summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/28336-h
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 02:38:10 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 02:38:10 -0700
commitcfb41f69de5f8515a9dd1866689663b8eb1cb45f (patch)
tree6c8d029f3adf31af0614409dd0a045faa756b9b0 /28336-h
initial commit of ebook 28336HEADmain
Diffstat (limited to '28336-h')
-rw-r--r--28336-h/28336-h.htm11721
1 files changed, 11721 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/28336-h/28336-h.htm b/28336-h/28336-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4e38dba
--- /dev/null
+++ b/28336-h/28336-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,11721 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+<head>
+ <meta name="generator" content=
+ "HTML Tidy for Windows (vers 1st July 2004), see www.w3.org" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content=
+ "text/html; charset=iso-8859-1" />
+
+ <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Blackwood&#39;s Edinburgh
+ Magazine - Volume 58 No. 357, July, 1845 by Various</title>
+<style type="text/css">
+
+ p { margin-top: .75em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .75em;
+ }
+ h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {
+ text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
+ clear: both;
+ }
+
+
+
+ h4,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {
+ text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
+ clear: both;
+ }
+
+
+ hr { width: 33%;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ clear: both;
+ }
+
+ hr.squished { width: 33%;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ clear: both;
+ }
+
+ hr.short {margin-left: 12em; width: 15%;}
+
+ body{margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ }
+
+ .pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */
+ /* visibility: hidden; */
+ position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: smaller;
+ text-align: right;
+ } /* page numbers */
+
+ .blockquot{margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 10%;}
+
+ .center {text-align: center;}
+ .right {text-align: right;}
+ .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+ .smcapcenter {font-variant: small-caps; text-align: center;}
+ .notes {background-color: #eeeeee; color: #000; padding: .5em;
+ margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+
+ .footnotes {border: dashed 1px;}
+ .footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;}
+ .footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
+ .fnanchor {vertical-align: super; font-size: .8em; text-decoration: none;}
+
+ .poem {margin-left:25%; margin-right:10%; text-align: left;}
+ .poem br {display: none;}
+ .poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;}
+ .poem span.i0 {display: block; margin-left: 0em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i2 {display: block; margin-left: 1em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i4 {display: block; margin-left: 2em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i6 {display: block; margin-left: 3em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i10 {display: block; margin-left: 5em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i12 {display: block; margin-left: 6em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i14 {display: block; margin-left: 7em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i16 {display: block; margin-left: 8em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i18 {display: block; margin-left: 9em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i20 {display: block; margin-left: 10em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i24 {display: block; margin-left: 12em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i22 {display: block; margin-left: 11em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i26 {display: block; margin-left: 13em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i30 {display: block; margin-left: 15em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i38 {display: block; margin-left: 19em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+
+
+/* indented small quotes ======================================================= */
+ .quoteindent2_5 {margin-left: 2.5em;}
+ .quoteindent3_5 {margin-left: 3.5em;}
+ .quoteindent5_5 {margin-left: 5.5em;}
+ .quoteindent6_5 {margin-left: 6.5em;}
+ .quoteindent10_5 {margin-left: 10.5em;}
+ .quoteindent25_5 {margin-left: 25.5em;}
+ .quoteindent5 {margin-left: 5em;}
+
+
+
+
+.rspace {padding-right: 10%;}
+.lspace {padding-left: 10%;}
+.btbb {border-top: 1px solid black; border-bottom: 1px solid black; padding: 6px 0 6px 0;}
+
+
+/* transcribers notes ============================================================== */
+.transnote { border: 1px dotted black; background-color: #EEE; color: inherit; margin: 2em 10% 1em 10%; font-size: 80%; padding: 0.5em 1em 0.5em 1em;}
+.transnote p { text-align: left;}
+h4 {font-variant: small-caps; font-weight: normal;}
+h1,h2 { margin-top: 5em; }
+
+
+
+/* tables ============================================================= */
+table { margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: left; empty-cells: show; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-top:1em; border: 1px solid black; padding: 5px;}
+
+table.smallfont { border-spacing:8px; border: 0px; font-size: .8em;}
+
+
+/* standard table */
+table.standard { border-spacing:8px; border: 0px;}
+td.padded { padding:5px; }
+td.paddedbig { padding:40px; }
+td.AlignCenter { text-align: center; }
+td.AlignRight { text-align: right; }
+td.AlignLeft { text-align: left; }
+td.BorderNo {border:0px solid #999; }
+td.BorderLeft { border-left: #999 1px solid; }
+td.BorderLeftRight { border-left: #999 1px solid;; border-right: #999 1px solid; }
+td.BorderRight { border-right: #999 1px solid; }
+td.BorderBottom { border-bottom: #999 1px solid; }
+td.BorderBottomRight { border-right: #999 1px solid; border-bottom: #999 1px solid; }
+
+
+
+table.toc {border: 0px solid black;}
+td.number {padding-right: 0; text-align: right;}
+td.tocpage {text-align: right; vertical-align: bottom;}
+td.toc {text-align: left; vertical-align: top; margin-left: 1em; text-indent: -1em; font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+</style>
+</head>
+
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Vol 58, No.
+357, July 1845, 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: Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Vol 58, No. 357, July 1845
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: March 15, 2009 [EBook #28336]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE, JULY 1845 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Brendan OConnor, Patricia Bennett, Jonathan
+Ingram and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Library of Early
+Journals.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+ <div class="transnote">
+ <h4>Transcriber&#39;s Note</h4>
+
+ <p>A Table of contents has been
+ generated for HTML version.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <h1>BLACKWOOD&#39;S<br />
+ Edinburgh<br />
+ MAGAZINE.</h1>
+
+ <h3>VOL. LVIII.</h3>
+
+ <h3>JULY&#8212;DECEMBER, 1845.</h3>
+
+
+ <h4>WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS, EDINBURGH,</h4>
+
+ <h6>AND</h6>
+
+ <div class="center">
+ 37, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON.
+ </div>
+ <hr class="squished" style="width: 5%;" />
+
+ <div class="center">
+ 1845.
+ </div>
+
+ <h1>BLACKWOOD&#8217;S<br />
+ EDINBURGH MAGAZINE.</h1>
+
+ <h3><span class="rspace">No. CCCLVII.</span> <span class="btbb">JULY,
+ 1845.</span> <span class="lspace">VOL. LVIII.</span></h3>
+
+ <h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+ <div class="center">
+ <table class="toc" summary="table of contents">
+ <tr>
+ <td>MARLBOROUGH, NO. I.,</td>
+
+ <td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>PÚSHKIN, THE RUSSIAN POET. NO. II.,</td>
+
+ <td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_28">28</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>SUSPIRIA DE PROFUNDIS: BEING A SEQUEL TO THE CONFESSIONS OF
+ AN ENGLISH OPIUM-EATER, PART II.,</td>
+
+ <td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_43a">43</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>NORTHERN LIGHTS,</td>
+
+ <td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_56">56</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>HOUSE-HUNTING IN WALES,</td>
+
+ <td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_74b">74</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>THE TORQUATO TASSO OF GOETHE,</td>
+
+ <td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>DAVID THE &quot;TELYNWR,&quot; OR THE DAUGHTER&#39;S TRIAL;
+ A TALE OF WALES,</td>
+
+ <td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_96">96</a></td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>NORTH&#39;S SPECIMENS OF THE BRITISH CRITICS. NO.
+ VI.&#8212;SUPPLEMENT TO DRYDEN ON CHAUCER,</td>
+
+ <td class="tocpage"><a href="#Page_114">114</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 10%;" />
+
+ <h3>EDINBURGH:</h3>
+
+ <div class="center">
+ WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS, 45, GEORGE STREET;<br />
+ AND 37, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON.
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="center">
+ <i>To whom all Communications (post paid) must be addressed.</i>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="smcapcenter">
+ sold by all the booksellers in the united kingdom.
+ </div>
+ <hr class="squished" style="width: 5%;" />
+
+ <div class="smcapcenter">
+ printed by ballantine and hughes, edinburgh.
+ </div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg
+ 1]</a></span>
+
+ <h2><a name="MARLBOROUGH" id="MARLBOROUGH"></a>MARLBOROUGH.<a name=
+ "FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class=
+ "fnanchor">[1]</a></h2>
+
+ <h3>No. I.</h3>
+
+ <p>Alexander the Great said, when he approached the tomb of Achilles,
+ &quot;Oh! fortunate youth, who had a Homer to be the herald of your
+ fame!&quot; &quot;And well did he say so,&quot; says the Roman
+ historian: &quot;for, unless the <i>Iliad</i> had been written, the
+ same earth which covered his body would have buried his name.&quot;
+ Never was the truth of these words more clearly evinced than in the
+ case of the Duke of <span class='smcap'>Marlborough</span>.
+ Consummate as were the abilities, unbroken the success, immense the
+ services of this great commander, he can scarcely be said to be known
+ to the vast majority of his countrymen. They have heard the distant
+ echo of his fame as they have that of the exploits of Timour, of
+ Bajazet, and of Genghis Khan; the names of Blenheim and Ramillies, of
+ Malplaquet and Oudenarde, awaken a transient feeling of exultation in
+ their bosoms; but as to the particulars of these events, the
+ difficulties with which their general had to struggle, the objects
+ for which he contended, even the places where they occurred, they
+ are, for the most part, as ignorant as they are of similar details in
+ the campaigns of Baber or Aurengzebe. What they do know, is derived
+ chiefly, if not entirely, from the histories of their enemies.
+ Marlborough&#39;s exploits have made a prodigious impression on the
+ Continent. The French, who felt the edge of his flaming sword, and
+ saw the glories of the <i>Grande Monarque</i> torn from the long
+ triumphant brow of Louis XIV.; the Dutch, who found in his conquering
+ arm the stay of their sinking republic, and their salvation from
+ slavery and persecution; the Germans, who saw the flames of the
+ Palatinate avenged by his resistless power, and the ravages of war
+ rolled back from the Rhine into the territory of the state which had
+ provoked them; the Lutherans, who beheld in him the appointed
+ instrument of divine vengeance, to punish the abominable perfidy and
+ cruelty of the revocation of the edict of Nantes&#8212;have concurred
+ in celebrating his exploits. The French nurses frightened their
+ children with stories of &quot;Marlbrook,&quot; as the Orientals say,
+ when their horses start, they see the shadow of Richard
+ C&#339;ur-de-Lion crossing their path. Napoleon hummed the well-known
+ air, &quot;Marlbrook s&#39;en va à la guerre,&quot; <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span> when he
+ crossed the Niemen to commence the Moscow campaign. But in England,
+ the country which he has made illustrious, the nation he has saved,
+ the land of his birth, he is comparatively forgotten; and were it not
+ for the popular pages of Voltaire, and the shadow which a great name
+ throws over the stream of time in spite of every neglect, he would
+ bevirtually unknown at this moment to nineteen-twentieths of the
+ British people.</p>
+
+ <p>It is the fault of the national historians which has occasioned
+ this singular injustice to one of the greatest of British
+ heroes&#8212;certainly the most consummate, if we except Wellington,
+ of British military commanders. No man has yet appeared who has done
+ any thing like justice to the exploits of Marlborough. Smollett,
+ whose unpretending narrative, compiled for the bookseller, has
+ obtained a passing popularity by being the only existing sequel to
+ Hume, had none of the qualities necessary to write a military
+ history, or make the narrative of heroic exploits interesting. His
+ talents for humour, as all the world knows, were great&#8212;for
+ private adventure, or the delineation of common life in novels,
+ considerable. But he had none of the higher qualities necessary to
+ form a great historian; he had neither dramatic nor descriptive
+ power; he was entirely destitute of philosophic views or power of
+ general argument. In the delineation of individual character, he is
+ often happy; his talents as a novelist, and as the narrator of
+ private events, there appear to advantage. But he was neither a poet
+ nor a painter, a statesman nor a philosopher. He neither saw whence
+ the stream of events had come, nor whither it was going. We look in
+ vain in his pages for the lucid arguments and rhetorical power with
+ which Hume illustrated, and brought, as it were, under the mind&#39;s
+ eye, the general arguments urged, or rather which might be urged by
+ ability equal to his own, for and against every great change in
+ British history. As little do we find the captivating colours with
+ which Robertson has painted the discovery and wonders of America, or
+ the luminous glance which he has thrown over the progress of society
+ in the first volume of Charles V. Gibbon&#39;s incomparable powers of
+ classification and description are wholly awanting. The fire of
+ Napier&#39;s military pictures need not be looked for. What is
+ usually complained of in Smollett, especially by his young readers,
+ is, that he is so dull&#8212;the most fatal of all defects, and the
+ most inexcusable in an historian. His heart was not in history, his
+ hand was not trained to it; it is in &quot;Roderick Random&quot; or
+ &quot;Peregrine Pickle,&quot; not the continuation of Hume, that his
+ powers are to be seen.</p>
+
+ <p>Lord Mahon has brought to the subject of the history of England
+ from the treaty of Utrecht to that of Aix-la-Chapelle, talents of a
+ kind much better adapted for doing justice to Marlborough&#39;s
+ campaigns. He has remarkable power for individual narrative. His
+ account of the gallant attempt, and subsequent hair-breadth escapes
+ of the Pretender in 1745, is full of interest, and is justly praised
+ by Sismondi as by far the best account extant of that romantic
+ adventure. He possesses also a fair and equitable judgment, much
+ discrimination, evident talent for drawing characters, and that
+ upright and honourable heart, which is the first requisite for
+ success in the delineation, as it is for success in the conduct of
+ events. His industry in examining and collecting authorities is
+ great; he is a scholar, a statesman, and a gentleman&#8212;no small
+ requisites for the just delineation of noble and generous
+ achievements. But notwithstanding all this, his work is not the one
+ to rescue Marlborough&#39;s fame from the unworthy obscurity into
+ which, in this country, it has fallen. He takes up the thread of
+ events where Marlborough left them: he begins only at the peace of
+ Utrecht. Besides this, he is not by nature a military historian, and
+ if he had begun at the Revolution, the case would probably have been
+ the same. Lord Mahon&#39;s attention has been mainly fixed on
+ domestic story; it is in illustrating parliamentary contests or court
+ intrigues, not military events, that his powers have been put forth.
+ He has given a clear, judicious, and elegant narrative of British
+ history, as regards these, so far as it is embraced by his
+ accomplished pen; but the historian of Marlborough must treat him
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+ as second to none, not even to Louis XIV. or William III. Justice
+ will never be done to the hero of the English revolution, till his
+ Life is the subject of a separate work in every schoolboy&#39;s
+ hands. We must have a memoir of him to be the companion of
+ Southey&#39;s Life of Nelson, and Napier&#39;s Peninsular War.</p>
+
+ <p>Voltaire, in his &quot;Siècle de Louis XIV.,&quot; could not avoid
+ giving a sketch of the exploits of the British hero; and his natural
+ impartiality has led him, so far as it goes, to give a tolerably fair
+ one. It need hardly be said, that coming from the pen of such a
+ writer, it is lively, animated, and distinct. But Voltaire was not a
+ military historian; he had none of the feelings or associations which
+ constitute one. War, when he wrote, had been for above half a
+ century, with a few brilliant exceptions, a losing game to the
+ French. In the War of the Succession they had lost their ascendancy
+ in continental Europe; in that of the Seven Years, nearly their whole
+ colonial dominions. The hard-won glories of Fontenoy, the doubtful
+ success of Laffelt, were a poor compensation for these disasters. It
+ was the fashion of his day to decry war as the game of kings, or
+ flowing from the ambition of priests; if superstition was abolished,
+ and popular virtue let into government, one eternal reign of peace
+ and justice would commence. With these writers the great object was,
+ to carry the cabinets of kings by assault, and introduce philosophers
+ into government through the antechambers of mistresses. Peter the
+ Great was their hero, Catharine of Russia their divinity, for they
+ placed philosophers at the head of affairs. It was not to be supposed
+ that in France, the vanquished country, in such an age justice should
+ be done to the English conqueror. Yet such were the talents of
+ Voltaire, especially for making a subject popular, that it is on his
+ work, such as it is, that the fame of Marlborough mainly rests, even
+ in his own country.</p>
+
+ <p>Marlborough, as might be expected, has not wanted biographers who
+ have devoted themselves, expressly and exclusively, to transmit his
+ fame and deeds to posterity. They have for the most part failed, from
+ the faults most fatal, and yet most common to biographers&#8212;undue
+ partiality in some, dulness and want of genius in others. They began
+ at an early period after his death, and are distinguished at first by
+ that rancour on the one side, and exaggeration on the other, by which
+ such contemporary narratives are generally, and in that age were in a
+ peculiar manner, distinguished. I. An abridged account of his life,
+ dedicated to the Duke of Montague, his son-in-law, appeared at
+ Amsterdam in 12mo; but it is nothing but an anonymous panegyric. II.
+ Not many years after, a life of Marlborough was published, in three
+ volumes quarto, by Thomas Ledyard, who had accompanied him in many of
+ his later travels, and had been the spectator of some of the last of
+ his military exploits. This is a work of much higher authority, and
+ contains much valuable information; but it is prolix, long-winded,
+ and diffuse, filled with immaterial documents, and written throughout
+ in a tone of inflated panegyric. III. Another life of Marlborough,
+ written with more ability, appeared at Paris in 1806, in three
+ volumes octavo, by Dutems. The author had the advantage of all the
+ resources for throwing light on his history which the archives of
+ France, then at the disposal of Napoleon, who had a high admiration
+ for the English general, could afford; but it could hardly be
+ expected that, till national historians of adequate capacity for the
+ task had appeared, it was to be properly discharged by foreigners.
+ Yet such is the partiality which an author naturally contracts for
+ the hero of his biography, that the work of Dutems, though the author
+ has shown himself by no means blind to his hero&#39;s faults, is
+ perhaps chiefly blameable for being too much of a panegyric. IV. By
+ far the fullest and most complete history of Marlborough, however, is
+ that which was published at London in 1818, by Archdeacon Coxe, in
+ five volumes octavo. This learned author had access to all the
+ official documents on the subject then known to be in existence,
+ particularly the Blenheim Papers, and he has made good use of the
+ ample materials placed at his disposal; but it cannot be said that he
+ has made an interesting, though he certainly has a valuable, work. It
+ has reached a second <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id=
+ "Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span> edition, but it is now little heard of: a
+ certain proof, if the importance of his subject, and value of his
+ materials is taken into account, that it labours under some
+ insurmountable defects in composition. Nor is it difficult to see
+ what these defects are. The venerable Archdeacon, respectable for his
+ industry, his learning, his researches, had not a ray of genius, and
+ genius is the soul of history. He gives every thing with equal
+ minuteness, makes no attempt at digesting or compression, and fills
+ his pages with letters and state-papers at full length; the certain
+ way, if not connected by ability, to send them to the bottom.</p>
+
+ <p>Dean Swift&#39;s history of the four last years of Queen Anne, and
+ his Apology for the same sovereign, contain much valuable information
+ concerning Marlborough&#39;s life; but it is so mixed up with the
+ gall and party spirit which formed so essential a part of the Dean of
+ St Patrick&#39;s character, that it cannot be relied on as impartial
+ or authentic.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> The life of James II. by
+ Clarke contains a great variety of valuable and curious details drawn
+ from the Stuart Papers sent to the Prince Regent on the demise of the
+ Cardinal York; and it would be well for the reputation of
+ Marlborough, as well as many other eminent men of the seventeenth and
+ eighteenth centuries, if some of them could be buried in oblivion.
+ But by far the best life of Marlborough, in a military point of view,
+ is that recently published by Mr Gleig, in his &quot;Military
+ Commanders of Great Britain,&quot;&#8212;a sketch characterized by
+ all the scientific knowledge, practical acquaintance with war, and
+ brilliant power of description, by which the other writings of that
+ gifted author are distinguished. If he would make as good use of the
+ vast collection of papers which, under the able auspices of Sir
+ George Murray, have now issued from the press, as he has of the more
+ scanty materials at his disposal when he wrote his account of
+ Marlborough, he would write <i>the</i> history of that hero, and
+ supersede the wish even for any other.</p>
+
+ <p>The fortunate accident is generally known by which the great
+ collection of papers now in course of publication in London has been
+ brought to light. That this collection should at length have become
+ known is less surprising than that it should so long have remained
+ forgotten, and have eluded the searches of so many persons interested
+ in the subject. It embraces, as Sir George Murray&#39;s lucid preface
+ mentions, a complete series of the correspondence of the great duke
+ from 1702 to 1712, the ten years of his most important public
+ services. In addition to the despatches of the duke himself, the
+ letters, almost equally numerous, of his private secretary, M.
+ Cardonnell, and a journal written by his grace&#39;s chaplain, Dr
+ Hare, afterwards Bishop of Chichester, are contained in the eighteen
+ manuscript volumes which were discovered in the record-room of
+ Hensington, near Woodstock, in October 1842, and are now given to the
+ public. They are of essential service, especially in rendering
+ intelligible the details of the correspondence, which would otherwise
+ in great part be uninteresting, and scarce understood, at least by
+ the ordinary reader. Some of the most valuable parts of the work,
+ particularly a full detail of the battle of Blenheim, are drawn from
+ Dr Hare&#39;s journal. In addition to this, the bulletins of most of
+ the events, issued by government at the time, are to be found in
+ notes at the proper places; and in the text are occasionally
+ contained short, but correct and luminous notices, of the preceding
+ or contemporaneous political and military events which are alluded
+ to, but not described, in the despatches, and which are necessary to
+ understand many of their particulars. Nothing, in a word, has been
+ omitted by the accomplished editor which could illustrate or render
+ intelligible the valuable collection of materials placed at his
+ disposal; and yet, with all his pains and ability, it is often very
+ difficult to follow the detail of events, or understand the matter
+ alluded to in the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id=
+ "Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span> despatches:&#8212;so great is the lack of
+ information on the eventful War of the Succession which prevails,
+ from the want of a popular historian to record it, even among
+ well-informed persons in this country; and so true was the
+ observation of Alexander the Great, that but for the genius of Homer,
+ the exploits of Achilles would have been buried under the tumulus
+ which covered his remains! And what should we have known of Alexander
+ himself more than of Attila or Genghis Khan, but for the fascinating
+ pages of Quintus Curtius and Arrian?</p>
+
+ <p>To the historian who is to go minutely into the details of
+ Marlborough&#39;s campaigns and negotiations, and to whom accurate
+ and authentic information is of inestimable importance, it need
+ hardly be said that these papers are of the utmost value. But, to the
+ general reader, all such voluminous publications and despatches must,
+ as a matter of necessity, be comparatively uninteresting. They always
+ contain a great deal of repetition, in consequence of the necessity
+ under which the commander lay, of communicating the same event to
+ those with whom he was in correspondence in many different quarters.
+ Great part of them relate to details of discipline, furnishing
+ supplies, getting up stores, and other necessary matters, of little
+ value even to the historian, except in so far as they illustrate the
+ industry, energy, and difficulties of the commander. The general
+ reader who plunges into the midst of the Marlborough despatches in
+ this age, or into those of Wellington in the next, when contemporary
+ recollection is lost, will find it impossible to understand the
+ greater part of the matters referred to, and will soon lay aside the
+ volumes in despair. Such works are highly valuable, but they are so
+ to the annalist or historian rather than the ordinary reader. They
+ are the materials of history, not history itself. They bear the same
+ relation to the works of Livy or Gibbon which the rude blocks in the
+ quarry do to the temples of St Peter&#39;s or the Parthenon. Ordinary
+ readers are not aware of this when they take up a volume of
+ despatches; they expect to be as much fascinated by it as they are by
+ the correspondence of Madame de Sevigné, Cowper, Gibbon, or Arnold.
+ They will soon find their mistake: the book-sellers will erelong find
+ it in the sale of such works. The matter-of-fact men in ordinary
+ life, and the compilers and drudges in literature&#8212;that is,
+ nine-tenths of the readers and writers in the world&#8212;are never
+ weary of descanting on the inestimable importance of authentic
+ documents for history; and without doubt they are right so far as the
+ collecting of materials goes. There must be quarriers before there
+ can be architects: the hewers of wood and drawers of water are the
+ basis of all civilization. But they are not civilization itself, they
+ are its pioneers. Truth is essential to an estimable character: but
+ many a man is insupportably dull who never told a falsehood. The
+ pioneers of Marlborough, however, have now gone before, and it will
+ be the fault of English genius if the divine artist does not erelong
+ make the proper use of the materials at length placed in his
+ hands.</p>
+
+ <p>John Churchill, afterwards Duke of Marlborough, was born on the
+ 5th July 1650, (new style,) at Ash, in the county of Devon. His
+ father was Sir Winston Churchill, a gallant cavalier who had drawn
+ his sword in behalf of Charles I., and had in consequence been
+ deprived of his fortune and driven into exile by Cromwell. His
+ paternal family was very ancient, and boasted its descent from the
+ <i>Courcils</i> de Poitou, who came into England with the Conqueror.
+ His mother was Elizabeth Drake, who claimed a collateral connexion
+ with the descendants of the illustrious Sir Francis Drake, the great
+ navigator. Young Churchill received the rudiments of his education
+ from the parish clergyman in Devonshire, from whom he imbibed that
+ firm attachment to the Protestant faith by which he was ever
+ afterwards distinguished, and which determined his conduct in the
+ most important crisis of his life. He was afterwards placed at the
+ school of St Paul&#39;s; and it was there that he first discovered,
+ on reading Vegetius, that his bent of mind was decidedly for the
+ military life. Like many other men destined for future distinction,
+ he made no great figure as a scholar, a circumstance easily
+ explained, if we recollect that it is on the knowledge of words that
+ the reputation of a schoolboy, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6"
+ id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> of things that of a man, is founded.
+ But the despatches now published demonstrate that, before he attained
+ middle life, he was a proficient at least in Latin, French, and
+ English composition; for letters in each, written in a very pure
+ style, are to be found in all parts of his correspondence.</p>
+
+ <p>From early youth, young Churchill was distinguished by the
+ elegance of his manners and the beauty of his countenance and
+ figure&#8212;advantages which, coupled with the known loyal
+ principles of his father, and the sufferings he had undergone in the
+ royal cause, procured for him, at the early age of fifteen, the
+ situation of page in the household of the Duke of York, afterwards
+ James II. His inclination for arms was then so decided, that that
+ prince procured for him a commission in one of the regiments of
+ guards when he was only sixteen years old. His uncommonly handsome
+ figure then attracted no small share of notice from the beauties of
+ the court of Charles II., and even awakened a passion in one of the
+ royal mistresses herself. Impatient to signalize himself, however, he
+ left their seductions, and embarked as a volunteer in the expedition
+ against Tangiers in 1766. Thus his first essay in arms was made in
+ actions against the Moors. Having returned to Great Britain, he
+ attracted the notice of the Countess of Castlemaine, afterwards
+ Duchess of Cleveland, then the favorite mistress of Charles II., who
+ had distinguished him by her regard before he embarked for Africa,
+ and who made him a present of £5000, with which the young soldier
+ bought an annuity of £500 a-year, which laid the foundation, says
+ Chesterfield, of all his subsequent fortunes. Charles, to remove a
+ dangerous rival in her unsteady affections, gave him a company in the
+ guards, and sent him to the Continent with the auxiliary force which,
+ in those days of English humiliation, the cabinet of St James&#39;s
+ furnished to Louis XIV. to aid him in subduing the United Provinces.
+ Thus, by a singular coincidence, it was under Turenne, Condé, and
+ Vauban that the future conqueror of the Bourbons first learned the
+ art of scientific warfare. Wellington went through the same
+ discipline, but in the inverse order: his first campaigns were made
+ against the French in Flanders, his next against the bastions of
+ Tippoo and the Mahratta horse in Hindostan.</p>
+
+ <p>Churchill had not been long in Flanders, before his talents and
+ gallantry won for him deserved distinction. The campaign of 1672,
+ which brought the French armies to the gates of Amsterdam, and placed
+ the United States within a hair&#39;s-breadth of destruction, was to
+ him fruitful in valuable lessons. He distinguished himself afterwards
+ so much at the siege of Nimeguen, that Turenne, who constantly called
+ him by his <i>sobriquet</i> of &quot;the handsome Englishman,&quot;
+ predicted that he would one day be a great man. In the following year
+ he had the good fortune to save the life of his colonel, the Duke of
+ Monmouth; and distinguished himself so much at the siege of
+ Maestricht, that Louis XIV. publicly thanked him at the head of his
+ army, and promised him his powerful influence with Charles II. for
+ future promotion. He little thought what a formidable enemy he was
+ then fostering at the court of his obsequious brother sovereign. The
+ result of Louis XIV.&#39;s intercession was, that Churchill was made
+ lieutenant-colonel; and he continued to serve with the English
+ auxiliary force in Flanders, under the French generals, till 1677,
+ when he returned with his regiment to London. Beyond all doubt it was
+ these five years&#39; service under the great masters of the military
+ art, who then sustained the power and cast a halo round the crown of
+ Louis XIV., which rendered Marlborough the consummate commander that,
+ from the moment he was placed at the head of the Allied armies, he
+ showed himself to have become. One of the most interesting and
+ instructive lessons to be learned from biography is the long steps,
+ the vast amount of previous preparation, the numerous changes, some
+ prosperous, others adverse, by which the mind of a great man is
+ formed, and he is prepared for playing the important part he is
+ intended to perform on the theatre of the world. Providence does
+ nothing in vain, and when it has selected a particular mind for great
+ achievement, the events which happen to it all seem to conspire in a
+ mysterious way for its development. Were any one omitted, some
+ essential quality in the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id=
+ "Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span> character of the future hero, statesman,
+ or philosopher would be found to be awanting.</p>
+
+ <p>Here also, as in every other period of history, we may see how
+ unprincipled ambition overvaults itself, and the measures which seem
+ at first sight most securely to establish its oppressive reign, are
+ the unseen means by which an overruling power works out its
+ destruction. Doubtless the other ministers of Louis XIV. deemed their
+ master&#39;s power secure when this English alliance was concluded;
+ when the English monarch had become a state pensioner of the court of
+ Versailles; when a secret treaty had united them by apparently
+ indissoluble bonds; when the ministers equally and the patriots of
+ England were corrupted by his bribes; when the dreaded fleets of
+ Britain were to be seen in union with those of France, to break down
+ the squadrons of an inconsiderable republic; when the descendants of
+ the conquerors of Cressy, Poitiers, and Azincour stood side by side
+ with the successors of the vanquished in those disastrous fields, to
+ achieve the conquest of Flanders and Holland. Without doubt, so far
+ as human foresight could go, Louvois and Colbert were right. Nothing
+ could appear so decidedly calculated to fix the power of Louis XIV.
+ on an immovable foundation. But how vain are the calculations of the
+ greatest human intellects, when put in opposition to the overruling
+ will of Omnipotence! It was that very English alliance which ruined
+ Louis XIV., as the Austrian alliance and marriage, which seemed to
+ put the keystone in the arch of his greatness, afterwards ruined
+ Napoleon. By the effect, and one of the most desired effects, of the
+ English alliance, a strong body of British auxiliaries were sent to
+ Flanders; the English officers learned the theory and practice of war
+ in the best of all schools, and under the best of all teachers; that
+ ignorance of the military art, the result in every age of our insular
+ situation, and which generally causes the four or five first years of
+ every war to terminate in disaster, was for the time removed, and
+ that mighty genius was developed under the eye of Louis XIV., and by
+ the example of Turenne, which was destined to hurl back to their own
+ frontiers the tide of Gallic invasion, and close in mourning the
+ reign of the <i>Grande Monarque</i>. &quot;Les hommes agissent,&quot;
+ says Bossuet, &quot;mais Dieu les mène.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>Upon Churchill&#39;s return to London, the brilliant reputation
+ which had preceded, and the even augmented personal advantages which
+ accompanied him, immediately rendered him the idol of beauty and
+ fashion. The ladies of the palace vied for his homage&#8212;the
+ nobles of the land hastened to cultivate his society. Like Julius
+ Cæsar, he was carried away by the stream, and plunged into the vortex
+ of courtly dissipation with the ardour which marks an energetic
+ character in the pursuit whether of good or evil. The elegance of his
+ person and manners, and charms of his conversation, prevailed so far
+ with Charles II. and the Duke of York, that soon after, though not
+ yet thirty years of age, he obtained a regiment. In 1680 he married
+ the celebrated Sarah Jennings, the favourite lady in attendance on
+ the Princess Anne, second daughter of the Duke of York, one of the
+ most admired beauties of the court, and this alliance increased his
+ influence, already great, with that Prince, and laid the foundation
+ of the future grandeur of his fortunes. Shortly after his marriage he
+ accompanied the Duke of York to Scotland, in the course of which they
+ both were nearly shipwrecked on the coast of Fife. On this occasion
+ the Duke made the greatest efforts to preserve his favourite&#39;s
+ life, and succeeded in doing so, although the danger was such that
+ many of the Scottish nobles perished under his eye. On his return to
+ London in 1682, he was presented by his patron to the King, who made
+ him colonel of the third regiment of guards. When the Duke of York
+ ascended the throne in 1685, on the demise of his brother, Churchill
+ kept his place as one of the gentlemen of the bedchamber, and was
+ raised to the rank of brigadier-general. He was sent by his sovereign
+ to Paris to notify his accession to Louis XIV., and on his return he
+ was created a peer by the title of Baron Churchill of Sandbridge in
+ the county of Hertford&#8212;a title which he took from an estate
+ there which he had acquired in right of his wife. On the revolt of
+ the Duke of Monmouth, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id=
+ "Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span> he had an opportunity of showing at once
+ his military ability, and, by a signal service, his gratitude to his
+ benefactor. Lord Feversham had the command of the royal forces, and
+ Churchill was his major-general. The general-in-chief, however, kept
+ so bad a look-out, that he was on the point of being surprised and
+ cut to pieces by the rebel forces, who, on this occasion at least,
+ were conducted with ability. The general and almost all his officers
+ were in their beds, and sound asleep, when Monmouth, at the head of
+ all his forces, silently debouched out of his camp, and suddenly fell
+ on the royal army. The rout would have been complete, and probably
+ James II. dethroned, had not Churchill, whose vigilant eye nothing
+ escaped, observed the movement, and hastily collected a handful of
+ men, with whom he made so vigorous a resistance as gave time for the
+ remainder of the army to form, and repel this well-conceived
+ enterprise.</p>
+
+ <p>Churchill&#39;s mind was too sagacious, and his knowledge of the
+ feelings of the nation too extensive, not to be aware of the perilous
+ nature of the course upon which James had adventured, in endeavouring
+ to bring about, if not the absolute re-establishment of the Catholic
+ religion, at least such a quasi-establishment of it as the people
+ deemed, and probably with reason, was, with so aspiring a body of
+ ecclesiastics, in effect the same thing. When he saw the headstrong
+ monarch break through all bounds, and openly trample on the
+ liberties, while he shocked the religious feelings, of his people, he
+ wrote to him to point out, in firm but respectful terms, the danger
+ of his conduct. He declared to Lord Galway, when James&#39;s
+ innovations began, that if he persisted in his design of overturning
+ the constitution and religion of his country, he would leave his
+ service. So far his conduct was perfectly unexceptionable. Our first
+ duty is to our country, our second only to our benefactor. If they
+ are brought into collision, as they often are during the melancholy
+ vicissitudes of a civil war, an honourable man, whatever it may cost
+ him, has but one part to take. He must not abandon his public duty
+ for his private feelings, but he must never betray official duty. If
+ Churchill, perceiving the frantic course of his master, had withdrawn
+ from his service, and then either taken no part in the revolution
+ which followed, or even appeared in arms against him, the most
+ scrupulous moralist could have discovered nothing reprehensible in
+ his conduct. History has in every age applauded the virtue, while it
+ has commiserated the anguish, of the elder Brutus, who sacrificed his
+ sons to the perhaps too rigorous laws of his country.</p>
+
+ <p>But Churchill did not do this, and thence has arisen an
+ ineffaceable blot on his memory. He did not relinquish the service of
+ the infatuated monarch; he retained his office and commands; but he
+ employed the influence and authority thence derived, to ruin his
+ benefactor. So far were the representations of Churchill from having
+ inspired any doubts of his fidelity, that James, when the Prince of
+ Orange landed, confided to him the command of a corps of five
+ thousand men, destined to oppose his progress. At the very time that
+ he accepted that command, he had, if we may believe his panegyrist
+ Ledyard, signed a letter, along with several other peers, addressed
+ to the Prince of Orange, inviting him to come over, and had actually
+ concluded with Major-General Kirk, who commanded at Axminster, a
+ convention, for the seizure of the king and giving him up to his
+ hostile son-in-law. James was secretly warned that Churchill was
+ about to betray him, but he refused to believe it of one from whom he
+ had hitherto experienced such devotion, and was only wakened from his
+ dream of security by learning that his favourite had gone over with
+ the five thousand men whom he commanded to the Prince of Orange. Not
+ content with this, it was Churchill&#39;s influence, joined to that
+ of his wife, which is said to have induced James&#39;s own daughter,
+ the Princess Anne, and Prince George of Denmark, to detach themselves
+ from the cause of the falling monarch; and drew from that unhappy
+ sovereign the mournful exclamation, &quot;My God! my very children
+ have forsaken me.&quot; In what does this conduct differ from that of
+ Labedoyere, who, at the head of the garrison of Grenoble, deserted to
+ Napoleon when sent out to oppose him?&#8212; <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> or
+ Lavalette, who employed his influence, as postmaster under Louis
+ XVIII., to forward the Imperial conspiracy?&#8212;or Marshal Ney,
+ who, after promising at the court of the Tuileries to bring the
+ ex-emperor back in an iron cage, no sooner reached the royal camp at
+ Melun, than he issued a proclamation calling on the troops to desert
+ the Bourbons, and mount the tricolor cockade? Nay, is not
+ Churchill&#39;s conduct, in a moral point of view, worse than that of
+ Ney; for the latter abandoned the trust reposed in him by a new
+ master, forced upon an unwilling nation, to rejoin his old benefactor
+ and companion in arms; but the former abandoned the trust reposed in
+ him by his old master and benefactor, to range himself under the
+ banner of a competitor for the throne, to whom he was bound neither
+ by duty nor obligation. And yet such is often the inequality of
+ crimes and punishments in this world, that Churchill was raised to
+ the pinnacle of greatness by the very conduct which consigned Ney,
+ with justice, so far as his conduct is concerned, to an ignominious
+ death.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Treason ne&#39;er prospers; for when it
+ does,</span> <span class="i2">None dare call it
+ treason.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>History forgets its first and noblest duty when it fails, by its
+ distribution of praise and blame, to counterbalance, so far as its
+ verdict can, this inequality, which, for inscrutable but doubtless
+ wise purposes, Providence has permitted in this transient scene.
+ Charity forbids us to scrutinize such conduct too severely. It is the
+ deplorable effect of a successful revolution, even when commenced for
+ the most necessary purposes, to obliterate the ideas of man on right
+ and wrong, and leave no other test in the general case for public
+ conduct but success. It is its first effect to place them in such
+ trying circumstances that none but the most confirmed and resolute
+ virtue can pass unscathed through the ordeal. He knew the human heart
+ well, who commanded us in our daily prayers to supplicate not to be
+ led into temptation, even before asking for deliverance from evil.
+ Let no man be sure, however much, on a calm survey, he may condemn
+ the conduct of Marlborough and Ney, that in similar circumstances he
+ would not have done the same.</p>
+
+ <p>The magnitude of the service rendered by Churchill to the Prince
+ of Orange, immediately appeared in the commands conferred upon him.
+ Hardly was he settled at William&#39;s headquarters when he was
+ dispatched to London to assume the command of the Horse Guards; and,
+ while there, he signed, on the 20th December 1688, the famous Act of
+ Association in favour of the Prince of Orange. Shortly after, he was
+ named lieutenant-general of the armies of William, and immediately
+ made a new organization of the troops, under officers whom he could
+ trust, which proved of the utmost service to William on the unstable
+ throne on which he was soon after seated. He was present at most of
+ the long and momentous debates which took place in the House of Peers
+ on the question on whom the crown should be conferred, and at first
+ is said to have inclined to a regency; but with a commendable
+ delicacy he absented himself on the night of the decisive vote on the
+ vacancy of the throne. He voted, however, on the 6th of February for
+ the resolution which settled the crown on William and Mary; and he
+ assisted at their coronation, under the title of Earl of Marlborough,
+ to which he had shortly before been elevated by William. England
+ having, on the accession of the new monarch, joined the continental
+ league against France, Marlborough received the command of the
+ British auxiliary force in the Netherlands, and by his courage and
+ ability contributed in a remarkable manner to the victory of
+ Walcourt. In 1690 he received orders to return from Flanders in order
+ to assume a command in Ireland, then agitated by a general
+ insurrection in favour of James; but, actuated by some remnant of
+ attachment to his old benefactor, he eluded on various pretences
+ complying with the order, till the battle of the Boyne had
+ extinguished the hopes of the dethroned monarch, when he came over
+ and made himself master of Cork and Kinsale. In 1691 he was sent
+ again into Flanders, in order to act under the immediate orders of
+ William, who was then, with heroic constancy, contending with the
+ still superior forces of France; but hardly had he landed there when
+ he was arrested, deprived of all <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span> his commands, and sent to
+ the Tower of London, along with several of the noblemen of
+ distinction in the British senate.</p>
+
+ <p>Upon this part of the history of Marlborough there hangs a veil of
+ mystery, which all the papers brought to light in more recent times
+ have not entirely removed. At the time, his disgrace was by many
+ attributed to some cutting sarcasms in which he had indulged on the
+ predilection of William for the continental troops, and especially
+ the Dutch; by others, to intrigues conducted by Lady Marlborough and
+ him, to obtain for the Princess Anne a larger pension than the king
+ was disposed to allow her. But neither of these causes are sufficient
+ to explain the fall and arrest of so eminent a man as Marlborough,
+ and who had rendered such important services to the newly-established
+ monarch. It would appear from what has transpired in later times,
+ that a much more serious cause had produced the rupture between him
+ and William. The charge brought against him at the time, but which
+ was not prosecuted, as it was found to rest on false or insufficient
+ evidence, was that of having, along with Lords Salisbury, Cornbury,
+ the Bishop of Rochester, and Sir Basil Ferebrace, signed the scheme
+ of an association for the restoration of James. Sir John Fenwick, who
+ was executed for a treasonable correspondence with James II. shortly
+ after Marlborough&#39;s arrest, declared in the course of his trial
+ that he was privy to the design, had received the pardon of the
+ exiled monarch, and had engaged to procure for him the adhesion of
+ the army. The Papers, published in Coxe, rather corroborate the view
+ that he was privy to it; and it is supported by those found at Rome
+ in the possession of Cardinal York.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id=
+ "FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>
+ That Marlborough, disgusted with the partiality of William for his
+ Dutch troops, and irritated at the open severity of his Government,
+ should have repented of his abandonment of his former sovereign and
+ benefactor, is highly probable. But it can scarcely be taken as an
+ apology for one act of treason, that he meditated the commission of
+ another. It only shows how perilous, in public as in private life, is
+ any deviation from the path of integrity, that it impelled such a man
+ into so tortuous and disreputable a path.</p>
+
+ <p>Marlborough, however, was a man whose services were too valuable
+ to the newly-established dynasty, for him to be permitted to remain
+ long in disgrace. He was soon liberated, indeed, from the Tower, as
+ no sufficient evidence of his alleged accession to the conspiracy had
+ been obtained. Several years elapsed, however, before he emerged from
+ the privacy into which he prudently retired on his liberation from
+ confinement. Queen Mary having been carried off by the smallpox on
+ the 17th of January 1696, Marlborough wisely abstained from even
+ taking part in the debates which followed in Parliament, during which
+ some of the malcontents dropped hints as to the propriety of
+ conferring the crown on his immediate patroness, the Princess Anne.
+ This prudent reserve, together with the absence of any decided proofs
+ at the time of Marlborough&#39;s correspondence with James, seems to
+ have at length weakened William&#39;s resentment, and by degrees he
+ was taken back into favour. The peace of Ryswick, signed on the 20th
+ of September 1697, having consolidated the power of that monarch,
+ Marlborough was, on the 19th of June 1698, made preceptor of the
+ young Duke of Gloucester, his nephew, <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span> son of the Princess Anne,
+ and heir-presumptive to the throne; and this appointment, which at
+ once restored his credit at court, was accompanied by the gracious
+ expression&#8212;&quot;My lord, make my nephew to resemble yourself,
+ and he will be every thing which I can desire.&quot; On the same day
+ he was re-appointed to his rank as a privy councillor, and took the
+ oaths and his seat accordingly. So fully had he now regained the
+ confidence of William, that he was three times named one of the nine
+ lords justiciars to whom the administration of affairs in Great
+ Britain was subsequently entrusted, during the temporary absence of
+ William in Holland; and the War of the Succession having become
+ certain in the year 1700, that monarch, who was preparing to take an
+ active part in it, appointed Marlborough, on 1st June 1701, his
+ ambassador-extraordinary at the Hague, and commander-in-chief of the
+ Allied forces in Flanders. This double appointment in effect invested
+ Marlborough with the entire direction of affairs civil and military,
+ so far as England was concerned, on the Continent. William, who was
+ highly indignant at the recognition of the Chevalier St George as
+ King of England, on the death of his father James II., in September
+ 1701, was preparing to prosecute the war with the vigour and
+ perseverance which so eminently distinguished his character, when he
+ was carried off by the effects of a fall from his horse, on the 19th
+ March 1702. But that event made no alteration in the part which
+ England took in the war which was commencing, and it augmented rather
+ than diminished the influence which Marlborough had in its direction.
+ The Princess Anne, with whom, both individually and through Lady
+ Marlborough, he was so intimately connected, mounted the throne
+ without opposition; and one of her first acts was to bestow on
+ Marlborough the order of the Garter, confirm him in his former
+ offices, and appoint him, in addition, her plenipotentiary at the
+ Hague. War was declared on the 15th May 1702, and Marlborough
+ immediately went over to the Netherlands to take the command of the
+ Allied army, sixty thousand strong, then lying before Nimeguen, which
+ was threatened by a superior force on the part of the French.</p>
+
+ <p>It is at this period&#8212;time 1702&#8212;that the great and
+ memorable, and withal blameless period of Marlborough&#39;s life
+ commenced; the next ten years were one unbroken series of efforts,
+ victories, and glory. He arrived in the camp at Nimeguen on the
+ evening of the 2d July, having been a few weeks before at the Hague;
+ and immediately assumed the command. Lord Athlone, who had previously
+ enjoyed that situation, at first laid claim to an equal authority
+ with him; but this ruinous division, which never is safe, save with
+ men so great as he and Eugene, and would unquestionably have proved
+ ruinous to the common cause if shared with Athlone, was prevented by
+ the States-General, who insisted upon the undivided direction being
+ conferred on Marlborough. Most fortunately it is precisely at this
+ period that the correspondence now published commences, which, in the
+ three volumes already published, presents an unbroken series of his
+ letters to persons of every description down to May, 1708. They thus
+ embrace the early successes in Flanders, the cross march into Bavaria
+ and battle of Blenheim, the expulsion of the French from Germany, the
+ battle of Ramillies, and taking of Brussels and Antwerp, the mission
+ to the King of Sweden at Dresden, the battle of Almanza, in Spain,
+ and all the important events of the first six years of the war. More
+ weighty and momentous materials for history never were presented to
+ the public; and their importance will not be properly appreciated, if
+ the previous condition of Europe, and imminent hazard to the
+ independence of all the adjoining states, from the unmeasured
+ ambition, and vast power of Louis XIV., is not taken into
+ consideration.</p>
+
+ <p>Accustomed as we are to regard the Bourbons as a fallen and
+ unfortunate race, the objects rather of commiseration than
+ apprehension, and Napoleon as the only sovereign who has really
+ threatened our independence, and all but effected the subjugation of
+ the Continent, we can scarcely conceive the terror with which a
+ century and a half ago they, with reason, inspired all Europe, or the
+ narrow escape which the continental states, at least, then made from
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg
+ 12]</a></span> being all reduced to the condition of provinces of
+ France. The forces of that monarchy, at all times formidable to its
+ neighbours, from the warlike spirit of its inhabitants, and their
+ rapacious disposition, conspicuous alike in the earliest and the
+ latest times;<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> its central situation,
+ forming, as it were, the salient angle of a bastion projecting into
+ the centre of Germany; and its numerous population&#8212;were then,
+ in a peculiar manner, to be dreaded, from their concentration in the
+ hands of an able and ambitious monarch, who had succeeded for the
+ first time, for two hundred years, in healing the divisions and
+ stilling the feuds of its nobles, and turned their buoyant energy
+ into the channel of foreign conquest. Immense was the force which, by
+ this able policy, was found to exist in France, and terrible the
+ danger which it at once brought upon the neighbouring states. It was
+ rendered the more formidable in the time of Louis XIV., from the
+ extraordinary concentration of talent which his discernment or good
+ fortune had collected around his throne, and the consummate talent,
+ civil and military, with which affairs were directed. Turenne,
+ Boufflers, and Condé, were his generals; Vauban was his engineer,
+ Louvois and Torcy were his statesmen. The lustre of the exploits of
+ these illustrious men, in itself great, was much enhanced by the
+ still greater blaze of fame which encircled his throne, from the
+ genius of the literary men who have given such immortal celebrity to
+ his reign. Corneille and Racine were his tragedians; Molière wrote
+ his comedies; Bossuet, Fénélon, and Bourdaloue were his theologians;
+ Massillon his preacher, Boileau his critic; Le Notre laid out his
+ gardens; Le Brun painted his halls. Greatness had come upon France,
+ as, in truth, it does to most other states, in all departments at the
+ same time; and the adjoining nations, alike intimidated by a power
+ which they could not resist, and dazzled by a glory which they could
+ not emulate, had come almost to despair of maintaining their
+ independence; and were sinking into that state of apathy, which is at
+ once the consequence and the cause of extraordinary reverses.</p>
+
+ <p>The influence of these causes had distinctly appeared in the
+ extraordinary good fortune which had attended the enterprises of
+ Louis, and the numerous conquests he had made since he had launched
+ into the career of foreign aggrandizement. Nothing could resist his
+ victorious arms. At the head of an army of an hundred thousand men,
+ directed by Turenne, he speedily overran Flanders. Its fortified
+ cities yielded to the science of Vauban, or the terrors of his name.
+ The boasted barrier of the Netherlands was passed in a few weeks;
+ hardly any of its far-famed fortresses made any resistance. The
+ passage of the Rhine was achieved under the eyes of the monarch with
+ little loss, and melodramatic effect. One half of Holland was soon
+ overrun, and the presence of the French army at the gates of
+ Amsterdam seemed to presage immediate destruction to the United
+ Provinces; and but for the firmness of their leaders, and a fortunate
+ combination of circumstances, unquestionably would have done so. The
+ alliance with England, in the early part of his reign, and the
+ junction of the fleets of Britain and France to ruin their fleets and
+ blockade their harbours, seemed to deprive them of their last
+ resource, derived from their energetic industry. Nor were substantial
+ fruits awanting from these conquests. Alsace and Franche Comté were
+ overrun, and, with Lorraine, permanently annexed to the French
+ monarchy; and although, by the peace of Nimeguen, part of his
+ acquisitions in Flanders was abandoned, enough was retained by the
+ devouring monarchy to deprive the Dutch of the barrier they had so
+ ardently desired, and render their situation to the last degree
+ precarious, in the neighbourhood of so formidable a power. The heroic
+ William, indeed, had not struggled in vain for the independence of
+ his country. The distant powers of Europe, at length wakened to a
+ sense of their danger, had made strenuous efforts to coerce the
+ ambition of France; the revolution of 1688 had restored England to
+ its natural <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg
+ 13]</a></span> place in the van of the contest for continental
+ freedom; and the peace of Ryswick in 1697 had in some degree seen the
+ trophies of conquests more equally balanced between the contending
+ parties. But still it was with difficulty that the alliance kept its
+ ground against Louis&#8212;any untoward event, the defection of any
+ considerable power, would at once, it was felt, cast the balance in
+ his favour; and all history had demonstrated how many are the chances
+ against any considerable confederacy keeping for any length of time
+ together, when the immediate danger which had stilled their
+ jealousies, and bound together their separate interests, is in
+ appearance removed. Such was the dubious and anxious state of Europe,
+ when the death of Charles II. at Madrid, on the 1st November 1700,
+ and the bequest of his vast territories to Philip Duke of Anjou,
+ second son of the Dauphin, and grandson of Louis XIV., threatened at
+ once to place the immense resources of the Castilian monarchy at the
+ disposal of the ambitious monarch of France, whose passion for glory
+ had not diminished with his advanced years, and whose want of
+ moderation was soon evinced by his accepting, after an affected
+ hesitation, the splendid bequest.</p>
+
+ <p>Threatened with so serious a danger, it is not surprising that the
+ powers of Europe were in the utmost alarm, and erelong took steps to
+ endeavour to avert it. Such, however, was the terror inspired by the
+ name of Louis XIV., and the magnitude of the addition made by this
+ bequest to his power, that the new monarch, in the first instance,
+ ascended the throne of Spain and the Indies without any opposition.
+ The Spanish Netherlands, so important both from their intrinsic
+ riches, their situation as the certain theatre of war, and the
+ numerous fortified towns with which they were studded, had been early
+ secured for the young Bourbon prince by the Elector of Bavaria, who
+ was at that time the governor of those valuable possessions.
+ Sardinia, Naples, Sicily, the Milanese, and the other Spanish
+ possessions in Italy, speedily followed the example. The distant
+ colonies of the crown of Castile, in America and the Indies, sent in
+ their adhesion. The young Prince of Anjou made his formal entry into
+ Spain in the beginning of 1701, and was crowned at Madrid under the
+ title of Philip V. The principal continental powers, with the
+ exception of the Emperor, acknowledged his title to the throne. The
+ Dutch were in despair: they beheld the power of Louis XIV. brought to
+ their very gates. Flanders, instead of being the barrier of Europe
+ against France, had become the outwork of France against Europe. The
+ flag of Louis XIV. floated on Antwerp, Brussels, and Ghent. Italy,
+ France, Spain, and Flanders, were united in one close league, and in
+ fact formed but one dominion. It was the empire of Charlemagne over
+ again, directed with equal ability, founded on greater power, and
+ backed by the boundless treasures of the Indies. Spain had threatened
+ the liberties of Europe in the end of the sixteenth century: France
+ had all but proved fatal to them in the close of the seventeenth.
+ What hope was there of being able to make head against them both,
+ united under such a head as Louis XIV.?</p>
+
+ <p>Great as these dangers were, however, they had no effect in
+ daunting the heroic spirit of William III. In concert with the
+ Emperor, and the United Provinces, who were too nearly threatened to
+ be backward in falling into his views, he laboured for the formation
+ of a great confederacy, which might prevent the union of the crowns
+ of France and Castile in one family, and prevent, before it was too
+ late, the consolidation of a power which threatened to be so
+ formidable to the liberties of Europe. The death of that intrepid
+ monarch in March 1702, which, had it taken place earlier, might have
+ prevented the formation of the confederacy, as it was, proved no
+ impediment, but rather the reverse. His measures had been so well
+ taken, his resolute spirit had laboured with such effect, that the
+ alliance, offensive and defensive, between the Emperor, England, and
+ Holland, had been already signed. The accession of the Princess Anne,
+ without weakening its bonds, added another power, of no mean
+ importance, to its ranks. Her husband, Prince George of Denmark,
+ brought the forces of that kingdom to aid the common cause. Prussia
+ soon after followed the example. On the other hand, Bavaria, closely
+ connected <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg
+ 14]</a></span> with the French and Spanish monarchies, both by
+ jealousy of Austria, and the government of the Netherlands, which its
+ Elector held, adhered to France. Thus the forces of Europe were
+ mutually arrayed and divided, much as they afterwards were in the
+ coalition against Napoleon in 1813. It might already be foreseen,
+ that Flanders, the Bavarian plains, Spain, and Lombardy, would, as in
+ the great contest which followed a century after, be the theatre of
+ war. But the forces of France and Spain possessed this advantage,
+ unknown in former wars, but immense in a military point of view, that
+ they were in possession of the whole of the Netherlands, the numerous
+ fortresses of which were alike valuable as a basis of offensive
+ operations, and as affording asylums all but impregnable in cases of
+ disaster. The Allied generals, whether they commenced their
+ operations in Flanders or on the side of Germany, had to begin on the
+ Rhine, and cut their way through the long barrier of fortresses with
+ which the genius of Vauban and Cohorn had encircled the frontiers of
+ the monarchy.</p>
+
+ <p>War having been resolved on, the first step was taken by the
+ Emperor, who laid claim to Milan as a fief of the empire, and
+ supported his pretensions by moving an army into Italy under the
+ command of Prince Eugene of Savoy, who afterwards became so
+ celebrated as the brother and worthy rival of Marlborough in arms.
+ The French and Spaniards assembled an army in the Milanese to resist
+ his advance; and the Duke of Mantua having joined the cause, that
+ important city was garrisoned by the French troops. But Prince Eugene
+ erelong obliged them to fall back from the banks of the Adige to the
+ line of the Oglio, on which they made a stand. But though hostilities
+ had thus commenced in Italy, negotiations were still carried on at
+ the Hague; though unhappily the pretensions of the French king were
+ found to be of so exorbitant a character, that an accommodation was
+ impossible. Marlborough&#39;s first mission to the Continent,
+ however, after the accession of Anne, was of a diplomatic character;
+ and it was by his unwearied efforts, suavity of manner, and singular
+ talents for negotiation, that the difficulties which attend the
+ formation of all such extensive confederacies were overcome. And it
+ was not till war was declared, on 4th May 1702, that he first took
+ the command as commander-in-chief of the Allied armies.</p>
+
+ <p>The first operation of the Allies was an attack on the small fort
+ of Kaiserworth, on the right bank of the Rhine, which belonged to the
+ Elector of Cologne, which surrendered on the 15th May. The main
+ French army, nominally under the direction of the Duke of Burgundy,
+ really of Marshal Boufflers, entered the Duchy of Cleves in the end
+ of the same month, and soon became engaged with the Allied forces,
+ which at first, being inferior in numbers, fell back. Marlborough
+ reached headquarters when the French lay before Nimeguen; and the
+ Dutch trembled for that frontier town. Reinforcements, however,
+ rapidly came in from all quarters to join the Allied army; and
+ Marlborough, finding himself at the head of a gallant force sixty
+ thousand strong, resolved to commence offensive operations. His first
+ operation was the siege of Venloo, which was carried by storm on the
+ 18th September, after various actions in the course of the siege.
+ &quot;My Lord Cutts,&quot; says Marlborough, &quot;commanded at one
+ of the breaches; and the English grenadiers had the honour of being
+ the first that entered the fort.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id=
+ "FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>
+ Ruremonde was next besieged; and the Allies, steadily advancing,
+ opened the navigation of the Meuse as far as Maestricht. Stevenswart
+ was taken on the 1st October; and, on the 6th, Ruremonde surrendered.
+ Liege was the next object of attack; and the breaches of the citadel
+ were, by the skilful operations of Cohorn, who commanded the Allied
+ engineers and artillery, declared practicable on the 23d of the same
+ month. The assault was immediately ordered; and &quot;by the
+ extraordinary bravery,&quot; says Marlborough, &quot;of the officers
+ and soldiers, the citadel was carried by storm; and, for the honour
+ of her Majesty&#39;s subjects, the English were the first that got
+ upon the breach.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id=
+ "FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg
+ 15]</a></span> So early in this, as in every other war where
+ ignorance and infatuation has not led them into the field, did the
+ native-born valour of the Anglo-Saxon race make itself known! Seven
+ battalions and a half were made prisoners on this occasion; and so
+ disheartened was the enemy by the fall of the citadel, that the
+ castle of the Chartreuse, with its garrison of 1500 men, capitulated
+ a few days afterwards. This last success gave the Allies the entire
+ command of Liege, and concluded this short but glorious campaign, in
+ the course of which they had made themselves masters by main force,
+ in presence of the French army, of four fortified towns, conquered
+ all Spanish Guelderland, opened the Meuse as far as Maestricht,
+ carried the strong castles of Liege by storm, advanced their
+ standards from the Rhine far into Flanders, and become enabled to
+ take up their winter quarters in the enemy&#39;s territory, amidst
+ its fertile fields.</p>
+
+ <p>The campaign being now concluded, and both parties having gone
+ into winter quarters, Marlborough embarked on the Meuse to return to
+ London, where his presence was much required to steady the authority
+ and direct the cabinet of the Queen, who had so recently taken her
+ seat on the throne. When dropping down the Meuse, in company of the
+ Dutch commissioners, he was made prisoner by a French partisan, who
+ had made an incursion into those parts; and owed his escape to the
+ presence of mind of a servant named Gill, who, unperceived, put into
+ his master&#39;s hands an old passport in the name of General
+ Churchill. The Frenchman, intent only on plunder, seized all the
+ plate and valuables in the boat, and made prisoners the small
+ detachment of soldiers who accompanied them; but, ignorant of the
+ inestimable prize within his grasp, allowed the remainder of the
+ party, including Marlborough, to proceed on their way. On this
+ occasion, it may truly be said, the boat carried Cæsar and his
+ fortunes. He arrived in safety at the Hague, where the people, who
+ regarded him as their guardian angel, and had heard of his narrow
+ escape, received him with the most enthusiastic acclamations. From
+ thence, having concerted the plan with the Dutch government for the
+ ensuing campaign, he crossed over to London, where his reception by
+ the Queen and nation was of the most gratifying description. Her
+ Majesty conferred on him the title of Duke of Marlborough and Marquis
+ of Blandford, and sent a message to the House of Commons, suggesting
+ a pension to him of £5000 a-year, secured on the revenue of the
+ post-office; but that House refused to consent to the alienation of
+ so considerable a part of the public revenue. He was amply
+ compensated, however, for this disappointment, by the enthusiastic
+ reception he met with from all classes of the nation, which, long
+ unaccustomed to military success, at least in any cause in which it
+ could sympathize, hailed with transports of joy this first revival of
+ triumph in support of the Protestant faith, and over that power with
+ whom, for centuries, they had maintained so constant a rivalry.</p>
+
+ <p>The campaign of 1703 was not fruitful of great events. Taught, by
+ the untoward issue of the preceding one, the quality of the general
+ and army with whom he had to contend, the French general cautiously
+ remained on the defensive; and so skilfully were the measures of
+ Marshal Boufflers taken, that all the efforts of Marlborough were
+ unable to force him to a general action. The war in Flanders was thus
+ limited to one of posts and sieges; but in that the superiority of
+ the Allied arms was successfully asserted, Parliament having been
+ prevailed on to consent to an augmentation of the British contingent.
+ But a treaty having been concluded with Sweden, and various
+ reinforcements having been received from the lesser powers,
+ preparations were made for the siege of Bonn, on the Rhine, a
+ frontier town of Flanders, of great importance from its commanding
+ the passage of that artery of Germany, and stopping, while in the
+ enemy&#39;s hands, all transit of military stores or provisions for
+ the use of the armies in Bavaria, or on the Upper Rhine. The
+ batteries opened with seventy heavy guns and English mortars on the
+ 14th May 1704; a vigorous sortie with a thousand foot was repulsed,
+ after having at first gained some success, on the following day, and
+ on the 16th two breaches having been declared practicable, the
+ garrison surrendered at discretion. <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> After this success, the
+ army moved against Huys, and it was taken with its garrison of 900
+ men on the 23d August. Marlborough and the English generals, after
+ this success, were decidedly of opinion that it would be advisable at
+ all hazard to attempt forcing the French lines, which were strongly
+ fortified between Mehaigne and Leuwe, and a strong opinion to that
+ effect was transmitted to the Hague on the very day after the fall of
+ Huys.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> They alleged with reason,
+ that the Allies being superior in Flanders, and the French having the
+ upper hand in Germany and Italy, it was of the utmost importance to
+ follow up the present tide of success in the only quarter where it
+ flowed in their favour, and counterbalance disasters elsewhere, by
+ decisive events in the quarter where it was most material to obtain
+ it. The Dutch government, however, set on getting a barrier for
+ themselves, could not be brought to agree to this course, how great
+ soever the advantages which it promised, and insisted instead, that
+ he should undertake the siege of Limbourg, which lay open to attack.
+ This was accordingly done; the trenches were commenced in the middle
+ of September, and the garrison capitulated on the 27th of the same
+ month: a poor compensation for the total defeat of the French army,
+ which would in all probability have ensued if the bolder plan of
+ operation he had so earnestly counselled had been adopted.<a name=
+ "FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class=
+ "fnanchor">[8]</a> This terminated the campaign of 1703, which,
+ though successful, had led to very different results from what might
+ have been anticipated if Marlborough&#39;s advice had been followed,
+ and an earlier victory of Ramillies laid open the whole Flemish
+ plains. Having dispatched eight battalions to reinforce the Prince of
+ Hesse, who had sustained serious disaster on the Moselle, he had an
+ interview with the Archduke Charles, whom the Allies had acknowledged
+ as King of Spain, who presented him with a magnificent sword set with
+ diamonds, and set out for the Hague, from whence he again returned to
+ London to concert measures for the ensuing campaign, and stimulate
+ the British government to the efforts necessary for its successful
+ prosecution.</p>
+
+ <p>But while success had thus attended all the operations of the
+ Allies in Flanders, where the English contingent acted, and
+ Marlborough had the command, affairs had assumed a very different
+ aspect in Germany and Italy. The French were there superior alike in
+ the number and quality of their troops, and, in Germany at least, in
+ the skill with which they were commanded. Early in June, Marshal
+ Tallard assumed the command of the French forces in Alsace, passed
+ the Rhine at Strasburg on the 16th July, took Brissac on the 7th
+ September, and invested Landau on the 16th October. The Allies, under
+ the Prince of Hesse, attempted to raise the siege, but were defeated
+ with considerable loss; and, soon after, Landau surrendered, thus
+ terminating with disaster the campaign on the Upper Rhine. Still more
+ considerable were the disasters sustained in Bavaria. Marshal Villars
+ there commanded, and at the head of the French and Bavarians,
+ defeated General Stirum, who headed the Imperialists, on the 20th
+ September. In December, Marshal Marsin, who had succeeded Villars in
+ the command, made himself master of the important city of Augsburg,
+ and in January 1704 the Bavarians got possession of Passau.
+ Meanwhile, a formidable insurrection had broken out in Hungary,
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg
+ 17]</a></span> which so distracted the cabinet of Vienna, that that
+ capital itself seemed to be threatened by the combined forces of the
+ French and Bavarians after the fall of Passau. No event of importance
+ took place in Italy during the campaign; Count Strahremberg, who
+ commanded the Imperial forces, having with great ability forced the
+ Duke de Vendôme, who was at the head of a superior body of French
+ troops, to retire. But in Bavaria and on the Danube, it was evident
+ that the Allies were overmatched; and to the restoration of the
+ balance in that quarter, the anxious attention of the confederates
+ was turned during the winter of 1703-4. The dangerous state of the
+ Emperor and the empire awakened the greatest solicitude at the Hague,
+ as well as unbounded terror at Vienna, from whence the most urgent
+ representations were made on the necessity of reinforcements being
+ sent from Marlborough to their support. But though this was agreed to
+ by England and Holland, so straitened were the Dutch finances, that
+ they were wholly unable to form the necessary magazines to enable the
+ Allies to commence operations. Marlborough, during the whole of
+ January and February 1704, was indefatigable in his efforts to
+ overcome these difficulties; and the preparations having at length
+ been completed, it was agreed by the States, according to a plan of
+ the campaign laid down by Marlborough, that he himself should proceed
+ into Bavaria with the great body of the Allied army in Flanders,
+ leaving only an army of observation there, to restrain any incursion
+ which the French troops might attempt during his absence.</p>
+
+ <p>Marlborough began his march with the great body of his forces on
+ the 8th May, and crossing the Meuse at Maestricht, proceeded with the
+ utmost expedition towards the Rhine by Bedbourg and Kirpen, and
+ arrived at Bonn on the 22d May. Meanwhile, the French were also
+ powerfully reinforcing their army on the Danube. Early in the same
+ month 26,000 men joined the Elector of Bavaria, while Villeroi with
+ the army of Flanders was hastening in the same direction. Marlborough
+ having obtained intelligence of these great additions to the
+ enemy&#39;s forces in the vital quarter, wrote to the States-General,
+ that unless they promptly sent him succour, the Emperor would be
+ entirely ruined.<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> Meanwhile, however, relying
+ chiefly on himself, he redoubled his activity and diligence.
+ Continuing his march up the Rhine by Coblentz and Cassel, opposite
+ Mayence, he crossed the Necker near Ladenbourg on the 3d June. From
+ thence he pursued his march without intermission by Mundelshene,
+ where he had, on the 10th June, his first interview with Prince
+ Eugene, who had been called from Italy to co-operate in stemming the
+ torrent of disaster in Germany. From thence he advanced by Great
+ Heppach to Langenau, and first came in contact with the enemy on the
+ 2d July, on the Schullenberg, near Donawert. Marlborough, at the head
+ of the advanced guard of nine thousand men, there attacked the French
+ and Bavarians, 12,000 strong, in their intrenched camp, which was
+ extremely strong, and after a desperate resistance, aided by an
+ opportune attack by the Prince of Baden, who commanded the
+ Emperor&#39;s forces, carried the intrenchments, with the whole
+ artillery which they mounted, and the loss of 7000 men and thirteen
+ standards to the vanquished. He was inclined to venture upon this
+ hazardous attempt by having received intelligence on the same day
+ from Prince Eugene, that Marshals Villeroi and Tallard, at the head
+ of fifty battalions, and sixty squadrons of their best troops, had
+ arrived at Strasburg, and were using the utmost diligence to reach
+ the Bavarian forces through the defiles of the Black Forest.</p>
+
+ <p>This brilliant opening of the German campaign was soon followed by
+ substantial results. A few days after <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> Rain surrendered, Aicha was
+ carried by assault; and, following up his career of success,
+ Marlborough advanced to within a league of Augsburg, under the cannon
+ of which the Elector of Bavaria was placed with the remnant of his
+ forces, in a situation too strong to admit of its being forced. He
+ here made several attempts to detach the Elector, who was now reduced
+ to the greatest straits, from the French alliance; but that prince,
+ relying on the great army, forty-five thousand strong, which Marshal
+ Tallard was bringing up to his support from the Rhine, adhered with
+ honourable fidelity to his engagements. Upon this, Marlborough took
+ post near Friburg, in such a situation as to cut him off from all
+ communication with his dominions; and ravaged the country with his
+ light troops, levying contributions wherever they went, and burning
+ the villages with savage ferocity as far as the gates of Munich. Thus
+ was avenged the barbarous desolation of the Palatinate, thirty years
+ before, by the French army under the orders of Marshal Turenne.
+ Overcome by the cries of his suffering subjects, the Elector at
+ length consented to enter into a negotiation, which made some
+ progress; but the rapid approach of Marshal Tallard with the French
+ army through the Black Forest, caused him to break it off, and hazard
+ all on the fortune of war. Unable to induce the Elector, by the
+ barbarities unhappily, at that time, too frequent on all sides in
+ war, either to quit his intrenched camp under the cannon of Augsburg,
+ or abandon the French alliance, the English general undertook the
+ siege of Ingolstadt; he himself with the main body of the army
+ covering the siege, and Prince Louis of Baden conducting the
+ operations in the trenches. Upon this, the Elector of Bavaria broke
+ up from his strong position, and, abandoning with heroic resolution
+ his own country, marched to Biberbach, where he effected his junction
+ with Marshal Tallard, who now threatened Prince Eugene with an
+ immediate attack. No sooner had he received intelligence of this,
+ than Marlborough, on the 10th of August, sent the Duke of Wirtemburg
+ with twenty-seven squadrons of horse to reinforce the prince; and
+ early next morning detached General Churchill with twenty battalions
+ across the Danube, to be in a situation to support him in case of
+ need. He himself immediately after followed, and joined the Prince
+ with his whole army on the 11th. Every thing now presaged decisive
+ events. The Elector had boldly quitted Bavaria, leaving his whole
+ dominions at the mercy of the enemy, except the fortified cities of
+ Munich and Augsburg, and periled his crown upon the issue of war at
+ the French headquarters; while Marlborough and Eugene had united
+ their forces, with a determination to give battle in the heart of
+ Germany, in the enemy&#39;s territory, with their communications
+ exposed to the utmost hazard, under circumstances where defeat could
+ be attended with nothing short of total ruin.</p>
+
+ <p>The French and Bavarian army consisted of fifty-five thousand men,
+ of whom nearly forty-five thousand were French troops, the very best
+ which the monarchy could produce. Marlborough and Eugene had
+ sixty-six battalions and one hundred and sixty squadrons, which, with
+ the artillery, might be about fifty thousand combatants. The forces
+ on the opposite sides were thus nearly equal in point of numerical
+ amount; but there was a wide difference in their composition.
+ Four-fifths of the French army were national troops, speaking the
+ same language, animated by the same feelings, accustomed to the same
+ discipline, and the most of whom had been accustomed to act together.
+ The Allies, on the other hand, were a motley assemblage, like
+ Hannibal&#39;s at Cannæ, or Wellington&#39;s at Waterloo, composed of
+ the troops of many different nations, speaking different languages,
+ trained to different discipline, but recently assembled together, and
+ under the orders of a stranger general, one of those haughty
+ islanders, little in general inured to war, but whose cold or
+ supercilious manners had so often caused jealousies to arise in the
+ best cemented confederacies. English, Prussians, Danes,
+ Wirtemburgers, Dutch, Hanoverians, and Hessians, were blended in such
+ nearly equal proportions, that the arms of no one state could be said
+ by its numerical preponderance to be entitled to the precedence. But
+ the consummate <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id=
+ "Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> address, splendid talents, and
+ conciliatory manners of Marlborough, as well as the brilliant valour
+ which the English auxiliary force had displayed on many occasions,
+ had won for them the lead, as they had formerly done when in no
+ greater force among the confederates under Richard C&#339;ur-de-Lion
+ in the Holy War. It was universally felt that upon them, as the Tenth
+ Legion of Cæsar, or the Old Guard of Napoleon, the weight of the
+ contest at the decisive moment would fall. The army was divided into
+ two <i>corps-d&#39;armée</i>; the first commanded by the duke in
+ person, being by far the strongest, destined to bear the weight of
+ the contest, and carry in front the enemy&#39;s position. These two
+ corps, though co-operating, were at such a distance from each other,
+ that they were much in the situation of the English and Prussians at
+ Waterloo, or Napoleon and Ney&#39;s corps at Bautzen. The second,
+ under Prince Eugene, which consisted chiefly of cavalry, was much
+ weaker in point of numerical amount, and was intended for a
+ subordinate attack, to distract the enemy&#39;s attention from the
+ principal onset in front under Marlborough.<a name="FNanchor_10_10"
+ id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class=
+ "fnanchor">[10]</a> With ordinary officers, or even eminent generals
+ of a second order, a dangerous rivalry for the supreme command would
+ unquestionably have arisen, and added to the many seeds of division
+ and causes of weakness which already existed in so multifarious an
+ array. But these great men were superior to all such petty
+ jealousies. Each, conscious of powers to do great things, and proud
+ of fame already acquired, was willing to yield what was necessary for
+ the common good to the other. They had no rivalry, save a noble
+ emulation who should do most for the common cause in which they were
+ jointly engaged. From the moment of their junction it was agreed that
+ they should take the command of the whole army day about; and so
+ perfectly did their views on all points coincide, and so entirely did
+ their noble hearts beat in unison, that during eight subsequent
+ campaigns that they for the most part acted together, there was never
+ the slightest division between them, nor any interruption of the
+ harmony with which the operations of the Allies were conducted.</p>
+
+ <p>The French position was in places strong, and their disposition
+ for resistance at each point where they were threatened by attack
+ from the Allied forces, judicious; but there was a fatal defect in
+ its general conception. Marshal Tallard was on the right, resting on
+ the Danube, which secured him from being turned in that quarter,
+ having the village of <span class='smcap'>Blenheim</span> in his
+ front, which was strongly garrisoned by twenty-six battalions and
+ twelve squadrons, all native French troops. In the centre was the
+ village of Oberglau, which was occupied by fourteen battalions, among
+ whom were three Irish corps of celebrated veterans. The communication
+ between Blenheim and Oberglau was kept up by a screen consisting of
+ eighty squadrons, in two lines, having two brigades of foot,
+ consisting of seven battalions, in its centre. The left, opposite
+ Prince Eugene, was under the orders of Marshal Marsin, and consisted
+ of twenty-two battalions of infantry and thirty-six squadrons,
+ consisting for the most part of Bavarians and Marshal Marsin&#39;s
+ men, posted in front of the village of Lutzingen. Thus the French
+ consisted of sixty-nine battalions and a hundred and thirty-four
+ squadrons, and were posted in a line strongly supported at each
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg
+ 20]</a></span> extremity, but weak in the centre, and with the wings,
+ where the great body of the infantry was placed, at such a distance
+ from each other, that, if the centre was broken through, each ran the
+ risk of being enveloped by the enemy, without the other being able to
+ render them any assistance. This danger as to the troops in Blenheim,
+ the flower of their army, was much augmented by the circumstance,
+ that if their centre was forced where it was formed of cavalry only,
+ and the victors turned sharp round towards Blenheim, the horse would
+ be driven headlong into the Danube, and the foot in that village
+ would run the hazard of being surrounded or pushed into that river,
+ which was not fordable, even for horse, in any part. But though these
+ circumstances would, to a far-seeing general, have presaged serious
+ disaster in the event of defeat, yet the position was strong in
+ itself, and the French generals, long accustomed to victory, had some
+ excuse for not having taken sufficiently into view the contingencies
+ likely to occur in the event of defeat. Both the villages at the
+ extremity of their line had been strengthened, not only with
+ intrenchments hastily thrown up around them, thickly mounted with
+ heavy cannon, but with barricades at all their principal entrances,
+ formed of overturned carts and all the furniture of the houses, which
+ they had seized upon, as the insurgents did at Paris in 1830, for
+ that purpose. The army stood upon a hill or gentle eminence, the guns
+ from which commanded the whole plain by which alone it could be
+ approached; and this plain was low, and intersected on the right, in
+ front of Blenheim, by a rivulet which flows down by a gentle descent
+ to the Danube, and in front of Oberglau by another rivulet, which
+ runs in two branches till within a few paces of the Danube; into
+ which it also empties itself. These rivulets had bridges over them at
+ the points where they flowed through villages; but they were
+ difficult of passage in the other places for cavalry and artillery,
+ and, with the ditches cut in the swampy meadows through which they
+ flowed, proved no small impediment to the advance of the Allied
+ army.</p>
+
+ <p>The Duke of Marlborough, before the action began, in person
+ visited each important battery, in order to ascertain the range of
+ the guns. The troops under his command were drawn up in four lines;
+ the infantry being in front, and the cavalry behind, in each line.
+ This arrangement was adopted in order that the infantry, which would
+ get easiest through the streams, might form on the other side, and
+ cover the formation of the cavalry, who might be more impeded. The
+ fire of cannon soon became very animated on both sides, and the
+ infantry advanced to the edge of the rivulets with that cheerful air
+ and confident step which is so often the forerunner of success. On
+ Prince Eugene&#39;s side the impediments, however, proved serious;
+ the beds of the rivulets were so broad, that they required to be
+ filled up with fascines before they could be passed by the guns; and
+ when they did get across, they replied without much effect to the
+ French cannon thundering from the heights, which commanded the whole
+ field. At half-past twelve, however, these difficulties were, by
+ great efforts on the part of Prince Eugene and his wing, overcome,
+ and he sent word to Marlborough that he was ready. The English
+ general instantly called for his horse; the troops every where stood
+ to their arms, and the signal was given to advance. The rivulets and
+ marshy ground in front of Blenheim and Unterglau were passed by the
+ first line without much difficulty, though under a heavy fire of
+ artillery from the French batteries; and the firm ground on the slope
+ being reached, the first line advanced in the finest order to the
+ attack&#8212;the cavalry in front having now defiled to a side, so as
+ to let the English infantry take the lead. The attack must be given
+ in the words of Dr Hare&#39;s Journal.</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;Lord Cutts made the first attack upon Blenheim, with the
+ English grenadiers. Brigadier-general Rowe led up his brigade,
+ which formed the first line, and was sustained in the second by a
+ brigade of Hessians. Rowe was within thirty paces of the palisades
+ about Blenheim when the enemy gave their first fire, by which a
+ great many officers and men fell; but notwithstanding this, that
+ brave officer marched direct up to the pales, on which he struck
+ his <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg
+ 21]</a></span> sword before he allowed his men to fire. His orders
+ were to enter at the point of the bayonet; but the superiority of
+ the enemy, and the strength of their post, rendered this
+ impossible. The first line was therefore forced to retire; Rowe was
+ struck down badly wounded at the foot of the pales; his
+ lieut.-colonel and major were killed in endeavouring to bring him
+ off, and some squadrons of French gens-d&#39;armes having charged
+ the brigade while retiring in disorder, it was partially broken,
+ and one of the colours of Rowe&#39;s regiment was taken. The
+ Hessians in the second line upon this advanced briskly forward,
+ charged the squadrons, retook the colour, and repulsed them. Lord
+ Cutts, however, seeing fresh squadrons coming down upon him, sent
+ to request some cavalry should be sent to cover his flank. Five
+ British squadrons accordingly were moved up, and speedily charged
+ by eight of the enemy; the French gave their fire at a little
+ distance, but the English charged sword in hand, and put them to
+ the rout. Being overpowered, however, by fresh squadrons, and
+ galled by the fire which issued from the enclosures of Blenheim,
+ our horse were driven back in their turn, and recoiled in
+ disorder.<br />
+ &quot;Marlborough, foreseeing that the enemy would pursue this
+ advantage, resolved to bring his whole cavalry across the rivulets.
+ The operation was begun by the English horse. It proved more
+ difficult, however, than was expected, especially to the English
+ squadrons; as they had to cross the rivulet where it was divided,
+ and the meadows were very soft. However, they surmounted those
+ difficulties, and got over; but when they advanced, they were so
+ severely galled by the infantry in Blenheim firing upon their
+ flank, while the cavalry charged them in front, that they were
+ forced to retire, which they did, under cover of Bulow and
+ Bothmer&#39;s German dragoons, who succeeded them in the passage.
+ Marlborough, seeing the enemy resolute to maintain the ground
+ occupied by his cavalry, gave orders for the whole remainder of his
+ cavalry to pass wherever they could get across. There was very
+ great difficulty and danger in defiling over the rivulet in the
+ face of an enemy, already formed and supported by several batteries
+ of cannon; yet by the brave examples and intrepidity of the
+ officers, they were at length got over, and kept their ground on
+ the other side. Bulow stretched across, opposite to Oberglau, with
+ the Danish and Hanoverian horse; but near that village they were so
+ vigorously charged by the French cavalry, that they were driven
+ back. Rallying, they were again led to the charge, and again routed
+ with great slaughter by the charges of the horse in front, and the
+ dreadful fire from the inclosures of Blenheim. Nor did the attack
+ on Oberglau to the British right, under Prince Holstein, succeed
+ better; no sooner had he passed the rivulet, than the Irish
+ veterans, posted there, came pouring down upon them, took the
+ prince prisoner, and threw the whole into confusion. Upon this,
+ Marlborough galloped to the spot at the head of some squadrons,
+ followed by three battalions, which had not yet been engaged. With
+ the horse he charged the Irish battalions in flank, and forced them
+ back; the foot he posted himself, and having re-established affairs
+ at that point, returned rapidly to the left, where he found the
+ whole of his corps passed over the streams, and on firm ground on
+ the other side. The horse were drawn up in two lines fronting the
+ enemy; the foot in two lines behind them; and some guns, under
+ Colonel Blood, having been hurried across by means of pontoons,
+ were brought to bear upon some battalions of foot which were
+ intermingled with the enemy&#39;s horse, and made great havoc in
+ their ranks.<br />
+
+ <p>&quot;It was now past three, and the Duke, having got his whole men
+ ready for the attack, sent to Prince Eugene to know if he was ready
+ to support him. But the efforts of that gallant prince had not been
+ attended with the same success. In the first onset, indeed, his
+ Danish and Prussian infantry had gained considerable success, and
+ taken six guns, and the Imperial cavalry had, by a vigorous charge,
+ broken the first line of the enemy&#39;s horse; but they failed in
+ their attack on the second line, and were driven back to their
+ original ground; whereupon the Bavarian cavalry, rushing forward,
+ enveloped Eugene&#39;s foot, who were forced to retire, and with
+ difficulty regained their original ground. Half an hour afterwards,
+ Prince Eugene made a second attack with his horse; but they were
+ again repulsed by the bravery of the Bavarian cavalry, and driven
+ for refuge into the wood, in the rear of their original position.
+ Nothing daunted by this bad success, the Prince formed his troops
+ for a third attack, and himself led his cavalry to the charge; but
+ so vigorous was the defence, that they were again repulsed to the
+ wood, and the victorious <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22"
+ id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span> enemy&#39;s dragoons with loud
+ cheers charged the Prussian foot in flank, and were only repelled
+ by the admirable steadiness with which they delivered their fire,
+ and stood their ground with fixed bayonets in front.<br />
+
+ <p>&quot;About five the general forward movement was made which
+ determined the issue of this great battle, which till then had
+ seemed doubtful. The Duke of Marlborough, having ridden along the
+ front, gave orders to sound the charge, when all at once our lines
+ of horse moved on, sword in hand, to the attack. Those of the enemy
+ presented their carbines at some distance and fired; but they had
+ no sooner done so than they wheeled about, broke, and fled. The
+ gens-d&#39;armes fled towards Hochstedt, which was about two miles
+ in the rear; the other squadrons towards the village of
+ Sondersheim, which was nearer, and on the bank of the Danube. The
+ Duke ordered General Hompesch, with thirty squadrons, to pursue
+ those who fled to Hochstedt; while he himself, with Prince Hesse
+ and the whole remainder of the cavalry, drove thirty of the
+ enemy&#39;s squadrons headlong down the banks of the Danube, which,
+ being very steep, occasioned the destruction of the greater part.
+ Vast numbers endeavoured to save themselves by swimming, and
+ perished miserably. Among the prisoners taken here were Marshal
+ Tallard and his suite, who surrendered to M. Beinenbourg,
+ aid-de-camp to the Prince of Hesse. Marlborough immediately desired
+ him to be accommodated with his coach, and sent a pencil note to
+ the duchess<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id=
+ "FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class=
+ "fnanchor">[11]</a> to say the victory was gained. Others, seeing
+ the fate of their comrades in the water, endeavoured to save
+ themselves by defiling to the right, along its margin, towards
+ Hochstedt, but they were met and intercepted by some English
+ squadrons; upon seeing which they fled in utter confusion towards
+ Morselingen, and did not again attempt to engage. The victorious
+ horse upon this fell upon several of the enemy&#39;s battalions,
+ who had nearly reached Hochstedt, and cut them to pieces.<br />
+
+ <p>&quot;Meanwhile Prince Eugene, by a fourth attack, succeeded in
+ driving the Elector of Bavaria from his position; and the Duke,
+ seeing this, sent orders to the squadrons in pursuit, towards
+ Morselingen, to wheel about and join him. All this while the troops
+ in Blenheim had been incessantly attacked, but it still held out
+ and gave employment to the Duke&#39;s infantry. The moment the
+ cavalry had beaten off that of the enemy, and cleared the field
+ between the two villages of them, General Churchill moved both
+ lines of foot upon the village of Blenheim, and it was soon
+ surrounded so as to cut off all possibility of escape except on the
+ side next the Danube. To prevent the possibility of their escape
+ that way, Webb, with the Queen&#39;s regiment, took possession of a
+ barrier the enemy had constructed to cover their retreat, and,
+ having posted his men across the street which led to the Danube,
+ several hundreds of the enemy, who were attempting to make their
+ escape that way, were made prisoners. The other issue to the Danube
+ was occupied in the same manner by Prince George&#39;s regiment:
+ all who came out that way were made prisoners or driven into the
+ Danube. Some endeavoured to break out at other places, but General
+ Wood, with Lord John Hay&#39;s regiment of <i>grey</i> dragoons
+ (Scots Greys) immediately advanced towards them, and, cantering up
+ to the top of a rising ground, made them believe they had a larger
+ force behind them, and stopped them on that side. When Churchill
+ saw the defeat of the enemy&#39;s horse decided, he sent to request
+ Lord Cutts to attack them in front, while he himself attacked them
+ in flank. This was accordingly done; the Earl of Orkney and General
+ Ingoldesby entering the village at the same time, at two different
+ places, at the head of their respective regiments. But so vigorous
+ was the resistance made by the enemy, especially at the churchyard,
+ that they were forced to retire. The vehement fire, however, of the
+ cannon and howitzers, which set fire to several barns and houses,
+ added to the circumstance of their commander, M. Clerambault,
+ having fled, and their retreat on all sides being cut off, led to
+ their surrendering at discretion, to the number of six-and-twenty
+ battalions. Thus concluded this great battle, in which the enemy
+ had 5900 more than the Allies,<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id=
+ "FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class=
+ "fnanchor">[12]</a> and the advantage of a very strong position,
+ difficult of attack.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id=
+ "FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class=
+ "fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
+ </div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg
+ 23]</a></span>
+
+ <p>In this battle Marlborough&#39;s wing lost 3000 men, and
+ Eugene&#39;s the same number, in all 6000. The French lost 13,000
+ prisoners, including 1200 officers, almost all taken by
+ Marlborough&#39;s wing, besides 34 pieces of cannon, 26 standards,
+ and 90 colours; Eugene took 13 pieces. The killed and wounded were
+ 14,000 more. But the total loss of the French and Bavarians,
+ including those who deserted during their calamitous retreat through
+ the Black Forest, was not less than 40,000 men,<a name=
+ "FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14"
+ class="fnanchor">[14]</a> a number greater than any which they
+ sustained till the still more disastrous day of Waterloo.</p>
+
+ <p>This account of the battle, which is by far the best and most
+ intelligible which has ever yet been published, makes it quite
+ evident to what cause the overwhelming magnitude of this defeat to
+ the French army was owing. The strength of the position consisted
+ solely in the rivulets and marshy grounds in its front; when they
+ were passed, the error of Marshal Tallard&#39;s disposition of his
+ troops was at once apparent. The infantry was accumulated in useless
+ numbers in the villages. Of the twenty-six battalions in Blenheim,
+ twenty were useless, and could not get into action, while the long
+ line of cavalry from thence to Oberglau was sustained only by a few
+ battalions of foot, incapable of making any effective resistance.
+ This was the more inexcusable, as the French, having sixteen
+ battalions of infantry more than the Allies, should at no point have
+ shown themselves inferior in foot soldiers to their opponents. When
+ the curtain of horse which stretched from Blenheim to Oberglau was
+ broken through and driven off the field, the 13,000 infantry
+ accumulated in the former of these villages could not avoid falling
+ into the enemy&#39;s hands; for they were pressed between
+ Marlborough&#39;s victorious foot and horse on the one side, and the
+ unfordable stream of the Danube on the other. But Marlborough, it is
+ evident, evinced the capacity of a great general in the manner in
+ which he surmounted these obstacles, and took advantage of these
+ faulty dispositions; resolutely, in the first instance, overcoming
+ the numerous impediments which opposed the passage of the rivulets,
+ and then accumulating his horse and foot for a grand attack on the
+ enemy&#39;s centre, which, besides destroying above half the troops
+ assembled there, and driving thirty squadrons into the Danube, cut
+ off, and isolated the powerful body of infantry now uselessly crowded
+ together in Blenheim, and compelled them to surrender.</p>
+
+ <p>Immense were the results of this transcendent victory. The French
+ army, lately so confident in its numbers and prowess, retreated
+ &quot;or rather fled,&quot; as Marlborough says, through the Black
+ Forest; abandoning the Elector of Bavaria and all the fortresses on
+ the Danube to their fate. In the deepest dejection, and the utmost
+ disorder, they reached the Rhine, scarce twelve thousand strong, on
+ the 25th August, and immediately began defiling over by the bridge of
+ Strasburg. How different from the triumphant army, which with drums
+ beating, and colours flying, had crossed at the same place six weeks
+ before! Marlborough, having detached part of his force to besiege
+ Ulm, drew near with the bulk of his army to the Rhine, which he
+ passed near Philipsburg on the 6th September, and soon after
+ commenced the siege of Landau, on the French side; Prince Louis with
+ 20,000 men forming the besieging force, and Eugene and Marlborough
+ with 30,000 the covering army. Ulm surrendered on the 16th September,
+ with 250 pieces of cannon, and 1200 barrels of powder, which gave the
+ Allies a solid foundation on the Danube, and effectually crushed the
+ power of the Elector of Bavaria, who, isolated now in the midst of
+ his enemies, had no alternative but to abandon his dominions, and
+ seek refuge in Brussels, where he arrived in the end of September.
+ Meanwhile, as the siege of Landau was found to require more time than
+ had been anticipated, owing to the extraordinary <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+ difficulties experienced in getting up supplies and forage for the
+ troops; Marlborough repaired to Hanover and Berlin to stimulate the
+ Prussian and Hanoverian cabinets to greater exertions in the common
+ cause, and he succeeded in making arrangements for the addition of
+ 8000 more Prussian troops to their valuable auxiliary force, to be
+ added to the army of the Imperialists in Italy, which stood much in
+ need of reinforcement. The Electress of Bavaria, who had been left
+ Regent of that State in the absence of the Elector in Flanders, had
+ now no resource left but submission; and a treaty was accordingly
+ concluded in the beginning of November, by which she agreed to
+ disband all her troops. Trarbach was taken in the end of December;
+ the Hungarian insurrection was appeased; Landau capitulated in the
+ beginning of the same month; a diversion which the enemy attempted on
+ Trêves was defeated by Marlborough&#39;s activity and vigilance, and
+ that city put in a sufficient posture of defence; and the campaign
+ being now finished, that accomplished commander returned to the
+ Hague, and London, to receive the honour due for his past services,
+ and urge their respective cabinets to the efforts necessary to turn
+ them to good account.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus by the operations of one single campaign was Bavaria crushed,
+ Austria and Germany delivered. Marlborough&#39;s cross-march from
+ Flanders to the Danube, had extricated the Imperialists from a state
+ of the utmost peril, and elevated them at once to security, victory,
+ and conquest. The decisive blow struck at Blenheim, resounded through
+ every part of Europe; it at once destroyed the vast fabric of power
+ which it had taken Louis XIV., aided by the talents of Turenne, and
+ the genius of Vauban, so long to construct. Instead of proudly
+ descending the valley of the Danube, and threatening Vienna, as
+ Napoleon afterwards did in 1805 and 1809, the French were driven in
+ the utmost disorder across the Rhine. The surrender of Trarbach and
+ Landau gave the Allies a firm footing on the left bank of that river.
+ The submission of Bavaria deprived the French of that great outwork,
+ of which they have made such good use in their German wars, the
+ Hungarian insurrection, deprived of the hoped-for aid from the armies
+ on the Rhine, was pacified. Prussia was induced by this great triumph
+ to co-operate in a more efficient manner in the common cause; the
+ parsimony of the Dutch gave way before the tumult of success; and the
+ empire, delivered from invasion, was preparing to carry its
+ victorious arms into the heart of France. Such results require no
+ comment; they speak for themselves, and deservedly place Marlborough
+ in the very highest rank of military commanders. The campaigns of
+ Napoleon exhibit no more decisive or glorious results.</p>
+
+ <p>Honours and emoluments of every description were showered on the
+ English hero for this glorious success. He was created a prince of
+ the Holy Roman empire,<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id=
+ "FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class=
+ "fnanchor">[15]</a> and a tract of land in Germany erected into a
+ principality in his favour. His reception at the courts of Berlin and
+ Hanover resembled that of a sovereign prince; the acclamations of the
+ people, in all the towns through which he passed, rent the air; at
+ the Hague his influence was such that he was regarded as the real
+ Stadtholder. More substantial rewards awaited him in his own country.
+ The munificence of the queen and the gratitude of Parliament
+ conferred upon him the extensive honour and manor of Woodstock, long
+ a royal palace, and once the scene of the loves of Henry II. and the
+ fair <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg
+ 25]</a></span> Rosamond. By order of the Queen, not only was this
+ noble estate settled on the duke and his heirs, but the royal
+ comptroller commenced a magnificent palace for the duke on a scale
+ worthy of his services and England&#39;s gratitude. From this origin
+ the superb palace of Blenheim has taken its rise; which, although not
+ built in the purest taste, or after the most approved models,
+ remains, and will long remain, a splendid monument of a nation&#39;s
+ gratitude, and of the genius of Vanbrugh.</p>
+
+ <p>Notwithstanding the invaluable services thus rendered by
+ Marlborough, both to the Emperor of Germany and the Queen of England,
+ he was far from experiencing from either potentate that liberal
+ support for the future prosecution of the war, which the inestimable
+ opportunity now placed in their hands, and the formidable power still
+ at the disposal of the enemy so loudly required. As usual, the
+ English Parliament were exceedingly backward in voting supplies
+ either of men or money; nor was the cabinet of Vienna inclined to be
+ more liberal in its exertions. Though the House of Commons agreed to
+ give £4,670,000 for the service of the ensuing year; yet the land
+ forces voted were only 40,000 men, although the population of Great
+ Britain and Ireland could not be at that period under ten millions,
+ while France, with about twenty millions, had above two hundred
+ thousand under arms. It is this excessive and invariable reluctance
+ of the English Parliament ever to make those efforts at the
+ commencement of a war, which are necessary to turn to a good account
+ the inherent bravery of its soldiers and frequent skill of its
+ commanders, that is the cause of the long duration of our Continental
+ wars, and of three-fourths of the national debt which now oppresses
+ the empire, and, in its ultimate results, will endanger its
+ existence. The national forces are, by the cry for economy and
+ reduction which invariably is raised in peace, reduced to so low an
+ ebb, that it is only by successive additions, made in many different
+ years, that it can be raised up to any thing like the amount
+ requisite for successful operations. Thus disaster generally occurs
+ in the commencement of every war; or if, by the genius of any
+ extraordinary commander, as by that of Marlborough, unlooked-for
+ success is achieved in the outset, the nation is unable to follow it
+ up; the war languishes for want of the requisite support; the enemy
+ gets time to recover from his consternation; his danger stimulates
+ him to greater exertions; and many long years of warfare, deeply
+ checkered with disaster, and attended with an enormous expense, are
+ required to obviate the effects of previous undue pacific
+ reduction.</p>
+
+ <p>How bitterly Marlborough felt this want of support, on the part of
+ the cabinets both of London and Vienna, which prevented him from
+ following up the victory of Blenheim with the decisive operations
+ against France which he would otherwise have undoubtedly commenced,
+ is proved by various parts of his correspondence. On the 16th of
+ December 1704, he wrote to Mr Secretary Harley&#8212;&quot;I am sorry
+ to see nothing has been offered yet, <i>nor any care taken by
+ Parliament for recruiting the army</i>. I mean chiefly the foot. It
+ is of that consequence for an early campaign, that without it <i>we
+ may run the hazard of losing, in a great measure, the fruits of the
+ last</i>; and therefore, pray leave to recommend it to you to advise
+ with your friends, if any proper method can be thought of, that may
+ be laid before the House immediately, without waiting my
+ arrival.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id=
+ "FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class=
+ "fnanchor">[16]</a> Nor was the cabinet of Vienna, notwithstanding
+ the imminent danger they had recently run, more active in making the
+ necessary efforts to repair the losses of the
+ campaign&#8212;&quot;You cannot,&quot; says Marlborough, &quot;say
+ more to us of the <i>supine negligence of the Court of Vienna</i>,
+ with reference to your affairs, <i>than we are sensible of every
+ where else</i>; and certainly if the Duke of Savoy&#39;s good conduct
+ and bravery at Verue had not reduced the French to a very low ebb,
+ the game must have been over before any help could come to
+ you.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> It is ever thus,
+ especially with states such as Great Britain, <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> in which
+ the democratic element is so powerful as to imprint upon the measures
+ of government that disregard of the future, and aversion to present
+ efforts or burdens, which is the invariable characteristic of the
+ bulk of mankind. If Marlborough had been adequately supported and
+ strengthened after the decisive blow struck at Blenheim; that is, if
+ the governments of Vienna and London, with that of the Hague, had by
+ a great and timely effort doubled his effective force when the French
+ were broken and disheartened by defeat, he would have marched to
+ Paris in the next campaign, and dictated peace to the <i>Grand
+ Monarque</i> in his gorgeous halls of Versailles. It was
+ short-sighted economy which entailed upon the nations the costs and
+ burdens of the next ten years of the War of the Succession, as it did
+ the still greater costs and burdens of the Revolutionary War, after
+ the still more decisive success of the Allies in the summer of 1793,
+ when the iron frontier of the Netherlands was entirely broken
+ through, and their advanced posts, without any force to oppose them,
+ were within an hundred and sixty miles of Paris.</p>
+
+ <p>This parsimony of the Allied governments, and their invincible
+ repugnance to the efforts and sacrifices which could alone bring, and
+ certainly would have brought, the war to an early and glorious issue,
+ is the cause of the subsequent conversion of the war into one of
+ blockades and sieges, and of its being transferred to Flanders, where
+ its progress was necessarily slow, and cost enormous, from the vast
+ number of strongholds which required to be reduced at every stage of
+ the Allied advance. It was said at the time, that in attacking
+ Flanders in that quarter, Marlborough took the bull by the horns;
+ that France on the side of the Rhine was far more vulnerable, and
+ that the war was fixed in Flanders, in order by protracting it to
+ augment the profits of the generals employed. Subsequent writers, not
+ reflecting on the difference of the circumstances, have observed the
+ successful issue of the invasions of France from Switzerland and the
+ Upper Rhine in 1814, and Flanders and the Lower Rhine in 1815, and
+ concluded that a similar result would have attended a like bold
+ invasion under Marlborough and Eugene. There never was a greater
+ mistake. The great object of the war was to wrest Flanders from
+ France; when the lilied standard floated on Brussels and Antwerp, the
+ United Provinces were constantly in danger of being swallowed up, and
+ there was no security for the independence either of England,
+ Holland, or any of the German States. If Marlborough and Eugene had
+ had two hundred thousand effective men at their disposal, as
+ Wellington and Blucher had in 1815, or three hundred thousand, as
+ Schwartzenberg and Blucher had in 1814, they would doubtless have
+ left half their force behind them to blockade the fortresses, and
+ with the other half marched direct to Paris. But as they had never
+ had more than eighty thousand on their muster-rolls, and could not
+ bring at any time more than sixty thousand effective men into the
+ field, this bold and decisive course was impossible. The French army
+ in their front was rarely inferior to theirs, often superior; and how
+ was it possible in these circumstances to adventure on the perilous
+ course of pushing on into the heart of the enemy&#39;s territory,
+ leaving the frontier fortresses, yet unsubdued, in their rear? The
+ disastrous issue of the Blenheim campaign to the French arms, even
+ when supported by the friendly arms and all the fortresses of
+ Bavaria, in the preceding year, had shown what was the danger of such
+ a course. The still more calamitous issue of the Moscow campaign to
+ the army of Napoleon, demonstrated that even the greatest military
+ talents, and most enormous accumulation of military force, affords no
+ security against the incalculable danger of an undue advance beyond
+ the base of military operations. The greatest generals of the last
+ age, fruitful beyond all others in military talent, have acted on
+ those principles, whenever they had not an overwhelming superiority
+ of forces at their command. Wellington never invaded Spain till he
+ was master of Ciudad Rodrigo and Badajos; nor France till he had
+ subdued St Sebastian and Pampeluna. The first use which Napoleon made
+ of his victories at Montenotte and Dego was to compel the Court of
+ Turin to surrender <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id=
+ "Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> all their fortresses in Piedmont; of the
+ victory of Marengo, to force the Imperialists to abandon the whole
+ strongholds of Lombardy as far as the Adige. The possession of the
+ single fortress of Mantua in 1796, enabled the Austrians to stem the
+ flood of Napoleon&#39;s victories, and gain time to assemble four
+ different armies for the defence of the monarchy. The case of half a
+ million of men, flushed by victory, and led by able and experienced
+ leaders assailing a single state, is the exception, not the rule.</p>
+
+ <p>Circumstances, therefore, of paramount importance and irresistible
+ force, compelled Marlborough to fix the war in Flanders, and convert
+ it into one of sieges and blockades. In entering upon such a system
+ of hostility, sure, and comparatively free from risk, but slow and
+ extremely costly, the alliance ran the greatest risk of being
+ shipwrecked on the numerous discords, jealousies, and separate
+ interests, which, in almost every instance recorded in history, have
+ proved fatal to a great confederacy, if it does not obtain decisive
+ success at the outset, before these seeds of division have had time
+ to come to maturity. With what admirable skill and incomparable
+ address Marlborough kept together the unwieldy alliance will
+ hereafter appear. Never was a man so qualified by nature for such a
+ task. He was courtesy and grace personified. It was a common saying
+ at the time, that neither man nor woman could resist him. &quot;Of
+ all the men I ever knew,&quot; says no common man, himself a perfect
+ master of the elegances he so much admired, &quot;the late Duke of
+ Marlborough possessed the graces in the highest degree, not to say
+ engrossed them. Indeed he got the most by them, and contrary to the
+ custom of profound historians, who always assign deep causes for
+ great events, I ascribe the better half of the Duke of
+ Marlborough&#39;s greatness to those graces. He had no brightness,
+ nothing shining in his genius. He had most undoubtedly an excellent
+ plain understanding, and sound judgment. But these qualities alone
+ would probably have never raised him higher than they found him,
+ which was page to James the Second&#39;s queen. But there the grace
+ protected and promoted him. His figure was beautiful, but his manner
+ was irresistible, either by man or woman. It was by this engaging,
+ graceful manner, that he was enabled, during all his war, to connect
+ the various and jarring powers of the Grand Alliance, and to carry
+ them on to the main object of the war, notwithstanding their private
+ and separate views, jealousies, and wrongheadedness. Whatever court
+ he went to (and he was often obliged to go to restive and refractory
+ ones) he brought them into his measures. The pensionary Heinsius, who
+ had governed the United Provinces for forty years, was absolutely
+ governed by him. He was always cool, and nobody ever observed the
+ least variation in his countenance; he could refuse more gracefully
+ than others could grant, and those who went from him the most
+ dissatisfied as to the substance of their business, were yet charmed
+ by his manner, and, as it were, comforted by it.&quot;<a name=
+ "FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18"
+ class="fnanchor">[18]</a></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> <i>Letters and
+ Despatches of John Churchill, First Duke of Marlborough, from
+ 1702 to 1712.</i> Edited by <span class='smcap'>Sir George
+ Murray</span>, G.C.B., Master-General of the Ordnance, &amp;c. 3
+ vols. London, 1845.</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>
+ &quot;Marlborough,&quot; says Swift, &quot;is as voracious as
+ hell, and as ambitious as the devil. What he desires above every
+ thing is to be made commander-in-chief for life, and it is to
+ satisfy his ambition and his avarice that he has opposed so many
+ intrigues to the efforts made for the restoration of
+ peace.&quot;</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> &quot;During
+ the interval between the liberation of Marlborough and the death
+ of Queen Mary, we find him, in conjunction with Godolphin and
+ many others, maintaining a clandestine intercourse with the
+ exiled family. On the 2d May 1694, only a few days before he
+ offered his services to King William, he communicated to James,
+ through Colonel Sackville, intelligence of an expedition then
+ fitting out, for the purpose of destroying the fleet in Brest
+ harbour.&quot;&#8212;<span class='smcap'>Coxe&#39;s</span>
+ <i>Marlborough</i>, i. 75. &quot;Marlborough&#39;s conduct to the
+ Stuarts,&quot; says Lord Mahon, &quot;was a foul blot on his
+ memory. To the last he persevered in those deplorable intrigues.
+ In October 1713, he protested to a Jacobite agent he would rather
+ have his hands cut off than do any thing to prejudice King
+ James.&quot;&#8212;<span class='smcap'>Mahon</span>, i.
+ 21-22.</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> &quot;Galli
+ turpe esse ducunt frumentum manu quærere; itaque armati alienos
+ agros demetunt.&quot;&#8212;<span class='smcap'>Cæsar</span>.</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>
+ <i>Despatches</i>, 21st September 1702.</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>
+ <i>Despatches</i>, 23d October 1702.</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> Memorial, 24th
+ August 1703.&#8212;<i>Despatches</i>, i. 165.</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> Marlborough
+ was much chagrined at being interrupted in his meditated decisive
+ operations by the States-General, on this occasion. On the 6th
+ September, he wrote to them:&#8212;&quot;Vos Hautes Puissances
+ jugeront bien par le camp que nous venons de prendre, qu&#39;on
+ n&#39;a pas voulu se résoudre à tenter les lignes. J&#39;ai été
+ convaincu de plus en plus, depuis l&#39;honneur que j&#39;ai eu
+ de vous écrire, par les avis que j&#39;ai reçu journellement de
+ la situation des ennemis, que cette entreprise n&#39;était pas
+ seulement practicable, mais même qu&#39;on pourrait en espérer
+ tout le succès que je m&#39;étais proposé: enfin l&#39;occasion
+ en est perdue, et je souhaite de tout mon c&#339;ur qu&#39;elle
+ n&#39;ait aucune fâcheuse suite, et qu&#39;on n&#39;ait pas lieu
+ de s&#39;en repentir quand il sera trop
+ tard.&quot;&#8212;<span class='smcap'>Marlborough</span> <i>aux
+ Etats Généraux</i>; <i>6 Septembre 1703. Despatches</i>, i.
+ 173.</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> &quot;Ce matin
+ j&#39;ai appris par une estafette que les ennemis avaient joint
+ l&#39;Electeur de Bavière avec 26,000 hommes, et que M. de
+ Villeroi a passé la Meuse avec la meilleure partie de l&#39;armée
+ des Pays Bas, et qu&#39;il poussait sa marche en toute diligence
+ vers la Moselle, de sorte que, sans un prompt sécours,
+ l&#39;empire court risque d&#39;être entièrement
+ abimé.&quot;&#8212;<span class='smcap'>Marlborough</span>, <i>aux
+ Etats Généraux; Bonn</i>, <i>2 Mai 1704</i>. <i>Despatches</i>,
+ i. 274.</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> The
+ following was the composition of these two corps, which will show
+ of what a motley array the Allied army was composed:&#8212;</p>
+
+ <table summary="composition of the two corps" class="standard">
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <table class="standard" summary=
+ "composition of the left wing">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="3" align="right">Left wing,
+ Marlborough.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&#160;</td>
+
+ <td>Batt.</td>
+
+ <td>Squad.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>English,</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">14</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">14</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>Dutch,</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">14</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">22</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>Hessians,</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">7</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">7</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>Hanoverians,</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">13</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">25</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>Danes,</td>
+
+ <td class="BorderBottom" align="right">0</td>
+
+ <td class="BorderBottom" align="right">22</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&#160;</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">48</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">86</td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ </td>
+
+ <td class="paddedbig">&#160;</td>
+
+ <td class="padded">
+ <table class="standard" summary=
+ "composition of the right wing">
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="3" align="right">Right wing, Eugene.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&#160;</td>
+
+ <td>Batt.</td>
+
+ <td>Squad.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>Danes,</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">7</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">0</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>Prussians,</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">11</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">15</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>Austrians,</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">0</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">24</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>Of the Empire,</td>
+
+ <td class="BorderBottom" align="right">0</td>
+
+ <td class="BorderBottom" align="right">35</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td>&#160;</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">18</td>
+
+ <td class="AlignRight">74</td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </table>
+ </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> This pencil
+ note is still preserved at Blenheim.</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>
+ French&#8212;Bat. 82. Squad. 146. Allies&#8212;Bat. 66. Squad.
+ 160. At 500 to a battalion, and 150 to a squadron, this gives a
+ superiority of 5900 to the French.</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> Marl.,
+ <i>Desp.</i> i. 402-409.</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> Cardonnell,
+ Desp. to Lord Harley, 25th Sept. 1704, <i>Desp.</i> i. 410. By
+ intercepted letters it appeared the enemy admitted a loss of
+ 40,000 men before they reached the Rhine. Marlborough to the Duke
+ of Shrewsbury, 28th Aug. 1704, <i>Desp.</i> i. 439.</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> The
+ holograph letter of the Emperor, announcing this honour, said,
+ with equal truth and justice&#8212;&quot;I am induced to assign
+ to your highness a place among the princes of the empire, in
+ order that it may universally appear how much I acknowledge
+ myself and the empire to be indebted to the Queen of Great
+ Britain, who sent her arms as far as Bavaria at a time when the
+ affairs of the empire, by the defection of the Bavarians to the
+ French, most needed that assistance and support:&#8212;And to
+ your Grace, likewise, to whose prudence and courage, together
+ with the bravery of the forces fighting under your command, the
+ two victories lately indulged by Providence to the Allies are
+ principally attributed, not only by the voice of fame, but by the
+ general officers in my army who had their share in your labour
+ and your glory.&quot;&#8212;<span class='smcap'>The Emperor
+ Leopold</span> to <span class='smcap'>Marlborough</span>, <i>28th
+ August 1704</i>.&#8212;<i>Desp.</i> i. 538.</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> Marlborough
+ to Mr Secretary Harley, 16th Dec. 1704.&#8212;<i>Desp.</i> i.
+ 556.</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> Marlborough
+ to Mr Hill at Turin, 6th Feb. 1705.&#8212;<i>Desp.</i> i.
+ 591.</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>Lord
+ Chesterfield&#39;s Letters</i>, Lord Mahon&#39;s edition, i.
+ 221-222.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg
+ 28]</a></span>
+
+ <h2><a name="PUSHKIN_THE_RUSSIAN_POET" id=
+ "PUSHKIN_THE_RUSSIAN_POET"></a>PÚSHKIN, THE RUSSIAN POET.</h2>
+
+ <h3>No. II.</h3>
+
+ <div class='smcapcenter'>
+ Specimens of his Lyrics.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class='smcapcenter'>
+ Translated From The Original Russian, By Thomas B. Shaw, B.A. Of
+ Cambridge, Adjunct Professor Of English Literature In The Imperial
+ Alexander Lyceum, Translator Of &quot;The Heretic,&quot;&amp;c.
+ &amp;c.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In offering to the public the following specimens of Púshkin&#39;s
+ poetry in an English dress, the translator considers it part of his
+ duty to make a few remarks. The number and extent of these
+ observations, he will, of course, confine within the narrowest limits
+ consistent with his important duty of making his countrymen
+ acquainted with the style and character of Russia&#39;s greatest
+ poet; a duty which he would certainly betray, were he to omit to
+ explain the chief points indispensable for the true understanding,
+ not only of the extracts which he has selected as a sample of his
+ author&#39;s productions, but of the general tone and character of
+ those productions, viewed as a whole.</p>
+
+ <p>The translator wishes it therefore to be distinctly understood
+ that he by no means intends to offer, in the character of a complete
+ poetical portrait, the few pieces contained in these pages, but
+ rather as an attempt, however imperfect, to daguerreotype&#8212;by
+ means of the most faithful translation consistent with
+ ease&#8212;<i>one</i> of the various expressions of Púshkin&#39;s
+ literary physiognomy; to represent one phase of his developement.</p>
+
+ <p>That physiognomy is a very flexible and a varying one; Púshkin
+ (considered only as a <i>poet</i>) must be allowed to have attained
+ very high eminence in various walks of his sublime art; his works are
+ very numerous, and as diverse in their form as in their spirit; he is
+ sometimes a romantic, sometimes a legendary, sometimes an epic,
+ sometimes a satiric, and sometimes a dramatic poet;&#8212;in most, if
+ not in all, of these various lines he has attained the highest
+ eminence as yet recognised by his countrymen; and, consequently,
+ whatever impression may be made upon our readers by the present essay
+ at a transfusion of his works into the English language, will be
+ necessarily a very imperfect one. In the prosecution of the arduous
+ but not unprofitable enterprise which the translator set before
+ himself three years ago&#8212;viz. the communication to his
+ countrymen of some true ideas of the scope and peculiar character of
+ Russian literature&#8212;he met with so much discouragement in the
+ unfavourable predictions of such of his friends as he consulted with
+ respect to the feasibility of his project, that he may be excused for
+ some degree of timidity in offering the results of his labours to an
+ English public. So great, indeed, was that timidity, that not even
+ the very flattering reception given to his two first attempts at
+ prose translation, has entirely succeeded in destroying it; and he
+ prefers, on the present occasion, to run the risk of giving only a
+ partial and imperfect reflection of Púshkin&#39;s intellectual
+ features, to the danger that might attend a more ambitious and
+ elaborate version of any of the poet&#39;s longer works.</p>
+
+ <p>Púshkin is here presented solely in his <i>lyrical</i> character;
+ and, it is trusted, that, in the selection of the compositions to be
+ translated&#8212;selections made from a very large number of highly
+ meritorious works&#8212;due attention has been paid not only to the
+ intrinsic beauty and merit of the pieces chosen, but also to the
+ important consideration which renders indispensable (in cases where
+ we find an <i>embarras de richesses</i>, and where the merit is
+ equal) the adoption of such specimens as would possess the greatest
+ degree of novelty for an English reader.</p>
+
+ <p>The task of translating all Púshkin&#39;s poetry is certainly too
+ dignified a one, not to excite our ambition; and it is meditated, in
+ the event of the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id=
+ "Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> accompanying versions finding in England
+ a degree of approbation sufficiently marked to indicate a desire for
+ more specimens, to extend our present labours so far, as to admit
+ passages of the most remarkable merit from Púshkin&#39;s longer
+ works; and, perhaps, even complete versions of some of the more
+ celebrated. Should, therefore, the British public give the
+ <i>fiat</i> of its approbation, we would still further contribute to
+ its knowledge of the great Russian author, by publishing, for
+ example, some of the more remarkable <i>places</i> in the poem of
+ &quot;Evgénii Oniégin,&quot; the charming &quot;Gypsies,&quot; scenes
+ and passages from the tragedy of &quot;Bóris Godunóff,&quot; the
+ &quot;Prisoner of the Caucasus,&quot; &quot;Mazépa,&quot; &amp;c.
+ &amp;c.</p>
+
+ <p>With respect to the present or <i>lyrical</i> specimens, we shall
+ take the liberty to make a few remarks, having reference to the
+ principles which have governed the translator in the execution of the
+ versions; and we shall afterwards preface each poem with a few words
+ of notice, such as may appear to be rendered necessary either by the
+ subject or by the form of the composition itself.</p>
+
+ <p>Of the poetical merit of these translations, considered as English
+ poems, their writer has no very exalted idea; of their
+ <i>faithfulness as versions</i>, on the contrary, he has so deep a
+ conviction, that he regrets exceedingly the fact, that the universal
+ ignorance prevailing in England of the Russian language, will prevent
+ the possibility of that important merit&#8212;strict
+ fidelity&#8212;being tested by the British reader. Let the indulgent,
+ therefore, remember, if we have in any case left an air of stiffness
+ and constraint but too perceptible in our work, that this fault is to
+ be considered as a sacrifice of grace at the altar of truth. It would
+ have been not only possible, but easy, to have spun a collection of
+ easy rhymes, bearing a general resemblance to the vigorous and
+ passionate poetry of Púshkin; but this would not have been a
+ <i>translation</i>, and a translation it was our object to produce.
+ Bowring&#39;s <i>Russian Anthology</i> (not to speak of his other
+ volumes of translated poetry) is a melancholy example of the danger
+ of this attractive but fatal system; while the names of Cary, of Hay,
+ and of Merivale, will remain as a bright encouragement to those who
+ have sufficient strength of mind to prefer the &quot;strait and
+ narrow way&quot; of masterly <i>translation</i>, to the &quot;flowery
+ paths of dalliance&quot; so often trodden by the
+ <i>paraphraser</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>In all cases, the metre of the original, the musical movement and
+ modulation, has, as far as the translator&#39;s ear enabled him to
+ judge, been followed with minute exactness, and at no inconsiderable
+ expense, in some cases, of time and labour. It would be superfluous,
+ therefore, to state, that the number of lines in the English version
+ is always the same as in the original. It has been our study,
+ wherever the differences in the structure of the two languages would
+ permit, to include the same thoughts in the same number of lines.
+ There is also a peculiarity of the Russian language which frequently
+ rendered our task still more arduous; and the conquest of this
+ difficulty has, we trust, conferred upon us the right to speak of our
+ triumph without incurring the charge of vanity. We allude to the
+ great abundance in the Russian of double terminations, and the
+ consequent recurrence of double rhymes, a peculiarity common also to
+ the Italian and Spanish versification, and one which certainly
+ communicates to the versification of those countries a character so
+ marked and peculiar, that no translator would be justified in
+ neglecting it. As it would be impossible, without the use of Russian
+ types, to give our readers an example of this from the writings of
+ Púshkin, and as they would be unable to pronounce such a quotation
+ even if they saw it, we will give an illustration of what we mean
+ from the Spanish and the Italian.</p>
+
+ <p>The first is from the fourth book of the <i>Galatea</i> of
+ Cervantes&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i0">&quot;Venga á mirar á la pastora
+ mia</span><br />
+ <span class="i2">Quien quisiere contar de gente en
+ gente</span><br />
+ <span class="i0">Que vió otro sol, que daba luz al
+ dia</span><br />
+ <span class="i2">Mas claro, que el que sale del oriente,&quot;
+ &amp;c.;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg
+ 30]</a></span>
+
+ <p>and the second from Chiabrera&#39;s sublime <i>Ode on the Siege of
+ Vienna</i>&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i0">&quot;E fino a quanto inulti</span><br />
+ <span class="i0">Sian, Signore, i tuoi servi? E fino a
+ quanto</span><br />
+ <span class="i0">Dei barbarici insulti</span><br />
+ <span class="i0">Orgogliosa n&#39;andrà l&#39;empia
+ baldanza?</span><br />
+ <span class="i0">Dov&#39;è, dov&#39;è, gran Dio, l&#39;antico
+ vanto</span><br />
+ <span class="i0">Di tua alta possanza?&quot; &amp;c.
+ &amp;c.</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In the two passages here quoted, it will be observed that all the
+ lines end with two syllables, in both of which the rhyme is engaged;
+ and an English version of the above verses, however faithful in other
+ respects, which should omit to use the same species of double
+ termination, and content itself with the monosyllable rhyme, would
+ indubitably lose some of the harmony of the original. These double
+ rhymes are far from abundant in our monosyllabic language; but we
+ venture to affirm, that their conscientious employment would be found
+ so valuable, as to amply repay the labour and difficulty attending
+ their search.</p>
+
+ <p>We trust that our readers will pardon the apparent technicality of
+ these remarks, for the sake of the consideration which induced us to
+ make them. In all translation, even in the best, there is so great a
+ loss of spirit and harmony, that the conscientious labourer in this
+ most difficult and ungrateful art, should never neglect even the most
+ trifling precaution that tends to hinder a still further depreciation
+ of the gold of his original; not to mention the principle, that
+ whatever it is worth our while to do at all, it is assuredly worth
+ our while to do as well as we can.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+ <p>The first specimen of Púshkin&#39;s lyric productions which we
+ shall present to our countrymen, &quot;done into English,&quot; as
+ Jacob Tonson was wont to phrase it, &quot;by an eminent hand,&quot;
+ is a production considered by the poet&#39;s critics to possess the
+ very highest degree of merit in its peculiar style. We have mentioned
+ some details respecting the nature and history of the Imperial Lyceum
+ of Tsarskoë Seló, in which Púshkin was educated, and we have
+ described the peculiar intensity of feeling with which all who
+ quitted its walls looked back upon the happy days they had spent
+ within them, and the singular ardour and permanency of the
+ friendships contracted beneath its roof. On the anniversary of the
+ foundation (by the Emperor Alexander) of the institution, it is
+ customary for all the &quot;old Lyceans&quot; to dine together, in
+ the same way as the Eton, Harrow, or Rugby men are accustomed to
+ unite once a-year in honour of their school. On many of these
+ occasions Púshkin contributed to the due celebration of the event by
+ producing poems of various lengths, and different degrees of merit;
+ we give here the best of these. It was written during the poet&#39;s
+ residence in the government of Pskoff, and will be found, we think, a
+ most beautiful and touching embodiment of such feelings as would be
+ suggested in the mind of one obliged to be absent from a ceremony of
+ the nature in question. Of the comrades whose names Púshkin has
+ immortalized in these lines, it is only necessary to specify that the
+ first, Korsákoff, distinguished among his youthful comrades for his
+ musical talents, met with an early death in Italy; a circumstance to
+ which the poet has touchingly alluded. Matiúshkin is now an admiral
+ of distinction, and is commanding the Russian squadron in the Black
+ Sea. Of the two whom he mentions as having passed the anniversary
+ described in this poem (October 19, 1825) in his company, the first
+ was Pústchin, since dead, and the second the Prince Gortchakóff, whom
+ he met by accident, travelling in the neighbourhood of his (the
+ poet&#39;s) seclusion. Our readers cannot fail, we think, to be
+ struck with the beautiful passage consecrated to his friendship with
+ Délvig; and the only other personal allusion which seems to stand in
+ need of explanation, is that indicated <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span> by the name Wilhelm,
+ towards the end of the poem. This is the Christian name of his friend
+ Küchelbecher, since dead, and whose family name was hardly harmonious
+ enough to enter Púshkin&#39;s line, and was therefore omitted on the
+ Horatian principle&#8212;&quot;versu quod dicere nolim.&quot; We now
+ hasten to present the lines.</p>
+
+ <div class='smcapcenter'>
+ October 19, 1825.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">The woods have doff&#39;d their garb of purply
+ gold;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The faded fields with silver frost are
+ steaming;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Through the pale clouds the sun, reluctant
+ gleaming,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Behind the circling hills his disk hath
+ roll&#39;d.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Blaze brightly, hearth! my cell is dark and
+ lonely:</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And thou, O Wine, thou friend of Autumn
+ chill,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Pour through my heart a joyous glow&#8212;if
+ only</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">One moment&#39;s brief forgetfulness of
+ ill!</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Ay, I am very sad; no friend is
+ here</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">With whom to pledge a long unlooked-for
+ meeting,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">To press his hand in eagerness of
+ greeting,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And wish him life and joy for many a
+ year.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">I drink alone; and Fancy&#39;s spells
+ awaken&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">With a vain industry&#8212;the voice of
+ friends:</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">No well-known footstep strikes mine ear
+ forsaken,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">No well-beloved face my heart
+ attends.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">I drink alone; ev&#39;n now, on Neva&#39;s
+ shore,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Haply my name on friendly lips has
+ trembled....</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Round that bright board, say, are ye <i>all</i>
+ assembled?</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Are there no other names ye count no
+ more?</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Has our good custom been betray&#39;d by
+ others?</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Whom hath the cold world lured from ye
+ away?</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Whose voice is silent in the call of
+ brothers?</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Who is not come? Who is not with you?
+ Say!</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14"><i>He</i> is not come, he of the curled
+ hair,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">He of the eye of fire and sweet-voiced
+ numbers:</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Beneath Italia&#39;s myrtle-groves he
+ slumbers;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">He slumbers well, although no friend was
+ there,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Above the lonely grave where he is
+ sleeping,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">A Russian line to trace with pious
+ hand,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">That some sad wanderer might read it,
+ weeping&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Some Russian, wandering in a foreign
+ land.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Art <i>thou</i> too seated in the friendly
+ ring,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">O restless Pilgrim? Haply now thou
+ ridest</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">O&#39;er the long tropic-wave; or now
+ abidest</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">&#39;Mid seas with ice eternal
+ glimmering!</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Thrice happy voyage!... With a jest thou
+ leapedst</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">From the Lyceum&#39;s threshold to thy
+ bark,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Thenceforth thy path aye on the main thou
+ keepedst,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">O child beloved of wave and tempest
+ dark!</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Well hast thou kept, &#39;neath many a stranger
+ sky,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The loves, the hopes of Childhood&#39;s golden
+ hour:</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And old Lyceum scenes, by memory&#39;s
+ power,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">&#39;Mid lonely waves have ris&#39;n before
+ thine eye;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Thou wav&#39;dst thy hand to us from distant
+ ocean,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Ever thy faithful heart its treasure
+ bore;</span><br />
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg
+ 32]</a></span> <span class="i12">&quot;A long farewell!&quot;
+ thou criedst, with fond emotion,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">&quot;Unless our fate hath doom&#39;d we meet
+ no more.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">The bond that binds us, friends, is fair and
+ true!</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Destructless as the soul, and as
+ eternal&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Careless and free, unshakable,
+ fraternal,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Beneath the Muses&#39; friendly shade it
+ grew.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">We are the same: wherever Fate may guide
+ us,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Or Fortune lead&#8212;wherever we may
+ go,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The world is aye a foreign land beside
+ us;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12"><i>Our</i> fatherland is Tsárkoë
+ Seló!</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">From clime to clime, pursued by storm and
+ stress,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">In Destiny&#39;s dark nets long time I
+ wrestled,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Until on Friendship&#39;s lap I fluttering
+ nestled,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And bent my weary head for her
+ caress....</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">With wistful prayers, with visionary
+ grieving,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">With all the trustful hope of early
+ years,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">I sought new friends with zeal and new
+ believing;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">But bitter was their greeting to mine
+ ears.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">And even here, in this lone
+ dwelling-place</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Of desert-storm, of cold, and
+ desolation,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">There was prepared for me a
+ consolation:</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Three of ye here, O friends! did I
+ embrace.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Thou enteredst first the poet&#39;s house of
+ sorrow,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">O Pústchin! thanks be with thee, thanks, and
+ praise</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Ev&#39;n exile&#39;s bitter day from thee could
+ borrow</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The light and joy of old
+ Lyceum-days.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Thee too, my Gortchakóff; although thy
+ name</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Was Fortune&#39;s spell, though her cold gleam
+ was on thee,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Yet from thy noble thoughts she never won
+ thee:</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">To honour and thy fiends thou&#39;rt still the
+ same.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Far different paths of life to us were
+ fated,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Far different roads before our feet were
+ traced,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">In a by-road, but for a moment
+ mated,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">We met by chance, and brotherly
+ embraced.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">When sorrow&#39;s flood o&#39;erwhelmd me, like
+ a sea;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And like an orphan, houseless, poor,
+ unfriended,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">My head beneath the storm I sadly
+ bended,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Seer of the Aonian maids! I look&#39;d for
+ thee:</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Thou camest&#8212;lazy child of
+ inspiration,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">My Délvig; and thy voice awaken&#39;d
+ straight</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">In this numb&#39;d heart the glow of
+ consolation;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And I was comforted, and bless&#39;d my
+ fate.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Even in infancy within us
+ burn&#39;d</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The light of song&#8212;the poet-spell had
+ bound us;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Even in infancy there flitted round
+ us</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Two Muses, whose sweet glamour soon we
+ learn&#39;d.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Even then <i>I</i> loved applause&#8212;that
+ vain delusion!&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12"><i>Thou</i> sang&#39;st but for thy Muse, and
+ for thy heart;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12"><i>I</i> squander&#39;d gifts and life with
+ rash profusion,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12"><i>Thou</i> cherishedst thy gifts in peace
+ apart.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">The worship of the Muse no care
+ beseems;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The Beautiful is calm, and high, and
+ holy;</span><br />
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg
+ 33]</a></span> <span class="i12">Youth is a cunning
+ counsellor&#8212;of folly!&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Lulling our sense with vain and empty
+ dreams....</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Upon the past we gaze&#8212;the same, yet
+ other&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And find no trace.&#8212;We wake, alas! too
+ late.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Was it not so with us, Délvig, my
+ brother?&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">My brother in our Muse as in our
+ fate!</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">&#39;Tis time, &#39;tis time! Let us once more
+ be free!</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The world&#39;s not worth this torturing
+ resistance!</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Beneath retirement&#39;s shade will glide
+ existence&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Thee, my belated friend&#8212;I wait for
+ thee!</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Come! with the flame of an enchanted
+ story</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Tradition&#39;s lore shall wake, our hearts to
+ move;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">We&#39;ll talk of Caucasus, of war, of
+ glory,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Of Schiller, and of genius, and of
+ love.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">&#39;Tis time no less for me ... Friends, feast
+ amain!</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Behold, a joyful meeting is before
+ us;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Think of the poet&#39;s prophecy; for o&#39;er
+ us</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">A year shall pass, and we shall meet
+ again!</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">My vision&#39;s covenant shall have
+ fulfilling;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">A year&#8212;and I shall be with ye once
+ more!</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Oh, then, what shouts, what hand-grasps warm
+ and thrilling!</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">What goblets skyward heaved with merry
+ roar!</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Unto our Union consecrated be</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The first we drain&#8212;fill higher yet, and
+ higher!</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Bless it, O Muse, in strains of raptured
+ fire!</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Bless it! All hail, Lyceum! hail to
+ thee!&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">To those who led our youth with care and
+ praises,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Living and dead! the next we grateful
+ fill;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Let each, as to his lips the cup he
+ raises,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The good remember, and forget the
+ ill.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Feast, then, while we are here, while yet we
+ may:</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Hour after hour, alas! Time thins our
+ numbers;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">One pines afar, one in the coffin
+ slumbers;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Days fly; Fate looks on us; we fade
+ away;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Bending insensibly to earth, and
+ chilling,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">We near our starting-place with many a
+ groan....</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Whose lot will be in old age to be
+ filling,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">On this Lyceum-day, his cup
+ <i>alone</i>?</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Unhappy friend! Amid a stranger
+ race,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Like guest intrusive, that superfluous
+ lingers,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">He&#39;ll think of us that day, with quivering
+ fingers</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Hiding the tears that wet his wrinkled
+ face....</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">O, may he then at least, in mournful
+ gladness,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Pass with his cup this day for ever
+ dear,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">As even I, in exile and in
+ sadness,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Yet with a fleeting joy, have pass&#39;d it
+ here!</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+ <p>In the following lines, the poet has endeavoured to reproduce the
+ impressions made upon his mind by the mountain scenery of the
+ Caucasus; scenery which he had visited with such rapture, and to
+ which his imagination returned with undiminished delight. It has been
+ our aim to endeavour, in our translation, to give an echo, however
+ feeble and imperfect, of the wild and airy <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> freedom
+ of the versification which distinguishes these spirited stanzas. The
+ picture which they contain, rough, sketchy, and unfinished, as it may
+ appear, bears every mark of being a faithful copy from nature&#8212;a
+ study taken on the spot; and will therefore, we trust, be not
+ unacceptable to our readers, as calculated to give an idea not only
+ of the vigorous and rapid <i>handling</i> of the poet&#39;s pencil,
+ but also of the wild and sublime region&#8212;the Switzerland of
+ Russia&#8212;which he has here essayed to portray. Of the two furious
+ and picturesque torrents which Púshkin has mentioned in this short
+ poem, Térek is certainly too well known to our geographical readers
+ to need any description of its course from the snow-covered peak of
+ Dariál to the Caspian; and the bold comparison in the last stanza
+ will doubtless be found, though perhaps somewhat exaggerated, not
+ deficient in a kind of fierce Æschylean energy, perfectly in
+ character with the violent and thundering course of the torrent
+ itself:&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class='smcapcenter'>
+ Caucasus.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Beneath me the peaks of the Caucasus
+ lie,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">My gaze from the snow-bordered cliff I am
+ bending;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">From her sun-lighted eyry the Eagle
+ ascending</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Floats movelessly on in a line with mine
+ eye.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">I see the young torrent&#39;s first leap
+ towards the ocean,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And the cliff-cradled lawine essay its first
+ motion.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Beneath me the clouds in their silentness
+ go,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The cataract through them in thunder
+ down-dashing,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Far beneath them bare peaks in the sunny ray
+ flashing,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Weak moss and dry shrubs I can mark yet
+ below.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Dark thickets still lower&#8212;green meadows
+ are blooming,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Where the throstle is singing, and reindeer are
+ roaming.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Here man, too, has nested his hut, and the
+ flocks</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">On the long grassy slopes in their quiet are
+ feeding,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And down to the valley the shepherd is
+ speeding,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Where Arágva gleams out from her wood-crested
+ rocks.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And there in his crags the poor robber is
+ hiding,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And Térek in anger is wrestling and
+ chiding.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Like a fierce young Wild Beast, how he bellows
+ and raves,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Like that Beast from his cage when his prey he
+ espieth;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">&#39;Gainst the bank, like a Wrestler, he
+ struggleth and plyeth,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And licks at the rock with his ravening
+ waves.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">In vain, thou wild River! dumb cliffs are
+ around thee,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And sternly and grimly their bondage hath bound
+ thee.</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+ <p>To those who measure the value of a poem, less by the pretension
+ and ambitiousness of its form, than by the completeness of its
+ execution and the skill with which the leading idea is developed, we
+ think that the graceful little production which we are now about to
+ present to the reader, will possess very considerable interest. It
+ is, it is true, no more important a thing than a mere song; but the
+ naturalness and unity of the fundamental thought, and the happy
+ employment of what is undoubtedly one of the most effective artifices
+ at the command of the lyric writer&#8212;we mean
+ repetition&#8212;render the following lines worthy of the universal
+ admiration which they have obtained in the original, and may not be
+ devoid of charm in the translation:&#8212;</p><span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+
+ <div class='smcapcenter'>
+ To * * *
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Yes! I remember well our meeting,</span><br />
+ <span class="i16">When first thou dawnedst on my
+ sight,</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">Like some fair phantom past me
+ fleeting,</span><br />
+ <span class="i16">Some nymph of purity and light.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">By weary agonies surrounded,</span><br />
+ <span class="i16">&#39;Mid toil, &#39;mid mean and noisy
+ care,</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">Long in mine ear thy soft voice
+ sounded,</span><br />
+ <span class="i16">Long dream&#39;d I of thy features
+ fair.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Years flew; Fate&#39;s blast blew ever
+ stronger,</span><br />
+ <span class="i16">Scattering mine early dreams to
+ air,</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">And thy soft voice I heard no
+ longer&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i16">No longer saw thy features fair.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">In exile&#39;s silent desolation</span><br />
+ <span class="i16">Slowly dragg&#39;d on the days for
+ me&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">Orphan&#39;d of life, of
+ inspiration,</span><br />
+ <span class="i16">Of tears, of love, of deity.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">I woke&#8212;once more my heart was
+ beating&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i16">Once more thou dawnedst on my
+ sight,</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">Like some fair phantom past me
+ fleeting,</span><br />
+ <span class="i16">Some nymph of purity and light.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">My heart has found its
+ consolation&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i16">All has revived once more for
+ me&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">And vanish&#39;d life, and
+ inspiration,</span><br />
+ <span class="i16">And tears, and love, and deity.</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+ <p>The versification of the following little poem is founded on a
+ system which Púshkin seems to have looked upon with peculiar favour,
+ as he has employed the same metrical arrangement in by far the
+ largest proportion of his poetical works. So gracefully and so
+ easily, indeed, has he wielded this metre, and with so flexible, so
+ delicate, and so masterly a hand, that we could not refrain from
+ attempting to imitate it in our English version; for we considered
+ that it is impossible to say how much of the peculiar
+ <i>character</i> of a poet&#39;s writings depends upon the colouring,
+ or rather the <i>touch</i>&#8212;if we may borrow a phrase from the
+ vocabulary of the critic in painting&#8212;of the metre. Undoubtedly
+ a poet is the best judge not only of the kind, but of the degree of
+ the effect which he wishes to produce upon his reader; and there may
+ be, between the thoughts which he desires to embody, and the peculiar
+ harmonies in which he may determine to clothe those thoughts,
+ analogies and sympathies too delicate for our grosser ears; or, at
+ least, if not too subtle and refined for our ears to perceive, yet
+ far too delicate for us to define, or exactly to appreciate. Moved by
+ this reasoning, we have always preferred to follow, as nearly as we
+ could, the exact versification, and even the most minute varieties of
+ tone and metrical accentuation. Inattention to this point is
+ undoubtedly the stumbling-block of translators in general; of the
+ dangerous consequences of such inattention, it is not necessary to
+ give any elaborate proof. How much, we may ask, does not the poetry
+ of Dante, for instance, lose, by being despoiled of that great source
+ of its peculiar effect springing from the employment of the
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg
+ 36]</a></span> <i>terza rima</i>! It is in vain to say, that it is
+ enormously difficult to produce the <i>terza rima</i> in English. To
+ translate the &quot;gran padre Alighier&quot; into English
+ <i>worthily</i>, the <i>terza rima must</i> be employed, whatever be
+ the obstacles presented by the dissimilarities existing between the
+ Italian and English languages.</p>
+
+ <div class='smcapcenter'>
+ The Mob.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class='center'>
+ &quot;Procul este, profani!&quot;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">A Poet o&#39;er his glowing lyre</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">A wild and careless hand had
+ flung.</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">The base, cold crowd, that nought
+ admire,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Stood round, responseless to his
+ fire,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">With heavy eye and mocking tongue.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">&quot;And why so loudly is he
+ singing?&quot;</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">(&#39;Twas thus that idiot mob
+ replied,)</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">&quot;His music in our ears is
+ ringing;</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">But whither flows that music&#39;s
+ tide?</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">What doth it teach? His art is
+ madness!</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">He moves our soul to joy or
+ sadness.</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">A wayward necromantic spell!</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Free as the breeze his music
+ floweth,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">But fruitless, too, as breeze that
+ bloweth,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">What doth it profit, Poet,
+ tell?&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i12"><span class='smcap'>Poet</span>.&#8212;Cease,
+ idiot, cease thy loathsome cant!</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Day-labourer, slave of toil and
+ want!</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">I hate thy babble vain and hollow.</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Thou art a worm, no child of day:</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Thy god is Profit&#8212;thou wouldst
+ weigh</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">By pounds the Belvidere Apollo.</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Gain&#8212;gain alone to thee is
+ sweet.</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">The marble is a god! ... what of
+ it</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Thou count&#39;st a pie-dish far above
+ it&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">A dish wherein to cook thy meat!</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i12"><span class='smcap'>Mob</span>.&#8212;But, if
+ thou be&#39;st the Elect of Heaven,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">The gift that God has largely
+ given,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Thou shouldst then for our good
+ impart,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">To purify thy brother&#39;s heart.</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Yes, we are base, and vile, and
+ hateful,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Cruel, and shameless, and
+ ungrateful&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Impotent and heartless tools,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Slaves, and slanderers, and fools.</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Come then, if charity doth sway
+ thee,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Chase from our hearts the
+ viper-brood;</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">However stern, we will obey thee;</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Yes, we will listen, and be good!</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i12"><span class='smcap'>Poet</span>.&#8212;Begone,
+ begone! What common feeling</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Can e&#39;er exist &#39;twixt ye and
+ me?</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Go on, your souls in vices
+ steeling;</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">The lyre&#39;s sweet voice is dumb to
+ ye:</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Go! foul as reek of charnel-slime,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">In every age, in every clime,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Ye aye have felt, and yet ye feel,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Scourge, dungeon, halter, axe, and
+ wheel.</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Go, hearts of sin and heads of
+ trifling,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">From your vile streets, so foul and
+ stifling,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">They sweep the dirt&#8212;no useless
+ trade!</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">But when, their robes with ordure
+ staining,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Altar and sacrifice disdaining,</span><br />
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg
+ 37]</a></span> <span class="i18">Did e&#39;er your <i>priests</i>
+ ply broom and spade?</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">&#39;Twas not for life&#39;s base
+ agitation</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">That <i>we</i> were born&#8212;for gain nor
+ care&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">No&#8212;we were born for
+ inspiration,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">For love, for music, and for
+ prayer!</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="squished" style='width: 45%;' />
+
+ <p>The ballad entitled &quot;The Black Shawl&quot; has obtained a
+ degree of popularity among the author&#39;s countrymen, for which the
+ slightness of the composition renders it in some measure difficult to
+ account. It may, perhaps, be explained by the circumstance, that the
+ verses are in the original exceedingly well adapted to be
+ sung&#8212;one of the highest merits of this class of
+ poetry&#8212;for all ancient ballads, in every language throughout
+ the world, were specifically intended to be sung or chanted; and all
+ modern productions, therefore, written in imitation of these ancient
+ compositions&#8212;the first lispings of the Muse&#8212;can only be
+ successful in proportion as they possess the essential and
+ characteristic quality of being capable of being sung. Independently
+ of the highly musical arrangement of the rhythm, which, in the
+ original, distinguishes &quot;The Black Shawl,&quot; the following
+ verses cannot be denied the merit of relating, in a few rapid and
+ energetic measures, a simple and striking story of Oriental love,
+ vengeance, and remorse:&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class='smcapcenter'>
+ The Black Shawl.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Like a madman I gaze on a raven-black
+ shawl;</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">Remorse, fear, and anguish&#8212;this heart
+ knows them all.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">When believing and fond, in the spring-time of
+ youth,</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">I loved a Greek maiden with tenderest
+ truth.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">That fair one caress&#39;d me&#8212;my life!
+ oh, &#39;twas bright,</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">But it set&#8212;that fair day&#8212;in a
+ hurricane night.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">One day I had bidden young guests, a gay
+ crew,</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">When sudden there knock&#39;d at my gate a vile
+ Jew.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">&quot;With guests thou art feasting,&quot; he
+ whisperingly said,</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">&quot;And <i>she</i> hath betray&#39;d
+ thee&#8212;thy young Grecian maid.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">I cursed him, and gave him good guerdon of
+ gold,</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">And call&#39;d me a slave that was trusty and
+ bold.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">&quot;Ho! my charger&#8212;my charger!&quot; we
+ mount, we depart,</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">And soft pity whisper&#39;d in vain at my
+ heart.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">On the Greek maiden&#39;s threshold in frenzy I
+ stood&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">I was faint&#8212;and the sun seem&#39;d as
+ darken&#39;d with blood:</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">By the maiden&#39;s lone window I listen&#39;d,
+ and there</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">I beheld an Armenian caressing the
+ fair.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">The light darken&#39;d round me&#8212;then
+ flash&#39;d my good blade....</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">The minion ne&#39;er finish&#39;d the kiss that
+ betray&#39;d.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">On the corse of the minion in fury I
+ danced,</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">Then silent and pale at the maiden I
+ glanced.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">I remember the prayers and the red-bursting
+ stream....</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">Thus perish&#39;d the maiden&#8212;thus
+ perish&#39;d my dream.</span><br />
+ </div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg
+ 38]</a></span>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">This raven-black shawl from her dead brow I
+ tore&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">On its fold from my dagger I wiped off the
+ gore.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">The mists of the evening arose, and my
+ slave</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">Hurl&#39;d the corses of both in the
+ Danube&#39;s dark wave.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Since then, I kiss never the maid&#39;s eyes of
+ light&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">Since then, I know never the soft joys of
+ night.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i14">Like a madman I gaze on the raven-black
+ shawl;</span><br />
+ <span class="i14">Remorse, fear, and anguish&#8212;this heart
+ knows them all!</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+ <p>The pretty lines which we are now about to offer, are rather
+ remarkable as being written in the manner of the ancient national
+ songs of Russia, than for any thing very new in the ideas, or very
+ striking in the expression. They possess, however&#8212;at least in
+ the original&#8212;a certain charm arising from simplicity and
+ grace.</p>
+
+ <div class='smcapcenter'>
+ The Rose.
+ </div>.<br />
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">Where is our rose, friends?</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Tell if ye may!</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Faded the rose, friends,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">The Dawn-child of Day.</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Ah, do not say,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Such is youth&#39;s fleetness!</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Ah, do not say,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Thus fades life&#39;s sweetness!</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">No, rather say,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">I mourn thee, rose&#8212;farewell!</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Now to the lily-bell</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Flit we away.</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+ <p>Among the thousand-and-one compositions, in all languages, founded
+ upon the sublime theme of the downfall and death of Napoleon, there
+ are, we think, very few which have surpassed, in weight of thought,
+ in splendour of diction, and in grandeur of versification,
+ Púshkin&#39;s noble lyric upon this subject. The mighty share which
+ Russia had in overthrowing the gigantic power of the greatest of
+ modern conquerors, could not fail of affording to a Russian poet a
+ peculiar source of triumphant yet not too exulting inspiration; and
+ Púshkin, in that portion of the following ode in which he is led more
+ particularly to allude to the part played by his country in the
+ sublime drama, whose catastrophe was the ruin of Bonaparte&#39;s
+ blood-cemented empire, has given undeniable proof of his possessing
+ that union of magnanimity and patriotism, which is not the meanest
+ characteristic of elevated genius. While the poet gives full way to
+ the triumphant feelings so naturally inspired by the exploits of
+ Russian valour, and by the patient fortitude of Russian policy, he
+ wisely and nobly abstains on indulging in any of those outbursts of
+ gratified revenge and national hatred which deform the pages of
+ almost all&#8212;poets, and even historians&#8212;who have written on
+ this colossal subject.</p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id=
+ "Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+
+ <div class='smcapcenter'>
+ Napoleon.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">The wondrous destiny is ended,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">The mighty light is quench&#39;d and
+ dead;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">In storm and darkness hath
+ descended</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Napoleon&#39;s sun, so bright and
+ dread.</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">The captive King hath burst his
+ prison&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">The petted child of Victory;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">And for the Exile hath arisen</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">The dawning of Posterity.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">O thou, of whose immortal story</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Earth aye the memory shall keep,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Now, &#39;neath the shadow of thy
+ glory</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Rest, rest, amid the lonely deep!</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">A grave sublime ... nor nobler
+ ever</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Couldst thou have found ... for o&#39;er thine
+ urn</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">The Nations&#39; hate is quench&#39;d for
+ ever,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">And Glory&#39;s beacon-ray shall
+ burn.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">There was a time thine eagles
+ tower&#39;d</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Resistless o&#39;er the humbled
+ world;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">There was a time the empires
+ cower&#39;d</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Before the bolt thy hand had
+ hurl&#39;d:</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">The standards, thy proud will
+ obeying,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Flapp&#39;d wrath and woe on every
+ wind&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">A few short years, and thou wert
+ laying</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Thine iron yoke on human kind.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+
+
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">And France, on glories vain and
+ hollow,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Had fixed her frenzy-glance of
+ flame&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Forgot sublimer hopes, to follow</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Thee, Conqueror, thee&#8212;her dazzling
+ shame!</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Thy legions&#39; swords with blood were
+ drunken&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">All sank before thine echoing
+ tread;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">And Europe fell&#8212;for sleep was
+ sunken,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">The sleep of death&#8212;upon her
+ head.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">Thou mightst have judged us, but thou wouldst
+ not!</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">What dimm&#39;d thy reason&#39;s piercing
+ light,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">That Russian hearts thou understoodst
+ not,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">From thine heroic spirit&#39;s
+ height?</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Moscow&#39;s immortal
+ conflagration</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Foreseeing not, thou deem&#39;dst that
+ we</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Would kneel for peace, a conquer&#39;d
+ nation&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Thou knew&#39;st the Russ ... too late for
+ thee!</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">Up, Russia! Queen of hundred
+ battles,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Remember now thine ancient right!</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">Blaze, Moscow!&#8212;Far shall shine thy
+ light!</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Lo! other times are dawning o&#39;er
+ us:</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Be blotted out, our short
+ disgrace!</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Swell, Russia, swell the battle
+ chorus!</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">War! is the watchword of our race!</span><br />
+ </div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg
+ 40]</a></span>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">Lo! how the baffled leader
+ seizeth,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">With fetter&#39;d hands, his Iron
+ Crown&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">A dread abyss his spirit freezeth!</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Down, down he goes, to ruin down!</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">And Europe&#39;s armaments are
+ driven,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Like mist, along the blood-stain&#39;d
+ snow&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">That snow shall melt &#39;neath summer&#39;s
+ heaven,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">With the last footstep of the foe.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">&#39;Twas a wild storm of fear and
+ wonder,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">When Europe woke and burst her
+ chain;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">The accursed race, like scatter&#39;d
+ thunder,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">After the tyrant fled amain.</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">And Nemesis a doom hath spoken,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">The Mighty hears that doom with
+ dread:</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">The wrongs thou&#39;st done shall now be
+ wroken,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Tyrant, upon thy guilty head!</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">Thou shalt redeem thy usurpation,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Thy long career of war and crime,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">In exile&#39;s eating desolation,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Beneath a far and stranger clime.</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">And oft the midnight sail shall
+ wander</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">By that lone isle, thy
+ prison-place,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">And oft a stranger there shall
+ ponder,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">And o&#39;er that stone a pardon
+ trace,</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">Where mused the Exile, oft
+ recalling</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">The well-known clang of sword and
+ lance,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">The yells, Night&#39;s icy ear
+ appalling;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">His own blue sky&#8212;the sky of
+ France;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Where, in his loneliness
+ forgetting</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">His broken sword, his ruin&#39;d
+ throne,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">With bitter grief, with vain
+ regretting,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">On his fair Boy he mused alone.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">But shame, and curses without
+ number,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Upon that reptile head be laid,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Whose insults now shall vex the
+ slumber</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Of him&#8212;that sad discrowned
+ shade!</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">No! for his trump the signal
+ sounded,</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Her glorious race when Russia ran;</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">His hand, &#39;mid strife and battle,
+ founded</span><br />
+ <span class="i20">Eternal liberty for man!</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+ <p>The next specimen for which we have to request the indulgence of
+ our readers, is a little composition of a very different and much
+ less ambitious character. The idea is simple enough, and not, we
+ think, entirely devoid of originality&#8212;the primary object of
+ every translator in the selection of the subjects on which he is to
+ exercise his dexterity.</p>
+
+ <div class='smcapcenter'>
+ The Storm.
+ </div>.<br />
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i20">See, on yon rock, a maiden&#39;s
+ form,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Far o&#39;er the wave a white robe
+ flashing,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Around, before the blackening
+ storm,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">On the loud beach the billows
+ dashing;</span><br />
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg
+ 41]</a></span> <span class="i18">Along the waves, now red, now
+ pale,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">The lightning-glare incessant
+ gleameth;</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Whirling and fluttering in the
+ gale,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">The snowy robe incessant
+ streameth;</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Fair is that sea in blackening
+ storm,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">And fair that sky with lightnings
+ riven,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">But fairer far that maiden form,</span><br />
+ <span class="i18">Than wave, or flash, or stormy
+ heaven!</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+ <p>We now come to one of the most remarkable lyric productions of our
+ Poet&#39;s genius, the &quot;General;&quot; and in order that our
+ readers may be enabled to understand and appreciate this exquisite
+ little poem, we shall preface it with a few remarks of an explanatory
+ character; as the <i>details</i>, at least, of the events upon which
+ it is founded may not be so generally known in England as they are in
+ Russia. Our English readers, however, are doubtless sufficiently
+ familiar with the history of the great campaign of the year 1812,
+ which led to the burning of Moscow, and to the consequent
+ annihilation of the mighty army which Napoleon led to perish in the
+ snows of Russia, to remember one remarkable episode connected with
+ that most important campaign. They remember that one of the Russian
+ armies was placed under the command of Field-marshal Barclay de
+ Tolly, a general descended from an ancient Scottish family which had
+ been settled for some generations in Russia, but who was in every
+ respect to be considered as a native Russian, being born a subject of
+ the Tsar, and having, during a long life of service in the Russian
+ army, gradually reached the highest military rank, and acquired a
+ well-earned and universal reputation as an able strategist and a
+ brave man. The mode of operations determined on at the beginning of
+ this most momentous struggle, and persevered in throughout by the
+ Russians, with a patience and steadiness no less admirable than the
+ wisdom of the combinations on which they were founded, was a purely
+ defensive system of tactics. The event amply demonstrated the
+ soundness of the principles upon which those operations were based;
+ for while Napoleon was gradually attracted into the interior of the
+ country by armies which perpetually retired before him without giving
+ him the opportunity of coming to a general action, the autumn was
+ gradually passing away, and the flames of Moscow only served to light
+ up, for the French army, the beginning of their hopeless retreat
+ through a country now totally laid waste, and covered with the snows
+ of a Russian winter. This mode of operations, however, was by no
+ means likely to please the population of Russia, infuriated by the
+ long unaccustomed presence of a hostile army within their sacred
+ frontier, and worked up by all the circumstances of the invasion to
+ the highest pitch of patriotic enthusiasm. Unable to appreciate the
+ value of what must have appeared to them a timid and pusillanimous
+ policy, they overwhelmed Barclay de Tolly with violent accusations of
+ cowardice, and even of treachery; rendered the more plausible to the
+ mind of the ignorant, by the circumstance of their object being a
+ foreigner&#8212;or at least of foreign blood. So violent ultimately
+ became these accusations, that although the Field-marshal continued
+ to enjoy the highest confidence and esteem of his sovereign, it was
+ found expedient to allow him to resign the chief command, in which he
+ was succeeded by Kutúzoff. Barclay de Tolly, during the greater part
+ of the campaign, fought as a simple general of division, in which
+ character (as Púshkin describes) he took part in the great battle of
+ Borodíno.</p>
+
+ <p>Barclay must still be considered as one of those distinguished
+ persons to whose memory justice has never been entirely done; and to
+ do this justice was Púshkin&#39;s generous task in the noble lines
+ which follow these remarks. No traveller has ever visited the winter
+ palace of St Petersburg without <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span> having been struck with the
+ celebrated &quot;Hall of Marshals,&quot; which forms one of its most
+ imposing features. In this magnificent room are placed the portraits
+ (chiefly painted by Dawe, an English artist, who passed the greater
+ part of his life in Russia) of the Russian generals who figured in
+ that great campaign; and among them is to be found, of course, the
+ &quot;counterfeit presentment&quot; of Barclay de Tolly, painted, as
+ the field-marshals are in every case in this gallery of portraits, at
+ full length. With respect to the versification of this and several
+ other poems which we have selected, the English reader will not
+ perhaps at first remark that it is nothing more than the measure used
+ by old Drayton in the <i>Polyolbion</i>, and one in which a great
+ deal of the earlier English poetry is written. It is very favourite
+ measure of our Russian poet, who has, however, increased, in some
+ degree, its difficulty for an English versifier, by introducing a
+ great number of double terminations. It will be found, indeed, that
+ these double rhymes are as numerous as the single or monosyllabic
+ ones.</p>
+
+ <div class='smcapcenter'>
+ The General.
+ </div>.<br />
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i12">In the Tsar&#39;s palace stands a hall right
+ nobly builded;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Its walls are neither carved, nor velvet-hung,
+ nor gilded,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Nor here beneath the glass doth pearl or
+ diamond glow;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">But wheresoe&#39;er ye look, around, above,
+ below,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The quick-eyed Painter&#39;s hand, now bold,
+ now softly tender,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">From his free pencil here hath shed a magic
+ splendour.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Here are no village nymphs, no dewy
+ forest-glades,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">No fauns with giddy cups, no snowy-bosom&#39;d
+ maids,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">No hunting-scene, no dance; but cloaks, and
+ plumes, and sabres,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And faces sternly still, and dark with
+ hero-labours.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The Painter&#39;s art hath here in glittering
+ crowd portray&#39;d</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The chiefs who Russia&#39;s line to victory
+ array&#39;d;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Chiefs in that great Campaign attired in
+ fadeless glory</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Of the year Twelve, that aye shall live in
+ Russian story.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Here oft in musing mood my silent footstep
+ strays,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Before these well-known forms I love to stop
+ and gaze,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And dream I hear their voice, &#39;mid
+ battle-thunder ringing.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Some of them are no more; and some, with faces
+ flinging</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Upon the canvass still Youth&#39;s fresh and
+ rosy bloom,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Are wrinkled now and old, and bending to the
+ tomb</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The laurel-wreathed brow.</span><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 14em;">But chiefly One doth win
+ me</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">&#39;Mid the stern throng. With new thoughts
+ swelling in me</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Before that One I stand, and cannot lightly
+ brook</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">To take mine eye from him. And still, the more
+ I look,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The more within my breast is bitterness
+ awaked.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i12">He&#39;s painted at full length. His brow,
+ austere and naked,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Shines like a fleshless skull, and on it ye may
+ mark</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">A mighty weight of woe. Around him&#8212;all is
+ dark;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Behind, a tented field. Tranquil and stern he
+ raises</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">His mournful eye, and with contemptuous
+ calmness gazes.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Be&#39;t that the artist here embodied his own
+ thought,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">When on the canvass thus the lineaments he
+ caught,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Or guided and inspired by some unknown
+ Possession&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">I know not: Dawe has drawn the man with this
+ expression.</span><br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i12">Unhappy chief! Alas, thy cup was full of
+ gall;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Unto a foreign land thou sacrificedst
+ all.</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The savage mob&#39;s dull glance of hate thou
+ calmly balkedst,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">With thy great thoughts alone and silently thou
+ walkedst;</span><br />
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg
+ 43]</a></span> <span class="i12">The people could not brook thy
+ foreign-sounding name,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Pursued thee with its yell, and piled thy head
+ with shame,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And by thy very hand though saved from ill and
+ danger,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Mock&#39;d at thy sacred age&#8212;thou
+ hoary-headed stranger!</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And even <i>he</i>, whose soul could read thy
+ noble heart,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">To please that idiot mob, blamed thee with
+ cruel art....</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And long with patient faith, defying doubt and
+ terror,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Thou heldest on unmoved, spite of a
+ people&#39;s error;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And, e&#39;er thy race was run, wert forced at
+ last to yield</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">The well-earned laurel-wreath of many a bloody
+ field,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Fame, power, and deep-thought plans; and with
+ thy sword beside thee</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Within a regiment&#39;s ranks, alone, obscure,
+ to hide thee,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">And there, a veteran chief, like some young
+ sentinel,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">When first upon his ear rings the ball&#39;s
+ whistling knell,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Thou rushedst &#39;mid the fire, a
+ warrior&#39;s death desiring&#8212;</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">In vain!&#8212;</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i12">O men! O wretched race! O worthy tears and
+ laughter!</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Priests of the moment&#39;s god, ne&#39;er
+ thinking of hereafter!</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">How oft among ye, men! a mighty one is
+ seen,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Whom the blind age pursues with insults mad and
+ mean,</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">But gazing on whose face, some future
+ generation</span><br />
+ <span class="i12">Shall feel, as I do now, regret and
+ admiration!</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <a name="Page_43a" id="Page_43a"></a>
+ <span class='pagenum'></span>
+
+ <h2><a name=
+ "SUSPIRIA_DE_PROFUNDIS_BEING_A_SEQUEL_TO_THE_CONFESSIONS_OF_AN_ENGLISH"
+ id=
+ "SUSPIRIA_DE_PROFUNDIS_BEING_A_SEQUEL_TO_THE_CONFESSIONS_OF_AN_ENGLISH">
+ </a>SUSPIRIA DE PROFUNDIS; BEING A SEQUEL TO THE CONFESSIONS OF AN
+ ENGLISH OPIUM-EATER.</h2>
+
+ <h3>PART II.</h3>
+
+ <p>The Oxford visions, of which some have been given, were but
+ anticipations necessary to illustrate the glimpse opened of
+ childhood, (as being its reaction.) In this <span class=
+ 'smcap'>Second</span> part, returning from that anticipation, I
+ retrace an abstract of my boyish and youthful days so far as they
+ furnished or exposed the germs of later experiences in worlds more
+ shadowy.</p>
+
+ <p>Upon me, as upon others scattered thinly by tens and twenties over
+ every thousand years, fell too powerfully and too early the vision of
+ life. The horror of life mixed itself already in earliest youth with
+ the heavenly sweetness of life; that grief, which one in a hundred
+ has sensibility enough to gather from the sad retrospect of life in
+ its closing stage, for me shed its dews as a prelibation upon the
+ fountains of life whilst yet sparkling to the morning sun. I saw from
+ afar and from before what I was to see from behind. Is this the
+ description of an early youth passed in the shades of gloom? No, but
+ of a youth passed in the divinest happiness. And if the reader has
+ (which so few have) the passion, without which there is no reading of
+ the legend and superscription upon man&#39;s brow, if he is not (as
+ most are) deafer than the grave to every <i>deep</i> note that sighs
+ upwards from the Delphic caves of human life, he will know that the
+ rapture of life (or any thing which by approach can merit that name)
+ does not arise, unless as perfect music arises&#8212;music of Mozart
+ or Beethoven&#8212;by the confluence of the mighty and terrific
+ discords with the subtle concords. Not by contrast, or as reciprocal
+ foils do these elements act, which is the feeble conception of many,
+ but by union. They are the sexual forces in music: &quot;male and
+ female created he them;&quot; and these mighty antagonists do not put
+ forth their hostilities by repulsion, but by deepest attraction.</p>
+
+ <p>As &quot;in to-day already walks to-morrow,&quot; <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> so in the
+ past experience of a youthful life may be seen dimly the future. The
+ collisions with alien interests or hostile views, of a child, boy, or
+ very young man, so insulated as each of these is sure to
+ be,&#8212;those aspects of opposition which such a person <i>can</i>
+ occupy, are limited by the exceedingly few and trivial lines of
+ connexion along which he is able to radiate any essential influence
+ whatever upon the fortunes or happiness of others. Circumstances may
+ magnify his importance for the moment; but, after all, any cable
+ which he carries out upon other vessels is easily slipped upon a feud
+ arising. Far otherwise is the state of relations connecting an adult
+ or responsible man with the circles around him as life advances. The
+ network of these relations is a thousand times more intricate, the
+ jarring of these intricate relations a thousand times more frequent,
+ and the vibrations a thousand times harsher which these jarrings
+ diffuse. This truth is felt beforehand misgivingly and in troubled
+ vision, by a young man who stands upon the threshold of manhood. One
+ earliest instinct of fear and horror would darken his spirit if it
+ could be revealed to itself and self-questioned at the moment of
+ birth: a second instinct of the sane nature would again pollute that
+ tremulous mirror, if the moment were as punctually marked as physical
+ birth is marked, which dismisses him finally upon the tides of
+ absolute self-control. A dark ocean would seem the total expanse of
+ life from the first: but far darker and more appalling would seem
+ that interior and second chamber of the ocean which called him away
+ for ever on the direct accountability of others. Dreadful would be
+ the morning which should say&#8212;&quot;Be thou a human child
+ incarnate;&quot; but more dreadful the morning which should
+ say&#8212;&quot;Bear thou henceforth the sceptre of thy self-dominion
+ through life, and the passion of life!&quot; Yes, dreadful would be
+ both: but without a basis of the dreadful there is no perfect
+ rapture. It is a part through the sorrow of life, growing out of its
+ events, that this basis of awe and solemn darkness slowly
+ accumulates. <i>That</i> I have illustrated. But, as life expands, it
+ is more through the <i>strife</i> which besets us, strife from
+ conflicting opinions, positions, passions, interests, that the
+ funereal ground settles and deposits itself, which sends upward the
+ dark lustrous brilliancy through the jewel of life&#8212;else
+ revealing a pale and superficial glitter. Either the human being must
+ suffer and struggle as the price of a more searching vision, or his
+ gaze must be shallow and without intellectual revelation.</p>
+
+ <p>Through accident it was in part, and, where through no accident
+ but my own nature, not through features of it at all painful to
+ recollect, that constantly in early life (that is, from boyish days
+ until eighteen, when by going to Oxford, practically I became my own
+ master) I was engaged in duels of fierce continual struggle, with
+ some person or body of persons, that sought, like the Roman
+ <i>retiarius</i>, to throw a net of deadly coercion or constraint
+ over the undoubted rights of my natural freedom. The steady rebellion
+ upon my part in one-half, was a mere human reaction of justifiable
+ indignation; but in the other half it was the struggle of a
+ conscientious nature&#8212;disdaining to feel it as any mere right or
+ discretional privilege&#8212;no, feeling it as the noblest of duties
+ to resist, though it should be mortally, those that would have
+ enslaved me, and to retort scorn upon those that would have put my
+ head below their feet. Too much, even in later life, I have perceived
+ in men that pass for good men, a disposition to degrade (and if
+ possible to degrade through self-degradation) those in whom
+ unwillingly they feel any weight of oppression to themselves, by
+ commanding qualities of intellect or character. They respect you:
+ they are compelled to do so: and they hate to do so. Next, therefore,
+ they seek to throw off the sense of this oppression, and to take
+ vengeance for it, by co-operating with any unhappy accidents in your
+ life, to inflict a sense of humiliation upon you, and (if possible)
+ to force you into becoming a consenting party to that humiliation.
+ Oh, wherefore is it that those who presume to call themselves the
+ &quot;friends&quot; of this man or that woman, are so often those
+ above all others, whom <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id=
+ "Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> in the hour of death that man or woman
+ is most likely to salute with the valediction&#8212;Would God I had
+ never seen your face?</p>
+
+ <p>In citing one or two cases of these early struggles, I have
+ chiefly in view the effect of these upon my subsequent visions under
+ the reign of opium. And this indulgent reflection should accompany
+ the mature reader through all such records of boyish inexperience. A
+ good tempered-man, who is also acquainted with the world, will easily
+ evade, without needing any artifice of servile obsequiousness, those
+ quarrels which an upright simplicity, jealous of its own rights, and
+ unpractised in the science of worldly address, cannot always evade
+ without some loss of self-respect. Suavity in this manner may, it is
+ true, be reconciled with firmness in the matter; but not easily by a
+ young person who wants all the appropriate resources of knowledge, of
+ adroit and guarded language, for making his good temper available.
+ Men are protected from insult and wrong, not merely by their own
+ skill, but also in the absence of any skill at all, by the general
+ spirit of forbearance to which society has trained all those whom
+ they are likely to meet. But boys meeting with no such forbearance or
+ training in other boys, must sometimes be thrown upon feuds in the
+ ratio of their own firmness, much more than in the ratio of any
+ natural proneness to quarrel. Such a subject, however, will be best
+ illustrated by a sketch or two of my own principal feuds.</p>
+
+ <p>The first, but merely transient and playful, nor worth noticing at
+ all, but for its subsequent resurrection under other and awful
+ colouring in my dreams, grew out of an imaginary slight, as I viewed
+ it, put upon me by one of my guardians. I had four guardians: and the
+ one of these who had the most knowledge and talent of the whole, a
+ banker, living about a hundred miles from my home, had invited me
+ when eleven years old to his house. His eldest daughter, perhaps a
+ year younger than myself, wore at that time upon her very lovely face
+ the most angelic expression of character and temper that I have
+ almost ever seen. Naturally, I fell in love with her. It seems absurd
+ to say so; and the more so, because two children more absolutely
+ innocent than we were cannot be imagined, neither of us having ever
+ been at any school;&#8212;but the simple truth is, that in the most
+ chivalrous sense I was in love with her. And the proof that I was so
+ showed itself in three separate modes: I kissed her glove on any rare
+ occasion when I found it lying on a table; secondly, I looked out for
+ some excuse to be jealous of her; and, thirdly, I did my very best to
+ get up a quarrel. What I wanted the quarrel for was the luxury of a
+ reconciliation; a hill cannot be had, you know, without going to the
+ expense of a valley. And though I hated the very thought of a
+ moment&#39;s difference with so truly gentle a girl, yet how, but
+ through such a purgatory, could one win the paradise of her returning
+ smiles? All this, however, came to nothing; and simply because she
+ positively would <i>not</i> quarrel. And the jealousy fell through,
+ because there was no decent subject for such a passion, unless it had
+ settled upon an old music-master whom lunacy itself could not adopt
+ as a rival. The quarrel meantime, which never prospered with the
+ daughter, silently kindled on my part towards the father. His offence
+ was this. At dinner, I naturally placed myself by the side of M., and
+ it gave me great pleasure to touch her hand at intervals. As M. was
+ my cousin, though twice or even three times removed, I did not feel
+ taking too great a liberty in this little act of tenderness. No
+ matter if three thousand times removed, I said, my cousin is my
+ cousin: nor had I ever very much designed to conceal the act; or if
+ so, rather on her account than my own. One evening, however, papa
+ observed my man&#339;uvre. Did he seem displeased? Not at all: he
+ even condescended to smile. But the next day he placed M. on the side
+ opposite to myself. In one respect this was really an improvement;
+ because it gave me a better view of my cousin&#39;s sweet
+ countenance. But then there was the loss of the hand to be
+ considered, and secondly there was the affront. It was clear that
+ vengeance must be had. Now there was but one thing in this world that
+ I could do even <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id=
+ "Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> decently: but <i>that</i> I could do
+ admirably. This was writing Latin hexameters. Juvenal, though it was
+ not very much of him that I had then read, seemed to me a divine
+ model. The inspiration of wrath spoke through him as through a Hebrew
+ prophet. The same inspiration spoke now in me. <i>Facit indignatio
+ versum</i>, said Juvenal. And it must be owned that Indignation has
+ never made such good verses since as she did in that day. But still,
+ even to me this agile passion proved a Muse of genial inspiration for
+ a couple of paragraphs: and one line I will mention as worthy to have
+ taken its place in Juvenal himself. I say this without scruple,
+ having not a shadow of vanity, nor on the other hand a shadow of
+ false modesty connected with such boyish accomplishments. The poem
+ opened thus&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Te nimis austerum; sacræ qui f&#339;dera
+ mensæ</span><br />
+ <span class="i2">Diruis, insector Satyræ reboante
+ flagello.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>But the line, which I insist upon as of Roman strength, was the
+ closing one of the next sentence. The general effect of the sentiment
+ was&#8212;that my clamorous wrath should make its way even into ears
+ that were past hearing:</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i8"><span style=
+ "margin-left: 7em;">&quot;&#8212;&#8212;mea sæva
+ querela</span><br />
+ <span class="i2">Auribus insidet ceratis, auribus
+ etsi</span><br />
+ <span class="i2">Non audituris hybernâ nocte
+ procellam.&quot;</span><br /></span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The power, however, which inflated my verse, soon collapsed;
+ having been soothed from the very first by finding&#8212;that except
+ in this one instance at the dinner-table, which probably had been
+ viewed as an indecorum, no further restraint of any kind whatever was
+ meditated upon my intercourse with M. Besides, it was too painful to
+ lock up good verses in one&#39;s own solitary breast. Yet how could I
+ shock the sweet filial heart of my cousin by a fierce lampoon or
+ <i>stylites</i> against her father, had Latin even figured amongst
+ her accomplishments? Then it occurred to me that the verses might be
+ shown to the father. But was there not something treacherous in
+ gaining a man&#39;s approbation under a mask to a satire upon
+ himself? Or would he have always understood me? For one person a year
+ after took the <i>sacræ mensæ</i> (by which I had meant the
+ sanctities of hospitality) to mean the sacramental table. And on
+ consideration I began to suspect, that many people would pronounce
+ myself the party who had violated the holy ties of hospitality, which
+ are equally binding on guest as on host. Indolence, which sometimes
+ comes in aid of good impulses as well as bad, favoured these
+ relenting thoughts; the society of M. did still more to wean me from
+ further efforts of satire: and, finally, my Latin poem remained a
+ <i>torso</i>. But upon the whole my guardian had a narrow escape of
+ descending to posterity in a disadvantageous light, had he rolled
+ down to it through my hexameters.</p>
+
+ <p>Here was a case of merely playful feud. But the same talent of
+ Latin verses soon after connected me with a real feud that harassed
+ my mind more than would be supposed, and precisely by this agency,
+ viz. that it arrayed one set of feelings against another. It divided
+ my mind as by domestic feud against itself. About a year after,
+ returning from the visit to my guardian&#39;s, and when I must have
+ been nearly completing my twelfth year, I was sent to a great public
+ school. Every man has reason to rejoice who enjoys so great an
+ advantage. I condemned and <i>do</i> condemn the practice of
+ sometimes sending out into such stormy exposures those who are as yet
+ too young, too dependent on female gentleness, and endowed with
+ sensibilities too exquisite. But at nine or ten the masculine
+ energies of the character are beginning to be developed: or, if not,
+ no discipline will better aid in their developement than the bracing
+ intercourse of a great English classical school. Even the selfish are
+ forced into accommodating themselves to a public standard of
+ generosity, and the effeminate into conforming to a rule of
+ manliness. I was myself at two public schools; and I think with
+ gratitude of the benefit which I reaped from both; as also I think
+ with gratitude of the upright guardian in whose quiet household I
+ learned Latin so effectually. But the small private schools which I
+ witnessed for brief periods, containing <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> thirty to
+ forty boys, were models of ignoble manners as respected some part of
+ the juniors, and of favouritism amongst the masters. Nowhere is the
+ sublimity of public justice so broadly exemplified as in an English
+ school. There is not in the universe such an areopagus for fair play
+ and abhorrence of all crooked ways, as an English mob, or one of the
+ English time-honoured public schools. But my own first introduction
+ to such an establishment was under peculiar and contradictory
+ circumstances. When my &quot;rating,&quot; or graduation in the
+ school, was to be settled, naturally my altitude (to speak
+ astronomically) was taken by the proficiency in Greek. But I could
+ then barely construe books so easy as the Greek Testament and the
+ Iliad. This was considered quite well enough for my age; but still it
+ caused me to be placed three steps below the highest rank in the
+ school. Within one week, however, my talent for Latin verses, which
+ had by this time gathered strength and expansion, became known. I was
+ honoured as never was man or boy since Mordecai the Jew. Not properly
+ belonging to the flock of the head master, but to the leading section
+ of the second, I was now weekly paraded for distinction at the
+ supreme tribunal of the school; out of which at first grew nothing
+ but a sunshine of approbation delightful to my heart, still brooding
+ upon solitude. Within six weeks this had changed. The approbation
+ indeed continued, and the public testimony of it. Neither would
+ there, in the ordinary course, have been any painful reaction from
+ jealousy or fretful resistance to the soundness of my pretensions;
+ since it was sufficiently known to some of my schoolfellows, that I,
+ who had no male relatives but military men, and those in India, could
+ not have benefited by any clandestine aid. But, unhappily, the head
+ master was at that time dissatisfied with some points in the progress
+ of his head form; and, as it soon appeared, was continually throwing
+ in their teeth the brilliancy of my verses at twelve, by comparison
+ with theirs at seventeen, eighteen, and nineteen. I had observed him
+ sometimes pointing to myself; and was perplexed at seeing the gesture
+ followed by gloomy looks, and what French reporters call
+ &quot;sensation,&quot; in these young men, whom naturally I viewed
+ with awe as my leaders, boys that were called young men, men that
+ were reading Sophocles&#8212;(a name that carried with it the sound
+ of something seraphic to my ears)&#8212;and who never had vouchsafed
+ to waste a word on such a child as myself. The day was come, however,
+ when all that would be changed. One of these leaders strode up to me
+ in the public playgrounds, and delivering a blow on my shoulder,
+ which was not intended to hurt me, but as a mere formula of
+ introduction, asked me, &quot;What the d&#8212;l I meant by bolting
+ out of the course, and annoying other people in that manner? Were
+ other people to have no rest for me and my verses, which, after all,
+ were horribly bad?&quot; There might have been some difficulty in
+ returning an answer to this address, but none was required. I was
+ briefly admonished to see that I wrote worse for the future, or
+ else&#8212;&#8212;At this <i>aposiopesis</i> I looked enquiringly at
+ the speaker, and he filled up the chasm by saying, that he would
+ &quot;annihilate&quot; me. Could any person fail to be aghast at such
+ a demand? I was to write worse than my own standard, which, by his
+ account of my verses, must be difficult; and I was to write worse
+ than himself, which might be impossible. My feelings revolted, it may
+ be supposed, against so arrogant a demand, unless it had been far
+ otherwise expressed; and on the next occasion for sending up verses,
+ so far from attending to the orders issued, I double-shotted my guns;
+ double applause descended on myself; but I remarked with some awe,
+ though not repenting of what I had done, that double confusion seemed
+ to agitate the ranks of my enemies. Amongst them loomed out in the
+ distance my &quot;annihilating&quot; friend, who shook his huge fist
+ at me, but with something like a grim smile about his eyes. He took
+ an early opportunity of paying his respects to me&#8212;saying,
+ &quot;You little devil, do you call this writing your worst?&quot;
+ &quot;No,&quot; I replied; &quot;I call it writing my best.&quot; The
+ annihilator, as it turned out, was really a good-natured young man;
+ but he soon went off to Cambridge; and with <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span> the rest,
+ or some of them, I continued to wage war for nearly a year. And yet,
+ for a word spoken with kindness, I would have resigned the
+ peacock&#39;s feather in my cap as the merest of baubles.
+ Undoubtedly, praise sounded sweet in my ears also. But <i>that</i>
+ was nothing by comparison with what stood on the other side. I
+ detested distinctions that were connected with mortification to
+ others. And, even if I could have got over <i>that</i>, the eternal
+ feud fretted and tormented my nature. Love, that once in childhood
+ had been so mere a necessity to me, <i>that</i> had long been a mere
+ reflected ray from a departed sunset. But peace, and freedom from
+ strife, if love were no longer possible, (as so rarely it is in this
+ world,) was the absolute necessity of my heart. To contend with
+ somebody was still my fate; how to escape the contention I could not
+ see; and yet for itself, and the deadly passions into which it forced
+ me, I hated and loathed it more than death. It added to the
+ distraction and internal feud of my own mind&#8212;that I could not
+ <i>altogether</i> condemn the upper boys. I was made a handle of
+ humiliation to them. And in the mean time, if I had an advantage in
+ one accomplishment, which is all a matter of accident, or peculiar
+ taste and feeling, they, on the other hand, had a great advantage
+ over me in the more elaborate difficulties of Greek, and of choral
+ Greek poetry. I could not altogether wonder at their hatred of
+ myself. Yet still, as they had chosen to adopt this mode of conflict
+ with me, I did not feel that I had any choice but to resist. The
+ contest was terminated for me by my removal from the school, in
+ consequence of a very threatening illness affecting my head; but it
+ lasted nearly a year; and it did not close before several amongst my
+ public enemies had become my private friends. They were much older,
+ but they invited me to the houses of their friends, and showed me a
+ respect which deeply affected me&#8212;this respect having more
+ reference, apparently, to the firmness I had exhibited than to the
+ splendour of my verses. And, indeed, these had rather drooped from a
+ natural accident; several persons of my own class had formed the
+ practice of asking me to write verses for <i>them</i>. I could not
+ refuse. But, as the subjects given out were the same for all of us,
+ it was not possible to take so many crops off the ground without
+ starving the quality of all.</p>
+
+ <p>Two years and a half from this time, I was again at a public
+ school of ancient foundation. Now I was myself one of the three who
+ formed the highest class. Now I myself was familiar with Sophocles,
+ who once had been so shadowy a name in my ear. But, strange to say,
+ now in my sixteenth year, I cared nothing at all for the glory of
+ Latin verse. All the business of school was slight and trivial in my
+ eyes. Costing me not an effort, it could not engage any part of my
+ attention; that was now swallowed up altogether by the literature of
+ my native land. I still reverenced the Grecian drama, as always I
+ must. But else I cared little then for classical pursuits. A deeper
+ spell had mastered me; and I lived only in those bowers where deeper
+ passions spoke.</p>
+
+ <p>Here, however, it was that began another and more important
+ struggle. I was drawing near to seventeen, and, in a year after
+ <i>that</i>, would arrive the usual time for going to Oxford. To
+ Oxford my guardians made no objection; and they readily agreed to
+ make the allowance then universally regarded as the <i>minimum</i>
+ for an Oxford student, viz. £200 per annum. But they insisted, as a
+ previous condition, that I should make a positive and definitive
+ choice of a profession. Now I was well aware that, if I <i>did</i>
+ make such a choice, no law existed, nor could any obligation be
+ created through deeds or signature, by which I could finally be
+ compelled into keeping my engagement. But this evasion did not suit
+ me. Here, again, I felt indignantly that the principle of the attempt
+ was unjust. The object was certainly to do me service by saving
+ money, since, if I selected the bar as my profession, it was
+ contended by some persons, (misinformed, however,) that not Oxford,
+ but a special pleader&#39;s office, would be my proper destination;
+ but I cared not for arguments of that sort. Oxford I was determined
+ to make my home; and also to bear my future course utterly
+ untrammeled by promises that I might repent. Soon came <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span> the
+ catastrophe of this struggle. A little before my seventeenth
+ birthday, I walked off one lovely summer morning to North
+ Wales&#8212;rambled there for months&#8212;and, finally, under some
+ obscure hopes of raising money on my personal security, I went up to
+ London. Now I was in my eighteenth year; and, during this period it
+ was that I passed through that trial of severe distress, of which I
+ gave some account in my former Confessions. Having a motive, however,
+ for glancing backwards briefly at that period in the present series,
+ I will do so at this point.</p>
+
+ <p>I saw in one journal an insinuation that the incidents in the
+ <i>preliminary</i> narrative were possibly without foundation. To
+ such an expression of mere gratuitous malignity, as it happened to be
+ supported by no one argument except a remark, apparently absurd, but
+ certainly false, I did not condescend to answer. In reality, the
+ possibility had never occurred to me that any person of judgment
+ would seriously suspect me of taking liberties with that part of the
+ work, since, though no one of the parties concerned but myself stood
+ in so central a position to the circumstances as to be acquainted
+ with <i>all</i> of them, many were acquainted with each separate
+ section of the memoir. Relays of witnesses might have been summoned
+ to mount guard, as it were, upon the accuracy of each particular in
+ the whole succession of incidents; and some of these people had an
+ interest, more or less strong, in exposing any deviation from the
+ strictest <i>letter</i> of the truth, had it been in their power to
+ do so. It is now twenty-two years since I saw the objection here
+ alluded to; and, in saying that I did not condescend to notice it,
+ the reader must not find any reason for taxing me with a blamable
+ haughtiness. But every man is entitled to be haughty when his
+ veracity is impeached; and, still more, when it is impeached by a
+ dishonest objection, or, if not <i>that</i>, by an objection which
+ argues a carelessness of attention almost amounting to dishonesty, in
+ a case where it was meant to sustain an imputation of falsehood. Let
+ a man read carelessly if he will, but not where he is meaning to use
+ his reading for a purpose of wounding another man&#39;s honour.
+ Having thus, by twenty-two years&#39; silence, sufficiently expressed
+ my contempt for the slander,<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id=
+ "FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class=
+ "fnanchor">[19]</a> I now feel myself at liberty to draw it into
+ notice, for the sake, <i>inter alia</i>, of showing in how rash a
+ spirit malignity often works. In the preliminary account of certain
+ boyish adventures which had exposed me to suffering of a kind not
+ commonly incident to persons in my station of life, and leaving
+ behind a temptation to the use of opium under certain arrears of
+ weakness, I had occasion to notice a disreputable attorney in London,
+ who showed me some attentions, partly on my own account as a boy of
+ some expectations, but much more with the purpose of fastening his
+ professional grappling-hooks upon the young Earl of A&#8212;&#8212;t,
+ my former companion, and my present correspondent. This man&#39;s
+ house was slightly described, and, with more minuteness, I had
+ exposed some interesting traits in his household economy. A question,
+ therefore, naturally arose in several people&#39;s
+ curiosity&#8212;Where was this house situated? and the more so
+ because I had pointed a renewed attention to it by saying, that on
+ that very evening, (viz. the evening on which that particular page of
+ the Confessions was written,) I had visited the street, looked up at
+ the windows, and, instead of the gloomy desolation reigning there
+ when myself and a little girl were the sole nightly tenants, sleeping
+ in fact <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg
+ 50]</a></span> (poor freezing creatures that we both were) on the
+ floor of the attorney&#39;s law-chamber, and making a pillow out of
+ his infernal parchments, I had seen with pleasure the evidences of
+ comfort, respectability, and domestic animation, in the lights and
+ stir prevailing through different stories of the house. Upon this the
+ upright critic told his readers that I had described the house as
+ standing in Oxford Street, and then appealed to their own knowledge
+ of that street whether such a house could be <i>so</i> situated. Why
+ not&#8212;he neglected to tell us. The houses at the east end of
+ Oxford Street are certainly of too small an order to meet my account
+ of the attorney&#39;s house; but why should it be at the east end?
+ Oxford Street is a mile and a quarter long, and being built
+ continuously on both sides, finds room for houses of <i>many</i>
+ classes. Meantime it happens that, although the true house was most
+ obscurely indicated, <i>any</i> house whatever in Oxford Street was
+ most luminously excluded. In all the immensity of London there was
+ but one single street that could be challenged by an attentive reader
+ of the Confessions as peremptorily <i>not</i> the street of the
+ attorney&#39;s house&#8212;and <i>that</i> one was Oxford Street;
+ for, in speaking of my own renewed acquaintance with the outside of
+ this house, I used some expression implying that, in order to make
+ such a visit of reconnoissance, I had turned <i>aside</i> from Oxford
+ Street. The matter is a perfect trifle in itself, but it is no trifle
+ in a question affecting a writer&#39;s accuracy. If in a thing so
+ absolutely impossible to be forgotten as the true situation of a
+ house painfully memorable to a man&#39;s feelings, from being the
+ scene of boyish distresses the most exquisite&#8212;nights passed in
+ the misery of cold, and hunger preying upon him both night and day,
+ in a degree which very many would not have survived,&#8212;he, when
+ retracing his schoolboy annals, could have shown indecision even, far
+ more dreaded inaccuracy, in identifying the house, not one syllable
+ after <i>that</i>, which he could have said on any other subject,
+ would have won any confidence, or deserved any, from a judicious
+ reader. I may now mention&#8212;the Herod being dead whose
+ persecutions I had reason to fear&#8212;that the house in question
+ stands in Greek Street on the west, and is the house on that side
+ nearest to Soho-Square, but without looking into the Square. This it
+ was hardly safe to mention at the date of the published Confessions.
+ It was my private opinion, indeed, that there were probably
+ twenty-five chances to one in favour of my friend the attorney having
+ been by that time hanged. But then this argued inversely; one chance
+ to twenty-five that my friend might be <i>un</i>hanged, and knocking
+ about the streets of London; in which case it would have been a
+ perfect god-send to him that here lay an opening (of <i>my</i>
+ contrivance, not <i>his</i>) for requesting the opinion of a jury on
+ the amount of <i>solatium</i> due to his wounded feelings in an
+ action on the passage in the Confessions. To have indicated even the
+ street would have been enough. Because there could surely be but one
+ such Grecian in Greek Street, or but one that realized the other
+ conditions of the unknown quantity. There was also a separate danger
+ not absolutely so laughable as it sounds. Me there was little chance
+ that the attorney should meet; but my book he might easily have met
+ (supposing always that the warrant of <i>Sus. per coll.</i> had not
+ yet on <i>his</i> account travelled down to Newgate.) For he was
+ literary; admired literature; and, as a lawyer, he wrote on some
+ subjects fluently; Might he not publish <i>his</i> Confessions? Or,
+ which would be worse, a supplement to mine&#8212;printed so as
+ exactly to match? In which case I should have had the same affliction
+ that Gibbon the historian dreaded so much; viz. that of seeing a
+ refutation of himself, and his own answer to the refutation, all
+ bound up in one and the same self-combating volume. Besides, he would
+ have cross-examined me before the public in Old Bailey style; no
+ story, the most straightforward that ever was told, could be sure to
+ stand <i>that</i>. And my readers might be left in a state of painful
+ doubt whether <i>he</i> might not, after all, have been a model of
+ suffering innocence&#8212;I (to say the kindest thing possible)
+ plagued with the natural treacheries of a schoolboy&#39;s memory. In
+ taking leave of this case and the remembrances connected with it, let
+ me say that, although really believing in the probability
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg
+ 51]</a></span> of the attorney&#39;s having at least found his way to
+ Australia, I had no satisfaction in thinking of that result. I knew
+ my friend to be the very perfection of a scamp. And in the running
+ account between us, (I mean, in the ordinary sense, as to money,) the
+ balance could not be in <i>his</i> favour; since I, on receiving a
+ sum of money, (considerable in the eyes of us both,) had transferred
+ pretty nearly the whole of it to <i>him</i>, for the purpose
+ ostensibly held out to me (but of course a hoax) of purchasing
+ certain law &quot;stamps;&quot; for he was then pursuing a diplomatic
+ correspondence with various Jews who lent money to young heirs, in
+ some trifling proportion on my own insignificant account, but much
+ more truly on the account of Lord A&#8212;&#8212;t, my young friend.
+ On the other side, he had given to me simply the reliques of his
+ breakfast-table, which itself was hardly more than a relique. But in
+ this he was not to blame. He could not give to me what he had not for
+ himself, nor sometimes for the poor starving child whom I now suppose
+ to have been his illegitimate daughter. So desperate was the running
+ fight, yard-arm to yard-arm, which he maintained with creditors
+ fierce as famine and hungry as the grave; so deep also was his horror
+ (I know not for which of the various reasons supposable) against
+ falling into a prison, that he seldom ventured to sleep twice
+ successively in the same house. That expense of itself must have
+ pressed heavily in London, where you pay half-a-crown at least for a
+ bed that would cost only a shilling in the provinces. In the midst of
+ his knaveries, and what were even more shocking to my remembrance,
+ his confidential discoveries in his rambling conversations of knavish
+ <i>designs</i>, (not always pecuniary,) there was a light of
+ wandering misery in his eye at times, which affected me afterwards at
+ intervals when I recalled it in the radiant happiness of nineteen,
+ and amidst the solemn tranquillities of Oxford. That of itself was
+ interesting; the man was worse by far than he had been meant to be;
+ he had not the mind that reconciles itself to evil. Besides, he
+ respected scholarship, which appeared by the deference he generally
+ showed to myself, then about seventeen; he had an interest in
+ literature; <i>that</i> argues something good; and was pleased at any
+ time, or even cheerful, when I turned the conversation upon books;
+ nay, he seemed touched with emotion, when I quoted some sentiment
+ noble and impassioned from one of the great poets, and would ask me
+ to repeat it. He would have been a man of memorable energy, and for
+ good purposes, had it not been for his agony of conflict with
+ pecuniary embarrassments. These probably had commenced in some fatal
+ compliance with temptation arising out of funds confided to him by a
+ client. Perhaps he had gained fifty guineas for a moment of
+ necessity, and had sacrificed for that trifle <i>only</i> the
+ serenity and the comfort of a life. Feelings of relenting kindness,
+ it was not in my nature to refuse in such a case; and I wished to * *
+ * But I never succeeded in tracing his steps through the wilderness
+ of London until some years back, when I ascertained that he was dead.
+ Generally speaking, the few people whom I have disliked in this world
+ were flourishing people of good repute. Whereas the knaves whom I
+ have known, one and all, and by no means few, I think of with
+ pleasure and kindness.</p>
+
+ <p>Heavens! when I look back to the sufferings which I have witnessed
+ or heard of even from this one brief London experience, I say if life
+ could throw open its long suits of chambers to our eyes from some
+ station <i>beforehand</i>, if from some secret stand we could look
+ <i>by anticipation</i> along its vast corridors, and aside into the
+ recesses opening upon them from either hand, halls of tragedy or
+ chambers of retribution, simply in that small wing and no more of the
+ great caravanserai which we ourselves shall haunt, simply in that
+ narrow tract of time and no more where we ourselves shall range, and
+ confining our gaze to those and no others for whom personally we
+ shall be interested, what a recoil we should suffer of horror in our
+ estimate of life! What if those sudden catastrophes, or those
+ inexpiable afflictions, which <i>have</i> already descended upon the
+ people within my <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id=
+ "Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> own knowledge, and almost below my own
+ eyes, all of them now gone past, and some long past, had been thrown
+ open before me as a secret exhibition when first I and they stood
+ within the vestibule of morning hopes; when the calamities themselves
+ had hardly begun to gather in their elements of possibility, and when
+ some of the parties to them were as yet no more than infants! The
+ past viewed not <i>as</i> the past, but by a spectator who steps back
+ ten years deeper into the rear, in order that he may regard it as a
+ future; the calamity of 1840 contemplated from the station of
+ 1830&#8212;the doom that rang the knell of happiness viewed from a
+ point of time when as yet it was neither feared nor would even have
+ been intelligible&#8212;the name that killed in 1843, which in 1835
+ would have struck no vibration upon the heart&#8212;the portrait that
+ on the day of her Majesty&#39;s coronation would have been admired by
+ you with a pure disinterested admiration, but which if seen to-day
+ would draw forth an involuntary groan&#8212;cases such as these are
+ strangely moving for all who add deep thoughtfulness to deep
+ sensibility. As the hastiest of improvisations, accept&#8212;fair
+ reader, (for you it is that will chiefly feel such an invocation of
+ the past)&#8212;three or four illustrations from my own
+ experience.</p>
+
+ <p>Who is this distinguished-looking young woman with her eyes
+ drooping, and the shadow of a dreadful shock yet fresh upon every
+ feature? Who is the elderly lady with her eyes flashing fire? Who is
+ the downcast child of sixteen? What is that torn paper lying at their
+ feet? Who is the writer? Whom does the paper concern? Ah! if she, if
+ the central figure in the group&#8212;twenty-two at the moment when
+ she is revealed to us&#8212;could, on her happy birth-day at sweet
+ seventeen, have seen the image of herself five years onwards, just as
+ <i>we</i> see it now, would she have prayed for life as for an
+ absolute blessing? or would she not have prayed to be taken from the
+ evil to come&#8212;to be taken away one evening at least before this
+ day&#39;s sun arose? It is true, she still wears a look of gentle
+ pride, and a relic of that noble smile which belongs to <i>her</i>
+ that suffers an injury which many times over she would have died
+ sooner than inflict. Womanly pride refuses itself before witnesses to
+ the total prostration of the blow; but, for all <i>that</i>, you may
+ see that she longs to be left alone, and that her tears will flow
+ without restraint when she is so. This room is her pretty boudoir, in
+ which, till to-night&#8212;poor thing!&#8212;she has been glad and
+ happy. There stands her miniature conservatory, and there expands her
+ miniature library; as we circumnavigators of literature are apt (you
+ know) to regard all female libraries in the light of miniatures. None
+ of these will ever rekindle a smile on <i>her</i> face; and there,
+ beyond, is her music, which only of all that she possesses, will now
+ become dearer to her than ever; but not, as once, to feed a
+ self-mocked pensiveness, or to cheat a half-visionary sadness. She
+ will be sad indeed. But she is one of those that will suffer in
+ silence. Nobody will ever detect <i>her</i> failing in any point of
+ duty, or querulously seeking the support in others which she can find
+ for herself in this solitary room. Droop she will not in the sight of
+ men; and, for all beyond, nobody has any concern with <i>that</i>
+ except God. You shall hear what becomes of her, before we take our
+ departure; but now let me tell you what has happened. In the main
+ outline I am sure you guess already without aid of mine, for we
+ leaden-eyed men, in such cases, see nothing by comparison with you
+ our quick-witted sisters. That haughty-looking lady with the Roman
+ cast of features, who must once have been strikingly
+ handsome&#8212;an Agrippina, even yet, in a favourable
+ presentation&#8212;is the younger lady&#39;s aunt. She, it is
+ rumoured, once sustained, in her younger days, some injury of that
+ same cruel nature which has this day assailed her niece, and ever
+ since she has worn an air of disdain, not altogether unsupported by
+ real dignity, towards men. This aunt it was that tore the letter
+ which lies upon the floor. It deserved to be torn; and yet she that
+ had the best right to do so would <i>not</i> have torn it. That
+ letter was an elaborate attempt on the part of an accomplished young
+ man to release himself from sacred engagements. What need
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg
+ 53]</a></span> was there to argue the case of <i>such</i>
+ engagements? Could it have been requisite with pure female dignity to
+ plead any thing, or do more than <i>look</i> an indisposition to
+ fulfil them? The aunt is now moving towards the door, which I am glad
+ to see; and she is followed by that pale timid girl of sixteen, a
+ cousin, who feels the case profoundly, but is too young and shy to
+ offer an intellectual sympathy.</p>
+
+ <p>One only person in this world there is, who <i>could</i> to-night
+ have been a supporting friend to our young sufferer, and <i>that</i>
+ is her dear loving twin-sister, that for eighteen years read and
+ wrote, thought and sang, slept and breathed, with the dividing-door
+ open for ever between their bedrooms, and never once a separation
+ between their hearts; but she is in a far distant land. Who else is
+ there at her call? Except God, nobody. Her aunt had somewhat sternly
+ admonished her, though still with a relenting in her eye as she
+ glanced aside at the expression in her niece&#39;s face, that she
+ must &quot;call pride to her assistance.&quot; Ay, true; but pride,
+ though a strong ally in public, is apt in private to turn as
+ treacherous as the worst of those against whom she is invoked. How
+ could it be dreamed by a person of sense, that a brilliant young man
+ of merits, various and eminent, in spite of his baseness, to whom,
+ for nearly two years, this young woman had given her whole confiding
+ love, might be dismissed from a heart like hers on the earliest
+ summons of pride, simply because she herself had been dismissed from
+ <i>his</i>, or seemed to have been dismissed, on a summons of
+ mercenary calculation? Look! now that she is relieved from the weight
+ of an unconfidential presence, she has sat for two hours with her
+ head buried in her hands. At last she rises to look for something. A
+ thought has struck her; and, taking a little golden key which hangs
+ by a chain within her bosom, she searches for something locked up
+ amongst her few jewels. What is it? It is a Bible exquisitely
+ illuminated, with a letter attached, by some pretty silken artifice,
+ to the blank leaves at the end. This letter is a beautiful record,
+ wisely and pathetically composed, of maternal anxiety still burning
+ strong in death, and yearning, when all objects beside were fast
+ fading from <i>her</i> eyes, after one parting act of communion with
+ the twin darlings of her heart. Both were thirteen years old, within
+ a week or two, as on the night before her death they sat weeping by
+ the bedside of their mother, and hanging on her lips, now for
+ farewell whispers, and now for farewell kisses. They both knew that,
+ as her strength had permitted during the latter month of her life,
+ she had thrown the last anguish of love in her beseeching heart into
+ a letter of counsel to themselves. Through this, of which each sister
+ had a copy, she trusted long to converse with her orphans. And the
+ last promise which she had entreated on this evening from both,
+ was&#8212;that in either of two contingencies they would review her
+ counsels, and the passages to which she pointed their attention in
+ the Scriptures; namely, first, in the event of any calamity, that,
+ for one sister or for both, should overspread their paths with total
+ darkness; and secondly, in the event of life flowing in too profound
+ a stream of prosperity, so as to threaten them with an alienation of
+ interest from all spiritual objects. She had not concealed that, of
+ these two extreme cases, she would prefer for her own children the
+ first. And now had that case arrived indeed, which she in spirit had
+ desired to meet. Nine years ago, just as the silvery voice of a dial
+ in the dying lady&#39;s bedroom was striking nine upon a summer
+ evening, had the last visual ray streamed from her seeking eyes upon
+ her orphan twins, after which, throughout the night, she had slept
+ away into heaven. Now again had come a summer evening memorable for
+ unhappiness; now again the daughter thought of those dying lights of
+ love which streamed at sunset from the closing eyes of her mother;
+ again, and just as she went back in thought to this image, the same
+ silvery voice of the dial sounded nine o&#39;clock. Again she
+ remembered her mother&#39;s dying request; again her own
+ tear-hallowed promise&#8212;and with her heart in her mother&#39;s
+ grave she now rose to fulfil it. Here, then when this solemn
+ recurrence to a testamentary counsel has ceased to be a <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> mere
+ office of duty towards the departed, having taken the shape of a
+ consolation for herself, let us pause.</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+ <p>Now, fair companion in this exploring voyage of inquest into
+ hidden scenes, or forgotten scenes of human life&#8212;perhaps it
+ might be instructive to direct our glasses upon the false perfidious
+ lover. It might. But do not let us do so. We might like him better,
+ or pity him more, than either of us would desire. His name and memory
+ have long since dropped out of every body&#39;s thoughts. Of
+ prosperity, and (what is more important) of internal peace, he is
+ reputed to have had no gleam from the moment when he betrayed his
+ faith, and in one day threw away the jewel of good conscience, and
+ &quot;a pearl richer than all his tribe.&quot; But, however that may
+ be, it is certain that, finally, he became a wreck; and of any
+ <i>hopeless</i> wreck it is painful to talk&#8212;much more so, when
+ through him others also became wrecks.</p>
+
+ <p>Shall we, then, after an interval of nearly two years has passed
+ over the young lady in the boudoir, look in again upon <i>her</i>?
+ You hesitate, fair friend: and I myself hesitate. For in fact she
+ also has become a wreck; and it would grieve us both to see her
+ altered. At the end of twenty-one months she retains hardly a vestige
+ of resemblance to the fine young woman we saw on that unhappy evening
+ with her aunt and cousin. On consideration, therefore, let us do
+ this. We will direct our glasses to her room, at a point of time
+ about six weeks further on. Suppose this time gone; suppose her now
+ dressed for her grave, and placed in her coffin. The advantage of
+ that is&#8212;that, though no change can restore the ravages of the
+ past, yet (as often is found to happen with young persons) the
+ expression has revived from her girlish years. The child-like aspect
+ has revolved, and settled back upon her features. The wasting away of
+ the flesh is less apparent in the face; and one might imagine that,
+ in this sweet marble countenance, was seen the very same upon which,
+ eleven years ago, her mother&#39;s darkening eyes had lingered to the
+ last, until clouds had swallowed up the vision of her beloved
+ <i>twins</i>. Yet, if that were in part a fancy, this at least is no
+ fancy&#8212;that not only much of a child-like truth and simplicity
+ has reinstated itself in the temple of her now reposing features, but
+ also that tranquillity and perfect peace, such as are appropriate to
+ eternity; but which from the <i>living</i> countenance had taken
+ their flight for ever, on that memorable evening when we looked in
+ upon the impassioned group&#8212;upon the towering and denouncing
+ aunt, the sympathizing but silent cousin, the poor blighted niece,
+ and the wicked letter lying in fragments at their feet.</p>
+
+ <p>Cloud, that hast revealed to us this young creature and her
+ blighted hopes, close up again. And now, a few years later, not more
+ than four or five, give back to us the latest arrears of the changes
+ which thou concealest within thy draperies. Once more, &quot;open
+ sesame!&quot; and show us a third generation. Behold a lawn islanded
+ with thickets. How perfect is the verdure&#8212;how rich the
+ blossoming shrubberies that screen with verdurous walls from the
+ possibility of intrusion, whilst by their own wandering line of
+ distribution they shape and umbrageously embay, what one might call
+ lawny saloons and vestibules&#8212;sylvan galleries and closets. Some
+ of these recesses, which unlink themselves as fluently as snakes, and
+ unexpectedly as the shyest nooks, watery cells, and crypts, amongst
+ the shores of a forest-lake, being formed by the mere caprices and
+ ramblings of the luxuriant shrubs, are so small and so quiet, that
+ one might fancy them meant for <i>boudoirs</i>. Here is one that, in
+ a less fickle climate, would make the loveliest of studies for a
+ writer of breathings from some solitary heart, or of <i>suspiria</i>
+ from some impassioned memory! And opening from one angle of this
+ embowered study, issues a little narrow corridor, that, after almost
+ wheeling back upon itself, in its playful mazes, finally widens into
+ a little circular chamber; out of which there is no exit, (except
+ back again by the entrance,) small or great; so that, adjacent to his
+ study, the writer would command how sweet a bed-room, permitting him
+ to lie the summer through, gazing all night long at the burning
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg
+ 55]</a></span> host of heaven. How silent <i>that</i> would be at the
+ noon of summer nights, how grave-like in its quiet! And yet, need
+ there be asked a stillness or a silence more profound than is felt at
+ this present noon of day? One reason for such peculiar repose, over
+ and above the tranquil character of the day, and the distance of the
+ place from high-roads, is the outer zone of woods, which almost on
+ every quarter invests the shrubberies&#8212;swathing them, (as one
+ may express it,) belting them, and overlooking them, from a varying
+ distance of two and three furlongs, so as oftentimes to keep the
+ winds at a distance. But, however caused and supported, the silence
+ of these fanciful lawns and lawny chambers is oftentimes oppressive
+ in the depth of summer to people unfamiliar with solitudes, either
+ mountainous or sylvan; and many would be apt to suppose that the
+ villa, to which these pretty shrubberies form the chief dependencies,
+ must be untenanted. But that is not the case. The house is inhabited,
+ and by its own legal mistress&#8212;the proprietress of the whole
+ domain; and not at all a silent mistress, but as noisy as most little
+ ladies of five years old, for that is her age. Now, and just as we
+ are speaking, you may hear her little joyous clamour as she issues
+ from the house. This way she comes, bounding like a fawn; and soon
+ she rushes into the little recess which I pointed out as a proper
+ study for any man who should be weaving the deep harmonies of
+ memorial <i>suspiria</i>. But I fancy that she will soon dispossess
+ it of that character, for her <i>suspiria</i> are not many at this
+ stage of her life. Now she comes dancing into sight; and you see
+ that, if she keeps the promise of her infancy, she will be an
+ interesting creature to the eye in after life. In other respects,
+ also, she is an engaging child&#8212;loving, natural, and wild as any
+ one of her neighbours for some miles round; viz. leverets, squirrels
+ and ring-doves. But what will surprise you most is&#8212;that,
+ although a child of pure English blood, she speaks very little
+ English; but more Bengalee than perhaps you will find it convenient
+ to construe. That is her Ayah, who comes up from behind at a pace so
+ different from her youthful mistress&#39;s. But, if their paces are
+ different, in other things they agree most cordially; and dearly they
+ love each other. In reality, the child has passed her whole life in
+ the arms of this ayah. She remembers nothing elder than <i>her</i>;
+ eldest of things is the ayah in her eyes; and, if the ayah should
+ insist on her worshipping herself as the goddess Railroadina or
+ Steamboatina, that made England and the sea and Bengal, it is certain
+ that the little thing would do so, asking no question but
+ this&#8212;whether kissing would do for worshipping.</p>
+
+ <p>Every evening at nine o&#39;clock, as the ayah sits by the little
+ creature lying awake in bed, the silvery tongue of a dial tolls the
+ hour. Reader, you know who she is. She is the granddaughter of her
+ that faded away about sunset in gazing at her twin orphans. Her name
+ is Grace. And she is the niece of that elder and once happy Grace,
+ who spent so much of her happiness in this very room, but whom, in
+ her utter desolation, we saw in the boudoir with the torn letter at
+ her feet. She is the daughter of that other sister, wife to a
+ military officer, who died abroad. Little Grace never saw her
+ grandmama, nor her lovely aunt that was her namesake, nor consciously
+ her mama. She was born six months after the death of the elder Grace;
+ and her mother saw her only through the mists of mortal suffering,
+ which carried her off three weeks after the birth of her
+ daughter.</p>
+
+ <p>This view was taken several years ago; and since then the younger
+ Grace in her turn is under a cloud of affliction. But she is still
+ under eighteen; and of her there may be hopes. Seeing such things in
+ so short a space of years, for the grandmother died at thirty-two, we
+ say&#8212;Death we can face: but knowing, as some of us do, what is
+ human life, which of us is it that without shuddering could (if
+ consciously we were summoned) face the hour of birth?</p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <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> Being
+ constantly almost an absentee from London, and very often from
+ other great cities, so as to command oftentimes no favourable
+ opportunities for overlooking the great mass of public journals,
+ it is possible enough that other slanders of the same tenor may
+ have existed. I speak of what met my own eye, or was accidentally
+ reported to me&#8212;but in fact all of us are exposed to this
+ evil of calumnies lurking unseen&#8212;for no degree of energy,
+ and no excess of disposable time, would enable any one man to
+ exercise this sort of vigilant police over <i>all</i> journals.
+ Better, therefore, tranquilly to leave all such malice to
+ confound itself.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg
+ 56]</a></span>
+
+ <h2><a name="NORTHERN_LIGHTS" id="NORTHERN_LIGHTS"></a>NORTHERN
+ LIGHTS.</h2>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;It was on a bright July morning that I found myself whirled
+ away by railroad from Berlin, &#39;that great ostrich egg in the
+ sand,&#39; which the sun of civilization is said to have
+ hatched.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In these words, and with this somewhat far-fetched simile, does a
+ German tourist, Edward Boas by name, commence his narrative of a
+ recent pilgrimage to the far north. Undeterred by the disadvantageous
+ accounts given of those regions by a traveller who had shortly before
+ visited them, and unseduced by the allurements of more southerly
+ climes, he boldly sets forth to breast the mountains and brave the
+ blasts of Scandinavia, and to form his own judgment of the country
+ and its inhabitants. Almost, however, before putting foot on
+ Scandinavian ground, Mr Boas, who, as a traveller, is decidedly of
+ the gossiping and inquisitive class, fills three chapters with all
+ manner of pleasant chatter about himself, and his feelings, and his
+ fancies, and the travelling companions he meets with. His liveliness
+ and versatility, and a certain bantering satirical vein, in which he
+ occasionally indulges, would have caused us to take his work, had we
+ met with it in an English translation, for the production of a French
+ rather than a German pen.</p>
+
+ <p>Leaving the railway at Angermunde, our traveller continues his
+ journey by the mail, in which he has two companions; a lady,
+ &quot;with an arm like ivory,&quot; about whom he seems more than
+ half inclined to build up a little episodical romance, and a young
+ man from the neighbouring town of Pasewalk, &quot;on whose thick
+ lips,&quot; we are informed, &quot;the genius of stupidity seemed to
+ have established its throne.&quot; This youth expressed his great
+ regret that the good old customs of Germany had become obsolete, and
+ expatiated on the necessity of striving to restore them. &quot;Those
+ were fine times,&quot; he said, &quot;when nobles made war on their
+ own account, burned down the villages, and drove the cattle of the
+ peasants on each other&#39;s territory. To themselves personally,
+ however, they did no harm; and if by chance Ritter Jobst fell into
+ the hands of Ritter Kurt, the latter would say, &#39;Ritter Jobst,
+ you are my prisoner on parole, and must pay me a ransom of five
+ hundred thalers.&#39; And thereupon they passed their time right
+ joyously together, drinking and hunting the livelong day. But Ritter
+ Jobst wrote to his seneschal that, by fair means or foul, he must
+ squeeze the five hundred thalers out of his subjects, who were in
+ duty bound to pay, to enable their gracious lord to return home
+ again. Those were the times,&quot; concluded the young Pasewalker,
+ &quot;and of such times should I like to witness the
+ return.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>Now, Mr Boas considerably disapproved of these aspirations after
+ the days of the robber knights, and he accordingly, to avoid hearing
+ any more of them, took a nap in his corner, which helped him on
+ nearly to Stralsund.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;This city,&quot; he says, &quot;has acquired an undeserved
+ renown through Wallenstein&#39;s famous vow, &#39;to have it, though
+ it were hung from heaven by chains.&#39; This puts me in mind of the
+ trick of a reviewer who, by enormous and exaggerated praise, induces
+ us to read the stupid literary production of some dear friend of his
+ own. We take up the book with great expectations, and find
+ it&#8212;trash. It is easy to see that Stralsund was founded by a set
+ of dirty fish-dealers. Clumsy, gable-ended houses, streets narrow and
+ crooked, a wretched pavement&#8212;such is the city. A small road
+ along the shore, encumbered with timber, old casks, filth and
+ rubbish&#8212;such is the quay.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>In this uninteresting place, Mr Boas is compelled to pass
+ eight-and-forty hours, waiting for a steamer. He fills up the time
+ with a little dissertation on Swedish and Pomeranian dialects, and
+ with a comical legend about a greedy monk, who bartered his soul to
+ the devil for a platter of lampreys. By a stratagem of the
+ abbot&#39;s, Satan was outwitted; and, taking himself off in a great
+ rage, he dropped the lampreys in the lake of <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span> Madue,
+ near Stargard, where to this day they are found in as great
+ perfection as in the lakes of Italy and Switzerland. This
+ peculiarity, however, might be accounted for otherwise than by
+ infernal means, for Frederick the Great was equally successful in
+ introducing the sturgeon of the Wolga into Pomeranian waters, where
+ it is still to be met with.</p>
+
+ <p>A day&#39;s sail brings our traveller to the port of Ystad, where
+ he receives his first impressions of Sweden, which are decidedly
+ favourable. At sunrise the next morning he goes on board the steamer
+ Svithiod, bound from Lubeck to Stockholm. At the same time with
+ himself are shipped three wandering Tyrolese musicians, who are
+ proceeding northwards to give the Scandinavians a taste of their
+ mountain melodies, and two or three hundred pigs, all pickled; the
+ pigs, that is to say. He finds on board a numerous and agreeable
+ society, of which and of the passage he gives a graphic
+ description.</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;The ship&#39;s bell rang to summon us to breakfast. There is
+ a certain epic copiousness about a Swedish <i>frukost</i>. On first
+ getting up in the morning it is customary to take a <i>Kop caffe
+ med skorpor</i>, a cup of coffee and a biscuit, and in something
+ less than two hours later one sits down to a most abundant meal.
+ This commences with a <i>sup</i>, that is to say, a glass of
+ carraway or aniseed brandy; then come tea, bread and butter, ham,
+ sausage, cheese and beer; and the whole winds up with a warm
+ <i>Kötträtt</i>, a beefsteak or cutlet.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Truly a solid and savoury repast. Whilst discussing it in the
+ cabin of the Svithiod, Mr Boas makes acquaintance with his
+ fellow-voyagers.</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;At the top of the table sat our captain, a jovial pleasant
+ man. He was very attentive to the passengers, had a prompt and
+ friendly answer to every question; in short, he was a Swede all
+ over. Near him were placed the families of two clergymen, in whose
+ charge was also travelling a young Swedish countess, a charming,
+ innocent-looking child, whose large dark eyes seemed destined, at
+ no very distant period, to give more than one heartache. Beside
+ them was a tall man, plainly dressed, and of military appearance.
+ This was Count S&#8212;&#8212;, (Schwerin, probably,) a descendant
+ of that friend and lieutenant of Frederick the Great who, on the
+ 6th May 1757, purchased with his life the victory of Prague. He was
+ returning from the hay-harvest on those estates which had belonged
+ to his valiant forefather, whose heirs had long been kept out of
+ them for lack of certain documents. But Frederick William III.
+ said, &#39;Right is right, though wax and parchment be not there to
+ prove it;&#39; and he restored to the family their property, which
+ is worth half-a-million.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;The Count&#39;s neighbour was Fru Nyberg, a Swedish poetess,
+ who writes under the name of Euphrosyne. In Germany, nobody
+ troubles himself about the &#39;Dikter af Euphrosyne,&#39; but
+ every educated Swede knows them and their authoress. The latter may
+ once have been handsome, but wrinkles have now crept in where roses
+ formerly bloomed. Euphrosyne was born in 1785&#8212;authoresses
+ purchase their fame dearly enough at the price of having their age
+ put down in every lexicon. A black tulle cap with flame-coloured
+ ribands covered her head; round her neck she wore a string of large
+ amber beads, a gold watch-chain, and a velvet riband from which her
+ eyeglass was suspended. She was quiet, and retiring, spoke little,
+ and passed the greater portion of the day in the cabin. Fru Nyberg
+ was returning from Paris, and had with her a young lady of
+ distinguished family, Emily Holmberg by name. This young person
+ possesses a splendid musical talent; her compositions are
+ remarkable for charming originality, and are so much the more
+ prized that the muse of Harmony has hitherto been but niggard of
+ her gifts to the sons and daughters of Sweden. There was something
+ particularly delicate and fairy-like in the whole appearance of
+ this maiden, whose long curls floated round her transparent white
+ temples, while her soft dove-like eyes had a sweet and slightly
+ melancholy expression.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;Next to Miss Holmberg, there sat a handsome young man, in a
+ sort of loose caftan of green velvet. His name was Baron
+ R&#8212;&#8212;, and he was a <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span> descendant of the man who
+ cast lots with Ankarström and Horn, which of them should kill the
+ King. He had formerly been one of the most noted lions and
+ <i>viveurs</i> of Stockholm, but had latterly taken to himself a
+ beautiful wife, and had become a more settled character; though his
+ exuberant spirits and love of enjoyment still remained, and
+ rendered him the gayest and most agreeable of travelling
+ companions. Nagel, the celebrated violin player, and his lively
+ little wife, were also among the passengers. They were returning
+ from America, where he had been exchanging his silvery notes
+ against good gold coin. Nagel is a Jew by birth, a most
+ accomplished man, speaking seven languages with equal elegance, and
+ much esteemed in the musical circles of Stockholm.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>A young Swedish woman, named Maria, whose affecting little history
+ Mr Boas learns and tells us&#8212;an Englishman&#8212;&quot;a
+ thorough Englishman, who, as long as he was eating, had no eyes or
+ ears for any thing else,&quot; and a French <i>commis voyageur</i>,
+ travelling to get orders for coloured papers, champagne, and silk
+ goods, completed the list of all those of the party who were any way
+ worthy of mention. The Frenchman, Monsieur Robineau by name, had a
+ little ugly face, nearly hidden by an enormous beard, wore a red cap
+ upon his head, and looked altogether like a bandy-legged brownie or
+ gnome. The scene at daybreak the next morning is described with some
+ humour.</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;A dull twilight reigned in the cabin, the lamp was burning
+ low and threatening to go out, the first glimmer of day was
+ stealing in through the windows, and the Englishman had struck a
+ light in order to shave himself. From each berth some different
+ description of noise was issuing; the Lubecker was snoring loudly,
+ Baron R&#8212;&#8212; was twanging a guitar, Monsieur Robineau
+ singing a barcarole, and every body was calling out as loud as he
+ could for something or other. Karl, the steward, was rushing up and
+ down the cabin, so confused by the fifty different demands
+ addressed to him, that he knew not how to comply with any one of
+ them.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;Karl, clean my boots!&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;Ja, Herr.&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;Karl, some warm water and a towel.&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;Ja, Herr.&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;<i>Amis, la matinée est belle! Sur le rivage
+ assemblez-vouz!</i>&#8212;Karl, the coffee!&#8212;<i>conduis ta
+ barque avec prudence! Pêcheur, parle bas!</i> ... Karl, the
+ coffee!&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;Ja, Herr.&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;Karl, my carpet-bag!&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;Karl, are you deaf? Did you not hear me ask for warm
+ water?&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;Ja, Herr.&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;<i>Jette tes filets en silence! Pêcheur, parle
+ bas!</i>&#8212;Coffee, coffee, coffee!&#8212;<i>Le roi des mers ne
+ t&#39;échappera pas!</i>&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;Ja, Herr.&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;Karl, look at these boots! You must clean them
+ again.&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;No, you must first find my carpet-bag.&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;Karl, you good-for-nothing fellow, if you do not bring
+ me the<br />
+ water immediately, I will complain to the captain.&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;<i>Pêcheur, parle bas! Conduis ta barque avec
+ prudence!</i> ... Karl,<br />
+ the coffee, or by my beard I will have you impaled as soon as I
+ am<br />
+ Emperor of Turkey!&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;&#39;Ja Herr! Ja, Herr! Ja, Herr!&#39;&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Aided by the various talents and eccentricities of the passengers,
+ by the grimaces of the Frenchman, and the songs of the Tyrolese
+ minstrels, the time passed pleasantly enough; till, on the morning of
+ the third day after leaving Ystad, the Svithiod was at the entrance
+ of Lake Maeler, opposite the fortress of Waxholm, which presents more
+ of a picturesque than of an imposing appearance.</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;It consists of a few loopholed parapets and ramparts, and of
+ a strong round tower of grey stone, looking very romantic but not
+ very formidable, and nevertheless entirely commanding the narrow
+ passage. A sentry, wrapped in his cloak, stood upon the wall and
+ hailed us through a speaking-trumpet. At the very moment that the
+ captain was about to answer, another steamer came round a bend of
+ the channel, meeting the Svithiod point-blank. The sentinel
+ impatiently repeated his summons, <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span> and for a moment there
+ appeared to be some danger of our either running foul of the other
+ boat, or getting a shot in our hull from the fort. They do not
+ understand joking at Waxholm, as was learned a short time since to
+ his cost by the commander of the Russian steamer Ischora, who did
+ not reply when summoned. Hastily furnishing the required
+ information to the castle, our captain shouted out the needful
+ orders to his crew, and we passed on in safety.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;The steamer which we now met bore the Swedish flag, and was
+ conveying the Crown Prince Oscar (the grandson of a lawyer and a
+ silk-mercer) and his wife, to Germany. They had left Stockholm in
+ the night time, to avoid all public ceremony and formality. A crowd
+ of artillerymen now lined the walls of Waxholm to give the usual
+ salute, and we could hear the booming of the guns long after we
+ were out of sight of ship and fort. In another hour I obtained my
+ first view of Stockholm.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Stockholm, the Venice of the North, has been thought by many
+ travellers to present a more striking <i>coup-d&#39;&#339;il</i> than
+ any other European capital, Constantinople excepted. Built upon seven
+ islands, formed by inlets of the sea and the Maeler Lake, it spreads
+ over a surface very large in proportion to the number of its houses
+ and inhabitants, and exhibits a singular mixture of streets, squares,
+ and churches, with rock, wood, and water. The ground on which it
+ stands is uneven, and in many places declivitous; the different parts
+ of the city are connected by bridges, and on every side is seen the
+ fresh green foliage of the north. The natural canals which intersect
+ Stockholm are of great depth, and ships of large burden are enabled
+ to penetrate into the very heart of the town. The general style of
+ building offers little to admire; the houses being for the most part
+ flat-fronted, monotonous, and graceless, without any species of
+ architectural decoration to relieve their inelegant uniformity. It is
+ the position of the city, the air of lightness given to it by the
+ water, which traverses it in every direction, and the life and
+ movement of the port, that form its chief recommendations. In their
+ architectural ideas the Swedes appear to be entirely utilitarian,
+ disdainful of ornament; and if a house of more modern and tasteful
+ build, with windows of a handsome size, cornices, and entablatures,
+ is here and there to be met with, it is almost certain to have been
+ erected by Germans or some other foreigners. The royal palace, of
+ which the first stone was laid in the reign of Charles XII., is a
+ well-conceived and finely executed work; some of the churches are
+ also worthy of notice; but most of the public buildings derive their
+ chief interest, like the squares and market-places, from their
+ antiquity, or from historical associations connected with them. Few
+ cities offer richer stores to the lovers of the romance of history
+ than does the capital of Sweden. One edifice alone, the
+ Ritterhaus&#8212;literally, the House of Knights or Lords&#8212;in
+ which the Swedish nobility were wont to hold their Diets, would
+ furnish subject-matter for a score of romances. Not a door nor a
+ window, scarce a stone in the building, but tells of some sanguinary
+ feud, or fierce insurrection of the populace, in the troublous days
+ of Sweden. From floor to ceiling of the great hall in which the Diet
+ held its sittings, hang the coats of arms of Swedish counts, barons,
+ and noblemen. A solemn gloomy light pervades the apartment, and
+ unites with the grave black-blue coverings of the seats and
+ balustrades, to convey the idea that this is no arena for showy
+ shallow orators, but a place in which stern truth and naked reality
+ have been wont to prevail. The chair of Gustavus Vasa, of inlaid
+ ivory, and covered with purple velvet, stands in this room.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr Boas, the pages of whose book are thickly strewn with legends
+ and historical anecdotes, many of them interesting, devotes a chapter
+ to the Ritterhaus and its annals. One tragical history, connected
+ with that building, appears worthy of extraction:</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;One of the chief favourites of Gustavus III. was Count
+ Armfelt, a young man of illustrious family, and of unusual mental
+ and personal accomplishments. At an early age he entered the royal
+ guards, and proved, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id=
+ "Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> during the war with Russia, that his
+ courage in the field fully equalled his more courtierlike merits.
+ He rapidly ascended in military grade, and, finally, the king
+ appointed him governor of Stockholm, and named him President of the
+ Council of Regency, which, in case of his death, was to govern
+ Sweden during the minority of the heir to the throne. Shortly after
+ these dignities had been conferred upon Armfelt, occurred the
+ famous masquerade and the assassination of Gustavus.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;Upon this event happening, a written will of the king&#39;s
+ was produced, of more recent date than the appointment of the
+ Count, and, according to which, the guardianship of the Prince
+ Royal was to devolve upon Duke Karl Sundermanland, the brother of
+ Gustavus. This was a weak, sensual, and vindictive prince, of
+ limited capacity, and easily led by flattery and deceit. He
+ belonged to a secret society, of which Baron Reuterholm was
+ grand-master. A couple of mysterious and well-managed apparitions
+ were sufficient to terrify the duke, and render him ductile as wax.
+ The most implicit submission was required of him, and soon the
+ crafty Reuterholm got the royal authority entirely into his own
+ hands. There was discontent and murmuring amongst the true friends
+ of the royal family, but Reuterholm&#39;s spies were ubiquitous,
+ and a frowning brow or dissatisfied look was punished as a crime.
+ Amongst others, Count Armfelt, who took no pains to conceal his
+ indignation at the scandalous proceedings of those in power, was
+ stripped of his offices, and ordered to set out immediately as
+ ambassador to Naples.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;This command fell like a thunderbolt upon the head of the
+ Count, whom every public and private consideration combined to
+ retain in Stockholm. Loath as he was to leave his country an
+ undisputed prey to the knaves into whose hands it had fallen, he
+ was perhaps still more unwilling to abandon one beloved being to
+ the snares and dangers of a sensual and corrupt court.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;It was on a September evening of the year 1792, and the light
+ of the moon fell cold and clear upon the white houses of Stockholm,
+ though the streets that intersected their masses were plunged in
+ deep shadow, when a man, muffled in a cloak, and evidently desirous
+ of avoiding observation, was seen making his way hastily through
+ the darkest and least frequented lanes of that city. Stopping at
+ last, he knocked thrice against a window-shutter; an adjacent door
+ was opened at the signal, and he passed through a corridor into a
+ cheerful and well-lighted apartment. Throwing off his cloak, he
+ received and returned the affectionate greeting of a beautiful
+ woman, who advanced with outstretched hand to meet him. The
+ stranger was Count Armfelt&#8212;the lady, Miss
+ Rudenskjöld&#8212;the most charming of the court beauties of the
+ day. The colour left her cheek when she perceived the uneasiness of
+ her lover; but when he told her of the orders he had received, her
+ head sank upon his breast, and her large blue eyes swam in tears.
+ Recovering, however, from this momentary depression, she vowed to
+ remain ever true to her country and her love. The Count echoed the
+ vow, and a kiss sealed the compact. The following morning a ship
+ sailed from Stockholm, bearing the new ambassador to Naples.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;Scarcely had Armfelt departed, when Duke Karl began to
+ persecute Miss Rudenskjöld with his addresses. At first he
+ endeavoured, by attention and flatteries, to win her favour; but
+ her avoidance of his advances and society increased the violence of
+ his passion, until at last he spoke his wishes with brutal
+ frankness. With maidenly pride and dignity, the lady repelled his
+ suit, and severely stigmatized his insolence. Foaming with rage,
+ the duke left her presence, and from that moment his love was
+ exchanged for a deadly hatred.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;Baron Reuterholm had witnessed with pleasure the growth of
+ the regent&#39;s passion for the beautiful Miss Rudenskjöld; for he
+ knew that the more pursuits Duke Karl had to occupy and amuse him,
+ the more undivided would be his own sway. It was with great
+ dissatisfaction, therefore, that he received an account of the
+ contemptuous manner in which the proud girl had treated her royal
+ admirer. The latter insisted upon revenge, full and complete
+ revenge, and Reuterholm promised that he should <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span> have
+ it. Miss Rudenskjöld&#39;s life was so blameless, and her conduct
+ in every respect so correct, that it seemed impossible to invent
+ any charge against her; but Reuterholm set spies to work, and spies
+ will always discover something. They found out that she kept up a
+ regular correspondence with Count Armfelt. Their letters were
+ opened, and evidence found in them of a plan to declare the young
+ prince of age, or at least to abstract Duke Karl from the
+ corrupting influence of Reuterholm. The angry feelings entertained
+ by the latter personage towards Miss Rudenskjöld were increased
+ tenfold by this discovery, and he immediately had her thrown into
+ prison. She was brought to trial before a tribunal composed of
+ creatures of the baron, and including the Chancellor Sparre, a man
+ of unparalleled cunning and baseness, than whom Satan himself could
+ have selected no better advocate. During her examination, Fraulein
+ von Rudenskjöld was most cruelly treated, and the words of the
+ correspondence were distorted, with infamous subtlety, into
+ whatever construction best suited her accusers. Sparre twisted his
+ physiognomy, which in character partook of that of the dog and the
+ serpent, into a thoughtful expression, and regretted that,
+ according to the Swedish laws, the offence of which Miss
+ Rudenskjöld was found guilty, could not be punished by the lash.
+ The pillory, and imprisonment in the Zuchthaus, the place of
+ confinement for the most guilty and abandoned of her sex, formed
+ the scarce milder sentence pronounced upon the unfortunate victim.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;It was early on an autumn morning&#8212;a thick canopy of
+ grey clouds overspread the heavens&#8212;and the dismal half-light
+ which prevailed in the streets of Stockholm made it difficult to
+ decide whether or not the sun had yet risen. A cold wind blew
+ across from Lake Maeler, and caused the few persons who had as yet
+ left their houses to hasten their steps along the deserted
+ pavement. Suddenly a detachment of soldiers arrived upon the square
+ in front of the Ritterhaus, and took up their station beside the
+ pillory. The officer commanding the party was a slender young man
+ of agreeable countenance; but he was pale as death, and his voice
+ trembled as he gave the words of command. The prison-gate now
+ opened, and Miss Rudenskjöld came forth, escorted by several
+ jailers. Her cheeks were whiter than the snow-white dress she wore;
+ her limbs trembled; her long hair hung in wild dishevelment over
+ her shoulders, and yet was she beautiful&#8212;beautiful as a
+ fading rose. They led her up the steps of the pillory, and the
+ executioner&#39;s hand was already stretched out to bind her to the
+ ignominious post, when she cast a despairing glance upon the
+ bystanders, as though seeking aid. As she did so, a shrill scream
+ of agony burst from her lips. She had recognised in the young
+ officer her own dearly-loved brother, who, by a devilish refinement
+ of cruelty, had been appointed to command the guard that was to
+ attend at her punishment.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;Strong in her innocence, the delicate and gently-nurtured
+ girl had borne up against all her previous sufferings; but this was
+ too much. Her senses left her, and she fell fainting to the ground.
+ Her brother also swooned away, and never recovered his unclouded
+ reason. To his dying day his mind remained gloomy and unsettled.
+ The very executioners refused to inflict further indignity on the
+ senseless girl, and she was conducted back to her dungeon, where
+ she soon recovered all the firmness which she had already displayed
+ before her infamous judges.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;Meanwhile Armfelt was exposed in Italy to the double danger
+ of secret assassination, and of a threatened requisition from the
+ Swedish government for him to be delivered up. He sought safety in
+ flight, and found an asylum in Germany. His estates were
+ confiscated, his titles, honours, and nobility declared forfeit,
+ and he himself was condemned by default as a traitor to his
+ country.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Concerning the ultimate fate of this luckless pair of lovers, Mr
+ Boas deposeth not, but passes on to an account of the disturbances in
+ 1810, when the Swedish marshal, Count Axel Fersen, suspected by the
+ populace as cause of the sudden death of the Crown Prince, Charles
+ Augustus, was attacked, while following the body of the prince
+ through the streets of Stockholm. <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span> He was sitting in full
+ uniform in his carriage, drawn by six milk-white horses, when he was
+ assailed with showers of stones, from which he took refuge in a house
+ upon the Ritterhaustmarkt. In spite of the exertions of General
+ Silversparre, at the head of some dragoons, the mob broke into the
+ house, and entered the room in which Fersen was. He folded his hands,
+ and begged for mercy, protesting his innocence. But his entreaties
+ were in vain. A broad-shouldered fellow, a shopkeeper, named Lexow,
+ tore off his orders, sword, and cloak, and threw them through the
+ window to the rioters, who with furious shouts reduced them to
+ fragments. Silversparre then proposed to take the count to prison,
+ and have him brought to trial in due form. But, on the way thither,
+ the crowd struck and ill-treated the old man; and, although numerous
+ troops were now upon the spot, these remained with shouldered arms,
+ and even their officers forbade their interference. They appeared to
+ be there to attend an execution rather than to restore order. The mob
+ dragged the unfortunate Fersen to the foot of Gustavus Vasa&#39;s
+ statue, and there beat and ill-treated him till he died. It was
+ remarked of the foremost and most eager of his persecutors, that
+ although dressed as common sailors, their hands were white and
+ delicate, and linen of fine texture peeped betrayingly forth from
+ under their coarse outer garments. Doubtless more than one
+ long-standing hatred was on that day gratified. It was still borne in
+ mind, that Count Fersen&#39;s father had been the chief instrument in
+ bringing Count Eric Brahe, and several other nobles, to the scaffold,
+ upon the very spot where, half a century later, his son&#39;s blood
+ was poured out.</p>
+
+ <p>The murder of the Count-Marshal was followed by an attack upon the
+ house of his sister, the Countess Piper; but she had had timely
+ notice, and escaped by water to Waxholm. Several officers of rank,
+ who strove to pacify the mob, were abused, and even beaten; until at
+ length a combat ensued between the troops and the people, and lasted
+ till nightfall, when an end was put to it by a heavy fall of rain.
+ The number of killed and wounded on that day could never be
+ ascertained.</p>
+
+ <p>These incidents are striking and dramatic&#8212;fine stuff for
+ novel writers, as Mr Boas says&#8212;but we will turn to less
+ sanguinary subjects. In a letter to a female friend, who is
+ designated by the fanciful name of Eglantine, we have a sketch of the
+ present state of Swedish poetry and literature. According to the
+ account here given us, Olof von Dalin, who was born in Holland in
+ 1763, was the first to awaken in the Swedes a real and correct taste
+ for the <i>belles lettres</i>. This he did in great measure by the
+ establishment of a periodical called the <i>Argus</i>. He improved
+ the style of prose writing, and produced some poetry, which latter
+ appears, however, to have been generally more remarkable for
+ sweetness than power. We have not space to follow Mr Boas through his
+ gallery of Swedish <i>literati</i>, but we will extract what he says
+ concerning three authoresses, whose works, highly popular in their
+ own country and in Germany, have latterly attracted some attention in
+ England. These are&#8212;Miss Bremer, Madame Flygare-Carlén, and the
+ Baroness Knorring, the delineators of domestic, rural, and
+ aristocratic life in Sweden.</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;Frederica Bremer was born in the year 1802. After the death
+ of her father, a rich merchant and proprietor of mines, she resided
+ at Schonen, and subsequently with a female friend in Norway. She
+ now lives with her mother and sister alternately in the Norrlands
+ Gatan, at Stockholm, or at their country seat at Arsta. If I were
+ to talk to you about Miss Bremer&#39;s romances, you would laugh at
+ me, for you are doubtless ten times better acquainted with them
+ than I am. But you are curious, perhaps, to learn something about
+ her appearance, and <i>that</i> I can tell you.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;You will not expect to hear that Miss Bremer, a maiden lady
+ of forty, retains a very large share of youthful bloom; but,
+ independently of that, she is really any thing but handsome. Her
+ thin wrinkled physiognomy is, however, rendered agreeable by its
+ good-humoured expression, and her meagre figure has the benefit of
+ a neat and simple style of dress. From the style of her writings, I
+ used always to take <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id=
+ "Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> her to be a governess; and she looks
+ exactly like one. She knows that she is not handsome, and on that
+ account has always refused to have her portrait taken; the one they
+ sell of her in Germany is a counterfeit, the offspring of an
+ artist&#39;s imagination, stimulated by speculative book-sellers.
+ This summer, there was a quizzing paragraph in one of the Swedish
+ papers, saying that a painter had been sent direct from America to
+ Rome and Stockholm, to take portraits of the Pope and of Miss
+ Bremer.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;In Sweden, the preference is given to her romance of
+ <i>Hemmet</i>, (Home,) over all her other works. Any thing like a
+ bold originality of invention she is generally admitted to lack,
+ but she is skilled in throwing a poetical charm over the quiet
+ narrow circle of domestic life. She is almost invariably successful
+ in her female characters, but when she attempts to draw those of
+ men, her creations are mere caricatures, full of emptiness and
+ improbability. Her habit of indulging in a sort of aimless and
+ objectless philosophizing vein, <i>à propos</i> of nothing at all,
+ is also found highly wearisome. For my part, it has often given me
+ an attack of nausea. She labours, however, diligently to improve
+ herself; and, when I saw her, she had just been ordering at a
+ bookseller&#39;s two German works&#8212;Bossen&#39;s <i>Translation
+ of Homer</i>, and Creuzer&#39;s <i>Symbolics</i>.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;Emily Flygare is about thirty years of age. She is the
+ daughter of a country clergyman, and has only to write down her own
+ recollections in order to depict village life, with its pains and
+ its pleasures. Accordingly, that is her strongest line in
+ authorship; and her book, <i>Kyrkoinvigningen</i>, (the Church
+ Festival,) has been particularly successful. Married in early life
+ to an officer, she contracted, after his death, several
+ engagements, all of which she broke off, whereby her reputation in
+ some degree suffered. At last she gave her hand to Carlén, a very
+ middling sort of poet, some years younger than she is; and she now
+ styles herself&#8212;following the example of Madame
+ Birch-Pfeiffer, and other celebrated singers&#8212;Flygare-Carlén.
+ She lives very happily at Stockholm with her husband, and is at
+ least as good a housewife as an authoress, not even thinking it
+ beneath her dignity to superintend the kitchen. Her great modesty
+ as to her own merits, and the esteem she expresses for her rivals,
+ are much to her credit. She is a little restless body, and does not
+ like sitting still. Her countenance is rather pleasing than
+ handsome, and its charm is heightened by the lively sparkle of her
+ quick dark eyes.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;The third person of the trio is the Baroness Knorring, a very
+ noble lady, who lives far away from Stockholm, and is married to an
+ officer. She is between thirty and forty years old, and it is
+ affirmed that she would be justified in exclaiming with
+ Wallenstein&#39;s Thekla&#8212;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">&#39;Ich habe gelebt und
+ geliebet.&#39;</span>
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ She was described to me as nervous and delicate, which is perhaps
+ the right temperament to enable her accurately to depict in her
+ romances the strained artificiality and silken softness of
+ aristocratic existence. Her style also possesses the needful
+ lightness and grace, and she accordingly succeeds admirably in her
+ sketches of high life, with all its elegant nullities and
+ spiritless pomp. One of her best works is the romance of
+ <i>Cousinerna</i>, (The Cousins,) which, as well as the other works
+ of Knorring, Bremer, and Flygare, has been placed before the German
+ public by our diligent translators.&quot;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <p>Upon the subjects of Swedish society and conversation, Mr Boas is
+ pleased to be unusually funny. Like the foreigner who asserted that
+ Goddam was the root of the English language, he seems prepared to
+ maintain that two monosyllables constitute the essence of the Swedish
+ tongue, and that they alone are required to carry on an effective and
+ agreeable dialogue. &quot;It is not at all difficult,&quot; he says,
+ &quot;to keep up a conversation with a Swede, when you are once
+ acquainted with a certain mystical formula, whereby all emotions and
+ sentiments are to be expressed, and by the aid of which you may love
+ and hate, curse and bless, be good-humoured or satirical, and even
+ witty. The mighty and all-sufficing words are, &#39;<i>Ja
+ so!</i>&#39; (Yes, indeed!) usually <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span> pronounced <i>Jassoh</i>.
+ It is wonderful to hear the infinite variety of modulation which a
+ Swede gives to these two insignificant syllables. Does he hear some
+ agreeable intelligence, he exclaims, with sparkling eyes and brisk
+ intonation, &#39;Ja so!&#39; If bad news are brought to him, he
+ droops his head, and, after a pause, murmurs mournfully, &#39;Ja
+ so!&#39; The communication of an important affair is received with a
+ thoughtful &#39;Ja so!&#39; a joke elicits a humorous one; an attempt
+ to banter or deceive him is met by a sarcastic repetition of the same
+ mysterious words.</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;A romance might be constructed out of these four letters.
+ Thus:&#8212;Lucy is sitting at her window, when a well-known
+ messenger brings her a bouquet. She joyfully exclaims, &#39;Ja
+ so!&#39; and presses the flowers to her lips. A friend comes in;
+ she shows her the flowers, and the friend utters an envious &#39;Ja
+ so!&#39; Soon afterwards Lucy&#39;s lover hears that she is
+ faithless; he gnashes his teeth, and vociferates a furious &#39;Ja
+ so!&#39; He writes to tell her that he despises her, and will never
+ see her again; whereupon she weeps, and says to herself, between
+ two tears, &#39;Ja so!&#39; She manages, however, to see him, and
+ convinces him that she has been calumniated. He clasps her in his
+ arms, and utters a &#39;Ja so!&#39; expressive of entire
+ conviction. Suddenly his brow becomes clouded, and muttering a
+ meditative &#39;Ja so!&#39; he remembers that a peremptory
+ engagement compels him to leave her. He seeks out the man who has
+ sought to rob him of his mistress, and reproaches him with his
+ perfidy. This rival replies by a cold, scornful &#39;Ja so!&#39;
+ and a meeting is agreed upon. The next day they exchange shots, and
+ I fully believe that the man who is killed sighs out with his last
+ breath &#39;Ja so!&#39; His horror-stricken antagonist exclaims
+ &#39;Ja so!&#39; and flies the country; and surgeon, relations,
+ friends, judge, all, in short, who hear of the affair, will
+ inevitably cry out, &#39;Ja so!&#39; Grief and joy, doubt and
+ confidence, jest and anger, are all to be rendered by those two
+ words.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The province of Dalarna, or Dalecarlia, which lies between
+ Nordland and the Norwegian frontier, and in which Miss Bremer has
+ laid the scene of one of her most recent works, is spoken of at some
+ length by Mr Boas, who considers it to be, in various respects, the
+ most interesting division of Sweden. Its inhabitants, unable to find
+ means of subsistence in their own poor and mountainous land, are in
+ the habit of wandering forth to seek a livelihood in more kindly
+ regions, and Mr Boas likens them in this respect to the Savoyards.
+ They might, perhaps, be more aptly compared to the Galicians, who
+ leave their country, not, as many of the Savoyards do, to become
+ beggars and vagabonds, by the aid of a marmoset and a grinding organ,
+ but to strive, by the hardest labour and most rigid economy, to
+ accumulate a sum that will enable them to return and end their lives
+ in their native village.</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;The dress of the Dalecarlians (<i>dale carls</i>, or men of
+ the valley) consists of a sort of doublet and leathern apron, to
+ the latter of which garments they get so accustomed that they
+ scarcely lay it aside even on Sundays. Above that they wear a short
+ overcoat of white flannel. Their round hats are decorated with red
+ tufts, and their breeches fastened at the knees with red ties and
+ tassels. The costume of their wives and daughters, who are called
+ Dalecullen, (women of the valley,) is yet more peculiar and
+ outlandish. It is composed of a coloured cap, fitting close to the
+ head, of a boddice with red laces, a gown, usually striped with red
+ and green, and of scarlet stockings. They wear enormous shoes,
+ large, awkward, and heavy, made of the very thickest leather, and
+ adorned with the eternal red frippery. The soles are an inch thick,
+ with huge heels, stuck full of nails, and placed, not where the
+ heel of the foot is, but in front, under the toes; and as these
+ remarkable shoes <i>lift</i> at every step, the heels of the
+ stockings are covered with leather. On Sundays, ample white
+ shirt-sleeves, broad cap-ribands, and large wreaths of flowers are
+ added to this singular garb, amongst the wearers of which pretty
+ faces and laughing blue eyes are by no means uncommon.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;The occupations of these women are of the rudest and most
+ laborious description. They may be literally <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span> said to
+ earn their bread by the sweat of their brow, and their hands are
+ rendered callous as horn by the nature of their toil. They act as
+ bricklayers&#39; labourers, and carry loads of stones upon their
+ shoulders and up ladders. Besides this, it is a monopoly of theirs
+ to row a sort of boat, which is impelled by machinery imitating
+ that of a steamer, but worked by hand. These are tolerably large
+ vessels, having paddle-wheels fitted to them, which are turned from
+ within. Each wheel is worked by two young Dalecarlian girls, who
+ perform this severe labour with the utmost cheerfulness, while an
+ old woman steers. They pass their lives upon the water, plying from
+ earliest dawn till late in the night, and conveying passengers, for
+ a trifling copper coin, across the broad canals which intersect
+ Stockholm in every direction. Cheerful and pious, the bloom of
+ health on her cheeks, and the fear of God in her heart, the
+ Dalecarlian maiden is contented in her humble calling. On Sunday
+ she would sooner lose a customer than miss her attendance at
+ church. One sorrowful feeling, and only one, at times saddens her
+ heart, and that is the <i>Heimweh</i>, the yearning after her
+ native valley, when she longs to return to her wild and beautiful
+ country, which the high mountains encircle, and the bright stream
+ of the Dalelf waters. There she has her father and mother, or
+ perhaps a lover, as poor as herself, and she sees no possibility of
+ ever earning enough to enable her to return home, and become his
+ wife.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;It was in this province that I now found myself, and its
+ inhabitants pleased me greatly. Nature has made them hardy and
+ intelligent, for their life is a perpetual struggle to extract a
+ scanty subsistence from the niggard and rocky soil. Unenervated by
+ luxury, uncorrupted by the introduction of foreign vices, they have
+ been at all periods conspicuous for their love of freedom, for
+ their penetration in discovering, and promptness in repelling,
+ attacks upon it. Faithful to their lawful sovereign, they yet
+ brooked no tyranny; and when invaders entered the land, or bad
+ governors oppressed them, they were ever ready to defend their just
+ rights with their lives. From the remotest periods, such has been
+ the character of this people, which has preserved itself
+ unsophisticated, true, and free. It is interesting to trace the
+ history of the Dalecarlians. Isolated in a manner from the rest of
+ the world amongst their rugged precipices and in their lonely
+ valleys, it might be supposed they would know nothing of what
+ passed without; yet whenever the moment for action has come, they
+ have been found alert and prepared.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;At the commencement of the fifteenth century, Eric XIII.,
+ known also as the Pomeranian, ascended the Swedish throne. His own
+ disposition was neither bad nor good, but he had too little
+ knowledge of the country he was called upon to reign over; and his
+ governors and vice-gerents, for the most part foreigners,
+ tyrannized unsparingly over the nation. The oppressed people
+ stretched out their hands imploringly to the king; but he, who was
+ continually requiring fresh supplies of money for the prosecution
+ of objectless wars, paid no attention to their complaints. Of all
+ his Vögte, or governors, not one was so bad and cruel as Jesse
+ Ericson, who dwelt at Westeraes, and ruled over Dalarna. He laid
+ enormous imposts on the peasantry, and when they were unable to
+ pay, he took every thing from them, to their last horse, and
+ harnessed themselves to the plough. Pregnant matrons were compelled
+ at his command to draw heavy hay-waggons, women and girls were
+ shamefully outraged by him, and persons possessing property
+ unjustly condemned, in order that he might take possession of their
+ goods. When the peasants came to him to complain, he had them
+ driven away with stripes, or else cut off their ears, or hung them
+ up in the smoke till they were suffocated.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;Then the men of Dalarna murmured; they assembled in their
+ valleys, and held counsel together. An insurrection was decided
+ upon, and Engelbrecht of Falun was chosen to head it, because,
+ although small of stature, he had a courageous heart, and knew how
+ to talk or to fight, as occasion required. He repaired to
+ Copenhagen, laid the just complaints of his countrymen before the
+ king, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg
+ 66]</a></span> and pledged his head to prove their truth. Eric gave
+ him a letter to the counsellors of state, some of whom accompanied
+ him back to Dalarna, and convinced themselves that the distress of
+ the province was inconceivably great. They exposed this state of
+ things to the king in a letter, with which Engelbrecht returned to
+ Copenhagen. But, on seeking audience of Eric, the latter cried out
+ angrily, &#39;You do nothing but complain! Go your ways, and appear
+ no more before me.&#39; So Engelbrecht departed, but he murmured as
+ he went, &#39;Yet once more will I return.&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;Although the counsellors themselves urged the king to appoint
+ another governor over Dalecarlia, he did not think fit to do so.
+ Then, in the year 1434, so soon as the sun had melted the snow, the
+ Dalecarlians rose up as one man, marched through the country, and
+ Jesse Ericson fled before them into Denmark. They destroyed the
+ dwellings of their oppressors, drove away their hirelings and
+ retainers, and Engelbrecht advanced, with a thousand picked men, to
+ Wadstena, where he found an assembly of bishops and counsellors.
+ From these he demanded assistance, but they refused to accord it,
+ until Engelbrecht took the bishop of Linköping by the collar, to
+ deliver him over to his followers. Thereupon they became more
+ tractable, and renounced in writing their allegiance to Eric, on
+ the grounds that he had &#39;made bishops of ignorant ribalds,
+ entrusted high offices to unworthy persons, and neglected to punish
+ tyrannical governors.&#39; The Dalecarlians advanced as far as
+ Schonen, where Engelbrecht concluded a truce, and dismissed them.
+ His army had consisted of ten thousand peasants, all burning with
+ anger against their oppressors, and without military discipline;
+ yet, to his great credit be it said, not a single excess or act of
+ plunder had been committed.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;On hearing of these disturbances, the king repaired in all
+ haste to Stockholm, whereupon Engelbrecht again summoned his
+ followers, and marched upon the capital, in which Eric entrenched
+ himself with various nobles and governors, who had burned down
+ their castles, and hastened to join him. Things looked threatening,
+ but nevertheless ended peaceably, for Eric was afraid of the
+ Swedes. He obtained peace by promising that in future the
+ provinces, with few exceptions, should name their own governors,
+ and that Engelbrecht should be vögt at Oerebro. As usual, however,
+ he broke his word, and, before sailing for Denmark, he appointed as
+ vögt a man who was a notorious pirate, a robber of churches, and
+ abuser of women. For the third time the peasants revolted. In the
+ winter of 1436 they appeared before Stockholm, which they took, the
+ burghers themselves helping them to burst open the gates.
+ Engelbrecht seized upon one fortress after another, meeting no
+ resistance from King Eric, who fled secretly to Pomerania, leaving
+ the war and his kingdom to take care of themselves. Several members
+ of the council followed him thither, and, after some persuasion,
+ brought him back with them.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;In the midst of these changes and commotions, Engelbrecht was
+ treacherously assassinated by the son of that bishop whom he had
+ formerly affronted at Wadstena. With tears and lamentations, the
+ boors fetched the body of their brave and faithful leader from the
+ little island where his death had occurred, and which to this day
+ bears his name. The spot on which the murder was committed is said
+ to be accursed, and no grass ever grows there. Subsequently the
+ coffin was brought to the church at Oerebro, and so exalted was the
+ opinion entertained of Engelbrecht&#39;s worth and virtue, that the
+ country people asserted that miracles were wrought at his tomb, as
+ at the shrine of a saint.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>It was nearly a century later that Gustavus Vasa, flying, with a
+ price upon his head, from the assassins of his father and friends,
+ took refuge in Dalecarlia. Disguised in peasant&#39;s garb, and with
+ an axe in his hand, he hired himself as a labourer; but was soon
+ recognised, and his employer feared to retain him in his service. He
+ then appealed to the Dalecarlians to espouse his cause; but, although
+ they admired and sympathised with the gallant youth who thus placed
+ his trust in them, they hesitated to take up arms in his behalf; and,
+ hopeless of their assistance, he at last turned <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span> his steps
+ towards Norway. But scarcely had he done so, when the incursion of a
+ band of Danish mercenaries sent to seek him, and the full
+ confirmation of what he had told them concerning the massacre at
+ Stockholm, roused the Dalecarlians from their inaction. The tocsin
+ was sounded throughout the provinces, the Danes were driven away, and
+ the two swiftest runners in the country bound on their snow-shoes,
+ and set out with the speed of the wind to bring back the royal
+ fugitive. They overtook him at the foot of the Norwegian mountains,
+ and soon afterwards he found himself at the head of five thousand
+ white-coated Dalecarlians.</p>
+
+ <p>The Danes were approaching, and one of their bishops
+ asked&#8212;&quot;How many men the province of Dalarna could
+ furnish?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;At least twenty thousand,&quot; was the reply; &quot;for the
+ old men are just as strong and as brave as the young ones.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;But what do they all live upon?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Upon bread and water. They take little account of hunger and
+ thirst, and when corn is lacking, they make their bread out of
+ tree-bark.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Nay,&quot; said the bishop, &quot;a people who eat tree-bark
+ and drink water, the devil himself would not vanquish, much less a
+ man.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>And neither were they vanquished. Like an avalanche from the
+ mountains, they fell upon their foes, beat them with clubs, and drove
+ them into the river. Their progress was one series of triumphs, till
+ they placed Gustavus Vasa on the throne of Sweden.</p>
+
+ <p>The last outbreak of the Dalecarlians was less successful. On the
+ 19th of June 1743, five thousand of these hardy and determined men
+ appeared before Stockholm, bringing with them in fetters the governor
+ of their province, and demanding the punishment of the nobles who had
+ instigated a war with Russia, and a new election of an heir to the
+ crown. They were not to be pacified by words; and even the next
+ morning, when the old King Frederick, surrounded by his general and
+ guards, rode out to harangue them, all he could obtain was the
+ release of their prisoner. On the other hand, they seized three
+ pieces of cannon, and dragged them to the square named after Gustavus
+ Adolphus, where they posted themselves.</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;There were eight thousand men of regular troops in Stockholm,
+ but these were not all to be depended upon, and it was necessary to
+ bring up some detachments of the guards. A company of Süderländers
+ who had been ordered to cross the bridge, went right about face, as
+ soon as they came in sight of the Dalecarlians, and did not halt
+ till they reached the sluicegate, which had been drawn up, so that
+ nobody might pass. It was now proclaimed with beat of drum, that
+ those of the Dalecarlians who should not have left the city by five
+ o&#39;clock, would be dealt with as rebels and traitors. More than
+ a thousand did leave, but the others stood firm. Counsellors and
+ generals went to them, and exhorted them to obedience; but they
+ cried out that they would make and unmake the king, according to
+ their own good right and decree, and that if it was attempted to
+ hinder them, the very child in the cradle should meet no mercy at
+ their hands. To give greater weight to their words, they fired a
+ cannon and a volley of musketry, by which a counsellor was killed.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;Orders were now given to the soldiers to fire, but they had
+ pity on the poor peasants, and only aimed at the houses, shattering
+ the glass in hundreds of windows. But the artillerymen were obliged
+ to put match to touch-hole, and a murderous fire of canister did
+ execution in the masses of the Dalecarlians. Many a white camisole
+ was stained with the red heart&#39;s-blood of its wearer; fifty men
+ fell dead upon the spot, eighty were wounded, and a crowd of others
+ sprang into the Norderström, or sought to fly. The regiment of
+ body-guards pursued them, and drove the discomfited boors into the
+ artillery court. A severe investigation now took place, and these
+ thirsters after liberty were punished by imprisonment and running
+ the gauntlet. Their leader and five others were beheaded.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;The Dalecarlians are a tenacious and obstinate people, and
+ their character is not likely to change; but God forbid that they
+ should again <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id=
+ "Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> deem it necessary to visit Stockholm.
+ They were doubtless just as brave in the year 1743 as in 1521 and
+ 1434; but though <i>they</i> had not altered, the times had.
+ Civilization and cartridges are powerful checks upon undisciplined
+ courage and an unbridled desire of liberty.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Returning from Dalecarlia to Stockholm, Mr Boas takes, not without
+ regret, his final farewell of that city, and embarks for Gothenburg,
+ passing through the Gotha canal, that splendid monument of Swedish
+ industry and perseverance, which connects the Baltic with the North
+ Sea. He passes the island of Mörkö, on which is Höningsholm Castle,
+ where Marshal Banner was brought up. A window is pointed out in the
+ third story of the castle, at which Banner, when a child, was once
+ playing, when he overbalanced himself and fell out. The ground
+ beneath was hard and rocky, but nevertheless he got up unhurt, ran
+ into the house, and related how a gardener had saved him by catching
+ him in his white apron. Enquiry was immediately made, but, far or
+ near, no gardener was to be found. By an odd coincidence,
+ Wallenstein, Banner&#39;s great opponent, when a page at Innspruck,
+ also fell out of a high window without receiving the least
+ injury.</p>
+
+ <p>On the first evening of the voyage, the steamer anchors for the
+ night near Mem, a country-seat belonging to a certain Count Saltza,
+ an eccentric old nobleman, who traces his descent from the time of
+ Charles XII., and fancies himself a prophet and ghost-seer. His
+ predictions relate usually to the royal family or country of Sweden,
+ and are repeated from mouth to mouth throughout every province of the
+ kingdom. And here we must retract an assertion we made some pages
+ back, as to the possibility of our supposing this book to proceed
+ from any other than a German pen. No one but a German would have
+ thought it necessary or judicious to intrude his own insipid
+ sentimentalities into a narrative of this description, and which was
+ meant to be printed. But there is probably no conceivable subject on
+ which a German could be set to write, in discussing which he would
+ not manage to drag in, by neck and heels, a certain amount of
+ sentiment or metaphysics, perhaps of both. Mr Boas, we are sorry to
+ say, is guilty of this sin against good taste. The steamer comes to
+ an anchor about ten o&#39;clock, and he goes ashore with Baron
+ K&#8212;&#8212;, a friend he has picked up on board, to take a stroll
+ in the Prophet&#39;s garden at Mem. There they encounter
+ Mesdemoiselles Ebba and Ylfwa, lovely and romantic maidens, who sit
+ in a bower of roses under the shadow of an umbrageous maple-tree,
+ their arms intertwined, their eyes fixed upon a moonbeam, piping out
+ Swedish melodies, which, to our two swains, prove seductive as the
+ songs of a Siren. The moonbeam aforesaid is kind enough to convert
+ into silver all the trees, bushes, leaves and twigs in the vicinity
+ of the young ladies with the Thor-and-Odin names; whilst to complete
+ this German vision, a white bird with a yellow tuft upon its head
+ stands sentry upon a branch beside them, the said bird being, we
+ presume, a filthy squealing cockatoo, although Mr Boas, gay deceiver
+ that he is, evidently wishes us to infer that it was an indigenous
+ volatile of the ph&#339;nix tribe. Sentinel Cockatoo, however, was
+ caught napping, and the garrison of the bower had to run for it. And
+ now commences a series of hopes and fears, and doubts and anxieties,
+ and sighings and perplexities, which keep the tender heart of Boas in
+ a state of agreeable palpitation, through four or five chapters; at
+ the end of which he steps on board the steam-boat Christiana, blows
+ in imagination a farewell kiss to Miss Ebba, of whom, by the bye, he
+ has never obtained more than half a glimpse, and awaking, as he tells
+ us, from his love-dream, which we should call his nightmare, sets
+ sail for Copenhagen.</p>
+
+ <p>Of the various places visited by Mr Boas during his ramble, few
+ seem to have pleased him better than Copenhagen, and he becomes quite
+ enthusiastic when speaking of that city, and of what he saw there.
+ The pleasure he had in meeting Thorwaldsen is perhaps in part the
+ cause of his remembering the Danish capital with peculiar favour. He
+ gives various details concerning that celebrated sculptor, his
+ character and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id=
+ "Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span> habits, and commences the chapter, which
+ he styles, &quot;A Fragment of Italy in the North,&quot; with a
+ comparison between Sweden and Denmark, two countries which, both in
+ trifling and important matters, but especially in the character of
+ their inhabitants, are far more dissimilar than from their
+ juxtaposition might have been supposed. Listen to Mr Boas.</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;On meeting an interesting person for the first time, one
+ frequently endeavours to trace a resemblance with some previous
+ acquaintance or friend. I have a similar propensity when I visit
+ interesting cities; but I had difficulty in calling to mind any
+ place to which I could liken Copenhagen. Between Sweden and Denmark
+ generally, there are more points of difference than of resemblance.
+ Sweden is the land of rocks, and Denmark of forest. Oehlenschlägel
+ calls the latter country, &#39;the fresh and grassy,&#39; but he
+ might also have added &#39;the cool and wooded.&#39;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;The Swedish language is soft and melodious, the Danish sharp
+ and accentuated. The former is better suited to lyrical, the latter
+ to dramatic poetry.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;When a Swede laughs, he still looks more serious than a Dane
+ who is out of humour. In Sweden, the people are quiet, even when
+ indulging in the pleasures they love best; in Denmark there is no
+ pleasure without noise. In a political point of view, the
+ difference between the two nations is equally marked. Beyond the
+ Sound, all demonstrations are made with fierce earnestness; on this
+ side of it, satire and wit are the weapons employed. On the one
+ hand shells and heavy artillery, on the other, light and brilliant
+ rockets. The Swedes have much liberty of the press and very little
+ humour; the Danes have a great deal of humour and small liberty of
+ the press. As a people, the former are of a choleric and melancholy
+ temperament, the latter of a sanguine and phlegmatic one.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;Whilst the Swedish national hatred is directed against
+ Russia, that of Denmark takes England for its object. Finland and
+ the fleet are not yet forgotten.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;The Swede is constantly taking off his hat; the Dane always
+ shakes hands. The former is courteous and sly, the latter simple
+ and honest.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;If Denmark has little similarity with its northern neighbour,
+ neither has it any marked point of resemblance with its southern
+ one. It always reminds me of the <i>tongue</i> of a balance,
+ vibrating between Sweden and Germany, and inclining ever to that
+ side on which the greatest weight lies. Thus its literary tendency
+ is German, its political one Swedish.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;The best comparison that can be made of Denmark is with
+ Italy; and to me, although I shall probably surprise the reader by
+ saying so, Copenhagen appears like a part of Rome transplanted into
+ the north. In some degree, perhaps, Thorwaldsen is answerable for
+ this impression; for where he works and creates, one is apt to
+ fancy oneself surrounded by that warm southern atmosphere in which
+ nature and art best flourish. When he returned to Copenhagen, it
+ was a festival day for the whole population of the city. A crew of
+ gaily dressed sailors rowed him to land, and whilst they were doing
+ so, a rainbow suddenly appeared in the heavens. The multitude
+ assembled on the shore set up a shout of jubilation, to see that
+ the sky itself assumed its brightest tints, to celebrate the return
+ of their favourite.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;I had been told that I should not see Thorwaldsen, because he
+ was staying with the Countess Stampe. This lady is about forty
+ years of age, and possesses that blooming <i>embonpoint</i> which
+ makes up in some women for the loss of youthful freshness. She
+ became acquainted with the artist in Italy, and fascinated him to
+ such a degree that he made her a present of the whole of his
+ drawings, which are of immense artistical value. She excited much
+ ill-will by accepting them, but at the same time it must in justice
+ be owned, that Thorwaldsen is under great obligations to her. He
+ had hardly arrived in Copenhagen, when innumerable invitations to
+ breakfasts, dinners, and suppers were poured upon him. Every body
+ wanted to have him; and, as he was known to love good living, the
+ most sumptuous repasts were prepared for him. The sturdy old man,
+ who had never been <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id=
+ "Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span> ill in his life, became pale and
+ sickly, lost his taste for work, and was in a fair way to die of an
+ indigestion, when the Countess Stampe stepped in to the rescue,
+ carried him off to her country-seat, and there fitted him up a
+ studio. His health speedily returned, and with it the energy for
+ which he has always been remarkable, and he joyfully resumed the
+ chisel and modelling stick.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;I had scarcely set foot in the streets of Copenhagen, when I
+ saw Thorwaldsen coming towards me. I was sure that I was not
+ mistaken, for no one who has ever looked upon that fine benevolent
+ countenance, that long silver hair, clear, high forehead and gently
+ smiling mouth&#8212;no one who has ever gazed into those divine
+ blue orbs, wherein creative power seems so sweetly to repose, could
+ ever forget them again. I went up and spoke to him. He remembered
+ me immediately, shook my hand with that captivating joviality of
+ manner which is peculiar to him, and invited me into his house. He
+ inhabits the Charlottenburg, an old chateau on the Königsneumarkt,
+ by crossing the inner court of which one reaches his studio. My
+ most delightful moments in Copenhagen were passed there, looking on
+ whilst he worked at the statues of deities and heroes&#8212;he
+ himself more illustrious than them all. There they stand, those
+ lifelike and immortal groups, displaying the most wonderful variety
+ of form and attitude, and yet, strange to say, Thorwaldsen scarcely
+ ever makes use of a model. His most recently commenced works were
+ two gigantic allegorical figures, Samson and Æsculapius. The first
+ was already completed, and I myself saw the bearded physiognomy of
+ Æsculapius growing each day more distinct and perfect beneath the
+ cunning hand of the master. The statues represent Strength and
+ Health.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In his house, and as a private individual, Thorwaldsen is as
+ amiable and estimable as in his studio. In the centre of one of his
+ rooms is a four-sided sofa, which was embroidered expressly for him
+ by the fair hands of the Copenhagen ladies. The walls are covered
+ with pictures, some of them very good, others of a less degree of
+ merit. They were not all bought on account of their excellence;
+ Thorwaldsen purchased many of them to assist young artists who were
+ living, poor and in difficulties, at Rome. Dressed in his blue linen
+ blouse, he explained to his visitor the subjects of these pictures,
+ without the slightest tinge of vanity in his manner or words. None of
+ the dignities or honours that have been showered upon him, have in
+ the slightest degree turned his head. Affable, cheerful, and
+ even-tempered, he appears to have preserved, to his present age of
+ sixty, much of the joyous lightheartedness of youth. With great glee
+ he related to Mr Boas the trick he had played the architects of the
+ church of Our Lady at Copenhagen.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Architects are obstinate people,&quot; said he, &quot;and
+ one must know how to manage them. Thank God, that is a knowledge
+ which I possess in a tolerable degree. When the church of Our Lady
+ was built, the architect left six niches on either side of the
+ interior, and these were to contain the twelve apostles. In vain did
+ I represent to them that statues were meant to be looked at on all
+ sides, and that nobody could see through a stone wall; I implored, I
+ coaxed them, it was all in vain. Then thought I to myself, he is best
+ served who serves himself, and thereupon I made the statues a good
+ half-foot higher than the niches. You should have seen the length of
+ the architects&#39; faces when they found this out. But they could
+ not help themselves; the infernal sentry-boxes were bricked up, and
+ my apostles stand out upon their pedestals, as you may have seen when
+ you visited the church.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>Thorwaldsen is devotedly attached to Copenhagen, and has made a
+ present to the city of all his works and collections, upon condition
+ that a fitting locality should be prepared for their reception, and
+ that the museum should bear his name. The king gave a wing of the
+ Christiansburg for this purpose, the call for subscriptions was
+ enthusiastically responded to, and the building is now well advanced.
+ Its style of architecture is unostentatious, and its rows of large
+ windows will admit a broad decided light upon the marble groups.
+ Pending its completion, the majority of the statues and pictures are
+ lodged in the palace.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr Boas appears bent upon establishing his parallel between
+ Denmark and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg
+ 71]</a></span> Italy. He traces it in the fondness of the Danes for
+ art, poetry, and music, in their gay and joyous character, and in
+ their dress. He even discovers an Italian punchinello figuring in a
+ Danish puppet-show; and as it was during the month of August that he
+ found himself in Denmark, the weather was not such as to dispel his
+ illusions.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;It would be erroneous,&quot; he says, &quot;to suppose that
+ Danish costumes weaken or obliterate the idea of a southern region
+ conveyed by this country. A Bolognese professor would not think of
+ covering his head with the red cap of a Lazzarone, and Roman
+ marchesas dress themselves, like Danish countesses, according to the
+ <i>Journal des Modes</i>. National costumes in all countries have
+ taken refuge in villages, and the peasants in the environs of
+ Copenhagen have no reason to be ashamed of their garb, which is both
+ showy and picturesque. The men wear round hats and dark-blue jackets,
+ lined with scarlet and adorned with long glittering rows of
+ bullet-shaped buttons. The women are very tasteful in their attire.
+ Their dark-green gowns, with variegated borders, reach down to their
+ heels, and the shoulder-strap of the closely fitting boddice is a
+ band of gold lace. The chief pains are bestowed upon the head-dress,
+ which is various in its fashion, sometimes composed of clear white
+ stuff, with an embroidered lappet, falling down upon the neck;
+ sometimes of a cap of many colours, heavily embroidered with gold,
+ and having broad ribands of a red purple, which flutter over the
+ shoulders. One meets every where with this original sort of costume;
+ for the peasant women repair in great numbers to the festivals at the
+ various towns, and in Copenhagen they are employed as nurses to the
+ children of the higher classes.</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;During my sojourn in the Danish capital, the weather was so
+ obliging as in no way to interfere with my Cisalpine illusions. The
+ sky continued a spotless dome of lapis-lazuli, out of which the sun
+ beamed like a huge diamond; and if now and then a little cloud
+ appeared, it was no bigger than a white dove flitting across the
+ blue expanse. The days were hot, a bath in the lukewarm sea
+ scarcely cooled me, and at night a soft dreamy sort of vapour
+ spread itself over the earth. I only remember one single moment
+ when the peculiarities of a northern climate made themselves
+ obvious. It was in the evening, and I was returning with my friend
+ Holst from the delightful forest-park of Friedrichsberg. The sky
+ was one immense blue prairie, across which the moon was solitarily
+ wandering, when suddenly the atmosphere became illuminated with a
+ bright and fiery light; a large flaming meteor rushed through the
+ air, and, bursting with a loud report, divided itself into a
+ hundred dazzling balls of fire. These disappeared, and immediately
+ afterwards a white mist seemed to rise out of the earth, and the
+ stars shone more dimly than before. Over stream and meadow rolled
+ the fog, in strange fantastical shapes, floating like a silver
+ gauze among the tree-stems and foliage, till it gradually wove
+ itself into one close and impervious veil. To such appearances as
+ these must legends of elves and fairies owe their origin.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>It is something rather new for an author to introduce into his
+ book a criticism of another work on the same subject. This, Mr Boas,
+ who appears to be a bold man, tolerably confident in his own
+ capabilities and acquirements, has done, and in a very amusing,
+ although not altogether an unobjectionable manner. He must be
+ sanguine, however, if he expects his readers to place implicit faith
+ in his impartiality. Under the title of &quot;A Tour in the
+ North,&quot; he devotes a long chapter to a bitter attack on the
+ Countess Hahn-Hahn&#39;s book of that name. Here is its
+ commencement:&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;A year previously to myself, Ida, Countess Hahn-Hahn, had
+ visited Sweden, and the fruit of her journey was, as is infallible
+ with that lady, a book. When I arrived at Stockholm, people were
+ just reading it, and I found them highly indignant at the nonsense
+ and misrepresentations it contains. When a German goes to Sweden he
+ is received as a brother, with a warmth and heartiness which should
+ make a doubly pleasing impression, if we reflect how important it
+ is in our days to preserve a mutual confidence and good-will
+ between nations. When meddling persons make <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span> the
+ perfidious attempt to embitter a friendly people by scoffing and
+ abuse, there should be an end to forbearance, and it becomes a duty
+ to strike in with soothing words. We must show the Swedes how such
+ scribblings are appreciated in Germany, lest they should think we
+ take a pleasure in ridiculing what is noble and good.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>And thereupon, Mr Boas does &quot;strike in,&quot; as he calls it;
+ but however soothing his words may prove to his ill-used Swedish
+ friends, we have considerable doubts as to their emollient effect
+ upon the Countess, supposing always that she condescends to read
+ them. He hits that lady some very hard knocks, not all of them,
+ perhaps, entirely undeserved; makes out an excellent case for the
+ Swedes, and proves, much more satisfactorily to himself than to us,
+ that Madame Hahn-Hahn is of a very inferior grade of bookmaking
+ tourists.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;In the first place&quot; he says, &quot;I declare that her
+ work on Sweden is no original, but a dull imitation of Gustavus
+ Nicolai&#39;s notorious book, &#39;Italy, as it really is.&#39; Like
+ that author, the Countess labours assiduously to collect together all
+ the darkest shades and least favourable points of the country and
+ people she visits; exaggerates them when she finds them, and invents
+ them when she does not. For the beauties of the country she has
+ neither eye nor feeling; she intentionally avoids speaking of them,
+ and her book is meant, like that of Nicolai, to operate as a warning,
+ and scare away travellers. The good lady says this very explicitly.
+ &#39;Travellers are beginning to turn their attention a good deal to
+ the north, for the south is becoming insufficient to gratify that
+ universal rage for rambling, with which I myself, as a true child of
+ the century, am also infected. But the north is so little
+ known&#8212;I, for my part, only knew it through Dahl&#39;s poetical
+ landscapes&#8212;that one feels involuntarily disposed to deck it
+ with the colours of the south, because the south is beautiful, and
+ the north is said also to be so. Thus one is apt to set out with a
+ delusion, and I think it will therefore be an act of kindness to
+ those who may visit Sweden after me, if I say exactly how I found
+ it.&#39; Uncommonly good, Gustavus the second. But it would be unfair
+ to Nicolai to assert that his book is as dull and nonsensical as that
+ of the Countess Hahn-Hahn. He went to Italy with the idea that it
+ never rained there, and that oranges grew on the hedges, as sloes do
+ with us. This was childish, and one could not help laughing at it.
+ But when his imitatress perpetually laments and complains, because on
+ the Maeler lake, under the 59th degree of latitude, she does not find
+ the sultry southern climate&#8212;it becomes worse than childish, and
+ one is compelled to pity her. The Countess chanced to hit upon a cool
+ rainy month for her visit&#8212;I am wrong, she was not a month in
+ Scandinavia altogether&#8212;and thereupon she cries out as if she
+ were drowning, and despises both country and people.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>It is easy to understand that there can be little sympathy between
+ the Countess Hahn-Hahn, an imaginative and somewhat capricious fine
+ lady, with strong aristocratic and exclusive tendencies, and such a
+ matter-of-fact person as Mr Boas, who, in spite of his
+ sentimentality, which is a sort of national infirmity, and although
+ he informs us in one part of his book that he is a poet, leans much
+ more to the practical and positive than to the imaginative and
+ dreamy, and we moreover suspect is a bit of a democrat. Having,
+ however, taken the Countess <i>en grippe</i>, as the French call it,
+ he shows her no mercy, and, it must be owned, displays some
+ cleverness in hitting off and illustrating the weak points of her
+ character and writings.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Hardly,&quot; he resumes, &quot;has the female Nicolai
+ reached Stockholm, when she begins with her insipid comparisons.
+ &#39;The golden brilliancy of Naples and the magic spell of Venice
+ are here entirely wanting.&#39; Is it possible? Only see what
+ striking remarks this witty and travelled dame does make! In the next
+ page she says:&#8212;&#39;Upon this very day, exactly one year since,
+ I was in Barcelona; but here there is nothing that will bear
+ comparison with the land of the aloe and the orange. Three years ago
+ I was on the Lake of Como, in that fairy garden beyond the Alps! Five
+ years ago in Vienna, amongst the rose-groves of Laxenburg;&#39;
+ &amp;c. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg
+ 73]</a></span> Who cares in what places the Countess has been? Surely
+ it is enough that she has written long wearisome books about them.
+ Every possible corner of Italy, Spain, and Switzerland is dragged
+ laboriously in, to furnish forth comparisons; and soon, no doubt, a
+ similar use will be made of Egypt, Syria, and Mesopotamia. These
+ comparisons are invariably shown to be to the disadvantage of Sweden;
+ and although the lady is oftentimes compelled to confess to the
+ beauty of a Swedish landscape, she never forgets to qualify the
+ admission, by observing how much more beautiful such or such a place
+ was. For example, she is standing one night at her window, looking
+ out on the Maeler lake. &#39;I wrapped my mantilla shiveringly around
+ me, stepped back from the window, shut it, and said with a slight
+ sigh: In Venice the moonlight nights were very different.&#39; Really
+ this would be hardly credible, did any other than a countess assure
+ us of it.&quot;</p>
+
+ <div class="blockquot">
+ &quot;Every thing in Sweden is disagreeable and adverse to her;
+ roads, houses, food, people, and money; rocks, trees, rivers and
+ flowers; but especially sun, sky, and air. She talks without
+ ceasing of heavy clouds and pouring rains, but even this abundance
+ of water is insufficient to mitigate the dryness of her book.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>&quot;I am always sorry,&quot; says a witty French writer,
+ &quot;when a woman becomes an author: I would much rather she
+ remained a woman.&quot; Does Mr Boas, perchance, partake this implied
+ opinion, that authorship unsexes; and is it therefore that he allows
+ himself to deal out such hard measure to the Countess Ida? Even if we
+ agreed with his criticisms, we should quarrel with his want of
+ gallantry. But it is tolerably evident that if Madame Hahn-Hahn,
+ finding herself on the shores of the Baltic, in a July that might
+ have answered to December in the sunny climes she had so recently
+ left, allowed her account of Swedes and Sweden to be shaded a little
+ <i>en noir</i> by her own physical discomforts; it is evident, we
+ say, that on the other hand, our present author, either more favoured
+ by the season, or less susceptible of its influence, sins equally in
+ the contrary extreme, and throws a rosy tint over all that he
+ portrays. Though equally likely to induce into error, it is the
+ pleasanter fault to those persons who merely read the tour for
+ amusement, without proposing to follow in the footsteps of the
+ tourist. Your complaining, grumbling travellers are bores, whether on
+ paper or in a post-chaise; and, truth to tell, we have noticed in
+ others of the Countess&#39;s books a disposition to look on the dark
+ side of things. But this is not always the case, and, when she gets
+ on congenial ground, she shines forth as a writer of a very high
+ order. Witness her Italian tour, and her book upon Turkey and Syria,
+ with which latter, English readers have recently been made acquainted
+ through an admirable translation, by the accomplished author of
+ <i>Caleb Stukely</i>. She has her little conceits, and her little
+ fancies; rather an overweening pride of caste, and contempt for the
+ plebeian multitude, and an addiction to filling too many pages of her
+ books with small personal and egotistical details about herself, and
+ her sensations, and what dresses she wears, and how thin she is, and
+ so on. But with all her faults, she is unquestionably a very
+ accomplished and clever writer. Her criticisms on subjects relating
+ to art, and especially her original and sparkling remarks on painting
+ and architecture, although qualified by Mr Boas as twaddle, stamp her
+ at once as a woman of no common order. She has profound and poetical
+ conceptions of Beauty, and at times a felicity of expression in
+ presenting the effects of nature and art upon her own mind, that
+ strikes and startles by its novelty and power. As a delineator of men
+ and manners, she is remarkable for shrewdness, subtle perception, and
+ truthfulness that cannot be mistaken. Should our readers doubt our
+ statements, or haply Mr Boas turn up his nose at the eulogium, we
+ would simply refer them and him to the last work that has fallen from
+ her pen, the Letters from the Orient, and bid them open it at the
+ page which brings them to a Bedouin encampment&#8212;a scene
+ described with the vigour that belongs to a masculine understanding,
+ and all the fascination which a feminine mind can bestow.</p>
+
+ <p>Still we are free to confess that the Countess has written perhaps
+ rather <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg
+ 74]</a></span> too much for the time she has been about it, and thus
+ laid herself open to an accusation of bookmaking, the prevailing vice
+ of the present race of authors. The incorrigible and merciless Mr
+ Boas does not let this pass.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;The question now remains to be asked,&quot; says he;
+ &quot;Why did Ida Hahn-Hahn, upon leaving a country in which she had
+ passed a couple of weeks&#8212;a country of the language of which she
+ confesses herself ignorant, and with which she was in every respect
+ thoroughly displeased, deem it incumbent on her forthwith to write a
+ thick book concerning it? The answer is this: her pretended impulse
+ to authorship is merely feigned, otherwise she would not have
+ troubled herself any further about such a wearisome country as
+ Sweden. Through three hundred and fifty pages does she drag herself,
+ grumbling as she goes; a single day must often fill a score of pages,
+ for travelling costs money, and the <i>honorarium</i> is not to be
+ despised. If I thus accuse the Countess of bookmaking, I also feel
+ that such an accusation should be supported by abundant proof, and
+ such proof am I ready to give.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>Oh fye, Boas! How can you be so ruthless? Besides the impolicy of
+ exposing the tricks of your trade, all this is very spiteful indeed.
+ You would almost tempt us, were it worth while, to take up the
+ cudgels in earnest in defence of the calumniated Countess, and to
+ give you a crack on the pate, which, as Maga is regularly translated
+ into German for the benefit and improvement of your countrymen, would
+ entirely finish your career, whether as poet, tour-writer, or any
+ thing else. But seeing that your conceits and lucubrations have
+ afforded us one or two good laughs, and considering, moreover, that
+ you are of the number of those small fry with which it is almost
+ condescension for us to meddle, we will let you off, and close this
+ notice of your book, if not with entire approbation, at least with a
+ moderate meed of praise.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <a name="Page_74b" id="Page_74b"></a>
+ <span class='pagenum'></span>
+
+ <h2><a name="HOUSE-HUNTING_IN_WALES" id=
+ "HOUSE-HUNTING_IN_WALES"></a>HOUSE-HUNTING IN WALES.</h2>
+
+ <p>&quot;Change of air! change of air!&quot; Every body was in the
+ same story. &quot;Medicine is of no use,&quot; said the doctor;
+ &quot;a little change of scene will set all to rights again.&quot; I
+ looked in the child&#39;s face&#8212;she was certainly very pale.
+ &quot;And how long do you think she should stay away from home?&quot;
+ &quot;Two or three months will stock her with health for a whole
+ year.&quot; Two or three months!&#8212;oh, what a century of time
+ that is, now that we have railroads all over the world, and steam to
+ the Pyramids&#8212;where in all the wide earth are we to go? So we
+ got maps of all countries, and took advice from every one we saw. We
+ shall certainly go among hills, wherever we go; beautiful scenery if
+ we can&#8212;but hills and fresh air at all events. We heard of fine
+ open downs, and an occasional tempest, in the neighbourhood of Rouen.
+ A steamer goes from Portsmouth to Havre, and another delightful
+ little river-boat up the Seine. For a whole day we had determined on
+ a visit to the burial-place of William the Norman&#8212;the
+ death-place of Joan of Arc; we had devised little tours and detours
+ all over the mysterious land that sent forth the conquerors of
+ England; but soon there cane &quot;a frost, a nipping
+ frost,&quot;&#8212;are we to be boxed up in an hotel in a French town
+ the whole time? No, we must go somewhere, where we can get a
+ country-house&#8212;a place on the swelling side of some romantic
+ hill, where we can trot about all day upon ponies, or ramble through
+ fields and meadows at our own sweet will. So we gave up all thoughts
+ of Rouen. &quot;I&#39;ll tell you what, sir,&quot; said a
+ sympathizing neighbour: &quot;when I came home on my three years&#39;
+ leave, I left the prettiest thing you ever saw, a perfect paradise,
+ and a bungalow that was the envy of every man in the district.&quot;
+ &quot;Well?&quot; I said with an enquiring look. &quot;It&#39;s among
+ the Neilgherries; and as for bracing air, there isn&#39;t such a
+ place in the whole world. I merely mention it, you know; it&#39;s a
+ little too far off, perhaps; but if <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> you like it, it is quite at
+ your service, I assure you.&quot; It was very tempting, but three
+ months was scarcely long enough. So we were at a nonplus. Scotland we
+ thought of; and the Cumberland lakes; and the Malvern hills; and the
+ Peak of Derbyshire; and where we might finally have fixed can never
+ be known, for our plans were decided by the advice of a friend, which
+ was rendered irresistible by being backed by his own experience.
+ &quot;Go to Wales,&quot; he said. &quot;I lived in such a beautiful
+ place there three or four years ago&#8212;in the Vale of
+ Glasbury&#8212;a lovely open space, with hills all round
+ it&#8212;admirable accommodation at the Three Cocks, and the most
+ civil and obliging landlord that ever offered good entertainment for
+ man and beast.&quot; Out came the maps again; the route was carefully
+ studied; and one day at the end of May, we found ourselves, eight
+ people in all, viz., four children and two maids, in a railway coach
+ at Gosport, fizzing up to Basingstoke. There is such a feeling of
+ life and earnestness about a railway carriage;&#8212;the perpetual
+ shake, and the continual swing, swing, on and on, without a
+ moment&#39;s pause, with the quick, bustling, breathless sort of
+ tramp of the engine&#8212;all these things, and forty others, put me
+ in such a state of intense activity that I felt as if I kept a
+ shop&#8212;or was a prodigious man upon &#39;Change&#8212;or was
+ flying up to make a fortune&#8212;or had suddenly been called to form
+ an administration&#8212;or had become a member of the prize ring, and
+ was going up to fight white-headed Bob. However, on this occasion I
+ was not called upon either to overthrow white-headed Bob of the ring,
+ or long-headed Bob of the administration; and at Basingstoke we
+ suddenly found ourselves, bag and baggage, wife, maids, and children,
+ standing in a forlorn and disconsolate manner, at the door of the
+ station-house; while the train pursued its course, and had already
+ disappeared like a dream, or rather like a nightmare. There were at
+ least half-a-dozen little carriages, each with one horse; and the
+ drivers had, each and all of then, the audacity to offer to convey
+ us&#8212;luggage and all&#8212;sixteen miles across, to Reading. Why,
+ there was not a vehicle there that would have held the two trunks;
+ and as to conveying us all, it would have taken the united energies
+ of all the Flies in Basingstoke, with the help of the Industrious
+ Fleas to boot, to get us to our destination within a week. While in
+ this perplexing situation, wondering what people could possibly want
+ with such an array of boxes and bags, a quiet-looking man, who had
+ stood by, chewing the lash of a driving-whip in a very philosophical
+ manner, said, &quot;Please sir, I&#39;ll take you all.&quot; &quot;My
+ good friend, have you seen the whole party?&quot; &quot;Oh yes, sir,
+ I brought a bigger nor yourn for this here train&#8212;we have a fly
+ on purpose.&quot; What a sensible man he must have been who devised a
+ vehicle so much required by unhappy sires that are ordered to remove
+ their Lares for change of air! &quot;Bring round the ark,&quot; we
+ cried; and in a minute came two very handsome horses to the door,
+ drawing a thing that was an aggravated likeness of the old hackney
+ coaches, with a slight cross of an omnibus in its breed. It held
+ seven inside with perfect ease, and would have held as many more as
+ might be required; and it carried all the luggage on the top with an
+ air of as much ease as if it had only been a bonnet, and it was
+ rather proud than otherwise of its head-dress. The driving seat was
+ as capacious as the other parts of the machine, and we had much
+ interesting conversation with the Jehu&#8212;whose epithets, we are
+ sorry to say, as applied to railroads, were of that class of
+ adjectives called the emphatic. There is to be a cross line very
+ shortly between Basingstoke and Reading, uniting the South-Western
+ and Great Western Railways&#8212;and then, what is to become of the
+ tremendous vehicle and its driver? The coach, to be sure, may be
+ retained as a specimen of Brobdignaggian fly, but my friend Jehu must
+ appear in the character of Othello, and confess that &quot;his
+ occupation&#39;s gone.&quot; Thank heaven! people wear boots, and
+ many of them like to have them cleaned, so, with the help of Day and
+ Martin, you may live. &quot;That&#39;s the Duke&#39;s gate,
+ sir,&quot; he said, pointing with his whip to a plain lodge and
+ entrance on the left hand. &quot;The lodge-keeper was his top groom
+ at <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg
+ 76]</a></span> the time Waterloo was&#8212;and a very nice place he
+ has.&quot; This was Strathfieldsaye: there were miles and miles of
+ the most beautiful plantations, all the fences in excellent order,
+ the cottages along the road clean and comfortable, and every symptom
+ of a good landlord to be seen as far as the eye could reach.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;If it wasn&#39;t for all this here luggage,&quot; said Jehu
+ in a confidential whisper, with a backward jerk of his head towards
+ the moving pyramid behind us; &quot;we might go through the park. The
+ Duke gives permission to gentlemen&#39;s carriages.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>So the poor man deluded himself with the thought, that if it
+ wer&#39;n&#39;t for the bandboxes, we might pass muster as fresh from
+ the hands of Cork and Spain.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;That&#39;s very kind of the Duke.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Oh, he&#39;s the best of gentlemen&#8212;I hears the best of
+ characters of him from his tenants, and all the poor folks round
+ about.&quot; Now here was our driver&#8212;rather ragged than
+ otherwise, and as poor as need be&#8212;bearing evidence to the
+ character of the greatest man in these degenerate days, on points
+ that are perhaps more important than some that will be dwelt on by
+ his biographers. The best of characters from his tenants and the
+ poor;&#8212;well, glorious Duke, I shall always think of this when I
+ read about your victories, and all your great doings in peace and
+ war; and when people call you the Iron Duke, and the great soldier,
+ and the hero of Waterloo, I shall think of you as the hero of
+ Strathfieldsaye, and the best of characters among your tenants and
+ the poor folks round about.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Does the Duke often come to Reading?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;No; very seldom.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;I should have thought he would come by the Great Western,
+ and drive across.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;He!&quot; exclaimed the driver, giving a cut to the near
+ horse by way of italicising his observation. &quot;He never comes by
+ none of their rails. He don&#39;t like &#39;em. He posts every step
+ of the way. He&#39;s a reg&#39;lar gentleman, he is, the
+ Duke.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>And in the midst of conversation like this, we got to Reading.
+ Through some wretched streets we drove, and then through some
+ tolerable ones; and at last pulled up at the Great Western Hotel, a
+ large handsome house, very near the Railway station; and in a few
+ minutes were as comfortably settled as if we had travelled with a
+ couple of outriders, and had ordered our rooms for a month. The
+ sitting-room had three or four windows, of which two looked out upon
+ the terminus. At these the whole party were soon happily stationed,
+ watching the different trains that came sweeping up and down every
+ few minutes; long luggage trains, pursuing their heavy way with a
+ business-like solidity worthy of their great weight and
+ respectability; short dapper trains, that seemed to take a spurt up
+ the road as if to try their wind and condition; and occasionally a
+ mysterious engine, squeaking, and hissing, and roaring, and then,
+ with a succession of curious jumps and pantings, backing itself half
+ a mile or so down the course, and then spluttering and dashing out of
+ sight as if madly intent upon suicide, and in search of a stone wall
+ to run its head upon. As to feeling surprise at the number of
+ accidents, the only wonder a sensible man can entertain on the
+ subject is, that there is any thing but accidents from morning to
+ night. And yet, when you look a little closer into it, every thing
+ seems so admirably managed, that the chances are thousands to one
+ against any misfortune occurring. Every engine seems to know its
+ place as accurately as a cavalry charger; the language also of the
+ signals seems very intelligible to the iron ears of the Lucifers and
+ Beelzebubs, and the other evil spirits, who seem on every line to be
+ the active agents of locomotion. Why can&#39;t the directors have
+ more Christianlike names for their moving power? What connexion is
+ there between a beautiful new engine, shining in all its
+ finery&#8212;the personification of obedient and beneficent
+ strength&#8212;with the &quot;Infernal,&quot; or the
+ &quot;Phlegethon,&quot; or the &quot;Styx?&quot; Are they aware what
+ a disagreeable association of ideas is produced in the students of
+ Lemprière&#39;s classical dictionary by the two last names? or the
+ Charon or Atropos? Let these things be mended, and let them be called
+ by some <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg
+ 77]</a></span> more inviting appellations&#8212;Nelson, St Vincent,
+ Rodney, Watt, Arkwright, Stephenson, Milton, Shakspeare,
+ Scott;&#8212;but leave heathen mythology and diabolic geography
+ alone. As night began to close, the sights and sounds grew more
+ strange and awful. A great flaming eye made its appearance at a
+ distance; the gradual boom of its approach grew louder and louder,
+ and its look became redder and redder; and then we watched it roll
+ off into the darkness again, on the other side of the station, on its
+ way to Bath&#8212;till, tearing up at the rate of forty miles an
+ hour, came another red-eyed monster, breathing horrible flame, and
+ seeming to burn its way through the sable livery of the night with
+ the strength and straightness of a red-hot cannon-ball. And then we
+ called for candles and went to bed.</p>
+
+ <p>The train was to pass on its way to Bristol at half-past eleven,
+ so we had plenty of time to see the lions of Reading&#8212;if there
+ had been any animals of the kind in the neighbourhood&#8212;but after
+ a short detour in the street, and a glimpse into the country, we
+ found ourselves irresistibly attracted to the railway. The scene here
+ was the same as on the previous night, and we were more and more
+ confirmed in our opinion, that, next to the sea or a navigable river,
+ a railway is the pleasantest object in a rural view. As to the
+ impostors who extort thousands of pounds from the unhappy
+ shareholders, on the pretext that the line will be injurious to their
+ estates, they ought at once to be sent to Brixton for obtaining money
+ under false pretences. It gives a greatly increased value to their
+ lands, as may be seen by the superior rents they can obtain for the
+ farms along the line; and as to the picturesqueness of the landscape,
+ it is only because the eye is not yet accustomed to it, nor the mind
+ embued with railway associations, that it is not considered a finer
+ &quot;object&quot; than the level greenery of a park, or the
+ hedgerows of a cultivated farm. Painters have already begun to see
+ the grandeur of a tempestuous sea ridden over by steamers; and before
+ the end of the next war, some black &quot;queller of the ocean
+ flood,&quot; with short funnel and smoke-blackened sails, will be
+ thought as fit a theme for poetry and romance, as the Victory or the
+ Shannon.</p>
+
+ <p>Knowledge, which we are every where told is now advancing at
+ railway speed, is still confined within very narrow limits, we are
+ sorry to say, among railway clerks and other officials. They still
+ seem to measure the sphere of their studies by distance, and not by
+ time; for instance, not one of the <i>employés</i> at Reading could
+ give us more information about Bristol than if it had been three
+ days&#39; journey removed from him. Three hours conveys us from one
+ to the other&#8212;and yet they did not know the name or situation of
+ a single inn, nor where the boats to Chepstow sailed from, nor
+ whether there were any boats to Chepstow at all. In ancient times
+ such ignorance might be excusable, when the towns were really as
+ distant as London and York now are; but when three hours is the
+ utmost limit, and every half hour the communication is kept up
+ between them, it struck us as something unaccountable that Bristol
+ should be such a complete <i>terra incognita</i> to at least a dozen
+ smart-looking individuals, who stamp off the tickets, and chuck the
+ money into a drawer, with an easy negligence very gratifying to the
+ beholder. Remembering the recommendation of the Royal Western Hotel
+ given us by a friend, with the whispered information that the turtle
+ was inimitable, and only three-and-sixpence a basin; we stowed away
+ the greater portion of the party in a first-class carriage, and
+ betook ourselves in economical seclusion to a vehicle of the second
+ rank. And a first-rate vehicle it was&#8212;better in the absence of
+ stuffing on that warm day, than its more aristocratic companion; and
+ in less than three minutes we were all spinning down the road&#8212;a
+ line of human and other baggage, at least a quarter of a mile in
+ length.</p>
+
+ <p>At Swindon we were allowed ten minutes for refreshment. The great
+ lunching-room is a very splendid apartment&#8212;and hungry
+ passengers rushed in at both doors, and in a moment clustered round
+ the counters, and were busy in the demolition of pies and sandwiches.
+ Under a noble arch the counters are placed; the <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+ attendants occupying a space between them, so that one set attend to
+ the gormandizers who enter by one of the doors, and the rest on the
+ others. It has exactly the effect of a majestic mirror&#8212;and so
+ completely was this my impression, that it was with the utmost
+ difficulty I persuaded myself that the crowd on the other side of the
+ arch was not the reflection of the company upon this. Exactly
+ opposite the place where I stood&#8212;in the act of enjoying a glass
+ of sherry and a biscuit&#8212;I discovered what I took of course to
+ be the counterfeit presentment of myself. What an extraordinary
+ mirror, I thought!&#8212;for I saw a prodigious man, with enormous
+ whiskers, ramming a large veal pie into his mouth with one hand, and
+ holding in the other a tumbler of porter. I looked at the glass of
+ sherry, and gave the biscuit a more vigorous bite&#8212;alas! it had
+ none of the flavour of the veal and porter; so I discovered that the
+ law of optics was unchanged, and that I had escaped the infliction of
+ so voracious a double-ganger.</p>
+
+ <p>The country round Chippenham is as beautiful as can be conceived;
+ all the fruit-trees were in full blossom, and we swept through long
+ tracts of the richest and prettiest orchards we ever saw. Hall and
+ farm, and moated grange, passed in rapid succession; and at last the
+ fair city of Bath rose like the queen of all the land, and looked
+ down from her palaces and towers on the fairest champaign that ever
+ queen looked upon before. Seen from the railway, the upper part of
+ the town seems to rise up from the very midst of orchards and
+ gardens; terrace above terrace, but still with a great flush of
+ foliage between; it is a pity it ever grew into a fashionable
+ watering-place; though, even now, it is not too late to amend. Like
+ some cynosure of neighbouring eyes, fed from her gentle youth upon
+ all the sights and sounds of rural life, she is too beautiful to put
+ on the airs and graces of a belle of the court. Let her go back to
+ her country ways&#8212;her walks in the village lanes&#8212;her
+ scampers across the fields; she will be more really captivating than
+ if she was redolent of Park Lane, and never missed a drawing-room or
+ Almack&#39;s. But here we are at Bristol, and must leave our
+ exhortations to Bath to a future opportunity.</p>
+
+ <p>It is amazing how rapidly the passengers disperse. By the time our
+ trunks and boxes were all collected, the station was deserted, the
+ empty carriages had wheeled themselves away, and we began to have
+ involuntary reminiscences of Campbell&#39;s <i>Last Man</i>.
+ Earth&#39;s cities had no sound nor tread&#8212;so it was with no
+ slight gratification that we beheld the cad of an omnibus beckoning
+ us to take our place on the outside of his buss. The luggage had been
+ swung down in a lump through a hole in the floor, and by the time we
+ reached the same level, by the periphrasis of a stair, every thing
+ had been stowed away on the roof, where in a few moments we joined
+ it; and careered through the streets of Bristol, for the first time
+ in our lives. &quot;Do you go to any hotel near the quay where the
+ Chepstow steamers start from?&quot; was our first enquiry; but before
+ the charioteer had time to remove the tobacco from his cheek, to let
+ forth the words of song, a gentleman who sat behind us very kindly
+ interfered. &quot;The York Hotel, sir, is quite near the river, in a
+ nice quiet square, and the most comfortable house I ever was in. If
+ they can give you accommodation, you can&#39;t be in better
+ quarters.&quot; Next to the praiseworthiness of a good Samaritan, who
+ takes care of the houseless and the stranger, is the merit of the
+ benevolent individual who tells you the good Samaritan&#39;s address.
+ We made up our minds at once to go on to the York Hotel.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;For Chepstow, sir?&quot; said the stranger&#8212;&quot;a
+ beautiful place, but by no means equal to Linton in North Devon. Do
+ you go to Chepstow straight?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;As soon as a boat will take us: we are going into Wales for
+ change of air, and the sooner we get there the better.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Change of air!&#8212;there isn&#39;t such air in England,
+ no, nor anywhere else, as at Linton. Why don&#39;t you come to
+ Linton? You can get there in six hours.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;But Welsh air is the one recommended.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Nonsense. There&#39;s no air in Wales to be compared with
+ Linton. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg
+ 79]</a></span> I&#39;ve tried them both&#8212;so have hundreds of
+ other people&#8212;and as for beauty and scenery, and walks and
+ drives, Linton beats the whole world.&quot; All this was very
+ difficult to resist; but we set our minds firmly on the Three Cocks
+ and Glasbury vale, and repelled all the temptations of the gem of the
+ North of Devon. Every hour that took us nearer to our goal, brought
+ out the likeness we had formed of it in our hearts with greater
+ relief. A fine secluded farm&#8212;of which a few rooms were fitted
+ up as a house of entertainment&#8212;a wild hill rising gradually at
+ its back&#8212;a mountain-stream rattling and foaming in
+ front&#8212;all round it, swelling knolls and heathy mountains. What
+ had Linton to show in opposition to charms like these? We rejected
+ the advice of our good-natured counsellor with great regret, more
+ especially as a sojourn in Linton would probably have enabled us to
+ cultivate his further acquaintance. The York was found all that he
+ described&#8212;clean, quiet, and comfortable. When the young fry had
+ finished their dinner, away we all set on a voyage of discovery to
+ Clifton. Up a hill we climbed&#8212;which in many neighbourhoods
+ would be thought a mountain&#8212;and passed paragons, and circuses,
+ and crescents, on left and right, wondering when we were ever to
+ emerge into the open air. At last we reached the top&#8212;a green
+ elevation surrounded on two sides by streets and villas&#8212;crowned
+ with a curious-looking observatory, and ornamented at one end with a
+ strange building on the very edge of the cliff; being one of the
+ <i>termini</i> of the suspension bridge, which got thus far, and no
+ further. Going across the Green, the sight is the most grand and
+ striking we ever saw. Far down, skirting its way round cliffs of
+ prodigious height&#8212;which, however, except when they are quarried
+ for building purposes, are covered with the richest
+ foliage&#8212;along their whole descent winds the Avon, at that
+ moment in full tide, and covered in all its windings with sails of
+ every shape and hue. The rocks on the opposite side are of a glorious
+ rich red, and consort most beautifully with the green leaves of the
+ plantations that soften their rugged precipices, by festooning them
+ to the very brink. Then there are wild dells running back in the
+ wooded parts of the hill, and walks seem to be made through them for
+ the convenience of maids who love the moon&#8212;or more probably,
+ and more poetically too, for the refreshment of the toiling citizens
+ of the smoky town, who wander about among these sylvan recesses, with
+ their wives and families, and enjoy the wondrous beauty of the
+ landscape, without having consulted Burke or Adam Smith on the causes
+ of their delight. As you climb upwards towards the observatory, you
+ fancy you are attending one of Buckland&#39;s lectures&#8212;the
+ whole language you hear is geological and philosophic. About a dozen
+ men, with little tables before them, are dispersed over the latter
+ part of the ascent, and keep tempting you with &quot;fossiliferous
+ specimens of the oolite formation,&quot; &quot;tertiary,&quot;
+ &quot;silurian,&quot; &quot;saurian,&quot;
+ &quot;stratification,&quot; &quot;carboniferous.&quot; It was quite
+ wonderful to hear such a stream of learning, and to see, at the same
+ time, the vigour of these terrene philosophers in polishing their
+ specimens upon a whetstone, laid upon their knees. A few shillings
+ put us all in possession of memorials of Clifton, in the shape of
+ little slabs of different strata, polished on both sides, and
+ ingeniously moulded to resemble a book. A little further up, we got
+ besieged by another body of the Clifton Samaritans, the proprietors
+ of a troop of donkeys, all saddled and bridled in battle array. Into
+ the hands of a venerable matron, the owner of a vast number of
+ donkies, and two or three ragged urchins, who acted as the Widdicombs
+ of the cavalcade, we committed all the younkers for an hour&#39;s
+ joy, between the turnpike and back, and betook ourselves to a seat at
+ the ledge of the cliff, and &quot;gazed with ever new delight&quot;
+ at the noble landscape literally at our feet. But the hour quickly
+ passed; the donkeys resigned their load; and we slid, as safely as
+ could be expected, down the inclined plane that conducted us to the
+ York. We did not experiment upon the turtle-soup, as we had been
+ advised to do at the Royal Western, but some Bristol salmon did as
+ well; and after a long consultation about boats, and breakfast at an
+ early hour, we found we had got through <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> our day,
+ and that hitherto the journey had offered nothing but enjoyment.</p>
+
+ <p>The morning lowered; and, heavily in clouds, but luckily without
+ rain, we effected our embarkation, at eight o&#39;clock, on board the
+ Wye&#8212;a spacious steamer that plies every day, according to the
+ tide, between Bristol and Chepstow. We were a numerous crew, and had
+ a steady captain, with a face so weather-beaten that we concluded his
+ navigation had not been confined to the Severn sea. The first two or
+ three miles of our course was through the towering cliffs and wooded
+ chasms we had admired from the Clifton Down. For that part of its
+ career, the Avon is so beautiful, and glides along with such an
+ evident aim after the picturesque, that it is difficult to believe it
+ any thing but an ornamental piece of water, adding a new feature to a
+ splendid landscape; and yet this meandering stream is the pathway of
+ nations, and only inferior in the extent of its traffic to the Thames
+ and Mersey. The shores soon sink into commonplace meadows, and we
+ emerge into the Severn, which is about five miles wide, from the
+ mouth of the Avon to that of the Wye. All the way across, new
+ headlands open upon the view; and, far down the channel, you catch a
+ glimpse of the Flat Holms, and other little islands; while in front
+ the Welsh hills bound the prospect, at a considerable distance, and
+ form a noble background to the rich, wooded plains of Monmouthshire,
+ and the low-lying shore we are approaching. Suddenly you jut round an
+ enormous rock, and find yourself in a river of still more sylvan
+ gentleness than the Avon. The other passengers seemed to have no eyes
+ for the picturesque&#8212;perhaps they had seen the scenery till they
+ were tired of it; and some of them were more pleasantly engaged than
+ gaping and gazing at rocks and trees. Grouped at the tiller-chains
+ were four or five people, very happily employed in looking at each
+ other&#8212;a lady and gentleman, in particular, seemed to find a
+ peculiar pleasure in the occupation; and were instructing each other
+ in the art and mystery of tying the sailor&#39;s knot. Time after
+ time the cord refused to follow the directions of the girl&#39;s
+ fingers&#8212;very white fingers they were too, and a very pretty
+ girl&#8212;and, with untiring assiduity, the teacher renewed his
+ lesson. We ventured a prophecy that they would soon be engaged in the
+ twisting of a knot that would not be quite so easy to untie as the
+ sailor&#39;s slip that made them so happy.</p>
+
+ <p>On we went on the top of the tide, rounding promontories, and
+ gliding among bosky bowers and wooded dells, till at last our panting
+ conveyer panted no more, and we lay alongside the pier of Chepstow.
+ The tide at this place rises to the incredible height of fifty, and
+ sometimes, on great occasions, of seventy feet; so they have a
+ floating sort of foot-bridge from the vessel to the shore, that sinks
+ and rises with the flood, connected with the land by elongating iron
+ chains, and illustrating the ups and downs of life in a very
+ remarkable manner. I will not attempt to describe Chepstow on the
+ present occasion, for a stay in it did not enter into our plan. The
+ Three Cocks grew in interest the nearer we got to their interesting
+ abode. We determined to hurry forward to Abergavenny&#8212;thence to
+ send a missive of enquiry as to the accommodations of the
+ hostel&#8212;to go on at once, if we could be received&#8212;and
+ (leaving all the lumber, including the maids and the younger
+ children) to make a series of voyages of discovery, that would
+ entitle us to become members of the Travellers&#39; Club.</p>
+
+ <p>A coach was on the strand ready to start for Monmouth; a whisper
+ and half-a-crown secured the whole of the inside and two seats out,
+ against all concurrents; and the Wye, the boat, the knot-tying
+ passengers, were all left behind, and we began to climb the hill as
+ fast as two miserable-looking horses could crawl. A leader was added
+ when we had got a little way up; but as they neglected to furnish our
+ coachman with a whip long enough to reach beyond his wheeler&#39;s
+ ears, our unicorn pursued the even tenor of his way with very
+ slackened traces, while our friend sat the picture of indignation,
+ with his short <i>flagellum</i> in his hand, and implored all the
+ male population who overtook us, to favour him by kicking the unhappy
+ leader to death. An occasional benevolent Christian complied with his
+ request to the extent of a dig with a <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span> stout boot under the rib;
+ but every now and then, the furibund jarvey apologised to us for the
+ slowness of our course by asking&#8212;&quot;Won&#39;t I serve him
+ out when I gets a whip!&quot; A whip he at last got, and made up for
+ lost time by belabouring the lazy culprit in a very scientific
+ manner; and having got us all into a gallop, he became quite pleasant
+ and communicative. All the people in Monmouthshire are Welsh, that is
+ very clear; and Monmouthshire is as Welsh a county as Carnarvon, in
+ spite of the maps of geographers, and the circuits of the Judges. The
+ very faces of the people are evidence of their Taffy-hood. We have
+ had no experience yet if they carry out the peculiar ideas on the
+ rights of property, attributed to Taffy in the ancient legend, which
+ relates the method that gentleman took to supply himself with a leg
+ of beef and a marrow bone; but their voices and names are redolent of
+ leeks, and no Act of Parliament can ever make them English. You might
+ as well pass an Act of Parliament to make our friend Joseph
+ Hume&#39;s speeches English. And therefore, throughout the narrative,
+ we shall always consider ourselves in Wales, till we cross the Severn
+ again. We trotted round the park wall of a noble estate called
+ Pearcefield, and when we had crowned the ascent, our Jehu turned
+ round with an air of great exultation, pulling up his horses at the
+ same time, and said&#8212;&quot;There! did you ever see a sight like
+ that? This is the Double View.&quot; He might well be proud&#8212;for
+ such a prospect is not to be equalled, I should think, in the world.
+ The Wye is close below you, with its rich banks, frowned over by a
+ magnificent crag, that forms the most conspicuous feature of the
+ landscape; and in the distance is the river Severn, pursuing its
+ shining way through the fertile valleys of Glo&#39;stershire, and by
+ some <i>deceptio visus</i>, for which we cannot account, raised
+ apparently to a great height above the level of its sister stream. It
+ has the appearance of being conveyed in a vast artificially raised
+ embankment, laughing into scorn the grandest aqueducts of ancient
+ Rome, and bearing perhaps a greater resemblance to the lofty-bedded
+ Po in its passage through the plains of Lombardy. The combination of
+ the two rivers in the same scene, with the peculiar characteristics
+ of each brought prominently before the eye at once, make this one of
+ the finest &quot;sights&quot; that can be imagined. The driver seemed
+ satisfied with the sincerity of our admiration, and, like a good
+ patriot, evidently considered our encomiums as a personal compliment
+ to himself. The whole of the drive to Monmouth is through a
+ succession of noble views, only to be equalled, as far as our
+ travelling experience extends, by the stage on the Scottish border,
+ between Longtown and Langholm. But soon after this, the skies, that
+ had gloomed for a long time, took fairly to pouring out all the cats
+ and dogs they possessed upon our miserable heads. An umbrella on the
+ top of a coach is at all times a nuisance and incumbrance, so, in
+ gloomy resignation to a fate that was unavoidable, we wrapt our
+ mantle round us, and made the most of a bad bargain. To Monmouth we
+ got at last, and to our great discomfort found that it was
+ market-day, and that we had to dispute the possession of a joint of
+ meat with some wet and hungry farmers. We compromised the matter for
+ a beefsteak, for which we had to wait about an hour; and having seen
+ that the whole of the garrison was well supplied, we proceeded to
+ make enquiries as to the best method of getting on to Abergavenny.
+ Finding that information on a matter so likely to remove a
+ remunerative party from the inn was not very easy to be obtained from
+ the denizens thereof, we made our way into the market. The civility
+ of the natives, when their interests are not concerned, is
+ extraordinary; and in a moment we were recommended to the Beaufort
+ Arms, a hotel that would do honour to Edinburgh itself&#8212;had
+ ordered a roomy chaise, and procured the services of a man with a
+ light cart, to follow us with the heavy luggage. The sky began to
+ clear, the postillion trotted gaily on, and we left the county town,
+ not much gratified with our experience of its smoky rooms and tough
+ beefsteaks. We followed the windings of the Trothy, a stream of a
+ very lively and frisky disposition, <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span> passing a seat of the Duke
+ of Beaufort, who seems lord-paramount of the county, and at length
+ came in view of the noble ruins of Ragland Castle. But now we were
+ wiser than we had been at the early part of the journey, and had
+ bought a very well written guide-book, by Mr W.H. Thomas, which, at
+ the small outlay of one shilling, made us as learned on &quot;the
+ Wye, with its associated scenery and ruins,&quot; as if we had lived
+ among them all our days. Inspired by his animated pages, we descanted
+ with the profoundest erudition, to our astonished companion on the
+ box, about its machicolated towers, and the finely proportioned
+ mullions of the hall. &quot;If you ascend the walls of the
+ castle,&quot; we exclaimed in a paroxysm of enthusiasm, as if we were
+ perched on the very top, &quot;you will see that the castle occupies
+ the centre of an undulating plain, checkered with white-washed
+ farm-houses, fields, and noble groves of oak. The tower and village
+ of Rhaglan lie at a short distance, picturesquely straggling and
+ irregular. To the north, the bold and diversified forms of the Craig,
+ the Sugar Loaf, Skyrids, and Blorenge mountains, with the outlines of
+ the Hatterals, perfect the scene in this direction; whilst the
+ ever-varying and amphitheatrical boundary of this natural basin, may
+ be traced over the Blaenavons, Craig-y-garayd, (close to Usk,) the
+ Gaer Vawr, the round Twm Barlwm, the fir-crowned top of Wentwood
+ forest, Pen-cae-Mawr, the dreary heights of Newchurch and Devauder;
+ the continuation of the same range past Llanishen, the white church
+ of which is plainly visible; Trelleck, Craig-y-Dorth, and the
+ highlands above Troy Park, where they end.&quot; We were going on in
+ the same easy and off-hand manner to describe some other
+ peculiarities of the landscape, when a sudden lurch of the carriage
+ brought the book we were furtively pillaging into open view, and we
+ were forced, with a very bad grace, to confess our obligations to Mr
+ W.H. Thomas. A very beautiful ruin it is, certainly, and we made a
+ vow to devote a day to exploring its remains, and judging for
+ ourselves of the accuracy of the guide-book&#39;s description. Even
+ if the road had no recommendation from the lovely openings it gives
+ at every turn, it would be a pleasure to travel by it in sunshine,
+ for the hedges along its whole extent were a complete rampart of the
+ sweetest smelling May. Such miles of snow-white blossoms we never saw
+ before. It looked like Titania&#39;s bleaching-ground, and as if all
+ the fairies had hung out their white frocks to dry. And the hawthorn
+ blossoms along the road were emulated on all the little terraces at
+ the side of it; the apple and pear trees were in full bloom, and
+ every little cottage rejoiced in its orchard&#8212;so that, with the
+ help of hedges and fruit trees, the whole earth was in a glow of
+ beauty and perfume&#8212;and we prophecy this will be a famous year
+ for cider and perry. Abergavenny has a very bad approach from
+ Monmouth, and we dreaded a repetition of the delays and toughnesses
+ we had just escaped from; how great therefore was our gratification
+ when we pulled up at the door of the Angel, and were shown into a
+ splendid room, thirty-five or forty feet long by twenty wide, secured
+ bedrooms as clean and comfortable as heart could desire, and had
+ every thing we asked for with the precision of clockwork and the
+ rapidity of steam. The Three Cocks began to descend from the lofty
+ place they held in our esteem, and we resolved for one day at least
+ to rest contentedly in such comfortable quarters, and look about us;
+ so forth we sallied, and in the course of our pilgrimage speedily
+ arrived at Aberga&#39;ny Castle. Talk of picturesqueness! this was
+ picturesque enough for poet or painter with a vengeance&#8212;great
+ thick walls all covered over with ivy, crowning a round knoll at the
+ upper part of the town, and looking over a finer view, we will
+ venture to say, than that we have just described as seen from
+ Ragland; and to complete the beauty of it&#8212;the comforts of
+ modern civilization uniting themselves to ancient
+ magnificence&#8212;the main walls have been fitted up by one of the
+ late lords into a pretty dwelling-house, which is at this moment
+ occupied by one of the surgeons of the town. This is the true use of
+ an antique ruin&#8212;this is replacing the coat of mail with a
+ rain-proof mackintosh&#8212;the steel casque of Brian de Boisguilbert
+ with the Kilmarnock nightcap <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83"
+ id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span> of Bailie Nicol Jarvie. And in this
+ instance the change has been effected with the greatest skill; the
+ coat of mail and steel casque are still there, but only for show; the
+ mackintosh and nightcap are the habitual dress: and few dwellings in
+ our poor eyes are comparable to the one, that outside has the date of
+ the crusaders, and inside, the conveniences of 1845. The town has a
+ noble body-guard of hills all round it; and perched high up on almost
+ inaccessible ledges, are little white-walled cottages, that made us
+ long for the wings of a bird to fly up and inspect them closer; no
+ other mode of conveyance would be either speedy or safe, for the
+ sides of the mountains are nearly perpendicular, and would have put
+ Douglas&#39;s horse to its mettle when he was on a visit to Owen
+ Glendowr. Dark, gloomy, Tartarean hills they appear, and no wonder;
+ for their whole interior is composed of iron, and day and night they
+ are glimmering and smoking with a hundred fires. They have a
+ dreadful, stern, metallic look about them, and are as different in
+ their configuration from the chalk hills of Hampshire as <i>they</i>
+ are from cheese. Some day we shall ascend their dusky sides, and dive
+ into Pluto&#39;s drear domains&#8212;the iron-works&#8212;a god who,
+ in the present state of railway speculation, might easily be
+ confounded with Plutus; and with this and many other good
+ resolutions, we returned to the hospitable care of our friend Mr
+ Morgan, at the Angel. Next day was Sunday, and very wet. We slipped
+ across the street and heard a very good sermon in the morning, in a
+ large handsome church, which was not quite so well filled as it ought
+ to have been, and were kept close prisoners all day afterwards by the
+ unrelenting clouds.</p>
+
+ <p>But our object was not yet attained, and we resolved to start off
+ with fresh vigour on our expedition to the Three Cocks. It was only
+ two-and-twenty miles off; our host, with none of the spirit that,
+ they say, is always found between two of a trade, spoke in the
+ highest terms of the Vale of Glasbury, and its clean and comfortable
+ hotel. He also made enquiry for us as to its present condition, and
+ brought back the pleasing intelligence that it was not full, and that
+ we should find plenty of accommodation at once. This did away with
+ the necessity of writing to the landlord, and in a short time we were
+ once more upon the road, maids and children inside as usual, and a
+ natty postilion cocking his white hat and flicking his little whip,
+ in the most bumptious manner imaginable. Through Crickhowell we went
+ without drawing bridle, and went almost too fast to observe
+ sufficiently its very beautiful situation; past noble country-seats,
+ bower and hall, we drove; and at last wound our solitary way along a
+ cross-road, among some pastoral hills, that reminded us more of
+ Dumfries-shire than any country we have ever seen. The road ascended
+ gradually for many miles; and on crowning the elevation, we caught a
+ very noble extensive view of a rich, flat, thickly-wooded plain, that
+ bore a great resemblance to the unequalled neighbourhood of Warwick.
+ Down and down we trotted&#8212;hills and heights of all kinds left
+ behind us&#8212;trees, shrubs, hedges, all in the fullest leaf, lay
+ for miles and miles on every side; and the scenery had about as much
+ resemblance to our ideal of a Welsh landscape, as ditch water to
+ champagne. Through this wilderness of sweets, stifling and oppressive
+ from its very richness, we drove for a long way, looking in vain for
+ the hilly region where the Three Cocks had taken up their abode. At
+ last we saw, a little way in front of us, at the side of the
+ road&#8212;or rather with one gable-end projecting into it, a large
+ white house, with a mill appearing to constitute one of its wings.
+ &quot;The man will surely stop here to water the horses,&quot; was
+ our observation; and so indeed he did&#8212;and as he threw the rein
+ loose over the off horse&#39;s neck&#8212;there! don&#39;t you see
+ the sign-board on the wall? Alas, alas, this is the Three Cocks! An
+ admirable fishing quarter it must be, for the river is very near, and
+ the country rich and beautiful, but not adapted to our particular
+ case, where mountain air and free exposure are indispensable. But if
+ it had been ten times less adapted to our purpose we had travelled
+ too far to give it up.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Can you take us in for a few weeks?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>The landlord laughed at the idea. &quot;I could not find room for
+ a single <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg
+ 84]</a></span> individual, if you gave me a thousand pounds. A party
+ has been with me for some time, and I can&#39;t even say how long
+ they may stay.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>And, corroborative of this, we saw at the window our fortunate
+ extruders, who no doubt congratulated themselves on so many points of
+ the law being in their favour. Here were we stuck on the Queen&#39;s
+ high road&#8212;tired horses, cooped-up children&#8212;and the Three
+ Cocks as unattainable as the Philosopher&#39;s stone. The
+ sympathizing landlord consoled us in our disappointment as well as he
+ could. The postilion jumped into his saddle again, and we pursued our
+ way to the nearest place where there was any likelihood of a
+ reception&#8212;namely, the Hay, a village of some size about five
+ miles further on. &quot;Come along, we shall easily find a nice
+ cottage to-morrow, or get into some farm-house, and ruralize for a
+ month or two delightfully.&quot; Our hopes rose as we looked forward
+ to a settled home, after our experience of the road for so many days;
+ and we soared to such a pitch of audacity at last, that we
+ congratulated ourselves that we had not got in at Glasbury, but were
+ forced to go forward. The world was all before us where to choose.
+ The country seemed to improve&#8212;that is, to get a little less
+ Dutch in its level, as we proceeded&#8212;and we finally reached the
+ Hay, with the determination of Barnaby&#39;s raven, to bear a good
+ heart at all events, and take for our motto, in all the ills of life,
+ &quot;Never say die!&#8212;never say die!&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>The hotel had been taken by assault, and was occupied in great
+ force by a troop of dragoons, on their march into Glo&#39;stershire.
+ We therefore did not come off quite so well as if we had led the
+ forlorn-hope ourselves; but, after so long a journey, we rejoiced in
+ being admitted at all. Two or three Welsh girls, who perhaps would
+ have been excellent waiters under other circumstances, appeared to
+ consider themselves strictly on military duty, and no other; so we
+ sate for a very long time in solitary stateliness, wondering when the
+ water would boil, and the tea-things be brought, and the ham and eggs
+ be ready. And of our wondering there was likely to be no end, till at
+ last the hungry captain, the lieutenant, and the cornet, were fairly
+ settled at dinner, and at about eight o&#39;clock we got tea, but no
+ bread; then came the loaf&#8212;and there was no butter; then the
+ butter&#8212;and there was no knife; but at last, all things arrived,
+ and the little ones were sent off to bed, and we amused ourselves by
+ listening to the rain on the window panes, and the whistling of the
+ wind in the long passages; and, with a resolution to be up in good
+ time to pursue our house-hunting project on the morrow, we concluded
+ the fifth day of our peregrinations in search of change of air.</p>
+
+ <p>We had a charming prospect from the window, at breakfast. A gutter
+ tearing its riotous way down the street, supplied by a whole
+ night&#39;s rain, and clouds resting with the most resolute
+ countenances on the whole face of the land. At the
+ post-office&#8212;that universal focus of information&#8212;to which
+ we wended in one of the intervals between the showers, we were told
+ of admirable lodgings. On going to see them, they consisted of two
+ little rooms, in a narrow lane. Then we were sent to another quarter,
+ and found the accommodation still more inadequate; and, at last, were
+ inconceivably cheered, by hearing of a pretty cottage&#8212;just the
+ thing&#8212;only left a short time ago by Captain somebody; five
+ bed-rooms, two parlours, large garden; if it had been planned by our
+ own architect, it could not have been better. Off we hurried to the
+ owner of this bijou. The worthy captain, on giving up his lease, had
+ sold his furniture; but we were very welcome to it as tenant for a
+ year!</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Are there no furnished houses in this neighbourhood, at
+ all?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;No&#8212;e&#39;es&#8212;may be you&#39;ll get in at the
+ shippus,&quot;&#8212;which, being Anglicized, is sheep-house; and
+ away we toddled a mile and a half to the shippus&#8212;a nice old
+ farm-house, with some pretensions to squiredom, and the inhabitants
+ kind and civil as heart could wish.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Yes, they sometimes let their rooms&#8212;to families larger
+ than ours&#8212;they supplied them with every thing&#8212;waited on
+ them&#8212;<i>did</i> for them&#8212;and, as for the children, there
+ wasn&#39;t such a place in the county for nice fields to play
+ in.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>We looked round the room&#8212;a good <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span> high
+ ceiling, large window. &quot;This is just the thing&#8212;and I am
+ delighted we were told of your house.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;It would have been very delightful, but&#8212;but we are
+ full already, and we expect some of our own family home.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>And why didn&#39;t you tell us all this before?&#8212;we
+ <i>nearly</i> said&#8212;and to this hour, we can&#39;t understand
+ why there was such a profuse explanation of comforts&#8212;which
+ <i>we</i> were never destined to partake of.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;But just across the road there is a very nice cottage, where
+ you can get lodged&#8212;and we can supply you with milk, and any
+ thing else you want.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>Oho! there is some hope for us yet; and a few minutes saw us in
+ colloquy with the old gentleman, the proprietor of the house. With
+ the usual politeness of the Welsh, he dilated on the pleasure of
+ having agreeable visitors; and, with the usual Welsh habit of
+ forgetting that people don&#39;t generally travel with beds and
+ blankets, carpets and chairs, and tables and crockery, on their
+ shoulders, he seemed rather astonished when the fact of the rooms
+ destined for us being unfurnished was a considerable drawback. So, in
+ not quite such high spirits as we started, we returned to the Hay.
+ After a little rest, we again sported our seven-league boots, and
+ took a solitary ramble across the Wye. A beautiful rising ground lay
+ in front; and as our main object was to get up as high as we could,
+ we went on and on, enjoying the increasing loveliness of the view,
+ and wondering if a country so very charming was really left entirely
+ destitute of furnished houses, and only enjoyed by the selfish
+ natives, who had no room for pilgrims from a distance. In a nest of
+ trees, surrounded on all sides by trimly kept orchards, and
+ clustering round a venerable church, we came, at a winding of the
+ road, on one of the most enchanting villages we ever saw. Near the
+ gate of a modest-looking mansion, we beheld a gentleman in earnest
+ conversation with a beggar. The beggar was a man of rags and
+ eloquence; the gentleman was evidently a political economist, and
+ rejected the poor man&#39;s petition &quot;upon principle.&quot; A
+ lady, who was at the gentleman&#39;s side, looked at a poor little
+ child the man carried in his arms. &quot;Go to your own place,&quot;
+ said the gentleman; &quot;I never encourage vagrants.&quot; But it
+ was too good-natured a voice to belong to a political economist.</p>
+
+ <p>I wish I were as sure of a house as that the poor fellow will get
+ a shilling, in spite of the new poor-law and Lord Brougham.</p>
+
+ <p>The lady, after looking at the child, said something or other to
+ her companion; and, as we turned away at the corner, we heard the
+ discourager of vagrants apologizing to himself, and also reading a
+ severe lecture on the impropriety of alms-giving. &quot;Remember, I
+ disapprove of it entirely. You are indebted for it to this lady, who
+ interposed for you.&quot; So the poor man got his shilling after all;
+ and we considered it a favourable omen of success in getting a
+ house.</p>
+
+ <p>The next turn brought us to a dwelling which we think it a sort of
+ sacrilege to call a public-house. The Baskerville Arms, in the
+ village of Clyroe, is more fit for the home of a painter or a poet
+ than for the retail of beer, &quot;to be drunk on the premises.&quot;
+ There was a row of three nice clean windows in the front; the house
+ seemed to stand in the midst of an orchard of endless extent, though
+ in reality it faced the road; and, with a clear recollection of the
+ line,</p><span class="i2">&quot;Oh, that for me some cot like this
+ would smile,&quot;</span><br />
+
+ <p>upon our heart and lips, we tapped at the door, and went into the
+ room on the right hand. Every thing was in the neatest possible
+ order&#8212;bunches of May in the grate, and bouquets of fresh
+ flowers in two elegant vases upon the table. What nonsense to call
+ this a public-house! It puts us much more in mind of Sloperton,
+ Moore&#39;s cottage in Wiltshire; and in a finer neighbourhood than
+ any part of Wiltshire can show.</p>
+
+ <p>The landlady came; a fit spirit to rule over such a
+ domain&#8212;the beau-ideal of tidiness and good humour. There were
+ only two bedrooms; and one parlour was all they could give up.</p>
+
+ <p>The raven of Barnaby Rudge had a hard fight of it to maintain his
+ ground. We very nearly said die! for we had felt a sort of assurance
+ that this was our haven at last.</p>
+
+ <p>The landlady saw our woe.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;There&#39;s such a beautiful cottage,&quot; <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span> she said,
+ &quot;a mile and a half further on.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Is it furnished?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Well, I don&#39;t know. I think somehow it is. Would you
+ like to go and see it? I don&#39;t know but my husband would put
+ enough of furniture into it to do for you, if you liked it.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>It was, at all events, worth the trial. A little girl was sent
+ with us to act as guide; and along a road we sauntered in supreme
+ delight&#8212;so quiet, so retired, and so rich in leaf and blossom,
+ that it seemed like a private drive through some highly-cultivated
+ estate; and, finally, we reached the cottage. It stood on the side of
+ an ascent; it commanded a noble view of the Herefordshire hills and
+ the valley of the Wye; and there could be no doubt that it was the
+ identical spot that the doctors had seen in their dreams, when they
+ described the sort of dwelling we were to choose. I wish I were a
+ half-pay captain, with a wife and three children, a taste for
+ gardening, and a poney-carriage. I wish I were a Benedict in the
+ honeymoon. I wish I were a retired merchant, with a good sum at the
+ bank, and a predilection for farming pursuits. I wish I were a
+ landscape painter, with a moderate fortune, realized by English art.
+ I wish&#8212;but there is no use of wishing for any thing about the
+ cottage, except that Mr Chaloner may furnish it at once, and let us
+ be its tenant for two or three months.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs Chaloner, on our return to the Baskerville Arms, was gratified
+ at our estimate of the surpassing beauties of the house. She would
+ send her husband to us at the Hay the moment he returned; and, in the
+ midst of &quot;gay dreams, by pleasing fancy bred,&quot; we returned
+ to our barrack, and created universal jubilee by the prospect we
+ unfolded.</p>
+
+ <p>In a sort of delirium of good nature, we waited patiently till the
+ soldiers had had all the attentions of the household again. We had
+ almost a sense of enjoyment in all the discomforts we experienced.
+ The doors that would not shut&#8212;the waiters that would not
+ come&#8212;all things shone of the brightest rose-colour, seen
+ through the anticipation of ten or twelve weeks&#39; residence in the
+ paradise we had seen.</p>
+
+ <p>Late at night Mr Chaloner was announced. He had heard the whole
+ story from his worthy half; was in hopes he should be able to meet
+ our wishes, but must consult his chief. If <i>he</i> agreed, he would
+ see us before ten next morning&#8212;if not, we were to consider that
+ the furniture could not be put in.</p>
+
+ <p>And again we were slightly in the dumps.</p>
+
+ <p>At half-past nine next morning we rang the bell, and ordered a
+ carriage to be at the door at ten. If we hear from Chaloner, we shall
+ drive at once to the Baskerville Arms; if not, there is no use of
+ house-hunting in such an inhospitable region any more; let us get
+ back to our friend at Abergavenny. If there is no house near
+ <i>it</i>, let us go back to Chepstow; if we are disappointed there,
+ let us go home, and tell the doctor we have changed the air
+ enough.</p>
+
+ <p>Ten o&#39;clock.&#8212;No Chaloner; but, as usual, also no
+ carriage. Half-past ten.&#8212;No Chaloner. At eleven&#8212;the
+ carriage;&#8212;and behold, in three hours more, the smiling face of
+ Mr Morgan&#8212;the great long room and clean apartments of the
+ Angel, and the end of our expectations of house and home, except in
+ an hotel.</p>
+
+ <p>We have no time on the present occasion to tell how fortune smiled
+ upon us at last. How our landlord exerted himself, not only to make
+ us happy while under his charge, but to get us into comfortable
+ quarters in a large commodious house in the neighbourhood. In some
+ future Number we will relate how jollily we fare in our new abode.
+ How we are waited on like kings by the kindest host and hostess that
+ ever held a farm; and how we travel in all directions, leaving the
+ little ones at home, in a great strong gig, drawn by a horse that
+ hobbles and joggles at a famous pace, and gives us plenty of good
+ exercise and hearty laughter. All these things we will describe for
+ the edification of people under similar circumstances to ourselves.
+ The present lucubration being intended as a warning not to move from
+ <i>one</i> home till another is secured; the next will be an example
+ how country quarters are enjoyed, and a description of how pale
+ cheeks are turned into red ones by living in the open air.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg
+ 87]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="TORQUATO_TASSO" id="TORQUATO_TASSO"></a>TORQUATO
+ TASSO.</h2>
+
+ <p>Any thing approaching to an elaborate criticism of the <i>Torquato
+ Tasso</i> of Goethe we do not, in this place, intend to attempt; our
+ object is merely to translate some of the more striking and
+ characteristic passages, and accompany these extracts with such
+ explanatory remarks as may be necessary to render them quite
+ intelligible.</p>
+
+ <p>There is, we cannot help remarking, a peculiar awkwardness in
+ introducing a veritable poet amongst the personages of a drama. We
+ cannot dissociate his name from the remembrance of the works he has
+ written, and the heroes whom he has celebrated. Tasso&#8212;is it not
+ another name for the <i>Jerusalem Delivered</i>? and can he be
+ summoned up in our memory without bringing with him the shades of
+ Godfrey and Tancred? We expect to hear him singing of these champions
+ of the cross; this was his life, and we have a difficulty in
+ according to him any other. It is only after some effort that we
+ separate the man from the poet&#8212;that we can view him standing
+ alone, on the dry earth, unaccompanied by the creations of his fancy,
+ his imaginative existence suspended, acting and suffering in the same
+ personal manner as the rest of us. The poet brought into the ranks of
+ the <i>dramatis personæ!</i>&#8212;the creator of fictions converted
+ himself into a fictitious personage!&#8212;there seems some strange
+ confusion here. It is as if the magic wand were waved over the
+ magician himself&#8212;a thing not unheard of in the annals of the
+ black art. But then the second magician should be manifestly more
+ powerful than the first. The second poet should be capable of
+ overlooking and controlling the spirit of the first; capable, at all
+ events, of animating him with an eloquence and a poetry not inferior
+ to his own.</p>
+
+ <p>For there is certainly this disadvantage in bringing before us a
+ well-known and celebrated poet&#8212;we expect that he should speak
+ in poetry of the first order&#8212;in such as he might have written
+ himself. It is long before we can admit him to be neither more nor
+ less poetical than the other speakers; it is long before we can
+ believe him to talk for any other purpose than to say beautiful and
+ tender things. Knowing, as we do, the trick of poets, and what is
+ indeed their office as spokesmen of humanity, we suspect even when he
+ is relating his own sufferings, and complaining of his own wrongs,
+ that he is still only making a poem; that he is still busied first of
+ all with the sweet expression of a feeling which he is bent on
+ infusing, like an electric fluid, through the hearts of others.
+ Altogether, he is manifestly a very inconvenient personage for the
+ dramatist to have to deal with.</p>
+
+ <p>These impressions wear off, however, as the poem
+ proceeds&#8212;just as, in real life, familiar intercourse with the
+ greatest of bards teaches us to forget the author in the companion,
+ and the man of genius in the agreeable or disagreeable neighbour. In
+ the drama of Goethe, we become quite reconciled to the new position
+ in which the poet of the Holy Sepulchre is placed. <i>Torquato
+ Tasso</i> is what in this country would be called a dramatic poem, in
+ opposition to the tragedy composed for the stage, or <i>quasi</i> for
+ the stage. The <i>dramatis personæ</i> are few, the conduct of the
+ piece is on the classic model&#8212;the model, we mean, of Racine;
+ the plot is scanty, and keeps very close to history; there is little
+ action, and much reflection.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>dramatis personæ</i> are&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>Alphonso, Duke of Ferrara.<br />
+ Leonora d&#39;Este, sister of the Duke.<br />
+ Leonora Sanvitale, Countess of Scandiano.<br />
+ Torquato Tasso.<br />
+ Antonio Montecatino, Secretary of State.</p>
+
+ <p>In Tasso we have portrayed to us the poetic temperament, with some
+ overcharge in the tendency to distrust and suspicion, which belongs,
+ as we learn from his biography, to the character of Tasso, and which
+ again was but the symptom and precursor of that insanity to which he
+ fell a prey. Both to relieve and develope this poetic character, we
+ have its opposite (the representative of the practical understanding)
+ in Antonio Montecatino, the secretary of state, the accomplished man
+ of the world, the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id=
+ "Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span> successful diplomatist. It may be well
+ to mention that the speeches in the play given to Leonora d&#39;Este,
+ with whom Tasso is in love, are headed <i>The Princess</i>; and it is
+ her friend Leonora Sanvitale, Countess of Scandiano, who speaks under
+ the name of <i>Leonora</i>.</p>
+
+ <div class='smcapcenter'>
+ &quot;Act. I.&#8212;Scene I.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="center">
+ <i>A garden in the country palace of Belriguardo, adorned with
+ busts of the epic poets.<br />
+ To the right, that of Virgil&#8212;to the left, that of
+ Ariosto.</i>
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class='smcapcenter'>
+ Princess, Leonora.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Princess.</i>&#8212;My
+ Leonora, first you look at me</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ And smile, then at yourself, and smile again.<br />
+ What is it? Let your friend partake. You seem<br />
+ Very considerate, and much amused.<br />
+ <br />
+ </div><span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Leonora.</i>&#8212;My
+ Princess, I but smiled to see ourselves</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Decked in these pastoral habiliments.<br />
+ We look right happy shepherdesses both,<br />
+ And what we do is still pure innocence.<br />
+ We weave these wreaths. Mine, gay with many flowers,<br />
+ Still swells and blushes underneath my hand;<br />
+ Thou, moved with higher thought and greater heart,<br />
+ Hast only wove the slender laurel bough.<br />
+ <br />
+ </div><span style=
+ "margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Princess.</i>&#8212;The bough which I,
+ while wreathing thoughts, have</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ wreathed,<br />
+ Soon finds a worthy resting-place. I lay it<br />
+ Upon my Virgil&#39;s forehead.
+ </div><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent25_5">
+ [<i>Crowns the bust of Virgil.</i>
+ </div><span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Leonora.</i>&#160;
+ &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; And I mine,</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ My jocund garland, on the noble brow<br />
+ Of Master Ludovico.<br />
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="quoteindent25_5">
+ [<i>Crowns the bust of Ariosto.</i>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Well may he,<br />
+ Whose sportive verse shall never fade, demand<br />
+ His tribute of the spring!<br />
+ <br />
+ </div><span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Princess.</i>&#160;
+ &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#39;Twas
+ amiable</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ In the duke, my brother, to conduct us,<br />
+ So early in the year, to this retreat.<br />
+ Here we possess ourselves, here we may dream<br />
+ Uninterrupted hours&#8212;dream ourselves back<br />
+ Into the golden age which poets sing.<br />
+ I love this Belriguardo; I have here<br />
+ Pass&#39;d many youthful, many happy days;<br />
+ And the fresh green, and this bright sun, recall<br />
+ The feelings of those times.<br />
+ <br />
+ </div><span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Leonora.</i>&#160;
+ &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; Yes, a new
+ world</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Surrounds us here. How it delights&#8212;the shade<br />
+ Of leaves for ever green! how it revives&#8212;<br />
+ The rushing of that brook! with giddy joy<br />
+ The young boughs swing them in the morning air;<br />
+ And from their beds the little friendly flowers<br />
+ Look with the eye of childhood up to us.<br />
+ The trustful gardener gives to the broad day<br />
+ His winter store of oranges and citrons;<br />
+ One wide blue sky rests over all; the snow<br />
+ On the horizon, from the distant hills,<br />
+ In light dissolving vapour steals away.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The conversation winds gracefully towards poetry and Tasso. We
+ will answer at once the interesting question, whether the poet has
+ represented Leonora d&#39;Este, the princess, as being in love with
+ Tasso. He has; and very delicately has he made her express this
+ sentiment. From the moment when, doubtless thinking of the living
+ poet, she twined the laurel wreath which she afterwards deposited on
+ the brow of Virgil, to the last scene where she leads the unhappy
+ Tasso to a fatal declaration of his <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span> passion, there is a gentle
+ <i>crescendo</i> of what always remains, however, a very subdued and
+ meditative affection. She loves&#8212;but like a princess; she muses
+ over the danger to herself from suffering such a sentiment towards
+ one in so different a rank of life to grow upon her; she never thinks
+ of the danger to <i>him</i>, to the hapless Tasso, by her betrayal of
+ an affection which she is yet resolved to keep within subjection. To
+ be sure it may be said, that all women have something of the princess
+ in them at this epoch of their lives. There is a wonderful
+ selfishness in the heart, while it still asks itself whether it shall
+ love or not. The sentiment of the princess is very elegantly
+ disguised in the jesting vein in which she rallies Leonora
+ Sanvitale&#8212;</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Leonora.</i>&#8212;Your mind embraces
+ wider regions; mine</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Lingers content within the little isle,<br />
+ And &#39;midst the laurel grove of poesy.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Princess.</i>&#8212;In
+ which fair isle, in which sweet grove, they say,</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ The myrtle also flourishes. And though<br />
+ There wander many muses there, we choose<br />
+ Our friend and playmate not alone from <i>them</i>,<br />
+ We rather greet the poet there himself,<br />
+ Who seems indeed to shun us, seems to fly,<br />
+ Seeking we know not what, and he himself<br />
+ Perhaps as little knows. &#39;Tis pretty when,<br />
+ In some propitious hour, the enraptured youth<br />
+ Looking with better eyes, detects in <i>us</i><br />
+ The treasure he had been so far to seek.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Leonora.</i>&#8212;The jest
+ is pleasant&#8212;touches, but not near.</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ I honour each man&#39;s merit; and to Tasso<br />
+ Am barely just. His eye, that covets nothing,<br />
+ Light ranges over all; his ear is fill&#39;d<br />
+ With the rich harmony great nature makes;<br />
+ What ancient records, what the living scene,<br />
+ Disclose, his open bosom takes it all;<br />
+ What beams of truth stray scattered o&#39;er this world,<br />
+ His mind collects, converges. How his heart<br />
+ Has animated the inanimate!<br />
+ How oft ennobled what we little prize,<br />
+ And shown how poor the treasures of the great!<br />
+ In this enchanted circle of his own<br />
+ Proceeds the wondrous man; and us he draws<br />
+ Within, to follow and participate.<br />
+ He seems to near us, yet he stays remote&#8212;<br />
+ Seems to regard us, and regards instead<br />
+ Some spirit that assumes our place the while.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Princess.</i>&#8212;Finely
+ and delicately hast thou limn&#39;d</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ The poet, moving in his world of thought.<br />
+ And yet, methinks, some fair reality<br />
+ Has wrought upon him here. Those charming verses<br />
+ Found hanging here and there upon our trees,<br />
+ Like golden fruit, that to the finer sense<br />
+ Breathes of a new Hesperides: think you<br />
+ These are not tokens of a genuine love?
+ </div>
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ And when he gives a name to the fair object<br />
+ Of all this praise, he calls it Leonora!
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Leonora.</i>&#8212;Thy
+ name, as well as mine. I, for my part,</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Should take it ill were he to choose another.<br />
+ Here is no question of a narrow love,<br />
+ That would engross its solitary prize,<br />
+ And guards it jealously from every eye<br />
+ That also would admire. When contemplation<br />
+ Is deeply busy with thy graver worth,<br />
+ My lighter being haply flits across,<br />
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg
+ 90]</a></span> And adds its pleasure to the pensive mood.<br />
+ It is not us&#8212;forgive me if I say it&#8212;<br />
+ Not us he loves; but down from all the spheres<br />
+ He draws the matter of his strong affection,<br />
+ And gives it to the name we bear. And we&#8212;<br />
+ We seem to love the man, yet love in him<br />
+ That only which we highest know to love.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Princess.</i>&#8212;You
+ have become an adept in this science,</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ And put forth, Leonora, such profundities<br />
+ As something more than penetrate the ear,<br />
+ yet hardly touch the thought.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Leonora.</i>&#160; &#160;
+ &#160; &#160; &#160; &#8212;Thou, Plato&#39;s scholar!</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Not apprehend what I, a neophyte,<br />
+ Venture to prattle of&quot;&#8212;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <p>Alphonso enters, and enquires after Tasso. Leonora answers, that
+ she had seen him at a distance, with his book and tablets, writing
+ and walking, and adds that, from some hint he had let fall, she
+ gathered that his great work was near its completion; and, in fact,
+ the princess soon after descries him coming towards
+ them:&#8212;</p><span style="margin-left: 18em;">&quot;Slowly he
+ comes,</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Stands still awhile as unresolved, then hastes,<br />
+ With quicken&#39;d step, towards us; then again<br />
+ Slackens his pace, and pauses.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Tasso enters, and presents his <i>Jerusalem Delivered</i> to his
+ patron, the Duke of Ferrara. Alphonso, seeing the laurel wreath on
+ the bust of Virgil, makes a sign to his sister; and the princess,
+ after some remonstrance on the part of Tasso, transfers it from the
+ statue to the head of the living poet. As she crowns him, she
+ says&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ &quot;Thou givest me, Tasso, here the rare delight,<br />
+ With silent act, to tell thee what I think.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>But the poet is no sooner crowned than he entreats that the wreath
+ should be removed. It weighs on him, it is a burden, a pressure, it
+ sinks and abashes him. Besides, he feels, as the man of genius must
+ always feel, that not to wear the crown but to earn it, is the real
+ joy as well as task of his life. The laurel is indeed for the bust,
+ not for the living head.</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 18em;">&quot;Take it away!</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Oh take, ye gods, this glory from my brow!<br />
+ Hide it again in clouds! Bear it aloft<br />
+ To heights all unattainable, that still<br />
+ My whole of life for this great recompense,<br />
+ Be one eternal course.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>He obeys, however, the will of the princess, who bids him retain
+ it. We are now introduced to the antagonist, in every sense of the
+ word, of Tasso,&#8212;Antonio, secretary of state. In addition to the
+ causes of repugnance springing from their opposite characters,
+ Antonio is jealous of the favour which the young poet has won at the
+ court of Ferrara, both with his patron and the ladies. This
+ representative of the practical understanding speaks with admiration
+ of the court of Rome, and the ability of the ruling pontiff. He
+ says&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ &quot;No nobler object is there in the world<br />
+ Than this&#8212;a prince who ably rules his people,<br />
+ A people where the proudest heart obeys,<br />
+ Where each man thinks he serves himself alone,<br />
+ Because what fits him is alone commanded.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Alphonso speaks of the poem which Tasso has just completed, and
+ points to the crown which he wears. Then follow some of the unkindest
+ words which a secretary of state could possibly bestow on the
+ occasion.</p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg
+ 91]</a></span> <span style=
+ "margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Antonio.</i>&#8212;You solve a riddle
+ for me. Entering here</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ I saw to my surprise <i>two</i> crowned.
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="quoteindent25_5">
+ [<i>Looking towards the bust of Ariosto.</i>
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Tasso.</i>&#160; &#160;
+ &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160;
+ I wish</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Thou could&#39;st as plainly as thou see&#39;st my honours,<br />
+ Behold the oppress&#39;d and downcast spirit within.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Antonio</i>&#8212;I have
+ long known that in his recompenses</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Alphonso is immoderate; &#39;tis thine<br />
+ To prove to-day what all who serve the prince<br />
+ Have learn&#39;d, or will.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Antonio then launches into an eloquent eulogium upon the
+ <i>other</i> crowned one&#8212;upon Ariosto&#8212;which has for its
+ object as well to dash the pride of the living, as to do homage to
+ the dead. He adds, with a most cruel ambiguity,</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 12em;">&quot;Who ventures near this man to place
+ himself,</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Even for his boldness may deserve a crown.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The seeds of enmity, it is manifest, are plentifully sown between
+ Antonio and Tasso. Here ends the 1st Act.</p>
+
+ <p>At the commencement of the 2d Act, the princess is endeavouring to
+ heal the wound that has been inflicted on the just pride of the poet,
+ and she alludes, in particular, to the eulogy which Antonio had so
+ invidiously passed upon Ariosto. The answer of Tasso deserves
+ attention. It is peculiar to the poetic genius to estimate very
+ differently at different times the value of its own labours.
+ Sometimes do but grant to the poet his claim to the possession of
+ genius, and his head strikes the stars. At other times, when
+ contemplating the lives of those men whose actions he has been
+ content to celebrate in song, he doubts whether he should not rank
+ himself as the very prince of idlers. He is sometimes tempted to
+ think that to have given one good stroke with the sword, were worth
+ all the delicate touches of his pen. This feeling Tasso has finely
+ expressed.</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Princess.</i>&#8212;When Antonio knows
+ what thou hast done</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ To honour these our times, then will he place thee<br />
+ On the same level, side by side, with him<br />
+ He now depicts in so gigantic stature.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Tasso.</i>&#8212;Believe
+ me, lady, Ariosto&#39;s praise</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Heard from his lips, was likely more to please<br />
+ Than wound me. It confirms us, it consoles,<br />
+ To hear the man extoll&#39;d whom we have placed<br />
+ Before us as a model: we can say<br />
+ In secret to ourselves&#8212;gain thou a share<br />
+ Of his acknowledged merit, and thou gain&#39;st<br />
+ As certainly a portion of his fame.<br />
+ No&#8212;that which to its depths has stirr&#39;d my spirit,<br />
+ What still I feel through all my sinking soul,<br />
+ It was the picture of that living world,<br />
+ Which restless, vast, enormous, yet revolves<br />
+ In measured circle round the one great man,<br />
+ Fulfils the course which he, the demi-god,<br />
+ Dares to prescribe to it. With eager ear<br />
+ I listen&#39;d to the experienced man, whose speech<br />
+ Gave faithful transcript of a real scene.<br />
+ Alas! the more I listen&#39;d, still the more<br />
+ I sank within myself: it seem&#39;d my being<br />
+ Would vanish like an echo of the hills,<br />
+ Resolved to a mere sound&#8212;a word&#8212;a nothing.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Princess.</i>&#8212;Poets
+ and heroes for each other live,</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Poets and heroes seek each other out,<br />
+ And envy not each other: this thyself,<br />
+ Few minutes past, did vividly portray.<br />
+ True, it is glorious to perform the deed<br />
+ That merits noble song; yet glorious too<br />
+ With noble song the once accomplish&#39;d deed<br />
+ Through all the after-world to memorize.&quot;
+ </div><br />
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg
+ 92]</a></span>
+
+ <p>When she continues to urge Tasso to make the friendship of
+ Antonio, and assures him that the return of the minister has only
+ procured him a friend the more, he answers:&#8212;</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Tasso.</i>&#8212;I hoped it once, I
+ doubt it now.</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Instructive were to me his intercourse,<br />
+ Useful his counsel in a thousand ways:<br />
+ This man possesses all in which I fail.<br />
+ And yet&#8212;though at his birth flock&#39;d every god,<br />
+ To hang his cradle with some special gift&#8212;<br />
+ The graces came not there, they stood aloof:<br />
+ And he whom these sweet sisters visit not,<br />
+ May possess much, may in bestowing be<br />
+ Most bountiful, but never will a friend,<br />
+ Or loved disciple, on his bosom rest.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The tendency of this scene is to lull Tasso into the belief that
+ he is beloved of the princess. Of course he is ardent to obey the
+ latest injunctions he has received from her, and when Antonio next
+ makes his appearance, he offers him immediately &quot;his hand and
+ heart.&quot; The secretary of state receives such a sudden offer (as
+ it might be expected a secretary of state would do) with great
+ coolness; he will wait till he knows whether he can return the like
+ offer of friendship. He discourses on the excellence of moderation,
+ and in a somewhat magisterial tone, little justified by the relative
+ intellectual position of the speakers. Here, again, we have a true
+ insight into the character of the man of genius. He is
+ modest&#8212;very&#8212;till you become too overbearing; he
+ exaggerates the superiority in practical wisdom of men who have
+ mingled extensively with the world, and so invites a tone of
+ dictation; and yet withal he has a sly consciousness, that this same
+ superiority of the man of the world consists much more in a certain
+ fortunate limitation of thought than in any peculiar extension. The
+ wisdom of such a man has passed through the mind of the poet, with
+ this difference, that in his mind there is much beside this wisdom,
+ much that is higher than this wisdom; and so it does not maintain a
+ very prominent position, but gets obscured and
+ neglected.</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Tasso.</i>&#8212;Thou hast good title
+ to advise, to warn,</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ For sage experience, like a long-tried friend,<br />
+ Stands at thy side. Yet be assured of this,<br />
+ The solitary heart hears every day,<br />
+ Hears every hour, a warning; cons and proves,<br />
+ And puts in practice secretly that lore<br />
+ Which in harsh lessons you would teach as new,<br />
+ As something widely out of reach.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Yet, spurred on by the injunction of the princess, he still makes
+ an attempt to grasp at the friendship of Antonio.</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Tasso.</i>&#8212;Once more! here is my
+ hand! clasp it in thine!</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Nay, step not back, nor, noble sir, deny me<br />
+ The happiness, the greatest of good men,<br />
+ To yield me, trustful, to superior worth,<br />
+ Without reserve, without a pause or halt.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Antonio.</i>&#8212;You come
+ full sail upon me. Plain it is</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ You are accustomed to make easy conquests,<br />
+ To walk broad paths, to find an open door.<br />
+ Thy merit&#8212;and thy fortune&#8212;I admit,<br />
+ But fear we stand asunder wide apart.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Tasso.</i>&#8212;In years
+ and in tried worth I still am wanting;</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ In zeal and will, I yield to none.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Antonio.</i>&#160; &#160;
+ &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; The
+ will</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Draws the deed after by no magic charm,<br />
+ And zeal grows weary where the way is long:<br />
+ Who reach the goal, they only wear the crown.<br />
+ And yet, crowns are there, or say garlands rather,<br />
+ Of many sorts, some gather&#39;d as we go,<br />
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg
+ 93]</a></span> Pluck&#39;d as we sing and saunter.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Tasso.</i>&#160; &#160;
+ &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; But a
+ gift</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Freely bestow&#39;d on this mind, and to that<br />
+ As utterly denied&#8212;this not each man,<br />
+ Stretching his hand, can gather if he will.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Antonio.</i>&#8212;Ascribe
+ the gift to fortune&#8212;it is well.</span><br />
+
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ The fortunate, with reason good, extol<br />
+ The goddess Fortune&#8212;give her titles high&#8212;<br />
+ Call her Minerva&#8212;call her what they will&#8212;<br />
+ Take her blind gifts for just reward, and wear<br />
+ Her wind-blown favour as a badge of merit.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Tasso.</i>&#8212;No need to
+ speak more plainly. &#39;Tis enough.</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ I see into thy soul&#8212;I know thee now,<br />
+ And all thy life I know. Oh, that the princess<br />
+ Had sounded thee as I! But never waste<br />
+ Thy shafts of malice of the eye and tongue<br />
+ Against this laurel-wreath that crowns my brow,<br />
+ The imperishable garland. &#39;Tis in vain.<br />
+ First be so great as not to envy it,<br />
+ Then perhaps thou may&#39;st dispute.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Antonio.</i>&#160; &#160;
+ &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; &#160; Thyself art
+ prompt</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ To justify my slight esteem of thee.<br />
+ The impetuous boy with violence demands<br />
+ The confidence and friendship of the man.<br />
+ Why, what unmannerly deportment this!
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Tasso.</i>&#8212;Better
+ what you unmannerly may deem,</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Than what I call ignoble.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Antonio.</i>&#160; &#160;
+ &#160; &#160; &#160; There remains</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ One hope for thee. Thou still art young enough<br />
+ To be corrected by strict discipline.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Tasso.</i>&#8212;Not young
+ enough to bow myself to idols</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ That courtiers make and worship; old enough<br />
+ Defiance with defiance to encounter.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Antonio.</i>&#8212;Ay,
+ where the tinkling lute and tinkling speech</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Decide the combat, Tasso is a hero.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Tasso.</i>&#8212;I were to
+ blame to boast a sword unknown</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ As yet to war, but I can trust to it.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Antonio.</i>&#8212;Trust
+ rather to indulgence.&quot;</span><br />
+
+ <p>We are in the high way, it is plain, to a duel. Tasso insists upon
+ an appeal to the sword. The secretary of state contents himself with
+ objecting the privilege or sanctity of the place, they being within
+ the precincts of the royal residence. At the height of this debate,
+ Alphonso enters. Here, again, the minister has a most palpable
+ advantage over the poet. He insists upon the one point of view in
+ which he has the clear right, and will not diverge from it; Tasso has
+ challenged him, has done his utmost to provoke a duel within the
+ walls of the palace; and is, therefore, amenable to the law. The Duke
+ can do no other than decide against the poet, whom he dismisses to
+ his apartment with the injunction that he is there to consider
+ himself, for the present, a prisoner.</p>
+
+ <p>In the three subsequent acts, there is still less of action; and
+ we may as well relate at once what there remains of plot to be told,
+ and then proceed with our extracts. Through the mediation of the
+ princess and her friend, this quarrel is in part adjusted, and Tasso
+ is released from imprisonment. But his spirit is wounded, and he
+ determines to quit the court of Ferrara. He obtains permission to
+ travel to Rome. At this juncture he meets with the princess. His
+ impression has been that she also is alienated from him; her
+ conversation removes and quite reverses this impression; in a moment
+ of ungovernable tenderness he is about to embrace her; she repulses
+ him and retires. The duke, who makes his appearance just at this
+ moment, and who has been a witness to the conclusion of this
+ interview, orders Tasso into confinement, expressing at the same time
+ his conviction <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id=
+ "Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> that the poet has lost his senses. He is
+ given into the charge of Antonio, and thus ends the drama.</p>
+
+ <p>Glancing back over the three last acts, whose action we have
+ summed up so briefly, we might select many beautiful passages for
+ translation; we content ourselves with the following.</p>
+
+ <p>The princess and Leonora Sanvitale are conversing. There has been
+ question of the departure of Tasso.</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Princess.</i>&#8212;Each day was
+ <i>then</i> itself a little life;</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ No care was clamorous, and the future slept.<br />
+ Me and my happy bark the flowing stream,<br />
+ Without an oar, drew with light ripple down.<br />
+ Now&#8212;in the turmoil of the present hour,<br />
+ The future wakes, and fills the startled ear<br />
+ With whisper&#39;d terrors.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Leonora.</i>&#160; &#160;
+ &#160; &#160; But the future brings</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ New joys, new friendships.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Princess.</i>&#160; &#160;
+ &#160; Let me keep the old.</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Change may amuse, it scarce can profit us.<br />
+ I never thrust, with youthful eagerness,<br />
+ A curious hand into the shaken urn<br />
+ Of life&#39;s great lottery, with hope to find<br />
+ Some object for a restless, untried heart.<br />
+ I honour&#39;d him, and therefore have I loved;<br />
+ It was necessity to love the man<br />
+ With whom my being grew into a life<br />
+ Such as I had not known, or dream&#39;d before.<br />
+ At first, I laid injunctions on myself<br />
+ To keep aloof; I yielded, yielded still,<br />
+ Still nearer drew&#8212;enticed how pleasantly<br />
+ To be how hardly punish&#39;d!
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Leonora.</i>&#160; &#160;
+ If a friend</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Fail with her weak consolatory speech,<br />
+ Let the still powers of this beautiful world,<br />
+ With silent healing, renovate thy spirit.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Princess.</i>&#8212;The
+ world <i>is</i> beautiful! In its wide circuit,</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ How much of good is stirring here and there!<br />
+ Alas! that it should ever seem removed<br />
+ Just one step off! Throughout the whole of life<br />
+ Step after step, it leads our sick desire<br />
+ E&#39;en to the grave. So rarely do men find<br />
+ What yet seem&#39;d destined them&#8212;so rarely hold<br />
+ What once the hand had fortunately clasp&#39;d;<br />
+ What has been giv&#39;n us, rends itself away,<br />
+ And what we clutch&#39;d, we let it loose again;<br />
+ There is a happiness&#8212;we know it not,<br />
+ We know it&#8212;and we know not how to prize.&quot;
+ </div><br />
+
+ <p>Tasso says, when he thought himself happy in the love of Leonora
+ d&#39;Este&#8212;</p><span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;I have
+ often dream&#39;d of this great happiness&#8212;</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ &#39;Tis here!&#8212;and oh, how far beyond the dream!<br />
+ A blind man, let him reason upon light,<br />
+ And on the charm of colour, how he will,<br />
+ If once the new-born day reveal itself,<br />
+ It is a new-born sense.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>And again on this same felicity,</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 12em;">&quot;Not on the wide sands of the rushing
+ ocean,</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ &#39;Tis in the quiet shell, shut up, conceal&#39;d,<br />
+ We find the pearl.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <p>It is in another strain that the poet speaks when Leonora
+ Sanvitale attempts to persuade him that Antonio entertains in reality
+ no hostility towards him. In what follows, we see the anger and
+ hatred of a meditative man. It is a hatred which supports and
+ exhausts itself in reasoning; which we might predict would never go
+ forth into any act of enmity. It is <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span> a mere sentiment, or rather
+ the mere conception of a sentiment. For the poet rather thinks of
+ hatred than positively hates.</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 12em;">&quot;And if I err, I err
+ resolvedly.</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ I think of him as of my bitter foe;<br />
+ To think him less than this would now distract,<br />
+ Discomfort me. It were a sort of folly<br />
+ To be with all men reasonable; &#39;twere<br />
+ The abandonment of all distinctive <i>self</i>.<br />
+ Are all mankind to us so reasonable?<br />
+ No, no! Man in his narrow being needs<br />
+ Both feelings, love, and hate. Needs he not night<br />
+ As well as day? and sleep as well as waking?<br />
+ No! I will hold this man for evermore<br />
+ As precious object of my deepest hate,<br />
+ And nothing shall disturb the joy I have<br />
+ In thinking of him daily worse and worse.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="quoteindent25_5">
+ <i>Act. 4, Scene 2.</i>
+ </div><br />
+
+ <p>We conclude with a passage in which Tasso speaks of the
+ irresistible passion he feels for his own art. He has sought
+ permission of the Duke to retire to Rome, on the plea that he will
+ there, by the assistance of learned men, better complete his great
+ work, which he regards as still imperfect. Alphonso grants his
+ request, but advises him rather to suspend his labour for the
+ present, and partake, for a season, of the distractions of the world.
+ He would be wise, he tells him, to seek the restoration of his
+ health.</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Tasso.</i>&#8212;It should seem so; yet
+ have I health enow</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ If only I can labour, and this labour<br />
+ Again bestows the only health I know.<br />
+ It is not well with me, as thou hast seen,<br />
+ In this luxuriant peace. In rest I find<br />
+ Rest least of all. I was not framed,<br />
+ My spirit was not destined to be borne<br />
+ On the soft element of flowing days,<br />
+ And so in Time&#39;s great ocean lose itself<br />
+ Uncheck&#39;d, unbroken.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Alphonso.</i>&#8212;All
+ feelings, and all impulses, my Tasso,</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Drive thee for ever back into thyself.<br />
+ There lies about us many an abyss<br />
+ Which Fate has dug; the deepest yet of all<br />
+ Is here, in our own heart, and very strong<br />
+ Is the temptation to plunge headlong in.<br />
+ I pray thee snatch thyself away in time.<br />
+ Divorce thee, for a season, from thyself.<br />
+ The man will gain whate&#39;er the poet lose.
+ </div><br />
+ <span style="margin-left: 12em;">&quot;<i>Tasso.</i>&#8212;One
+ impulse all in vein I should resist,</span><br />
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ Which day and night within my bosom stirs.<br />
+ Life is not life if I must cease to think,<br />
+ Or, thinking, cease to poetize.<br />
+ Forbid the silk-worm any more to spin,<br />
+ Because its own life lies upon the thread.<br />
+ Still it uncoils the precious golden web,<br />
+ And ceases not till, dying, it has closed<br />
+ Its own tomb o&#39;er it. May the good God grant<br />
+ We, one day, share the fate of that same worm!&#8212;<br />
+ That we, too, in some valley bright with heaven,<br />
+ Surprised with sudden joy, may spread our wing.
+ </div>
+
+
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+
+ <div class="quoteindent10_5">
+ I feel&#8212;I feel it well&#8212;this highest art<br />
+ Which should have fed the mind, which to the strong<br />
+ Adds strength and ever new vitality,&#8212;<br />
+ It is destroying me, it hunts me forth,<br />
+ Where&#39;er I rove, an exile amongst men.&quot;
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="quoteindent25_5">
+ <i>Act V. Scene 2.</i>
+ </div><br />
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg
+ 96]</a></span></p>
+
+ <h2><a name="DAVID_THE_TELYNWR20_OR_THE_DAUGHTERS_TRIAL" id=
+ "DAVID_THE_TELYNWR20_OR_THE_DAUGHTERS_TRIAL"></a>DAVID THE
+ &quot;TELYNWR;&quot;<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id=
+ "FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class=
+ "fnanchor">[20]</a> OR, THE DAUGHTER&#39;S TRIAL.<br />
+ A TALE OF WALES.</h2>
+
+ <h3>BY JOSEPH DOWNES.</h3>
+
+ <p>The inhabitants of the white mountain village of K&#8212;&#8212;,
+ in Cardiganshire, were all retired to rest, it being ten o&#39;clock.
+ No&#8212;a single light twinkled from under eaves of thick and mossy
+ thatch, in one cottage apart, and neater than the rest, that skirted
+ the steep <i>street</i>, (as the salmon fishers, its chief
+ inhabitants, were pleased to call it,) being, indeed, the rock,
+ thinly covered with the soil, and fringed with long grass, but rudely
+ smoothed, where very rugged, by art, for the transit of a
+ <i>gamboo</i> (cart with small wheels of entire wood) or sledge. The
+ moonlight slept in unbroken lustre on the houses of one story, or
+ without any but what the roof slope formed, and several appearances
+ marked it as a fisher village. A black, oval, pitched basket, as it
+ appeared, hung against the wall of several of the cottages, being the
+ <i>coracle</i>, or boat for one person, much used on the larger Welsh
+ rivers, very primitive in form and construction, being precisely
+ described by Cæsar in his account of the ancient Britons. Dried
+ salmon and other fish also adorned others, pleasingly hinting of the
+ general honesty and mutual confidence of the humble natives, poor as
+ they were, for strangers were never thought of; the road, such as it
+ was, merely mounting up to &quot;the hill&quot; (the lofty desert of
+ sheepwalk) on one hand, and descending steeply to the river Tivy on
+ the other. A deadened thunder, rising from some fall and brawling
+ shallow &quot;rapid&quot; of the river, was the only sound, except
+ the hooting of an owl from some old ivied building, a ruin
+ apparently, visible on the olive-hued precipice behind. The russet
+ mass of mountain, bulging, as it were, over the little range of cots,
+ gave an air of security to their picturesque white beauty; while
+ silver clouds curled and rolled in masses, grandly veiling their
+ higher peaks, and sometimes canopied the roofs, many reddened with
+ wall-flower; the walls also exhibiting streaks of green, where rains
+ had drenched the vegetating thatch and washed down its tint of yellow
+ green. Aged trees, green even to the trunks, luxuriant ivy enveloping
+ them as well as the branches, stretched their huge arms down the
+ declivity leading to the Tivy, the flashing of whose waters, through
+ its rich fringe of underwood, caught the eye of any one standing on
+ the ridge above. A solitary figure, tall and muffled, did stand with
+ his back in contact with one of these oaks, so as to be hardly
+ distinguishable from the trunk.</p>
+
+ <p>A poet might imagine, looking at a Welsh village by moonlight,
+ thus embosomed in pastoral mountains, canopied with those silver
+ mists whose very motion was peace, and lulled by those soft solemn
+ sounds, more peace-breathing than even silence, that <i>there</i>, at
+ least, care never came; there peace, &quot;if to be found in the
+ world,&quot; would be surely found; and soon that one light
+ moving&#8212;that prettier painted door stealthily
+ opening&#8212;would prove that peace confined to the elements only.
+ &quot;Here I am!&quot; would be groaned to his mind&#39;s ear by the
+ ubiquitous, foul fiend, Care; for thence emerged a female
+ form&#8212;<i>simplex munditiis</i>&#8212;the exact description of it
+ as to attire&#8212;rather tall than otherwise, but its chief
+ characteristic, a drooping kind of bowed gait, in affecting unison
+ with a melancholy settled over the pale features, so strongly as to
+ be visible even by the moon at a very short distance. Brushing away a
+ tear from each eye, as she held to her breast a little packet of some
+ kind, as soon as she found (as she imagined) the coast clear, she
+ proceeded, after fastening her door, toward one of the bowered
+ footpaths <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg
+ 97]</a></span> leading to the river. The concealed man looked after
+ her, prepared to follow, when some belated salmon fisher, his dark
+ coracle, strapped to his back, nodding over his head, appeared. This
+ lurking personage was nicknamed &quot;Lewis the Spy&quot; by the
+ country people. He was the agent, newly appointed, to inspect the
+ condition of a once fine but most neglected estate, which had
+ recently come into possession of a &quot;Nabob,&quot; as they called
+ him&#8212;a gentleman who had left Wales a boy, and was now on his
+ voyage home to take possession of a dilapidated mansion called
+ Talylynn. Lewis, his forerunner and plenipotentiary, was the dread
+ and hate of the alarmed tenants. He had already ejected from his
+ stewardship a good but rather indolent old man, John Bevan, who had
+ grown old in the service of the former &quot;squire;&quot; and
+ besides kept watch over the doings on the farms in an occult and
+ treacherous manner, prowling round their &quot;folds&quot; by dusk,
+ and often listening to conversations by concealing himself. Such was
+ the man who now accosted the humble fisherman. Reverentially, as if
+ to the terrible landlord himself, the peasant bared his head to his
+ sullen representative.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Who is that young woman?&quot; he enquired, sternly, though
+ well knowing who she was.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Dim Saesneg,&quot; answered the man, bowing.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;None of your Dim Saesneg to me, fellow,&quot; rejoined
+ Lewis, sternly. &quot;Did not I hear you swearing in good English at
+ a <i>Saesyn</i> (Englishman or Saxon) yesterday?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>The Welshman begged pardon in good Saxon, and answered at
+ last&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Why, then, if it please your honour, her name be
+ Winifred&#8212;her other name be Bevan&#8212;<i>Miss</i> Bevan, the
+ school&#8212;her father be Mister Bevan of Llaneol, steward that was
+ to our old squire of the great house, &#39;the
+ Hall&#39;&#8212;Talylynn Hall&#8212;where there&#39;s a fine lake. I
+ warrant your honour has fished there. You Saesonig gentlemen do
+ mostly do nothing but fish and shoot in our poor country; I beg
+ pardon, but you look <i>Saesoniadd</i>, (Saxonlike,) I was
+ thinking&#8212;fine lake, but the trout be not to
+ compare&quot;&#8212;&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Well,&quot; interrupted the other laughing, &quot;your
+ English tongue can wag as glib as your outlandish one. A sweetheart
+ in the case there, isn&#39;t there? What the devil&#39;s she going
+ down to the river for at this time of night, else?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Why, to be sure there be!&quot; the man answered.
+ &quot;<i>We</i> all know that; poor thing, she had need find some
+ comforter in all her troubles&#8212;her father so poor, and in debt
+ to this strange foreigner, who&#39;s on the water coming home now,
+ and has made proposals for her in marriage, so they do <i>say</i>;
+ but it&#39;s like your honour knows more of that than I do&#8212;for
+ be not you Mr Lewis, I beg pardon, Lewis Lewis, esquire?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;And what do you know of this sweetheart of hers? Is he her
+ <i>first</i>, think ye? <i>I</i> doubt that,&quot; rejoined Lewis,
+ not noticing his enquiry&#8212;&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;<i>You</i> may doubt what your honour pleases, but <i>we</i>
+ don&#39;t&#8212;no; never man touched her <i>hand</i> hardly, never
+ one her lips, before&#8212;I did have it from her mother; but as for
+ this one she&#39;s found at last, we wish she&#39;d a
+ better&quot;&#8212;&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;What&#39;s the matter with him, then?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Oh, nothing more than that he&#39;s poor, sir&#8212;poor;
+ and that <i>we</i> don&#39;t know much about the
+ stranger&quot;&#8212;&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;What &#39;<i>we</i>&#39; do you mean, while you talk of
+ &#39;we&#39;?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Lord bless ye, sir, why us all of this bankside, and this
+ side Tivy, the great family of us, she&#39;s just like <i>our</i>
+ little girl to us all; for don&#39;t she have all our young ones to
+ give &#39;em learning, whether the Cardigan ladies pay for &#39;em or
+ don&#39;t? And wasn&#39;t poor dear old John Bevan the man who would
+ lend every farmer in the parish a help in money or any way, only for
+ asking? So it is, you see, she has grown up among us. This young man,
+ though he may be old for what I know, never seeing him in my
+ life&#8212;you see, sir, we on this side of Tivy are like strangers
+ to the Cardy men, t&#39;other side&#8212;<i>they</i> are
+ <i>Cardie&#39;s</i>, sure enow, <i>true</i> ones, as the Saxon
+ foreign folk do call us <i>all</i> of this shire. I wouldn&#39;t
+ trust one of &#39;em t&#39;other side, no further than I could throw
+ him. I&#39;ll tell ye a story&quot;&#8212;&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg
+ 98]</a></span></p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Never mind. What about David?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Oh, ho! You know his name, then? Well, and that&#39;s all
+ <i>I</i> do&#8212;pretty nigh. He lives with a woman who fostered him
+ after his own mother died in travail with him, they do say, who has a
+ little house, beyond that lump of a mountain, above all the others,
+ we see by daylight; he has been in England, and is a strange one for
+ music. He owes (owns, possesses,) a beautiful
+ harp&#8212;<i>beautiful</i>! The Lord knows, some do say, that&#39;s
+ all he owes in the world, so (except) his coracle and the salmon he
+ takes, and what young people do give him at weddings and biddings,
+ where he goes to play: and what&#39;s that to keep a wife? Poor Davy
+ <i>Telynwr</i>! Yet, by my soul, we all say we&#39;d rather see her
+ his than this foreigner gentleman&#39;s, who has almost broke her
+ heart, they say, by coming between her and her own dear
+ one.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;He&#39;s <i>not</i> come yet,&quot; muttered the other,
+ sullenly; adding, sharply and bitterly, &quot;Mighty good friends you
+ all are, to wish her married to a beggar, a vagabond harper, rather
+ than to a gentleman.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Why&#8212;to be sure, sir&#8212;but vows be
+ vows&#8212;love&#39;s love&#8212;and to tell truth, sir,&quot; (the
+ Welsh blood of the Cardy peasant was now up,) &quot;if any foreign,
+ half Welsh, half wild Indian, sort of gentleman had sent his fine
+ letters, asking my sweetheart&#39;s friends to turn <i>me</i> off, in
+ my courting days, and prepare my wench to be his lady, instead of my
+ wife&#8212;I&#39;d have&#8212;I&#39;d have&quot;&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;<i>What</i> would you have done?&quot; asked the other,
+ laughing heartily.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Cursed him to St Elian!&quot; roared the other; then,
+ dropping his voice into a solemn tone, &quot;put him into his
+ well.<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> <i>I&#39;d</i> have
+ plagued him, I warrant. But for <i>my</i> part,&quot; added the man
+ archly, &quot;I don&#39;t believe there&#39;s any <i>squire</i> lover
+ in the case&#8212;nor that your honour ever said there is.&quot; The
+ agent here vanished, as if in haste, abruptly, down the steep
+ path.</p>
+
+ <p>During this conversation, Winifred had reached the river. While
+ she stands expectant, not in happiness, but in tears, it is time to
+ say a few words of the lover so expected.</p>
+
+ <p>David, who was lately become known &quot;on t&#39;other side
+ Tivy,&quot; by the name of <i>Nosdethiol Telynwr</i>, that is,
+ &quot;night-walking harper,&quot; was an idle romantic young man,
+ almost grown out of youth, who had long lived away from Wales, where
+ he had neither relative nor friend but one aged woman who had been
+ his first nurse, he having been early left an orphan. Without settled
+ occupation or habits, he was understood almost to depend for bread on
+ the salmon he caught, and trifling presents received. A small
+ portable harp, of elegant workmanship, (adorned with
+ &quot;<i>real</i> silver,&quot; so <i>ran the tale</i>,) was the
+ companion of his moonlight wanderings. He had a whim of serenading
+ those who had never heard of a &quot;serenade,&quot; but were not the
+ less sensible of a placid pleasure at being awakened by soft music in
+ some summer sight. The simple mountain cottagers, whose slumbers he
+ thus broke or soothed, often attributed the sweet sounds to the
+ kindness of some wandering member of the &quot;Fair Family,&quot; or
+ <i>Tylwyth Têg</i>, the fairies. Nor did his figure, if discovered
+ vanishing between the trees, if some one ventured to peep out, in a
+ light night, dispel the illusion; for it appears, that the fairy of
+ old Welsh superstition was not of diminutive stature.&quot;<a name=
+ "FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22"
+ class="fnanchor">[22]</a> That he was &quot;very learned,&quot; had
+ somewhere acquired much knowledge of books, <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span> however
+ little of men, was reported on both sides of the river; and these few
+ particulars were almost all that was known even to Winifred, who had
+ so rashly given all her thoughts, all her hopes, all her heart
+ almost, (reserving only one sacred corner for her beloved parents,)
+ to this dangerous stranger&#8212;for stranger he was still to her in
+ almost all outer circumstances of life. This was partly owing to the
+ interposition of that narrow river, however trivial a line of
+ demarcation that must appear to English people, accustomed to cross
+ even great rivers of commerce, like the Thames, as they would step
+ over a brook or ditch, by the frequent aid of bridges and boats. In
+ Wales, bridges are too costly to be common. When reared, some unlucky
+ high flood often sweeps them away. Intercourse by ferryboats and
+ fords is liable to long interruptions. The dwellers of opposite sides
+ frequent different markets, and belong frequently to different
+ counties. The nature of the soil also often differs wholly. Hence it
+ happens, that sometimes a farmer, whose eye rests continually on the
+ little farm and fields of another, on the opposite &quot;bank,&quot;
+ rising from the river running at the base of his own confronting
+ hill-side, lives on, ignorant almost of the name, quite of the
+ character, of their tenant, to whom he could almost make himself
+ heard by a shout&#8212;if it happens that neither ford, ferry, nor
+ bridge, is within short distance.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;The people of t&#39;other side,&quot; is an expression
+ implying nearly as much strangeness, and contented ignorance of these
+ neighbours, and no neighbours, as the same spoken by the people of
+ Dover or Calais, of those t&#39;other side the Channel. It was not,
+ therefore, surprising that poor Winifred (albeit not imprudent, save
+ in this new-sprung passion,) might have said with the poet, too
+ truly,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;I know not, I ask not, what guilt&#39;s in
+ that heart;</span> <span class="i2">I but know that I love thee,
+ whatever thou art.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>This wild reckless sentiment (though scarcely true to love&#39;s
+ nature, which is above all things curious about all belonging to its
+ object) did in her case illustrate her feelings. Winifred had lately
+ disclosed to her dear &quot;unknown&quot; the ruin impending over her
+ father, the result of his mingled good-nature and indolence, he
+ having permitted the tenants to run in arrears, and suffer
+ dilapidations, as already said;&#8212;the long neglect, however, of
+ the East Indian landlord being at the root of the evil, who had been
+ as remiss in his dealings with the steward as the steward with the
+ tenants. The first appearance of this newly appointed agent, who
+ announced the early return of his employer to take possession of the
+ decayed manor-house, was as sudden as ominous of the ruin of old John
+ Bevan. The hope he held out of the &quot;Nabob&quot; espousing his
+ long-remembered child, Winifred, and the consequent salvation of her
+ father, seemed too romantic to be believed. Yet this man proved
+ himself duly accredited by his principal, and exercised his power
+ already with severity. The fine old house of Talylynn, a mansion
+ rising close to a small beautiful lake skirted by an antique park
+ with many deer, was already almost prepared for the reception of the
+ &quot;squire from abroad.&quot; Meanwhile&#8212;what most excited the
+ ill-will of the tenantry&#8212;this odious persecutor of the
+ all-beloved John Bevan had also furbished up a neat old house
+ adjoining the park gate, as a residence for himself; while poor
+ Bevan&#39;s farm-house of Llaneol was suffered to fall into ruinous
+ decay&#8212;the new steward even neglecting to keep it
+ weather-tight.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus decayed, and almost ruinous, it seemed more in harmony with
+ the fortunes of the ever resigned and patient man. But his less
+ placid dame, after losing the services of Winifred, had fallen into a
+ peevish sort of despondency, as the father, missing her society, and
+ its finer species of consolation, had sunk into a more placid
+ apathy.</p>
+
+ <p>David had received the hint of her possible self-devotion to the
+ coming &quot;squire&quot; with very little philosophy, little temper,
+ and no allowance for the feelings of an only daughter expecting to
+ see a white-headed, fond father, dragged from his home to a jail. He
+ had been incensed; he had wronged her by imputations of sordid
+ motives&#8212;of pride, of contempt for <i>himself</i> as a
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg
+ 100]</a></span> beggar; and at last broke from her in sullen
+ resentment, after requiring her to bring all his letters, at their
+ next interview, which was to be a farewell one. And now she was
+ bringing every thing she had received from him, in sad obedience to
+ this angry demand. Nor was all his wrath, his injustice, and his
+ despair, really unacceptable to her secret heart. She would not have
+ had him patient under even the prospective possibility of her
+ marrying another.</p>
+
+ <p>But his manner at this meeting announced a change in his whole
+ sentiments.</p>
+
+ <p>His very first words, (cold, yet kind, but how altered in tone!)
+ with his constrained deportment, expressed his acquiescence in her
+ purpose, whether pride, jealousy, or a juster estimate of her filial
+ virtue, had induced the stern resolve.</p>
+
+ <p>Winifred had never known the full strength of her own passion till
+ now! The idea of an early eternal end to their ungratified loves,
+ which had for some time become familiar to her own secret mind,
+ assumed a new and strange terror for her imagination the moment it
+ ceased to be hers <i>alone</i>. The shock was novel and overpowering,
+ when the separation seemed acquiesced in by him, thus putting it out
+ of her own power to hesitate further between devotion to the lover or
+ to the parent. His reconciled manner, his calm taking her by the
+ hand, even the kiss which she could not resist, were more painful
+ than his utmost resentment would have been. Yet there was a sad
+ severity in his look, as his fine countenance of deep melancholy
+ turned to the bright moon, which a little comforted her, and
+ indicated that it was pride rather than patience which led to his
+ affected contentment. <i>He</i> had not a parent to nerve <i>his</i>
+ heart to the sacrifice.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;I passed <i>your</i> home yesterday,&quot; he began
+ sarcastically: &quot;it is a fine place again, already, that hall of
+ Talylynn, and wants only as fine a mistress.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;You wrong me, David <i>bach</i>! on my life and soul you do,
+ <i>dear</i> David!&quot; she replied sobbing. &quot;&#39;Tis a
+ hateful hall&#8212;a horrid hall! If it were only I, your poor lost
+ Winifred, that was to suffer, oh! how much sooner would I be carried
+ dead into a vault, than alive, and dressed in all the finest silks of
+ India, into that dreadful house you twit me with!&#8212;unkind,
+ unkind!&quot; And almost fainting, her head sunk upon his shoulder,
+ and his arm was required to support her.</p>
+
+ <p>Instantly she recovered, and stood erect. &quot;But oh, David,
+ there is another dreadful place, and another dear being besides you,
+ dearest, that I think of night and day! The horrid castle
+ jail&#8212;my dear, dear father! Oh, if this Lewis speaks truth, and
+ if that strange boy&#8212;I only knew him as a boy, you
+ know&#8212;who has power to ruin him, (<i>will</i> surely ruin him!)
+ will <i>indeed</i> forgive him all he owes; will really become his
+ son&#8212;his son-in-law, instead of his merciless creditor; oh!
+ could I refuse <i>my</i> part, shocking part though it be? I should
+ not suffer long, David&#8212;I feel I should not.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;And pray, what <i>kind</i> of youth&#8212;<i>boy</i> as you
+ are pleased to call him&#8212;was this nabob then?&quot; enquired her
+ lover, apparently startled at learning the fact of her having had
+ some previous knowledge of his powerful rival.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;A youth! a mere child, when I last saw him,&quot; she
+ answered. &quot;I thought you had known all about him.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Nothing more than his name; how came you in his
+ company?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;His father, living in India, was half-brother to our old
+ squire, Fitzarthur of Talylynn. His mother dying, his widower father,
+ whose health was broken up before, came over here, this being his
+ native country, in hope of recovering it; but died at Talylynn,
+ leaving one child, that little orphan boy, heir, after his
+ half-uncle&#39;s death, to all this property. You have often heard me
+ tell how like two brothers my dear father and <i>our</i> old squire
+ were always&#8212;though father was only a steward&#8212;how he used
+ to have me at the great house, for a month at a time, where he had me
+ taught by a lady who lived with him, before I went to school; and so
+ I used often to see that little boy in black&#8212;very queer and
+ sullen he was thought; but he had no playfellow, except an owl that
+ he kept tame, I remember, and cried when he buried <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span> him in
+ the garden,&#8212;the only time he was ever known to cry, he was so
+ still and stern. It was <i>I</i> caught him, then acting the sexton
+ by himself, close by the high box hedge, under a great tree. I
+ remember the spot now, and remember how angry I made him by
+ laughing.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;And you did wrong to laugh, if it was so serious to
+ him.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Oh! but I did not know he was crying when I laughed, and
+ <i>was</i> sorry when I detected it. One thing was, the old gentleman
+ was so jovial, and loved a good laugher, and was rather too fond of
+ wine, and mostly out hunting, so that the poor boy had to find his
+ own amusement. He seemed fond of me, but hated, he said, his uncle,
+ and his hounds, and his ways, and every thing there but his own owl;
+ so that nobody was sorry when he was fetched back to India, to be put
+ in the where he was to make the fortune he has now made, I
+ suppose.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;And your little heart did throb a little, and sink for a
+ day, when this playfellow was shipped off for life, as you thought,
+ and you <i>did</i> remember his funeral tears over his owl,
+ and&quot;&#8212;a quaver of voice and betrayed earnestness revealed
+ the jealous pang shooting across the heart of the speaker; but her
+ own was too heavy and deeply anxious to prolong this desultory
+ talk.</p>
+
+ <p>She only added&#8212;&quot;Heaven knows how little I thought that
+ poor stranger boy would ever grow to be what he is to me
+ now.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;<i>What he is to you?</i> Why, what then is he,
+ Winifred?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;The horror of my thoughts, my dreams,
+ my&quot;&#8212;&#8212;she answered sobbing. &quot;But why should I
+ say so? Wicked I am to feel him so, if he is <i>indeed</i> to be the
+ saviour of my dear, dear father!&quot; And she turned away to shed
+ relieving tears.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;And this little packet contains my letters&#8212;<i>all</i>,
+ does it?&quot; he asked, touching the small parcel she had deposited
+ within a cleft of the hollow river-side tree, by which they stood,
+ the post-office of their happier days, where, concealed by thick moss
+ gathered from the bole, those letters had every one been searched for
+ and found&#8212;with what a leap of heart, first felt! how fondly
+ thrust into her bosom, for the leisure delight of opening at
+ home&#8212;and all in vain!</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;All but one,&quot; she answered tremulously; &quot;I brought
+ then because you bade me&#8212;but you were so angry
+ <i>then</i>&#8212;let me take them back?&quot; and she clutched them
+ eagerly. &quot;At least we may wait, David&#8212;we don&#39;t know
+ yet; I do suspect that Lewis Lewis&#8212;he shuns me as if he was
+ conscious of some wickedness; he&#39;s as horrid to me as his
+ master&#8212;the thought of his master&#8212;I do forbode something
+ awful from that man! It was but just before I heard you brushing
+ among those great low branches, in your coracle, that I fancied I saw
+ him stealing, as if to watch, or perhaps waylay you; but I am full of
+ dismal thoughts.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>He had not the heart to force his letters, so reluctantly
+ resigned, from her chilly hand. But he held in his what was
+ calculated to inspire pain quite as poignant. In the fond admiration
+ of her fancy&#39;s first object, she had vehemently longed for a
+ portrait of that rather singular face&#8212;a long oval, with lofty
+ forehead, already somewhat corrugated by habits of deep thought, in
+ his lonely night-loving existence; its mixture of passion, dumb
+ poetry, its constitutional or adventitious profound melancholy, ever
+ present, till his countenance gradually lighted up, after her coming
+ and her animating discourse, like some deep gloomy valley growing
+ light as the sun surmounts a lofty bank, gleaming through its pines.
+ She had forced him to take a piece of money for procuring this so
+ desired keepsake, and every time they met, she had fondly hoped to
+ have the little portrait put into her hand. Now, instead, he
+ presented the unused money&#8212;would she retain the image of a
+ sweetheart in the home of her stern and lordly husband? Her heart
+ confessed that she must no longer wish for it&#8212;but it sunk
+ within her at the thought, how soon that innocent would be a guilty
+ wish; and when he surprised her with the money so suddenly, she
+ involuntarily shuddered, forebore to close her hand upon it, let it
+ slide from her palm, and murmured only with her innocent plaintiff
+ voice, &quot;I shall never have your picture
+ now&#8212;<i>never</i>!&quot; And <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span> then she dejected her
+ eyes to the little parcel of letters, written, received, kissed, and
+ kept, like something holy, so long in vain; and all the charming
+ hopeful hours in which each was found, when some longer absence had
+ given to each a deeper interest, and higher value&#8212;those hours
+ never to return, came shadowing over her mind, memory, and soul, and
+ a lethargy of despairing grief imposed a ghost-like semblance of calm
+ on her whole figure, and her face slowly assumed a deadly paleness,
+ even to the lips, visible even by the moon. David grew alarmed,
+ relapsed into the full fondness of former hours, folded the dumb,
+ drooping, and agonized young woman in his arms, to his bosom! without
+ her betraying consciousness, and yet she was not fainting; she stood
+ upright, and her eyes, though fixed as if glazed, still expressed
+ love in their almost shocking fixedness.</p>
+
+ <p>The young man grew terrified. &quot;Look up! speak to me!
+ Winifred, <i>dear</i> Winifred, my <i>own</i> Winifred, in spite of
+ all!&quot; he broke forth. &quot;Smile at me, my dearest, once more,
+ and keep these foolish letters you so value, keep them
+ <i>all</i>.&quot; And he thrust them into her passive hand.</p>
+
+ <p>Aroused by his words and action, poor Winifred, starting with a
+ gasp, wildly kissed the little packet, and thanked him by an embrace
+ more passionate than her prudence or modesty would have permitted,
+ had they been happy.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;And my portrait&#8212;my ugliness in paint, and on ivory
+ too, dearest, you shall have yet, as you desire it,&quot; he added,
+ forcing pleasantry; &quot;only do not fall into that frightful sort
+ of trance again.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>He little knew what deadliness of thoughts, almost of purpose, had
+ produced that long abstracted fit. The most exemplary prudence (the
+ result of a sound mind and heart) had characterised this young woman
+ till now. While yet at home, her bodily activity surprised her
+ parents. Their means having been long but low, they had little help
+ in their dairy and small farming concerns. She often surprised her
+ mother with the sight of the butter already churned, the ewes already
+ milked, or the cheeses pressed, when she arose. She was abroad in the
+ heavy dews of morning, when the sun at midsummer rises in what is
+ properly the night, regarded as the hour of rest&#8212;abroad, happy
+ and cheerful, calling the few cows in the misty meadows. Nor did this
+ habit of early rising prevent her indulging at night her <i>one</i>
+ unhappy habit&#8212;romance-reading; a pleasure which she enjoyed
+ through the kindness of many ladies of the town of Cardigan, who
+ afterwards established her in her school at K&#8212;&#8212;. They
+ supplied her with these dangerous volumes that exalted
+ passion&#8212;love in excess&#8212;above all the aims and pursuits of
+ life: represented her who loves most madly as most worthy of
+ sympathy; and even, too often, crowned the heroine with the palm of
+ self-martyrdom&#8212;making suicide itself no longer a crime or
+ folly, but almost a virtue, under certain contingencies.</p>
+
+ <p>When poverty increased, the activity of her powerful intellect was
+ brought into display, as much as her personal activity had been, in
+ devising resources. She had acquired some skill in drawing, through
+ the kindness of the neighbouring gentry, and she improved herself so
+ far as to execute very respectable drawings of the ruins of Kilgerran
+ Castle, on her own river, and other fine scenes of Wales; and these
+ were sold for her (or rather for her parents) by others, at fairs and
+ wakes, where she never appeared herself. When residing at the
+ village, her wheel was heard in the morning before others were
+ stirring, and at late night, after every other one was still. Her
+ little light, gleaming in the lofty village, espied between the
+ hanging trees, was the guiding star of the belated fisher up the
+ narrow goat&#39;s-path which led to the village, who could always
+ obtain light for his pipe at &quot;<i>Miss Bevan&#39;s</i>, the
+ school,&quot; when not a casement had exhibited a taper for hours.
+ But the evil of all this wear and tear of mind and body was, that it
+ maintained an unnatural state of excitement in the one, and of
+ weakness (disguised by that fever of imagination) in the other.
+ Sleep, the preserver of health and tranquillity of mind, was
+ exchanged for lonely emotions excited by night reading. She was
+ weeping over the dramatist&#39;s fifth act of tragedy, or the
+ romancist&#39;s <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id=
+ "Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span> more morbid appeals to the passions,
+ while nature demanded rest. Then an accidental meeting with the young
+ harper&#8212;he recovering a book she had dropped into the Tivy out
+ of her hand, from having fallen asleep through exertion, and
+ restoring it with a grace quite romance-hero like&#8212;produced a
+ new era, and new excitement&#8212;that of the heart. Thenceforth, she
+ became &quot;of imagination all compact,&quot; however her strong
+ sense preserved her purity and virtue. But no more dangerous lover
+ could be imagined than such a loose hanger-on, rather than member, of
+ society as David the <i>Telynwr</i>&#8212;for <i>his</i> nature was
+ <i>hers</i>; except, perhaps, in virtuous resolution, he was a female
+ Winifred. Yet he possessed a romantic &quot;leaning, at least, to
+ virtue&#39;s side.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>This was oddly exemplified now, (to return to their present
+ position;) for as soon as her partial recovery had removed his alarm,
+ he grew cold, and almost severe in his manner, and broke
+ forth&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;<i>So</i>, then, Winifred would willingly pore over the
+ love-letters of a sweetheart while under a husband&#39;s roof! She
+ thinks this beauty enough for <i>him</i>&#8212;she would reserve her
+ thoughts, wishes, every thing else, for his old rival;&#8212;every
+ thing but what a ring, and a few words, makes his right by law, the
+ poor husband is to leave to any old sweetheart that may come prowling
+ round his gates! That&#39;s gross! Is it <i>not</i>,
+ Winifred?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>Alas! the heart-broken young woman had been meditating on far
+ other issue to their brief attachment! On death!&#8212;death on her
+ wedding-day, as the only means of preserving at once her father&#39;s
+ liberty and her own virtue; for her reading had taught her that
+ marriage, where the mind and heart were so wholly engaged elsewhere,
+ was no better than legalised prostitution. With a look of dark
+ intensity of meaning, Winifred broke her lengthened silence, saying
+ hollowly&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;I was not looking so far forward&#8212;I was not looking
+ beyond <i>that</i> day&#8212;not to
+ that&quot;&#8212;&#8212;<i>night</i>, she would have said, but
+ modesty stopped her speech. &quot;And <i>you</i> can be so calm! so
+ thoughtful! <i>You</i> can be reasoning about my duties during a
+ life! you can be pleading for <i>my</i> future husband! Oh, I wish I
+ were like you! And yet, I bless God, that you are not like <i>me</i>!
+ I would not have you feel as I do for the world! No, not even know
+ what I am feeling, thinking, dearest, at this moment.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;No!&quot; David again muttered, more and more severely,
+ &quot;I cannot submit to have my letters and trifling keepsakes to be
+ tossed about by <i>him</i>! It is weakness to wish it, Winifred
+ Bevan; and worse for me to grant it.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;You shall have them all&#8212;all&#8212;all!&quot; she
+ exclaimed in passionate agony composed of tenderness, anguish, anger,
+ recklessness, with a bitterness of irony keener to her own heart,
+ than to him who roused that terrible reaction of her nature.
+ &quot;I&#39;ll run and fetch them all this very night! Oh,
+ they&#39;ll serve for <i>your</i> new love. You may copy your
+ letters. I&#39;m sure, if she have a human heart, they&#39;ll move
+ it&#8212;they&#39;ll win it! Strike my name out, and you may send the
+ very letters. She will not know that another heart was broken by
+ giving them up! She will not know the stains are tears of pleasure
+ dropped upon them! And you shall have <i>that</i> too, if you
+ will&#8212;if you must!&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;Which? what? dearest creature, but compose
+ yourself&#8212;pray do!&quot; he said, again alarmed.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;<i>That</i> you sent with the lock of hair&#8212;<i>this</i>
+ hair!&quot; she answered wildly. &quot;But you <i>will</i> leave me
+ the little lock? Oh, there&#39;s plenty to cut for <i>another</i>
+ here!&quot; and she laughed hysterically, frightfully, and played
+ with his profusion of raven hair; but it was mournful play.
+ &quot;Leave me&#8212;<i>do</i> leave poor Winifred that, David, for
+ the love of God! In mercy, leave it! I will not ask for the picture
+ again&#8212;I will not <i>wish</i> it, if <i>you</i> say I must not;
+ but the hair&#8212;the poor bit of hair&#8212;he! oh, misery! he
+ shall never see it! I myself will never cry over it&#8212;never look
+ at it, if you think it wrong&#8212;never till I&#39;m dying,
+ David&#8212;dying! There will be no harm then, you know, in
+ looking&#8212;in a poor dying creature&#39;s look, who has done with
+ passions, life, love, every thing. And none&#8212;none shall see it
+ but those who lay me out, or they who find my&#8212;oh! we none of us
+ know where we may die, or how! It may be alone,
+ dearest&#8212;<i>alone</i>! Oh, <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span> the comfort it will be
+ to have a part of very <i>you</i> to hold&#8212;to hold by, like this
+ very hand, in my death-damp one. Let me have it!&quot; she shrilly
+ implored, in delirious energy. &quot;I want it to take with me to my
+ death-bed&#8212;to my death-pit&#8212;my grave, whatever it may
+ be&#8212;to heaven itself&#8212;to our place of meeting again, if it
+ were possible! Oh, that it <i>were</i> possible! and that I might
+ bring back to you there the kiss&#8212;the long kiss&#8212;you shall
+ leave on these wretched lips when we part for ever and for ever here!
+ <i>Will</i> you take it from me, David, my heart, my soul? No, you
+ will not?&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>The crisis of love&#39;s parting agony was at its height.
+ Half-conscious of her own dangerous prostration of soul and mind
+ under its power, she turned from the dear object, and rested her
+ forehead against the trunk of their old tree of assignation; and a
+ steady, sadder shower of tears, relieving her full heart, followed
+ this storm of various and rapid emotions, sweeping over one weakened
+ mind, like thunderclouds charged with electric fire, borne on a
+ whirlwind over a whole landscape, in a few minutes of mingled gloom
+ and glory. For, in the sublime of passion, whatever be its nature, is
+ there not a terrible joy, a secret glorifying of the earthy nature,
+ which we may compare to such elemental war&#8212;now hanging all
+ heaven in mourning, and bringing night on noonday, and presently
+ illuminating that day with a ghastly, momentary light, brilliant even
+ beyond its own?</p>
+
+ <h3>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+
+ <p>Llaneol, the dilapidated farm-house of the expelled steward, old
+ Bevan, stood beautifully in a wooded glen, watered by a shallow
+ stream, between a brook and river in size. A pretty greensward, of
+ perpetual vivid hue, stretched quite up to the threshold&#8212;its
+ &quot;fold,&quot; or farm-yard, being small, and situated behind. A
+ wooded mountain rose opposite, topped by a range of many-tinted
+ cliffs, splintered like thunder-stricken battlements, and resembling,
+ in their fretted and timeworn fronts, rich cathedral architecture in
+ ruins. Extensive sheep-walks rose in russet, lofty barrenness behind,
+ but allowing below breadth for venerable oaks, and a profusion of
+ underwood, to shelter the white, but no longer well-thatched,
+ farm-cottage, and screening that umbrageous valley from the colder
+ wind; while the many sheep, seen, and but just seen, dotting the
+ lofty barrier, beautified the scene by the pastoral ideas which their
+ dim-seen white inspired. Only the songs of birds distinguished the
+ noonday from the night, unless when the flail was heard in the barn,
+ through the open doors of which, coloured by mosses, the river
+ glistened, and the green, with its geese, gleamed the more
+ picturesquely for this rustic perspective.</p>
+
+ <p>As Winifred was approaching this tranquil vale&#8212;her native
+ vale&#8212;after an absence at the town of Cardigan, where she had
+ been seeking assistance for her father, with little success, she was
+ startled by the unusual sound of many voices, and soon saw, aghast,
+ the whole of the rustic furniture standing about on the pretty green,
+ her infant play-place; the noisy auctioneer mounted on the well-known
+ old oaken table; even her mother&#39;s wheel was already knocked down
+ and sold, and her father&#39;s own great wicker chair was ready to be
+ put up, while rude boys were trying its rickety antiquity by a
+ furious rocking.</p>
+
+ <p>On no occasion is so much joviality indulged (in Wales) as on that
+ of an auction &quot;under a distress for rent,&quot; (which was the
+ case here)&#8212;an occasion of calamity and ruin to the owner. Even
+ in the event of an auction caused by a death, where the common course
+ of nature has removed the possessor from those &quot;goods and
+ chattels&quot; which are now useless to him, a sale is surely a
+ melancholy spectacle to creatures who use their minds, and possess
+ feelings befitting a brotherhood of Christians, or even heathens. To
+ see the inmost recesses of &quot;home, sweet home,&quot; thrown open
+ to all strangers; the most treasured articles (often descended as
+ heir-looms from ancestors, and therefore possessing an intrinsic
+ value, quite unsuspected by others, for the owner,) ransacked, tossed
+ from hand to hand, and at last &quot;knocked down&quot; at a nominal
+ price&#8212;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id=
+ "Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>even this is a mournful exhibition.
+ But where the ruthless hand of his brother man has wrested those
+ valuables from their possessor, instead of inevitable death&#39;s
+ tearing him from them&#8212;where that very owner and his family are
+ present, sadly listening to the ceaseless jokes (thoughtlessly
+ inhuman) lavished by the auctioneer, and re-echoed by the crowd, over
+ those old familiar objects&#8212;witnessing the happy excitement of
+ rival bidders, and the universal pleasure over his ruin, like the cry
+ and flocking of vultures over a battle-field, witnessed by wretches
+ still alive, though mortally wounded; what can exceed the shocking
+ transgression of human brotherhood presented by such a scene! A scene
+ of every-day occurrence&#8212;a scene never seeming to excite even
+ one reflection kindred to these natural, surely, and obvious
+ feelings&#8212;yet one terribly recalling to the pensive observer
+ that axiom, <i>Homo ad hominem lupus est!</i> Doubtless the
+ fraudulent or utterly reckless debtor is, in the eye of reason, the
+ first &quot;wolfish&quot; assailant of his brother. But how many of
+ these familiar tragedies are as truly the result of unforeseen,
+ unforeseeable contingencies, as diseases or other events, considered
+ the visitations of God! One, or two, or three, sick and heavy hearts
+ and wounded minds, in the midst of a hundred happy, light ones,
+ buoyed up by fierce cupidity and keen bargain-hunting, and
+ exhilarated by drink and by fun, and all drawn together by the misery
+ of those outcast few.</p>
+
+ <p>Poor Bevan had been taken by surprise in this sudden execution,
+ put in by his treacherous supplanter, Lewis Lewis. But what most
+ excited the anger of his old attached neighbours, was the fact that
+ many of these goods were bought by an agent of Lewis, to finish
+ furnishing his own newly repaired house by the old park wall.
+ Winifred learned that her parents had removed to a friendly
+ neighbour&#39;s, at some distance, but suspected the worst&#8212;his
+ removal to jail.</p>
+
+ <p>Not now the weakness of woman prevailed over her presence of mind,
+ as we have lately seen it do in her interview with a beloved object.
+ She commanded her agitation, so far as to bid for her father&#39;s
+ old chair, but in vain; for her timid bidding, faltered from behind a
+ crowd, failed to catch the ear of the jocular auctioneer, (who, in
+ Wales, must always be somewhat of a mountebank,) and the favourite
+ chair was gone at once, after the wheel, and the many old familiar
+ chattels which she saw standing, now the property of strangers.</p>
+
+ <p>Events crowded fast on each other, hurrying on that terrible hour
+ in which a revolting act of self-devotion was to render even this
+ domestic horror of little injury to her parents. &quot;I will buy
+ &#39;daddy&#39; a better chair, or he shall have enough to buy a
+ better, when I am gone,&quot; she murmured to herself. For now the
+ rumour grew rife, that Mr Fitzarthur had actually landed, was daily
+ expected; and, in confirmation, she received through a neighbour
+ present, a letter left for her by her father, stating that he had now
+ actually received, under the Nabob&#39;s own hand, a proposal of
+ marriage, which the generous old man (who well knew her engagements
+ to another) solemnly charged her to reject, at all hazards to
+ himself. He further begged her to come quickly to the temporary place
+ of refuge he and her mother had found under the roof of a hill
+ cottage, just now tenantless through the death of a relative.
+ Thither, with heavy heart, Winifred hastened by the first light of
+ morning.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;<i>The</i> hill,&quot; an expression much in the mouths of
+ Welsh rural people, signifies not any particular one, as it would in
+ England, but the whole desolate regions of the mountain heights; the
+ homeless place of ever-whistling winds, and low bellowing clouds,
+ mingling with the mist of the mountain, into one black smoke-like
+ rolling volume&#8212;the place of dismal pools and screaming kites,
+ full of bogs, concealed by a sickly yellowish herbage in the midst of
+ the russet waste, boundlessly wearying the eye with its sober
+ monotony of tint. If a pool or lake relieve it by reflecting the sky,
+ on approach it is found choked all round by high rushes, and shadowed
+ by low strangely-shaped rocks, tinted by mosses of dingy hue; the
+ water that glistened pleasantly in the distance, shrinks now to a
+ mere pond, (the middle space, too deep for bullrushes and other weeds
+ to take root.) The deep stillness, or the unintermitted hollow
+ blowing of the wind (according to the weather) are equally mournful.
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg
+ 106]</a></span> The rotten soil is cleft and torn into gulleys and
+ small channels, in which the mahogany-coloured rivulets, springing
+ from the peat morass, straggle silently with a sluggish motion in
+ harmony with the lifeless scene. There, if a weedy-roofed hut do
+ appear, (detected by its thin feeble smoke column) or the shepherd
+ who tenants it should show his solitary figure in the distance, the
+ only upright object where is not one tree-trunk, neither the home of
+ man nor man&#39;s appearance lessens the sense of almost savage
+ solitude; the one so lonely, not a smoke-wreath being visible all
+ round, beside; the other, as he loiters by, watching some sheep on
+ some distant bank, so shy and wild-looking, and, to appearance, so
+ melancholy, so forlorn. Meanwhile, as we &quot;plod our weary
+ way,&quot; some dip in the wavy round of olive-hued lumpish
+ mountains, or an abrupt huge chasm of awful rocks, each side being
+ almost perpendicular, startles the traveller with a far-down prospect
+ of some sunshiny, rich, leafy, valley region, at once showing at what
+ a bleak elevation he has been roaming so long, and tantalizing him
+ with the contrast of that far, far off, low, luring landscape,
+ rendering more irksome than before the dead, heathery desert,
+ interminably undulating before, behind, and all round him.</p>
+
+ <p>The little farm whither old Bevan had retired, stood high in such
+ a desert as this, on the very verge of such a mountain-portal, (a
+ <i>bwlch</i>, pronounced boolch, the Welsh call it,) an antique stone
+ cottage, hanging like a nest on one of the side banks, dismal itself,
+ but all that under world of pastoral pleasantness below, in full
+ though dim perspective. A premature decay is always visible on these
+ kind of wild, weather-beaten homes, in the torn thatch; the walls
+ tinged with green, and generally propped to resist the effects of the
+ powerful winds. If white-washed, which they really are, broad streaks
+ of green are visible, from the frequent heavy rains, tinged by the
+ mosses and weeds of the roof. The clouds, attracted by the heights,
+ career on the strong blast, so low and close, as often to shut up the
+ dingy human nest in a dreary day of its own, while all below is blue
+ serene.</p>
+
+ <p>To this melancholy abode, its few rustic chattels still standing
+ there, left since the death of its tenant, Winifred toiled up by a
+ steep, wild, but well-known track, but found not father, mother, or
+ living thing, except one, so much in unison with the wild melancholy
+ of the scene, as to exalt it almost to horror. This was a wretched
+ idiot man, dressed in female attire, perfectly harmless, and kept, as
+ a parish pauper, at an adjacent farm. He was noted for fidelity to
+ any one who flattered him by some little commission. This ragged
+ object presented to her the key of the padlock on the door, with the
+ words &quot;gone, gone, gone!&quot; She entered, and found, to her
+ surprise, excellent refreshment provided in the desolate house,
+ evidently but lately deserted. But what riveted her eyes, was a
+ letter to herself in the handwriting of David, but tremulously
+ written, announcing his inability to keep an appointment, (one more!)
+ which they had made, to part for ever&#8212;her terrible distress, it
+ will be remembered, on the last occasion, deterring the young man
+ from any further trial of her feelings. He further informed her that
+ Mr Fitzarthur was certainly arrived, and had taken up his temporary
+ abode at the pretty house by the park, designed by Lewis Lewis for
+ his own residence. Moreover, she learned that her father and mother
+ anxiously expected her at that house to which they had removed, but
+ did not reveal that he had <i>been removed</i> in the care of two
+ bailiffs, and the house named was but a resting place in his transit
+ to jail.</p>
+
+ <p>When the mind is enfeebled by repeated blows, it often happens
+ that some one, which to others may appear the slightest of all,
+ produces the greatest effect, its pain being quite disproportioned to
+ its real importance. Thus it happened, that, amidst all her trials,
+ Winifred felt the loss of her father&#39;s favourite chair as a
+ crowning misery, trivial as was that loss, when hope itself was lost.
+ She had identified that very humble chattel with his figure almost
+ her life long. She almost expected to see the two fair hands (for,
+ truth to tell, the aged steward had never worked hard) on each side,
+ and the venerable kind face projected forwards from its deep concave,
+ arched over that white head, to smile welcome to her even as it stood
+ out <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg
+ 107]</a></span> on the little green. The intrusion of boy clowns, one
+ after another, into its seat seemed a grievous insult to the unhappy
+ owner, though absent. Yet a sad comfort rose in the thought of her
+ ability to reinstate her father in all his lost comforts, through
+ this terrible marriage. Then she grew impatient in her longing to
+ console him by assurance of this, notwithstanding his generous wish
+ that her hand should go where he knew her heart had irretrievably
+ been given. But these repeated disappointments in finding the parents
+ she longed to fold to her bosom, postponing this little
+ gratification, (the telling him she would repurchase the old family
+ chair,) now quite overcame the fortitude she had till now exhibited.
+ She sate down sick at heart&#8212;turned with aversion from the
+ refreshment her fatigue required, and wept bitterly. Superstition,
+ and two mysterious incidents, even while she remained on the hill, if
+ indeed they were more than superstition&#39;s coinage, helped to
+ depress her. Just before she reached this forlorn house with the
+ haggard, aged, horrid-looking idiot prowling round it, with his rags
+ fluttering in the wind, she thought that the figure of the hated
+ steward and spy moved along a wild path on the opposite side of that
+ great mountain cleft, traversed by a noisy torrent almost the depth
+ of the whole hill, near the top of which this cottage was perched.
+ His being there alone was nothing marvellous, but an ominous horror
+ seemed, in her mind, to hover round that man, who (as if conscious of
+ some deadly evil which was through him to overwhelm her some time)
+ studiously avoided direct intercourse with his victim.</p>
+
+ <p>The second incident which might have sprung from the dwelling of
+ her mind&#39;s eye on the absent features of him, who, it seemed,
+ refused to meet her again, was an apparition, or what she deemed
+ such, of her dear Night-harper! One of those dense flying clouds, so
+ common even at moderate elevations when the mists roll down the
+ hills, suddenly enveloping the lone lofty spot, left but a little
+ area of a few yards for vision, a dungeon walled with fog, which kept
+ circulating furiously on the blast like a great smoke, in continuous
+ whirls. And through some momentary fissure in this white wall, she
+ imagined the pallid and almost ghastly visage of her forsaken lover
+ appeared intensely looking toward her, as she stood on the rude
+ threshold, looking out on the temporary storm that had shut her up.
+ Her vague apprehension of some evil arising to David, her mind&#39;s
+ perpetual object, from the man she believed herself to have espied
+ just before, was rarely absent from her thought. Combining the two
+ appearances, she became more and more fancy-fraught, thus confined,
+ as it were, in an elemental solitude of the mountain and the cloud,
+ where, for the present, we leave her, to narrate the fate of her
+ father.</p>
+
+ <p>The novel calamity of arrest for debt was borne by the respectable
+ old man, John Bevan, with a patience and dignity that no study of
+ philosophy could have inspired. Though somewhat inactive, he felt
+ that, in the honest discharge of his duty, he stood acquitted in the
+ sight of God, though not in the eye of the law, of all fault, at
+ least of any one meriting the terrible punishment of imprisonment. It
+ was near nightfall when two emissaries of the law appeared,
+ announcing that horses waited at the neighbouring inn to convey him
+ to jail with the first light of morning. The poor old dame, his wife,
+ was not to be pacified by the efforts of the two bailiffs, who
+ executed their commission with the utmost gentleness, by order, as it
+ appeared, of the Nabob himself, notwithstanding that the old
+ man&#39;s stern self-denying rejection of his overture for his
+ daughter&#39;s hand had determined him to let his agent proceed to
+ extremities. Soothing as well as he could both her grief and her
+ rage&#8212;for the latter rose unreflectingly against the mere agents
+ in this grievous infliction&#8212;old Bevan smoked his pipe as usual
+ to the end, and then requested permission to take a little walk only
+ to the church, which stood a short way from the solitary house where
+ they surprised him.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;You see I cannot run, for I can hardly walk with these
+ rheumatics, my friend,&quot; he observed; &quot;but I have a fancy to
+ visit the churchyard to-night, as it will be moonlight, and we shall
+ be pretty busy in the morning. My dame is gone to bed with the good
+ woman of this cottage, as I begged her to go; so pray let us walk&#8212;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg
+ 108]</a></span>you shall see me all the while by the moon, without
+ coming into the churchyard with me.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>Arrived at the low stone stile, he crossed it by the help of the
+ man, and proceeded alone to the tomb of his old master&#39;s grave,
+ surrounded by a rail, with a yew growing inside, marking the site of
+ the ancient family vault. The moon now shining clearly, the bailiff
+ saw him kneel and uncover his head, which shone in its light, in the
+ distance resembling a scull bleached by the wind. He remained a long
+ time in this position, and his murmuring voice was partly audible to
+ the man. At last he returned, thanking him for his patience, and
+ shaking him very cordially by the hand. So touched was even this
+ rugged lower limb of the law by this proof of his affectionate
+ remembrance of his old patron, that he behaved throughout with great
+ courtesy, and even respect. Bevan and his departed master had lived,
+ as has been said, almost on the footing of cronies, a certain
+ phlegmatic ease of nature being the characteristic of both. So proud,
+ indeed, was Bevan of his brotherlike intercourse with the great man,
+ that he made himself for years almost a personal <i>fac-simile</i> of
+ him, even to the cut and colour of his coat, wig, everything; and
+ being a fine specimen of a &quot;noble peasant,&quot; externally as
+ well as internally, his assumption of the <i>squire</i> in costume
+ well became his tall figure, mild countenance, (streaked with the
+ lingering pink of his youthful bloom,) and gentle demeanour. A rigid
+ observer might have thought, that to this indulgent but indolent
+ master the poor steward owed his ruin; his habits of
+ &quot;forgiving&quot; his tenants their rent debts so often, having
+ extended themselves to the former, further increased by the strange
+ inattention of the new landlord. The gratitude of Bevan was, however,
+ deserved&#8212;for never was a kinder master.</p>
+
+ <p>&quot;It is a thing not to be thought,&quot; he said, while
+ returning with the man, &quot;that I shall ever come back here, to
+ the old church again, alive or dead; seeing that I am too poor for
+ any one to bring my old bones all the way from Cardigan, to put them
+ in the same ground with <i>his</i>, as I did dream of in my better
+ days, and too old for a man used to free air and the hill-sides all
+ his life, to live long in a prison, or indeed out of one&#8212;but we
+ must all die. I assure you, my honest man and kind, you have done me
+ good, in mind and body, by letting me take leave of his honour! Well
+ I may call him so, now he is in heaven, whom I did honour when here,
+ from my very heart of hearts; kind he was to me&#8212;a second father
+ to my child&#8212;God bless him! Sure I am, if he were still among
+ us, how his good heart would melt, how it would <i>bleed</i> for
+ us&#8212;for <i>her</i>&#8212;I <i>know</i> it would.&quot; Here the
+ old man sobbed and kept silence a space, then
+ proceeded&#8212;&quot;You see how weak old age and over-love of this
+ world make a man, sir. Yet I am content. Next to God, I owe to him
+ whose dear corpse I have just now been so near, a long and happy
+ life,&#8212;thanks, thanks, thanks! To both, up yonder, I do here
+ render them from my inmost soul;&quot; and he bared his head again,
+ looking up to the placid moon with a visage of kindred placidity, and
+ an eye of blue lustre, so brightened by his emotion as almost to be
+ likened to the heaven in which that moon shone. &quot;Why should I
+ repine, or fear the walls of a prison, as my passage to that wide
+ glorious world without wall or bound or end, where I hope to live
+ free and for ever, in the sight of my Redeemer, and, perhaps, of him
+ who was Hugh Fitzarthur, Esq., of Tallylynn hall, when here? I hope I
+ am not irreverent, but in truth, friend, I fear I have almost as
+ vehemently longed for the presence of him once more, as for that more
+ awful presence: heaven pardon me if it was wicked! So welcome prison,
+ welcome death! Half a hundred and nineteen years spent pleasantly on
+ these green hills, free, and fresh, and hale, I can surely afford a
+ few weeks or months to a closer place, were it but as in a school for
+ my poor earthly and ignorant soul, to purify itself, to prepare
+ itself for that glorious place, to learn to die.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>Next morning the old couple, dame Bevan being mounted on a pillion
+ behind him, proceeded on their melancholy journey. They reached the
+ house by the park, where it was proposed that an interview should
+ take place between the old man and the landlord himself, with some
+ view to arrangement prior to his imprisonment. <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span> While
+ they there expect the long delayed comfort of Winifred&#39;s embrace,
+ let us return to that good daughter, now more eager to fly to that
+ dreaded suitor, to reverse her father&#39;s resolve, to offer herself
+ a victim, than ever she had been to reach that dearer one who had now
+ cruelly disappointed her in the hope of one more meeting&#8212;that,
+ perhaps, the last she could have innocently allowed!</p>
+
+ <p>The dreaded day of trial arrived. But we must revert to her sad
+ meditations, and wild irresolute thoughts, while shut up by the
+ storm-cloud, and alone, in the mountain house. Doating passion, pain
+ of heart, terrible suggestions of despair, kept altering her
+ countenance as she leaned against the mouldering door-post,
+ imprisoned by the black mists that prevented her safely leaving the
+ hovel. A sudden, dire, revolution in her religious impressions was
+ wrought, or rather completed, in that dismal scene. David had more
+ than once wrung her very soul by dark hints of self-destruction in
+ the event of her ever forsaking him. He had thus been led into
+ discussions on suicide, and had even argued for the moral right of
+ man to end his own being under circumstances. Persuasion hangs on the
+ lips of those we love. What she would have rejected as impious, from
+ some immoral man, in dispute, sank deep into her soul, emanating from
+ a heart she loved, through lips that, to her, seemed formed for
+ eloquence as much as love to make its throne.</p>
+
+ <p>Wild and tragical modes of reconciling her two furious, fighting,
+ irreconcilable wishes&#8212;that of saving her father&#8212;that of
+ blessing her lover&#8212;began to take terrible form and reality in
+ her mind, as the wind howled, the ruinous house shook, and its
+ timbers groaned, and the blackness of the sky, as the storm
+ increased, deepened the lurid hue of the foul and turbulent fog, (for
+ such the mountain cloud thus in contact with her eyes appeared.) The
+ world, as it were, already left behind, or rather below, the elements
+ alone warring round her, her high-wrought imagination began to regard
+ life and death, and the world itself, as things no longer
+ appertaining to her, except as a passive instrument toward one great
+ object, the preservation of her father&#39;s freedom, and, if it
+ <i>were</i> possible, also of her own inviolate person&#8212;that
+ person which she had, indeed, most solemnly vowed to one alone, David
+ the Telynwr. Not <i>to</i> him&#8212;for her innate delicacy rendered
+ such vows repugnant to her; but alone, by the moon or stars, by the
+ cataract, and in the lonely lanes and woods, she had vowed herself to
+ one alone&#8212;had dedicated her virgin beauty (in the spirit of
+ those romances she had fatally devoured) to her
+ &quot;night-harper&quot; with as true devotion as ever did white
+ vestal, at the end of her noviciate, devote herself alive and dead to
+ the one God. Instilled by the touching tone, the wild pathos, the
+ swimming eye of a wayward passionate character, weak, yet bold, of
+ whom she knew almost nothing, this devoted girl yielded up her better
+ reason to his rash innovations in morals, his examples of suicidal
+ heroes, and even <i>moralists</i>, among the ancients; and in the
+ wild height, alone, among the clouds, she almost wrought up her fond
+ agonizing soul to a terrible part&#8212;the accomplishing her
+ father&#39;s preservation, <i>on her wedding-day</i>, through the
+ influence she might naturally expect to obtain in such a season, and
+ that done, make her peace with God; and, before night&#8212;black
+ pools&#8212;rock precipices, fearful as Leucadia&#39;s&#8212;mortal
+ plants, and even the horrid knife and halter&#8212;floated before her
+ mind&#39;s eye without her trembling, even like terrible, yet kind,
+ ministrants proffering escape&#8212;escape from legalised
+ violation!&#8212;escape from <i>perjury</i>, to her, the self-doomed
+ Iphigenia! For her morbid fancy, whispered to by her intense
+ tenderness, conjured up that dilemma between faith broken to her
+ lover and abandonment of a dear parent to his fate. Despair suggested
+ that self-destruction itself might seem venial, even before God, when
+ rushed upon as the only alternative to perjury&#8212;to prostitution;
+ for such her romantic purity taught her to consider submission to the
+ embrace of any living man except her heart&#39;s own&#8212;her
+ affianced&#8212;&quot;her beautiful!&quot;&#8212;her lost!</p>
+
+ <p>Such were the feelings under whose influence our humble heroine
+ pursued her mountain journey, of a few miles, to the place of meeting
+ with her parents; and it was probably beneath the roof of the lone
+ cottage in the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id=
+ "Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span> cloud that, under the same morbid mood
+ of mind, she penned a letter to Mr Fitzarthur, which was afterwards
+ discovered, dated at top &quot;My Wedding Day,&quot; containing a
+ passionate appeal on behalf of her father, for a bond of legal
+ indemnification to be executed before night, as a present which she
+ had set her heart on giving her father, as a bridal one, <i>that very
+ day</i>. Arrived at the house fitted up for the hated supplanter of
+ her father, &quot;Lewis the Spy,&quot; her heart beat so violently
+ before she could firm her nerves to ring the bell, that she stood
+ leaning some time against the wall. This old house was now almost
+ rebuilt, and not without regard to rural beauty, in harmony with the
+ fine scenery of an antique park, with its mossy ivied remains of
+ walls and venerable trees overshadowing it, and was called &quot;The
+ Little Hall of the Park.&quot; She sighed deeply as she glanced at
+ its comfortable aspect, remembering how long it had formed the secret
+ object of her mother&#39;s little ambition (for the dame had a touch
+ of pride in her composition beyond her ever-contented mate) to occupy
+ that <i>little</i> hall. It seemed so appropriate that the lesser
+ squire&#8212;the <i>great</i> squire&#39;s friend&#8212;should also
+ have <i>his</i> &quot;hall,&quot; though a little one!</p>
+
+ <p>Indeed, it had been in incipient repair for him, that the old men
+ might spend their winter evenings together at the real hall, divided
+ but by a short path, across an angle of the park, without a dreary
+ walk for Bevan impending over the end of their carouse, with
+ never-wearied reminiscences of their boyhood&#8212;when sudden death
+ stopped all proceedings, and left poor Bevan alone in the world, as
+ it seemed to him&#8212;&quot;in simplicity a child,&quot; and as
+ imbecile in conflict with it as any child.</p>
+
+ <p>She nerved her mind and hand by an effort, and rang the
+ bell&#8212;(the <i>bell</i>, there a modern innovation.) No sound but
+ its own distant deadened one, was heard within; but some dog in the
+ rear barked, and then howled, as if alarmed at the sudden breach of
+ long prevailing silence. Again she rang&#8212;again the troubled
+ growl and bark, suppressed by fear of the only living thing, as it
+ seemed, within hearing, alone responded. The situation was very
+ solitary, the only adjacent house, the hall, being yet tenantless,
+ and night was gathering fast; for that storm which had first detained
+ her in the lofty region, (where a darker storm had gathered round her
+ mind and soul,) had desolated the lower country all day, flooded the
+ brooks, and delayed her on the road during several hours.</p>
+
+ <p>She fancied a sort of suppressed commotion within, as of
+ whisperings and stealthy steps, and one voice she clearly overheard,
+ but it was not her father&#39;s. Whether it was that of Lewis (who,
+ however, was not yet residing there) she knew not, never having heard
+ it in her life; he avoiding, as was stated, direct intercourse with
+ her&#8212;disappearing &quot;like a guilty thing&quot; whenever her
+ figure appeared in distant approach. What should this mean? Wild
+ fears, even superstitious ones, of some indefinite ill or horror
+ impending, began to shake her forced fortitude, as she stood,
+ half-fearing to ring again&#8212;again to hear the melancholy voice
+ of the dog, as of one lost&#8212;to wait&#8212;listen&#8212;and dream
+ of&#8212;David&#8212;death&#8212;murder&#8212;or even worse, till
+ even the giant horror&#8212;the jail!&#8212;and the white-headed
+ prisoner, shrank before the present ominous mystery&#8212;ominous of
+ she <i>knew</i> not what, therefore involving every thing dreadful.
+ Meanwhile, the swinging of the large oak branches in the close of a
+ squally day, their groaning, and the vast glooms that their foliage
+ shed all below, the twilight rapidly deepening into confirmed night,
+ all tended to the inspiration of a wild unearthly melancholy.
+ Suddenly the door was opened, while she hesitated to ring again, and
+ by a <i>black</i> man! Persons of colour are rarely seen inland, in
+ Wales, and Winifred had never visited a seaport of any consequence;
+ so that even this was almost a shock. She quickly, however, guessed
+ that this was a servant of the &quot;Nabob,&quot; brought over with
+ him. The man, learning her name, bade her enter, adding, that she
+ would see her father <i>soon</i>, but that &quot;massa&quot; was
+ within, settling some affairs with Mr Lewis, and begged to see her. A
+ sort of grim grin, though joined to a deference that seemed, to her
+ troubled and broken spirit, and sunken heart, a cruel mockery,
+ relaxed the man&#39;s features, and half shocked, half irritated her.
+ Her spirits, however, rose with the occasion, <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+ demanding all her fortitude and all her tact; for now she was to make
+ that impression on this terrible suitor&#39;s fancy, through which
+ alone she could work out her father&#39;s salvation. In a few minutes
+ more, she stood in the same apartment with her David&#39;s detested
+ rival! The embers of a large fire, decayed, cast red twilight, which
+ made it appear already dark without; and there he stood, at the long
+ room&#39;s extreme end, between her and the hearth.</p>
+
+ <p>To Winifred, the personal attributes of the man, whom in her awful
+ resolve she regarded merely as the instrument of that filial good
+ work, were utterly indifferent; yet she stopped&#8212;she
+ shuddered&#8212;and trembled all over, as she caught the mere outline
+ of his figure by the fire-light. There he was! to her idea, the
+ embodied evil genius of her family! the sullen apostate from the
+ finer part of love&#8212;the victim of satiety, (as rumour said,) the
+ selfish contemner of women&#39;s better feelings!&#8212;indifferent
+ to all but person in his election of a wife; willing to unite himself
+ with one whose heart and mind were stranger to him, on bare report of
+ her health and beauty, and some slight recollections of her
+ childhood! Seeing her stop, and even totter, he advanced a few steps;
+ but she, with the instinctive recoil and antipathy of some feeble
+ creature from its natural enemy, retreated at his first
+ movement&#8212;and, shocked by this betrayed repugnance, he again
+ stood irresolute. Then rushed back upon her heart, with all the
+ horror of novelty, the renunciation of poor David, now it was on the
+ point of being sealed for ever. Now father, mother, all beside, was
+ forgotten&#8212;the ghastliness of a terrible struggle within, the
+ stern horror of confirmed despair, began to disguise her beauty as
+ with a death-pale mask&#8212;the features grew rigid, her heart beat
+ audibly, her ears rang and tingled, and sight grew dim. She was
+ fainting, falling. Mr Fitzarthur sprang to support her, but putting
+ his arms too boldly round her waist, that detested freedom at once
+ startled her into temporary self-possession, back into life. She
+ gasped, struggled against him, as if she had rather have fallen than
+ have been supported by <i>him</i>; and turned to him that white face,
+ white even to the lips, imploringly, where was still depicted her
+ unconquerable aversion. Some astonishment seemed to rivet that look
+ upon his face, but half-visible by the dusky light&#8212;astonishment
+ no longer painful, when the Nabob, emboldened, renewed his now
+ permitted clasp, and only uttering &quot;My <i>dear</i>! don&#39;t
+ you know me?&quot; in the tenderest tone to which ever manly voice
+ was modulated, increased his grasp to a passionate embrace, advanced
+ his face&#8212;his mouth to hers, advanced and pressed
+ unresisted&#8212;and before her bewildered eyes closed in that
+ fainting fit which had been but suspended, stood revealed to them (as
+ proved by one delighted smile, flashed out of all the settled gloom
+ of that countenance,) as her heart&#39;s own David&#8212;no longer
+ the night&#8212;wandering poor <i>Telynwr</i>, but David Fitzarthur
+ of Talylynn, Esq.</p>
+
+ <p>The story of the eccentric East Indian may be shortly told. From
+ childhood he was the victim of excessive morbid sensibility, and
+ constitutional melancholy. The jovial habits of his good-natured
+ Welsh uncle were repugnant to his nature; and after becoming an
+ orphan, the solitary boy had no human object on which the deep
+ capacity for tenderness of his <i>occult</i> nature could be exerted.
+ Thus forced by his fate into solitariness of habits, and secreted
+ emotions, he was deemed unsocial, and reproached for what he felt was
+ his misfortune&#8212;the being wholly misunderstood by those his
+ early lot was cast among. Hence his perverted ardour of affection was
+ misplaced on the lower living world&#8212;dog, cat, or owl, whatever
+ chance made his companions. Returning to India, where he had known
+ two parents, to meet no longer the tenderness of even one, the
+ melancholy boy-exile (for Wales he ever regarded as his country)
+ increased in morbid estrangement from mankind, as he increased in
+ years; till his maturity nearly realized the misanthropic unsocial
+ character for which his youth had been unjustly reproached. Though in
+ the high road to a splendid fortune, he loathed East Indian society,
+ far beyond all former loathing of fox-hunters and topers in Wales,
+ whose green mountains now became (conformably to the nature,
+ &quot;<i>semper varium et mutabile</i>,&quot; of the melancholic) the
+ very idols of his romantic regrets and <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span> fondest memory. In India
+ were neither green fields nor green hearts. External nature and human
+ nature appeared equally to languish under that enfeebling hot death
+ in the atmosphere, which seemed to wither female beauty in the moment
+ that it ripened. The pallidness of the European beauties, sickly as
+ the clime, disgusted him&#8212;their venality still more. Female
+ fortune-hunters were far more intolerable to his delicacy than the
+ coarsest hunter of vermin&#8212;fox or hare&#8212;ever had been at
+ his uncle&#39;s hall, whom he began to esteem, and sincerely
+ mourned&#8212;when death had removed all of him from his memory but
+ his kindness, his desire to amuse him, the &quot;sulky boy,&quot; his
+ substantial goodness and warm-heartedness. Knowing that every female
+ in his circle was well informed of his ample fortune, still
+ accumulating, he fancied art, deceit, coquetry in every smile and
+ glance, (for suspicion of human hearts and motives ever besets the
+ melancholic character;) and thus, it was natural that he should
+ sometimes sigh over the idea of some fresh mountain beauty, not
+ trained by parents in the art and to the task of husband-hunting.
+ Even the soft-faced child, just growing into woman, who had held her
+ pinafore for fruit, in the orchard, whose half-fallen apple-tree was
+ his almost constant seat, floated across his vacant, yet restless
+ mind. In truth, when she surprised him in his part of sexton to his
+ owl, she had evinced rather more sympathy than she had admitted to
+ his other self, David the wood-wanderer; and though she had indeed
+ laughed, it was with tears in her eyes, elicited by one she detected
+ in the shy averted orbs of his. Yet was the sweetness of the little
+ Welsh girl left behind, for a long time, even when manhood failed to
+ banish its idea, no more than his statue to Pygmalion, or his watery
+ image to Narcissus. But having no female society, save those
+ marketable forms that he distrusted and despised; yet pining, in his
+ romantic refinement, for <i>pure</i> passion&#8212;for reciprocal
+ passion&#8212;panting to be loved <i>for himself alone</i>, he kept
+ imagining her developed graces, exaggerating the conceit of some
+ childish tenderness toward himself, his position and his nervous
+ infirmity keeping a solitude of soul and heart ever round him, into
+ which no female form had free and constant admission, but that aërial
+ one, the little Winifred, of far, far off, green Wales! The promise
+ of pure beauty, which her childhood gave, his <i>dream</i> fulfilled;
+ and his imagination seized and cherished the beautiful cloud, painted
+ by fancy, till it became the goddess of his idolatry, though
+ conscious of the self-delusion, and retained with that tenacity
+ conceivable, perhaps, to the morbidly sensitive alone. The habit of
+ yielding to the importunity of one idea, strengthens itself; every
+ recurrence of it produces quicker sensibility to the next; deeper and
+ deeper impression follows, till one form of mania
+ supervenes&#8212;that which consists in the undue mastery and eternal
+ presence of one idea.</p>
+
+ <p>Childish and <i>fugitive</i> as it <i>seemed</i>, a passion had
+ actually commenced in his <i>boy&#39;s</i> heart, which clung to that
+ of the man, though under the same light, fragile, and dreamlike form.
+ Poetry might liken it to the mere frothy foam of the infant cataract,
+ when it gushes out of the breast of the mountain to the rising sun,
+ which, arrested by an intense frost, ere it can fall, in the very act
+ of evanishing, there hangs, still hangs, the mere air-bubbles
+ congealed into crystal vesicles, defying all the force of the mounted
+ sun to dissipate their delicate white beauty, evanescent as it
+ <i>looks</i>. The chill and the impenetrability of heart, kept by
+ circumstances within him, such frost might typify&#8212;that pure,
+ fragile-seeming, yet durable passion, that snow-foam of the
+ waterfall. True it was that this fantastic fancy had the power to
+ draw him to his Welsh patrimony earlier than worldly ambition would
+ have warranted. But his after conduct&#8212;his actual overtures were
+ not so wildly romantic, as might appear from the foregoing narrative;
+ but of this in the sequel.</p>
+
+ <p>And where was her father&#8212;mother? Why had the law been
+ allowed by this eccentric lover to violate the humble sanctuary of
+ home, at the desolate Llaneol? What was become of the wicker chair?
+ Was the hated Lewis to be maintained in his usurpation of the chair
+ of Bevan&#39;s <i>ancestral</i> post of steward, (for his father had
+ been steward to the father of the squire deceased?) Above all, was
+ Dame Bevan to see that home of her heart&#39;s hope, the permanent
+ home <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg
+ 113]</a></span> of the harsh supplanter of her husband? Passing over
+ the affecting scene of poor Winifred&#39;s fainting, which drew round
+ her father and mother, and others from below, proceed we to answer
+ those queries and conclude our tale.</p>
+
+ <p>When perfectly restored, Winifred, leaning on the arm of her
+ future husband, accompanied her parents down into the comfortable
+ kitchen, where, by a huge fire, stood the veritable wicker chair,
+ familiar to her eyes from infancy, rickety as ever, but surviving its
+ desecration by the boys at the auction; and looking round, she saw
+ standing the whole solid old oaken furniture, coffers, dressers,
+ &amp;c., even to the same bright brazen skillets, pewter dishes, and
+ sundries&#8212;the pride of Mistress Bevan&#39;s heart, the splendour
+ of better days. Mr Fitzarthur led the old man by the hand to his own
+ chair, his wife to another; and then, having seated himself by their
+ daughter, began, over the fumes of tea and coffee, (the honours of
+ which pleasant meal, so needful after her agitation, he solicited
+ Winifred to perform,) to narrate various matters, which we must
+ condense into a nutshell.</p>
+
+ <p>To their surprise and amusement, they now learned that the hated
+ &quot;spy&quot; who had prowled round their folds and fields so long,
+ would resign to Mistress Bevan the house in which they sat, and that
+ atonement made, vanish into thin air&#8212;<i>a vox et preterea
+ nihil!</i> being in reality the Proteus-like, mysterious, handsome,
+ though sallow stranger, and no stranger, sitting among them!</p>
+
+ <p>We said that Mr Fitzarthur&#39;s conduct in espousing this
+ long-unseen mistress of his fancy, was not quite so extraordinary and
+ wild as it appeared. For coming back grown into maturity, and altered
+ by climate in complexion and all characteristics, he found himself
+ quite unrecognised, and conceived the idea of at once reconnoitring
+ his dilapidated estate, and watching the conduct of his
+ long-remembered Winifred. <i>Two</i> disguises seemed necessary
+ toward these two purposes, and he adopted the two we have seen, one
+ on the &quot;hither side Tivy,&quot; the other on the &quot;far side
+ Tivy,&quot; which his coracle allowed him to cross at pleasure. His
+ close watch of the blameless girl&#39;s whole life confirmed the warm
+ and romantic wishes of his soul, which her beauty inspired&#8212;that
+ beauty as fully confirming the vision of his love-dream when far and
+ long away.</p>
+
+ <p>It was during the alarm of her prolonged fainting, produced by the
+ surprise of this discovery, and the previous agitations, (whereby,
+ perhaps, the prudence rather than the affection of the eccentric
+ lover was impeached,) that her mother, searching her pocket for a
+ bottle of volatile salts, turned forth the letter lately referred to,
+ melancholy evidence of the desperate extremity to which two powerful
+ antagonist passions&#8212;love, and filial love&#8212;had driven a
+ mind not unfortified by religion, but beleaguered by despair and all
+ its powers, till resolution failed, and peril impended over an
+ otherwise almost spotless soul.</p>
+
+ <p>As the old man&#39;s affections were not wholly weaned from
+ Llaneol, ruinous as it was, his son-in-law had it restored as a
+ temporary summer residence for the old people, as well as
+ occasionally for himself and his beloved bride.</p>
+
+ <p>It hardly needs to be told, that the arrest and its executors were
+ but parts of the delusion, the amount of real infliction being no
+ more than a ride in a fine morning of some miles. Whether the whole,
+ as involving some little added trouble of mind to that whose whole
+ weight he was going so soon to remove, was too severe a penance for
+ the steward&#39;s neglect, may be variously judged by various
+ readers. In the halcyon days that followed, Winifred never forgot the
+ place on the Tivy bank where she slept and dropped her book; nor did
+ the happy husband, melancholic no more, forsake his coracle or his
+ harp utterly, but would often serenade his lady-love (albeit his
+ wedded love also) on some golden evening, as she sat among the
+ cowslips and harebells, that enamelled with floral blue and gold the
+ greensward bank of the Tivy, under the fine sycamore tree&#8212;the
+ &quot;trysting-place&quot; of their romantic assignations.</p>
+
+ <div class="footnotes">
+ <h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+ <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> Harper.</p>
+
+ <p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> <i>St
+ Elian.</i>&#8212;A saint of Wales. There is a well bearing his
+ name; one of the many of the holy wells, or <i>Ffynnonan</i>, in
+ Wales. A man whom Mr Pennant had affronted, threatened him with
+ this terrible vengeance. Pins, or other little offerings, are
+ thrown in, and the curses uttered over them.</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> In the
+ &quot;History of the Gwyder Family,&quot; it is stated, that some
+ members of a leading family in the reign of Henry VII., being
+ denounced as &quot;Llawrnds,&quot; murderers, (from
+ <i>Llawrnd</i>, red or bloody hand,) and obliged to fly the
+ country, returned at last, and lived long disguised, in the woods
+ and caves, being dressed all in green; so that &quot;when they
+ were espied by the country people, all took them for the
+ &quot;<i>Tylwyth Têg</i>, the fair family,&quot; and straight ran
+ away.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ <hr style="width: 65%;" />
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg
+ 114]</a></span>
+
+ <h2><a name="NORTHS_SPECIMENS_OF_THE_BRITISH_CRITICS" id=
+ "NORTHS_SPECIMENS_OF_THE_BRITISH_CRITICS"></a>NORTH&#39;S SPECIMENS
+ OF THE BRITISH CRITICS.</h2>
+
+ <h3>NO. VI.<br />
+ SUPPLEMENT TO DRYDEN ON CHAUCER.</h3>.
+
+ <p>From the grand achievements of Glorious John, one experiences a
+ queer revulsion of the currency in the veins in passing to the small
+ doings of Messrs Betterton, Ogle, and Co., in 1737 and 1741; and
+ again, to the still smaller of Mr Lipscomb in 1795, in the way of
+ modernizations of Chaucer. Who was Mr Betterton, nobody, we presume,
+ now knows; assuredly he was not Pope, though there is something silly
+ to that effect in Joseph Warton, which is repeated by Malone.
+ &quot;Mr Harte assured me,&quot; saith Dr Joseph, &quot;that he was
+ convinced by some circumstances which Fenton had communicated to him,
+ that Pope wrote the characters that make the introduction (the
+ Prologue) to the Canterbury Tales, published under the name of
+ Betterton.&quot; Betterton is bitter bad; Ogle, &quot;<i>wersh</i> as
+ cauld parritch without sawte!&quot; Lipscomb is a jewel. In a
+ postscript to his preface he says, &quot;I have barely time here, the
+ tales being already almost all printed off, to apologize to the
+ reader for having inserted my own translation of The Nun&#39;s
+ Priest&#39;s Tale, instead of that of Dryden; but the fact is, <i>I
+ did not know that Dryden&#39;s version existed</i>; for having
+ undertaken to complete those of the Canterbury Tales which were
+ wanting in Ogle&#39;s collection, and the tale in question <i>not
+ being in that collection</i>, I proceeded to supply it, having never
+ till very lately, strange as it may seem, <i>seen the volume of
+ Dryden&#39;s Fables in which it may be found</i>!!&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>It is diverting to hear the worthy who, in 1795, had never seen
+ Dryden&#39;s Fables, offering to the public the first completed
+ collection of the Canterbury Tales in a modern version, &quot;under
+ the reasonable confidence that the improved taste in poetry, and the
+ extended cultivation of that, in common with all the other elegant
+ arts, which so strongly characterizes the present day, will make the
+ lovers of verse look up to the old bard, the father of English
+ poetry, with a veneration proportioned to the improvements they have
+ made in it.&quot; It grieves him to think that the language in which
+ Chaucer wrote &quot;has decayed from under him.&quot; That reason
+ alone, he says, can justify the attempt of exhibiting him in a modern
+ dress; and he tells us that so faithfully has he adhered to the great
+ original, that they who have not given their time to the study of the
+ old language, &quot;must either find a true likeness of Chaucer
+ exhibited in this version, or they will find it nowhere else.&quot;
+ With great solemnity he says, &quot;Thence I have imposed it on
+ myself as a duty somewhat sacred to deviate from my original as
+ little as possible in the sentiment, and have often in the language
+ adopted his own expressions, the simplicity and effect of which have
+ always forcibly struck me, <i>wherever the terms he uses (and that
+ happens not unfrequently) are intelligible to modern ears</i>.&quot;
+ Yes&#8212;Gulielme Lipscomb, thou wert indeed a jewel.</p>
+
+ <p>Happy would he have been to accompany his version of Chaucer with
+ notes. &quot;But though the version itself has been an agreeable and
+ easy rural occupation, yet in a remote village, near 250 miles from
+ London, the very books, <i>trifling as they may seem</i>, to which it
+ would be necessary to refer <i>to illustrate</i> <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span> <i>the
+ manners of the 14th century</i>, were not to be procured; and
+ parochial and other engagements would not admit of absence sufficient
+ to consult them where they are to be found; it is not therefore for
+ want of deference to the opinions of those who have recommended a
+ body of notes that they do not accompany these Tales.&quot;
+ Yes&#8212;Gulielme, thou wert a jewel.</p>
+
+ <p>It is, however, but too manifest from his alleged versions, that
+ not only did Mr Lipscomb of necessity eschew the perusal of &quot;the
+ books, trifling as they may seem, to which it would be necessary to
+ refer to illustrate the manners of the 14th century,&quot; but that
+ he continued to his dying day almost as ignorant of Chaucer&#39;s
+ Canterbury Tales as of Dryden&#39;s Fables.</p>
+
+ <p>In his preface he tells one very remarkable falsehood. &quot;The
+ Life of Chaucer, and the Introductory Discourse to the Canterbury
+ Tales, are taken from the valuable edition of his original works
+ published by Mr Tyrwhitt.&quot; The Introductory Discourse is so
+ taken; but it is plain that poor, dear, fibbing Willy Lipscomb had
+ not looked into it, for it contradicts throughout all the statements
+ in the life of Chaucer, which is not from Tyrwhitt, but clumsily
+ cribbed piecemeal by Willy himself from that rambling and inaccurate
+ one by a Mr Thomas in Urry&#39;s edition. Lipscomb is lying on our
+ table, and we had intended to quote a few specimens of him and his
+ predecessor Ogle; but another volume that had fallen aside a year or
+ two ago, has of itself mysteriously reappeared&#8212;and a few words
+ of it in preference to other &quot;haverers.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>Mr Horne, the author of &quot;The False Medium,&quot;
+ &quot;Orion,&quot; the &quot;Spirit of the Age,&quot; and some other
+ clever brochures in prose and in verse, in the laboured rather than
+ elaborate introduction to &quot;The Poems of Geoffrey Chaucer,
+ modernized,&quot; (1841,) by Leigh Hunt, Wordsworth, Robert Bell,
+ Thomas Powell, Elizabeth Barrett, and Zachariah Azed, gives us some
+ threescore pages on Chaucer&#39;s versification; but, though they
+ have an imposing air at first sight, on inspection they prove
+ stark-naught. He seems to have a just enough general notion of the
+ principle of the verse in the Canterbury Tales; but with the many
+ ways of its working&#8212;the how, the why, and the
+ wherefore&#8212;he is wholly unacquainted, though he dogmatizes like
+ a doctor. He soon makes his escape from the real difficulties with
+ which the subject is beset, and mouths away at immense length and
+ width about what he calls &quot;the <i>secret</i> of Chaucer&#39;s
+ rhythm in his heroic verse, which has been the baffling subject of so
+ much discussion among scholars, a trifling increase in the syllables
+ occasionally introduced for variety, and founded upon the same laws
+ of contraction by apostrophe, syncope, &amp;c., as those followed by
+ all modern poets; but employed in a more free and varied manner, all
+ the words being fully written out, the vowels sounded, and not
+ subjected to the disruption of inverted commas, as used in after
+ times.&quot; This &quot;secret&quot; was patent to all the world
+ before Mr Horne took pen in hand, and his eternal blazon of it is too
+ much now for ears of flesh and blood. The modernized versions,
+ however, are respectably executed&#8212;Leigh Hunt&#39;s admirably;
+ and we hope for another volume. But Mr Horne himself must be more
+ careful in his future modernizations. The very opening of the
+ Prologue is not happy.</p>
+
+ <p>In Chaucer it runs thus:&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Whannè that April with his shourès
+ sote</span> <span class="i2">The droughte of March hath perced to
+ the rote,</span> <span class="i2">And bathed every veine in
+ swiche licour,</span> <span class="i2">Of whiche vertue
+ engendered is the flour;</span> <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span> <span class=
+ "i2">When Zephyrus eke with his sotè brethe,</span> <span class=
+ "i2">Enspired hath in every holt and hethe</span> <span class=
+ "i2">The tendre croppès, and the yongè sonne</span> <span class=
+ "i2">Hath in the Ram his halfè cours yronne,</span> <span class=
+ "i2">And smalè foulès maken melodie,</span> <span class="i2">That
+ slepen allè night with open eye,</span> <span class="i2">So
+ priketh hem nature in hire corages;</span> <span class="i2">Than
+ longen folk to gon on pilgrimages,</span> <span class="i2">And
+ palmeres for to seken strangè strondes,</span> <span class=
+ "i2">To servè halwes couthe in sondry londes,&quot;
+ &amp;c.</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Thus modernized by Mr Home:&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;When that sweet April showers with
+ downward shoot</span> <span class="i2">The drought of March have
+ pierc&#39;d unto the root,</span> <span class="i2">And bathed
+ every vein with liquid power,</span> <span class="i2">Whose
+ virtue rare engendereth the flower;</span> <span class="i2">When
+ Zephyrus also with his fragrant breath</span> <span class=
+ "i2">Inspirèd hath in every grove and heath</span> <span class=
+ "i2">The tender shoots of green, and the young sun</span>
+ <span class="i2">Hath in the Ram one half his journey run,</span>
+ <span class="i2">And small birds in the trees make melody,</span>
+ <span class="i2">That sleep and dream all night with open
+ eye;</span> <span class="i2">So nature stirs all energies and
+ ages</span> <span class="i2">That folk are bent to go on
+ pilgrimages,&quot; &amp;c.</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Look back to Chaucer&#39;s own lines, and you will see that Mr
+ Horne&#39;s variations are all for the worse. How flat and tame
+ &quot;sweet April showers,&quot; in comparison with &quot;April with
+ his shourès sote.&quot; In Chaucer the month comes boldly on, in his
+ own person&#8212;in Mr Horne he is diluted into his own showers.
+ &#39;Tis ominous thus to stumble on the threshold. &quot;Downward
+ shoot&quot; is very bad indeed in itself, and all unlike the natural
+ strength of Chaucer. &quot;Liquid power&quot; is even worse and more
+ unlike; and most tautological the &quot;virtue of power.&quot; In
+ Chaucer the virtue is in the &quot;licour.&quot; &quot;Rare&quot; is
+ poorly dropped in to fill up. Chaucer purposely uses &quot;sotè&quot;
+ twice&#8212;and the repetition tells. Mr Horne must needs change it
+ into &quot;fragrant.&quot; &quot;In the trees&quot; is not in
+ Chaucer&#8212;for he knew that &quot;smalè foulès&quot; shelter in
+ the &quot;hethe&quot; as well as in the &quot;holt&quot;&#8212;among
+ broom and bracken, and heath and rushes. Chaucer does not <i>say</i>,
+ as Mr Horne does, that the birds <i>dream</i>&#8212;he leaves you to
+ think for yourself whether they do so or not, while sleeping with
+ open eye all night. Such conjectural emendations are injurious to
+ Chaucer. We presume Mr Horne believes he has authority for applying
+ &quot;so pricketh hem nature in hire corages&quot; to the folks that
+ &quot;longen to go on pilgrimages&quot;&#8212;and not to the
+ &quot;smalè foulès.&quot; Or is it intended for a happy innovation?
+ To us it seems an unhappy blunder&#8212;taking away a fine touch of
+ nature from Chaucer, and hardening it into horn; while &quot;all
+ energies and ages&quot; is indeed a free and affected version of
+ &quot;corages.&quot; &quot;For to wander thro&#39;,&quot; is a
+ mistranslation of &quot;to seken;&quot; and to &quot;sing the holy
+ mass,&quot; is not the meaning of to &quot;servè halwes couthe,&quot;
+ <i>i.e.</i> to worship saints known, &amp;c.</p>
+
+ <p>Turning over a couple of leaves, we behold a modernization of the
+ antique with a vengeance&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;His son, a young squire, with him there I
+ <i>saw</i>,</span> <span class="i2">A lover and a lusty
+ bache<i>lor</i>! (aw) (ah!)</span> <span class="i2">With locks
+ crisp curl&#39;d, as they&#39;d been laid in press,</span>
+ <span class="i2">Of twenty year of age he was, I
+ guess.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Chaucer never once in all his writings thus rhymes off two
+ consecutive couplets in one sentence so slovenly, as with &quot;I
+ saw,&quot; and &quot;I guess.&quot; But Mr Horne is so enamoured
+ &quot;with the old familiar faces&quot; of pet cockneyisms, that he
+ must have his will of them. Of the same squire, Chaucer
+ says&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Of his stature he was of <i>even
+ length</i>;&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>and Mr Horne translates the words into&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;He was in stature of the common
+ length,&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>They mean &quot;well proportioned.&quot; Of this young squire,
+ Chaucer saith&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;So hote he loved, that by
+ nightertale</span> <span class="i2">He slep no more than doth the
+ nightingale.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>We all know how the nightingale employs the night&#8212;and here
+ it is implied that so did the lover. Mr Horne spoils all by an
+ affected prettiness suggested by a misapplied passage in Milton.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;His amorous ditties nightly fill&#39;d the
+ vale;</span> <span class="i2">He slept no more than doth the
+ nightingale.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Chaucer says of the Prioresse&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Full well she sang the servicè
+ divine</span> <span class="i2">Entunèd in hire nose ful
+ swetèly.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Mr Horne must needs say&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Entuned in her nose with <i>accent</i>
+ sweet.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The accent, to our ears, is lost in the pious snivel&#8212;pardon
+ the somewhat unclerical word.</p>
+
+ <p>Chaucer says of her&#8212;-</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Ful semèly after hire meat she
+ raught,&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>which Mr Horne improves into&#8212;-</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span style="margin-left: 10em;">&quot;And for her meat</span>
+ <span class="i2">Full seemly bent she forward on her
+ seat.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Chaucer says&#8212;</p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117"
+ id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;<i>And peined hire</i> to contrefeten
+ chere</span> <span class="i2">Of court, and been astatelich of
+ manere,</span> <span class="i2">And to be holden digne of
+ reverence.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>That is, she took pains to imitate the manners of the Court,
+ &amp;c.; whereas Mr Horne, with inconceivable ignorance of the
+ meaning of words that occur in Chaucer a hundred times, writes
+ &quot;<i>it gave her pain</i> to counterfeit the ways of Court,&quot;
+ thereby reversing the whole picture.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And French she spake full fayre and
+ fetisly,&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>he translates &quot;full properly <i>and neat</i>!&quot; Dryden
+ rightly calls her &quot;the mincing Prioress;&quot; Mr Horne wrongly
+ says, &quot;she was evidently one of the most high-bred and refined
+ ladies of her time.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>Chaucer says, of that &quot;manly man,&quot; the Monk&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Ne that a monk, when he is
+ rekkeless,</span> <span class="i2">Is like to a fish that is
+ waterless;</span> <span class="i2">This is to say, a monk out of
+ his cloistre.</span> <span class="i2">This ilkè text held he not
+ worth an oistre.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Mr Horne here modernizeth thus&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Or that a monk beyond his bricks and
+ <i>mortar</i>,</span> <span class="i2">Is like a fish without a
+ drop of <i>water</i>,</span> <span class="i2">That is to say, a
+ monk out of his cloister.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>There can be no mortar without water, but the words do not rhyme
+ except to Cockney ears, though the blame lies at the door of the
+ mouth. &quot;Bricks and mortar&quot; is an odd and somewhat vulgar
+ version of &quot;rekkeless;&quot; and to say that a monk &quot;beyond
+ his bricks and mortar&quot; is a monk &quot;out of his
+ cloister,&quot; is not in the manner of Chaucer, or of any body
+ else.</p>
+
+ <p>Chaucer says slyly of the Frere, that</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;He hadde ymade ful mony a mariage</span>
+ <span class="i2">Of yongè women, at his owen coste;&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>and Mister Horne brazen-facedly,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Full many a marriage had he brought to
+ bear,</span> <span class="i2">For women young, and <i>paid the
+ cost with sport</i>.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>O fie, Mister Horne! To hide our blushes, will no maiden for a
+ moment lend us her fan? We cover our face with our hands.&#8212;Of
+ this same Frere, Mr Horne, in his introduction, when exposing the
+ faults of another translator, says that &quot;Chaucer shows us the
+ quaint begging rogue playing his harp among a crowd of admiring
+ auditors, and <i>turning up his eyes</i> with an attempted expression
+ of religious enthusiasm;&quot; but Chaucer does no such thing, nor
+ was the Frere given to any such practice.</p>
+
+ <p>Of the Clerk of Oxenford, Chaucer says, he &quot;loked holwe, and
+ thereto soberly.&quot; Mr Horne needlessly adds &quot;ill-fed.&quot;
+ Chaucer says&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Ful threadbare was his overest
+ courtepy.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Mr Horne modernizes it into&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;His uppermost short cloak <i>was a bare
+ thread</i>.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Why exaggerate so? Chaucer says&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;But all that he might of <i>his frendes
+ hente</i></span> <span class="i2">On bokès and on lerning he it
+ spente.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Mr Horne says&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;But every farthing that his friends
+ e&#39;er <i>lent</i>.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>They did not <i>lend</i>, they gave outright to the poor
+ scholar.</p>
+
+ <p>The Reve&#39;s Prologue opens thus in Chaucer&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Whan folk han laughed at this nicè
+ cas</span> <span class="i2">Of Absalom and <i>hendy</i>
+ Nicholas.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Mr Horne says&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Of Absalom and <i>credulous</i>
+ Nicholas!&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>He manifestly mistakes the sly scholar for the credulous
+ carpenter, whom on the tenderest point he outwitted! To those who
+ know the nature of the story, the blunder is extreme.</p>
+
+ <p>What is to be thought of such rhymes as these?</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And for to drink strong wine as red as
+ <i>blood</i>,</span> <span class="i2">Then would he jest, and
+ shout as he were <i>mad</i>.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Toward the mill, the bay nag in his
+ <i>hand</i>,</span> <span class="i2">The miller sitting by the
+ fire they <i>found</i>.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And on she went, till she the cradle
+ <i>found</i>,</span> <span class="i2">While through the dark
+ still groping with her <i>hand</i>.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg
+ 118]</a></span>
+
+ <p>These to our ears, are not happy modernizations of Chaucer.</p>
+
+ <p>Here come a few more Cockneyisms.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Alas! our warden&#39;s palfrey it is
+ <i>gone</i>.</span> <span class="i2">Allen at once forgot both
+ meal and <i>corn</i>.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Allen stole back, and thought ere that it
+ <i>dawn</i>,</span> <span class="i2">I will creep in by John that
+ lieth for<i>lorn</i>.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;For, from the town Arviragus was
+ <i>gone</i>,</span> <span class="i2">But to herself she spoke
+ thus, all <i>forlorn</i>.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Aurelius, thinking of his substance
+ <i>gone</i>,</span> <span class="i2">Curseth the time that ever
+ he was <i>born</i>.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;An arm-brace wore he that was rich and
+ <i>broad</i>,</span> <span class="i2">And by his side a buckler
+ and a <i>sword</i>.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Now grant my ship, that some smooth haven
+ <i>win her</i>;</span> <span class="i2">I follow Statius first,
+ and then <i>Corinna</i>.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Alas! this worst of all is Elizabeth Barrett&#39;s! &quot;Well of
+ English <i>undefiled</i>!&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>In Chaucer we have&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;<span class='smcap'>A Sergeant of the
+ Lawè</span>, ware and wise,</span> <span class="i2">That often
+ hadde yben <i>at the Parvis</i>.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Mr Horne gives us&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;A Sergeant of the Law, wise, wary,
+ <i>arch</i>!</span> <span class="i2"><i>Who oft had gossip&#39;d
+ long in the church porch.</i>&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The word &quot;arch&quot; is here interpolated to give some colour
+ to the charge of &quot;gossiping,&quot; absurdly asserted of the
+ learned Sergeant. The Parvis was the place of conference, where
+ suitors met with their counsel and legal advisers; and Chaucer merely
+ intimates thereby the extent of the Sergeant&#39;s practice. In
+ Chaucer we have&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;In termès hadde he cas and domès
+ alle</span> <span class="i2">That fro the time of <i>King
+ Will.</i> weren falle.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Who does not see the propriety of the customary contraction,
+ <i>King Will.</i>? Mr Horne does not; and substitutes, &quot;since
+ King William&#39;s reign.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>Of the Frankelein Chaucer says, he was</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;An housholder, and that a gret was
+ he;&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>the context plainly showing the meaning to be, &quot;hospitable on
+ a great scale.&quot; Mr Horne ignorantly translates the words,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;A householder of great extent was
+ he.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In Chaucer we have&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;His table dormant in his halle
+ alway</span> <span class="i2">Stood ready covered all the longè
+ day.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The meaning of that is, that any person, or party, might sit down,
+ at any hour of the day, and help himself to something comfortable, as
+ indeed is the case now in all country houses worth
+ Visiting&#8212;such as Buchanan Lodge. Mr Horne stupidly exaggerates
+ thus&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;His table with repletion heavy lay</span>
+ <span class="i2">Amidst his hall throughout the feast-long
+ day.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In the prologue to the Reve&#39;s Tale, the Reve, nettled by the
+ miller, who had been satirical on his trade, says he will</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span style="margin-left: 6.5em;">&quot;<i>somdel set his
+ howve</i></span> <span class="i2">For leful is with force force
+ off to showve.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>&quot;Howve&quot; is cap&#8212;and in the Miller&#39;s Prologue we
+ had been told</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;How that a clerk had set the wrightès
+ cappe;&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>that is, &quot;made a fool&quot; of him&#8212;nay, a cuckold. Mr.
+ Horne,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Though my reply <i>should somewhat fret
+ his nose</i>.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In Chaucer the Reve&#39;s tale begins with</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;At Trumpington, not far from
+ Cantebrigge,</span> <span class="i2">There goeth a brook, and
+ over that a brigge."</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Mr Horne saith somewhat wilfully.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;At Trumpington, near Cambridge, <i>if you
+ look</i>,</span> <span class="i2">There goeth a bridge, and under
+ that a brook.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Two Cantabs ask leave of their Warden</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;To geve hem leve <i>but a litel
+ stound</i>,</span> <span class="i2">To gon to mill and sen hire
+ corn yground.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><i>i.e.</i> &quot;to give them leave for a short time.&quot; Mr
+ Horne translates it, &quot;for a merry round.&quot;</p><span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+
+ <p>In the course of the tale, the miller&#39;s wife</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">&quot;Came leping inward at a
+ renne.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><i>i.e.</i> &quot;Came leaping into the room at a run.&quot; Mr
+ Horne translates it&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;The miller&#39;s wife came <i>laughing
+ inwardly</i>!&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Chaucer says&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;This miller hath so <i>wisly</i> bibbed
+ ale.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>And Mr Horne, with incredible ignorance of the meaning of that
+ word, says&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;The miller hath so <i>wisely</i> bobbed of
+ ale.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>So wisely that he was &quot;for-drunken&quot;&#8212;and &quot;as a
+ horse he snorteth in his sleep.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>In Chaucer the description of the miller&#39;s daughter ends with
+ this line&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;But right faire was <i>hire here</i>, I
+ will not lie,&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><i>i.e.</i> her hair. Mr Horne translates it &quot;was <i>she
+ here</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>But there is no end to such blunders.</p>
+
+ <p>In Chaucer, as in all our old poets of every degree, there occur,
+ over and over again, such forms of natural expression as the
+ following,&#8212;and when they do occur, let us have them; but what a
+ feeble modernizer must he be who keeps adding to the number till he
+ gives his readers the ear-ache. Not one of the following is in the
+ original:&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;At Algeziras, in Granada,
+ he,&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;At many a noble fight of ships was
+ he.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;For certainly a prelate fair was
+ he.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;In songs and tales the prize o&#39;er all
+ bore he.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And a poor parson of a town was
+ he.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Such had he often proved, and loath was
+ he.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;In youth a good trade practised well had
+ he.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Lordship and servitude at once hath
+ he.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And die he must as echo did, said
+ he.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Madam this is impossible, said
+ he.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Save wretched Aurelius none was sad but
+ he.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And said thus when this last request heard
+ he.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In like manner, in Chaucer as in all our old poets of every
+ degree, there occur over and over again such natural forms of
+ expression as &quot;I wot,&quot; &quot;I wis&quot;&#8212;and where
+ they do occur let us have them too and be thankful; but
+ poverty-stricken in the article of rhymes must <i>be he</i>, who is
+ perpetually driven to resort to such expedients as the
+ following&#8212;all of which are Mr Horne&#39;s own:&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Of fees and robes he many had, I
+ ween.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And yet this manciple made them fools, I
+ wot.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;This Reve upon stallion sat, I
+ wot.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Than the poor parson in two months, I
+ wot.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;For certainly when I was born, I
+ trow.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;A small stalk in mine eyes he sees, I
+ deem.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;There were two scholars young and poor, I
+ trow.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;John lieth still and not far off, I
+ trow.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Eastern astrologers and clerks, I
+ wis.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;This woful heart found some reprieve, I
+ wis.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Unto his brother&#39;s bed he came, I
+ wis.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And now Aurelius ever, as I
+ ween.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;That she could not sustain herself, I
+ ween.&quot;</span><br />
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Mr Horne, in his Introduction, unconscious of his own sins, speaks
+ with due contempt of the modernizations of Chaucer by Ogle and
+ Lipscomb and their coadjutors, and of the injury they may have done
+ to the reputation of the old poet. But whatever injury they may have
+ occasioned, &quot;there can be doubt,&quot; he says, &quot;of the
+ mischief done by Mr Pope&#39;s obscene specimen, <i>placed at the
+ head</i> of his list of &#39;Imitations of English Poets.&#39; It is
+ an imitation of those passages which we should only regard as the
+ rank offal of a great feast in the olden time. The better taste and
+ feeling of Pope should have imitated the noble <i>poetry</i> of
+ Chaucer. He avoided this &#39;for sundry weighty reasons.&#39; But if
+ this so-called imitation by Pope was &#39;done in his youth&#39; he
+ should have burnt it in his age. Its publication at the present day
+ among his elegant works, is a disgrace to modern times, and to his
+ high reputation.&quot; Not so fast and strong, good Mister Horne. The
+ six-and-twenty octosyllabic lines thus magisterially denounced by our
+ stern moralist in the middle of the nineteenth century, have had a
+ place in Pope&#39;s works for a hundred years, and it is too late now
+ to seek to delete them. They were written by Pope in his fourteenth
+ or fifteenth year, and gross <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120"
+ id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span> as they are, are pardonable in a
+ boy of precocious genius, giving way for a laughing hour to his sense
+ of the grotesque. Joe Warton (not Tom) pompously calls them &quot;a
+ gross and <i>dull</i> caricature of the Father of English
+ Poetry.&quot; And Mr Bowles says, &quot;he might have added, it is
+ disgusting as it is dull, and no more like Chaucer than a
+ <i>Billingsgate</i> is like an Oberea.&quot; It is <i>not</i> dull,
+ but exceedingly clever; and Father Geoffrey himself would have
+ laughed at it&#8212;patted Pope on the head&#8212;and enjoined him
+ for the future to be more discreet. Roscoe, like a wise man, regards
+ it without horror&#8212;remarking of it, and the boyish imitation of
+ Spenser, that &quot;why these sportive and characteristic sketches
+ should be brought to so severe an ordeal, and pointed out to the
+ reprehension of the reader as gross and disagreeable, dull and
+ disgusting, it is not easy to perceive.&quot; Old Joe maunders when
+ he says, &quot;he that was unacquainted with Spenser, and was to form
+ his ideas of the turn and manner of his genius from this piece, would
+ undoubtedly suppose that he abounded in filthy images, and excelled
+ in describing the lower scenes of life.&quot; Let all such blockheads
+ suppose what they choose. Pope&#8212;says Roscoe&#8212;&quot;was well
+ aware as any one of the superlative beauties and merits of Spenser,
+ whose works he assiduously studied, both in his early and riper
+ years; but it was not his intention in these few lines to give a
+ <i>serious</i> imitation of him. All that he attempted was to show
+ how exactly he could apply the language and manner of Spenser to low
+ and burlesque subjects; and in this he has completely succeeded. To
+ compare these lines, as Dr Warton has done, with those more extensive
+ and highly-finished productions, the <i>Castle of Indolence</i> by
+ Thomson, and the <i>Minstrel</i> by Beattie, is manifestly
+ unjust&quot;&#8212;and stupidly absurd. What Mr Horne means by saying
+ that Pope &quot;avoided imitating the noble poetry of Chaucer for
+ sundry weighty reasons,&quot; is not apparent at first sight. It
+ means, however, that Pope <i>could</i> not have done so&#8212;that
+ the feat was beyond his power. The author of the <i>Messiah</i> and
+ the <i>Eloïse</i> wrote tolerable poetry of his own; and he knew how
+ to appreciate, and to emulate, too, some of the finest of
+ Chaucer&#39;s. Why did Mr Horne not mention his <i>Temple of
+ Fame</i>? A more childish sentence never was written than &quot;its
+ publication at the present day among his elegant works is a disgrace
+ to modern times, and to his high reputation.&quot; Pope&#39;s
+ reputation is above reproach, enshrined in honour for evermore, and
+ modern times are not so Miss Mollyish as to sympathize with such
+ sensitive censorship of an ingeniously versified peccadillo, at which
+ our <i>avi</i> and <i>proavi</i> could not choose but smile.</p>
+
+ <p>But Mr Horne, thinking, that in this case &quot;the child is
+ father of the man,&quot; rates Pope as roundly for what he seems to
+ suppose were the misdemeanours of his manhood. &quot;Of the
+ highly-finished paraphrase, by Mr Pope, of the &#39;Wife of
+ Bath&#39;s Prologue,&#39; and &#39;The Merchant&#39;s Tale,&#39;
+ suffice it to say, that the licentious humour of the original being
+ divested of its <i>quaintness and obscurity</i> (!) becomes yet more
+ licentious in proportion to the fine touches of skill with which it
+ is brought into the light. Spontaneous coarseness is made revolting
+ by meretricious artifice. Instead of keeping in the distance that
+ which was objectionable, by such shades in the modernizing as should
+ have answered to the <i>hazy appearance</i> (!) of the original, it
+ receives a clear outline, and is brought close to us. An ancient
+ Briton, with his long rough hair and painted body, laughing and
+ singing half-naked under a tree, may be coarse, yet innocent of all
+ intention to offend; but if the imagination (absorbing the
+ anachronism) can conceive him shorn of this falling hair, his paint
+ washed off, and in this uncovered stated introduced into a
+ drawing-room full of ladies in rouge and diamonds, hoops <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span> and
+ hair-powder, no one can doubt the injury thus done to the ancient
+ Briton. This is no unfair illustration of what was done in the time
+ of Pope,&quot; &amp;c.</p>
+
+ <p>It may be &quot;no unfair illustration,&quot; and certainly is no
+ unludicrous one. We must all of us allow, that were an ancient
+ Briton, habited, or rather unhabited, as above, to bounce into a
+ modern drawing-room full of ladies, whether in rouge and diamonds,
+ hoops and hair-powder, or not, the effect of such <i>entrée</i> would
+ be prodigious on the fair and fluttered Volscians. Our imagination,
+ &quot;absorbing the anachronism,&quot; ensconces us professionally
+ behind a sofa, to witness and to record the scene. How different in
+ nature Christopher North and R.H. Horne! While he would be
+ commiserating &quot;the injury thus done to the ancient Briton,&quot;
+ we should be imploring our savage ancestor to spare the ladies.
+ &quot;Innocent of all intention to offend&quot; might be Caractacus,
+ but to the terrified bevy he would seem the king of the Cannibal
+ Islands at least. What protection against the assault of a savage,
+ almost <i>in puris naturalibus</i>, could be hoped for in their
+ hoops! Yet who knows but that, on looking round and about, he might
+ himself be frightened out of his senses? An ancient Briton, with his
+ long rough hair and painted body, may laugh and sing by himself,
+ half-naked under a tree, and in his own conceit be a match for any
+ amount of women. But shorn of his falling hair, and without a streak
+ of paint on his cheeks, verily his heart might be found to die within
+ him, before furies with faces fiery with rouge, and heads horrent
+ with pomatum&#8212;till instinctively he strove to roll himself up in
+ the Persian carpet, and there prayed for deliverance to his tutelary
+ gods.</p>
+
+ <p>Our imagination having thus &quot;absorbed the anachronism,&quot;
+ let us now leave Caractacus in the carpet&#8212;while our reason has
+ recourse to the philosophy of criticism. Mr Horne asserts, that in
+ &quot;Mr Pope&#39;s&quot; highly-finished paraphrase of the
+ &quot;Wife of Bath&#39;s Prologue,&quot; and the &quot;Merchant&#39;s
+ Tale,&quot; &quot;the licentious humour of the original is divested
+ of its quaintness and obscurity, and becomes yet more licentious in
+ proportion to the fine touches of skill with which it is brought into
+ the light.&quot; Quaintness and <i>obscurity</i>!! Why, everything in
+ those tales is as plain as a pike-staff, and clearer than mud.
+ &quot;The hazy appearance of the original&quot; indeed! What! of the
+ couple in the Pear-Tree? Mr Horne spitefully and perversely
+ misrepresents the character of Pope&#39;s translations. They are
+ remarkably free from the vice he charges them withal&#8212;and have
+ been admitted to be so by the most captious critics. Many of the very
+ strong things in Chaucer, which you may call coarse and gross if you
+ will, are omitted by Pope, and many softened down; nor is there a
+ single line in which the spirit is not the spirit of satire. The
+ folly of senile dotage is throughout exposed as unsparingly, though
+ with a difference in the imitation, as in the original. Even Joseph
+ Warton and Bowles, affectedly fastidious over-much as both too often
+ are, and culpably prompt to find fault, acknowledge that Pope&#39;s
+ versions are blameless. &quot;In the art of telling a story,&quot;
+ says Bowles, &quot;Pope is peculiarly happy; we almost forget the
+ grossness of the subject of this tale, (the Merchant&#39;s,) while we
+ are struck by the uncommon ease and readiness of the verse, the
+ suitableness of the expression, and the spirit and happiness of the
+ whole.&quot; While Dr Warton, sensibly remarking, &quot;that the
+ character of a fond old dotard, betrayed into disgrace by an
+ unsuitable match, is supported in a lively manner,&quot; refrains
+ from making himself ridiculous by mealy-mouthed moralities which on
+ such a subject every person of sense and honesty must despise. Mr
+ Horne keeps foolishly carping at Pope, or &quot;Mr Pope,&quot; as he
+ sometimes calls him, throughout his interminable&#8212;no, not
+ interminable&#8212;his hundred-paged Introduction. He abominates
+ Pope&#39;s Homer, and groans to think how it has corrupted the
+ English ear by its long domination in our schools. He takes up, with
+ leathern lungs, the howl of the Lakers, and his imitative bray is
+ louder than the original, &quot;in linked sweetness long drawn
+ out.&quot; Such sonorous strictures are innocent; but his false
+ charge of licentiousness against Pope is most reprehensible&#8212;and
+ it is insincere. For he has the sense to see Chaucer&#39;s broadest
+ satire in its true light, and its fearless expositions. Yet from his
+ justification of pictures and all their colouring in the ancient
+ poet, that might well startle people by no means timid, he turns with
+ frowning forehead and reproving hand to corresponding delineations in
+ the modern, that stand less in need of it, and spits his spite on
+ Pope, which we wipe off that it may not corrode. &quot;This
+ translation was done at sixteen <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span> or seventeen,&quot; says
+ Pope in a note to his January and May&#8212;and there is not, among
+ the achievements of early genius, to be found another such specimen
+ of finished art and of perfect mastery.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Horne has ventured to give in his volume the Reve&#39;s Tale.
+ &quot;It has been thought,&quot; he says, &quot;that an idea of the
+ extraordinary versatility of Chaucer&#39;s genius could not be
+ adequately conveyed, unless one of his matter-of-fact comic tales
+ were attempted. The Reve&#39;s has accordingly been selected, as
+ presenting a graphic painting of character, equal to those contained
+ in the &#39;Prologue to the Canterbury Tales,&#39; displayed in
+ action by means of a story, which may be designated <i>as a broad
+ farce, ending in a pantomime of absurd reality</i>. To those who are
+ acquainted with the original, an apology may not be considered
+ inadmissible for certain necessary variations and omissions.&quot;
+ For our part, we do not object to this tale, though at the
+ commencement of such a work its insertion was ill-judged, and will
+ endanger greatly the volume. But we do object to the hypocritical
+ cant about the licentiousness of Pope&#39;s fine touches, from the
+ person who wrote the above words in italics. Omissions there must
+ have been&#8212;but they sadly shear the tale of its vigour, and
+ indeed leave it not very intelligible to readers who know not the
+ original. The variations are most unhappy&#8212;miserable indeed; and
+ by putting the miller&#39;s daughter to lie in a closet at the end of
+ a passage, this moral modernizer has killed Chaucer. In the matchless
+ original all the night&#39;s action goes on in one room&#8212;and
+ that not a large one&#8212;miller, miller&#39;s wife, miller&#39;s
+ daughter, and the two strenuous Cantabs, are within the same four
+ narrow walls&#8212;their beds nearly touch&#8212;the jeopardized
+ cradle has just space to rock in&#8212;yet this self-elected
+ expositor of Chaucer is either so blind as not to see how essential
+ such allocation of the parties is to the wicked comedy, or such a
+ blunderer as to believe that he can improve on the greatest master
+ that ever dared, and with perfect success, to picture, without our
+ condemnation&#8212;so wide is the privilege of genius in sportive
+ fancy&#8212;what, but for the self-rectifying spirit of fiction,
+ would have been an outrage on nature, and in the number not only of
+ forbidden but unhallowed things. The passages interpolated by Mr
+ Horne&#39;s own pen are as bad as possible&#8212;clownish and
+ anti-Chaucerian to the last degree.</p>
+
+ <p>For example, he thus takes upon himself, in the teeth of Chaucer,
+ to narrate Alein&#39;s night adventure&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And up he rose, and crept along the
+ floor,</span> <span class="i2">Into the passage humming with
+ their snore;</span> <span class="i2">As narrow was it as a drum
+ or tub,</span> <span class="i2">And like a beetle doth he grope
+ and <i>grub</i>,</span> <span class="i2">Feeling his way, <i>with
+ darkness in his hands</i>.</span> <span class="i2">Till at the
+ passage end he stooping stands.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Chaucer tells us, without circumlocution, why the Miller&#39;s
+ Wife for while had left her husband&#39;s side; but Mr Horne is
+ intolerant of the indelicate, and thus elegantly paraphrases the one
+ original word&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">"The wife her routing ceased soon after that:</span>
+ <span class="i2">And woke and left her bed; <i>for she was pained</i></span>
+ <span class="i2"><i>With nightmare dreams of skies that madly rained.</i></span>
+ <span class="i2"><i>Eastern astrologers and clerks, I wis,</i></span>
+ <span class="i2"><i>In time of Apis tell of storms like this.</i>&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Such is modern refinement!</p>
+
+ <p>In Chaucer, the blind encounter between the Miller and one of the
+ Cantabs, who, mistaking him for his comrade, had whispered into his
+ ear what had happened during the night to his daughter, is thus
+ comically described&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">"Ye falsè harlot, quod the miller, hast?</span>
+ <span class="i2">A falsè traitour, falsè clerk, (quod he)</span>
+ <span class="i2">Thou shalt be deaf by Goddès dignitee,</span>
+ <span class="i2">Who dorstè be so bold to disparage</span>
+ <span class="i2">My daughter, that is come of swiche
+ lineage.</span> <span class="i2">And by the throtè-bolle he
+ caught Alein,</span> <span class="i2">And he him hente
+ despiteously again,</span> <span class="i2">And on the nose he
+ smote him with his fist;</span> <span class="i2">Down ran the
+ bloody streme upon his brest;</span> <span class="i2">And on the
+ flore with nose and mouth to-broke,</span> <span class="i2">They
+ walwe, as don two piggès in a poke.</span> <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+ <span class="i2">And up they gon, and down again anon,</span>
+ <span class="i2">Till that the miller spurned at a stone,</span>
+ <span class="i2">And down he fell backward upon his wif,</span>
+ <span class="i2">That wistè nothing of this nicè strif,</span>
+ <span class="i2">For she was falle aslepe, a litel wight</span>
+ <span class="i2">with John the clerk,&quot; and ...</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Here comes Mr Horne in his strength.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Thou slanderous ribald! quoth the miller,
+ hast!</span> <span class="i2">A traitor false, false lying clerk,
+ quoth he,</span> <span class="i2">Thou shalt be slain by
+ heaven&#39;s dignity</span> <span class="i2">Who rudely
+ dar&#39;st disparage with foul lie</span> <span class="i2">My
+ daughter, that is come of lineage high!</span> <span class=
+ "i2">And by the throat he Allan grasp&#39;d amain,</span>
+ <span class="i2">And caught him, yet more furiously again,</span>
+ <span class="i2">And on his nose he smote him with his
+ fist!</span> <span class="i2">Down ran the bloody stream upon his
+ breast,</span> <span class="i2">And on the floor they tumble heel
+ and crown,</span> <span class="i2">And shake the house, it
+ seem&#39;d all coming down.</span> <span class="i2">And up they
+ rise, and down again they roll:</span> <span class="i2">Till that
+ the Miller, stumbling o&#39;er a coal,</span> <span class=
+ "i2">Went plunging headlong like a bull at bait,</span>
+ <span class="i2">And met his wife, and both fell flat as
+ slate.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Mr Horne cannot read Chaucer. The Miller does not, as he makes him
+ do, accuse the Cantab of falsely slandering his daughter&#39;s
+ virtue. He does not doubt the truth of the unluckily blabbed secret;
+ false harlot, false traitor, false clerk, are all words that tell his
+ belief; but Mr Horne, not understanding &quot;disparage,&quot; as it
+ is here used by Chaucer, wholly mistakes the cause of the
+ father&#39;s fury. He does not even know, that it is the Miller who
+ gets the bloody nose, not the Cantab. &quot;As don two piggès in a
+ poke,&quot; he leaves out, preferring, as more picturesque, &quot;And
+ on the floor they tumble <i>heel and crown</i>!&quot; &quot;And shake
+ the house&#8212;it seemed all coming down,&quot; is not in Chaucer,
+ nor could be; but the crowning stupidity is that of making the Miller
+ meet his wife, and upset her&#8212;she being all the while in bed,
+ and now startled out of sleep by the weight of her fallen
+ superincumbent husband. And this is modernizing Chaucer!</p>
+
+ <p>What, then&#8212;after all we have written about him&#8212;we ask,
+ can, at this day, be done with Chaucer? The true answer
+ is&#8212;<span class='smcap'>read him</span>. The late Laureate dared
+ to think that every one might; and in his collection, or selection,
+ of English poets, down to Habington inclusive, he has given the
+ prologue, and half a dozen of the finest and most finished tales;
+ believing that every earnest lover of English poetry would by degrees
+ acquire courage and strength to devour and digest a moderately-spread
+ banquet. Without doubt, Southey did well. It was a challenge to
+ poetical Young England to gird up his loins and fall to his work. If
+ you will have the fruit, said the Laureate, you must climb the tree.
+ He bowed some heavily-laden branches down to your eye, to tempt you;
+ but climb you must, if you will eat. He displayed a generous trust in
+ the growing desire and capacity of the country for her own
+ time-shrouded poetical treasures. In the same full volume, he gave
+ the &quot;Faerie Queene&quot; from the first word to the last.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us hope boldly, as Southey hoped. But there are, in the
+ present world, a host of excellent, sensitive readers, whose natural
+ taste is perfectly susceptible of Chaucer, if he spoke their
+ language; yet who have not the courage, or the leisure, or the
+ aptitude, to master his. They must not be too hastily blamed if they
+ do not readily reconcile themselves to a garb of thought which
+ disturbs and distracts all their habitual associations. Consider, the
+ &#39;ingenious feeling,&#39; the vital sensibility, with which they
+ apprehend their own English, may place the insurmountable barrier
+ which opposes their access to the father of our poetry. What can be
+ done for them?</p>
+
+ <p>In the first place, what is it that so much removes the language
+ from us? It is removed by the words and grammatical forms that we
+ have lost&#8212;by its real antiquity; perhaps more by an accidental
+ semblance of antiquity&#8212;the orthography. That last may seem a
+ small matter; but it is not.</p>
+
+ <p>There are three ways in which literary craftsmen have attempted to
+ fill up, or bridge over, the gulf of time, <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span> and
+ bring the poet of Edward III. and Richard II. near to modern
+ readers.</p>
+
+ <p>Dryden and Pope are the representatives, as they are the masters,
+ of the first method; for the others who have trodden in their
+ footsteps are hardly to be named or thought of. Dryden and Pope hold,
+ in their own school of modernizing, this undoubted distinction, that
+ under their treatment, that which was poetry remains poetry. Their
+ followers have written, for the most part, intelligible English, but
+ never poetry. They have told the story, and not that always; but they
+ have distilled lethargy on the tongue of the narrator.&#8212;This
+ first method the most boldly departs from the type. It was probably
+ the only way that the culture of Dryden&#39;s and Pope&#39;s time
+ admitted of. We have since gradually returned, more and more, upon
+ our own antiquity, as all the nations of Europe have upon theirs.
+ Then civilization seemed to herself to escape forwards out of
+ barbarism. Now she finds herself safe; and she ventures to seek light
+ for her mature years in the recollections of her own childhood.</p>
+
+ <p>But now, the altered spirit of the age has produced a new manner
+ of modernization. The problem has been put thus. To retain of Chaucer
+ whatever in him is our language, or is most nearly our
+ language&#8212;only making good, always, the measure; and for
+ expression, which time has left out of our speech, to substitute such
+ as is in use. And several followers of the muses, as we have seen,
+ have lately tried their hand at this kind of conversion.</p>
+
+ <p>It is hard to judge both the system and the specimens. For if the
+ specimens be thought to have succeeded, the system may, upon them, be
+ favourably judged; but if the specimens have failed, the system must
+ not upon them be unfavourably judged, but must in candour be looked
+ upon as possibly carrying in itself means and powers that have not
+ yet been unfolded. But unhappily a difficulty occurs which would not
+ have occurred with a writer in prose&#8212;the law of the verse is
+ imperious. Ten syllables must be kept, and rhyme must be kept; and in
+ the experiment it results, generally, that whilst the rehabiting of
+ Chaucer is undertaken under a necessity which lies wholly in the
+ obscurity of his dialect&#8212;the proposed ground or motive of
+ modernization&#8212;far the greater part of the actual changes are
+ made for the sake of that which beforehand you might not think of,
+ namely, the Verse. This it is that puts the translators to the
+ strangest shifts and fetches, and besets the version, in spite of
+ their best skill, with anti-Chaucerisms as thick as blackberries.</p>
+
+ <p>It might, at first sight, seem as if there could be no remorse
+ about dispersing the atmosphere of antiquity; and you might be
+ disposed to say&#8212;a thought is a thought, a feeling a feeling, a
+ fancy a fancy. Utter the thought, the feeling, the fancy, with what
+ words you will, provided that they are native to the matter, and the
+ matter will hold its own worth. No. There is more in poetry than the
+ definite, separable matter of a fancy, a feeling, a thought. There is
+ the indefinite, inseparable spirit, out of which they all arise,
+ which verifies them all, harmonizes them all, interprets them all.
+ There is the spirit of the poet himself. But the spirit of the time
+ in which a poet lives, flows through the spirit of the poet.
+ Therefore, a poet cannot be taken out of his own time, and rightly
+ and wholly understood. It seems to follow that thought, feeling,
+ fancy, which he has expressed, cannot be taken out of his own speech,
+ and his own style, and rightly and wholly understood. Let us bring
+ this home to Chaucer, and our occasion. The air of antiquity hangs
+ about him, cleaves to him; therefore he is the venerable Chaucer. One
+ word, beyond any other, expresses to us the difference betwixt his
+ age and ours&#8212;Simplicity. To read him after his own spirit, we
+ must be made simple. That temper is called up in us by the simplicity
+ of his speech and style. Touched by these, and under their power, we
+ lose our false habituations, and return to nature. But for this
+ singular power exerted over us, this dominion of an irresistible
+ sympathy, the hint of antiquity which lies in the language seems
+ requisite. That summons us to put off our own, and put on another
+ mind. In a half modernization, there lies the <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span> danger
+ that we shall hang suspended between two minds&#8212;between two
+ ages&#8212;taken out of one, and not effectually transported into
+ that other. Might a poet, if it were worth while, who had imbued
+ himself with antiquity and with Chaucer, depart more freely from him,
+ and yet more effectually reproduce him? Imitating, not erasing, the
+ colours of the old time&#8212;untying the strict chain that binds you
+ to the fourteenth century, but impressing on you candour, clearness,
+ shrewdness, ingenuous susceptibility, simplicity, <span class=
+ 'smcap'>Antiquity</span>! A creative translator or
+ imitator&#8212;Chaucer born again, a century and a half later.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us see how Wordsworth deals with Chaucer in the first seven
+ stanzas of the Cuckoo and Nightingale.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;The god of love, a benedicite!</span>
+ <span class="i2">How mighty and how gret a lord is he,</span>
+ <span class="i2">For he can make of lowè hertès highe,</span>
+ <span class="i2">Of highè lowe, and likè for to dye,</span>
+ <span class="i2">And hardè hertès he can maken fre.</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And he can make, within a litel
+ stounde,</span> <span class="i2">Of sekè folkè, holè, freshe, and
+ sounde,</span> <span class="i2">Of holè folkè he can maken
+ seke,</span> <span class="i2">And he can binden and unbinden
+ eke</span> <span class="i2">That he wol have ybounden or
+ unbounde.</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;To telle his might my wit may not
+ suffice,</span> <span class="i2">For he can make of wisè folke
+ ful nice,</span> <span class="i2">For he may don al that he wol
+ devise,</span> <span class="i2">And lither folkè to destroien
+ vice,</span> <span class="i2">And proudè hertès he can make
+ agrise.</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And shortly al that ever he wol he
+ may,</span> <span class="i2">Ayenès him dare no wight sayè
+ nay:</span> <span class="i2">For he can glade and grevè whom he
+ liketh:</span> <span class="i2">And whoso that he wol, he
+ lougheth or siketh,</span> <span class="i2">And most his might he
+ shedeth ever in May.</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;For every truè gentle hertè fre</span>
+ <span class="i2">That with him is or thinketh for to be</span>
+ <span class="i2">Ayenès May shal have now som stering,</span>
+ <span class="i2">Other to joie or elles to som mourning;</span>
+ <span class="i2">Other to joie or elles to som mourning;</span>
+ <span class="i2">In no seson so moch as thinketh me.</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;For whan they mayè here the briddès
+ singe,</span> <span class="i2">And se the flourès and the levès
+ springe,</span> <span class="i2">That bringeth into hire
+ rememberaunce</span> <span class="i2">A maner esè, medled with
+ grevaunce,</span> <span class="i2">And lusty thoughtès fulle of
+ gret longinge.</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And of that longinge cometh
+ hevinesse,</span> <span class="i2">And therof groweth oft gret
+ sekenesse,</span> <span class="i2">Al for lackinge of that that
+ they desire;</span> <span class="i2">And thus in May ben hertès
+ sette on fire,</span> <span class="i2">So that they brennen forth
+ in gret distresse.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <div class='smcap'>
+ <span class="i14">Wordsworth.</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;The God of love! Ah, benedicite,</span>
+ <span class="i2">How mighty and how great a lord is he,</span>
+ <span class="i2">For he of low hearts can make high, of
+ high</span> <span class="i2">He can make low and unto death bring
+ nigh,</span> <span class="i2">And hard hearts he can make them
+ kind and free.</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg
+ 126]</a></span> <span class="i2">&quot;Within a little time, as
+ hath been found,</span> <span class="i2">He can make sick folk
+ whole, and fresh, and sound.</span> <span class="i2">Them who are
+ whole in body and in mind</span> <span class="i2">He can make
+ sick, bind can he and unbind</span> <span class="i2">All that he
+ will have bound, or have unbound.</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;To tell his might my wit may not
+ suffice,</span> <span class="i2">Foolish men he can make them out
+ of wise;</span> <span class="i2">For he may do all that he will
+ devise,</span> <span class="i2">Loose livers he can make abate
+ their vice,</span> <span class="i2">And proud hearts can make
+ tremble in a trice.</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;In brief, the whole of what he will, he
+ may;</span> <span class="i2">Against him dare not any wight say
+ nay;</span> <span class="i2">To humble or afflict whome&#39;er he
+ will,</span> <span class="i2">To gladden or to grieve, he hath
+ like skill;</span> <span class="i2">But most his might he sheds
+ on the eve of May.</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;For every true heart, gentle heart and
+ free,</span> <span class="i2">That with him is, or thinketh so to
+ be,</span> <span class="i2">Now against May shall have some
+ stirring&#8212;whether</span> <span class="i2">To joy, or be it
+ to some mourning; never</span> <span class="i2">At other time,
+ methinks, in like degree.</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;For now when they may hear the small
+ birds&#39; song,</span> <span class="i2">And see the budding
+ leaves the branches throng,</span> <span class="i2">This unto
+ their rememberance doth bring</span> <span class="i2">All kinds
+ of pleasure, mix&#39;d with sorrowing,</span> <span class=
+ "i2">And longing of sweet thoughts that ever long.</span>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And of that longing heaviness doth
+ come,</span> <span class="i2">Whence oft great sickness grows of
+ heart and home;</span> <span class="i2">Sick are they all for
+ lack of their desire;</span> <span class="i2">And thus in May
+ their hearts are set on fire,</span> <span class="i2">So that
+ they burn forth in great martyrdom.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Here is the master of the art; and his work, most of all,
+ therefore, makes us doubt the practicability of the thing undertaken.
+ He works reverently, lovingly, surely with full apprehension of
+ Chaucer; and yet, at every word where he leaves Chaucer, the spirit
+ of Chaucer leaves the verse. You see plainly that his rule is to
+ change the least that can possibly be changed. Yet the gentle grace,
+ the lingering musical sweetness, the taking simplicity, of the wise
+ old poet, vanishes&#8212;brushed away like the down from the
+ butterfly&#39;s wing, by the lightest and most timorous touch.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;For he can make of lowè hertès
+ highe.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>There is the soul of the lover&#39;s poet, of the poet himself a
+ lover, poured out and along in one fond verse, gratefully consecrated
+ to the mystery of love, which he, too, has experienced when
+ he&#8212;the shy, the fearful, the reserved&#8212;was yet by the
+ touch of that all-powerful ray which</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;Shoots invisible virtue even to the
+ deep,&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>enkindled, and to his own surprise made elate to hope and to
+ dare.</p>
+
+ <p>But now contract, as Wordsworth does, the dedicated verse into a
+ half verse, and bring together the two distinct and opposite
+ mysteries under one enunciation&#8212;in short, divide the one verse
+ to two subjects&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;For he of low hearts can make
+ high&#8212;of high</span> <span class="i2">He can make
+ low;&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>and the fact vouched remains the same, the simplicity of the words
+ is kept, for they are the very words, and yet something is
+ gone&#8212;and in that something every thing! There is no longer the
+ dwelling upon the words, no longer the dilated utterance of a heart
+ that melts with its own thoughts, no longer the <span class=
+ 'pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+ consecration of the verse to its matter, no longer the softness, the
+ light, the fragrance, the charm&#8212;no longer, in a word, the old
+ manner. Here is, in short, the philosophical observation touching
+ love, &quot;the saw of might&quot; still; but the love itself here is
+ not. A kindly and moved observer speaks, not a lover.</p>
+
+ <p>In one of the above-cited stanzas, Urry seems to have misled
+ Wordsworth. Stanza iv. verse 4, Chaucer says:&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And whoso that he wol, he lougheth or
+ siketh.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The sense undoubtedly is, &quot;and whosoever <span class=
+ 'smcap'>he</span>&quot;&#8212;namely, the God of
+ Love&#8212;&quot;will, <span class=
+ 'smcap'>he</span>&quot;&#8212;namely, the Lover&#8212;&quot;laugheth
+ or sigheth accordingly.&quot; But Urry mistaking the
+ construction&#8212;supposed that <span class='smcap'>he</span>, in
+ both places, meant the god only. He had, therefore, to find out in
+ &quot;lougheth&quot; and &quot;siketh,&quot; actions predicable of
+ the love-god. The verse accordingly runs thus with him,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And who that he wol, he loweth or
+ siketh.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Now, it is true, that, after all, we do not exactly know how Urry
+ understood his own reading; for he did not make his own glossary. But
+ from his glossary, we find that &quot;to lowe&quot; is to praise, to
+ allow, to approve&#8212;furthermore that &quot;siketh&quot; in this
+ place means &quot;maketh sick.&quot; Wordsworth, following as it
+ would appear the lection of Urry, but only half agreeing to the
+ interpretation of Urry&#39;s glossarist, has rendered the line</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;To humble or afflict whome&#39;er he
+ will.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>He has understood in his own way, from an obvious suggestion,
+ &quot;loweth,&quot; to mean, maketh low, humbleth; whilst
+ &quot;afflict&quot; is a ready turn for &quot;maketh sick&quot; of
+ the glossary. But here Wordsworth cannot be in the right. For Chaucer
+ is now busied with magnifying the kingdom of love by accumulated
+ antitheses&#8212;high, low&#8212;sick, whole&#8212;wise,
+ foolish&#8212;the wicked turns good, the proud shrink and
+ fear&#8212;the God, at his pleasure, gladdens or grieves. The phrase
+ under question must conform to the manner of the place where it
+ appears. An opposition of meanings is indispensable. &quot;Humble or
+ afflict,&quot; which are both on one side, cannot be right.
+ &quot;Approveth or maketh sick,&quot; are on opposite sides, but will
+ hardly pick one another out for antagonists. &quot;Laugheth or
+ sigheth,&quot; has the vividness and simplicity of Chaucer, the most
+ exact contrariety matches them&#8212;and the two phenomena cannot be
+ left out of a lover&#39;s enumeration.</p>
+
+ <p>Chaucer says of his &#39;bosom&#39;s lord,&#39;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And most his might he sheddeth ever in
+ May&quot;&#8212;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>renowning here, as we saw that he does elsewhere, the whole month,
+ as love&#39;s own segment of the zodiacal circle. The time of the
+ poem itself is accordingly &#39;the thridde night of May.&#39;
+ Wordsworth has rendered,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;But most his might he sheds <i>on the eve
+ of May.</i>&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Why so? Is the approaching visitation of the power more strongly
+ felt than the power itself in presence? Chaucer says distinctly the
+ contrary, and why with a word lose, or obscure, or hazard the
+ appropriation of the month entire, so conspicuous a tenet in the old
+ poetical mind? And is Eve here taken strictly&#8212;the night before
+ May-day, like the <i>Pervigilium Veneris</i>? Or loosely, on the
+ verge of May, answerably to &#39;ayenes May&#39; afterwards? To the
+ former sense, we might be inclined to propose on the contrary
+ part,</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;But sheds his might most on the morrow of
+ May,&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><i>i.e.</i> in prose on May-day morning, consonantly to all the
+ testimonies.</p>
+
+ <p>Chaucer says that the coming-on of the love-month produces in the
+ heart of the lover</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;A maner easè medled with
+ grevaunce.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>That is to say, <i>a kind of</i> joy or pleasure, (Fr.
+ <i>aise</i>,) mixed with sadness. He insists, by this expression,
+ upon the strangeness of the kind, peculiar to the willing sufferers
+ under this unique passion, &quot;love&#39;s pleasing smart.&quot; Did
+ Wordsworth, by intention or misapprehension, leave out this turn of
+ expression, by which, in an age less forward than ours in sentimental
+ researches, Chaucer drew notice to the contradictory nature of the
+ internal state which he described? <span class='pagenum'><a name=
+ "Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span> As if Chaucer had said,
+ &quot;<i>al</i> maner esè,&quot; Wordsworth says, &quot;all kinds of
+ pleasure mixed with sorrowing.&quot;</p>
+
+ <p>In the next line he adds to the intuitions of his master, one of
+ his own profound intuitions, if we construe aright&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And longing of sweet thoughts that ever
+ long.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>That ever long! The sweetest of thoughts are never satisfied with
+ their own deliciousness. Earthly delight, or heavenly delight upon
+ earth, penetrating the soul, stirs in it the perception of its native
+ illimitable capacity for delight. Bliss, which should wholly possess
+ the blest being, plays traitor to itself, turns into a sort of divine
+ dissatisfaction, and brings forth from its teeming and infinite bosom
+ a brood of winged wishes, bright with hues which memory has bestowed,
+ and restless with innate aspirations. Such is our commentary on the
+ truly Wordsworthian line, but it is not a line answerable to
+ Chaucer&#39;s&#8212;</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <span class="i2">&quot;And lusty thoughtès full of gret
+ longinge.&quot;</span>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Is this hypercriticism? It is the only criticism that can be
+ tolerated betwixt two such rivals as Chaucer and Wordsworth. The
+ scales that weigh poetry should turn with a grain of dust, with the
+ weight of a sunbeam, for they weigh spirit. Or is it saying that
+ Wordsworth has not done his work as well as it was possible to be
+ done? Rather it is inferring, from the failure of the work in his
+ hand, that he and his colleagues have attempted that which was
+ impossible to be done. We will not here hunt down line by line. We
+ put before the reader the means of comparing verse with verse. We
+ have, with &#39;a thoughtful heart of love,&#39; made the comparison,
+ and feel throughout that the modern will not, cannot, do justice to
+ the old English. The quick sensibility which thrills through the
+ antique strain deserts the most cautious version of it. In short, we
+ fall back upon the old conviction, that verse is a sacred, and song
+ an inspired thing; that the feeling, the thought, the word, and the
+ musical breath spring together out of the soul in one creation; that
+ a translation is a thing not given in <i>rerum natura</i>;
+ consequently that there is nothing else to be done with a great poet
+ saving to leave him in his glory.</p>
+
+ <p>And our friend John Dryden? Oh, he is safe enough; for the new
+ translators all agree that his are no translations at all of Chaucer,
+ but original and excellent poems of his own.</p>
+
+ <p>A language that is half Chaucer&#39;s, and half that of his
+ renderer, is in great danger to be the language of nobody. But
+ Chaucer&#39;s has its own energy and vivacity which attaches you, and
+ as soon as you have undergone the due transformation by sympathy,
+ carries you effectually with it. In the moderate versions that are
+ best done, you miss this indispensable force of attraction. But
+ Dryden boldly and freely gives you himself, and along you sweep, or
+ are swept rejoicingly along. &quot;The grand charge to which his
+ translations are amenable,&quot; says Mr Horne, &quot;is, that he
+ acted upon an erroneous principle.&quot; Be it so. Nevertheless, they
+ are among the glories of our poetical literature. Mr Horne&#39;s,
+ literal as he supposes them to be, are unreadable. He, too, acts on
+ an erroneous principle; and his execution betrays throughout the
+ unskilful hand of a presumptuous apprentice. But he has &quot;every
+ respect for the genius, and for every thing that belongs to the
+ memory, of Dryden;&quot; and thus magniloquently eulogizes his most
+ splendid achievement:&#8212;&quot;The fact is, Dryden&#39;s version
+ of the &#39;Knight&#39;s Tale&#39; would be most appropriately read
+ by the towering shade of one of Virgil&#39;s heroes, walking up and
+ down a battlement, and waving a long, gleaming spear, to the roll and
+ sweep of his sonorous numbers.&quot;</p>
+ <hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+ <p class="center"><i>Edinburgh: Printed by Ballantyne and Hughes, Paul&#39;s
+ Work.</i></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Vol
+58, No. 357, July 1845, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE, JULY 1845 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 28336-h.htm or 28336-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/2/8/3/3/28336/
+
+Produced by Brendan OConnor, Patricia Bennett, Jonathan
+Ingram and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Library of Early
+Journals.)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+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
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>