American Independence.
+
+The conduct of the Queen on this special occasion is not recorded;
+although we are told by the same communicative chronicler who had been
+Her Majesty's companion, that she did not hesitate to express herself
+more openly than the King on the part which France took in favor of the
+independence of the American Colonies, to which she was constantly
+opposed. A letter from Mario Antoinette, addressed to Madame de
+Polignac, under the date of April 9th, 1787, declares unavailing regret,
+saying,--"The time of illusions is past, and to-day we pay dear on
+account of our infatuation and enthusiasm for the American War."[43] It
+is evident that Marie Antoinette, like her brother Joseph, thought that
+her "business was to be a Royalist."
+
+But the name of Franklin triumphed in France. So long as he continued to
+reside there he was received with honor, and when, after the achievement
+of Independence, and the final fulfilment of all that was declared in
+the verse of Turgot, he undertook to return home, the Queen--who had
+looked with so little favor upon the cause which he so grandly
+represented--sent a litter to receive his sick body and carry him gently
+to the sea. As the great Revolution began to show itself, his name was
+hailed with new honor; and this was natural, for the great Revolution
+was the outbreak of that spirit which had risen to welcome him. In
+snatching the sceptre from a tyrant he had given a lesson to France.
+His death, when at last it occurred, was the occasion of a magnificent
+eulogy from Mirabeau, who, borrowing the idea of Turgot, exclaimed from
+the tribune of the National Assembly,--"Antiquity would have raised
+altars to the powerful genius, who, for the good of man, embracing in
+his thought heaven and earth, _could subdue lightning and tyrants_."[44]
+On his motion, France went into mourning for Franklin. His bust was a
+favorite ornament, and, during the festival of Liberty, it was carried,
+with those of Sidney, Rousseau, and Voltaire, before the people to
+receive their veneration.[45] A little later, the eminent medical
+character, Cabanis, who had lived in intimate association with Franklin,
+added his testimony, saying that the enfranchisement of the United
+States was in many respects his work, and that the Revolution, the most
+important to the happiness of men which had then been accomplished on
+earth, united with one of the most brilliant discoveries of physical
+science to consecrate his memory; and he concludes by quoting the verse
+of Turgot.[46] Long afterwards, his last surviving companion in the
+cheerful circle of Madame Helvetius, still loyal to the idea of Turgot,
+hailed him as "that great man who had placed his country in the number
+of independent states, and made one of the most important discoveries of
+the age."[47]
+
+But it is time to look at this verse in its literary relations, from
+which I have been diverted by its commanding interest as a political
+event. Its importance on this account must naturally enhance the
+interest in its origin.
+
+The poem which furnished the prototype of the famous verse was
+"Anti-Lucretius, sive de Deo et Natura," by the Cardinal Melchior de
+Polignac. Its author was of that patrician house which is associated so
+closely with Marie Antoinette in the earlier Revolution, and with
+Charles X. in the later Revolution, having its cradle in the mountains
+of Auvergne, near the cradle of Lafayette, and its present tomb in the
+historic cemetery of Picpus, near the tomb of Lafayette, so that these
+two great names, representing opposite ideas, begin and end side by
+side. He was not merely an author, but statesman and diplomatist also,
+under Louis XIV. and the Regent. Through his diplomacy a French prince
+was elected King of Poland. He represented France at the Peace of
+Utrecht, where he bore himself very proudly towards the Dutch. By the
+nomination of the Pretender, at that time in France, he obtained the hat
+of a cardinal. At Rome he was a favorite, and he was also, with some
+interruptions, a favorite at Versailles. His personal appearance, his
+distinguished manners, his genius, and his accomplishments, all
+commended him. Literary honors were superadded to political and
+ecclesiastical. He succeeded to the chair of Bossuet at the Academy. But
+he was not without the vicissitudes of political life. Falling into
+disgrace at court, he was banished to the abbacy of Bonport. There the
+scholarly ecclesiastic occupied himself with a refutation of Lucretius,
+in Latin verse.
+
+The origin of the poem is not without interest. Meeting Bayle in
+Holland, the ecclesiastic found the indefatigable skeptic most
+persistently citing Lucretius, in whose elaborate verse the atheistic
+materialism of Epicurus is developed and exalted. Others had already
+answered the philosopher directly; but the indignant Christian was moved
+to answer the poet through whom the dangerous system was proclaimed. His
+poem was, therefore, a vindication of God and religion, in direct
+response to a master-poem of antiquity, in which these are assailed. The
+attempt was lofty, especially when the champion adopted the language of
+Lucretius. Perhaps, since Sannazaro, no modern production in Latin verse
+has found equal success. Even before its publication, in 1747, it was
+read at court, and was admired in the princely circle of Sceaux. It
+appeared in elegant, editions, was translated into French prose by
+Bougainville, and into French verse by Jeanty-Laurans, also most
+successfully into Italian verse by Ricci. At the latter part of the last
+century, when Franklin reached Paris, it was hardly less known in
+literary circles than a volume of Grote's History in our own day.
+Voltaire, the arbiter of literary fame at that time, regarding the
+author only on the side of literature, said of him, in his "Temple du
+Gout,"--
+
+ "Le Cardinal, oracle de la France,
+ Reunissaut Virgile avec Platon,
+ _Vengeur du ciel et vainqueur de Lucrece_."
+
+The last line of this remarkable eulogy has a movement and balance not
+unlike the Latin verse of Turgot, or that which suggested it in the poem
+of Polignac; but the praise which it so pointedly offers attests the
+fame of the author; nor was this praise confined to the "fine frenzy" of
+verse. The "Anti-Lucretius" was gravely pronounced the "rival of the
+poem which it answered,"--"with verses as flowing as Ovid, sometimes
+approaching the elegant simplicity of Horace and sometimes the nobleness
+of Virgil,"--and then again, with a philosophy and a poetry combined
+"which would not be disavowed either by Descartes or by Virgil."[48]
+
+Turning now to the poem itself, we shall see how completely the verse of
+Turgot finds its prototype there. Epicurus is indignantly described as
+denying to the gods all power, and declaring man independent, so as to
+act for himself; and here the poet says, "Braving the thunderous
+recesses of heaven, _he snatched the lightning from Jove and the arrows
+from Apollo_, and, liberating the mortal race, ordered it to dare all
+things,"--
+
+ "Coeli et tonitralia templa lacessens,
+ _Eripuit fulmenque Jovi, Phoeboque sagittas_;
+ Et mortale manumittens genus, omnia jussit
+ Audere."[49]
+
+To deny the power of God and to declare independence of His commands,
+which the poet here holds up to judgment, is very unlike the life of
+Franklin, all whose service was in obedience to God's laws, whether in
+snatching the lightning from the skies or the sceptre from tyrants; and
+yet it is evident that the verse which pictured Epicurus in his impiety
+suggested the picture of the American plenipotentiary in his double
+labors of science and statesmanship.
+
+But the present story will not be complete without an allusion to that
+poem of antiquity which was supposed to have suggested the verse of
+Turgot, and which doubtless did suggest the verse of the
+"Anti-Lucretius." Manilius is a poet little known. It is difficult to
+say when he lived or what he was. He is sometimes supposed to have lived
+under Augustus, and sometimes under Theodosius. He is sometimes supposed
+to have been a Roman slave, and sometimes a Roman senator. His poem,
+under the name of "Astronomicon," is a treatise on astronomy in verse,
+which recounts the origin of the material universe, exhibits the
+relations of the heavenly bodies, and vindicates this ancient science.
+It is while describing the growth of knowledge, which gradually mastered
+Nature, that the poet says,--
+
+ "Eriputque Jovi fulmen, viresque tonandi."[50]
+
+The meaning of this line will be seen in the context, which, for
+plainness as well as curiosity, I quote from a metrical version of the
+first book of the poem,[51] entitled, "The Sphere of Marcus Manilius
+made an English Poem, by Edward Sherburne," which was dedicated to
+Charles II.:--
+
+ "Nor put they to their curious search an end
+ Till reason had scaled heaven, thence viewed this round
+ And Nature latent in its causes found:
+ Why thunder does the suffering clouds assail;
+ Why winter's snow more soft than summer's hail;
+ Whence earthquakes come and subterranean fires;
+ Why showers descend, what force the wind inspires:
+ From error thus the wondering minds uncharmed,
+ _Unsceptred Jove, the Thunderer disarmed_."
+
+Enough has been said on the question of origin; but there is yet one
+other aspect of the story.
+
+The verse was hardly divulged when it became the occasion of various
+efforts in the way of translation. Turgot had already done it into
+French; so had D'Alembert. M. Nogaret wrote to Franklin, inclosing an
+attempted translation, and says in his letter,--"The French have done
+their best to translate the Latin verse, where justice is done you in so
+few words. They have appeared as jealous of transporting this eulogy
+into their language as they are of possessing you. But nobody has
+succeeded, and I think nobody will succeed."[52] He then quotes a
+translation which he thinks defective, although it appeared in the
+"Almanach des Muses" as the best:--
+
+ "Cet homme que tu vois, sublime en tous les tems,
+ Derobe aux dieux la foudre et le sceptre aux tyrans."
+
+To this letter Dr. Franklin made the following reply:[53]--
+
+ "_Passy, 8 March, 1781_.
+
+ "SIR,--I received the letter you have done me the honor of writing
+ to me the 2d instant, wherein, after overwhelming me with a flood
+ of compliments, which I can never hope to merit, you request my
+ opinion of your translation of a Latin verse that has been applied
+ to me. If I were, which I really am not, sufficiently skilled in
+ your excellent language to be a proper judge of its poesy, the
+ supposition of my being the subject must restrain me from giving
+ any opinion on that line, except that it ascribes too much to me,
+ especially in what relates to the tyrant, the Revolution having
+ been the work of many able and brave men, wherein it is sufficient
+ honor for me, if I am allowed a small share. I am much obliged by
+ the favorable sentiments you are pleased to entertain of me.
+
+ "With regard, I have the honor to be, Sir, etc.,
+
+ "B. FRANKLIN."
+
+In his acknowledgment of this letter M. Nogaret says,--"Paris is pleased
+with the translation of your '_Eripuit_,' and your portrait, as I had
+foreseen, makes the fortune of the engraver."[54] But it does not appear
+to which translation he refers.
+
+Here is another attempt:--
+
+ "Il a par ses travaux, toujours plus etonnans,
+ Ravi la foudre aux Dieux et le sceptre aux tyrans."
+
+There are other verses which adopt the idea of Turgot. Here, for
+instance, is a part of a song by the Abbe Morellet, written for one of
+the dinners of Madame Helvetius:[55]--
+
+ "Comme un aigle audacieux,
+ Il a vole jusqu'aux cieux,
+ _Et derobe le tonnerre_
+ Dont ils effrayaient la terre,
+ Heureux larcin
+ De l'habile Benjamin.
+
+ "L'Americain indompte
+ _Recouvre sa liberte_;
+ Et ce genereux ouvrage,
+ Autre exploit de notre sage,
+ Est mis a fin
+ Par Louis et Benjamin."
+
+Mr. Sparks found among Franklin's papers the following paraphrastic
+version:[56]--
+
+ "Franklin sut arreter la foudre dans les airs,
+ Et c'est le moindre bien qu'il fit a sa patrie;
+ Au milieu de climats divers,
+ Ou dominait la tyrannie,
+ Il fit regner les arts, les moeurs, et le genie;
+ Et voila le heros que j'offre a l'univers."
+
+Nor should I omit a translation into English by Mr. Elphinstone:--
+
+ "He snatched the bolt from Heaven's avenging hand,
+ Disarmed and drove the tyrant from the land."
+
+In concluding this sketch, I wish to say that the literary associations
+of the subject did not tempt me; but I could not resist the inducement
+to present in its proper character an interesting incident which can be
+truly comprehended only when it is recognized in its political
+relations. To this end it was important to exhibit its history, even in
+details, so that the verse which has occupied so much attention should
+be seen not only in its scholarly fascination, but in its wide-spread
+influence in the circles of the learned and the circles even of the
+fashionable in Paris and throughout France, binding this great nation by
+an unchangeable vow to the support of American liberty. Words are
+sometimes things; but never were words so completely things as those
+with which Turgot welcomed Franklin. The memory of that welcome cannot
+be forgotten in America. Can it ever be forgotten in France?
+
+
+POSTSCRIPT.
+
+And now the country is amazed by the report that the original welcome of
+France to America and the inspired welcome of Turgot to Franklin are
+forgotten by the France of this day, or, rather let me say, forgotten by
+the Emperor, whose memory for the time is the memory of France. It is
+said that Louis Napoleon is concerting an alliance with the Rebel
+slavemongers of our country, founded on the recognition of their
+independence, so that they may take their place as a new power in the
+family of nations. Indeed, we have been told, through the columns of the
+official organ, the "Moniteur," that he wishes to do this thing. Perhaps
+he imagines that he follows the great example of the last century.
+
+What madness!
+
+The two cases are in perfect contrast,--as opposite as the poles, as
+unlike as Liberty and Slavery.
+
+The struggle for American Independence was a struggle for Liberty, and
+was elevated throughout by this holy cause. But the struggle for
+Slavemonger Independence is necessarily and plainly a struggle for
+Slavery, and is degraded throughout by the unutterable vileness of all
+its barefaced pretensions.
+
+The earlier struggle, adopted by the enlightened genius of France, was
+solemnly placed under the benediction of "God and Liberty." The present
+struggle, happily thus far discarded by that same enlightened genius,
+can have no other benediction than "Satan and Slavery."
+
+The earlier struggle was to snatch the sceptre from a kingly tyrant. The
+present struggle is to put whips into the hands of Rebel slavemongers
+with which _to compel work without wages_, and thus give wicked power to
+vulgar tyrants without number.
+
+The earlier struggle was fitly pictured by the welcome of Turgot to
+Franklin. But another spirit must be found, and other words must be
+invented, to picture the struggle which it is now proposed to place
+under the protection of France.
+
+The earlier struggle was grandly represented by Benjamin Franklin, who
+was already known by a sublime discovery in science. The present
+struggle is characteristically represented by John Slidell, whose great
+fame is from the electioneering frauds by which he sought to control a
+Presidential election; so that his whole life is fitly pictured, when it
+is said, that he thrust fraudulent votes into the ballot-box, and whips
+into the hands of task-masters.
+
+The earlier struggle was predicted by Turgot, who said, that, in the
+course of Nature, colonies must drop from the parent stem, like ripe
+fruit. But where is the Turgot who has predicted, that, in the course of
+Nature, the great Republic must be broken, in order to found a new power
+on the corner-stone of Slavery?
+
+The earlier struggle gathered about it the sympathy of the learned, the
+good, and the wise, while the people of France rose up to call it
+blessed. The present struggle can expect nothing but detestation from
+all who are not lost to duty and honor, while the people of France must
+cover it with curses.
+
+The earlier struggle enjoyed the favor of France, whether in assemblies
+of learning or of fashion, in spite of its King. It remains to be seen
+if the present struggle must not ignobly fail in France, still mindful
+of its early vows, in spite of its Emperor.
+
+Where duty and honor are so plain, it is painful to think that even for
+a moment there can be any hesitation.
+
+Alas for France!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+REVIEWS AND LITERARY NOTICES.
+
+
+_History of Spanish Literature._ By GEORGE TICKNOR. In Three Volumes.
+Third American Edition, corrected and enlarged. Boston: Ticknor &
+Fields.
+
+The first edition of this work was published in 1849, in three volumes
+octavo, and it is hardly necessary for us to add, that it was received
+with very great favor both at home and abroad. Indeed, we may go
+farther, and say that it was received with the highest favor by those
+who were best qualified to pronounce upon its merits. The audience which
+it addressed was small at home, and not numerous anywhere; for the
+literature of Spain, in general, does not present strong attractions to
+those who are not natives of the Peninsula. In our country, at the time
+of its publication, there was hardly a man competent to examine and
+criticize it; and in Europe, outside of Spain itself, the number of
+thorough Spanish scholars was and is but small, and of these a large
+proportion is found in Germany. But by these, whether in Germany,
+France, or England, Mr. Ticknor's History was received with a generous
+and hearty admiration which must have been to him as authentic a token
+of the worth of his book as the voice of posterity itself. But, of
+course, it was exposed to the severest trial in Spain, the people of
+which are intensely national, loving their literature, like everything
+else which belongs to them, with a passionate and exclusive love, and
+not disposed to treat with any tenderness a foreign writer who should
+lay an incompetent hand upon any of their great writers, though in a
+friendly and liberal spirit. But by the scholars and men of letters in
+Spain it was greeted with a kindliness of welcome which nothing but the
+most substantial excellence could have assured. Universal assent to the
+views of a foreigner and a Protestant was not to be expected: this or
+that particular judgment was questioned; but no one said, or could say,
+that Mr. Ticknor's History was superficial, or hastily prepared, or
+prejudiced, or wanting in due proportions. On the other hand, a most
+hearty tribute of admiration was paid to its thorough learning, its
+minute and patient research, its accurate judgments, its candid temper
+and generous spirit. Cultivated Spaniards were amazed that a foreigner
+had so thoroughly traced the stream of their literature from its
+fountain-heads, omitting nothing, overlooking nothing, and doing justice
+to all.
+
+Such a work could never attain any very wide popularity, and this from
+the nature of its subject. To the general reader books about books are
+never so attractive as histories and biographies, which deal with the
+doings of men, and glow with the warmth of human interests. But every
+man of literary taste, though but superficially acquainted with Spanish
+literature, could recognize the merits of Mr. Ticknor's work, its
+philosophical spirit, its lucid arrangement, its elegant and judicious
+criticisms, and its neat, correct, and accurate style. He could not fail
+to see that the works of Bouterwek and Sismondi were, by comparison,
+merely a series of graceful sketches, with no claim to be called a
+complete and thorough history. It took its place at once as the highest
+authority in any language upon the subject of which it treated, as the
+very first book which everybody would consult who wanted any information
+upon that subject.
+
+The present edition of the "History of Spanish Literature" is by no
+means identical with those which have preceded it. It omits nearly the
+whole of the inedited, primitive Castilian poems which have heretofore
+filled about seventy pages at the end of the last volume; and in other
+parts of the work a corresponding, and even more than a corresponding,
+amount of new matter has been introduced, which will, it is believed, be
+accounted of greater interest than the early poetry it displaces. These
+additions and changes have been derived from very various sources. In
+the first place, Mr. Ticknor was in Europe himself in 1856 and 1857, and
+visited the principal libraries, public and private, in England, France,
+Germany, and Italy, in which any considerable collection of Spanish
+books was to be found, and by examination of these supplied any wants
+there might be in his own very ample stores. In the second place, his
+History has been translated into German and Spanish, the former version
+being illustrated with notes by Dr. Ferdinand Wolf, perhaps the best
+Spanish scholar in Germany, and the latter by Don Pascual de Gayangos,
+one of the best scholars in Spain. From the results of the labors of
+these distinguished annotators Mr. Ticknor has taken--with generous
+acknowledgment--everything which, in his judgment, could add value,
+interest, or completeness to the present revised edition. And lastly, in
+the period between the publication of the first edition and the present
+time much has been done for the illustration of Spanish literature, both
+in the Peninsula and out of it. This is due in part to the interest in
+the subject which Mr. Ticknor himself awakened; and in Spain it is one
+of the consequences of the rapid progress in material development and
+vital energy which that country has been making during the last fifteen
+years. New lives of some of its principal writers have been published,
+and new editions of their works have been prepared. From all these
+sources a very ample supply of new materials has been derived, so that,
+while the work remains substantially the same in plan, outline, and
+spirit, there are hardly three consecutive pages in it which do not
+contain additions and improvements. We will briefly mention a few of the
+more prominent of these.
+
+In the first volume, pages 446-455, the life of Garcilasso de la Vega is
+almost entirely rewritten from materials found in a recent biography by
+Don Eustaquio Navarrete, which Mr. Ticknor pronounces "an important
+contribution to Spanish literary history." The writer is the son of the
+learned Don Martin Navarrete.
+
+In the second volume, pages 75-81, many new and interesting facts are
+stated in regard to the life of Luis de Leon, derived from a recently
+published report of the entire official record of his trial before the
+Inquisition, of which Mr. Ticknor says that it is "by far the most
+important authentic statement known to me respecting the treatment of
+men of letters who were accused before that formidable tribunal, and
+probably the most curious and important one in existence, whether in
+manuscript or in print. Its multitudinous documents fill more than nine
+hundred pages, everywhere teeming with instruction and warning on the
+subject of ecclesiastical usurpations, and the noiseless, cold, subtle
+means by which they crush the intellectual freedom and manly culture of
+a people."
+
+In the same volume, pages 118-119, some new and interesting facts are
+stated which prove beyond a doubt, that Lope de Vega was actuated by
+ungenerous feelings towards his great contemporary, Cervantes. The
+evidence is found in some autograph letters of Lope, extracts from which
+were made by Duran, and are now published by Von Schack, an excellent
+Spanish scholar.
+
+In the same volume, page 191, is a copy of the will of Lope de Vega,
+recently discovered, and obtained from the late Lord Holland.
+
+In the same volume, pages 354-357, is a learned bibliographical note
+upon the publication and various editions of the plays of Calderon.
+
+In the third volume, Appendix B., pages 408-414, is a learned
+bibliographical note on the Romanceros.
+
+In the same volume, Appendix C., pages 419-422, is an elaborate note on
+the Centon Epistolario, in reply to an article by the Marques de Pidal.
+
+In the same volume, Appendix D., pages 432-434, is a new postscript on
+the clever literary forgery, _El Buscapie_.
+
+At the close of the third volume there are seven pages giving a brief
+and condensed account of the several works connected with Spanish
+literature which have been published within two or three years past, and
+since the stereotype plates for the present work were cast.
+
+The present edition is in a duodecimo, instead of an octavo form, and is
+sold at a less price than the previous ones.
+
+In the closing sentences of the preface to this edition, Mr. Ticknor
+says: "Its preparation has been a pleasant task, scattered lightly over
+the years that have elapsed since the first edition of this work was
+published, and that have been passed, like the rest of my life, almost
+entirely among my own books. That I shall ever recur to this task again,
+for the purpose of further changes or additions, is not at all probable.
+My accumulated years forbid any such anticipation; and therefore, with
+whatever of regret I may part from what has entered into the happiness
+of so considerable a portion of my life, I feel that now I part from it
+for the last time. _Extremum hoc munus habeto_." This is a very natural
+feeling, and gracefully expressed; but whatever of sadness there may be
+in parting from a book which has so long been a constant resource, a
+daily companion, may in this case be tempered by the thought that the
+work, as now dismissed, is so well founded, so symmetrically
+proportioned, so firmly built, as to defy the sharpest criticism--that
+of Time itself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+RECENT AMERICAN PUBLICATIONS RECEIVED BY THE EDITORS OF THE ATLANTIC
+MONTHLY.
+
+
+The History, Civil, Political, and Military, of the Southern Rebellion,
+from its Incipient Stages to its Close. Comprehending, also, all
+Important State-Papers, Ordinances of Secession, Proclamations,
+Proceedings of Congress, Official Reports of Commanders, etc., etc. By
+Orville J. Victor. New York. James D. Torrey. Vols. I. and II. 8vo. pp.
+viii., 531; viii., 537. per vol. $2.50.
+
+Biographical Sketches of Illinois Officers engaged in the War against
+the Rebellion of 1861. By James Grant Wilson, Major commanding Fifteenth
+Illinois Cavalry. Enlarged Edition. Illustrated with Portraits. Chicago,
+James Barnet. 8vo. paper. pp. 120. 50 cts.
+
+Leaves from the Diary of an Army-Surgeon; or, Incidents of Field, Camp,
+and Hospital Life. By Thomas T. Ellis, M.D., late Post-Surgeon at New
+York, and Acting Medical Director at Whitehouse, Va. New York. John
+Bradburn. 12mo. pp. 312. $1.00.
+
+The Actress in High Life: An Episode in Winter Quarters. New York. John
+Bradburn. 12mo. pp. 416. $1.25.
+
+Americans in Rome. By Henry P. Leland. New York. Charles T. Evans. 12mo.
+pp. 311. $1.25.
+
+The Castle's Heir: A Novel in Real Life. By Mrs. Henry Wood. In Two
+Volumes. Philadelphia. T.B. Peterson & Brothers. 8vo. paper. pp. 144,
+260. $1.00.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: The circumstances connected with the introduction of the
+British troops into Boston will be found related in the "Atlantic
+Monthly" for June, 1862; and the number for the following August
+contains a view of the relation of the question of removal to the
+arbitrary policy contemplated for the Colonies.]
+
+[Footnote 2: Boston, printed in the "Gazette" of February 12, 1770. A
+letter printed in the "Boston Evening Post," October 9, 1789, from
+London, received by the last ship, after eulogizing "the noble stand of
+the colonists," says, "I am charmed with the prudent conduct of the
+Bostonians in particular, and that you have been able lo preserve so
+much tranquillity among you, while the spirits of the people must have
+been so soured and agitated by oppression. You have certainly very wise
+and prudent men concerned in the conduct of your affairs." A Tory view
+of Boston in these times, (by "Sagittarius,") is as follows:--"The
+Town-Meeting at Boston is the hot-bed of sedition. It is there that all
+their dangerous insurrections are engendered; it is there that the flame
+of discord and rebellion was first lighted up and disseminated over the
+Provinces; it is therefore greatly to be wished that Parliament may
+rescue the loyal inhabitants of that town and Province from the
+merciless hand of an ignorant mob, led on and inflamed by
+self-interested and profligate men."]
+
+[Footnote 3: _Reliq. Wotton._, p. 317, et seq.]
+
+[Footnote 4: Of clay he says, "It is a cursed step-dame to almost all
+vegetation, as having few or no meatuses for the percolation of
+alimental showers."]
+
+[Footnote 5: Sir William Temple gives this list of his pears:--Blanquet,
+Robin, Rousselet, Pepin, Jargonel; and for autumn: Buree, Vertlongue,
+and Bergamot.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Brougham's _Speeches_, Vol. II. p. 233.]
+
+[Footnote 7: Vol. IV. p. 443, First Series.]
+
+[Footnote 8: _Notes and Queries_, Vol. V. p. 17.]
+
+[Footnote 9: _Ibid._]
+
+[Footnote 10: Lib. I. v. 104.]
+
+[Footnote 11: Sparks's _Works of Franklin_, Vol. VIII. p. 538.]
+
+[Footnote 12: _Notes and Queries_, Vol. V. p. 549, First Series.]
+
+[Footnote 13: _Ibid_. Vol. V. p. 140. See, also, _Ibid._ Vol. V. p. 571;
+Vol. VI. p. 88; _Dublin Review_ for March, 1847, p. 212; _Quarterly
+Review_ for June, 1850.]
+
+[Footnote 14: _Oevres de Turgot_, Tom. IX. p. 140.]
+
+[Footnote 15: _Oeuvres de Condorcet_, par O'Connor, Tom. V. p. 162.]
+
+[Footnote 16: Sparks's _Works of Franklin_, Vol. VIII. p. 537; Mignet,
+_Notices et Portraits_, Tom. II. p. 480.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Cabania, _Oeuvres_, Tom. V. p. 251.]
+
+[Footnote 18: _Lettres de Madame Du Deffant_, Tom. III. p. 367.]
+
+[Footnote 19: _Ibid_. Tom. IV. p. 35.]
+
+[Footnote 20: Lacretelle, _Histoire de France_, Tom. V. p. 90.]
+
+[Footnote 21: _Oeuvres de Condorcet_, par O'Connor, Tom. V. pp. 406,
+407.]
+
+[Footnote 22: Capefigue, _Louis XVI_, Tom. II. pp. 12, 13, 42, 49, 50.
+The rose-water biographer of Diane de Poitiers, Madame de Pompadour, and
+Madame du Barry would naturally disparage Franklin.]
+
+[Footnote 23: Mignet, _Notices at Portraits_, Tom. II. p. 427.]
+
+[Footnote 24: _La Gazette Secrete_, 15 Jan. 1777; Capefigue, _Louis
+XVI._, Tom. II. p. 15.]
+
+[Footnote 25: _Oeuvres de Turgot_, Tom. II. p. 66.]
+
+[Footnote 26: _Oeuvres de Turgot_, Tom. VIII. p. 496.]
+
+[Footnote 27: Vol. X. p. 107.]
+
+[Footnote 28: _Memoires de Madame D'Epinay_, Tom. III. p. 431.]
+
+[Footnote 29: Galiani, _Correspondance_, Tom. II. p. 275, _Lettre de 25
+Juillet_, 1778. Nobody saw America with a more prophetic eye than this
+inspired Pulcinello of Naples. As far back as the eighteenth of May,
+1776, several weeks before the Declaration of Independence, he
+wrote,--"The epoch is come for the total fall of Europe and its
+transmigration to America. Do not buy your house in the Chaussee
+d'Antin, but at Philadelphia. The misfortune for me is that there are no
+abbeys in America." Tom. II. p. 203. See also Grimm, _Correspondence_,
+Tom. IX. p. 285 (1776).]
+
+[Footnote 30: The dictionaries of Michaud and Didot concur in the date
+of her death; but there is reason to suppose that they are both
+mistaken.]
+
+[Footnote 31: See Querard, _La France Litteraire_, article _La
+Rochefoucauld_.]
+
+[Footnote 32: Tom. I. p. 168.]
+
+[Footnote 33: _Oeuvres de Turgot_, Tom. I. p. 416.]
+
+[Footnote 34: Franklin, _Works_, by Sparks, Vol. V. p. 124.]
+
+[Footnote 35: _Oeuvres de Turgot_, Tom. I. p. 414; Tom. IX. p. 416;
+_Oeuvres de Condorcet_, Tom. V. p. 162.]
+
+[Footnote 36: Cabanis, _Oeuvres_, Tom. V. p. 261; Mignet, _Notices et
+Portraits_, Tom. II. p. 475. See, also, Morellet, _Memoires_, Tom. I. p.
+290. Cabanis and Morellet both lived for many years under the hospitable
+roof of Madame Helvetius. It is the former who has preserved the
+interesting extract from the letter of Franklin. Nobody who has visited
+the Imperial Library at Paris can forget the very pleasant autograph
+note of Franklin in French to Madame Helvetius, which is exhibited in
+the same case with an autograph note of Henry IV. to Gabrielle
+d'Estrees.]
+
+[Footnote 37: Tom. II. p. 83. See, also, p. 337.]
+
+[Footnote 38: Tom. II. p. 465. See, also, the letter of the Marquis de
+Chastellux to Professor Madison on the Fine Arts in America, where the
+generous Frenchman recommends for all our great towns a portrait of
+Franklin, "with the Latin verse inscribed in France below his portrait."
+Chastellux, _Travels in North America_, Vol. II. p. 372.]
+
+[Footnote 39: Chambelland, _Vie du Prince de Bourbon-Conde_, Tom. I. p.
+374.]
+
+[Footnote 40: Capefigue, _Louis XVI._, Tom. II. pp. 49, 50.]
+
+[Footnote 41: Lacretelle, _Histoire de France pendant le 18me Siecle_,
+Tom. V. p. 91. The historian errs in putting this success in 1777,
+before the date of the Treaty; and he errs also with regard to the
+Court, if he meant to embrace the King and Queen.]
+
+[Footnote 42: _Memoires sur Marie Antoinette_, par Madame Campan, Tom.
+I. p. 251.]
+
+[Footnote 43: _Bulletin de l'Alliance des Arts_, 10 Octobre, 1843. See
+also Goncourt, _Histoire de Marie Antoinette_, p. 221.]
+
+[Footnote 44: Grimm, _Correspondance_, Tom. XVI. p. 407.]
+
+[Footnote 45: Louis Blanc, _Histoire de la Revolution_, Tom. VI. pp.
+234, 316.]
+
+[Footnote 46: Cabanis, _Oeuvres_, Tom. V. p. 251.]
+
+[Footnote 47: Morellet, _Memoires_, Tom. I. p. 290.]
+
+[Footnote 48: _L'Anit-Lucrece_, traduit de Bougainville, _Epitre
+Dedicatoire, Discours Preliminaire_, p. 69.]
+
+[Footnote 49: Lib. I. v. 95.]
+
+[Footnote 50: Lib. I. v. 104. _Tonandi_ is sometimes changed to
+_tonantis_, and also _tonanti_. (See _Notes and Queries_, Vol. V. p.
+140.)]
+
+[Footnote 51: It is understood that there is a metrical version of this
+poem by the Rev. Dr. Frothingham of Boston, which he does not choose to
+publish, although, like everything from this refined scholar, it must be
+marked by taste and accuracy.]
+
+[Footnote 52: Sparks's _Works of Franklin_, Vol. VIII. p. 538, note.]
+
+[Footnote 53: Ibid. p. 537.]
+
+[Footnote 54: Sparks's _Works of Franklin_, Vol. VIII. p. 539, note.]
+
+[Footnote 55: Morellet, _Memoires_, Tom. I. p. 288. Nothing is more
+curious with regard to Franklin than these _Memoires_, including
+especially the engraving from an original design by him. In some copies
+this engraving is wanting. It is, probably, the gayeties here recorded,
+and, perhaps, the "infatuation" of the court-ladies, that suggested the
+scandalous charges which Dr. Julius has strangely preserved in his
+_Nordamerikas Sittliche, Zustaende_, Vol. I. p. 98.]
+
+[Footnote 56: Sparks's _Works of Franklin_, Vol. VIII. p. 539, note.]
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 73,
+November, 1863, by Various
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