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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Library Magazine of Select Foreign
+Literature, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Library Magazine of Select Foreign Literature
+ Volume 1, Part 1
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: John B. Alden
+
+Release Date: March 1, 2011 [EBook #35432]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAGAZINE OF SELECT FOREIGN LITERATURE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Bill Tozier, Christine D. and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ LIBRARY MAGAZINE
+
+ OF
+
+ Select Foreign Literature.
+
+ VOLUME 1.
+
+ NEW YORK:
+ JOHN B. ALDEN, PUBLISHER,
+ 1883.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE.
+
+ About Locusts. "Chambers's Journal," 511
+ Alcohol: Its Action and Uses. J. R. Gasquet, 597
+ American View of American Competition. Edward Atkinson, 335
+ American Churches, The Historical Aspect of the. Dean Stanley, 641
+ An Imperial Pardon. F. A. S., 64
+ Art Education in Great Britain. Sir Coutts Lindsay, 477
+ Artificial Somnambulism. Richard A. Proctor, 348
+ Association of Local Societies, The. J. Clifton Ward, 286
+ Atheism and the Church. G. H. Curteis, 217
+ Austin, Alfred. Farmhouse Dirge, 177
+ Atkinson, Edward. An American View of American Competition, 335
+ Baker, H. Barton. Theatrical Makeshifts and Blunders, 22
+ Bayne, Thomas. English Men of Letters,--Shelley, 153
+ Besant, Walter. Froissart's Love Story, 675
+ Biographies of the Season. "London Society," 404
+ Black, Algernon. Charles Lamb, 310
+ Blackie, John Stuart. On a Radical Reform in the Method of Teaching
+ the Classical Languages, 290
+ Blaikie, W. G. Ferney in Voltaire's Time and Ferney To-day, 230
+ Buchanan, Robert. Sydney Dobell--A Personal Sketch, 538
+ Bunbury, Clement. A Visit to the New Zealand Geysers, 761
+ Calculating Boys. Richard A. Proctor, 705
+ Chapters on Socialism. John Stuart Mill, 257
+ Chances of the English Opera, The. Francis Hueffer, 626
+ Christmas in Morocco. C. A. P. ("Sarcelle,") 75
+ Classical Education, On the Worth of a. Bonamy Price, 297
+ Cobbett, William: A Biography. Thomas Hughes, 326
+ Commercial Depression and Reciprocity. Bonamy Price, 578
+ Contemporary Life and Thought in France. G. Monod, 186
+ Contemporary Life and Thought in Russia. T. S., 312
+ Contentment. C. C. Fraser-Tytler, 285
+ Cooper, Basil H. Fresh Assyrian Finds, 463
+ Count Fersen, 244
+ Coup d'Etat, A, 21
+ Critic on the Hearth, The. James Payn, 696
+ Cupid's Workshop. Somerville Gibney, 453
+ Curteis, G. H. Atheism and the Church, 217
+ Dallas, W. S. Entomology, 470
+ Defence of Lucknow, The. Alfred Tennyson, 385
+ Desprez, Frank. The Vaquero, 104
+ Difficulties of Socialism, The. John Stuart Mill, 385
+ Discoveries of Astronomers, The.--Hipparchus. Richard A. Proctor, 237
+ Dreamland.--A Last Sketch. Julia Kavanagh, 181
+ English Men of Letters.--Shelley. Thomas Bayne, 153
+ English Opera, The Chances of. Francis Hueffer, 626
+ Entomology. W. S. Dallas, 470
+ Ewart, Henry C. The Schoolship Shaftesbury, 204
+ Farmhouse Dirge, A. Alfred Austin, 177
+ Ferney in Voltaire's Time and Ferney To-day. W. G. Blaikie, 230
+ Forbes, Archibald. Plain Words About the Afghan Question, 434
+ Fraser-Tytler, C. C. Contentment, 285
+ French Novels. "Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine," 723
+ French Republic and the Catholic Church, The. John Morley, 561
+ Fresh Assyrian Finds. Basil H. Cooper, 463
+ Friends and Foes of Russia, The. W. E. Gladstone, 129
+ Froissart's Love Story. Walter Besant, 675
+ Future of India, The. Sir Erskine Perry, 1
+ Gasquet, J. R. Alcohol: Its Action and Uses, 597
+ Gibney, Somerville. Cupid's Workshop, 453
+ Gladstone, W. E. Greece and the Treaty of Berlin, 663
+ Gladstone, W. E. Probability as the Guide of Conduct, 513
+ Gladstone, W. E. The Friends and Foes of Russia, 129
+ Greece and the Treaty of Berlin. W. E. Gladstone, 663
+ Greece, The Progress of. R. C. Jebb, 366
+ Growth of London, The, 158
+ Hamlet, "Mr. Irving's." "Temple Bar," 386
+ Happy Valley, The. L. A., 32
+ Harrison, Frederic. On the Choice of Books, 414
+ Historical Aspect of the American Churches, The. Dean Stanley, 641
+ Homes and Haunts of the Italian Poets, The--Guarini. T. Adolphus
+ Trollope, 85
+ Homes and Haunts of the Italian Poets, The.--Torquato Tasso. Frances
+ Eleanor Trollope, 434
+ Hueffer, Francis. The Chances of the English Opera, 626
+ Hughes, Thomas. William Cobbett: A Biography, 326
+ Japp, Alex. H. Winter Morn in Country and Winter Morn in Town, 31
+ Jebb, R. C. The Progress of Greece, 366
+ Kavanagh, Julia. Dreamland: A Last Sketch, 181
+ Lamb, Charles. Algernon Black, 310
+ Languages, Classical, On a Radical Reform in the Method of Teaching
+ the. John Stuart Blackie, 290
+ Leicester Square, Some Gossip About, 53
+ Lindsay, Sir Coutts. Art Education in Great Britain, 477
+ Manzoni's Hymn for Whitsunday. Dean Stanley, 637
+ Merivale, Herman C. The Royal Wedding, 508
+ Mill, John Stuart. The Difficulties of Socialism, 385
+ Mill, John Stuart. Chapters on Socialism, 257
+ Mivart, St. George. On the Study of Natural History, 609
+ Monod, G. Contemporary Life and Thought in France, 186
+ Morley, John. The French Republic and the Catholic Church, 561
+ Musical Cultus of the Present Day, The. H. Heathcote Statham, 687
+ On a Radical Reform in the Method of Teaching the Classical
+ Languages. John Stuart Blackie, 290
+ On Being Knocked Down and Picked Up Again.--A Consolatory Essay, 209
+ On the Choice of Books, Frederic Harrison, 414
+ On the Study of Natural History. St. George Mivart, 609
+ On the Worth of a Classical Education. Bonamy Price, 297
+ Payn, James. The Critic on the Hearth, 696
+ Perry, Sir Erskine. The Future of India, 1
+ Philological Society's English Dictionary, The. "The Academy," 639
+ Phoenicians in Greece, The. A. H. Sayce, 36
+ Plain Words About the Afghan Question. Archibald Forbes, 454
+ Price, Bonamy. Commercial Depression and Reciprocity, 578
+ Price, Bonamy. On the Worth of a Classical Education, 297
+ Probability as the Guide of Conduct. W. E. Gladstone, 513
+ Progress of Greece, The. R. C. Jebb, 366
+ Proctor, Richard A. Artificial Somnambulism, 348
+ Proctor, Richard A. Supposed Changes in the Moon, 111
+ Proctor, Richard A. Calculating Boys, 705
+ Proctor, Richard A. The Discoveries of Astronomers--Hipparchus, 237
+ Recollections of Thackeray, 126
+ Rose, Edward. Wagner as a Dramatist, 493
+ Royal Wedding, The. Herman C. Merivale, 508
+ Russia, The Friends and Foes of. W. E. Gladstone, 129
+ Sayce, A. H. The Phoenicians in Greece, 36
+ Schoolship Shaftesbury. Henry C. Ewart, 204
+ Schopenhauer on Men, Books and Music. "Fraser's Magazine," 751
+ Some Gossip About Leicester Square, 53
+ Socialism, Chapters on. John Stuart Mill, 257
+ Socialism, Difficulties of. John Stuart Mill, 388
+ Stanley, Dean. Manzoni's Hymn for Whitsunday, 637
+ Stanley, Dean. The Historical Aspect of the American Churches, 641
+ Statham, H. Heathcote. The Musical Cultus of the Present Day, 687
+ Supposed Changes in the Moon. Richard A. Proctor, 111
+ Sydney Dobell: A Personal Sketch. Robert Buchanan, 538
+ Tasso, Torquato. The Homes and Haunts of the Italian Poets. Frances
+ Eleanor Trollope, 434
+ Tennyson, Alfred. The Defence of Lucknow, 385
+ Thackeray, Recollections of, 126
+ Theatrical Makeshifts and Blunders. H. Barton Baker, 22
+ Their Appointed Seasons. J. G. Wood, 603
+ Through the Ages: A Legend of a Stone Axe. "New Quarterly Magazine," 557
+ Toilers in Field and Factory. "Time," 483
+ Toilers in Field and Factory, No. II.--Characteristics. "Time," 549
+ Transvaal, About the. "Chamber's Journal," 330
+ Trollope, Frances Eleanor. The Homes and Haunts of the Italian
+ Poets.--Torquato Tasso, 434
+ Trollope, T. Adolphus. The Homes and Haunts of the Italian Poets, 85
+ Two Modern Japanese Stories, 105
+ Valvedere, Adrian de. A Woman's Love--A Slavonian Study, 59
+ Vaquero, The. Frank Desprez, 101
+ Visit to the New Zealand Geysers, A. Clement Bunbury, 761
+ Wagner as a Dramatist. Edward Rose, 493
+ Ward, J. Clifton. The Association of Local Societies, 286
+ Winter Morn in Country--Winter Morn in Town. Alex. H. Japp, 31
+ Woman's Love. A. A Slavonian Study. Adrian de Valvedere, 59
+ Wood, J. G. Their Appointed Seasons, 603
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+LIBRARY MAGAZINE
+
+JANUARY, 1879.
+
+
+
+
+THE FUTURE OF INDIA.
+
+
+Speculation as to the political future is not a very fruitful occupation.
+In looking back to the prognostications of the wisest statesmen, it will
+be observed that they were as little able to foresee what was to come a
+generation or two after their death, as the merest dolt amongst their
+contemporaries. The Whigs at the beginning of the last century thought
+that the liberties of Europe would disappear if a prince of the House of
+Bourbon were securely fixed on the throne of Spain. The Tories in the last
+quarter of that century considered that if England lost her American
+provinces she would sink into the impotence of the Dutch Republic. The
+statesmen who assembled at the Congress of Vienna would have laughed any
+dreamer to scorn who should have suggested that in the lifetime of many of
+them Germany would become an empire in the hands of Prussia, France a
+well-organized and orderly republic, and the "geographical expression" of
+Italy vitalised into one of the great powers of Europe. Nevertheless, if
+politics is ever to approach the dignity of a science, it must justify a
+scientific character by its ability to predict events. The facts are too
+complicated, probably, ever to admit the application of exact deductive
+reasoning; and in the growth of civilised society new and unexpected forms
+are continually springing up. But though practical statesmen will not aim
+at results beyond the immediate future, it is impossible for men who pass
+their lives in the study of the difficult task of government to avoid
+speculations as to the future form of society to which national efforts
+should be directed. Some theory or other, therefore, is always present,
+consciously or unconsciously, to the mind of politicians.
+
+With respect to British India it may be observed that very different views
+of policy prevail. Native writers in the Indian press view their exclusion
+from all the higher offices of Government, and the efforts of Manchester
+to transfer 800,000_l._ per annum raised on cotton goods to increased
+taxation in India, as a policy based on mere selfishness; and a Russian
+journal, apparently in good faith, assured its readers the other day,
+that India pays into the British treasury an annual tribute of twenty to
+twenty-five millions sterling. On the other hand, some advanced thinkers
+amongst ourselves hold that India is a burden on our resources, and the
+cry of "Perish India!" so far as relates to its dependence on England, is
+considered to be not unsupported by sound reasoning. One of the ablest
+publicists of India, in a published letter to Sir George Campbell, has
+declared his conviction, after twenty years' experience in that country,
+that good government by the British in India is impossible.
+
+It may be admitted that exaggerated notions as to the pecuniary value of
+India to England prevail, and it must also be confessed that, with all our
+self-complacency as to the benefits of British rule, we have to accuse
+ourselves of several shortcomings. Nevertheless, it may be affirmed with
+confidence that the national instinct as to the value of our possessions
+in the East coincides with the views of our most enlightened statesmen. My
+colleague, Colonel Yule, has pointed out, I think with entire justice,
+that the task which we have proposed to ourselves in India, unlike that of
+the Dutch in Java, is to improve and elevate the two hundred millions
+under our charge to the utmost extent of our powers. The national
+conscience is not altogether satisfied with the mode in which some of our
+possessions have been acquired, but impartial inquiry demonstrates that
+unless a higher morality had prevailed than has ever yet been witnessed
+amongst the sons of men, the occasions for conquest and acquisition of
+territory that have presented themselves to the British during the last
+hundred years would not have been foregone by any nation in the world. But
+the feeling I allude to quickens the sense of our obligations to the
+inhabitants of India. Having undertaken the heavy task of their
+government, it is our duty to demonstrate to posterity that under British
+rule we have enabled them to advance in the route of civilization and
+progress. We recognise that in all probability so distant and extensive an
+empire cannot permanently remain in subjection to a small island in the
+West, and therefore our constant task is to render the population of India
+at some day or other capable of self-government. Is such a problem
+susceptible of a favourable solution? I propose to discuss this question
+in the following pages.
+
+
+I.
+
+The late Sir George Lewis once observed to me that in his opinion, it was
+labour lost to endeavour to make anything of the Hindus. They were a race
+doomed to subjection whenever they came into collision with peoples more
+vigorous than themselves. They possessed, in short, none of the elements
+which are requisite for self-government. Any opinion of that philosophic
+observer is entitled to grave consideration, and undoubtedly there is much
+in the history of the past that tends to justify the above desponding
+conclusion. The Persians, the Greeks, the Parthians, the Huns, the Arabs,
+the Ghaznivides, the Afghans, the Moguls, the Persians a second time, and
+the British have successfully entered India and made themselves masters of
+the greater part of it. But Sir George had never been called upon to make
+any particular study of Indian history, nor indeed was it open to him
+during the earlier period of his life, which was devoted exclusively to
+study, to acquire the knowledge of India which later erudition and
+research have brought to light. It is possible that a closer attention to
+what has occurred in the past may enable us to regard the future in a more
+favourable aspect. It will, I think, be found, after such a study, that
+more intrinsic vitality and greater recuperative power exist amongst the
+Hindu race than they have been generally accredited with. Unfortunately
+the ancient and copious literature of the Hindus presents extremely little
+of historic value. The tendency of the Indian mind to dreamy speculations
+on the unseen and the unknown, to metaphysics, and to poetry, has led to a
+thorough disregard of the valuable offices of history. Accordingly, we
+find in their great epic poems, which date back, according to the best
+orientalists, at least seven centuries before Christ, the few historical
+facts which are mentioned so enveloped in legends, so encumbered with the
+grossest exaggerations, that it requires assiduous scholarship to extract
+a scintilla of truth from their relations.
+
+Our distinguished countrymen, Sir William Jones and Mr. Colebrooke, led
+the way in applying the resources of European learning to the elucidation
+of the Sanscrit texts. And the happy identification, by the former, of the
+celebrated Chandragupta of the Hindus with the monarch of Pataliputra,
+Sandracottus, at whose court Megasthenes resided for seven years in the
+third century before Christ, laid the first firm foundation for authentic
+Indian history. Since that period the researches of oriental scholars
+following up the lines laid down by their illustrious predecessors; the
+rock inscriptions which have been collected from various parts of India,
+the coins, extending over many ages, of different native dynasties--all
+these compared together enable a student even as sceptical as Sir George
+Lewis to form a more favourable idea of the Hindus in their political
+capacity than he was disposed to take.
+
+Early European inquirers into Hindu antiquity, with the natural prejudice
+in favour of their studies in a hitherto unknown tongue, were disposed to
+lend far too credulous an ear to the gross exaggerations and reckless
+inaccuracies of the "Máhabhárat" and kindred works. James Mill on the
+other hand, who was a Positivist before Auguste Comte had begun to write,
+rejected with scorn all the allusions to the past in these ancient writers
+as entirely fabulous. Careful scholarship, however, working on the
+materials of the past which every day's discoveries are increasing,
+demonstrates that much true history is to be gathered from the works of
+the Sanscrit writers.
+
+The celebrated granite rock of Girnar[1] in the peninsula of Guzerat
+presents in itself an authentic record of three distinct dynasties
+separated from one another by centuries. And we owe to what may be justly
+called the genius of James Prinsep the decipherment of those inscriptions
+of Asoka which have brought to the knowledge of Europe a Hindu monarch of
+the third century before our era, who, whilst he has been equalled by few
+in the extent of his dominions, may claim superiority over nearly every
+king that ever lived, from his tender-hearted regard for the interests of
+his people, and from the wide principles of toleration which he
+inculcated.
+
+Horace Wilson, who may be safely cited as the most calm and judicious
+oriental scholar of our times, asserts that there is nothing to shock
+probability in supposing that the Hindu dynasties, of whom we trace
+vestiges, were spread through twelve centuries anterior to the war of the
+Máhabhárat.[2] This leads us back to dates about 2600 years B.C. We have,
+therefore, the astounding period of over four thousand years during which
+to glean facts relating to the Hindu race and their capacity for
+government, such as may form foundation for conclusions as to the future.
+The characteristics which have most impressed themselves on my mind after
+such study of Indian records as I have been able to bestow are, first, the
+very early appearance of solicitude for the interest and welfare of the
+people, as exhibited by Hindu rulers, such as has rarely or never been
+exhibited in the early histories of other nations; secondly, the
+successful efforts of the Hindu race to re-establish themselves in power
+on the least appearance of decay in the successive foreign dynasties which
+have held rule among them. It is only with the latter phenomenon that I
+propose now to deal, and a rapid retrospect may be permitted.
+
+We learn from European records that Cyrus made conquests in India in the
+sixth century B.C., and the famous inscription of his successor Darius
+includes Sind and the modern Afghanistan amongst his possessions. But when
+Alexander entered India two centuries later he found no trace of Persian
+sway, but powerful Indian princes. Taxiles, Abisares, and the celebrated
+Porus ruled over large kingdoms in the Panjáb. The latter monarch, whose
+family name Paura is recorded in the Máhabhárat, is described by the Greek
+writers to have ruled over 300 cities, and he brought into the field
+against Alexander more than 2,000 elephants, 400 chariots, 4,000 cavalry,
+and 50,000 foot. Against this force Alexander was only able to bring
+16,000 foot and 5,000 horse; but the bulk of the troops were Macedonians,
+and the leader was the greatest general whom the world has seen. We have
+full particulars of the celebrated battle which ensued, and which ended in
+the complete discomfiture of Porus. The conduct of this Indian king,
+however, in the battle extorted the admiration of the Greek historians. He
+received nine wounds during the engagement, and was the last to leave the
+field, affording, as Arrian remarks, a noble contrast to Darius the
+Second, who was the first to fly amongst his host in his similar conflict
+with the Greeks. Alexander, as in the Macedonian conquests generally,
+left satraps in possession of his Indian acquisitions. But a very few
+years ensued before we find a native of India had raised up a mighty
+kingdom, and all trace of Greek rule in the Punjab disappears.
+Chandragupta, or Sandracottus, is said by a Greek writer to have seen
+Alexander in person on the Hydaspes. Justin relates that it was he who
+raised the standard of independence before his fellow-countrymen, and
+successfully drove out Alexander's satraps. He founded the Maurya dynasty,
+and the vast extent of the kingdom ruled over by his grandson Asoka is
+testified by the edicts which the latter caused to be engraved in various
+parts of his dominions. They also record the remarkable fact of his close
+alliance with the Greek rulers of Syria, Egypt, Macedon, Cyrene and
+Epirus. We next find that one of the Greek princes who had established an
+independent dynasty in Bactria, Euthydemus, invaded India, and made
+several conquests, but he also was met in the field and overcome by
+Galoka, son of Asoka, who for some time added Cashmir to his possessions.
+The Bactrian dynasty was put an end to by Mithridates, 140 B.C., and
+consequently the Greeks were driven eastwards, and they planted themselves
+in various parts of India. We find clear traces of them in Guzerat, where
+the town of Junaghur (Javanaghur) still records the name of the Greeks who
+founded the city. The coins and inscriptions of the Sinha rulers of
+Guzerat furnish us with some particulars as to the Greek holdings at this
+period, and they seem to have extended from the Jumna on the east to
+Guzerat and Kutch on the west. The Macedonians seem here, as elsewhere, to
+have placed natives at the head of their district administrations, and the
+Sinha rulers call themselves Satraps and Máha Rajahs, and use Greek
+legends on their coins, but evidently they soon acquired complete
+independence. Simultaneously or nearly so with these Indo-Greek
+principalities, we find invasions of India by the race commonly called
+Scythians, but more accurately Jutchi, Sacć, and White Huns. These also
+formed independent kingdoms. But again native leaders of enterprise arose
+who put an end to foreign dominion. Vikramadit, who founded an era 57
+B.C., and whose exploits have made a deep impression upon the native mind,
+is thought to be one of the Hindu leaders who succeeded in expelling a
+foreign dynasty. And it would appear that towards the middle of the third
+century after Christ all foreign dominion had disappeared from the soil of
+India, except perhaps some small settlements of Jutchi, on the banks of
+the Indus; and except the temporary conquest of Sind by the Arabs in the
+seventh century, from which they were soon expelled by the Sumea
+Rajputs[3]. Thus, during a period of 600 years, we have encountered a
+series of invasions and conquests of portions of India by foreign rulers,
+but all successively driven out by the energy of native leaders. Thereupon
+followed the establishment of native dynasties all over India. It was
+chiefly during the 700 years that now ensued, up to the invasion of India
+by Mahmud of Ghazni, that the great works of Sanscrit literature in
+poetry, grammar, algebra, and astronomy, appeared. During this period also
+the Rajputs, who have been well called the Normans of the East, seem to
+have found their way to nearly every throne in India. Their acquisition of
+power has never been fully traced, and probably the materials are wanting
+for any full or accurate account of it; but the subject is well worthy the
+attention of an Indian student.
+
+The Mahomedan conquests which, with the fanaticism and savage intolerance
+introduced by them, commenced A.D. 1001, seem to have exercised most
+depressing effects on the Hindu mind. But here again we meet with the same
+phenomenon. So soon as the Mussulman rule becomes enfeebled, a native
+chief rises up who is enabled to rally his countrymen around him and form
+a dynasty. Sivaji in 1660-80 established an independency which his
+successors, as mayors of the palace, enlarged into a kingdom, out of which
+arose the native powers of Sindia, of the Gaekwar, and of the Bhonslas of
+Berar. Exactly the same occurrence has been witnessed in the present
+century by the success of Ranjit Sing in forming an independent
+principality in the Panjáb. This remarkable man, who was absolutely
+illiterate, by his own energy of character raised himself from the head of
+a small Sikh clan to the head of a kingdom with a revenue of two and a
+half millions sterling.[4] We may be sure that, if the British had not
+been in force, natives of soldierly qualities like Jung Bahádar of Nepal,
+or Tantia Topi of the mutinies, would have carved out in the present day
+kingdoms for themselves in other parts of India.
+
+
+II.
+
+It may be thought that in the preceding sketch I have been aiming at the
+conclusion that British dominion is in danger of extinction either by
+foreign invasion or internal insurrection. Nothing is more foreign from my
+views. I firmly believe that British rule in the East was never so strong,
+never so able to protect itself against all attacks from without or from
+within, as at the present moment. In a foreign dominion such as ours,
+where unforeseen contingencies may any day arise, and where a considerable
+amount of disaffection must always exist, constant watchfulness on the
+part of Government is no doubt required; but this position is thoroughly
+recognised by all statesmen who occupy themselves with Indian affairs. I
+do not for a moment delude myself with the idea that we have succeeded in
+gaining the affections of the natives. No foreign rulers who have kept
+themselves apart as a separate caste from the conquered nation have
+succeeded in accomplishing this feat. There is something of
+incompatibility between the European and Asiatic, which seems to forbid
+easy amalgamation. Lord Stowell, in one of his fine judgments, has pointed
+out the constant tendency of Europeans in the East to form themselves into
+separate communities, and to abstain from all social intercourse with the
+natives around them, and he illustrates his position with the happy
+quotation--
+
+ Scyllis amara suam non intermiscuit undam.
+
+The English perhaps are distinguishable among all European nations by the
+deep-rooted notions of self-superiority which their insular position and
+great success in history have engendered. The southern races of Europe,
+the Spanish and Portuguese, have shown no reluctance to intermix freely
+with the native races of America, India, and the Philippines, such as has
+always been exhibited by inhabitants of the British Isles when expatriated
+to the East or West. But where race, color, religion, prejudice intervene
+to prevent social intercourse between the English in India and the
+natives, what a wide gulf is placed between them!
+
+In justice, however, it must be stated that, although the haughtiness of
+demeanour and occasional brutality in manners which the _aristocratie de
+peau_ sometimes engenders in our countrymen are much to be deprecated, the
+estrangement which exists in India between the English and the natives is
+not wholly, nor even principally, attributable to the former. A Hindu of
+very humble caste would think himself polluted if he sat down to dinner
+with the European governor of his Presidency. In this instance, as in so
+many others, Hindu opinions have permeated the whole native community; and
+other races transplanted to India, such as Mahomedans and Parsis, are
+equally exclusive in their social life. When I was in Bombay I made an
+attempt to break through the barrier which the latter caste had
+voluntarily erected for themselves. Sir Jamshedji Jijibhai, an able,
+self-raised man, was then the acknowledged head of the Parsi community,
+and was distinguished for his benevolence and enlightened views. I
+endeavored to persuade him to set his countrymen an example, and to come
+to a dinner at which I would assemble the chief authorities of the island;
+and I proposed to him as an inducement that he should send his own cook,
+who should prepare for him his wonted fare. But the step was too startling
+a one for him, though I was glad to find that his son, the second baronet,
+was able to get over his prejudices on his visit, some years after, to
+London. A ludicrous example of the same exclusive feeling has been related
+in connection with a Governor-General. His lordship, desirous to break
+down any notion of social inferiority on the part of a distinguished
+native who was paying him a visit, placed his arm round his neck as they
+walked up and down a verandah engaged in familiar conversation. The
+high-bred Oriental made no sign, but as soon as he could extricate himself
+from the embraces of his Excellency, he hastened home to wash away the
+contamination of a Mlecha's touch.
+
+It may also be observed that the mutual repugnance of the two races to
+such close social intercourse as intermarriage, for example, would
+produce, gives rise to two excellent results. First, there is every reason
+to suppose, judging by what we see of the native Portuguese in India, that
+the English and Hindu would make, in the language of breeders, a very bad
+cross; and it is therefore satisfactory to find that English rulers in
+India, unlike the Normans in England, or the Moguls in India, have never
+intermarried with the natives of the country. The second result is closely
+connected with the first. What has led to the downfall of previous
+foreign dynasties has been that the invaders of the country had become
+effeminate by their long possession of power, and had lost the original
+energy and vigour which had enabled their predecessors to gain a throne.
+The constant recruitment of English rulers from their fatherland wholly
+prevents this cause of internal decay from making its appearance among the
+British.
+
+It is not, then, by our hold on the affections of the people that we
+maintain our dominion in India. The strength and probable endurance of our
+rule are based on our real power, on our endeavours to do justice, on our
+toleration. The memory of the excesses committed under Mussulman rule has
+probably become dim with the great bulk of the people, but it is very
+vivid among educated Hindus. A strong conviction prevails among them that
+if British rule were to disappear in India, the same rise of military
+adventurers, the same struggles for power, and the same anarchy as
+prevailed during the first half of the last century would again appear.
+The latest expression of Hindu opinion on this subject which I have met
+with is contained in a pamphlet published in the present year by Mr.
+Dadoba Pandurang.[5] He is an aged scholar, and though not a Brahmin, well
+versed in the Vedas, but, above all, he is distinguished by his devout
+views and by his desire to elevate and improve his fellow-countrymen. He
+writes:--
+
+ If there is a manifestation of the hand of God in history,
+ as I undoubtedly believe there is, nothing to my imagination
+ appears more vivid and replete with momentous events
+ calculated for the mutual welfare and good of both countries
+ than this political union of so large, important, rich, and
+ interesting a country as Hind in the further south-east with
+ a small but wisely governed island of Great Britain in the
+ further north-west.... Let us see what England has done to
+ India. England, besides governing India politically, has now
+ very wisely commenced the important duty of educating the
+ millions of her Indian children, and of bringing them up to
+ the standard of enlightenment and high civilization which
+ her own have obtained. She has already eradicated, I should
+ add here, to the great joy of Heaven, several of the most
+ barbarous and inhuman practices, such as Sutti,[6]
+ infanticide, Charak Puja,[7] and what not, which had for
+ ages been prevalent among a large portion of the children of
+ this her new acquisition. These practices, which had so long
+ existed at the dictation of an indigenous priesthood, except
+ for the powerful interference of England could not have been
+ abolished.
+
+Opinions like these, I am persuaded, prevail throughout the educated
+community, and the presence of British rule amongst them is recognised as
+indispensable in the present state of Hindu society.
+
+
+III.
+
+With respect to a successful invasion of India, it must be confessed that
+the English mind has always been keenly susceptible of alarm. The wide
+plains of Hisdustan, which offer so ready an access to aggressive armies,
+the absence of fortified places, and the frequency with which India has
+been won and lost in a single pitched battle, all tend to encourage the
+belief that some day or other British domination will be in danger from
+some incursion of this sort. It may be observed that for nearly a century
+past the English nation has been subjected to periodic fits of Indian
+panic. Sir John Kaye, in his "History of the Afghan War," states that in
+1797 the whole of India was kept "in a chronic state of unrest" from the
+fears of an Afghan descent upon the plains of Hindustan. In 1800 the
+Emperor Paul of Russia and Napoleon conceived "a mad and impracticable
+scheme of invasion," which greatly increased local alarm. In 1809 these
+fears assumed even larger proportions when an alliance between Napoleon
+and Persia was on foot with a view to the proposed invasion; and the
+mission to Persia under Sir John Malcolm was inaugurated. In 1838 Russia
+took the place which Zeman Shah, Persia, and Napoleon had previously
+occupied, and the disastrous invasion of Afghanistan was commenced by Lord
+Auckland from his mountain retreat at Simla.
+
+Since that period the suspicions of the nation have been continually
+directed against Russia by a small but able party, who, from their chiefly
+belonging to the Presidency of Bombay, have been termed the Bombay school.
+The late General John Jacob was the originator of the anti-Russian policy
+inculcated by them. He was a man of great ability and original views, and,
+if he had moved in a wider sphere, he might have left a name equal to that
+of the most illustrious of his countrymen in India. But he passed the
+greater part of his life on the barren wastes of Sind, and rarely came in
+contact with superior minds. In 1856 General Jacob addressed a singularly
+able paper to Lord Canning, then Governor-General, and which Sir Lewis
+Pelly afterwards published to the world.[8] This was just at the close of
+the Crimean War, when England was about to undertake an expedition against
+Persia to repel her aggression on Herát. It was Jacob's firm conviction
+that, unless India interposed, Russia, having Persia completely under her
+control, could, whenever she pleased, take possession not only of Herát,
+but of Candahar, and thus find an entrance to the plains of India, on
+which our dominion was to disappear. To thwart this contingency, and
+render the approach of a European army towards our frontier impossible, he
+would, as an ultimate measure, garrison Herát with twenty thousand troops,
+but in the first instance would occupy Quetta. These proposals were
+carefully considered by Lord Canning's Government, but were rejected.
+
+The same arguments were brought forward eleven years later by Sir Bartle
+Frere, whilst Governor of Bombay, and were laid before the Government of
+India. That Government was then remarkably strong, consisting of Lord
+Lawrence, Sir William Mansfield (Lord Sandhurst), Sir Henry Maine, Mr.
+Massey, and Major-General Sir Henry Durand; but the proposals to improve
+our frontier by extending our dominions westward, and by the annexation of
+independent foreign territory, were unanimously disapproved of.
+
+About the same time that Sir Bartle Frere was endeavouring to stimulate
+the Government of India to occupy Quetta, my distinguished colleague and
+friend, Sir Henry Rawlinson, published two articles in the "Quarterly
+Review,"[9] in which he called the attention of the public to the rapidly
+increasing extension of the Russian dominions in the direction of our
+Indian frontier, and to the necessity of maintaining outworks such as
+Herát and Candahar for the protection of our Eastern Empire. But he raised
+the question in a more solemn form in the confidential memorandum which he
+transmitted to the Government of India in 1868, and which he afterwards
+published in 1875,[10] with additional matter, forming a complete
+conspectus of the aggressive policy to be adopted to guard against a
+Russian invasion. The views of the Government of India on these papers
+have not, I believe, been given to the world, but it is well known in
+Indian circles that the masterly activity therein advocated did not find
+acceptance.
+
+At the present moment Russophobia is raging to a greater extent than at
+any previous period; but this is ground on which for the present I am
+precluded from entering. It is gratifying to observe, however, that in the
+great conflict of opinion which, as it will be seen, has thus been raging
+for the last forty years, as to the best method of protecting our
+north-western frontier from an invading foe, both schools have ultimately
+agreed on one conclusion, namely, that a successful invasion of India by
+Russia is in nowise probable. The one side would avert any possibility of
+an attack by the occupation of Afghanistan, the Suleiman mountains, and
+probably the Hindu Kush; the other would husband the resources of India,
+and not waste blood and treasure in anticipation of a conflict that may
+possibly never occur, and that certainly never will occur without years of
+warning to the nation.
+
+I cannot pursue this interesting question further at a moment when the
+whole question of our policy on the Indian frontier is ripening for
+discussion, and when the materials on which a sound conclusion can be
+drawn are not yet laid before the public. It is sufficient for my present
+purpose to repeat that the probability of British dominion in the East
+being terminated by a Russian invasion is rejected on all sides.
+
+
+IV.
+
+If the views which have been now put forward are at all sound, we may
+perhaps conclude that whilst our Indian empire requires on the part of its
+rulers the utmost watchfulness to guard against dangers and contingencies
+which may at any moment arise, yet that with ordinarily wise government we
+may look forward to a period of indefinitely long duration during which
+British dominion may flourish. That sooner or later the links which
+connect England with India will be severed, all history teaches us to
+expect; but when that severance occurs, if the growing spirit of
+philantrophy and increasing sense of national morality which characterise
+the nineteenth century continue, we may fairly hope that the Englishman
+will have taught the Hindus how to govern themselves. It is England's
+task, as heretofore, "to teach other nations how to live." A very long
+period, however, is required before the lesson can be fully learned, and
+the holders of Indian securities need not fear that the reversionary
+interests of their grandchildren will be endangered. Our rule in India
+dates back little more than a century; and although from the first a wise
+spirit of toleration and an eminent desire to do justice have prevailed,
+it is only within the last thirty or forty years that any serious attempts
+to elevate the character of the nation have been manifested.
+
+The educational movement, which is silently producing prodigious changes
+in India, received its first impulse from England, and the clause in the
+Act of Parliament[11] which recognised the duty of educating the masses,
+enabled men like Lord Macaulay, Sir Edward Ryan, and others, to lay the
+foundations of a system which has since established itself far and wide.
+But the Court of Directors never took heartily to this great innovation of
+modern times, and it was only under the direction of English statesmanship
+that the Indian authorities were induced to act with vigour in this
+momentous undertaking. Sir Charles Wood's celebrated minute on education,
+in 1858, laid the foundation of a national system of education, and the
+principles then inculcated have never since been departed from. Some
+generations will require to pass before the Oriental mind is enabled to
+substitute the accurate forms of European thought for the loose
+speculations that have prevailed through long centuries. But already happy
+results are appearing, and in connection with the subject of this article
+it may be noticed as a most hopeful sign of the future that our English
+schools are turning out native statesmen by whom all our best methods of
+government are being introduced into the dominions of native princes.
+
+The administration reports of some of these gentlemen may vie with those
+of our best English officers; and the names of Sir Dinkar Rao, Sir Madava
+Rao, Sir Salar Jung, and others, give full indication that among the
+natives of India may be found men eminently qualified for the task of
+government. Wittingly or unwittingly, English officials in India are
+preparing materials which some day or other will form the groundwork for a
+native empire or empires. I was thrown closely into contact with the Civil
+Service whilst I was in India, for I employed all my vacations in
+travelling through the country, mostly at a foot's pace. Everywhere I went
+I found a cultivated English gentleman exerting himself to the best of his
+ability to extend the blessings of civilisation--justice, education, the
+development of all local resources. I firmly believe that no government in
+the world has ever possessed a body of administrators to vie with the
+Civil Service of India. Nor do I speak only of the service as it existed
+under the East India Company, for, from all that I have heard and
+observed, competition supplies quite as good servants of the State as did
+in earlier days the patronage of the Court of Directors. The truth is,
+that the excellence of the result has been attributable in nowise to the
+mode of selection, but to the local circumstances which call forth in
+either case, in the young Englishman of decent education and of the moral
+tone belonging to the middle classes of this country, the best qualities
+of his nature. But in these energetic, high-principled, and able
+administrators we have a danger to good government which it is necessary
+to point out. Every Englishman in office in India has great power, and
+every Englishman, as the late Lord Lytton once observed to me, is in heart
+a reformer. His native energy will not enable him to sit still with his
+hands before him. He must be improving something. The tendency of the
+English official in India is to over-reform, to introduce what he may deem
+improvements, but which turn out egregious failures, and this, be it
+observed, amongst the most conservative people of the world. Some of the
+most carefully devised schemes for native improvement have culminated in
+native deterioration. A remarkable illustration of this position is
+afforded by the late inquiry into the causes of the riots among the
+cultivators of the Deccan. It has been one of the pretensions of British
+administration that they have instituted for the first time in India pure
+and impartial courts of justice. And the boast is well founded. In the
+Presidency of Bombay also the Government has substituted long leases of
+thirty years on what may be called Crown Lands for the yearly holdings
+formerly in vogue. They have also greatly moderated the assessment. The
+result has been that land in the Bombay Presidency from being unsaleable
+has acquired a value of from ten to twenty years' purchase. But the effect
+of these two measures upon the holders of these lands has been disastrous.
+Finding themselves possessed of property on which they could raise money
+with facility, they have indulged this national propensity out of all
+proportion to their means; and the money-lenders in their turn drag the
+improvident borrowers before a court of justice, and obtain decrees upon
+the indisputable terms of the contract, which no judge feels competent to
+disregard.
+
+Another danger of the same sort arises from the short term of office which
+is allowed to officials in the highest places in India. When the
+Portuguese had large dominions in India, they found that their Viceroys,
+if permitted to remain a long time in the East, became insubordinate, and
+too powerful for the Government at Lisbon to control. They accordingly
+passed a law limiting the tenure of office to five years. This limitation
+seems to have been adopted tacitly in our Eastern administrative system,
+and has undoubtedly been observed for more than a century. But the period
+of five years is very short to enable either a Governor-General, or
+Governor, or member of Council to leave his mark on the country; and there
+is a temptation to attempt something dazzling which would require for its
+proper fulfilment years to elaborate, but which, if not passed at the
+moment, would fail to illustrate the era.
+
+It is needless to observe that a series of ill-considered changes, a
+constant succession of new laws to be followed by amended laws in the next
+session, attempts to change manners and practices (not immoral in
+themselves) that have prevailed for centuries, all tend to make a
+government, especially a foreign government, odious. But there is one
+other rock which it is above all essential to avoid when we are
+considering the problem how best to preserve the duration of British
+government for the benefit of India. Every ardent administrator desires
+improvements in his own department; roads, railways, canals, irrigation,
+improved courts of justice, more efficient police, all find earnest
+advocates in the high places of government. But improved administration is
+always costly, and requires additional taxation. I fear that those in
+authority too often forget that the wisest rulers of a despotic government
+have always abstained from laying fresh burdens on the people. It is, in
+fact, the chief merit of such a government that the taxes are ordinarily
+light, and are such as are familiarised by old usage. New taxes imposed
+without the will, or any appeal to the judgment, of the people create the
+most dangerous kind of disaffection. But if this is true generally, it is
+especially true in India, where the population is extremely poor, and
+where hitherto the financier has not been enabled to make the rich
+contribute their due quota to the revenue of the country.
+
+It has been said by some that we have not yet reached the limits of
+taxation in India, but to them I would oppose the memorable saying of Lord
+Mayo towards the close of his career. "A feeling of discontent and
+dissatisfaction existed," in his opinion, "among every class, both
+European and native, on account of the constant increase of taxation that
+had for years been going on;" and he added: "The continuance of that
+feeling was a political danger, the magnitude of which could hardly be
+over-estimated." The Earl of Northbrook quoted and fully endorsed this
+opinion in his examination before the House of Commons in the present
+year.[12]
+
+But although this constant aim at improvement among our English
+administrators too often leads to irritating changes, harassing
+legislation, and new fiscal charges on the people, causes are at work
+which tend to eliminate these obstacles to good and stable government. In
+our experimental application of remedies to evils patent on the surface,
+our blunders have chiefly arisen from our ignorance of the people.
+Institutions that had been seen to work well in Europe might, it was
+thought, be transplanted safely to India. Experience alone could teach
+that this is often a grievous error; but experience is being daily
+afforded by our prolonged rule, and by our increasing acquaintance with
+the habits, wants, and feelings of the people. The tendency also to change
+and improvement, which I have before observed upon as leading to
+ill-considered measures, operates here beneficially, for there is never
+any hesitation in a local government to reverse the proceedings of its
+predecessors when found to work injuriously for the community.
+
+But the most cheering symptom of future good government in India is the
+increased disposition of British rulers to associate natives of character
+and ability with themselves in high offices of administration. Parliament
+so long ago as 1833 laid down the principle that no native shall by reason
+of his religion, place of birth, or colour, be disabled from holding any
+office. Her gracious Majesty also in 1858 proclaimed her will "that so far
+as may be, our subjects, of whatever race or creed, be impartially
+admitted to offices in our service, the duties of which they may be
+qualified by their education, ability, and integrity duly to discharge."
+
+Many obstacles have hitherto prevailed, chiefly arising out of the vested
+interests of a close Civil Service, to prevent full operation being given
+to a policy so solemnly laid down. But it is no breach of official
+propriety to announce that Lord Cranbrook has earnestly taken up the
+proposals of the present Viceroy to clear away the difficulties which have
+hitherto intervened, and has sent out a despatch to India which it may be
+fairly anticipated will meet the aspirations of educated natives, and will
+greatly strengthen the foundations of British government in the East.
+
+It will thus be seen that several factors are at work which cannot fail,
+under the continued rule of the British Government, to have most
+beneficial effects on the national character of India. A system of
+education is being established which is opening a door for the
+introduction of all the knowledge accumulated in Europe, and which sooner
+or later must greatly dissipate that ignorance which is at the bottom of
+so many obstacles to good government in the East. Equality before the law
+and the supremacy of law have been fully brought home to the cognisance of
+every inhabitant of India, and they form a striking contrast, fully
+appreciated by the Hindus, to the arbitrary decisions and the race
+prerogatives which characterised their former Mahomedan rulers. Continuous
+efforts at improvement are witnessed in every zillah of India, and if they
+sometimes fail in their operation it is still patent that the permanent
+welfare of the people is the constant aim and object of Government.
+Moreover, the ready ear tendered to any expression of a grievance, the
+minute subjection of every act of authority in India, from the deputy
+magistrate up to the Governor-General, to the scrutiny of the Home
+Government, secure to the meanest inhabitant of India a hearing, and
+inspire the consciousness that he also is a member of the State, and that
+his rights and interests are fully recognised. The association of natives
+with ourselves in the task of government, which has been commenced in the
+lower branches of the judicial administration with the greatest success,
+and which is now about to be attempted on a larger scale, as I have before
+noted, is also a fact of the greatest gravity. On the whole, after very
+close attention to Indian administration for nearly forty years, of which
+about twelve were spent in the country itself in a position where I was
+enabled to take an impartial view of what was going on around me, I am of
+opinion that a bright future presents itself, and, if I could see my way
+more clearly on the very important questions of caste and of the future
+religion of India, I should say a brilliant future, in which perhaps for
+centuries to come the supremacy of England will produce the happiest
+results in India.
+
+
+V.
+
+But I must not close this article without reference to the very different
+views which have been lately put forth in this Review under the
+sensational title of the "Bankruptcy of India." Mr. Hyndman, after much
+study of Indian statistics, has arrived at the conclusion that "India has
+been frightfully impoverished under our rule, and that the process is
+going on now at an increasingly rapid rate." The revenue raised by
+taxation is about 36,000,000_l._, and "is taken absolutely out of the
+pockets of the people," three-fourths of whom are engaged in agriculture.
+The increase of 12,000,000_l._ in the revenue which has occurred between
+1857 and 1876 "comes almost entirely out of the pockets of the
+cultivators," and "the greater part of the increase of the salt, stamps,
+and excise is derived from the same source." The cost of maintaining a
+prisoner in the cheapest part of India is 56_s._ a head, or, making
+allowance for children, 46_s._; but the poor cultivator has only 31_s._
+6_d._, from which he must also defray the charges "for sustenance of
+bullocks, the cost of clothing, repairs to implements, house, &c., and
+_for taxation_."
+
+He states the debt of India to be "enormous," amounting to 220,000,000_l._
+sterling, principally accumulated in the last few years. The railways have
+been constructed at ruinous cost, for which the "unfortunate ryot has had
+to borrow an additional five or ten or twenty rupees of the native
+money-lender at 24, 40, 60 per cent., in order to pay extra taxation."
+Irrigation works "tell nearly the same sad tale. Here again millions have
+been squandered--squandered needlessly." Moreover, the land is fast
+becoming deteriorated or is being worse cultivated. In short, through a
+long indictment of twenty-three pages, of which I omit many counts, he
+cannot find a single act of British administration that meets his
+approval. All is naught. It is true that the Civil Service of India is
+composed of men who have gained their posts by means of the best education
+that England can supply, and who from an early period of manhood have
+devoted their lives to the practical solution of the many difficult
+problems which Indian administration presents. But Mr. Hyndman finds fault
+with them all.
+
+The article itself is couched in such an evident spirit of philanthropy
+that one feels unwilling to notice pointedly the blunders, the
+exaggerations, and the inaccuracies into which the writer has fallen. But
+Mr. Hyndman has entered the lists so gallantly with a challenge to all the
+Anglo-Indian world, that he of course expects to encounter some hard
+knocks, writing, as he does, on a subject with which he has no practical
+acquaintance. He has already received "a swashing blow" respecting the
+agricultural statistics on which he bases the whole of his argument. On
+data supplied to him by an able native writer, whom I know intimately and
+for whom I have the highest respect, he has drawn conclusions which are
+so manifestly absurd, that all practically acquainted with the subject are
+tempted to throw aside his article as mere rubbish. But Mr. Dádobhai, like
+himself, has no knowledge of the rural life of India, or of agriculture
+generally, or of the practical business of administration. He is a man who
+has passed his whole life in cities, an excellent mathematician, of
+unwearied industry, and distinguished, even among his countrymen, for his
+patriotic endeavours to improve their condition. But the mere study of
+books and of figures--especially of the imperfect ones which hitherto have
+characterised the agricultural statistics of India--is not sufficient to
+constitute a great administrator; and when Mr. Dádobhai, after making
+himself prominent by useful work in the municipality of Bombay, was
+selected to fill the high office of Prime Minister to the Gaekwar of
+Baroda, he was not deemed by his countrymen to have displayed any great
+aptitude in statesmanship.[13]
+
+The alarming picture drawn by Mr. Hyndman on data thus supplied attracted
+the attention of the greatest authority in England on agricultural
+matters; for intrinsic evidence clearly shows that the letters signed
+"C.," which appeared in the _Times_ of the 5th of October and the 9th of
+October, can proceed from no other than Mr. Caird. His refutation of Mr.
+Hyndman's pessimist views is so short, that I give the pith of it here:--
+
+ The conclusions arrived at are so startling that though,
+ like Mr. Hyndman, I have never been in India, I, as an
+ alarmed Englishman, have tried to test the strength of the
+ basis upon which they rest. The only _data_ I have at hand
+ are taken from the figures in the last year's report of the
+ Punjab. The number of cultivated acres there agrees with
+ those quoted by Mr. Hyndman--say 21,000,000 acres--and I
+ adopt his average value of 1_l._ 14_s._ per acre.
+
+ The Government assessment is 1,905,000_l._, to pay which
+ one-sixth of the wheat crop [the produce of 1,120,000] would
+ have to be sold and exported. There would remain for
+ consumption in the country the produce of 5,500,000 acres of
+ wheat and of 12,000,000 acres of other grain, the two
+ sufficing to yield for a year 2 lb. per head per day for the
+ population of 17,000,000, which is more than double the
+ weight of corn eaten by the people of this country. Besides
+ this, they would have for consumption their garden
+ vegetables and milk; and beyond it the money value of
+ 845,000 acres of oil-seed, 720,000 acres of cotton and hemp,
+ 391,000 acres of sugar-cane, 120,000 acres of indigo, 69,000
+ acres of tobacco, 88,000 acres of spices, drugs, and dyes,
+ 19,000 acres of poppy, and 8,800 acres of tea; the aggregate
+ value of which, without touching the corn, would leave
+ nearly twice the Government assessment.
+
+ Mr. Hyndman has committed the error of arguing from an
+ English money value at the place of production upon articles
+ of consumption, the true value of which is their
+ food-sustaining power to the people who consume them.
+
+When an argument is thus found so completely _pecher par sa base_, it is
+needless to pursue it further. But I conceive that Mr. Hyndman, when
+studying this overwhelming refutation, must feel somewhat
+conscience-stricken when he reperuses such sentences of his own as the
+following:--"In India at this time, millions of the ryots are growing
+wheat, cotton, seeds, and other exhausting crops, and send them away
+because these alone will enable them to pay their way at all. They are
+themselves, nevertheless, eating less and less of worse food each year, in
+spite, or rather by reason, of the increasing exports." Thus a farmer is
+damaged by finding new markets for his produce! And he sells his wheat,
+which is the main produce of his arable land in those parts of India where
+it flourishes, to buy some cheaper grain which his land does not grow! The
+youngest assistant in a collector's establishment could inform Mr. Hyndman
+that the food of the agricultural population of India consists of the
+staple most suitable to the soil of the district: in the Punjab wheat, in
+Bengal and all well-watered lowlands rice, on the tablelands of the Deccan
+jowári (_holcus sorghum_) and bájri (_panicum spicatum_), on the more
+sterile plateau of Southern India the inferior grain rági (_eiuesyne
+coracauna_).
+
+It must have been under the dominion of the idea produced by Mr.
+Dádobhai's statistics as to the thoroughly wretched state of the
+agricultural population of India that Mr. Hyndman has been led into
+exaggerated statements which his own article shows he knew to be
+inaccurate. A dreadful case of misgovernment existed in India, and,
+thoroughly to arouse his countrymen to the fact, it was necessary to pile
+up the agony. Thus, in one part of his article he states that the
+"enormous debt" of India amounts to 220,000,000_l._, but in a later
+portion he admits that it is only 127,000,000_l._, and he knows full well
+that the amount of 100,000,000_l._ of guaranteed railway debt is not only
+not a present debt due from Government, but is a very valuable property,
+which will probably bring in some millions of revenue when they exercise
+their right of buying up the interests of the several guaranteed
+companies.
+
+Again, he speaks throughout his article of the excessive taxation imposed
+on the poor, half-starved cultivators; and he gives the following table as
+showing the amount "taken absolutely out of the pockets of the people:"--
+
+ Land revenue Ł21,500,000
+ Excise 2,500,000
+ Salt 6,240,000
+ Stamps 2,830,000
+ Customs 2,720,000
+
+He thus maintains that the portion of the rent paid to Government for
+occupation of the land is a tax upon the cultivator, which is about as
+true as to state that the 67,000,000_l._ of rental in the United Kingdom
+is a special tax on the farmers of this country. The amount derived from
+excise is chiefly produced by the sale of intoxicating liquors, the use of
+which is forbidden by the social and religious views of the natives; and
+any contribution to the revenue under this head is clearly a voluntary act
+on the part of the transgressor. The revenue from stamps proceeds chiefly
+from what may be called taxes on justice; they are, in my opinion,
+extremely objectionable, but weighty objections may be urged against
+nearly every tax, and a large portion of this tax falls on the wealthier
+class of suitors. The amount contributed by the population under the head
+of customs, although it may take money out of the pocket of the rayat,
+actually adds to his store; for, unless he could buy in the bazaar a piece
+of Manchester long-cloth cheaper than an article of domestic manufacture,
+it is manifest that he would select the latter. There remains only the
+single article of salt on which the cultivator undoubtedly is taxed, and
+which forms the sole tax from which he cannot escape. This tax also is
+extremely objectionable in theory, more perhaps than in practice, for it
+amounts to about 7-˝_d._ per head. But even if we take the whole amount
+of taxation as shown by Mr. Hyndman, excluding the land revenue or rental
+of the land, the average per head is only 1_s._ 6_d._, of which more than
+one-third can be avoided at the pleasure of any individual consumer. It is
+not, then, a misstatement to aver that the population of India is more
+lightly taxed than any population in the world living under an orderly
+government.
+
+I have thus far thought it my duty to expose what I believe to be grave
+errors in Mr. Hyndman's sensational article. But I should do him great
+injustice if I did not admit that he has brought out in vivid colours some
+very important facts. It is true that these facts are well known to Indian
+administrators, but they are facts disagreeable to contemplate, and are
+therefore slurred over willingly; but they have such important bearing on
+the proceedings of Government in India that they cannot be too frequently
+paraded before the public eye.
+
+The first of these truths is the undeniable poverty of the great bulk of
+the population. But here Mr. Hyndman does not appear to me to have taken
+full grasp of the fact, or to have ascertained its causes. The dense
+population of India, amounting in its more fertile parts to six and seven
+hundred per square mile, is almost exclusively occupied in agricultural
+pursuits. But the land of India has been farmed from time immemorial by
+men entirely without capital. A farmer in this country has little chance
+of success unless he can supply a capital of 10_l._ to 20_l._ an acre. If
+English farms were cultivated by men as deficient in capital as the Indian
+rayats, they would be all thrown on the parish in a year or two. The
+founder of a Hindu village may, by aid of his brethren and friends, have
+strength enough to break up the jungle, dig a well, and with a few rupees
+in his pocket he may purchase seed for the few acres he can bring under
+the plough. If a favourable harvest ensue, he has a large surplus, out of
+which he pays the _jamma_ or rent to Government. But on the first failure
+of the periodical rains his withered crops disappear, he has no capital
+wherewith to meet the Government demand, to obtain food for his family and
+stock, or to purchase seed for the coming year. To meet all these wants he
+must have recourse to the village money-lender, who has always formed as
+indispensable a member of a Hindu agricultural community as the ploughman
+himself.
+
+From time immemorial the cultivator of the soil in India has lived from
+hand to mouth, and when his hand could not supply his mouth from the
+stores of the last harvest he has been driven to the local saukár or
+money-lender to obtain the means of existence. This is the first great
+cause of India's poverty. The second is akin to it, for it exists in the
+infinite divisibility of property which arises under the Hindu system of
+succession, and which throws insuperable obstructions to the growth of
+capital. The rule as to property in Hindu life is that all the members of
+a family, father, grandfather, children, and grandchildren, constitute an
+undivided partnership, having equal shares in the property, although one
+of them, generally the eldest, is recognised as the manager. It is in the
+power of any member to sever himself from the family group, and the
+tendency of our Government has been to encourage efforts of what may be
+called individualism. But the new stock is but the commencement of another
+undivided family, so strong is the Hindu feeling in favour of this
+time-honoured custom. It is obvious that where the skill, foresight, and
+thriftiness required for the creation of capital may be thwarted by the
+extravagance or carelessness of any one of a large number of partners, its
+growth must be seriously impeded.
+
+It will be seen, if the above arguments are sound, that the obstructions
+which oppose themselves to the formation of capital arise out of
+immemorial usages, and are irremediable by any direct interference of
+Government. But whatever may be the causes of this national poverty, the
+fact is undoubted, and it cannot be too steadily contemplated by those who
+desire to rely on fresh taxation for their favourite projects, whether it
+be for improved administration, for magnificent public works, or for the
+extension of our dominions. Mr. Hyndman also points out the great
+expensiveness of a foreign government, and his remarks on this subject are
+undoubtedly true. The high salaries required to tempt Englishmen of
+suitable qualifications to expatriate themselves for the better part of
+their lives, and the heavy dead weight of pensions and furlough charges
+for such officials, form, no doubt, a heavy burden on the resources of
+India. The costliness of a European army is, of course, also undoubtedly
+great. But these are charges which, to a less or greater degree, are
+inseparable from the dominion of a foreign government. The compensation
+for them is to be found in the security they provide against a foreign
+invader or against internal disturbances, and the protection they afford,
+in a degree hitherto unknown in India, to life, property, and character.
+But Mr. Hyndman's diatribes are useful in pointing to the conclusion that
+all the efforts of Government should be directed towards the diminution of
+these charges, where compatible with efficiency, and his striking contrast
+of the home military charges in 1862-63, which then amounted to 28_l._
+3_s._, and now have risen in the present year to 66_l._, deserves most
+serious consideration.
+
+There is only one other statement of Mr. Hyndman which I desire to notice.
+He declares the general opinion of the natives to be that life, as a
+whole, has become harder since the English took the country, and he adds
+his own opinion that the fact is so. Mr. Hyndman, as we have seen, knows
+but little of the actual life of the agricultural population, and of their
+state under native rule he probably knows less. But I am inclined to think
+he fairly represents a very prevailing belief amongst the natives. A vivid
+indication of this native feeling is given in the most instructive work on
+Hindu rural life that I have ever met with.[14] Colonel Sleeman thus
+recounts a conversation he held with some natives in one of his rambles--
+
+ I got an old landowner from one of the villages to walk on
+ with me a mile and put me in the right road. I asked him
+ what had been the state of the country under the former
+ government of the Jâts and Mahrattas, and was told that the
+ greater part was a wild jungle. "I remember," said the old
+ man, "when you could not have got out of the road hereabouts
+ without a good deal of risk. I could not have ventured a
+ hundred yards from the village without the chance of having
+ my clothes stripped off my back. Now the whole country is
+ under cultivation, and the roads are safe. Formerly the
+ governments kept no faith with their landowners and
+ cultivators, exacting ten rupees where they had bargained
+ for five whenever they found their crops good. But in spite
+ of all this _zulm_ (oppression) there was then more _burkul_
+ (blessings from above) than now; the lands yielded more to
+ the cultivator."
+
+Colonel Sleeman on the same day asked a respectable farmer what he thought
+of the latter statement. He stated: "The diminished fertility is owing, no
+doubt, to the want of those salutary fallows which the fields got under
+former governments, when invasions and civil wars were things of common
+occurrence, and kept at least _two-thirds of the land waste_."
+
+The fact is that, under an orderly government like ours, the causes
+alluded to above as impeding the growth of capital become very much
+aggravated. Population largely increases, waste lands are brought under
+the plough, grazing grounds for stock disappear, and the fallows, formerly
+so beneficial in restoring fertility to the soil, can no longer be kept
+free from cultivation. All these considerations form portions of the very
+difficult problems in government which day by day present themselves to
+the Indian administrator. But does Mr. Hyndman think they are to be solved
+by recurrence to the native system of government; by the substitution of a
+local ruler, sometimes paternal, more frequently the reverse, for the
+courts of justice which now administer the law which can be read and
+understood by all; by civil contracts being enforced by the armed servant
+of the creditor, instead of by the officers of a court acting under
+strict surveillance; by the land assessment being collected year by year
+through the farmers of the revenue according to their arbitrary will,
+instead of being payable in a small moderate[15] sum, unalterable for a
+long term of years? If he thinks this--and his allusion to the system of
+the non-regulation provinces favours the conclusion--he will not find, I
+think, an educated native in the whole of India who will agree with him.
+
+There are great harshnesses in our rule, there is a rigidity and
+exactitude of procedure which is often distasteful to native opinion,
+there are patent defects arising out of our attempts to administer
+justice, there is great irritation at our constant and often ill-conceived
+experiments in legislation, there is real danger in the fresh burdens we
+lay upon the people in our desire to carry out apparently laudable
+reforms. But with all these blemishes, which have only to be distinctly
+perceived to be removed from our administrative system, the educated
+native feels that he is gradually acquiring the position of a freeman, and
+he would not exchange it for that which Mr. Hyndman appears to desiderate.
+
+ E. PERRY, _in Nineteenth Century_.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] This rock on its eastern face contains the decrees of Asoka, who began
+to reign 263 B.C.; on the western face is the inscription of Rudradáman,
+one of the Satrap-rulers under an Indian Greek dynasty, circa 90 B.C.; and
+the northern face presents the inscription of Skandagupta, 240 A.D.
+
+[2] Preface to _Vishnu Purana_.
+
+[3] Elphinstone, _History of India_, vol. i. p. 511.
+
+[4] See Aitcheson, _Treaties_, vol. vi. p. 18.
+
+[5] _A Hindu Gentleman's Reflections._ Spiers, London, 1878.
+
+[6] Widow-burning.
+
+[7] The swing-sacrifice.
+
+[8] _Views and Opinions of General John Jacob._ London, 1858.
+
+[9] October 1865, and October 1866.
+
+[10] _England and Russia in the East._ Murray.
+
+[11] 59 Geo. III. c. 55, s. 43.
+
+[12] _Report on East India Public Works_, p. 85.
+
+[13] The career of Mr. Dádobhai Naoroji illustrates in a remarkable manner
+the operation of the system of education introduced under our government.
+A Parsi, born in Bombay of very poor parents, he received his education at
+the Elphinstone College, where he displayed so much intelligence that in
+1845 an English gentleman, desirous to open up a new career for educated
+natives, offered to send him to England to study for the bar if any of the
+wealthy merchants of his community would pay half the expenses. But in
+those days the Parsis, like the Hindus, dreaded contact with England, and
+the offer fell to the ground. Dádobhai continued at the College, where he
+obtained employment as a teacher, and subsequently became professor of
+mathematics, no native having previously filled such a post. In 1845 he
+left scholastics and joined the first native mercantile house established
+in London. This firm commenced with great success, and Dádobhai no sooner
+found himself master of 5,000l. than he devoted it to public objects in
+his native city. The house of Messrs. Cama subsequently failed, and
+Dádobhai returned to Bombay, where, as above noted, he took an active part
+in municipal affairs, and was subsequently appointed Dewan to the Gaekwar.
+He is now carrying on business as a merchant on his own account in London.
+
+[14] _Rambles of an Indian Official_, 1844.
+
+[15] So long ago as the period when Colonel Sleeman wrote, the principle
+was fully established as to the moderation to be observed in the
+Government assessment. He says: "We may rate the Government share at
+one-fifth as the maximum and one-tenth as the minimum of the gross
+produce." (_Rambles of an Indian Official_, vol i. p. 251.) In the Blue
+Book laid before Parliament last Session on the Deccan riots, it will be
+seen that the Government share in the gross produce of those districts
+where a high assessment was supposed to have created the disturbances was
+only one-thirteenth.
+
+
+
+
+A COUP D'ÉTAT.
+
+
+ If little seeds by slow degree
+ Put forth their leaves and flowers unheard,
+ Our love had grown into a tree,
+ And bloomed without a single word
+
+ I haply hit on six o'clock,
+ The hour her father came from town;
+ I gave his own peculiar knock,
+ And waited slyly, like a clown.
+
+ The door was open. There she stood,
+ Lifting her mouth's delicious brim.
+ How could I waste a thing so good!
+ I took the kiss she meant for him.
+
+ A moment on an awful brink--
+ Deep breath, a frown, a smile, a tear;
+ And then, "O Robert, don't you think
+ That that was rather--_cavalier_?" [_London Society._
+
+
+
+
+THEATRICAL MAKE-SHIFTS AND BLUNDERS.
+
+
+It is a generally received opinion that all stage wardrobes are made up of
+tawdry rags, and that the landscapes and palaces that look so charming by
+gaslight are but mere daubs by day. But there are wardrobes _and_
+wardrobes, scenery and scenery. The dresses used for some great "get up"
+at the opera houses, or at the principal London and provincial theatres,
+are costly and magnificent; the scenery, although painted for distance and
+artificial light, is really the product of artists of talent, and there is
+an attention to reality in all the adjuncts that would quite startle the
+believers in the tinsel and tawdry view. A millionaire might take a lesson
+from the stage drawing-rooms of the Prince of Wales and the Court
+theatres, and no cost is spared to procure the _real_ article, whatever it
+may be, that is required for the scene. These minutić of realism, however,
+are quite a modern idea, dating no farther back than the days of
+Boucicault and Fechter. Splendid scenery and gorgeous dresses for the
+legitimate dramas were introduced by John Kemble, and developed to the
+utmost extent by Macready and Kean; but it was reserved for the present
+decade to lavish the same attention and expenses upon the petite drama.
+Half a century ago the property maker manufactured the stage furniture,
+the stage books, the candelabra, curtains, cloths, pictures, &c., out of
+papier mache and tinsel; and the drawing-room or library of a gentleman's
+mansion thus presented bore as much resemblance to the reality as sea-side
+furnished lodgings do to a ducal palace. Before the Kemble time a green
+baize, a couple of chairs and a table, sufficed for all furnishing
+purposes, whether for an inn or a palace.
+
+In these days of "theatrical upholstery," we can scarcely realize the
+shabbiness of the stage of the last century. There were a few handsome
+suits for the principal actors, but the less important ones were
+frequently dressed in costumes that had done service for fifty years,
+until they were worn threadbare and frequently in rags. Endeavour to
+realise upon the modern stage such a picture as this given by Tate
+Wilkinson, of his appearance at Covent Garden as "The Fine Gentleman," in
+"Lethe." "A very short old suit of clothes, with a black velvet ground,
+and broad, gold flowers as dingy as the twenty-four letters on a piece of
+gingerbread; it had not seen the light since the first year Garrick played
+'Lothario,' at the theatre. Bedecked in that sable array for the modern
+'Fine Gentleman,' and to make the appearance complete, I added an old red
+surtout, trimmed with a dingy white fur, and a deep skinned cape of the
+same hue, borrowed by old Giffard, I was informed, at Lincoln's Inn Fields
+Theatre, to play 'King Lear' in." When West Digges appeared at the
+Haymarket as Cardinal Wolsey, it was in the identical dress that Barton
+Booth had worn in Queen Anne's time: a close-fitting habit of gilt leather
+upon a black ground, black stockings, and black gauntlets. No wonder
+Foote, who was in the pit, exclaimed, upon the appearance of this
+extraordinary figure, "A Roman sweep on May-day!" When Quin played the
+youthful fascinating Chamont, in Otway's "Orphan," he wore a long grisly
+half-powdered periwig, hanging low down each side his breast and down his
+back, a huge scarlet coat and waistcoat, heavily trimmed with gold, black
+velvet breeches, black silk neckcloth, black stockings, a pair of
+square-toed shoes, with an old-fashioned pair of stone buckles, stiff
+high-topped white gloves, with a broad old scolloped lace hat. Such a
+costume upon a personage not in his first youth, and more than inclined to
+obesity, must have had an odd effect. But then, as is well known, Garrick
+played "Macbeth" in a scarlet coat and powdered wig; John Kemble performed
+"Othello" in a full suit of British scarlet regimentals, and even when he
+had gone so far as to dress "Macbeth" as a highlander of 1745, wore in his
+bonnet a tremendous hearse plume, until Scott plucked it out, and placed
+an eagle's feather there in its stead. The costumes of the ladies were
+almost more absurd. Whether they appeared as Romans, Greeks, or females of
+the Middle Ages, they dressed the same--in the huge hoop, and powdered
+hair raised high upon the head, heavy brocaded robes that required two
+pages to hold up, without whose assistance they could scarcely have moved;
+and servants were dressed quite as magnificently as their mistresses.
+
+In scenery there was no attempt at "sets;" a drop, and a pair of "flats,"
+dusty and dim with age, were all the scenic accessories; and two or three
+hoops of tallow candles, suspended above the stage, were all that
+represented the blaze of gas and lime-light to which we are accustomed.
+The candle-snuffer was a theatrical post of some responsibility in those
+days. Garrick was the first who used concealed lights. The uncouth
+appearance of the stage was rendered still worse on crowded nights by
+ranges of seats raised for spectators on each side. The most ridiculous
+_contretemps_ frequently resulted from this incongruity. Romeo, sometimes,
+when he bore out the body of Juliet from the solitary tomb of the
+Capulets, had to almost force his way through a throng of beaux, and
+Macbeth and his lady plotted the murder of Duncan amidst a throng of
+people.
+
+One night, Hamlet, upon the appearance of the Ghost, threw off his hat, as
+usual, preparatory to the address, when a kind-hearted dame, who had heard
+him just before complain of its being "very cold," picked it up and
+good-naturedly clapped it upon his head again. A similar incident once
+happened during the performance of Pizarro. Elvira is discovered asleep
+upon a couch, gracefully covered by a rich velvet cloak; Valverde enters,
+kneels and kisses her hand; Elvira awakes, rises and lets fall the
+covering, and is about to indignantly repulse her unwelcome visitor, when
+a timid female voice says: "Please, ma'am, you've dropped your mantle,"
+and a timid hand is trying to replace it upon the tragedy queen's
+shoulders. Of another kind, but very much worse, was an accident that
+befell Mrs. Siddons at Edinburgh, at the hands of another person who
+failed to distinguish between the real person and the counterfeit. Just
+before going on for the sleep-walking-scene, she had sent a boy for some
+porter, but the cue for her entrance was given before he returned. The
+house was awed into shuddering silence as, in a terrible whisper, she
+uttered the words "Out, out, damned spot!" and with slow mechanical action
+rubbed the guilty hands; when suddenly there emerged from the wings a
+small figure holding out a pewter pot, and a shrill voice broke the awful
+silence with "Here's your porter, mum." Imagine the feelings of the
+stately Siddons! The story is very funny to read, but depend upon it the
+incident gave her the most cruel anguish.
+
+It is not, however, to the uninitiated outsiders alone we are indebted for
+ludicrous stage contretemps; the experts themselves have frequently given
+rise to them. All readers of Elia will remember the name of Bensley, one
+of "the old actors" upon whom he discourses so eloquently--a grave precise
+man, whose composure no accident could ruffle, as the following anecdote
+will prove. One night, as he was making his first entrance as Richard
+III., at the Dublin Theatre, his wig caught upon a nail in the side scene,
+and was dragged off. Catching his hat by the feather, however, he calmly
+replaced it as he walked to the centre of the stage, but left his _hair_
+still attached to the nail. Quite unmoved by the occurrence, he commenced
+his soliloquy; but so rich a subject could not escape the wit of an Irish
+audience. "Bensley, darlin'," shouted a voice from the gallery, "put on
+your jaisey!" "Bad luck to your politics, will you suffer a _whig_ to be
+hung?" shouted another. But the tragedian, deaf to all clamour, never
+faltered, never betrayed the least annoyance, spoke the speech to the end,
+stalked to the wing, detached the wig from the nail, and made his exit
+with it in his hand.
+
+Novices under the influence of stage fright will say and do the most
+extraordinary things. Some years ago, I witnessed a laughable incident
+during the performance of "Hamlet" at a theatre in the North. Although a
+very small part, consisting as it does of only one speech, the "Second
+Actor" is a very difficult one, the language being peculiarly cramped. In
+the play scene he assassinates the player king by pouring poison into his
+ear. The speech preceding the action is as follows:
+
+ Thoughts black, hands apt, drugs fit, and time agreeing;
+ Confederate season, else no creature seeing;
+ Thou mixture rank, of midnight weeds collected,
+ With Hecate's ban thrice blasted, thrice infected,
+ Thy natural magic and dire property
+ On wholesome life usurp immediately.
+
+Upon which follows the stage direction--"_Pours poison into his ear._"
+
+In a play of so many characters as Hamlet, such a part, in a second-class
+theatre, can be given only to a very inferior performer. The one to whom
+it was entrusted on the present occasion was a novice. Muffled in a black
+coat and a black slouched hat, and with a face half hidden by burnt cork,
+he looked a most villainous villain, as he stole on and gazed about in the
+most approved melo-dramatic fashion. Then he began, in a strong north
+country brogue,--
+
+ Thoughts black, hands apt,--
+
+then his memory failed him, and he stuck fast. The prompter whispered
+"drugs fit;" but stage fright had seized him, and he could not take the
+word. He tried back, but stuck again at the same place. Half-a-dozen
+people were all prompting him at the same time now, but all in vain. At
+length one more practical than the rest whispered angrily, "Pour the
+poison in his ear and get off." The suggestion restored a glimmering of
+reason to the trembling, perspiring wretch. He could not remember the
+words of Shakespeare, so he improvised a line. Advancing to the sleeping
+figure, he raised the vial in his hand, and in a terribly tragic tone
+shouted, "Into his ear-hole this I'll _power_!"
+
+Some extraordinary and agonising mistakes, for tragedians, have been made
+in what are called the flying messages in "Richard III." and "Macbeth," by
+novices in their nervousness mixing up their own parts with the context;
+as when Catesby rushed on and cried, "My lord, the Duke of Buckingham's
+taken." There he should have stopped while Richard replied, "Off with his
+head! so much for Buckingham!" But in his flurry the shaking messenger
+added, "and they've cut off his head!" With a furious look at having been
+robbed of one of his finest "points," the tragedian roared out, "Then,
+damn you, go and stick it on again!" Another story is told of an actor
+playing one of the officers in the fifth act of "Macbeth." "My lord," he
+has to say, "there are ten thousand----" "Geese, villain," interrupts
+Macbeth. "Ye--es, my lord!" answered the messenger, losing his memory in
+his terror.
+
+But a far more dreadful anecdote is related of the same play. A star was
+playing the guilty Thane in a very small company, where each member had to
+sustain three or four different characters. During the performance the man
+appointed to play the first murderer was taken ill. There was not another
+to be spared, and the only resource left was to send on a supernumerary,
+supposed to be intelligent, to stand for the character. "Keep close to the
+wing," said the prompter; "I'll read you the words, and you can repeat
+them after me." The scene was the banquet; the supper was pushed on, and
+Macbeth, striding down the stage, seized his arm and said in a stage
+whisper, "There's blood upon thy face." "'Tis Banquo's, then," was the
+prompt. Lost and bewildered--having never spoken in his life before upon
+the stage--by the tragedian's intense yet natural tones, the fellow,
+imitating them in the most confidential manner, answered, "Is there, by
+God?" put his hand up to his forehead, and, finding it stained with rose
+pink, added, "Then the property man's served me a trick!"
+
+Once upon a time I was present at the performance of the celebrated dog
+piece, "The Forest of Bondy," in a small country theatre. The plot turns
+upon a well-known story, the discovery of a murder through the sagacity of
+the victim's dog. The play-bill descanted most eloquently upon the
+wonderful genius of the "highly trained" animal, and was sufficient to
+raise expectation on tip-toe. Yet it had evidently failed to impress the
+public of this town, their experiences probably having rendered them
+sceptical of such pufferies, for the house was miserably bad. The first
+entrance of "the celebrated dog Cćsar," however, in attendance upon his
+master, was greeted with loud applause. He was a fine young black
+Newfoundland, whose features were more descriptive of good nature than
+genius. He sat on his haunches and laughed at the audience, and pricked up
+his ears at the sound of a boy munching a biscuit in the pit. I could
+perceive he was a novice, and that he would forget all he had been taught
+when he came to the test. While Aubrey, the hero, is passing through a
+forest at night, he is attacked by two ruffians, and after a desperate
+combat is killed; the dog is supposed to be kept out of the way. But in
+the very midst of the fight, Cćsar, whose barking had been distinctly
+heard all the time, rushed on the stage. Far from evincing any ferocity
+towards his master's foes, he danced about with a joyous bark, evidently
+considering it famous fun. Aubrey was furious, and kicked out savagely at
+his faithful "dawg," thereby laying himself open to the swords of his
+adversaries, who, however, in consideration that the combat had not been
+long enough, generously refused the advantages. "Get off, you beast!"
+growled Aubrey, who evidently desired to fight it out without canine
+interference. At length, when the faltering applause from the gallery
+began to show that the gods had had enough of it, the assassins buried
+their swords beneath their victim's arms, and he expired in great agony;
+Cćsar looking on from the respectful distance to which his master's kick
+had sent him, with the unconcern of a person who had seen it all done at
+rehearsal and knew it was all sham, but with a decided interest of eye and
+ear in the direction of the biscuit-muncher. In the next act he was to
+leap over a stile and ring the bell at a farm house, and, having awakened
+the inhabitants, seize a lantern which is brought out, and lead them to
+the spot where the villains have buried his master. After a little
+prompting Cćsar leaped the stile and went up to the bell, round the handle
+of which was twisted some red cloth to imitate meat; but there never was a
+more matter-of-fact dog than this; he evidently hated all shams, even
+artistic ones; and after a sniff at the red rag he walked off disgusted,
+and could not be induced to go on again; so the people had to rush out
+without being summoned, carry their own lantern, and find their way by a
+sort of canine instinct, or scent, to the scene of the murder. But Cćsar's
+delinquencies culminated in the last scene, where, after the chief
+villain, in a kind of lynch law trial, has stoutly asserted his innocence,
+the sagacious "dawg" suddenly bounds upon the stage, springs at his
+throat, and puts an end to his infamous career. Being held by the collar,
+and incited on, in the side scene, Cćsar's deep bark sounded terribly
+ferocious, and seemed to foreshadow a bloody catastrophe; but his bark
+proved worse than his bite, for when released he trotted on with a most
+affable expression of countenance, his thoughts still evidently bent upon
+biscuits; in vain did the villain show him the red pad upon his throat and
+invite him to seize it. Cćsar had been deceived once, and scorned to
+countenance an imposition. Furious with passion, the villain rushed at
+him, drew him up on his hind legs, clasped him in his arms, then fell upon
+the stage and writhed in frightful agonies, shrieking, "Mussy, mussy, take
+off the dawg!" and the curtain fell amidst the howls and hisses of the
+audience.
+
+Another laughable dog story, although of a different kind, was once
+related to me by a now London actor. In a certain theatre in one of the
+great northern cities business had been so bad for some time that salaries
+were very irregularly paid. It is a peculiarity of the actor that he is
+never so jolly, so full of fun, and altogether so vivacious, as when he is
+impecunious. In prosperity he is dull and melancholy; the yellow dross
+seems to weigh down his spirit, to stultify it; empty his pockets, and it
+etherialises him. At the theatre in question, the actors amused themselves
+if they failed to amuse the audience. Attached to this house was a mongrel
+cur, whom some of them had taught tricks to while away the tedium of long
+waits. "Jack"--such was his name--was well known all round the
+neighbourhood, and to most of the _habitues_ of the house. Among his other
+accomplishments he could simulate death at command, and could only be
+recalled to life by a certain piece of information to be presently
+mentioned. One night the manager was performing "The Stranger" to about
+half-a-dozen people. Francis was standing at the wing waiting for his cue
+when his eye fell upon Jack, who was standing just off the stage on the
+opposite side; an impish thought struck him--he whistled--Jack pricked up
+his ears, and Francis slapped his leg and called him. Obedient to the
+summons Jack trotted before the audience, but as he reached the centre of
+the stage the word "dead!" struck upon his ear. The next moment he was
+stretched motionless with his two hind legs sticking up at an angle of
+forty-five degrees. The scene was the one in which the Stranger relates to
+Baron Steinfort the story of his wrongs, and he had come to the line, "My
+heart is like a close-shut sepulchre," when a burst of laughter from the
+front drew his attention to Jack. He saw the trick that had been played in
+an instant. "Get off, you brute!" he growled, giving the animal a kick.
+But Jack was too highly trained to heed such an admonition, having learned
+beforehand that the kicking was not so bad as the flogging he would get
+for not performing his part correctly. "Doan't tha' kick poor Jack,"
+called out a rough voice, "give un the word." "Ay, ay, give un the word,"
+echoed half-a-dozen voices. The manager knew better than to disregard the
+advice of his patrons, and ground out between his teeth, "Here's a
+policeman coming." At that "open Sesame" Jack was up and off like a shot.
+It must have been one of the finest bits of burlesque to have seen that
+black-ringlet-wigged, sallow, dyspeptic, tragic-looking individual,
+repeating the clown's formula over a mangy cur.
+
+The failure or forgetfulness of stage properties is frequently a source of
+ludicrous incidents. People are often killed by pistols that will not
+fire, or stabbed with the butt ends. In some play an actor has to seize a
+dagger from a table and stab his rival. One night the dagger was forgotten
+and no substitute was there, _except a candle_, which the excited actor
+wrenched from the candlestick, and madly plunged _at_ his opponent's
+breast; but it effected its purpose, for the victim expired in strong
+convulsions. It is strange how seldom the audience perceive such
+_contretemps_, or notice the extraordinary and ludicrous slips of the
+tongue that are so frequent upon the stage.
+
+A playbill is not always the most truth-telling publication in the world.
+Managers, driven to their wits' ends to draw a sluggish public, often
+announce entertainments which they have no means of producing properly, or
+even at all, and have to exercise an equal amount of ingenuity to find
+substitutes, or satisfy a deluded audience. Looking through some
+manuscript letters of R. B. Peake's the other day, I came across a capital
+story of Bunn. While he was manager of the Birmingham Theatre, Power, the
+celebrated Irish comedian, made a starring engagement with him. It was
+about the time that the dramatic version of Mrs. Shelley's
+"Frankenstein"--done, I believe, by Peake himself--was making a great
+sensation, and Power announced it for his benefit, playing "the Monster"
+himself. The manager, however, refused to spend a penny upon the
+production. "You must do with what you can find in the theatre," he said.
+There was only one difficulty. In the last scene Frankenstein is buried
+beneath an avalanche, and among the stage scenery of the Theatre Royal,
+Birmingham, there was nothing resembling an avalanche to be found, and the
+AVALANCHE was the one prodigious line in the playbill. Power was
+continually urging this difficulty, but Bunn always eluded it with, "Oh,
+we shall find something or other." At length it came to the day of
+performance, and the problem had not yet been solved.
+
+"Well, we shall have to change the piece," said Power.
+
+"Pooh, pooh! nonsense!" answered the manager.
+
+"There is no avalanche, and it is impossible to be finished without."
+
+"Can't you cut it out?"
+
+"Impossible."
+
+The manager fell into a brown study for a few moments. Then suddenly
+brightening up, he said, "I have it; but they must let the green curtain
+down instantly on the extraordinary effect. Hanging up in the flies is the
+large elephant made for 'Blue Beard;' we'll have it whitewashed."
+
+"What?" exclaimed Power.
+
+"We'll have it whitewashed," continued the manager coolly; "what is an
+avalanche but a vast mass of white? When Frankenstein is to be
+annihilated, the carpenters shall shove the whitened elephant over the
+flies--destroy you both in a moment--and down comes the curtain."
+
+As there was no other alternative, Power e'en submitted. The whitened
+elephant was "shoved" over at the right moment, the effect was appalling
+from the front, and the curtain descended amidst loud applause.
+
+Not quite so successful was a hoax perpetrated by Elliston, during _his_
+management of the Birmingham Theatre, many years previously. Then, also,
+business had been very bad, and he was in great difficulties. Let us give
+the managers their due. They do not, as a rule, resort to swindles except
+under strong pressure; then they soothe their consciences with the
+reflection that as an obtuse and ungrateful public will not support their
+legitimate efforts, it deserves to be swindled. And a very good reflection
+it is--from a managerial point of view. No man was more fertile in
+expedients than Robert William Elliston; so after a long continuance of
+empty benches, the walls and boardings of the town were one morning
+covered with glaring posters announcing that the manager of the Theatre
+Royal had entered into an engagement with a BOHEMIAN of extraordinary
+strength and stature, who would perform some astonishing evolutions with a
+stone of upwards of a ton weight, which he would toss about as easily as
+another would a tennis-ball. What all the famous names of the British
+drama and all the talents of its exponents had failed to accomplish, was
+brought about by a stone, and on the evening announced for its appearance
+the house was crammed to the ceiling. The exhibition was to take place
+between the play and the farce, and scarcely had the intellectual audience
+patience to listen to the piece, so eager were they for the noble
+entertainment that was to follow. At length, much to their relief, the
+curtain fell. The usual interval elapsed, the house became impatient,
+impatience soon merged into furious clamour. At length, with a pale,
+distraught countenance, Elliston rushed before the curtain. In a moment
+there was a breathless silence.
+
+"The Bohemian has deceived me!" were his first words. "_That_ I could have
+pardoned; but he has deceived you, my friends, _you_;" and his voice
+trembled, and he hid his face behind his handkerchief and seemed to sob.
+
+Then, bursting forth again, he went on: "I repeat, he has deceived me; he
+is not here."
+
+A yell of disappointment burst from the house.
+
+"The man," continued Elliston, raising his voice, "of whatever name or
+nation he may be, who breaks his word, commits an offence which----" The
+rest of this Joseph Surface sentiment was drowned in furious clamour, and
+for some minutes he could not make himself heard, until he drew some
+letters from his pocket, and held them up.
+
+"Here is the correspondence," he said. "Does any gentleman here understand
+German? If so, will he oblige me by stepping forward?"
+
+The Birmingham public were not strong in languages in those days, it would
+seem, for no gentleman stepped forward.
+
+"Am I, then, left alone?" he exclaimed in tragic accents. "Well, I will
+translate them for you."
+
+Here there was another uproar, out of which came two or three voices, "No,
+no." Like Buckingham, he chose to construe the two or three into "a
+general acclaim."
+
+"Your commands shall be obeyed," he said bowing, and pocketing the
+correspondence, "I _will not_ read them. But my dear patrons, your
+kindness merits some satisfaction at my hands; your consideration shall
+not go unrewarded. You shall not say you have paid your money for nothing.
+Thank heaven, I can satisfy you of my own integrity, and present you with
+a portion of the entertainment you have paid to see. The Bohemian, the
+villain, is not here. But the _stone_ is, and YOU SHALL SEE IT." He winked
+at the orchestra, which struck up a lively strain, and up went the
+curtain, disclosing a huge piece of sand rock, upon which was stuck a
+label, bearing the legend in large letters, "THIS IS THE STONE."
+
+It need scarcely be added that the Bohemian existed only in the manager's
+brain. But it is a question whether the audience which could be only
+brought together by such an exhibition did not deserve to be swindled.
+
+An equally good story is told of his management at Worcester. For his
+benefit he had announced a grand display of fireworks! No greater proof of
+the gullibility of the British public could be adduced than their
+swallowing such an announcement. The theatre was so small that such an
+exhibition was practically impossible. A little before the night Elliston
+called upon the landlord of the property, and in the course of
+conversation hinted at the danger of such a display, as though the idea
+had just struck him; the landlord took alarm, and, as Elliston had
+anticipated, forbade it. Nevertheless the announcements remained on the
+walls, and on the night the theatre was crowded. The performance proceeded
+without any notice being taken by the management of the fireworks, until
+murmurs swelled into clamour and loud cries. Then with his usual kingly
+air, Elliston came forward and bowed. He had made, he said, the most
+elaborate preparation for a magnificent pyrotechnic display; he had left
+nothing undone, but at the last moment came the terrible reflection, would
+it not be dangerous? Would there not be collected within the walls of the
+theatre a number of lovely young tender girls, of respectable matrons, to
+do him honour? What if the house should catch fire--the panic, the
+struggle for life--ah, he shuddered at the thought! Then, too, he thought
+of the property of that worthiest of men, the landlord--he rushed to
+consult him--and he now called upon him--there he was, seated in the stage
+box--to publicly state, for the satisfaction of the distinguished audience
+he saw before him, that he had forbidden the performance from
+considerations of safety. The landlord, a very nervous man, shrank to the
+back of his box, scared by every eye in the house being fixed upon him;
+but the audience, thankful for the terrible danger they had escaped, burst
+into thunders of applause.
+
+The stories are endless of the shifts and swindles to which country
+managers, at their wits' end, have had to resort to attract a sluggish
+public. How great singers have been advertised that never heard of such an
+engagement, and even forged telegrams read to an expectant audience, to
+account for their non-appearance. How prizes have been distributed on
+benefit nights--to people who gave them back again. How audiences, the
+victims of some false announcement, have been left waiting patiently for
+the performance to commence, while the manager was on his way to another
+town with their money in his pocket. But there is a great sameness about
+such stories, and one or two are a specimen of all.
+
+ H. BARTON BAKER, _in Belgravia_.
+
+
+
+
+I.--WINTER-MORN IN THE COUNTRY.
+
+
+ The Sabbath of all Nature! Stillness reigns
+ For snow has fallen, and all the land is white.
+ The cottage-roofs slant grey against the light,
+ And grey the sky, nor cloud nor blue obtains.
+
+ The sun is moonlike, as a maiden feigns
+ To veil her beauty, yet sends glances bright
+ That fill the eye, and make the heart delight,
+ Expectant of some wonder. Lengthened trains
+
+ Of birds wing high, and straight the smoke ascends.
+ All things are fairy-like: the trees empearled
+ With frosty gem-work, like to trees in dream.
+
+ Beneath the weight the slender cedar bends
+ And looks more ghost-like! 'Tis a wonder-world,
+ Wherein, indeed, things are not as they seem.
+
+
+
+
+II.--WINTER-MORN IN TOWN.
+
+ Through yellow fog all things take spectral shapes:
+ Lamps dimly gleam, and through the window pane
+ The light is shed in short and broken lane;
+ And "darkness visible" pants, yawns, and gapes.
+
+ From roofs the water drips, as from high capes,
+ Half-freezes as it falls. Like cries of pain
+ Fog-signals faintly heard, and then again
+ Grave warning words to him who rashly apes
+
+ The skater, nearer. All is muffled fast
+ In dense dead coils of vapour, nothing clear--
+ The world disguised in mumming masquerade.
+
+ O'er each a dull thick clinging veil is cast,
+ And no one is what fain he would appear:
+ Nor any well-marked track on which to tread,
+
+ ALEX. H. JAPP, _in Belgravia_.
+
+
+
+
+THE HAPPY VALLEY.
+
+A REMINISCENCE OF THE HIMALAYAS.
+
+
+The privilege which the families of officers in the service of the State
+may be said exclusively to possess, of reproducing in Upper India--and
+especially in the Himalayan stations, and valley of Dhera Dhoon--the
+stately or cottage homes of England, is perhaps one, to a great extent,
+unfamiliar to their relatives at home; and it is scarcely too much to say
+that the general public, which, as a rule, considers the Indian climate an
+insuperable barrier to all enjoyment, has but a faint idea of that
+glorious beauty, which is no "fading flower," in this "Happy Valley," with
+its broad belt of virgin forest, that lies between the Himalayas proper
+and the sharp ridges of the wild Sewalic range. The latter forms a barrier
+between the sultry plains and the cool and romantic retreats, where the
+swords of our gallant defenders may be said to rest in their scabbards,
+and where, surrounded by the pleasures of domestic life, health and
+happiness may, in the intervals of piping times of peace, be enjoyed to
+their fullest extent.
+
+In such favoured spots the exile from home may live, seemingly, for the
+present only; but, in truth, it is not so, for even under such favoured
+circumstances the tie with our natal place is never relaxed, and the hope
+of future return to it adds just that touch of pensiveness--scarcely
+sadness--which is the delicate neutral tint that brings out more forcibly
+the gorgeous colours of the picture.
+
+The gaieties of the mountain stations of Mussoorie and Landour were now
+approaching their periodical close, in the early part of October, when the
+cold season commences. The attractive archery meetings on the green
+plateaux of the mountain-spurs had ceased, and balls and sumptuous
+dinner-parties were becoming fewer and fewer; while daily one group of
+friends after another, "with lingering steps and slow," on rough
+hill-ponies or in quaint jam-pans, were wending their way some six or
+seven thousand feet down the umbrageous mountain-sides, watched from above
+by those who still lingered behind, until they seemed like toilsome emmets
+in the far distance.
+
+Now that our summer companions were gone we used to while away many an
+hour with our glasses, scanning in that clear atmosphere the vast plains
+stretched out beneath us like a rich carpet of many colours, but in which
+forms were scarcely to be traced at that distance. Here, twisted silver
+threads represented some great river; there, a sprinkling of rice-like
+grains, the white bungalows of a cantonment; while occasionally a sombre
+mass denoted some forest or mango tope. Around us, and quailing under
+fierce gusts of wind from the passes of the snowy range rising in peaks
+to nearly twice the altitude of the Alps, the gnarled oaks, now denuded of
+their earlier garniture of parasitical ferns, that used to adorn their
+mossy branches with Nature's own point lace, seemed almost conscious of
+approaching winter.
+
+Landour, now deserted, save by a few invalid soldiers and one or two
+resident families, had few attractions. The snow was lying deep on the
+mountain-sides, and blocking up the narrow roads. But winter in the
+Himalayas is a season of startling phenomena; for it is then that thunder
+storms of appalling grandeur are prevalent, and to a considerable extent
+destructive. During the night, amidst the wild conflict of the elements,
+would, not unfrequently, be heard the bugles of the soldiers' Sanatorium,
+calling to those who could sleep to arouse themselves, and hasten to the
+side of residents whose houses had been struck by the electric fluid.
+
+Still, we clung to our mountain-home to the last, although we knew that
+summer awaited us in the valley below, and that in an hour and a half we
+might with ease exchange an almost hyperborean climate for one where
+summer is perennial, or seems so--for the rainy season is but an interlude
+of refreshing showers.
+
+At length an incident occurred which somewhat prematurely influenced our
+departure.
+
+As we were sitting at an early breakfast one morning with the children,
+Khalifa, a favourite domestic, and one who rarely failed to observe that
+stately decorum peculiar to Indian servants, rushed wildly into the room,
+with every appearance of terror, screaming, "Janwar! Burra janwar,
+sahib!"[16] at the same time pointing to the window.
+
+We could not at first understand what the poor fellow meant; but on
+looking out, were not a little disconcerted at the sight which presented
+itself.
+
+Crouched on the garden-wall was a huge spotted animal of the leopard
+species. It looked, however, by no means ferocious, but, on the contrary,
+to be imploring compassion and shelter from the snowstorm. Still,
+notwithstanding its demure cat-like aspect, its proximity was by no means
+agreeable. With a strange lack of intelligence, the brute, instead of
+avoiding the cold, had evidently become bewildered, and crawled up the
+mountain side. As we could scarcely be expected to extend the rites of
+hospitality to such a visitor, the harmless discharge of a pistol insured
+his departure at one bound, and with a terrific growl.
+
+Wild beasts are rarely seen about European stations. Those who like them
+must go out of their way to find them. But perhaps stupefied by cold while
+asleep, and pinched by hunger, as on the present occasion, they may lose
+their usual sagacity.
+
+Having got rid of our unwelcome visitor, we determined at once to leave
+our mountain-home.
+
+The servants were only too glad to hasten our departure, and in the
+course of an hour everything was packed up, and we were ready for the
+descent into the plains.
+
+Notwithstanding the absence of a police force, robberies of houses are
+almost unknown; and therefore it was only necessary for us to draw down
+the blinds and lock the main door, leaving the furniture to take care of
+itself.
+
+The jam-pans and little rough ponies were ready; the servants, although
+shivering in their light clothing, more active than I had ever before seen
+them; and in the course of another hour we were inhaling the balmy air of
+early summer.
+
+The pretty little hotel of Rajpore, at the base of the mountain, was now
+reached; and before us lay the broad and excellent road, shaded with
+trees, which, in the course of another twenty minutes, brought us to the
+charming cantonment of Deyrah. All Nature seemed to be rejoicing; the
+birds were singing; the sounds of bubbling and splashing waters
+(mountain-streams diverted from their natural channels, and brought into
+every garden), and hedges of the double pink and crimson Bareilly rose[17]
+in full bloom, interspersed with the oleander, and the mehndi (henna of
+Scripture) with its fragrant clusters, filling the air with the perfume of
+mignonette, presented a scene of earthly beauty which cannot be surpassed.
+
+"How stupid we were," I remarked, looking back at our late home, now a
+mere black speck on the top of the snowy mountain far above--"how very
+foolish and perverse to have fancied ourselves more English in the winter
+up there, when we might all this time have been leading the life of Eden,
+in this enchanting spot!"
+
+"Indeed we were," replied my companion. "But it is the way with us in
+India. We give a rupee for an English daisy, and cast aside the honeyed
+champah."
+
+In India there is no difficulty in housing oneself. No important agents
+are necessary, and advertising is scarcely known. Accordingly, without
+ceremony, we took quiet possession of the first vacant bungalow which we
+came to, and our fifteen domestics did not seem to question for a moment
+the propriety of the occupation. Under our somewhat despotic government,
+are not the sahib lög[18] above petty social observances?
+
+While A. was busily employed getting his guns ready and preparing for
+shikari in the adjacent forest and jungles, which swarm with peafowl,
+partridges, quail, pigeons, and a variety of other game, my first care was
+to summon the resident mali (gardener), and ascertain how the beautiful
+and extensive garden of which we had taken possession[19] might be further
+stocked.
+
+"Mem sahib,"[20] said the quiet old gardener, with his hands in a
+supplicatory position, "there is abundance here of everything--aloo, lal
+sag, anjir, padina, baingan, piyaz, khira, shalgham, kobs, ajmud,
+kharbuza, amb, amrut, anar, narangi--"[21]
+
+"Stay!" I interrupted; "that is enough."
+
+But the old mali had something more to add:
+
+"Mem sahib, all is your own, and your slave shall daily bring his
+customary offering, and flowers for the table; and the protector of the
+poor will not refuse bakshees for the bearer."
+
+I promised to be liberal to the poor old man, and then proceeded to
+inspect the flower-garden.
+
+Here I was surprised to find a perfect fraternisation between the tropical
+flora and our own. Amongst flowers not unfamiliar to the European were
+abundance of the finest roses, superb crimson and gold poincianas, the
+elegant hybiscus, graceful ipomoeas, and convolvuli of every hue, the
+purple amaranth, the variegated double balsam, the richest marigolds, the
+pale-blue clusters of the plantago, acacias, jasmines, oranges, and
+pomegranates, intermixed with our own pansies, carnations, cinerarias,
+geraniums, fuchsias, and a wealth of blossoms impossible to remember by
+name.
+
+"If there is a paradise on earth, it is this, it is this!"
+
+Far more beautiful to the homely eye are such gardens than those of
+Shalimar and Pinjore, with their costly marble terraces, geometrical
+walks, fountains and cascades falling over sculptured slabs.
+
+Nor are we in India confined to the enjoyment of Nature. Art[22] finds its
+way to us from Europe, and literature here receives the warmest welcome.
+Our pianos, our musical-boxes--our costly and richly bound illustrated
+works, fresh from England--the most thrilling romances of fiction, and all
+the periodicals of the day, are regularly accumulated in these charming
+Indian retreats, and keep up the culture of the mind in a valley whose
+"glorious beauty" is, as I have said, no "fading flower," but the home of
+the missionary, and the resort of the war-worn soldier or truth-loving
+artist.
+
+Nor is this all. Around Deyrah is some of the most exquisitely beautiful
+cave scenery, comparatively unknown even to Europeans; such, for example,
+as the wondrous natural tunnel, whose sides shine with the varied beauty
+of the most delicate mosaics, and are lit up by rents in the hill above;
+the "dropping cave" of Sansadhara, "bosomed high in tufted trees;" and the
+strange ancient shrines sculptured in the romantic glen of
+Tope-Kesur-Mahadeo.
+
+Of these, Sansadhara has lately been made the subject of a beautiful
+photograph, which, however, fails to convey the exquisite charm of the
+original; but the natural tunnel and Tope-Kesur-Mahadeo have never been
+presented by the artist to the public, although there are unique sketches
+of them in the fine collection of a lady[23] who, as the wife of a former
+Indian Commander-in-Chief, had opportunities afforded to few of indulging
+her taste.
+
+One might exhaust volumes in attempting to describe such scenes, and even
+then fail to do them the faintest justice. The Alps, with all their
+beauty, lose much of their grandeur after one has been in daily
+contemplation of the majestic snowy range of the Himalayas, while the
+forests and valleys that skirt its base have no counterpart in Europe. In
+these partial solitudes we lose much of our conventionality. The mind is
+to a certain extent elevated by the grand scale on which Nature around is
+presented. The occasional alarm of war teaches the insecurity of all
+earthly happiness. Our life is subject to daily introspection, and before
+the mind's eye is the sublime prospect, perhaps at no very distant period,
+of a Christian India rising from the ruins of a sensuous idolatry in
+immortal beauty.
+
+ L. A., _in London Society_.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[16] "Wild beast! Big wild beast, sir!"
+
+L. M.--I.--2.
+
+[17] A remarkable plant. It is in constant bloom. On every spray there is
+a central crimson blossom, which only lasts one day, surrounded by five or
+six pink ones, which remain for many days.
+
+[18] Dominant class.
+
+[19] House-rent is paid monthly in India, in arrear.
+
+[20] My lady.
+
+[21] Potato, spinach, fig, mint, egg-plant, onion, cucumber, turnip,
+cabbage, parsley, melon, mango, guava, pomegranate, orange.
+
+[22] There is no intention of disparaging beautiful native art.
+
+[23] Lady Gomm.
+
+
+
+
+THE PHOENICIANS IN GREECE.
+
+
+Herodotus begins his history by relating how Phoenician traders brought
+"Egyptian and Assyrian wares" to Argos and other parts of Greece, in those
+remote days when the Greeks were still waiting to receive the elements of
+their culture from the more civilized East. His account was derived from
+Persian and Phoenician sources, but, it would seem, was accepted by his
+contemporaries with the same unquestioning confidence as by himself. The
+belief of Herodotus was shared by the scholars of Europe after the revival
+of learning, and there were none among them who doubted that the
+civilization of ancient Greece had been brought from Asia or Egypt, or
+from both. Hebrew was regarded as the primćval language, and the Hebrew
+records as the fountain-head of all history; just as the Greek vocabulary,
+therefore, was traced back to the Hebrew lexicon, the legends of primitive
+Greece were believed to be the echoes of Old Testament history. _Ex
+Oriente lux_ was the motto of the inquirer, and the key to all that was
+dark or doubtful in the mythology and history of Hellas was to be found in
+the monuments of the Oriental world.
+
+But the age of Creuzer and Bryant was succeeded by an age of scepticism
+and critical investigation. A reaction sat in against the attempt to force
+Greek thought and culture into an Asiatic mould. The Greek scholar was
+repelled by the tasteless insipidity and barbaric exuberance of the East;
+he contrasted the works of Phidias and Praxiteles, of Sophocles and Plato,
+with the monstrous creations of India or Egypt, and the conviction grew
+strong within him that the Greek could never have learnt his first lessons
+of civilization in such a school as this. Between the East and the West a
+sharp line of division was drawn, and to look for the origin of Greek
+culture beyond the boundaries of Greece itself came to be regarded almost
+as sacrilege. Greek mythology, so far from being an echo or caricature of
+Biblical history and Oriental mysticism, was pronounced to be self-evolved
+and independent, and K. O. Müller could deny without contradiction the
+Asiatic origin even of the myth of Aphrodite and Adonis, where the name of
+the Semitic sun-god seems of itself to indicate its source. The
+Phoenician traders of Herodotus, like the royal maiden they carried away
+from Argos, were banished to the nebulous region of rationalistic fable.
+
+Along with this reaction against the Orientalizing school which could see
+in Greece nothing but a deformed copy of Eastern wisdom went another
+reaction against the conception of Greek mythology on which the labours of
+the Orientalizing school had been based. Key after key had been applied to
+Greek mythology, and all in vain; the lock had refused to turn. The light
+which had been supposed to come from the East had turned out to be but a
+will-o'-the-wisp; neither the Hebrew Scriptures nor the Egyptian
+hieroglyphics had solved the problem presented by the Greek myths. And the
+Greek scholar, in despair, had come to the conclusion that the problem was
+insoluble; all that he could do was to accept the facts as they were set
+before him, to classify and repeat the wondrous tales of the Greek poets,
+but to leave their origin unexplained. This is practically the position of
+Grote; he is content to show that all the parts of a myth hang closely
+together, and that any attempt to extract history or philosophy from it
+must be arbitrary and futile. To deprive a myth of its kernel and soul,
+and call the dry husk that is left a historical fact, is to mistake the
+conditions of the problem and the nature of mythology.
+
+It was at this point that the science of comparative mythology stepped in.
+Grote had shown that we cannot look for history in mythology, but he had
+given up the discovery of the origin of this mythology as a hopeless task.
+The same comparative method, however, which has forced nature to disclose
+her secrets has also penetrated to the sources of mythology itself. The
+Greek myths, like the myths of the other nations of the world, are the
+forgotten and misinterpreted records of the beliefs of primitive man, and
+of his earliest attempts to explain the phenomena of nature. Restore the
+original meaning of the language wherein the myth is clothed, and the
+origin of the myth is found. Myths, in fact, are the words of a dead
+language to which a wrong sense has been given by a false method of
+decipherment. A myth, rightly explained, will tell us the beliefs, the
+feelings, and the knowledge of those among whom it first grew up; for the
+evidences and monuments of history we must look elsewhere.
+
+But there is an old proverb that "there is no smoke without fire." The war
+of Troy or the beleaguerment of Thebes may be but a repetition of the
+time-worn story of the battle waged by the bright powers of day round the
+battlements of heaven; but there must have been some reason why this story
+should have been specially localized in the Troad and at Thebes. Most of
+the Greek myths have a background in space and time; and for this
+background there must be some historical cause. The cause, however, if it
+is to be discovered at all, must be discovered by means of those evidences
+which will alone satisfy the critical historian. The localization of a
+myth is merely an indication or sign-post pointing out the direction in
+which he is to look for his facts. If Greek warriors had never fought in
+the plains of Troy, we may be pretty sure that the poems of Homer would
+not have brought Akhilles and Agamemnon under the walls of Ilium. If
+Phoenician traders had exercised no influence on primćval Greece, Greek
+legend would have contained no references to them.
+
+But even the myth itself, when rightly questioned, may be made to yield
+some of the facts upon which the conclusions of the historian are based.
+We now know fairly well what ideas, usages, and proper names have an Aryan
+stamp upon them, and what, on the other hand, belong rather to the Semitic
+world. Now there is a certain portion of Greek mythology which bears but
+little relationship to the mythology of the kindred Aryan tribes, while it
+connects itself very closely with the beliefs and practices of the Semitic
+race. Human sacrifice is very possibly one of these, and it is noticeable
+that two at least of the legends which speak of human sacrifice--those of
+Athamas and Busiris--are associated, the one with the Phoenicians of
+Thebes, the other with the Phoenicians of the Egyptian Delta. The whole
+cycle of myths grouped about the name of Herakles points as clearly to a
+Semitic source as does the myth of Aphrodite and Adonis; and the
+extravagant lamentations that accompanied the worship of the Akhćan
+Demeter (Herod. v. 61) come as certainly from the East as the olive, the
+pomegranate, and the myrtle, the sacred symbols of Athena, of Hera, and of
+Aphrodite.[24]
+
+Comparative mythology has thus given us a juster appreciation of the
+historical inferences we may draw from the legends of prehistoric Greece,
+and has led us back to a recognition of the important part played by the
+Phoenicians in the heroic age. Greek culture, it is true, was not the
+mere copy of that of Semitic Asia, as scholars once believed, but the
+germs of it had come in large measure from an Oriental seed-plot. The
+conclusions derived from a scientific study of the myths have been
+confirmed and widened by the recent researches and discoveries of
+archćology. The spade, it has been said, is the modern instrument for
+reconstructing the history of the past, and in no department in history
+has the spade been more active of late than in that of Greece. From all
+sides light has come upon that remote epoch around which the mist of a
+fabulous antiquity had already been folded in the days of Herodotus; from
+the islands and shores of the Ćgean, from the tombs of Asia Minor and
+Palestine, nay, even from the temples and palaces of Egypt and Assyria,
+have the materials been exhumed for sketching in something like clear
+outline the origin and growth of Greek civilization. From nowhere,
+however, have more important revelations been derived than from the
+excavations at Mykenć and Spata, near Athens, and it is with the evidence
+furnished by these that I now propose mainly to deal. A personal
+inspection of the sites and the objects found upon them has convinced me
+of the groundlessness of the doubts which have been thrown out against
+their antiquity, as well as of the intercourse and connection to which
+they testify with the great empires of Babylonia and Assyria. Mr. Poole
+has lately pointed out what materials are furnished by the Egyptian
+monuments for determining the age and character of the antiquities of
+Mykenć.[25] I would now draw attention to the far clearer and more
+tangible materials afforded by Assyrian art and history.
+
+Two facts must first be kept well in view. One of these is the Semitic
+origin of the Greek alphabet. The Phoenician alphabet, originally
+derived from the alphabet of the Egyptian hieroglyphics, and imported into
+their mother-country by the Phoenician settlers of the Delta, was
+brought to Greece, not probably by the Phoenicians of Tyre and Sidon,
+but by the Aramćans of the Gulf of Antioch, whose nouns ended with the
+same "emphatic aleph" that we seem to find in the Greek names of the
+letters, _alpha_, _beta_, _gamma_, (_gamla_). Before the introduction of
+the simpler Phoenician alphabet, the inhabitants of Asia Minor and the
+neighbouring islands appear to have used a syllabary of some seventy
+characters, which continued to be employed in conservative Cyprus down to
+a very late date; but, so far as we know at present, the Greeks of the
+mainland were unacquainted with writing before the Aramćo-Phoenicians
+had taught them their phonetic symbols. The oldest Greek inscriptions are
+probably those of Thera, now Santorin, where the Phoenicians had been
+settled from time immemorial; and as the forms of the characters found in
+them do not differ very materially from the forms used on the famous
+Moabite Stone, we may infer that the alphabet of Kadmus was brought to the
+West at a date not very remote from that of Mesha and Ahab, perhaps about
+800 B.C. We may notice that Thera was an island and a Phoenician colony,
+and it certainly seems more probable that the alphabet was carried to the
+mainland from the islands of the Ćgean than that it was disseminated from
+the inland Phoenician settlement at Thebes, as the old legends affirmed.
+In any case, the introduction of the alphabet implies a considerable
+amount of civilizing force on the part of those from whom it was borrowed;
+the teachers from whom an illiterate people learns the art of writing are
+generally teachers from whom it has previously learnt the other elements
+of social culture. A barbarous tribe will use its muscles in the service
+of art before it will use its brains; the smith and engraver precede the
+scribe. If, therefore, the Greeks were unacquainted with writing before
+the ninth century, B.C., objects older than that period may be expected to
+exhibit clear traces of Phoenician influence, though no traces of
+writing.
+
+The other fact to which I allude is the existence of pottery of the same
+material and pattern on all the prehistoric sites of the Greek world,
+however widely separated they may be. We find it, for instance, at Mykenć
+and Tiryns, at Tanagra and Athens, in Rhodes, in Cyprus, and in Thera,
+while I picked up specimens of it in the neighbourhood of the Treasury of
+Minyas and on the site of the Acropolis at Orchomenus. The clay of which
+it is composed is of a drab colour, derived, perhaps in all instances,
+from the volcanic soil of Thera and Melos, and it is ornamented with
+geometrical and other patterns in black and maroon-red. After a time the
+patterns become more complicated and artistic; flowers, animal forms, and
+eventually human figures, take the place of simple lines, and the pottery
+gradually passes into that known as Corinthian or Phoeniko-Greek. It
+needs but little experience to distinguish at a glance this early pottery
+from the red ware of the later Hellenic period.
+
+Phoenicia, Keft as it was called by the Egyptians, had been brought into
+relation with the monarchy of the Nile at a remote date, and among the
+Semitic settlers in the Delta or "Isle of Caphtor" must have been natives
+of Sidon and the neighbouring towns. After the expulsion of the Hyksos,
+the Pharaohs of the eighteenth and nineteenth dynasties carried their arms
+as far as Mesopotamia and placed Egyptian garrisons in Palestine. A
+tomb-painting of Thothmes III. represents the Kefa or Phoenicians, clad
+in richly-embroidered kilts and buskins, and bringing their tribute of
+gold and silver vases and earthenware cups, some in the shape of animals
+like the vases found at Mykenć and elsewhere. Phoenicia, it would seem,
+was already celebrated for its goldsmiths' and potters' work, and the
+ivory the Kefa are sometimes made to carry shows that their commerce must
+have extended far to the east. As early as the sixteenth century B.C.,
+therefore, we may conclude that the Phoenicians were a great commercial
+people, trading between Assyria and Egypt and possessed of a considerable
+amount of artistic skill.
+
+It is not likely that a people of this sort, who, as we know from other
+sources, carried on a large trade in slaves and purple, would have been
+still unacquainted with the seas and coasts of Greece where both slaves
+and the murex or purple-fish were most easily to be obtained. Though the
+Phoenician alphabet was unknown in Greece till the ninth century B.C.,
+we have every reason to expect to find traces of Phoenician commerce and
+Phoenician influence there at least five centuries before. And such
+seems to be the case. The excavations carried on in Thera by MM. Fouqué
+and Gorceix,[26] in Rhodes by Mr. Newton and Dr. Saltzmann, and in various
+other places such as Megara, Athens, and Melos, have been followed by the
+explorations of Dr. Schliemann at Hissarlik, Tiryns, and Mykenć, of
+General di Cesnola in Cyprus, and of the Archćological Society of Athens
+at Tanagra and Spata.
+
+The accumulations of prehistoric objects on these sites all tell the same
+tale, the influence of the East, and more especially of the Phoenicians,
+upon the growing civilization of early Greece. Thus in Thera, where a sort
+of Greek Pompeii has been preserved under the lava which once overwhelmed
+it, we find the rude stone hovels of its primitive inhabitants, with roofs
+of wild olive, filled with the bones of dogs and sheep, and containing
+stores of barley, spelt, and chickpea, copper and stone weapons, and
+abundance of pottery. The latter is for the most part extremely coarse,
+but here and there have been discovered vases of artistic workmanship,
+which remind us of those carried by the Kefa, and may have been imported
+from abroad. We know from the tombs found on the island that the
+Phoenicians afterwards settled in Thera among a population in the same
+condition of civilization as that which had been overtaken by the great
+volcanic eruption. It was from these Phoenician settlers that the
+embroidered dresses known as Therćan were brought to Greece; they were
+adorned with animals and other figures, similar to those seen upon
+Corinthian or Phoeniko-Greek ware.
+
+Now M. Fr. Lenormant has pointed out that much of the pottery used by the
+aboriginal inhabitants of Thera is almost identical in form and make with
+that found by Dr. Schliemann at Hissarlik, in the Troad, and he concludes
+that it must belong to the same period and the same area of civilization.
+There is as yet little, if any, trace of Oriental influence; a few of the
+clay vases from Thera, and some of the gold workmanship at Hissarlik, can
+alone be referred, with more or less hesitation, to Phoenician artists.
+We have not yet reached the age when Phoenician trade in the West ceased
+to be the sporadic effort of private individuals, and when trading
+colonies were established in different parts of the Greek world; Europe is
+still unaffected by Eastern culture, and the beginnings of Greek art are
+still free from foreign interference. It is only in certain designs on the
+terra-cotta discs, believed by Dr. Schliemann to be spindle-whorls, that
+we may possibly detect rude copies of Babylonian and Phoenician
+intaglios.
+
+Among all the objects discovered at Hissarlik, none have been more
+discussed than the vases and clay images in which Dr. Schliemann saw a
+representation of an owl-headed Athena. What Dr. Schliemann took for an
+owl's head, however, is really a rude attempt to imitate the human face,
+and two breasts are frequently moulded in the clay below it. In many
+examples the human countenance is unmistakable, and in most of the others
+the representation is less rude than in the case of the small marble
+statues of Apollo (?) found in the Greek islands, or even of the early
+Hellenic vases where the men seem furnished with the beaks of birds. But
+we now know that these curious vases are not peculiar to the Troad.
+Specimens of them have also been met with in Cyprus, and in these we can
+trace the development of the owl-like head into the more perfect
+portraiture of the human face.[27] In conservative Cyprus there was not
+that break with the past which occurred in other portions of the Greek
+world.
+
+Cyprus, in fact, lay midway between Greece and Phoenicia, and was shared
+to the last between an Aryan and a Semitic population. The Phoenician
+element in the island was strong, if not preponderant; Paphos was a chief
+seat of the worship of the Phoenician Astarte, and the Phoenician
+Kitium, the Chittim of the Hebrews, took first rank among the Cyprian
+towns. The antiquities brought to light by General di Cesnola are of all
+ages and all styles--prehistoric and classical, Phoenician and Hellenic,
+Assyrian and Egyptian--and the various styles are combined together in the
+catholic spirit that characterized Phoenician art.
+
+But we must pause here for a moment to define more accurately what we mean
+by Phoenician art. Strictly speaking, Phoenicia had no art of its own;
+its designs were borrowed from Egypt and Assyria, and its artists went to
+school on the banks of the Nile and the Euphrates. The Phoenician
+combined and improved upon his models; the impulse, the origination came
+from abroad; the modification and elaboration were his own. He entered
+into other men's labours, and made the most of his heritage. The sphinx of
+Egypt became Asiatic, and in its new form was transplanted to Nineveh on
+the one side and to Greece on the other. The rosettes and other patterns
+of the Babylonian cylinders were introduced into the handiwork of
+Phoenicia, and so passed on to the West, while the hero of the ancient
+Chaldean epic became first the Tyrian Melkarth, and then the Herakles of
+Hellas. It is possible, no doubt, that with all this borrowing there was
+still something that was original in Phoenician work; such at any rate
+seems to be the case with some of the forms given to the vases; but at
+present we have no means of determining how far this originality may have
+extended. In Assyria, indeed, Phoenician art exercised a great influence
+in the eighth and seventh centuries B.C.; but it had itself previously
+drawn its first inspiration from the empire of the Tigris, and did but
+give back the perfect blossom to those from whom it had received the seed.
+The workmanship of the ivories and bronze bowls found at Nineveh by Mr.
+Layard is thoroughly Phoenician; but it cannot be separated from that of
+the purely Assyrian pavements and bas-reliefs with which the palaces were
+adorned. The Phoenician art, in fact, traces of which we find from
+Assyria to Italy, though based on both Egyptian and Assyrian models, owed
+far more to Assyria than it did to Egypt. In art, as in mythology and
+religion, Phoenicia was but a carrier and intermediary between East and
+West; and just as the Greek legends of Aphrodite and Adonis, of Herakles
+and his twelve labours, and of the other borrowed heroes of Oriental story
+came in the first instance from Assyria, so did that art and culture which
+Kadmus the Phoenician handed on to the Greek race.
+
+But Assyria itself had been equally an adapter and intermediary. The
+Semites of Assyria and Babylonia had borrowed their culture and
+civilization from the older Accadian race, with its agglutinative
+language, which had preceded them in the possession of Chaldea. So
+slavishly observant were the Assyrians of their Chaldean models that in a
+land where limestone was plentiful they continued to build their palaces
+and temples of brick, and to ornament them with those columns and
+pictorial representations which had been first devised on the alluvial
+plains of Babylonia. To understand Assyrian art, and track it back to its
+source, we must go to the engraved gems and ruined temples of primćval
+Babylonia. It is true that Egypt may have had some influence on Assyrian
+art, at the time when the eighteenth dynasty had pushed its conquests to
+the banks of the Tigris; but that influence does not seem to have been
+either deep or permanent. Now the art of Assyria is in great measure the
+art of Phoenicia, and that again the art of prehistoric Greece. Modern
+research has discovered the prototype of Herakles in the hero of a
+Chaldean epic composed it may be, four thousand years ago; it has also
+discovered the beginnings of Greek columnar architecture and the germs of
+Greek art in the works of the builders and engravers of early Chaldea.
+
+When first I saw, five years ago, the famous sculpture which has guarded
+the Gate of Lions at Mykenć for so many centuries, I was at once struck by
+its Assyrian character. The lions in form and attitude belong to Assyria,
+and the pillar against which they rest may be seen in the bas-reliefs
+brought from Nineveh. Here, at all events, there was clear proof of
+Assyrian influence; the only question was whether that influence had been
+carried through the hands of the Phoenicians or had travelled along the
+highroad which ran across Asia Minor, the second channel whereby the
+culture of Assyria could have been brought to Greece. The existence of a
+similar sculpture over a rock-tomb at Kumbet in Phrygia might seem to
+favour the latter view.
+
+The discoveries of Dr. Schliemann have gone far to settle the question.
+The pottery excavated at Mykenć is of the Phoenician type, and the clay
+of which is composed has probably come from Thera. The terra-cotta figures
+of animals and more especially of a goddess with long robe, crowned head,
+and crescent-like arms, are spread over the whole area traversed by the
+Phoenicians. The image of the goddess in one form or another has been
+found in Thera and Melos, in Naxos and Paros, in Ios, in Sikinos, and in
+Anaphos, and M. Lenormant has traced it back to Babylonia and to the
+Babylonian representation of the goddess Artemis-Nana.[28] At Tanagra the
+image has been found under two forms, both, however, made of the same clay
+and in the same style as the figures from Mykenć. In one the goddess is
+upright, as at Mykenć, with the _polos_ on her head, and the arms either
+outspread or folded over the breast; in the other she is sitting with the
+arms crossed. Now among the gold ornaments exhumed at Mykenć are some
+square pendants of gold which represent the goddess in this sitting
+posture.[29]
+
+The animal forms most commonly met with are those of the lion, the stag,
+the bull, the cuttle-fish, and the murex. The last two point unmistakably
+to a seafaring race, and more especially to those Phoenician sailors
+whose pursuit of the purple-trade first brought them into Greek seas. So
+far as I know, neither the polypus nor the murex, nor the butterfly which
+often accompanies them have been found in Assyria or Egypt, and we may
+therefore see in them original designs of Phoenician art. Mr. Newton has
+pointed out that the cuttle-fish (like the dolphin) also occurs among the
+prehistoric remains from Ialysos in Rhodes, where, too, pottery of the
+same shape and material as that of Mykenć has been found, as well as beads
+of a curious vitreous substance, and rings in which the back of the chaton
+is rounded so as to fit the finger. It is clear that the art of Ialysos
+belongs to the same age and school as the art of Mykenć; and as a scarab
+of Amenophis III. has been found in one of the Ialysian tombs, it is
+possible that the art may be as old as the fifteenth century B.C.
+
+Now Ialysos is not the only Rhodian town which has yielded prehistoric
+antiquities. Camirus also has been explored by Messrs. Biliotti and
+Saltzmann; and while objects of the same kind and character as those of
+Ialysos have been discovered there, other objects have been found by their
+side which belong to another and more advanced stage of art. There are
+vases of clay and metal, bronze bowls, and the like, which not only
+display high finish and skill, but are ornamented with the designs
+characteristic of Phoenician workmanship at Nineveh and elsewhere. Thus
+we have zones of trees and animals, attempts at the representation of
+scenery, and a profusion of ornament, while the influence of Egypt is
+traceable in the sphinxes and scarabs, which also occur plentifully. Here,
+therefore, at Camirus, there is plain evidence of a sudden introduction of
+finished Phoenician art among a people whose art was still rude and
+backward, although springing from the same germs as the art of Phoenicia
+itself. Two distinct periods in the history of the Ćgean thus seem to lie
+unfolded before us; one in which Eastern influence was more or less
+indirect, content to communicate the seeds of civilization and culture,
+and to import such objects as a barbarous race would prize; and another in
+which the East was, as it were, transported into the West, and the
+development of Greek art was interrupted by the introduction of foreign
+workmen and foreign beliefs. This second period was the period of
+Phoenician colonization as distinct from that of mere trading
+voyages--the period, in fact, when Thebes was made a Phoenician
+fortress, and the Phoenician alphabet diffused throughout the Greek
+world. It is only in relics of the later part of this period that we can
+look for inscriptions and traces of writing, at least in Greece proper; in
+the islands and on the coast of Asia Minor, the Cypriote syllabary seems
+to have been in use, to be superseded afterwards by the simpler alphabet
+of Kadmus. For reasons presently to be stated, I would distinguish the
+first period by the name of Phrygian.
+
+Throughout the whole of it, however, the Phoenician trading ships must
+have formed the chief medium of intercourse between Asia and Europe. Proof
+of this has been furnished by the rock tombs of Spata, which have been
+lighted on opportunely to illustrate and explain the discoveries at
+Mykenć. Spata is about nine miles from Athens, on the north-west spur of
+Hymettos, and the two tombs hitherto opened are cut in the soft sandstone
+rock of a small conical hill. Both are approached by long tunnel-like
+entrances, and one of them contains three chambers, leading one into the
+other, and each fashioned after the model of a house. No one who has seen
+the objects unearthed at Spata can doubt for a moment their close
+connection with the Mykenćan antiquities. The very moulds found at Mykenć
+fit the ornaments from Spata, and might easily have been used in the
+manufacture of them. It is more especially with the contents of the sixth
+tomb, discovered by Mr. Stamatáki in the _enceinte_ at Mykenć after Dr.
+Schliemann's departure, that the Spata remains agree so remarkably. But
+there is a strong resemblance between them and the Mykenćan antiquities
+generally, in both material, patterns, and character. The cuttle-fish and
+the murex appear in both; the same curious spiral designs, and ornaments
+in the shape of shells or rudely-formed oxheads; the same geometrical
+patterns; the same class of carved work. An ivory in which a lion, of the
+Assyrian type, is depicted as devouring a stag, is but a reproduction of a
+similar design met with among the objects from Mykenć, and it is
+interesting to observe that the same device, in the same style of art, may
+be also seen on a Phoenician gem from Sardinia.[30] Of still higher
+interest are other ivories, which, like the antiquities of Camirus, belong
+rather to the second than to the first period of Phoenician influence.
+One of these represents a column, which, like that above the Gate of
+Lions, carries us back to the architecture of Babylonia, while others
+exhibit the Egyptian sphinx, as modified by Phoenician artists. Thus the
+handle of a comb is divided into two compartments--the lower occupied by
+three of these sphinxes, the upper by two others, which have their eyes
+fixed on an Assyrian rosette in the middle. Similar sphinxes are engraved
+on a silver cup lately discovered at Palestrina, bearing the Phoenician
+inscription, in Phoenician letters, "Eshmun-ya'ar, son of Ashta'."[31]
+Another ivory has been carved into the form of a human side face,
+surmounted by a tiara of four plaits. On the one hand the arrangement of
+the hair of the face, the whisker and beard forming a fringe round it, and
+the two lips being closely shorn, reminds us of what we find at
+Palestrina; on the other hand, the head-dress is that of the figures on
+the sculptured rocks of Asia Minor, and of the Hittite princes of
+Carchemish. In spite of this Phoenician colouring, however, the
+treasures of Spata belong to the earlier part of the Phoenician period,
+if not to that which I have called Phrygian: there is as yet no sign of
+writing, no trace of the use of iron. But we seem to be approaching the
+close of the bronze age in Greece--to have reached the time when the
+lions were sculptured over the chief gateway of Mykenć, and the so-called
+treasuries were erected in honour of the dead.
+
+Can any date be assigned, even approximately, to those two periods of
+Phoenician influence in Greece? Can we localize the era, so to speak, of
+the antiquities discovered at Mykenć, or fix the epoch at which its kings
+ceased to build its long-enduring monuments, and its glory was taken from
+it? I think an answer to these questions may be found in a series of
+engraved gold rings and prisms found upon its site--the prisms having
+probably once served to ornament the neck. In these we can trace a gradual
+development of art; which in time becomes less Oriental and more Greek,
+and acquires a certain facility in the representation of the human form.
+
+Let us first fix our attention on an engraved gold chaton found, not in
+the tombs, but outside the _enceinte_ among the ruins, as it would seem,
+of a house.[32] On this we have a rude representation of a figure seated
+under a palm-tree, with another figure behind and three more in front, the
+foremost being of small size, the remaining two considerably taller and in
+flounced dresses. Above are the symbols of the sun and crescent-moon, and
+at the side a row of lions' heads. Now no one who has seen this chaton,
+and also had any acquaintance with the engraved gems of the archaic period
+of Babylonian art, can avoid being struck by the fact that the intaglio is
+a copy of one of the latter. The characteristic workmanship of the
+Babylonian gems is imitated by punches made in the gold which give the
+design a very curious effect. The attitude of the figures is that common
+on the Chaldean cylinders; the owner stands in front of the deity, of
+diminutive size, and in the act of adoration, while the priests are placed
+behind him. The latter wear the flounced dresses peculiar to the early
+Babylonian priests; and what has been supposed to represent female
+breasts, is really a copy of the way in which the breast of a man is
+frequently portrayed on the cylinders.[33] The palm-tree, with its single
+fruit hanging on the left side, is characteristically Babylonian; so also
+are the symbols that encircle the engraving, the sun and moon and lions'
+heads. The chaton of another gold ring, found on the same spot, is covered
+with similar animal heads. This, again, is a copy of early Babylonian art,
+in which such designs were not unfrequent, though, as they were afterwards
+imitated by both Assyrian and Cyprian engravers, too much stress must not
+be laid on the agreement.[34] The artistic position and age of the other
+ring, however, admits of little doubt. The archaic period of Babylonian
+art may be said to close with the rise of Assyria in the fourteenth
+century B.C.; and though archaic Babylonian intaglios continued to be
+imported into the West down to the time of the Romans, it is not likely
+that they were imitated by Western artists after the latter had become
+acquainted with better and more attractive models. I think, therefore,
+that the two rings may be assigned to the period of archaic Babylonian
+power in western Asia, a period that begins with the victories of
+Naram-Sin in Palestine in the seventeenth century B.C. or earlier, and
+ends with the conquest of Babylon by the Assyrians and the establishment
+of Assyrian supremacy. This is also the period to which I am inclined to
+refer the introduction among the Phoenicians and Greeks of the column
+and of certain geometrical patterns, which had their first home in
+Babylonia.[35] The lentoid gems with their rude intaglios, found in the
+islands, on the site of Herćum, in the tombs of Mykenć and elsewhere,
+belong to the same age, and point back to the loamy plain of Babylonia
+where stone was rare and precious, and whence, consequently, the art of
+gem-cutting was spread through the ancient world. We can thus understand
+the existence of artistic designs and other evidences of civilizing
+influence among a people who were not yet acquainted with the use of iron.
+The early Chaldean Empire, in spite of the culture to which it had
+attained, was still in the bronze age; iron was almost unknown, and its
+tools and weapons were fashioned of stone, bone, and bronze. Had the
+Greeks and the Phoenicians before them received their first lessons in
+culture from Egypt or from Asia Minor, where the Khalybes and other allied
+tribes had worked in iron from time immemorial, they would probably have
+received this metal at the same time. But neither at Hissarlik nor at
+Mykenć is there any trace of an iron age.
+
+The second period of Western art and civilization is represented by some
+of the objects found at Mykenć in the tombs themselves. The intaglios have
+ceased to be Babylonian, and have become markedly Assyrian. First of all
+we have a hunting scene, a favourite subject with Assyrian artists, but
+quite unknown to genuine Hellenic art. The disposition of the figures is
+that usual in Assyrian sculpture, and, like the Assyrian king, the
+huntsman is represented as riding in a chariot. A comparison of this
+hunting scene with the bas-reliefs on the tombstones which stood over the
+graves shows that they belong to the same age, while the spiral
+ornamentation of the stones is essentially Assyrian. Equally Assyrian,
+though better engraved, is a lion on one of the gold prisms, which might
+have been cut by an Assyrian workman, so true is it to its Oriental model,
+and after this I would place the representation of a struggle between a
+man (perhaps Herakles) and a lion, in which, though the lion and attitude
+of the combatants are Assyrian, the man is no longer the Assyrian hero
+Gisdhubar, but a figure of more Western type. In another intaglio,
+representing a fight between armed warriors, the art has ceased to be
+Assyrian, and is struggling to become native. We seem to be approaching
+the period when Greece gave over walking in Eastern leading-strings, and
+began to step forward firmly without help. As I believe, however, that the
+tombs within the _enceinte_ are of older date than the Treasuries outside
+the Acropolis, or the Gate of Lions which belongs to the same age, it is
+plain that we have not yet reached the time when Assyro-Phoenician
+influence began to decline in Greece. The lions above the gate would alone
+be proof to the contrary.
+
+But, in fact, Phoenician influence continued to be felt up to the end of
+the seventh century B.C. Passing by the so-called Corinthian vases, or the
+antiquities exhumed by General di Cesnola in Cyprus, where the
+Phoenician element was strong, we have numerous evidences of the fact
+from all parts of Greece. Two objects of bronze discovered at Olympia may
+be specially signalized. One of these is an oblong plate, narrower at one
+end than at the other, ornamented with _repousse_ work, and divided into
+four compartments. In the first compartment are figures of the nondescript
+birds so often seen on the "Corinthian" pottery; in the next come two
+Assyrian gryphons standing, as usual, face to face; while the third
+represents the contest of Herakles with the Kentaur, thoroughly Oriental
+in design. The Kentaur has a human forefront, covered, however, with hair;
+his tail is abnormally long, and a three-branched tree rises behind him.
+The fourth and largest compartment contains the figure of the Asiatic
+goddess with the four wings at the back, and a lion, held by the hind leg,
+in either hand. The face of the goddess is in profile. The whole design is
+Assyro-Phoenician, and is exactly reproduced on some square gold plates,
+intended probably to adorn the breast, presented to the Louvre by the Duc
+de Luynes. The other object to which I referred is a bronze dish,
+ornamented on the inside with _repousse_ work, which at first sight looks
+Egyptian, but is really that Phoenician modification of Egyptian art so
+common in the eighth and seventh centuries B.C. An inscription in the
+Aramaic characters of the so-called Sidonian branch of the Phoenician
+alphabet is cut on the outside, and reads: "Belonging to Neger, son of
+Miga."[36] As the word used for "son" is the Aramaic _bar_ and not the
+Phoenician _ben_, we may conclude that the owner of the dish had come
+from northern Syria. It is interesting to find a silver cup embossed with
+precisely the same kind of design, and also bearing an inscription in
+Phoenician letters, among the treasures discovered in a tomb at
+Palestrina, the ancient Prćneste, more than a year ago. This inscription
+is even briefer than the other: "Eshmunya'ar son of 'Ashtâ,"[37] where,
+though _ben_ is employed, the father's name has an Aramaic form. Helbig
+would refer these Italian specimens of Phoenician skill to the
+Carthaginian epoch, partly on the ground that an African species of ape
+seems sometimes represented on them;[38] in this case they might be as
+late as the fifth century before the Christian era.
+
+During the earlier part of the second period of Phoenician influence,
+Phoenicia and the Phoenician colonies were not the only channel by
+which the elements of Assyrian culture found their way into the West. The
+monuments and religious beliefs of Asia Minor enable us to trace their
+progress from the banks of the Euphrates and the ranges of the Taurus,
+through Cappadocia and Phrygia, to the coasts and islands of the Ćgean.
+The near affinity of Greek and Phrygian is recognized even by Plato;[39]
+the legends of Midas and Gordius formed part of Greek mythology, and the
+royal house of Mykenć was made to come with all its wealth from the golden
+sands of the Paktolus; while on the other hand the cult of Mâ, of Attys,
+or of the Ephesian Artemis points back to an Assyrian origin. The
+sculptures found by Perrot[40] and Texier constitute a link between the
+prehistoric art of Greece and that of Asia Minor; the spiral ornaments
+that mark the antiquities of Mykenć are repeated on the royal tombs of
+Asia Minor; and the ruins of Sardis, where once ruled a dynasty derived by
+Greek writers from Ninus or Nineveh, "the son of Bell," the grandson of
+the Assyrian Herakles,[41] may yet pour a flood of light on the earlier
+history of Greece. But it was rather in the first period, which I have
+termed Phrygian, than in the second, that the influence of Asia Minor was
+strongest. The figure of the goddess riding on a leopard, with mural crown
+and peaked shoes, on the rock-tablets of Pterium,[42] is borrowed rather
+from the cylinders of early Babylonia than from the sculptures of Assyria;
+and the Hissarlik collection connects itself more with the primitive
+antiquities of Santorin than with the later art of Mykenć and Cyprus. We
+have already seen, however, the close relationship that exists between
+some of the objects excavated at Mykenć and what we may call the
+pre-Phoenician art of Ialysos,--that is to say, the objects in which the
+influence of the East is indirect, and not direct. The discovery of
+metallurgy is associated with Dodona, where the oracle long continued to
+be heard in the ring of a copper chaldron, and where M. Karapanos has
+found bronze plates with the geometrical and circular patterns which
+distinguish the earliest art of Greece; now Dodona is the seat of primćval
+Greek civilization, the land of the Selloi or Helloi, of the Graioi
+themselves, and of Pelasgian Zeus, while it is to the north that the
+legends of Orpheus, of Musćus, and of other early civilizers looked back.
+But even at Dodona we may detect traces of Asiatic influence in the part
+played there by the doves, as well as in the story of Deucalion's deluge,
+and it may, perhaps, be not too rash to conjecture that even before the
+days of Phoenician enterprise and barter, an echo of Babylonian
+civilization had reached Greece through the medium of Asia Minor, whence
+it was carried, partly across the bridge formed by the islands of the
+Archipelago, partly through the mainland of Thrace and Epirus. The
+Hittites, with their capital at Carchemish, seem to have been the centre
+from which this borrowed civilization was spread northward and westward.
+Here was the home of the art which characterizes Asia Minor, and we have
+only to compare the bas-relief of Pterium with the rock sculptures found
+by Mr. Davis associated with "Hamathite" hieroglyphics at Ibreer, in
+Lycaonia,[43] to see how intimate is the connection between the two. These
+hieroglyphics were the still undeciphered writing of the Hittite tribes
+and if, as seems possible, the Cypriote syllabary were derived from them,
+they would be a testimony to the western spread of Hittite influence at a
+very early epoch. The Cypriote characters adopted into the alphabets of
+Lycia and Karia, as well as the occurrence of the same characters on a
+hone and some of the terra-cotta discs found by Dr. Schliemann at
+Hissarlik, go to show that this influence would have extended, at any
+rate, to the coasts of the sea.
+
+The traces of Egyptian influence, on the contrary, are few and faint. No
+doubt the Phoenician alphabet was ultimately of Egyptian origin, no
+doubt, too, that certain elements of Phoenician art were borrowed from
+Egypt, but before these were handed on to the West, they had first been
+profoundly modified by the Phoenician settlers in the Delta and in
+Canaan. The influence exercised immediately by Egypt upon Greece belongs
+to the historic period; the legends which saw an Egyptian emigrant in
+Kekrops or an Egyptian colony in the inhabitants of Argos were fables of a
+late date. Whatever intercourse existed between Egypt and Greece in the
+prehistoric period was carried on, not by the Egyptians, but by the
+Phoenicians of the Delta; it was they who brought the scarabs of a
+Thothmes or an Amenophis to the islands of the Ćgean, like their
+descendants afterwards in Italy, and the proper names found on the
+Egyptian monuments of the eighteenth and nineteenth dynasties, which
+certain Egyptologists have identified with those of Greece and Asia Minor,
+belong rather, I believe, to Libyan and Semitic tribes.[44] Like the
+sphinxes at Spata, the indications of intercourse with Egypt met with at
+Mykenć prove nothing more than the wide extent of Phoenician commerce
+and the existence of Phoenician colonies at the mouths of the Nile.
+Ostrich-eggs covered with stucco dolphins have been found not only at
+Mykenć, but also in the grotto of Polledrara near Vulci in Italy; the
+Egyptian porcelain excavated at Mykenć is painted to represent the fringed
+dress of an Assyrian or a Phoenician, not of an Egyptian; and though a
+gold mask belonging to Prince Kha-em-Uas, and resembling the famous masks
+of Mykenć, has brought to the Louvre from an Apis chamber, a similar mask
+of size was discovered last year in a tomb on the site of Aradus. Such
+intercourse, however, as existed between Greece and the Delta must have
+been very restricted; otherwise we should surely have some specimens of
+writing, some traces of the Phoenician alphabet. It would not have been
+left to the Aramćans of Syria to introduce the "Kadmeian letters" into
+Greece, and Mykenć, rather than Thebes, would have been made the centre
+from which they were disseminated. Indeed, we may perhaps infer that even
+the coast of Asia Minor, near as it was to the Phoenician settlements at
+Kamirus and elsewhere, could have held but little intercourse with the
+Phoenicians of Egypt from the fact that the Cypriote syllabary was so
+long in use upon it, and that the alphabets afterwards employed were
+derived only indirectly from the Phoenician through the medium of the
+Greek.
+
+One point more now alone needs to be noticed. The long-continued influence
+upon early Greek culture which we ascribe to the Phoenicians cannot but
+have left its mark upon the Greek vocabulary also. Some at least of the
+names given by the Phoenicians to the objects of luxury they brought
+with them must have been adopted by the natives of Hellas. We know that
+this is the case with the letters of the alphabet; is it also the case
+with other words? If not, analogy would almost compel us to treat the
+evidences that have been enumerated of Phoenician influence as illusory,
+and to fall back upon the position of O. K. Müller and his school. By way
+of answer I would refer to the list of Greek words, the Semitic origin of
+which admits of no doubt, lately given by Dr. August Müller in
+Bezzenberger's "Beitrage zur Kunde der indogermanischen Sprachen."[45]
+Amongst these we find articles of luxury like "linen," "shirt,"
+"sackcloth," "myrrh," and "frankincense," "galbanum" and "cassia,"
+"cinnamon" and "soap," "lyres" and "wine-jars," "balsam" and "cosmetics,"
+as well, possibly, as "fine linen" and "gold," along with such evidences
+of trade and literature as the "pledge," "the writing tablet," and the
+"shekel." If these were the only instances of Semitic tincture, they would
+be enough to prove the early presence of the Semitic Phoenicians in
+Greece. But we must remember that they are but samples of a class, and
+that many words borrowed during the heroic age may have dropped out of use
+or been conformed to the native part of the vocabulary long before the
+beginning of the written literature, while it would be in the lesser known
+dialects of the islands that the Semitic element was strongest. We know
+that the dialect of Cyprus was full of importations from the East.
+
+In what precedes I have made no reference to the Homeric poems, and the
+omission may be thought strange. But Homeric illustrations of the presence
+of the Phoenicians in Greece will occur to every one, while both the
+Iliad and the Odyssey in their existing form are too modern to be quoted
+without extreme caution. A close investigation of their language shows
+that it is the slow growth of generations; Ćolic formulć from the lays
+first recited in the towns of the Troad are embodied in Ionic poems where
+old Ionic, new Ionic, and even Attic jostle against one another, and
+traditional words and phrases are furnished with mistaken meanings or new
+forms coined by false analogy. It is difficult to separate the old from
+the new, to say with certainty that this allusion belongs to the heroic
+past, this to the Homer of Theopompus and Euphorion, the contemporary of
+the Lydian Gyges. The art of Homer is not the art of Mykenć and of the
+early age of Phoenician influence; iron is already taking the place of
+bronze, and the shield of Akhilles or the palace of Alkinous bear witness
+to a developed art which has freed itself from its foreign bonds. Six
+times are Phoenicia and the Phoenicians mentioned in the Odyssey, once
+in the Iliad;[46] elsewhere it is Sidon and the Sidonians that represented
+them, never Tyre.[47] Such passages, therefore, cannot belong to the epoch
+of Tyrian supremacy, which goes back, at all events, to the age of David,
+but rather to the brief period when the Assyrian king Shalmaneser laid
+siege to Tyre, and his successor Sargon made Sidon powerful at its
+expense. This, too, was the period when Sargon set up his record in
+Cyprus, "the isle of Yavnan" or the Ionians, when Assyria first came into
+immediate contact with the Greeks, and when Phoenician artists worked at
+the court of Nineveh and carried their wares to Italy and Sardinia. But it
+was not the age to which the relics of Mykenć, in spite of paradoxical
+doubts, reach back, nor that in which the sacred bull of Astarte carried
+the Phoenician maiden Europa to her new home in the west.
+
+ A. H. SAYCE, in _Contemporary Review_.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[24] See E. Curtins: Die griechische Götterlehre vom geschichtlichen
+Standpunkt, in _Preussische Jahrbucher_, xxxvi. pp. 1-17. 1875.
+
+[25] _Contemporary Review_, January, 1878.
+
+[26] See Fouqué's Mission Scientifique á l'île de Santorin (Archives des
+Missions 2e série, iv. 1867); Gorceix in the Bulletin de l'Ecole francaise
+d'Athčnes, i.
+
+[27] See, for example, Di Cesnola's _Cyprus_, pp. 401, 402.
+
+[28] _Gazette Archéologique_, ii-. 1, 3.
+
+[29] See Schliemann's Mycenć and Tiryns, pl. 273.
+
+[30] Given by La Marmora in the Memorie della Reale Academia delle Scienze
+di Torino (1854), vol. xiv., pl. 2, fig. 63.
+
+[31] Given in the Monumenti d. Instituto Romano, 1876.
+
+[32] Schliemann: Mycenć and Tiryns, p. 530.
+
+[33] See, for instance, the example given in Rawlinson's Ancient
+Monarchies (1st edit.), i. p. 118, where the flounced priest has what
+looks like a woman's breast. Dancing boys and men in the East still wear
+these flounces, which are variously coloured (see Loftus: Chaldea and
+Susiana, p. 22; George Smith: Assyrian Discoveries, p. 130).
+
+[34] See, for example, Layard: Nineveh and Babylon, pp. 604, 606; Di
+Cesnola: Cyprus, pl. 31, No. 7; pl. 32, No. 19. A copy of the Mykenćan
+engraving is given in Schliemann's Mycenć and Tiryns, pl. 531.
+
+[35] More especially the examples in Rawlinson's Ancient Monarchies, iii.
+p. 403, and i. 413. For Mykenćan examples see Schliemann's Mykenć and
+Tiryns, ppl. 149, 152, &c. Some of the more peculiar patterns from Mykenć
+resemble the forms assumed by the "Hamathite" hieroglyphics in the
+unpublished inscription copied by Mr. George Smith from the back of a
+mutilated statue at Jerablűs (Carchemish).
+
+[36] LNGR. BR. MIGA'.
+
+[37] ASHMNYA'R. BNA' SHTA.
+
+[38] Annali d. Istituto Romano, 1876.
+
+[39] Kratylus, 410 A.D.
+
+[40] Exploration Archéologique de la Galatie et de la Bithynie.
+
+[41] See Herodotus, i.7.
+
+[42] Texier: Description de l'Asie Mineure, i. 1, pl. 78.
+
+[43] Transactions of the Society of Biblical Archćology, iv. 2, 1876.
+
+[44] I have given the reasons of my scepticism in the _Academy_, of May
+30, 1874. Brugsch Bey, the leading authority on the geography of the
+Egyptian monuments, would now identify those names with those tribes in
+Kolkhis, and its neighbourhood.
+
+[45] i. pp. 273-301 (1877).
+
+[46] _Phoenicia_, Od. iv. 83; xiv. 291. _Phoenicians_, Od. xiii. 272; xv.
+415. _A Phoenician_, Od. xiv. 288. _A Phoenician woman_, Od. xiv. 288; Il.
+xiv. 321.
+
+[47] _Sidon_, _Sidonia_, Il. vi. 291; Od. xiii. 285; xv. 425. _Sidonians_,
+Il. vi. 290; Od. iv. 84, 618; xv. 118.
+
+
+
+
+SOME GOSSIP ABOUT LEICESTER SQUARE.
+
+
+In old-world London, Leicester Square played a much more important part
+than it does to-day. It was then the chosen refuge of royalty and the home
+of wit and genius. Time was when it glittered with throngs of
+lace-bedizened gallants; when it trembled beneath the chariot-wheels of
+Beauty and Fashion; when it re-echoed with the cries of jostling chairmen
+and link-boys; when it was trodden by the feet of the greatest men of a
+great epoch--Newton and Swift, Hogarth, Sir Joshua Reynolds, and a host of
+others more or less distinguished. Mr. Tom Taylor, in his interesting work
+entitled "Leicester Square," tells us that the vicissitudes of a London
+quarter generally tend downwards through a regular series of decades. It
+is first fashionable; then it is professional; then it becomes a favourite
+locality for hotels and lodging-houses; then the industrial element
+predominates, and then not infrequently a still lower depth is reached.
+Leicester Square has been no exception to this rule. Its reputation in
+fact was becoming very shady indeed, when the improvement of its central
+inclosure gave it somewhat of a start upwards and turned attention to its
+early history.
+
+Of old, many of these grand doings took place at Leicester House, which
+was the first house in the Square. It was built by Robert Sidney, Earl of
+Leicester, a staunch Royalist, somewhere about 1636. His sons, Viscount
+Lisle and the famous Algernon Sidney, grew up less of Royalists than he
+was; and to Leicester House, with the sanction and welcome of its head,
+came many of the more prominent Republicans of the day, Vane and Neville,
+Milton and Bradshaw, Ludlow and Lambert. The cream of history lies not so
+much in a bare notation of facts as in the little touches of nature and
+manners which reproduce for us the actual human life of a former age, and
+much of this may be gleaned from the history of the Sidneys. They were an
+interesting family, alike from their rank, their talents, their personal
+beauty, and the vicissitudes of their fortunes. The Countess was a clever
+managing woman; and her letters to her absent lord when ambassador in
+France convey to us many pleasant details of the home-life at Leicester
+House. Still more charming is it to read the pretty little billets
+addressed to the Earl by his elder girls. Of these six beautiful daughters
+of the house of Sidney, four were married and two died in the dawn of
+early womanhood. Of the younger of these, Lady Elizabeth, the father has a
+touching entry in his journal. After narrating her death, he adds: "She
+had to the last the most angelical countenance and beauty, and the most
+heavenly disposition and temper of mind that I think were ever seen in so
+young a creature."
+
+With her death the merry happy family life at Leicester House drew to a
+close. The active bustling mother, whose influence had brought the
+different jarring chords into harmony, died a few mouths afterwards; and
+the busy years as they sped onwards, while consummating the fall of
+Charles and consolidating the power of Cromwell, also put great and
+growing disunion between the Sidney brothers. At the Restoration, Algernon
+was in exile; Lord Lisle's stormy temper had alienated him from his
+father; the Earl's favourite son-in-law was dead; of the three who
+remained he was neither proud nor fond; and lonely and sick at heart, he
+grew weary of the splendid home from which the fair faces of his handsome
+children had gone for ever, and made preparations to leave it. He was
+presented to Charles II.; and immediately afterwards retired to Penshurst
+in Kent; and Leicester House was let, first to the ambassadors of the
+United Provinces; and then to a more remarkable tenant, Elizabeth Stewart,
+the ill-fated Princess and Queen of Bohemia. She had left England in 1613
+a lovely happy girl, the bride of the man she loved, life stretching all
+rainbow-hued before her. She returned to it a weary haggard woman of
+sixty-five, who had drunk to the dregs of every possible cup of
+disappointment and sorrow. Her presence was very unwelcome, as that of the
+unfortunate often is. Charles II., her nephew, was very loath indeed to
+have the pleasure of receiving her as a guest; but she returned to London
+whether he would or not, and Leicester house was taken for her. There she
+languished for a few months in feeble and broken health, and there, on the
+anniversary of her wedding-day, she died.
+
+The house immediately to the west of Leicester House belonged to the
+Marquis of Aylesbury; but in 1698 it was occupied by the Marquis of
+Caermarthen, who was appointed by King William III. cicerone and guide to
+Peter the Great when he came in the January of that year to visit England.
+Peter's great qualities have long been done full justice to; but in the
+far-off January of 1698 he appeared to the English as by no means a very
+august-looking potentate; he had the manners and appearance of an unkempt
+barbarian, and his pastimes were those of a coal-heaver. His favourite
+exercise in the mornings was to run a barrow through and through Evelyn's
+trim holly-hedges at Deptford; and the state in which he left his pretty
+house there is not to be described. His chief pleasure, when the duties of
+the day were over, was to drink all night with the Marquis in his house at
+Leicester Fields, the favourite tipple of the two distinguished topers
+being brandy spiced with pepper; or sack, of which the Czar is reported to
+have drunk eight bottles one day after dinner. Among other sights in
+London, the Marquis took him to see Westminster Hall in full term. "Who
+are all these men in wigs and gowns?" he asked. "Lawyers," was the answer.
+"Lawyers!" he exclaimed. "Why, I have only two in my dominions, and when I
+get back, I intend to hang one of them."
+
+In January 1712 Leicester House, which was then occupied by the imperial
+resident, received another distinguished visitor in the person of Prince
+Eugene, one of the greatest captains of the age. In appearance he was a
+little sallow wizened old man, with one shoulder higher than the other. A
+soldier of fortune, whose origin was so humble as to be unknown, his
+laurels were stained neither by rapacity nor self-seeking; and in all the
+vicissitudes of his eventful life he bore himself like a hero, and a
+gentleman in the truest and fullest acceptation of the word. Dean Swift
+was also at this time in lodgings in Leicester Fields, noting with clear
+acute unpitying vision the foibles and failings of all around him, and
+writing to Stella from time to time after his cynical fashion, "how the
+world is going mad after Prince Eugene, and how he went to court also, but
+could not see him, the crowd was so great."
+
+A labyrinth of courts, inns, and stable-yards had gradually filled up the
+space between the royal mews and Leicester Fields; and between 1680 and
+1700 several new streets were opened through these; one reason for the
+opening of them being the great influx of French refugees into London, on
+the occasion of the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685. Many of
+these exiles settled in and around Leicester Fields, and for their use
+several chapels were built. The neighbourhood has ever since been a resort
+of French immigrants.
+
+In one of these streets opening into Leicester Square, St. Martin's
+Street, Sir Isaac Newton lived for the last sixteen years of his life. The
+house in which he lived looks dingy enough now; but in those days it was
+considered a very good residence indeed, and Like Leicester House was
+frequented by the best company in the fashionable world. The genius and
+reputation of its master attracted scientific and learned visitors; and
+the beauty of his niece, Mrs. Catharine Barton, drew to her feet all the
+more distinguished wits and beaux of the time.
+
+Between 1717 and 1760 Leicester House became what Pennant calls "the
+pouting-place of princes," being for almost all that time in the
+occupation of a Prince of Wales who was living in fierce opposition to the
+reigning king. In 1718 the Prince of Wales having had a furious quarrel
+with his father George I., on the occasion of the christening of the
+Prince's son George William, left St. James's, and took Leicester House at
+a yearly rent of five hundred pounds; and until he succeeded to the throne
+in 1727, it was his town residence.
+
+Here he held his court--a court not by any means strait-laced; a gay
+little court at first; a court whose selfish intrigues and wild frolics
+and madcap adventures and humdrum monotony live for us still in the
+sparkling pages of Horace Walpole; or are painted in with vivid clearness
+of touch and execution, but with a darker brush, by Hervey, Pope's Lord
+Fanny, who was a favourite with his mistress the handsome accomplished
+Caroline, Princess of Wales. Piloted by one or other of these exact
+historians, we enter the chamber of the gentlewomen-in-waiting, and are
+introduced to the maids-of-honour, to fair Mary Lepell, to charming Mrs.
+Bellenden, to pensive, gentle Mrs. Howard. We see them eat Westphalia ham
+of a morning, and then set out with their royal master for a
+helter-skelter ride over hedges and ditches, on borrowed hacks. No wonder
+Pope pitied them; and on their return, who should they fall in with but
+that great poet himself! They are good to him in their way, these saucy
+charming maids-of-honour, and so they take the frail little man under
+their protection and give him his dinner; and then he finishes off the
+day, he tells us, by walking three hours in the moonlight with Mary
+Lepell. We can imagine the affected compliments he paid her and the
+burlesque love he made to her; and the fun she and her sister
+maids-of-honour would have laughing over it all, when she went back to
+Leicester House and he returned to his pretty villa at Twickenham.
+
+As the Prince grew older his court became more and more dull, till at last
+it was almost deserted, when on the 14th of June 1727 the loungers in its
+half-empty chambers were roused by sudden news--George I. was dead; and
+Leicester House was thronged by a sudden rush of obsequious courtiers,
+among whom was the late king's prime-minister, bluff, jolly, coarse Sir
+Robert Walpole. No one paid any attention to him, for every one knew that
+his disgrace was sealed; the new king had never been at any pains to
+conceal his dislike to him. Sir Robert, however, knew better; he was quite
+well aware who was to be the real ruler of England now; and he knew that
+the Princess Caroline had already accepted him, just as she accepted La
+Walmoden and her good Howard; and so all alone in his corner he chuckled
+to himself as he saw the crowd of sycophants elbow and jostle and push
+poor Lady Walpole as she tried to make her way to the royal feet. Caroline
+saw it too, and with a flash of half-scornful mischief lighting up her
+shrewd eyes, said with a smile: "Sure, there I see a friend." Instantly
+the human stream parted, and made way for her Ladyship.
+
+In 1728 Frederick, the eldest son of George and Caroline, arrived from
+Hanover, where he had remained since his birth in 1707. It was a fatal
+mistake; he came to England a stranger to his parents, and with his place
+in their hearts already filled by his brother. It was inevitable that
+where there was no mutual love, distrust and alienation should come, as in
+no long time they did, with the result that the same pitiful drama was
+played out again on the same stage. In 1743 Frederick Prince of Wales took
+Leicester House and held his receptions there. He was fond of gaiety, and
+had a succession of balls, masques, plays, and supper-parties. His tastes,
+as was natural considering his rearing, were foreign, and Leicester House
+was much frequented by foreigners of every grade. Desnoyers the
+dancing-master was a favourite habitué, as was also the charlatan
+St-Germain. In the midst of all this fiddling and buffoonery the Prince
+fell ill; but not so seriously as to cause uneasiness to any one around
+him; consequently all the world was taken by surprise when he suddenly
+died one morning in the arms of his friend the dancing-master. After his
+death his widow remained at Leicester House, and like a sensible woman as
+she was, made her peace with the king her father-in-law, who ever
+afterwards shewed himself very kind and friendly to her.
+
+In October 1760 George III. was proclaimed king; and again a crowd of
+courtiers thronged to Leicester House to kiss the hand of the new
+sovereign. For six years longer the Princess of Wales continued to live at
+Leicester House; and there in 1765 her youngest son died, and the
+following year she removed to Carlton House.
+
+While the quarrel between George II. and Frederick was at its fiercest,
+the central inclosure of Leicester Square was re-arranged very elegantly
+according to the taste of the day; and an equestrian statue of George I.,
+which had belonged to the first Duke of Chandos and had been bought at the
+sale of his effects, was set up in front of Leicester House, where it
+remained, a dazzling object at first, in all the glory of gilding, which
+passed with the populace for gold; but latterly a most wretched relic of
+the past, an eyesore, which was removed in 1874 in the course of Baron
+Grant's improvements.
+
+Leicester Square had other tenants beside Sir Isaac Newton, compared with
+whom courtiers and gallants and fine gentlemen and ladies look very small
+indeed. Hogarth lived in this street, and so did Sir Joshua Reynolds.
+Hogarth's house was the last but two on the east side of the Square. Here
+he established himself, a young struggling man, with Jane Thornhill, the
+wife with whom he had made a stolen love-match. In this house, with the
+quaint sign of the Golden Head over the door, he worked, not as painters
+generally do, at a multitude of detached pieces, but depicting with his
+vivid brush a whole series of popular allegories on canvas. When he became
+rich, as in process of time he did, he had a house at Chiswick; but he
+still retained the Golden Head as his town-house, and in 1764 returned to
+it to die.
+
+In No. 47 Sir Joshua Reynolds lived, and painted those charming portraits
+which have immortalised for us all that was most beautiful and famous in
+his epoch. He was a kindly genial lovable man, fond of society, and with a
+liking for display. He had a wonderful carriage, with the four seasons
+curiously painted in on the panels, and the wheels ornamented with carved
+foliage and gilding. The servants in attendance on this chariot wore
+silver-laced liveries; and as he had no time to drive in it himself, he
+made his sister take a daily airing in it, much to her discomfort, for she
+was a homely little lady with very simple tastes. He was a great dinner
+giver; and as it was his custom to ask every pleasant person he met
+without any regard to the preparation made to receive them, it may be
+conjectured that there was often a want of the commonest requisites of the
+dinner-table. Even knives, forks, and glasses could not always be procured
+at first. But although his dinners partook very much of the nature of
+unceremonious scrambles, they were thoroughly enjoyable. Whatever was
+awanting, there was always cheerfulness and the pleasant kindly
+interchange of thought. In July 1792 Sir Joshua died in his own house in
+Leicester Square; and within a few hours of his death, an obituary notice
+of him was written by Burke, the manuscript of which was blotted with his
+tears.
+
+In No. 28, on the eastern side of the Square, the celebrated anatomist
+John Hunter lived. Like most distinguished men of the day, he sat to Sir
+Joshua Reynolds for his portrait; but was so restless and preoccupied that
+he made a very bad sitter. At last one day he fell into a reverie. The
+happy moment had come; Sir Joshua, with his instinctive tact, caught the
+expression and presented to us the great surgeon in one of his most
+characteristic attitudes. The other celebrated surgeons, Cruickshank and
+Charles Bell, also lived in this Square. The house in which Bell resided
+for many years was large and ruinous, and had once been inhabited by
+Speaker Onslow. Here he set up his Museum, and began to lecture on
+anatomy, having for a long time, he writes, scarcely forty pupils to
+lecture to.
+
+During all the later portion of its history Leicester Square has been
+famous for shows. In 1771 Sir Ashton Lever exhibited a large and curious
+Museum in Leicester House. In 1796 Charles Dibdin built at Nos. 2 and 3,
+on the east side of Leicester Square, a small theatre in which he gave an
+entertainment consisting of an interesting medley of anecdote and song. In
+1787 Miss Linwood opened her gallery of pictures in needlework, an
+exhibition which lasted forty-seven years, for the last thirty-five of
+which it was exhibited at Savile House, a building which was destroyed by
+fire in 1865.
+
+After Miss Linwood's, one of the best shows in Leicester Square was
+Burford's Panorama, which is now numbered with the things that were, its
+site being occupied by a French chapel and school. In 1851 a new show was
+inaugurated by Mr. Wylde the geographer. It consisted of a monster globe
+sixty feet in diameter, which occupied the central dome of a building
+erected in the garden of the Square. The world was figured in relief on
+the inside of it, and it was viewed from several galleries at different
+elevations. It was exhibited for ten years, and was then taken down by its
+proprietor, owing to a dispute concerning the ownership of the garden. Out
+of this case, which was decided in 1867, the proceedings originated which
+resulted in the purchase and renovation of the garden by Baron Grant, who
+having once more made it trim and neat, handed it over to the Board of
+Works.--_Chambers's Journal._
+
+
+
+
+A WOMAN'S LOVE.
+
+A SLAVONIAN STUDY.
+
+
+Those races that have not undergone the beneficial and domesticating
+influences of civilisation, and that are isolated from the more cultured
+nations, possess to an excess the different qualities or impulses inherent
+to our nature. Amongst the emotions that move the heart of man, love is
+certainly the one that has the greatest empire over him; it rules the soul
+so imperiously that all the other passions are crushed by it. It makes
+cowards of the bravest men, and gives courage to the timid. Love is,
+indeed, the great motive-power of life.
+
+Our passions and our emotions are, however, more subdued than those of the
+semi-civilised nations; for, in the first place, we undergo the softening
+influences of education, and secondly, we are more or less under the
+restraint of the rules which govern society. Besides this, our mind is
+usually engrossed by the numerous cares which our state of living
+necessitates; for we are not like them, contented with little; on the
+contrary, instead of being satisfied with what is necessary, we require
+luxuries and superfluities, the procurement of which takes up a
+considerable portion of our energy and our mental activity.
+
+The Slavonians, and more especially those belonging to the southern
+regions, such as the Dalmatians and Montenegrins, are, as a general rule,
+very passionate; ardent in their affections, they are likewise given to
+anger, resentment, and hatred, the generic sister passion of love.
+
+The Slavonian women are, however, not indolent, nor do they ever indulge
+in idle dreams; for they are not only occupied with the household cares,
+but they also take a share, and not the smallest or the slightest, of
+those toils which in other countries devolve upon the men alone. They
+therefore, in the manly labours of the field, not only get prematurely
+old, but they hardly ever possess much grace, slenderness, or delicate
+complexions. No Slavonian woman, for instance, is ever _mignonne_. They,
+in compensation, acquire in health, and perhaps in real ćsthetic beauty of
+proportions, what they lose in prettiness or delicacy of appearance,
+consequently they never suffer from vapours or from the numerous nervous
+complaints to which the generality of our ladies are subjected; the
+natural result of this state of things is _mens sana in corpore sano_;
+this is doubtless the reason why Slavonian women are, as a general rule,
+fond mothers and faithful wives.
+
+They are certainly not endowed with that charming refinement, the
+_morbidezza_ of manners which but too often is but a mask covering a
+morbid selfish disposition, a hypocritical and false nature. Though
+ignorant, they are neither void of natural good sense nor wit; they only
+want that smattering of worldly knowledge which the contact of society
+imparts, and which but too often covers nothing but frivolity, gross
+ignorance, and conceit. Their conversation is, perhaps, not peculiarly
+attractive; for being simple and artless, speech was not given to them as
+a means of disguising their thoughts; their lips only disclose the
+fullness of their hearts. Conversation is, besides, a gift conferred to
+few; and even in our polite circles not many persons can converse in an
+interesting manner, and fewer can be witty without backbiting; moreover,
+if man were suddenly to become transparent, would he not have to blush for
+the frivolous demonstrations of friendship daily interchanged in our
+artificial state of society?
+
+The different amusements that absorb so much of our time and occupy our
+minds are unknown in Slavonian countries; the daily occupations and the
+details of the toilet do not captivate the whole attention; so that when a
+simple affection is awakening in the heart of a man or of a woman, it by
+degrees pervades the whole soul and the whole mind, and a strong and
+ardent passion usually ensues. Moreover, amongst those simple-minded
+sincere people flirtations are generally unknown; yet when they do love,
+their affections are genuine; they never exchange amongst each other those
+false coins bearing Cupid's effigy, and known as coquetry; for their lips
+only utter what their hearts really feel. People there do not delight in
+playing with the fire of love, or trying how far they can with impunity
+make game of sentiments which should be held sacred. Amongst the virile
+maidens of Slavonia many of them therefore have virgin hearts, that is to
+say, artless souls, fresh to all the tender sentiments; the reason of this
+is, that from the age of fifteen they do not trifle with their affections
+until they have become so callous and sceptical that marriage is merely
+wealth or a position in life. Men do not first waste away all the tender
+emotions which the human heart is capable of, and then settle down into a
+_mariage de raison_.
+
+The following story, which happened about a century ago, will serve as an
+illustration of the power of love amongst the Slavonians; it is, indeed, a
+kind of repetition of the fate which attended the lovers of Sestos and
+Abydos. This, however, is no legend, but an historical fact; the place
+where this tragedy happened was the island of St. Andrea, situated between
+those of Malfi and Stagno, not far from the town of Ragusa.
+
+Though no Musćus has immortalised this story by his verses, it is,
+however, recorded in the "Revista Dalmata" (1859), in the "Annuario
+Spalatino" of the same year, as well as other Slavonian periodicals.
+
+The hero of this story, whose Christian name was Teodoro, belonged to one
+of the wealthiest patrician families of Ragusa, his father being, it is
+said, Rector of the Republic. He was a young man of a grave character, but
+withal of a gentle and tender disposition; he not only possessed great
+talents, but also great culture, for his time was entirely given up to
+study.
+
+One day, the young patrician having gone from the island of St. Andrea,
+where he had been staying at the Benedictine convent, to one of the other
+two neighboring islands, he in the evening wished to return to his abode.
+He met upon the beach a young girl who was carrying home some baskets of
+fish. Having asked her if she knew of anybody who would take him across to
+the island of St. Andrea, the young girl proffered her services, which the
+young and bashful patrician reluctantly accepted.
+
+The young girl was as beautiful, as chaste, and as proud as the Arrabiata
+of Paul Heyse; and for the first time Teodoro felt a new and vague feeling
+awake in his bosom. He began to talk to the girl, asking her a thousand
+questions about herself, about her home; and the young girl doubtless told
+him that she was an orphan, and that she lived with her brothers. Instead
+of returning to his family, the young nobleman remained at the Benedictine
+convent, with the purpose of studying in retirement; his mind, however,
+was not entirely engrossed by his books, and his visits to the island
+where Margherita lived daily became more frequent.
+
+The love which had kindled in his heart found an echo in the young girl's
+bosom, and instead of endeavouring to suppress their feelings they yielded
+to the charms of this saintly affection, to the rapture of loving and
+being loved. In a few days their mutual feelings had made such progress
+that the young man promised the _barcarinola_ to marry her. His noble
+character and his brave spirit made him forget that he could not with
+impunity break the laws of the society amongst which he lived; for that
+society, which would have smiled had he seduced the young girl and made
+her his mistress, would nevertheless have been scandalised had he taken
+her for his lawful wife.
+
+Peccadilloes are overlooked, and it is almost better in high life to be a
+knave than a fool; it was, indeed, a quixotic notion for a patrician to
+marry a plebeian, an unheard of event in the annals of the aristocratic
+republic of Ragusa. The difficulties which our hero was to encounter were
+therefore insurmountable.
+
+In the midst of his thoughtless happiness our young lover was suddenly
+summoned back to his home; for whilst Teodoro was supposed to be deeply
+engaged in his studies his father, without the young man's knowledge, and
+not anticipating any opposition, promised his son in marriage to the
+daughter of one of his friends, a young lady of great wealth and beauty.
+This union had, it is true, been concerted when the children were mere
+babes, and it had until then been a bond between the two families. The
+young lady being now of a marriageable age, and having concentrated all
+her affections on the young man she had always been taught to regard as
+her future husband, she now looked forward with joy for the anticipated
+event.
+
+Teodoro was therefore summoned back home to assist at a great festivity
+given in honour of his betrothal; he at once hastened back to Ragusa, in
+order to break off the engagement contracted for him. Vainly, however, did
+he try to remonstrate, first with his father and then with his mother. He
+avowed that he had no inclination for matrimony, that he felt no love for
+this young lady, nothing but a mere brotherly affection, and that he could
+not cherish her as his wife; he found, nevertheless, both his parents
+inexorable. It was too late; the father had given his word to his friend;
+a refusal would prove an insult, which would provoke a rupture between
+these two families; no option was left but to obey.
+
+Teodoro thereupon retired to his own room, where he remained in the
+strictest confinement, refusing to see any one. The evening of that
+eventful day, the guests were assembled; the bride and her family had
+already arrived; the bridegroom, nevertheless, was missing. This was
+indeed a strange breach of good manners, and numerous comments were
+whispered from ear to ear. The father sent at last a peremptory order to
+his undutiful son to come at once to him. The young man ultimately made
+his appearance, attired like Hamlet at his stepfather's court, in a suit
+of deep mourning, whilst his long hair, which formerly fell in ringlets
+over his shoulders, was all clipped short. In this strange accoutrement he
+came to acquaint his father before the whole assembly that he had decided
+to forego the pleasure, the pomp and vanity of this world, to renounce
+society, and take up his abode in a convent, where he intended passing his
+days in study and meditation.
+
+The scene of confusion which followed this unexpected declaration can be
+imagined. The guests all wished to retire: the first person, however, to
+leave the house was Teodoro, expelled by his father and bearing with him
+the paternal malediction. Thus this day of anticipated joy ended in
+disappointment and humiliation. The discarded bride was borne away by her
+parents, and it is said that her delicate health never recovered from this
+unexpected blow.
+
+That very night the young man retired to the Benedictine convent upon the
+island of St. Andrea, with the firm resolution of passing his life in holy
+seclusion. When a few days had passed, his love proved, nevertheless,
+stronger than his will, and he could not refrain from going to see his
+Margherita, and informing her of all that had happened, telling her that
+he had been driven from home, and that he had taken refuge at the convent,
+where he intended passing his life in a state of holy celibacy.
+Notwithstanding all his good intentions, the sight of the young girl
+proved too great a temptation, her beauty overcame his resolutions, and he
+swore to her that he would brave his parents' opposition, as well as the
+anger of his caste, and that he would marry her in spite of his family and
+of the whole world.
+
+He thus continued seeing this young girl, till at last the fishermen, her
+brothers, having found out why this young patrician visited the island so
+often, severe and jealous like all their countrymen, they waylaid him, and
+threatened to kill him if he were once more caught upon these shores. The
+prior of the Benedictines, finding besides that his _protege_, far from
+coming to seek peace and tranquillity within the walls of his convent,
+was, on the contrary, an object of scandal, expressed his intention to
+expel him, should he not discontinue his visits to the neighbouring
+island, and reform.
+
+Every new difficulty seemed to give fresh courage to the lovers; they
+would have fled from their native country and their persecutors, but they
+knew that they would be overtaken, brought back, and punished; so they
+decided to wait some time until the wrath of their enemies had abated, and
+the storm had blown over.
+
+As Teodoro could not go any more to see the young girl, it was Margherita
+who now came to visit her lover; to evade, however, the suspicion of her
+brothers, and that of the friars, they only met in the middle of the
+night, and as they always changed their place of meeting, a lighted torch
+was the signal where the young girl was to direct her bark. There were
+nights, nevertheless, when she could not obtain a boat; yet this was no
+obstacle to her brave spirit, for upon those nights, she, like Leander,
+swam across the channel, for nothing could daunt this heroic woman's
+heart.
+
+These ill-fated lovers were happy notwithstanding their adverse fortune,
+for the sacred fire of love which burnt within them was bliss enough to
+compensate for all their woes. Their days were passed in anxious
+expectation for the hour which was to unite them on the sea-shore, amidst
+the darkness of the night. There clasped in one another's arms, the world
+and its inhabitants existed no longer for them; those were moments of
+ineffable rapture, in which it seemed impossible to drain the whole
+chalice of happiness; moments in which time and eternity are confounded,
+instants only to be appreciated by those who have known the infinite bliss
+of loving and being loved. Their souls seemed to leave their bodies, blend
+together and soar into the empyreal spaces, the regions of infinite
+happiness; for them all other sentiments passed away, and nothing was felt
+but an unmitigated love.
+
+The dangers which encompassed them, their loneliness upon the rocky
+shores, the stillness of the night, only served to heighten their joy and
+exultation, for a pleasure dearly bought is always more keenly felt.
+
+Their happiness was, however, not to be of long duration; such felicity is
+celestial; on this earth,
+
+ "Les plus belles choses
+ Ont le pire destin."
+
+Margherita's brothers, knowing the power of love, watched their sister,
+and at last found out that when the young nobleman had ceased coming, it
+was she who by night visited the Island of St. Andrea, and they resolved
+to be revenged upon her. They bided their time, and upon a dark and stormy
+night, the fishermen, knowing that their sister would not be intimidated
+by the heavy sea, went off with the boat and left her to the mercy of the
+waves. The young girl, unable to resist the impulse of her love,
+recommended herself to the Almighty, and bravely plunged into the waters.
+Her treacherous brothers, having watched her movements, plied their oars
+and directed their course towards the island; they landed, went and took
+the lighted torch from the place where it was burning, and fastened it to
+the prow of their boat; having done this, they slowly rowed away into the
+open sea.
+
+Margherita, as usual, swam towards the beacon-light of love, but that
+night all her efforts were useless--the faster she swam, the greater was
+the distance that separated her from that _ignis-fatuus_ light; doubtless
+she attributed this to the roughness of the sea, and took courage, hoping
+soon to reach that blessed goal.
+
+A flash of lightning, which illumined the dark expanse of the waters, made
+her at last perceive her mistake; she saw the boat towards which she had
+been swimming, and also the island of St. Andrea far behind her. She at
+once directed her course towards it, but there, in the midst of darkness,
+she struggled with the wild waves, until, overpowered by fatigue, she gave
+up all hopes of rejoining her beloved one, and sank down in the briny
+deep.
+
+The cruel sea that separated the lovers was, however, more merciful than
+man, for upon the morrow the waves themselves softly deposited the
+lifeless body of the young girl upon the sand of the beach.
+
+The nobleman, who had passed a night of most terrible anxiety, found at
+daybreak the corpse of the girl he loved. He caused it to be committed to
+the earth, after which he re-entered within the walls of the convent, took
+the Benedictine dress, and spent the rest of his life pining in grief.
+
+ ADRIAN DE VALVEDERE, in _Tinsley's Magazine_.
+
+
+
+
+AN IMPERIAL PARDON.
+
+
+During a journey through some parts of Russia a few years ago, we engaged,
+in preference to the imperial post-chaise, a private conveyance for a
+considerable distance, the driver being a Jew--generally preferred in the
+East on account of their sobriety and general trustworthiness. On the road
+my companion became communicative, and entered into philosophic-religious
+discussion--a topic of frequent occurrence among these bilingual
+populations. After a somewhat desultory harangue, he suddenly became
+silent and sad, having just uttered the words: "If a Chassid goes astray,
+what does he become? A meschumed, _i.e._ an apostate."--"To what class of
+people do you allude?" I inquired.--"Well, it just entered my head,
+because we have to pass the house of one of them--I mean the 'forced
+ones.'"--"Forced!" I thought of a religious sect. "Are they Christians or
+Jews?"--"Neither the one nor the other," was the reply, "but simply
+'forced.' Oh, sir, it is a great misery and a great crime! Our children at
+least will not know anything of it, because new victims do not arise, and
+on the marriage of these parties rests a curse--they remain sterile! But
+what am I saying? It is rather a blessing--a mercy! Should thus a
+terrible misery be perpetuated? These forced people are childless. Well,
+God knows best. I am a fool, a sinner to speak about it." No entreaty of
+mine would induce my Jewish companion to afford further information
+concerning this peculiar people. But before the end of our journey I heard
+unexpectedly more about this unfortunate class of Russian subjects. We
+travelled westward through the valley of the Dniester, a district but
+thinly peopled, and rested at an inn on the borders of an extensive
+forest.
+
+Amidst the raillery going on in the principal room of this hostelry
+between guests of different nationalities, we had not heard the noise of
+wheels which slowly moved towards the house. It was a very poor
+conveyance, containing a small cask and a basket. The young hostess arose
+hastily, and, approaching the owner, said in a whisper, "What is it you
+want?" A slight paleness overspread her countenance, and stranger still
+was the demeanour of my coachman. "Sir, sir!" he exclaimed loudly, turning
+towards me, stretching out his hands as if seeking support, or warding off
+some impending danger. "What is the matter?" I rejoined, greatly
+surprised: but he merely shook his head, and stared at the new comer.
+
+He was an elderly peasant, attired in the usual garb of the
+country-people; only at a more close inspection I noticed that he wore a
+fine white shirt. Of his face I could see but little, it being hidden
+behind the broad brim of his straw hat.
+
+"Hostess," he said, addressing the young woman, "will you purchase
+something of me? I have some old brandy, wooden spoons and plates,
+pepper-boxes, needle-cases, &c., all made of good hard wood, and very
+cheap." In an almost supplicating tone he uttered these words very slowly,
+with downcast eyes. From his pronunciation he appeared to be a Pole.
+
+The hostess looked shyly up to him.
+
+"You know my brother-in-law has forbidden me to have dealings with you,"
+she said hesitatingly, "on account of your wife; but to-day he is not at
+home." After a momentary silence, turning towards the driver, she
+continued, "Reb Rüssan, will you betray me? You come frequently this way."
+In reply he merely shrugged his shoulders and moved away. Turning again
+with some impatience to the peasant, she said, "Bring me a dish and two
+spoons." When he had gone to fetch these articles, the woman once more
+accosted my coachman.
+
+"You must not blame me; they are very poor people!"
+
+"Certainly they are very poor"--he replied in a milder tone. "During life,
+hunger and misery, and after death--hell! and all undeserved!" But the man
+stood already, at this utterance, with his basket in the room. The bargain
+was soon concluded, and the few copeks paid. Curiosity prompted me to step
+forward and examine the merchandise.
+
+"I have also cigar-cases," said the peasant, humbly raising his hat. But
+his face was far more interesting than his wares. You rarely see such
+features! However great the misery on earth, this pale, pain-stricken
+countenance was unique in its kind, revealing yet traces of sullen
+defiance, and the glance of his eyes moved instantly the heart of the
+beholder--a weary, almost fixed gaze, and yet full of passionate mourning.
+
+"You are a Pole!" I observed after a pause.
+
+"Yes," he replied.
+
+"And do you live in this neighbourhood?"
+
+"At the inn eight werst from here. I am the keeper."
+
+"And besides wood-carver?"
+
+"We must do the best we can," was his reply. "We have but rarely any
+guests at our house."
+
+"Does your hostelry lie outside the main road?"
+
+"No, close to the high road, sir. It was at one time the best inn between
+the Bug and the Dniester. But now carriers do not like to stay at our
+house."
+
+"And why not?"
+
+"Because they consider it a sin--especially the Jews." Suddenly, with
+seeming uneasiness and haste, he asked, "Will you purchase anything? This
+box, perhaps. Upon the lid is engraved a fine country-house."
+
+Attracted by the delicate execution, I inquired, "And is this your own
+workmanship?"
+
+"Yes," was his reply.
+
+"You are an artist! And pray where did you learn wood-engraving?"
+
+"At Kamieniec-Poddski."
+
+"At the fortress?"
+
+"Yes, during the insurrection of 1863."
+
+"Were you among the insurgents?"
+
+"No, but the authorities feared I might join them--hence I and the other
+forced ones were incarcerated in the fortress when the insurrection broke
+out, and again set free when it was suppressed."
+
+"Without any cause?"
+
+"Without the slightest. I was already at that time a crushed man. When yet
+a youth the marrow of my bones had been poisoned in the mines of Siberia.
+During the whole time of my settlement, I have been since 1858 keeper of
+that inn; I gave the authorities no cause for suspicion, but I was a
+'forced man,' and that sufficed for pouncing upon me."
+
+"Forced! what does it mean?"
+
+"Well, a person forced to accept, when to others free choice is
+left--domicile, trade or calling, wife and religion."
+
+"Terrible!" I exclaimed. "And you submitted?" A little smile played around
+his thin lips.
+
+"Are you so much moved at my fate? We generally bear very easily the most
+severe pains endured by others."
+
+"That is a saying of Larochefoucauld," I said, somewhat surprised. "Have
+you read him?"
+
+"I was at one time very fond of French literature. But pardon my acrimony.
+I am but little accustomed to sympathy, and indeed of what avail would it
+be to me now!" He stared painfully at the ground, and I also became
+silent, convinced that any superficial expression of sympathy would, under
+the circumstances, be downright mockery.
+
+A painful pause ensued, which I broke with the question, if he had worked
+the engraving upon the lid of the box after a pattern.
+
+"No, from memory," was his rejoinder.
+
+"It is a peculiar kind of architecture!"
+
+"It is like all gentlemen's houses in Littauen; only the old tree is very
+striking. It was a very old house."
+
+"Has been? Does it exist no longer?"
+
+"It was burnt down seven years ago by the Russians, after they had first
+ransacked it. They evidently were not aware that they destroyed their own
+property. It had been confiscated years before, and had been Crown
+property since 1848."
+
+"And have you yet the outlines of the building so firmly engraved on your
+memory?"
+
+"Of course! it was my birth-place, which I had rarely left until I was
+eighteen years old. Such things are not easily forgotten. And although
+more than twenty years have passed since this sad affair, hardly a day
+passed on which I did not think of my paternal home. I was aware of the
+death of my mother, and that my cousin was worse than dead--perhaps I
+ought to have rejoiced when the old mansion was burnt to the ground; but
+yet I could not suppress a tear when the news reached me. There is hardly
+anything on earth which can now move me." I record literally what the
+unfortunate man related. My Jewish coachman, not easily impressed, had
+during the conversation crept gradually nearer, and shook his head
+seriously and sorrowfully.
+
+"Excuse me, Pani Walerian," he interrupted: "upon my honour, yours is a
+sad story!" He launched out into practical politics, and concluded thus:
+
+"A Pole is not as clever as I am. If he (the Pole) was the equal of the
+Russian, well and good, fight it out; but the Russian is a hundred times
+stronger; therefore, Pani Walerian, why irritate him, why confront him?"
+
+I could not help laughing at these remarks; but the poor "forced one"
+remained unmoved; and only after some silence, he observed, turning
+towards me:
+
+"I have never even confronted the Russians. I merely received the
+punishment of the criminal, without being one, or venturing my all in my
+people's cause. I was very young, when I was transported to
+Siberia--little more than nineteen years old. My father had died early. I
+managed our small property, and a cousin of mine, a pretty girl, sixteen
+years old, lived at our house. Indeed, I had no thoughts of politics. It
+is true I wore the national costume, perused our poets, especially
+Mickiewicz and Slowaski, and had on the wall of my bedroom a portrait of
+Kosciuszko. For such kind of high treason even the Russian Government
+would not have crushed me in ordinary times--but it was the year 1848.
+'Nicolai Pawlowitch' had not sworn in vain that if the whole of Europe was
+in flames, no spark should arise in his empire--and by streams of blood
+and tears, he achieved his object. Wherever a young Polish noble lived who
+was suspected of revolutionary tendencies, repeated domiciliary searches
+were made; and if only a single prohibited book was found, the dread fiat
+went forth, 'To Siberia with him!'
+
+"In my own case it came like a thunderbolt. I was already in Siberia, and
+could not yet realize my misery. During the whole long journey I was more
+or less delirious. I hoped for a speedy liberation, for I was altogether
+innocent, and at that time," he continued with a bitter smile, "I yet
+believed in God. When all hope became extinct, I began madly to rave, but
+finally settled down utterly crushed and callous. It was a fearful
+state--for weeks together, all my past life seemed a complete blank, at
+most I still remembered my name. This, sir, is literally true: Siberia is
+a very peculiar place."
+
+The poor fellow had sunk down upon a bench, his hands rested powerless in
+his lap. I never have seen a face so utterly worn and pain-stricken. After
+a while he continued:
+
+"Ten years had thus passed away; at least, I was told so--I had long
+ceased to count the days of my misery. For what purpose should I have done
+so?
+
+"I had sunk so low that I felt no pity even for my terrible condition. One
+day I was brought before the Inspector, together with some of my
+companions. This official informed us that we had been pardoned on
+condition of becoming colonists in New Russia. The mercy of the Czar would
+assign to each of us a place of residence, a trade, and a lawful wife, who
+would be also a pardoned convict. We must of course, in addition, be
+converted to the Orthodox Greek Church. This latter stipulation did but
+little concern us. We readily accepted the conditions, for the people are
+glad of leaving Siberia, no matter whither, even to meet death itself. And
+had we not been pardoned? Alexander Nikolajewitch is a gracious lord. In
+Siberia the mines are over-crowded, and in South Russia the steppes are
+empty! Oh, he is a philanthropist! decus et delicić generis humani! But
+perhaps I wrong him. We entered upon our long journey, and proceeded
+slowly south-west. In about eight months we reached Mohilew. Here we were
+only kept in easy confinement, and above all, brought under the influence
+of the pope. This was a rapid proceeding. One morning we were driven
+together into a large room, about one hundred men, and an equal number of
+women. Presently the priest entered; a powerful and dirty fellow, who
+appeared to have invigorated himself for his holy work with a considerable
+dose of gin, for we could smell it at least ten paces off, and he had some
+difficulty in keeping upon his legs.
+
+"'You ragamuffins!' he stammered; 'you vermin of humanity! you are to
+become Orthodox Christians; but surely I shall not take much trouble with
+you. For, what do you think I get per head? Ten copeks, you vermin! ten
+copeks per head. Who will be a missionary at such pay? I certainly do it
+to-day for the last time! Indeed, our good father Alexander Nikolajewitch
+caused one rouble to be set in the tariff; but that rascal, the director,
+pockets ninety copeks, and leaves only ten for me. To-day, however, I have
+undertaken your conversion, because I am told there are many of you. Now
+listen! you are now Catholics, Protestants, Jews! That is sad mistake; for
+every Jew is a blood-sucker, every Protestant a dog, and every Catholic a
+pig. Such is their lot in life--but after death? carrion, my good people,
+carrion! And will Christ have mercy on them at the last day? Verily no! He
+will not dream of such a thing! And until then? Hell-fire! Therefore, good
+people, why should you suffer such torments? Be converted! Those who agree
+to become Orthodox Christians, keep silent; those who demur, receive the
+knout and go back to Siberia. Wherefore, my dear brothers and sisters, I
+ask, will you become Orthodox Christians?'
+
+"We remained silent.
+
+"'Well,' continued the priest, 'now pay attention! Those who are already
+Christians need only to lift up the right hand, and repeat after me the
+creed. That will soon be done. But with the damned Jews one has always a
+special trouble--the Jews I must first baptise. Jews, step forward!--the
+other vermin can remain where they now are.' In this solemn manner the
+ceremony was brought to a conclusion.
+
+"On the day following," M. Walerian continued, "the second act was
+performed: the selection of a trade. This act was as spontaneous as our
+religious conversion; only, some individual regard became here
+indispensable. Three young Government officials were deputed to record our
+wishes, and to comply with them as far as the exigencies of the case
+admitted. The official before whom I appeared was very juvenile. Though
+externally very polished, he was in reality a frightfully coarse and cruel
+youth, without a spark of human feeling, so far as we were concerned. We
+afforded him no small amount of merriment. This youth inquired carefully
+concerning our wishes, and invariably ordered the very opposite. Among us
+was a noble lady from Poland, of very ancient lineage, very feeble and
+miserable, whose utter helplessness might well inspire the most callous
+heart with respect and compassion. The lady was too old to be married to
+one of the 'forced ones,' and was therefore asked to state what kind of
+occupation she desired. She entreated to be employed in some school for
+daughters of military officers, there being a demand for such service; but
+the young gentleman ordered her to go as laundress to the barracks at
+Mohilew! An aged Jew had been sent to Siberia for having smuggled
+prohibited books across the frontiers. He had been the owner of a printing
+establishment, and was well acquainted with the business. 'Could he not be
+employed in one of the Imperial printing offices; and if possible,' urged
+the aged man, 'be permitted to reside in a place where few or no Jews
+lived?' He had under compulsion changed his religion; to which he was yet
+fervently attached, and trembled at the thought that his former
+co-religionists would none the less avoid him as an apostate. The young
+official noted down his request, and made him a police agent at Miaskowka,
+a small town in the government district of Podolien, almost exclusively
+inhabited by Jews. Another, a former schoolmaster, in the last stages of
+consumption, begged on his knees to be permitted to die quietly in some
+country village. 'That is certainly a modest request!' observed this
+worthless youth; and sent him as a waiter to a hospital. Need I tell how I
+fared? Being misled, like the rest, by the hypocritical air and seeming
+concern of this rascal, I made known to him my desire to obtain the post
+of under-steward at some remote Crown estate, where I might have as little
+intercourse as possible with my fellow-men. And thus, sir, I became the
+keeper of the small inn on a much-frequented highway!"
+
+The unfortunate man arose suddenly, and paced the room in a state of great
+excitement.
+
+"But now comes the best of all," he exclaimed, with a desperate
+effort--"the last act, the choice of a wife." Again an internal struggle
+overpowered the unhappy narrator--a sudden and heavy tear rolled down his
+care-worn cheek, evidently caused by the remembrance of this abominable
+transaction. "It was a terrible ordeal," he said. "Sir, sir," he continued
+after a momentary pause, "since the sun has risen in our horizon, he has
+shone on many a cruel game which the mighty of the earth have played with
+the helpless, but a more abominable farce has hardly ever been enacted
+than the one I am now relating--the manner in which we unfortunate people
+were coupled together. In my youth I read how Carrier at Nantes murdered
+the Royalists; how he caused the first best man to be tied with a rope to
+a woman, and carried down the Loire in a boat. In the middle of the river
+a trap-door was suddenly opened, and the unfortunate couple disappeared in
+the waves. But that monster was an angel compared with the officials of
+the Czar; and these republican marriages were a benevolent act in
+comparison with those we were forced to conclude. At Nantes, the victims
+were tied together for a mutual death; we for our mutual lives!... On a
+subsequent morning we were once more ushered into the room where our
+conversion had taken place. There were present about thirty men and an
+equal number of women. Together with the latter entered the official who
+had so considerately ordered our lot as regards a livelihood.
+
+"'Ladies and gentlemen,' he commenced with a nasal twang, 'his Majesty has
+graciously pardoned you, and desires to see you all happy. Now, the lonely
+man is seldom a happy man; and hence you are to marry. Every gentleman is
+free to select a partner, provided of course the lady accepts the choice.
+And in order that none of you gentlemen may be placed in the invidious
+position of having to select a partner unworthy of him, supreme
+benevolence has ordered that an adequate number of ladies, partly from
+penal settlements and partly from houses of correction, should be now
+offered you. As his Majesty's solicitude for your welfare has already
+assigned you an occupation, you may now follow unhesitatingly the
+promptings of your own hearts in the choice of a wife. Ladies and
+gentlemen, yours is the happy privilege to realise the dream of a purely
+socialistic marriage. Make, then, your selection without delay; and as
+"all genuine love is instantaneous, sudden as a lightning flash, and soft
+as the breezes of spring"--to use the words of our poet Lermontoff--I
+consider one hour sufficient. Bear also in mind that marriages are
+ratified in heaven, and trust implicitly to your own heart. I offer you
+beforehand, ladies and gentlemen, my congratulations.'
+
+"After this address, the young rascal placed his watch in front of him on
+the table, sat down, and grinned maliciously at our helpless condition.
+The full measure of scorn implied in this speech but few of us entirely
+realised, for we were in truth a curious assembly. The most extravagant
+imagination could hardly picture more glaring contrasts! Side by side with
+the bestial Bessarabian herdsman, who in a fit of intoxication had slain
+the whole of his family, stood the highly cultivated professor from Wilna,
+whom the love of his country and of freedom had consigned to the mines of
+Siberia; the most desperate thief and shoplifter from Moscow, and the
+Polish nobleman who at the height of his misfortunes still regarded his
+honour as the most precious treasure, the ex-professor from Charkow, and
+the Cossac-robber from the Don; the forger from Odessa, &c. On my own
+right hand stood a thief and deserter from Lipkany, and on the left a
+Baschkire, who had been pardoned at the foot of the gallows, though he had
+once assisted in roasting alive a Jewish family in a village inn. A madly
+assorted medley of human beings! And the women! The dissolute female
+gladly released from the house of correction, because she still more
+depraved her already degraded companions, associated with the unfortunate
+Polish lady, whose pure mind had never been poisoned by a vulgar word, and
+whose quiet happiness had not been disturbed by any prospect of
+misfortune, until a single letter, or act of charity to an exiled
+countryman, brought her into misery. Pressing against the young girl whose
+sole offence consisted in being the unfortunate offspring of a mother sent
+to Siberia, might be seen the infamous hag who had habitually decoyed
+young girls to ruin, in whose soul every spark of womanhood had long been
+extinguished. And these people were called upon to marry; and one hour was
+granted them in which to become acquainted and assorted! Sir, you will now
+perhaps comprehend my emotion in relating this shocking business!
+
+"I consider it the most shocking and at the same time the most curious
+outrage which has ever been committed." The "forced" man paused, a deadly
+pallor suffused his countenance, and his agitation was great. The young
+hostess appeared perfectly stunned, whilst Reb Rüssan, the coachman, bent
+his head in evident compassion.
+
+After a while M. Walerian continued in a calmer mood. "It must certainly
+have been an entertaining spectacle to notice the behaviour of this
+ill-assorted people at that trying hour. Even the barefaced monster on his
+raised daďs betrayed a feverish excitement: he would suddenly jump from
+his chair, and again recline, playing the while nervously with his
+fingers. I am hardly able to describe the details, being not altogether
+unbiassed at this dreadful hour.
+
+"I only know we stood at first in two distinct groups, and for the first
+few moments after the official announcement, not a glance was exchanged
+between the two sexes, much less a word spoken. A deep silence reigned in
+the room, a death-like stillness, varied only by an occasional deep sigh,
+or a nervous movement. The minutes passed, certainly not many, but they
+seemed to me an eternity!
+
+"Suddenly a loud hoarse voice exclaimed, 'Up, my lads! here are some very
+pretty mates!' We all recognised the notorious thief from Moscow, a
+haggard withered fellow, with the ugliest face I ever beheld. He crossed
+over to the women and examined in his way which would be the most
+desirable partner. Here he received an indignant push, and there an
+impudent alluring glance. Others, again--the better part--recoiled from
+the approach of the brute. He was followed by the Baschkire, who like a
+clumsy beast of prey drew nigh, muttering incoherently, 'I will have a fat
+woman, the fattest among them.' From his approach even the ugliest and
+most impudent instinctively recoiled--this wooer was really too hideous,
+at best only suited to a monkey. The third in order who came forward was
+the Don-Cossac, a pretty slender youth. An impudent lass jauntily met him
+and fell on his neck; but he pushed her aside, and walked towards the girl
+who had murdered her child. The discarded female muttered some insulting
+words, and hung the next moment on my own neck. I shook her off, and she
+repeated the attempt with my neighbour, and again unsuccessfully.
+
+"Her example became contagious: presently the more shameless of the women
+made an onslaught on the men. Ten minutes later the scene had changed. In
+the centre of the room stood a number of men and women engaged in eager
+negotiation--shouting and scolding. The parties who had already agreed
+retired to the window-niches, and here and there a man pulled an
+unfortunate woman, making desperate efforts to escape from him. The
+females who yet retained a spark of womanhood crept into a corner of the
+room; and in another recess were three of us--the ex-professor, Count S.,
+and myself. We had instinctively come together, watching with painful
+emotion this frantic spectacle, not inclined to participate in it. To me
+at least the thought of selecting a wife here never occurred.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"'Another half an hour at your disposal, ladies and gentlemen,' exclaimed
+our official tormentor; 'twenty minutes--yet fifteen minutes!'
+
+"I stood as if rooted to the ground, my knees trembled, my agitation
+increased, but I remained motionless. Indeed, as often as I heard the
+unpleasant voice of the official, the blood rushed to my head, but I
+advanced not one step. My excitement increased--profound disgust, bitter
+despair--the wildest indignation which perhaps ever pierced a poor human
+heart. 'No,' I said; 'I must assert the dignity of my manhood!' I was
+determined not to make the selection of a wife under the eyes of this man.
+Another impulse I could hardly suppress--viz. to throw myself upon this
+imperial delegate and strangle him. And if I finally abstained from an act
+of violence, it was because I yet loved life, and wished not to end it on
+the gallows. Sir," continued M. Walerian, "the source of great misery on
+earth is this overpowering instinct of self-preservation; without it, I
+should be freed this day from all my misery. Thus I stood, so to speak, at
+bay in my corner, using all my efforts to subdue the evil spirit within
+me. My looks most probably betrayed me--for when my eyes met those of the
+official, I noticed an involuntary shudder. A moment afterwards he
+regarded me with a sly and malignant glance. I turned aside and closed my
+eyes on this harassing scene.
+
+"'Yet five minutes, ladies and gentlemen! Those as yet undecided must
+speed themselves, and unburden their heart, or I shall be compelled by
+virtue of my office to tie them together. And although I shall do so
+conscientiously, and to the best of my knowledge, there is this risk--that
+you engage in a marriage of mere convenience, instead of one of free
+choice and inclination.'
+
+"Though my agitation reached its climax, I made no move. I considered
+myself an accomplice in this disgraceful outrage, if I within the allotted
+five minutes declared my heart and made a choice. But another thought
+flashed across my mind: 'I may still be able to prevent the worst. Who
+knows with whom that rascal may couple me if I remain altogether passive?
+Choose for yourself!'--I made a step forward--a mist seemed before my
+eyes--my heart beat wildly--I staggered, I sought figures in order to
+distinguish and recognise myself.
+
+"Sir," exclaimed the narrator with a sudden yell, "what scenes did I see
+there? I am no coward, but I--I dare not venture to speak of it. Thus I
+moved forward; hardly two minutes passed, but days would not suffice to
+relate what passed during these terrible moments through my heart and
+brain. I noticed in a corner a fainting woman, a young and delicate
+creature. I learnt afterwards that she was an orphan child, born of a
+dissolute woman in a penal settlement. A coarse fellow with cunning eyes
+bent over her, endeavouring to raise her from the ground. I suddenly
+pounced upon the fellow, struck him a heavy blow, and carried the
+unconscious woman away as if a mere child. I determined to defend her to
+the last. But no rescue was attempted, though the forger shook his fists
+at me, but had seemingly not the courage to approach nearer. Gazing about
+him, another female embraced him, a repulsive woman. He looked at her
+somewhat abashed, but soon submitted to her caresses.
+
+"'Ladies and gentlemen! the allotted hour has passed,' said the official.
+'I must beg the parties to come forward and make known to me their choice.
+This may be repugnant to some of you, but my duties prescribe it. I
+especially request the gentlemen in yonder corner to advance'--pointing to
+myself and the forger. I clenched my fists involuntarily, but stepped
+forward with the fainting woman. 'Cossacks, keep your "Kantschu" in
+readiness,' said the official to the guard which surrounded him. Turning
+first to me, he said: "And are you, sir, resolved to carry the woman you
+now hold in your arms, not only in this room, but through life?' I nodded
+assent. 'And what have you to say, damsel?' The poor creature was as yet
+unconscious. 'She is in a swoon,' I replied. 'In that case I am sorry,'
+continued the official, 'to have to refuse in his Majesty's name my
+consent to your union. In the interests of humanity, I require an audible
+yes from all parties. I have watched attentively the whole proceedings,'
+continued the official--'not from mere curiosity, but partly as a duty,
+and partly out of pure sympathy--and I can assure you, sir, without
+disparagement to your claims, that the choice of the young lady you now
+hold in your arms fell not upon you, but upon the gentleman yonder,'
+pointing to the forger. 'It was probably the excess of happiness at this
+selection which caused her fainting. For you there is waiting an adequate
+recompense--that ripe, desirable beauty who now only reluctantly holds the
+arm of your rival. Therefore, changez, Messieurs!' 'Scoundrel!' I
+exclaimed, and advanced to seize him. But ere I could lay hold of him, a
+fearful blow on my head stretched me stunned and bleeding to the ground.
+When I had somewhat recovered, our marriage procession was in progress of
+formation. The woman whom the official had assigned to me knelt at my
+side, bathing my head, endeavouring to revive me. 'I like you,' she
+observed, 'and will treat you well.' She raised me to my feet, placed her
+arm in mine, and pushed me in the ranks of the procession, which moved
+slowly towards the church. On our road a heavy hand seized me suddenly by
+the collar. 'Brother,' grunted a coarse voice in my ear, 'your stout woman
+takes my fancy. Will you change with me? Mine is certainly less corpulent,
+but younger in years.'
+
+"It was the man behind me--the Baschkire. The female whom he dragged along
+was a lean, ugly, dark-complexioned woman, swooning or near a swoon. An
+expression of unutterable despair overspread her features, rendering them,
+if possible, yet more ugly. 'A woman who can suffer so intensely as this
+one unquestionably does, cannot be without a heart--is not altogether
+depraved, no matter what cause brought her here.' These reflections
+determined me. 'She is preferable to the woman at my side. Done!' I
+whispered to the Baschkire. Just crossing the threshold of the church, a
+momentary pause ensued, during which we effected the exchange; not without
+a murmur, however, on the part of my intended wife. But the Baschkire kept
+her quiet; and a closer inspection of her new partner seemed to satisfy
+her. The poor woman I led forward seemed hardly aware of the exchange, she
+was so entirely absorbed in her grief. We were married. The official only
+afterwards became aware of what had happened, but could not now undo it.
+But I had to suffer for it--terrible was the punishment."
+
+Not another word was uttered by the unfortunate man. Quite overcome by the
+recital of his cruel fate, he suddenly arose and left the house.
+
+On account of the approach of the Jewish Sabbath, my coachman urged on our
+journey. Half an hour later, we passed the lonely and desolate hostelry of
+poor M. Walerian, the exile of Siberia, who owed so much to imperial
+clemency.--F. A. S., _in Belgravia_.
+
+
+
+
+CHRISTMAS IN MOROCCO.
+
+
+"To-morrow Christmas for Moros!" said the gentle Hamed, our Moorish
+servant, entering the room soon after the bang of the last sunset gun of
+Ramadan had shaken our windows, and the thick smoke of the coarse Moorish
+powder had floated away, temporarily obscuring the gorgeous hues bestowed
+by the retiring luminary on the restless waters of the South Atlantic.
+
+"To-morrow Christmas for Moros! In the morning Hamed clean house, go for
+_soko_; then all day no _trabally_; have new _haik_, new slippers, walk
+about all same _tejjer_."
+
+By which little speech our faithful attendant meant to convey that
+to-morrow's rejoicing at the termination of the long and irksome fast of
+Ramadan was equivalent to the "Ingleez's" Christmas, and that, after
+putting the house in order and bringing the provisions from the _soko_, or
+market, he would do no more _trabally_, or work--the word being a
+corruption of the Spanish _trabajo_--but would don the new _haik_ and
+bright yellow slippers for which he had long been saving up, and to the
+purchase of which certain little presents from the children of our
+household had materially contributed; and would be entitled, by
+prescriptive holiday right, to "take his walks abroad" with the _dolce far
+niente_ dignity of a _tejjer_, or merchant.
+
+I think we members of the little English community of Mogador--or, as the
+Moors fondly call this pleasantest town of the Morocco seaboard, "El
+Souerah," or The Beautiful--had almost as good reason as the Moslem
+population to rejoice at the termination of the great fast. The Moors not
+being allowed, during the holy month, to eat, drink, or smoke betwixt the
+rising and the setting of the sun--the more sternly orthodox even closing
+their nostrils against any pleasant odour that might casually perfume the
+air in their vicinity, and their ears against even the faintest sound of
+music--debarring themselves, in fact, from whatever could give the
+slightest pleasure to any of the senses, a considerable amount of gloom
+and listlessness was the inevitable result.
+
+The servants in the various households, not over active and intelligent at
+the best of times, became, as the weary days of prayer and fasting wore
+on, appallingly idiotic, sleepy, and sullen, would do but little work, and
+that little never promptly nor well. Meals could not be relied on within
+an hour or two, rooms were left long untidy, essential little errands and
+messages unperformed, and a general gloomy confusion prevailed.
+
+Did I, tempted by the smoothness of the sea, desire a little fishing
+cruise, and send a youthful Moor to the neighbouring rocks to get me a
+basket of mussels for bait, he would probably, directly he got outside the
+town-gates, deposit the basket and himself in the shade of the first wall
+he came to, and slumber sweetly till the tide had risen and covered all
+the rocky ledges where it was possible to collect bait. Had I told the
+youngster over night that he must come out to sea with me in the morning,
+and take care that my boat was put outside the dock, so that she would be
+afloat at a certain hour, I would find, on going down at daybreak with
+rods and tackle, that the boat was high and dry upon the mud, and it would
+take the united efforts of half a dozen Moors and myself to get her afloat
+at the end of nearly an hour's frantic struggling and pushing through mud
+and water, necessitating on my part the expenditure of a great amount of
+perspiration, not a little invective, and sundry silver coins.
+
+And when we were fairly afloat my Mahometan youth would be so weak from
+fasting that his oar would be almost useless; and when we did, after an
+hour or so of the most ignominious zigzaging, reach our anchorage on one
+of the fishing-grounds, then would he speedily become sea-sick, and
+instead of helping me by preparing bait and landing fish, he would lean
+despairingly over the side in abject misery, and implore me to go home
+promptly--a piteous illustration of the anguish caused by an empty stomach
+contracting on itself.
+
+Nor were these the only discomforts under which we groaned and grumbled.
+
+From the evening when the eager lookers-out from minarets of mosques and
+towers of the fortifications first descried the new moon which ushered in
+the holy month of fasting, every sunset, as it flushed the far-off waves
+with purple and crimson and gold, and turned the fleecy cloudlets in the
+western sky to brightest jewels, and suffused the white houses and towers
+of Mogador with sweetest glow of pink, and gilded the green-tiled top of
+each tall minaret, had been accompanied by the roar of a cannon from the
+battery just below our windows.
+
+"What the deuce is that?" asked a friend of mine, lately arrived from
+England, as we strolled homewards one evening through the dusty streets,
+and the boom of the big gun suddenly fell upon his astonished ear.
+
+"Only sunset," I replied.
+
+"Queer place this," said J. "Does the sun always set with a bang?"
+
+"Always during Ramadan."
+
+"Does it rise with a bang too? I hate to be roused up early in the
+morning!"
+
+"No, there is no gun at sunrise; but there is a very loud one at about
+three in the morning, or sometimes half-past, or four, or later."
+
+"Shocking nuisance!" remarked J. "My bedroom window's just over that
+abominable battery."
+
+The early morning gun was a great trial, certainly. I would not have
+minded being _reveille en sursaut_, as a Frenchman would say, and then
+turning comfortably over on the other side, and going to sleep again.
+
+But somehow or other I always found myself awake half an hour or an hour
+before the time, and then I _could not_ get to sleep again, but lay
+tossing about and fidgettily listening for the well-known din. At length I
+would hear a sound like the hum of an enormous fiendish nightmarish
+mosquito, caused by a hideous long tin trumpet, the shrill whistle of a
+fife or two, and the occasional tom-tomming of a Moorish drum. "Ha, the
+soldiers coming along the ramparts; they will soon fire now."
+
+But the sound of the discordant instruments with which the soldiery
+solaced themselves in the night for their enforced abstinence from such
+"sweet sounds" in the day would continue for a long time before the red
+flash through my wide-open door would momentarily illumine my little
+chamber on the white flat roof, and then the horrid bang would rend the
+air, followed by a dense cloud of foul-smelling smoke; and then would my
+big dog Cćsar for several minutes rush frantically to and fro upon the
+roof in hot indignation, and utter deep-mouthed barks of defiance at the
+white figures of the "Maghaseni," as they flitted ghost-like along the
+ramparts below, and snort and pant and chafe and refuse to be pacified for
+a long time.
+
+At the firing of the sunset gun the Moors were allowed to take a slight
+refection, which generally consisted of a kind of gruel. I have seen a
+Moorish soldier squatting in the street with a brass porringer in his lap,
+eagerly awaiting the boom of the cannon to dip his well-washed fingers in
+the mess.
+
+At about 9 P.M. another slight meal was allowed to the true believers, and
+they might eat again at morning gun-fire, after which their mouths were
+closed against all "fixings, solid and liquid," even against the smallest
+draught of water or the lightest puff at the darling little pipe of
+dream-inducing _kief_.
+
+On the twenty-seventh day of Ramadan we were informed that twenty-seven
+guns would be fired that night, and that we had better leave all our
+windows open, or they would certainly be broken by the violence of the
+discharge. This was pleasant; still more delightful was the glorious
+uncertainty which prevailed in the minds of our informants as to the time
+at which we might expect the infliction.
+
+Some said that the twenty-seven guns would be fired before midnight;
+Hamed opined that the cannonade would not take place till 3 or 4 A.M. Many
+of the guns on the battery in close proximity to our abode were in a
+fearfully rusty and honeycombed condition, so that apprehensions as to
+some of them bursting were not unnatural, and I thought it extremely
+probable that a few stray fragments might "drop in" on me.
+
+That night I burned the "midnight oil," and lay reading till nearly two,
+when sweet sleep took possession of me, from which I was awakened about
+four in the morning by a terrific bang that fairly shook the house.
+
+A minute more, and there came a red flash and another bang, presently
+another. Thought I, "I will go out and see the show;" so I went on to the
+flat white roof in my airy nocturnal costume, and leaning over the parapet
+looked down on to the platform of the battery below. A group of dim white
+figures, a flickering lantern, a glowing match, a touch at the breech of a
+rusty old gun, a swift skurry of the white figures round a corner, a
+squib-like fountain of sparks from the touch-hole, a red flash from the
+mouth, momentarily illumining the dark violet sea, a bang, and a cloud of
+smoke.
+
+Then the white figures and the lantern appeared again; another squib,
+another flash, another bang, Cćsar galloping up and down over the roof,
+snorting his indignation, but not barking, probably because he felt
+"unable to do justice to the subject;" and at length, after the eleventh
+gun had belched forth crimson flames and foul smoke, all was peace, save a
+distant discord of tin trumpets, _gouals_ and _gimbris_, and I returned to
+my mosquito-haunted couch with a sigh of relief.
+
+Pass we now to the eve of "Christmas for Moros," and let ethnologist and
+hagiologist derive some satisfaction from the evidences I collected in
+this far-away Moorish town that the gladness of the Mahometan festival
+does, similarly to the purer joy of the Christian, though in a less degree
+perhaps, incline towards "peace and good-will to men," charity and
+kindliness.
+
+As we sat chatting that evening round the tea-table, to us entered Hamed,
+bearing, with honest pride illumining his brown features, a great tray of
+richly engraved brass, heaped up with curious but tempting-looking cakes.
+
+Gracefully presenting them to "the senora," he intimated that this was his
+humble offering or Christmas token of good-will towards the family, and
+that his mother (whom the good fellow maintains out of his modest wages)
+had made them with her own hands.
+
+The cakes were made of long thin strips of the finest paste, plentifully
+sweetened with delicious honey, twisted into quaint shapes, and fried in
+the purest of oil. I need hardly say that the children were delighted, and
+immediately commenced to court indigestion by a vigorous onslaught on the
+new and tempting sweets. Nay, why should I blush to confess that I myself
+have a very sweet tooth in my head, and such a liking for all things
+saccharine that my friends say jokingly that I must be getting into my
+second childhood?--an imputation which, as I am only a little on the
+wrong side of thirty, I can bear with equanimity. However, I firmly
+decline to inform an inquisitive public how many of those delightful
+Moorish cakes I ate: truth to tell, I do not remember; but I enjoyed them
+heartily, nor found my digestion impaired thereby.
+
+We had a little chat with Hamed--whose face was lighted up with the
+broadest of grins as we praised his mother's pastry and showed our
+appreciation of it in the most satisfactory manner--on certain matters of
+the Mahometan religion and the position of women in the future life. Some
+of the sterner Muslims believe that women have no souls; others opine that
+while good men go to "_Eljannah_," or heaven, and bad ones to
+"_Eljehannam_," or hell, women and mediocre characters are deported to a
+vague kind of limbo which they designate as "_Bab Maroksh_," or the
+Morocco Gate.
+
+But the gentle, liberal, and gallant Hamed informed us, in reply to an
+individual query with regard to our Moorish housemaid, that "if Lanniya
+plenty good, no _tiefem_ (steal), no drinkum _sharab_ (wine), and go for
+_scula_ ("school," or religious instruction in the mosque, or in a
+schoolhouse adjoining it), by and by she go for "_Eljannah_."
+
+I am hardly correct, by the way, in speaking of Lanniya as "house-_maid_,"
+for Moorish maidens and wives never go in the service of European
+families, being prohibited by their religion from showing their faces; it
+is only widows and divorced women who may go about unveiled, and mingle
+with Christians.
+
+The next morning, soon after the last gun of Ramadan had sounded its
+joyous boom in my ear, I was up and stirring, donning my shooting apparel
+and preparing for an early country walk with my faithful four-footed
+comrade. I had no fear of exciting the fanaticism of the Muslim population
+by going out shooting on their holy day, for there is not much bigotry in
+Mogador,--Moors, Christians, and Jews observing their several religions
+peacefully side by side, so that three Sundays come in every week, the
+Mahometan on Friday, the Jewish on Saturday, and then ours.
+
+The sun, just rising from behind the eastern sand-hills, was gilding all
+the house-tops and minarets, till our white town looked like a rich
+assemblage of fairy palaces of gold and ivory; the smiling sea, serene and
+azure, came rippling peacefully up to the base of the rugged brown rocks,
+enlivened to-day by no statuesque figures of Moorish fishermen; nor did a
+single boat dot the broad blue expanse of the unusually smooth South
+Atlantic, of which the fish and the sea-fowl were for once left in
+undisturbed possession.
+
+As I gazed from the flat roof away over the great town, I heard from many
+quarters loud sounds of music and merriment. As I passed presently through
+the narrow streets, with their dead white walls and cool dark arches,
+scarcely a camel was to be seen at the accustomed corners by the stores of
+the merchants, where usually whole fleets of the "ships of the desert" lay
+moored, unloading almonds, and rich gums, and hides, and all the varied
+produce of the distant interior.
+
+Outside the town-gates the very hordes of semi-wild scavenger dogs seemed
+to know that the day was one of peace, for they lay in the sunshine, nor
+barked and snapped at the infidel intruder as he walked over the golden
+sands, along the edge of the marshy pool, past the pleasant-looking
+Moorish cemetery with its graceful verdant palm-trees, a calm oasis in the
+sandy plain, and out across the shallow lagoon formed by overflows of high
+tides, by which a few late trains of homeward-bound camels went softly
+stepping, looking wonderfully picturesque as they marched through shallow
+waters so beautifully gilded by the morning sun, their drivers doubtless
+eager to reach their own home or the shelter of some friendly village to
+participate in the modest revelries of the joyous season. How I wandered
+along the shore of the "many-sounding sea," enjoying a little rough sport,
+and the blithe companionship of the big doggie; how I saw never a Moor
+upon the rocks, but many Jews with long bamboo rods, busily engaged in
+fishing for bream and bass and rock-fish, it boots not to describe with a
+minuteness which might be wearisome to my readers, for I am not now
+writing "of sport, for sportsmen."
+
+So let us turn homewards, as the sun is getting high in the heavens, and
+note the scenes by the way.
+
+Yonder, near the marshy corner of the plain, haunted by wild-fowl, and
+carrion crows, and mongrel jackal-like dogs, is the rough cemetery of the
+despised "Jehoud," the Israelites who form so large and so wealthy a
+portion of the population of Mogador. Among the long flat stones that mark
+the graves of the exiled sons and daughters of Israel there is a winding
+crowd of white-draped figures, a funeral procession. Unwilling to intrude
+upon their grief, I pass on, casting an involuntary glance at the
+picturesque garb and wild gesticulations of the mourners as the women's
+loud and bitter cry of "Ai, Ai, Ai, Ai!" sounds weirdly through the air,
+just as it may have done in the old scriptural times, when "the mourners
+went about the streets" and gave unchecked vent to their grief in public,
+even as they do to this day.
+
+But as I neared Morocco Gate, from the neighbouring "Running Ground" came
+very different sounds--a din of many drums, a squeaking of merry fifes,
+the firing of many long Moorish guns, the shouting of men and boys, and
+the eerie shrill _taghariet_ of the Moorish women.
+
+And as I passed in front of the round battery, out from the great gate of
+the New Kasbah came the crowd of men, women, and children who had been
+clamouring joyfully in the Running-Ground, a bright throng of brown faces
+and white raiment, interspersed with the gay colours worn by the little
+children, and dotted here and there by the blood-red of the national flag.
+Suddenly from a cannon just behind me came a cloud of smoke enveloping me
+and the dog, and a bang which fairly shook us, and then another and
+another. The firing of the guns from this battery was the spectacle the
+Moorish populace had come out to see.
+
+It was an uncomfortable sensation to have big guns going off just behind
+one; they were only loaded with blank cartridge, of course, but we were
+quite near enough to be knocked down by a stray piece of wadding, and
+something did once whistle past my ear suggestively.
+
+But it would never do for an "Ingleez" to run away in the presence of a
+lot of Moors; so I walked calmly across the sands while the whole battery
+of guns--twelve, I think--were fired, Cćsar meanwhile prancing about
+majestically, and loudly giving vent to his indignation at a proceeding
+which he evidently considered, as he always does the firing of any gun or
+pistol by any one but me, an express insult to his master, and an
+infringement of his peculiar privileges.
+
+I went home by way of the Water-Port, where there was no movement of
+lighters or fishing-craft, no stir of bare-legged porters and fishermen,
+no bustle of Jewish and European merchants; nearly all the boats were
+drawn up on the shore, and those which remained afloat, slumbered
+tenantless on the broad blue bosom of the sea. On rocks, and in the
+pleasant shade of walls and arches, a few figures, in bright and gauzy
+_haiks_ and gorgeous new slippers, lounged and dozed, perchance tired with
+the revelries they had gone through since daybreak, and recruiting their
+energies for fresh rejoicings towards evening. Reaching home about eleven,
+I rested a while, deposited my birds in the larder, and then proceeded to
+stroll about the streets and see how the populace comported themselves on
+this festive occasion. I was sorry to learn that some of the younger and
+more fanatical of the Moors had been relieving their feelings by abusing
+the Jews, some of whom had had stones thrown at them, and their heads
+slightly broken. But this temporary riot was over, and now all was "peace
+and good-will," except that perhaps there may have lurked a little not
+unnatural ill-feeling in the minds of the broken-headed Israelites, who
+could not help feeling rather disgusted at the manner in which the Muslim
+youths had celebrated "Christmas for Moros."
+
+As I passed along the narrow lane wherein the soldiers of the Kaid or
+Governor, in the snowiest of _haiks_ and tallest and reddest of
+_tarbooshes_, squatted against the wall, chatting blithely as they awaited
+the advent of their master, a grave and venerable-looking Moorish
+grandpapa, hurrying along with a great armful of cakes in one of the folds
+of his _haik_, stumbled against a loose stone and dropped several of the
+cakes.
+
+I hastily stooped and picked them up; the old man muttered a few words of
+blessing upon me, insisted on my accepting the dainties I had rescued from
+the dust, utterly refused to receive them back, pressed my hand, and
+hurried on, leaving me in a state of embarrassment, from which I was
+opportunely relieved by the arrival of a bright-eyed little Moor of seven
+or eight summers, who was perfectly willing to relieve me from all trouble
+connected with the handful of cakes. Passing into the busy streets of the
+Moorish quarter, I found the population coming out of the various mosques,
+where they had been to morning service, and now going in for a systematic
+course of "greetings in the market-place," and purchasing of presents. O,
+for an artist's pencil and colours to depict the gorgeous costumes of the
+town Moors, the quaint, wild garb of their country cousins; the gauzy
+cream-tinted _haiks_ from Morocco; the rich silken _caftans_ of purple, or
+crimson, or yellow, or green, or azure, or pink, sweetly half-veiled by a
+fold or two of snowy gauze thrown over them; the bright red fez caps, and
+voluminous snowy turbans of the patriarchal-looking old men; the broad
+silken sashes from Fez, heavy and stiff with rich embroidery of gold; the
+great curved daggers in their richly chased silver or brass sheaths,
+suspended amid the folds of the _haik_ by thick woolen cords of gay
+colours; the handsome brown faces, the flashing black eyes, the wonderful
+white teeth, the sinewy brown bare legs, the brand-new yellow slippers of
+the merry Moors of Mogador!
+
+And the negroes, or, as old Fuller would quaintly have called them, "the
+images of God cut in ebony," how their honest black features glistened,
+and how their bright teeth grinned beneath turban or fez, or gaudy
+handkerchief of many colours!
+
+The negro servant of one of the European residents, a good-humoured giant
+of nearly seven feet, whom his master is wont to describe as "his nigger
+and a half," came stalking down amongst the little shops and stalls with a
+flaunting bandanna round his head, a purple jacket, a most gorgeous sash,
+a pair of green baggy breeches, a glittering silver-sheathed dagger, and a
+most imposing _haik_, thrown in toga-like folds over all.
+
+Negro women, unveiled, white-clad, adorned as to their shiny black arms
+with rude heavy bracelets of silver or brass, sat at street-corners with
+baskets of sweet cakes and little loaves for sale. Veiled Moorish women,
+perchance showing just one bright black eye to tantalise the beholder,
+glided along like substantial ghosts in the white raiment which enveloped
+them from their heads down to the little feet shod with red or yellow
+slippers embroidered with gold thread or bright-coloured silks. Women
+leading tiny toddlers of children, little bright-eyed boys with crowns
+shaven all but one queer little tufted ridge in the middle, deftly curled
+this morning by mamma's loving fingers; foreheads adorned with quaint
+frontlets, from which hung curious ornaments of gold and coral and silver,
+spells against the evil eye, talismans, and what not.
+
+Little boys in beautiful cloth or silken cloaks of pale blue, or delicate
+purple, or crimson, or rich green, or golden yellow, trotting along as
+proud as peacocks, holding by the hand some tiny brother who can barely
+toddle. Children who have just had new slippers purchased for them, and
+are carrying them home in triumph; children who, with funny little copper
+coins in their hand, are congregating round the stall of the swarthy
+seller of sweetstuffs, who is ejaculating loudly, "_Heloua_, _Heloua_!"
+busily brandishing a feathery branch of green _artim_ the while, to keep
+the vagrom flies off his stores of rich dainties composed of walnut and
+almond toffee, pastes made of almonds and honey and sugar, little brown
+sugar balls thickly strewn with cummin-seeds, long sticks of peppermint,
+and other delicacies difficult to describe.
+
+As to the grown-up Moors, never was seen such a hand-shaking as is going
+on amongst them. Everybody is shaking hands with everybody else, each
+wishing the other the Arabic substitute for "A merry Christmas," and after
+each handshaking each of the participants puts his hand to his lips and
+proceeds, to be stopped two yards farther on for a repetition of the
+performance.
+
+On we go through the meat-market, and note pityingly the leanness of the
+Moors' Christmas beef, which has just been butchered, and of which an
+eager good-humored crowd are buying small pieces amid much vociferation,
+chaff, and "compliments of the season" generally.
+
+Then we come to the green-grocers' shops, where we see huge radishes,
+great pomegranates, sweet potatoes, and bunches of fragrant mint for the
+flavouring of the Moors' passionately loved beverage, green tea; then to
+the grocers' quarter, where, asking a grave and portly Moor for a
+pennyworth _fakea_ (dried fruit), he puts into half a gourd-shell a
+pleasant collection of dates, almonds, figs, and raisins, hands them to us
+with benign politeness. Opposite his store is a low table covered with
+queer bottles of all shapes and sizes, filled with a dubious-looking pink
+fluid, resembling the most delicious hair oil, but apparently highly
+appreciated by the Moorish and Jewish youth who crowd around.
+
+In the centre is a burly brandy-bottle, bearing the well-known label of
+"J. and F. Martell," now filled with a fluid presumably more innocuous
+than the choicest cognac; the big bottle is flanked by rows of little
+medicine-vials and long thin bottles such as are used for attar of roses
+and other Eastern scents; for the vendor of this bright-coloured liquor
+does not possess cups or tumblers, but dispenses it in the little bottles.
+A bare-headed youth, with shaven crown, tenders a _mozouna_, receives a
+two-ounce vial, empties it solemnly amid the envious looks of his
+comrades, sets it down, and walks gravely away.
+
+Away we go too, Cćsar and I, and I note that there is hardly a Jew to be
+seen in the streets; they are afraid of stone-throwing, and outbursts of
+the slumbering hatred and contempt with which they are regarded by the
+orthodox Muslim.
+
+As for Christians, Englishmen especially, they are much more tolerated and
+respected; and I know that I may walk the town all day without fear of
+molestation, and get plenty of kindly greetings and many a smile and shake
+of the hand.
+
+Out of the busy market, up the narrow and shady streets, hearing sounds of
+the fearsome trumpet, which I have already compared to an exaggerated
+mosquito, meeting that instrument presently at a corner--a horrid tin
+thing about two yards long, wielded by a sinewy little man in a blue
+tunic, accompanying a gaily-dressed boy on a sleek and patient donkey.
+Fifing and drumming and firing of guns going on all around.
+
+Fierce-looking Moors and Arabs from the country leaning on their long
+silver-mounted guns, scowling at the "Kaffer," whom they have perchance
+not seen until they came to El Souërah. A veiled, but evidently portly,
+dame, leading by the hand a pretty little girl, in a red skirt below a
+rich garment of lace or embroidery, with a crimson hooded cloak or
+_djelab_ over it, rich ornaments on her smooth brown forehead, enormous
+silver anklets, little bare feet, dyed, like her hands and those of most
+of the little girls and many of the big ones, a bright red with henna.
+Little girl shrinks behind her mother, afraid of the Giaour or of his big
+dog; the Giaour slips by with a smile, doggie with a friendly wag of his
+tail, and we go homeward for a while; Cćsar to make a hearty meal of the
+biscuits which have come all the way from England for him; his master to
+partake of lunch, then smoke a pipe on the roof, and look wistfully out
+over the bright blue sky, and let his thoughts wander far, far away to
+many a pleasant Christmas in a pleasant corner of the fair Western land:
+
+ "Where is now the merry party
+ I remember long ago,
+ Laughing round the Christmas fireside,
+ Brightened by its ruddy glow?"
+
+But the Moor's Christmas has come early in October; there is time yet, and
+plenty of English steamers going backwards and forwards; who knows whether
+the wanderer may not yet spend the next Christmas by a genial English
+fireside, and recount to prattling children on his knee (others' children,
+alas!) the curious sights, sounds, and scenes of "Christmas for Moros?"
+But I have not quite done with you yet, kindly reader. I must just briefly
+tell you how I went out again in the afternoon with Cćsar and a two-legged
+friend, and found more shopping going on and more handshaking, and found
+the more festive spirits getting hilarious over green tea and coffee and
+_kief_; how we strolled down to the Water-Port and sat on the quay,
+surrounded by merry young Moors in their "Sunday best;" how my friend
+essayed to sketch one or two of them, and they did not like it, but
+thought some evil spell would be put upon them thereby; how they asked us
+many questions about England, and particularly wanted to know how many
+dollars we possessed; how my companion won the hearts of some of the
+younger members of the party by teaching them how to whistle between their
+thumbs, and how to make a certain very loud and direfully discordant
+screech; and how J. and I finished the afternoon by partaking of a
+delightful bottle of English ale in the courtyard of a cool store, leaning
+our chairs against massive stone pillars, and smoking the pipe of peace.
+
+But I fear the stern Editor will not grant me any more space, and I must
+leave at present the recital of all that I saw on the ensuing day, which
+the gentle Hamed, if he were a _little_ more closely acquainted with our
+institutions, would call "Boxing-day for Moros."
+
+ C. A. P. ("SARCELLE"), _in London Society_,
+ MOGADOR.
+
+
+
+
+THE HOMES AND HAUNTS OF THE ITALIAN POETS.
+
+
+GUARINI.
+
+Pastoral poetry had in Italy a tendency to a rapid degeneration from the
+first. "Decipit exemplum vitiis imitabile." The earliest "pastorals" were
+far from being without merit, and merit of a high order. But they were
+eminently "vitiis imitabiles." Two specimens of Italian Arcadian poetry
+stand out, from the incredibly huge mass of such productions still extant,
+superior to all the innumerable imitations to which they gave rise in a
+more marked degree even than "originals" usually surpass imitations in
+value. These are the "Aminta" of Tasso, and the "Pastor Fido" of the poet
+with whom it is the object of these pages to make the English nineteenth
+century reader, who never will find the time to read him, in some degree
+acquainted--Batista Guarini. It would be difficult to say which of these
+two celebrated pastoral dramas was received with the greater amount of
+delight and enthusiasm by the world of their contemporaries, or even which
+of them is the better performance. The almost simultaneous production of
+these two masterpieces in their kind is a striking instance of the, one
+may almost say, epidemic nature of the influences which rule the
+production of the human intellect; influences which certainly did not
+cease to operate for many generations after that of the authors of the
+"Aminta" and the "Pastor Fido," although the servile imitation of those
+greatly admired works unquestionably went for much in causing the
+overwhelming flood of pastorals which deluged Italy immediately subsequent
+to their enormous success.
+
+I have said that it would be difficult to assign a preëminence to either
+of these poems. But it must not be supposed that it is intended thence to
+insinuate an equality between the authors of them. Tasso would occupy no
+lower place on the Italian Parnassus if he had never written the "Aminta."
+His fame rests upon a very much larger and firmer basis. But Guarini would
+be nowhere--would not be heard of at all--had he not written the "Pastor
+Fido." Having, however, produced that work--a work of which forty editions
+are said to have been printed in his lifetime, and which has been
+translated into almost every civilised language, including Latin, Greek,
+and Hebrew--he has always filled a space in the eyes of his countrymen,
+and occupied a position in the roll of fame, which render his admission as
+one of our select band here imperative. He is, besides, a representative
+poet; the head and captain of the pastoral school, which attained
+everywhere so considerable a vogue, and in Italy such colossal
+proportions.
+
+Guarini was born in the year 1537 in Ferrara,--desolate, dreary, shrunken,
+grass-grown, tumble-down Ferrara, which in the course of one half-century
+gave to the world, besides a host of lesser names, three such poets as
+Tasso, Ariosto and Guarini. Ariosto died four years before Guarini was
+born; but Tasso was nearly his contemporary, being but seven years his
+junior.
+
+In very few cases in all the world and in all ages has it happened that
+intellectual distinction has been the appanage of one family for as many
+generations as in that of the Guarini. They came originally from Verona,
+where Guarino, the first of the family on record, who was born in 1370,
+taught the learned languages, and was one of the most notable of the band
+of scholars who laboured at the restoration of classical literature. He
+lived to be ninety years old, and is recorded to have had twenty-three
+sons. It is certain that he had twelve living in 1438. One of them,
+Giovanni Batista, succeeded his father in his professorship at Ferrara, to
+which city the old scholar had been invited by Duke Hercules I. It would
+seem that another of his sons must also have shared the work of teaching
+in the University of Ferrara: for Batista the poet was educated by his
+great-uncle Alessandro, and succeeded him in his professorship. Of the
+poet's father we only learn that he was a mighty hunter, and further, that
+he and his poet-son were engaged in litigation respecting the inheritance
+of the poet's grandfather and great-uncle. It is probable that the two old
+scholars wished to bequeath their property, which included a landed
+estate, to their grandson and great-nephew, who already was manifesting
+tastes and capacities quite in accordance with their own, rather than to
+that exceptional member of the race who cared for nothing but dogs and
+horses.
+
+Nor was Batista the last of his race who distinguished himself in the same
+career. His son succeeded him in his chair at the university; and we have
+thus at least four generations of scholars and professors following the
+same course in the same university, which was in their day one of the most
+renowned in Europe.
+
+All this sounds very stable, very prosperous, very full of the element of
+contentment. And there is every reason to believe that the
+great-grandfather, the grandfather, the great-uncle, the son, were all as
+tranquil and contented and happy as well-to-do scholars in a prosperous
+university city should be. But not so the poet. His life was anything but
+tranquil, or happy, or contented. The lives of few men, it may be hoped,
+have been less so.
+
+Yet his morning was brilliant enough. He distinguished himself so
+remarkably by his success in his early studies that, on the death of his
+great-uncle Alexander when he was only nineteen, he was appointed to
+succeed him. This was in 1556, when Hercules II. was Duke of Ferrara, and
+when that court of the Este princes was at the apogee of its splendour,
+renown, and magnificence. The young professor remained working at the
+proper labours of his profession for ten years; and they were in all
+probability the best and happiest, the only happy ones of his life. Happy
+is the nation, it has been said, which has no history; and much the same
+probably may be said of an individual. Respecting these ten years of
+Guarini's life but little has been recorded. No doubt the chronicle of
+them would have been monotonous enough. The same quiet duties quietly and
+successfully discharged; the same morning walk to his school, the same
+evening return from it, through the same streets, with salutations to the
+same friends, and leisurely pauses by the way to chat, Italian fashion,
+with one and another, as they were met in the streets, not then, as now,
+deserted, grass-grown, and almost weird in their pale sun-baked
+desolation, but thronged with bustling citizens, mingled with gay
+courtiers, and a very unusually large proportion of men whose names were
+known from one end of Italy to the other. Those school haunts in the
+Ferrarese University were haunts which the world-weary ex-professor must
+often throughout the years of his remaining life--some forty-five of them,
+for he did not die till 1612, when he was seventy-five--have looked back
+on as the best and happiest of his storm-tossed existence.
+
+There is, however, one record belonging to this happy time which must not
+be forgotten. It was at Padua, _Padova la dotta_, as she has been in all
+ages and is still called, Padua the learned, in the year 1565. Guarini was
+then in his twenty-eighth year, and had been a professor at Ferrara for
+the last eight years. Probably it was due to the circumstance that his
+friend and fellow-townsman, Torquato Tasso, was then pursuing his studies
+at Padua, that the young Ferrarese professor turned his steps in that
+direction, bound "on a long vacation ramble." Tasso was only
+one-and-twenty at the time; but he was already a member of the famous
+Paduan Academy of the "Etherials," which Guarini was not. And we may
+readily fancy the pride and pleasure with which the younger man, doing the
+honours of the place to his learned friend, procured him to be elected a
+member of the "Etherials." Guarini (so called _nel secolo_--in the world),
+was _Il Costante_--the "Constant One" among the "Etherials." Scipio
+Gonzaga, who became subsequently the famous Cardinal, spoke an oration of
+welcome to him on his election. Then what congratulations, what
+anticipations of fame, what loving protestations of eternal friendship,
+what naďve acceptance of the importance and serious value of their
+Etherial Academic play, as the two youths strolling at the evening hour
+among the crowds of gravely clad but in no wise gravely speaking students
+who thronged the colonnades in deep shadow under their low-browed arches,
+sally forth from beneath them as the sun nears the west, on to the vast
+open space which lies around the great church of St. Antony! Advancing in
+close talk they come up to Donatello's superb equestrian statue of the
+Venetian General Gattamelata, and lean awhile against the tall pedestal,
+finishing their chat before entering the church for the evening prayer.
+
+The "Etherials" of Padua constituted one of the innumerable "Academies"
+which existed at that day and for a couple of centuries subsequently in
+every one of the hundred cities of Italy. The "Arcadian" craze was the
+generating cause of all of them. All the members were "shepherds;" all
+assumed a fancy name on becoming a member, by which they were known in
+literary circles; and every Academy printed all the rhymes its members
+strung together!
+
+Those must have been pleasant days in old Padua, before the young
+Professor returned to his work in the neighbouring university of Ferrara.
+The two young men were then, and for some time afterwards, loving friends;
+for they had not yet become rival poets.
+
+At the end of those ten years of university life he may be said to have
+entered on a new existence--to have begun life afresh--so entirely
+dis-severed was his old life from the new that then opened on him.
+Alphonso II., who had succeeded his father, Hercules II., as Duke of
+Ferrara in 1559, "called him to the court" in 1567, and he began life as a
+courtier, or a "servant" of the Duke, in the language of the country and
+time.
+
+Well, in 1567 he entered into the service of the Duke, his sovereign, and
+never had another happy or contented hour!
+
+The first service on which the Duke employed him, and for the performance
+of which he seems specially to have taken him from his professional chair,
+was an embassy to Venice, to congratulate the new Doge, Pietro Loredano,
+on his elevation to the ducal throne, to which he had been elected on the
+previous 19th of June. On this occasion the Professor was created
+Cavaliere, a title to which his landed estate of Guarina, so called from
+the ancestor on whom it had been originally bestowed by a former duke,
+fairly entitled him.
+
+Shortly afterwards he was sent as ambassador to the court of Turin; and
+then to that of the Emperor Maximilian at Innspruck. Then he was twice
+sent to Poland; the first time on the occasion of the election of Henry
+the Third of France to the throne of that kingdom; and the second time
+when Henry quitted it to ascend that of France on the death of his brother
+Charles IX. The object of this second embassy was to intrigue for the
+election to the Polish crown of Alphonso. But, as it is hardly necessary
+to say, his mission was unsuccessful.
+
+It seems, too, to have been well-nigh fatal to the ambassador. There is
+extant a letter written from Warsaw to his wife, which gives a curious and
+interesting account of the sufferings he endured on the journey and at the
+place of his destination. He tells his wife not to be discontented that
+his silence has been so long, but to be thankful that it was not eternal,
+as it was very near being! "I started, as you know, more in the fashion of
+a courier than of an ambassador. And that would have been more tolerable
+if bodily fatigue had been all. But the same hand that had to flog the
+horses by day, had to hold the pen by night. Nature could not bear up
+against this double labour of body and mind; especially after I had
+travelled by Serravelles and Ampez,[48] which is more disagreeable and
+difficult than I can tell you, from the ruggedness no less of the country
+than of the people, from the scarcity of horses, the miserable mode of
+living, and the want of every necessary. So much so that on reaching
+Hala[49] I had a violent fever. I embarked, however, for Vienna
+notwithstanding. What with fever, discouragement, an intense thirst,
+scarcity of remedies and of medical assistance, bad lodging, generally far
+to seek,[50] and often infected with disease, food disgusting, even to
+persons in health, bed where you are smothered in feathers, in a word,
+none of the necessaries or comforts of life! I leave you to imagine what I
+have suffered. The evil increased; my strength grew less. I lost my
+appetite for everything save wine. In a word, little hope remained to me
+of life, and that little was odious to me. There is on the Danube, which I
+was navigating, a vast whirlpool, so rapid that if the boatmen did not
+avail themselves of the assistance of a great number of men belonging to
+the locality, strong and powerful and well acquainted with the danger, who
+are there constantly for the purpose, and who struggle with their oars
+against the rapacious gulf, there is not a vessel in that great river
+which would not be engulfed! The place is worthy of the name of "the Door
+of Death," which with a notoriety of evil fame it has gained for itself.
+There is no passenger so bold as not to pass that bit of the course of the
+river on foot; for the thing is truly formidable and terrible. But I was
+so overcome by illness, that having lost all sense of danger or desire to
+live, I did not care to leave the boat, but remained in it, with those
+strong men, I hardly know whether to say stupidly or intrepidly--but I
+will say intrepidly, since at one point, where I was within an ace of
+destruction, I felt no fear."
+
+He goes on to tell how at Vienna a physician treated him amiss, and made
+him worse; how every kind of consideration, and his own desire to save his
+life, counselled him to delay there; but how the honour, the
+responsibility of the embassy wholly on his shoulders, his duty to his
+sovereign prevailed to drive him onwards. He feared, too, lest it should
+be supposed at Warsaw that he preferred his life to the business on which
+he came, an accusation which might have been made use of by suspicious and
+malignant adversaries to deprive him of all the credit of his labours, and
+"to snatch from my Prince the crown which we are striving to place on his
+head. It is impossible to imagine," he continues, "what I suffered in that
+journey of more than six hundred miles from Vienna to Warsaw, dragged
+rather than carried in carts, broken and knocked to pieces. I wonder that
+I am still alive! The obstinate fever, the want of rest, of food, and of
+medicine, the excessive cold, the infinite hardships, the uninhabited
+deserts, were killing me. More often than not it was a much lesser evil to
+crouch by night in the cart, which dislocated my bones by day, rather than
+to be suffocated in the foulness of those dens, or stables rather, where
+the dogs and cats, the cocks and hens, and the geese, the pigs and the
+calves, and sometimes the children, kept me waiting."
+
+He proceeds to tell how the country was overrun, in that time of
+interregnum, by lawless bands of Cossacks; how he was obliged to travel
+with a strong escort, but nevertheless was obliged several times to
+deviate from the direct road to avoid the Cossacks, but on two occasions
+had very narrow escapes from falling into their hands. When he reached
+Warsaw at last, more dead than alive, the only improvement of his position
+was that he was stationary instead of in motion. "The cart no more
+lacerates my limbs!" But there was no rest to be got. "The place, the
+season, the food, the drink, the water, the servants, the medicines, the
+doctors, mental trouble, and a thousand other ills make up my torment.
+Figure to yourself all the kingdom lodged in one little town, and my room
+in the midst of it! There is no place from the top to the bottom, on the
+right or on the left, by day or by night, that is not full of tumult and
+noise. There is no special time here destined for business. Negotiation is
+going on always, because drinking is going on always; and business is dry
+work without wine. When business is over, visits begin; and when these are
+at an end, drums, trumpets, bombs, uproar, cries, quarrels, fighting,
+split one's head in a manner piteous to think of. Ah! if I suffered all
+this labour and this torment for the love and the glory of God, I should
+be a martyr!" (one thinks of Wolsey!) "But is he not worthy of the name
+who serves without hope of recompense?"
+
+He concludes his letter, bidding his wife not to weep for him, but to live
+and care for her children, in a manner which indicates that he had even
+then but little hope of returning alive.
+
+We are nevertheless assured by his biographers that he acquitted himself
+upon all these occasions in such sort as to give satisfaction to his
+sovereign and to acquire for himself the reputation of an upright and able
+minister. The Italian practice of entrusting embassies especially to men
+of letters, which we first had occasion to note when tracing the
+vicissitudes of the life of Dante in the thirteenth century, which we saw
+subsequently exemplified in the cases of Petrarch, Boccaccio, and Ariosto,
+and which might be further exemplified in the persons of many other
+Italian scholars and men of letters, still, as we see, prevailed in the
+sixteenth century, and continued to do so for some little time longer.
+
+But in no one instance, of all those I have mentioned, does the poet thus
+employed in functions which in other lands and other times have usually
+led to honours and abundant recognition of a more solid kind, appear to
+have reaped any advantage in return for the service performed, or to have
+been otherwise than dissatisfied and discontented with the treatment
+accorded to him.
+
+It would have been very interesting to learn somewhat of the impression
+made upon an Italian scholar of the sixteenth century by the places
+visited, and persons with whom he must have come in contact in those
+transalpine lands, which were then so far off, so contrasted in all
+respects with the home scenes among which his life had been passed in the
+low-lying, fat, and fertile valley of the Po. Of all this his various
+biographers and contemporaries tell us no word! But there is a volume of
+his letters, a little square quarto volume, now somewhat rare, printed at
+Venice in the year 1595.[51] These letters have somewhat unaccountably not
+been included in any of the editions of his works, and they are but little
+known. But turning to this little volume, and looking over the dates of
+the letters (many of them, however, are undated), I found three written
+"Di Spruch," and eagerly turned to them, thinking that I should certainly
+find there what I was seeking. The letters belong to a later period of
+Guarini's life, having been written in 1592, when he was again sent on an
+embassy to the German Emperor. This circumstance, however, is of no
+importance as regards the purpose for which I wanted the letters. I was
+disappointed. But I must nevertheless give one of these letters, not
+wantonly to compel my reader to share my disappointment, but because it is
+a curiosity in its way. The person to whom he writes is a lady, the
+Contessa Pia di Sala, with whom he was evidently intimate. He is at
+Innspruck at the Court of the Emperor Maximilian. The lady is at Mantua,
+and this is what he writes to her:
+
+ "Di Spruch, Nov. 29, 1592.
+
+ "The letter of your Illustrious Ladyship, together with
+ which you send me that of your most excellent brother,
+ written at the end of August, reached me yesterday, at first
+ to my very great anger at having been for so long a time
+ deprived of so precious a thing, while I appeared in fault
+ towards so distinguished a lady; but finally to my very
+ great good fortune. For if a letter written by the most
+ lovely flame[52] in the world had arrived, while the skies
+ were burning, what would have become of me, when, now that
+ winter is beginning, I can scarcely prevent myself from
+ falling into ashes? And in truth, when I think that those so
+ courteous thoughts come from the mind which informs so
+ lovely a person, that those characters have been traced by a
+ hand of such excellent beauty, I am all ablaze, no less than
+ if the paper were fire, the words flames, and all the
+ syllables sparks. But God grant that, while I am set on fire
+ by the letter of your Illustrious Ladyship, you may not be
+ inflamed by anger against me, from thinking that the terms
+ in which I write are too bold. Have no such doubt, my
+ honoured mistress! I want nothing from the flaming of my
+ letter, but to have made by the light of it more vivid and
+ more brilliant in you, the natural purity of your beautiful
+ face, even as it seems to me that I can see it at this
+ distance. My love is nothing else save honour; my flame is
+ reverence; my fire is ardent desire to serve you. And only
+ so long will the appointment in his service, which it has
+ pleased my Lord His Serene Highness the Duke of Mantua to
+ give me, and on which your Illustrious Ladyship has been
+ kind enough to congratulate me so cordially, be dear to me,
+ as you shall know that I am fit for it, and more worthy and
+ more ready to receive the favour of your commands, which
+ will always be to me a most sure testimony that you esteem
+ me, not for my own worth, as you too courteously say, but
+ for the worth which you confer on me, since I am not worthy
+ of such esteem for any other merit than that which comes to
+ me from being honoured by so noble and beautiful a lady. I
+ kiss the hand of your Illustrious Ladyship, wishing the
+ culmination of every felicity."
+
+Now, this letter I consider to be a very great curiosity! The other two
+written from the same place, one to a Signor Bulgarini at Siena, the other
+to a lady, the Marchesa di Grana, at Mantua, are of an entirely similar
+description. I turned to them in the hope of finding how Innspruck, its
+stupendous scenery, its court, its manners so widely different from those
+to which the writer and his correspondents were used, its streets, its
+people, impressed a sixteenth century Italian from the valley of the Po. I
+find instead a psychological phenomenon! The writer is a grave, austere
+man (Guarini was notably such), celebrated throughout Italy for his
+intellectual attainments, in the fifty-seventh year of his age, with a
+wife and family; he is amidst scenes which must, one would have thought,
+have impressed in the very highest degree the imagination of a poet, and
+must, it might have been supposed, have interested those he was writing to
+in an only somewhat less degree, and he writes the stuff the reader has
+just waded through. It is clear that this Italian sixteenth century
+scholar, poet and of cultivated intellect as he was, saw nothing amid the
+strange scenes to which a hard and irksome duty called him, which he
+thought worthy of being mentioned even by a passing word to his friends!
+Surely this is a curious trait of national character.
+
+He remained in the service of the court for fourteen years, employed
+mainly, as it should seem, in a variety of embassies; an employment which
+seems to have left him a disappointed, soured, and embittered man. He
+considered that he had not been remunerated as his labour deserved, that
+the heavy expenses to which he had been put in his long journeys had not
+been satisfactorily made up to him, and that he had not been treated in
+any of the foreign countries to which his embassies had carried him with
+the respect due to his own character and to his office.
+
+He determined therefore to leave the court and retire to Padua, a
+residence in which city, it being not far distant from his estate of
+Guarina, would offer him, he thought, a convenient opportunity of
+overlooking his property and restoring order to his finances, which had
+suffered much during his travels. This was in the year 1582, when Guarini
+was in the forty-fifth year of his age. It is not clear, however, that
+this retirement was wholly spontaneous; and the probability is that the
+Duke and his ambassador were equally out of humour with each other. And it
+is probable that the faults were not all on the side of the Duke. There is
+sufficient evidence that the author of the "Pastor Fido" must have been a
+difficult man to live with.
+
+The old friendship of happier days with Tasso had not survived the wear
+and tear of life at court. It was known that they no longer saw or spoke
+with each other. And everybody--if not of their contemporaries, at least
+of subsequent writers--jumped to the conclusion that the writer of the
+"Aminta" and the writer of the "Pastor Fido" must be jealous of each
+other. Jealousy there certainly was. But some frailer and more mortal
+female than the Muse was the cause of it. The Abate Serassi in his life of
+Tasso admits that Tasso first gave offence to Guarini by a sonnet in which
+he endeavoured to alienate the affections of a lady from him, by
+representing him as a faithless and fickle lover. The lines in which Tasso
+attacked his brother poet are, it must be admitted, sharp enough!
+
+ Si muove e si raggira
+ Instabil piů che arida fronde ai venti;
+ Nulla fč, null' amor, falsi i tormenti
+ Sono, e falso l'affeto ond' ei sospira.
+ Insidioso amante, ama e disprezza
+ Quasi in un punto, e trionfando spiega
+ Di femminile spoglie empi trofei.[53]...
+
+The attack was savage enough, it must be admitted, and well calculated to
+leave a lasting wound. Guarini immediately answered the cruel sonnet by
+another, the comparative weakness of which is undeniable.
+
+ Questi che indarno ad alta mira aspira
+ Con altrui biasmi, e con bugiardi accenti,
+ Vedi come in se stesso arruota i denti,
+ Mentre contra ragion meco s'adira.
+
+ Di due fiamme si vanta, e stringe e spezza
+ Piů volte un nodo; e con quest' arti piega
+ (Chi 'l crederebbe!) a suo favore i Dei.[54]...
+
+There is reason to think that the accusation of many times binding and
+loosing the same knot, may have hit home. The sneer about bending the gods
+to favour him, alludes to Tasso's favour at court, then in the ascendant,
+and may well have been as offensive to the Duke and the ladies of his
+court as to the object of his satire. Both angry poets show themselves
+somewhat earth-stained members of the Paduan "Etherials." But the sequel
+of the estrangement was all in favour of the greater bard. Tasso, in
+desiring a friend to show his poems in manuscript to certain friends, two
+or three in number, on whose opinion he set a high value, named Guarini
+among the number. And upon another occasion wishing to have Guarini's
+opinion as to the best of two proposed, methods of terminating a sonnet,
+and not venturing to communicate directly with him, he employed a common
+friend to obtain his brother-poet's criticism. Tasso had also in his
+dialogue entitled the "Messagero" given public testimony to Guarini's high
+intellectual and civil merits. But Guarini appears never to have forgiven
+the offence. He never once went to see Tasso in his miserable confinement
+in the hospital of St. Anne; nor, as has been seen, would hold any
+communication with him.
+
+He must have been a stern and unforgiving man. And indeed all the
+available testimony represents him as having been so,--upright, honest,
+and honourable, but haughty, punctilious, litigious, quick to take
+offence, slow to forget or forgive it, and cursed with a thin-skinned
+_amour propre_ easily wounded and propense to credit others with the
+intention of wounding where no such intention existed. The remainder of
+the story of his life offers an almost unbroken series of testimonies to
+the truth of such an estimate of his character.
+
+It was after fourteen years' service in the court of Duke Alphonso, as has
+been said, that he retired disgusted and weary to live in independence and
+nurse his estate in the neighbourhood of Padua. But the part of
+Cincinnatus is not for every man! It was in 1582 that he retired from the
+court intending to bid it and its splendours, its disappointments and its
+jealousies, an eternal adieu. In 1585, on an offer from the Duke to make
+him his secretary, he returned and put himself into harness again!
+
+But this second attempt to submit himself to the service, to the caprices
+and exigencies of a master and of a court ended in a quicker and more
+damaging catastrophe than the first. In a diary kept by the poet's nephew,
+Marcantonio Guarini, under the date of July 13, 1587, we find it written
+that "the Cavalier Batista Guarini, Secretary of the Duke, considering
+that his services did not meet with sufficient consideration in proportion
+to his worth, released himself from that servitude." The phrase here
+translated "released himself" is a peculiar one--_si licenzio_--"dismissed
+himself." To receive _licenza_, or to be _licenziato_, is to be dismissed,
+or at least parted with in accordance with the will of the employer. But
+the phrase used by the diarist seems intended to express exactly what
+happened when the poet, once more discontented, took himself off from
+Ferrara and its Duke. He seems to have done so in a manner which gave deep
+and lasting offence. In a subsequent passage of the above-quoted diary we
+read, "the Cavaliere Batista Guarini having absented himself from Ferrara,
+disgusted with the Duke, betook himself to Florence, and then, by the
+intermedium of Guido Coccapani the agent, asked for his dismissal in form
+and obtained it." We happen, however, to have a letter written by this
+Coccapani, who seems to have been the Duke's private secretary and
+managing man, in which he gives his version of the matter. He was
+"stupefied," he says, "when he received the extravagant letter of the
+Cavaliere Guarini, and began to think that it would be with him as it had
+been with Tasso," who by that time had fallen into disgrace. There is
+reason to think that he left Ferrara secretly, without taking leave of the
+Duke, or letting anybody at court know where he had gone. He did,
+however, obtain his formal dismissal, as has been said, but the Duke by no
+means forgave him.
+
+Though it would appear that on leaving Ferrara in this irregular manner he
+went in the first instance to Florence, it seems that he had had hopes
+given him of a comfortable position and honourable provision at Turin. He
+was to have been made a Counsellor of State, and entrusted with the task
+of remodelling the course of study at the university, with a stipend of
+six hundred crowns annually. But on arriving at Turin he found
+difficulties in the way. In fact, the angry Duke of Ferrara had used his
+influence with the Duke of Savoy to prevent anything being done for his
+contumacious Secretary of State. Guarini, extremely mortified, had to
+leave Turin, and betook himself to Venice.
+
+His adventure, however, was of a nature to cause great scandal in that
+clime and time. As usual, the Italians were offended at the "imprudence"
+of which Guarini's temper had led him to be guilty, more than they would
+have been by many a fault which among ourselves would be deemed a very
+much worse one. A violence of temper or indignation shown in such a manner
+as to injure _one's own_ interests is, and in a yet greater degree was, a
+spectacle extremely disgusting to Italian moral sentiment.
+
+The outcry against Guarini on this occasion was so great that he found
+himself obliged to put forth an exculpatory statement.
+
+"If human actions, my most kind readers," he begins, "always bore marked
+on the front of them the aims and motives which have produced them, or if
+those who talk about them were always well informed enough to be able to
+judge of them without injury to the persons of whom they speak, I should
+not be compelled, at my age, and after so many years of a life led in the
+eyes of the world, and often busied in defending the honour of others, to
+defend this day my own, which has always been dearer to me than my life.
+Having heard, then, that my having left the service of His Serene Highness
+the Duke of Ferrara and entered that of the Duke of Savoy has given
+occasion to some persons, ignorant probably of the real state of the case,
+to make various remarks, and form various opinions, I have determined to
+publish the truth, and at the same time to declare my own sentiments in
+the matter.
+
+"I declare, then, that previously to my said departure I consigned to the
+proper person everything, small as it was, which was in my hands regarding
+my office, which had always been exercised by me uprightly and without any
+other object in view than the service of my sovereign and the public
+welfare. Further, that I, by a written paper under my own hand (as the
+press of time and my need rendered necessary), requested a free and
+decorous dismissal from the Duke in question, and also, that I set forth
+in all humility the causes which led me to that determination; and I added
+(some of the circumstances in which I was compelling me to do so) that if
+His Serene Highness did not please to give me any other answer, I would
+take his silence as a consent to my request of dismissal. I declare
+further that the paper was delivered to the principal Minister of his
+Serene Highness, and lastly, that my salary was, without any further
+communication with me, stopped, and cancelled from the roll of payments.
+And as this is the truth, so it is equally true that my appointment as
+reformer of the University of Turin, and Counsellor of State with six
+hundred crowns yearly, was settled and concluded with His Serene Highness
+the Duke of Savoy, and that I declined to bind myself, and did not bind
+myself, to ask any other dismissal from His Serene Highness the Duke of
+Ferrara than that which I have already spoken. And, finally, it is true
+that, as I should not have gone to Turin if I had not been engaged for
+that service and invited thither, so I should not have left, or wished to
+leave this place,[55] had I not known that I received my dismissal in the
+manner above related. Now, as to the cause which may have retarded and may
+still retard the fulfillment of the engagement above mentioned, I have
+neither object, nor obligation, nor need to declare it. Suffice it that it
+is not retarded by any fault of mine, or difficulty on my side. In
+justification of which I offered myself, and by these presents now again
+offer myself, to present myself wheresoever, whensoever, and in whatsoever
+manner, and under whatsoever conditions and penalties, as may be seen more
+clearly set forth in the instrument of agreement sent by me to His
+Highness. From all which, I would have the world to know, while these
+affairs of mine are still in suspension, that I am a man of honour, and am
+always ready to maintain the same in whatsoever manner may be fitting to
+my condition and duty. And as I do not at all doubt that some decision of
+some kind not unworthy of so just and so magnanimous a prince will be
+forthcoming; so, let it be what it may, it will be received by me with
+composure and contentment; since, by God's grace, and that of the serene
+and exalted power under the most just and happy dominion of which I am now
+living, and whose subject, if not by birth, yet by origin and family, I
+am,[56] I have a comfortable and honoured existence. And may you, my
+honoured readers, live in happiness and contentment. Venice, February 1,
+1589."
+
+We must, I think, nevertheless be permitted to doubt the contentment and
+happiness of the life he led, as it should seem, for the next four years,
+at Venice. No such decision of any kind, as he hoped from the Duke of
+Savoy, was forthcoming. He was shunted! He had quarrelled with his own
+sovereign, and evidently the other would have none of him. The Italians of
+one city were in those days to a wonderful degree foreigners in another
+ruled by a different government; and there can be little doubt that
+Guarini wandered among the quays and "calle" of Venice, or paced the great
+piazza at the evening hour, a moody and discontented man!
+
+At last, after nearly four years of this sad life, there came an
+invitation from the Duke of Mantua proposing that Guarini should come to
+Mantua together with his son Alessandro, to occupy honourable positions in
+that court. The poet, heartily sick of "retirement," accepted at once, and
+went to Mantua. But there, too, another disappointment awaited him. The
+"magnanimous" Duke Alphonso would not tolerate that the man who had so
+cavalierly left his service should find employment elsewhere. It is
+probable that this position was obtained for him by the influence of his
+old friend and fellow-member of the "Etherials" at Padua, Scipione
+Gonzaga; and it would seem that he occupied it for a while, and went on
+behalf of the Duke of Mantua to Innspruck, whence he wrote the wonderful
+letters which have been quoted.
+
+The Cardinal's influence, however, was not strong enough to prevail
+against the spite of a neighbouring sovereign. There are two letters
+extant from the Duke, or his private secretary, to that same Coccapani
+whom we saw so scandalized at Guarini's hurried and informal departure
+from Ferrara, and who was residing as Alphonso's representative at Mantua,
+in which the Minister is instructed to represent to the Duke of Mantua
+that his brother of Ferrara "did not think it well that the former should
+take any of the Guarini family into his service, and when they should see
+each other he would tell him his reasons. For the present he would only
+say that he wished the Duke to know that it would be excessively pleasing
+to him if the Duke would have nothing to say to any of them."
+
+This was in 1593; and the world-weary poet found himself at fifty-six once
+again cast adrift upon the world. The extremity of his disgust and
+weariness of all things may be measured by the nature of the next step he
+took. He conceived, says his biographer Barotti, that "God called him by
+internal voices, and by promise of a more tranquil life, to accept the
+tonsure." His wife had died some little time before; and it was therefore
+open to him to do so. He went to Rome accordingly for the purpose of there
+taking orders. But during the short delay which intervened between the
+manifestation of his purpose and the fulfilment of it, news reached him
+that his friend and protectress the Duchess of Urbino, Alphonso's sister,
+had interceded for him with the Duke, and that he was forgiven! It was
+open to him to return to his former employment! And no sooner did the news
+reach him than he perceived that "the internal voices" were altogether a
+mistake. God had never called him at all, and Alphonso had! All thoughts
+of the Church were abandoned on the instant, and he hastened to Ferrara,
+arriving there on the 15th of April, 1595.
+
+But neither on this occasion was he destined to find the tranquillity
+which he seemed fated never to attain! And this time the break-up was a
+greater and more final one than the last. Duke Alphonso died in 1597; and
+the Pontificial Court, which had long had its eye on the possibility of
+enforcing certain pretended claims to the Duchy of Ferrara, found the
+means at Alphonso's death of ousting his successor the Duke Cesare, who
+remained thenceforward Duke of Modena only, but no longer of Ferrara.
+
+Guarini was once more adrift! Nor were the political changes in Ferrara
+the only thing which rendered the place no longer a home for him. Other
+misfortunes combined to render a residence in the city odious to him. His
+daughter Anna had married a noble gentleman of Ferrara, the Count Ercole
+Trotti, by whom she was on the 3rd of May, 1598, murdered at his villa of
+Zanzalino near Ferrara. Some attempt was made to assert that the husband
+had reason to suspect that his wife was plotting against his life. But
+there seems to have been no foundation for any accusation of the sort; and
+the crime was prompted probably by jealousy. Guarini, always on bad terms
+with his sons, and constantly involved in litigation with them, as he had
+been with his father, was exceedingly attached to this unfortunate
+daughter.
+
+But even this terrible loss was not the only bitterness which resulted
+from this crime. Guarini composed a long Latin epitaph, in which he
+strongly affirms her absolute innocence of everything that had been laid
+to her charge, and speaks with reprobation of the husband's[57] crime. But
+scarcely had the stone bearing the inscription been erected than the
+indignant father was required by the authorities of the city to remove it.
+A declaration, which he published on the subject, dated June 15, 1598, is
+still extant. "On that day," he writes, "the Vice-legate of Ferrara spoke
+with me, in the name of the Holy Father, as to the removing of the epitaph
+written by me on Anna my daughter in the church of Sta. Catherina. He said
+that there were things in it that might provoke other persons to
+resentment, and occasion much scandal; and that, besides that, there were
+in the inscription words of Sacred Scripture, which ought not to be used
+in such a place. I defended my cause, and transmitted a memorial to his
+Holiness, having good reason to know that these objections were the mere
+malignity of those who favour the opposite party, and of those who caused
+the death of my innocent child. But at last, on the 22nd, I caused the
+epitaph to be removed, intimating that it was my intention to take up the
+body, and inter it elsewhere. On which it is worthy of remark, that having
+made my demand to that effect, I was forbidden to do so." He further adds:
+"Note! news was brought to me here that my son Girolamo, who was evidently
+discovered to be the accomplice, and principal atrocious author of the
+death of his sister Anna, received from the Potesta of Rovigo licence to
+come into the Polisina with twelve men armed with arquebuses."
+
+All this is very sad; and whether these terrible suspicions may or may not
+have had any foundation other than the envenomed temper generated by the
+family litigations, it must equally have had the effect of making the life
+of Guarini a very miserable one, and contributing to his determination to
+abandon finally his native city.
+
+More surprising is it that, after so many disgusts and disappointments, he
+should once again have been tempted to seek, what he had never yet been
+able to find there, in a court. In a letter written in November, 1598, he
+informs the Duke Cesare (Duke of Modena, though no longer of Ferrara) that
+the Grand Duke of Florence had offered him a position at Florence. And his
+Serene Highness, more kindly and forgiving than the late Duke, wrote him
+an obliging and congratulatory letter in the following month.
+
+At Florence everything at first seemed to be going well with him, and he
+seemed to stand high in favour with the Grand Duke Ferdinand. But very
+shortly he quitted Florence in anger and disgust on the discovery of the
+secret marriage of his third son, Guarini, with a woman of low condition
+at Pisa, with at least the connivance, as the poet thought, whether justly
+or not there is nothing to show, of the Grand Duke.
+
+After that his old friend the Duchess of Urbino once again stood his
+friend, and he obtained a position in the court of Urbino, then one of the
+most widely famed centres of cultivation and letters in Italy. And for a
+while everything seemed at last to be well with him there. On the 23rd of
+February, 1603, he writes to his sister, who apparently had been pressing
+him to come home to Ferrara:--"I should like to come home, my sister. I
+have great need and a great desire for home; but I am treated so well
+here, and with so much distinction and so much kindness, that I cannot
+come. I must tell you that all expenses for myself and my servants are
+supplied, so that I have not to spend a farthing for anything in the world
+that I need. The orders are that anything I ask for should be furnished to
+me. Besides all which, they give me three hundred crowns a year; so that,
+what with money and expenses, the position is worth six hundred crowns a
+year to me. You may judge, then, if I can throw it up. May God grant you
+every happiness!
+
+ Your brother,
+ B. GUARINI."
+
+But all would not do. He had been but a very little time in this little
+Umbrian Athens among the Apennines before he once again threw up his
+position in anger and disgust, because he did not obtain all the marks of
+distinction to which he thought that he was entitled. This was in 1603. He
+was now sixty-six, and seems at length to have made no further attempt to
+haunt at court. Once again he was at Rome in 1605, having undertaken, at
+the request of the citizens of Ferrara, to carry their felicitations to
+the new Pope, Paul the Fifth. And with the exception of that short
+expedition his last years were spent in the retirement of his ancestral
+estate of Guarina.
+
+The property is situated in the district of Lendinara, on the fat and
+fertile low-lying region between Rovigo and Padua, and belongs to the
+commune--parish, as we should say--of St. Bellino. The house, dating
+probably from the latter part of the fifteenth century, is not much more
+than a hundred yards or so from the _piazza_ of the village, which boasts
+two thousand inhabitants. The road between the two is bordered with trees.
+The whole district is as flat as a billiard table, and as prosaical in its
+well-to-do fertility as can be imagined. It is intersected by a variety of
+streams, natural and artificial. About a couple of miles from the house to
+the south is the Canalbianco; and a little farther to the north the
+Adigetto. To the east runs the Scortico. St. Bellino, from whom the
+village is named, was, it seems, enrolled among the martyrs by Pope
+Eugenius the Third in 1152. He has a great specialty for curing the bite
+of mad dogs. There is a grand cenotaph in his honour in the village
+church, which was raised by some of the Guarini family. But this, too,
+like all else, became a subject of trouble and litigation to our poet. A
+certain Baldassare Bonifaccio of Rovigo wanted to transport the saint to
+that city. Guarini would not hear of this; litigated the matter before the
+tribunals of Venice, and prevailed. So the saint still resides at St.
+Bellino to the comfort of all those bitten by mad dogs in those parts. The
+house and estate have passed through several hands since that time; but a
+number of old family portraits may still be seen on the walls, together
+with the family arms, and the motto, "Fortis est in asperis non turbari."
+The armchair and writing table of the poet are also still preserved in the
+house, and a fig-tree is pointed out close by it, under the shade of which
+the poet, as tradition tells, wrote on that table and in that chair his
+"Pastor Fido." There is an inscription on the chair as follows: "Guarin
+sedendo qui canto, che vale al paragon seggio reale."[58]
+
+It was not, however, during this his last residence here that the "Pastor
+Fido" was written, but long previously. It was doubtless his habit to
+escape from the cares of official life in Ferrara from time to time as he
+could; and it must have been in such moments that the celebrated pastoral
+was written.[59]
+
+The idea of a scholar and a poet, full of years and honours, passing the
+quiet evening of his life in a tranquil retirement in his own house on his
+own land, is a pleasing one. But it is to be feared that in the case of
+the author of the "Pastor Fido" it would be a fallacious one. Guarini
+would not have come to live on his estate if he could have lived
+contentedly in any city. We may picture him to ourselves sitting under his
+fig-tree, or pacing at evening under the trees of the straight avenue
+between his house and the village, or on the banks of one of the sluggish
+streams slowly finding their way through the flat fields towards the Po;
+but I am afraid the picture must be of one "Remote, unfriended,
+melancholy, slow," with eyes bent earthwards, and discontented mind:
+"remote," because to the Italian mind all places beyond the easy reach of
+a city are so; "unfriended," because he had quarrelled with everybody;
+"melancholy," because all had gone amiss with him, and his life had been a
+failure; "slow," because no spring of hope in the mind gave any elasticity
+to his step.
+
+One other "haunt" of the aged poet must, however, be mentioned, because it
+is a very characteristic one. During this last residence at Guarina, he
+hired an apartment at Ferrara, selecting it in a crowded part of the
+centre of the city, especially frequented by the lawyers, that he might be
+in the midst of them, when he went into the city on the various business
+connected with his interminable lawsuits. The most crowded part of the
+heart of the city of Ferrara! It would be difficult to find any such part
+now. But the picture offered to the imagination, of the aged poet,
+professor, courtier, haunting the courts, the lawyers' chambers, leaving
+his, at least, tranquil retreat at St. Bellino, to drag weary feet through
+the lanes of the city in which he had in earlier days played so different
+a part, is a sad one. But there are people who like contention so much
+that such work is a labour of love to them. And certainly, if the
+inference may be drawn from the fact of his never having been free from
+lawsuits in one quarrel or another, Guarini must have been one of these.
+But it is passing strange that the same man should have been the author of
+the "Pastor Fido."
+
+They pursued him to the end, these litigations; or he pursued them! And at
+last he died, not at Guarina, but at Venice, on the 7th of October, 1612,
+where, characteristically enough, he chanced to be on business connected
+with some lawsuit.
+
+And now a few words must be said about his great work, the "Pastor Fido."
+It is one of the strangest things in the range of literary history that
+such a man should have written such a poem. He was, one would have said,
+the last man in the world to produce such a work. The first ten years of
+his working life were spent in the labour of a pedagogue; the rest of it
+in the inexpressibly dry, frivolous, and ungenial routine of a small
+Italian court, or in wandering from one to the other of them in the vain
+and always disappointed search for such employment. We are told that he
+was a punctilious, stiff, unbending, angular man; upright and honourable,
+but unforgiving and wont to nurse his enmities. He was soured,
+disappointed, discontented with everybody and everything, involved in
+litigation first with his father, and then with his own children. And this
+was the man who wrote the "Pastor Fido," of all poems comparable to it in
+reputation the lightest, the airiest, and the most fantastic! The argument
+of it is as follows:
+
+The Arcadians, suffering in various ways from the anger of Diana, were at
+last informed by the oracle that the evils which afflicted them would
+cease when a youth and a maiden, both descended from the Immortals, as it
+should seem the _creme de la creme_ of Arcadian society mostly was, should
+be joined together in faithful love. Thereupon Montano, a priest of the
+goddess who was descended from Hercules, arranged that his only son Silvio
+should be betrothed to Amaryllis, the only daughter of Tytirus, who was
+descended from Pan. The arrangement seemed all that could be desired, only
+that a difficulty arose from the fact that Silvio, whose sole passion was
+the chase, could not be brought to care the least in the world for
+Amaryllis. Meantime Mirtillo, the son, as was supposed, of the shepherd
+Carino, fell desperately in love with Amaryllis. She was equally attached
+to him, but dared not in the smallest degree confess her love, because the
+law of Arcadia would have punished with death her infidelity to her
+betrothed vows. A certain Corisca, however, who had conceived a violent
+but unrequited passion for Mirtillo, perceiving or guessing the love of
+Amaryllis for him, hating her accordingly, and hoping that, if she could
+be got out of the way, she might win Mirtillo's love, schemes by deceit
+and lies to induce Mirtillo and Amaryllis to enter together a cave, which
+they do in perfect innocence, and without any thought of harm. Then he
+contrives that they should be caught there, and denounced by a satyr; and
+Amaryllis is condemned to die. The law, however, permits that her life may
+be saved by any Arcadian who will voluntarily die in her stead; and this
+Mirtillo determines to do, although he believes that Amaryllis cares
+nothing for him, and also is led by the false Corisca to believe that she
+had gone into the cave for the purpose of meeting with another lover. The
+duty of sacrificing him devolves on Montano the priest; and he is about to
+carry out the law, when Carino, who has been seeking his reputed son
+Mirtillo, comes in, and while attempting to make out that he is a
+foreigner, and therefore not capable of satisfying the law by his death,
+brings unwittingly to light circumstances that prove that he is in truth a
+son of Montano, and therefore a descendant of the god Hercules. It thus
+appears that a marriage between Mirtillo and Amaryllis will exactly
+satisfy the conditions demanded by the oracle. There is an under-plot,
+which consists in providing a lover and a marriage for the woman-hater
+Silvio. He is loved in vain by the nymph Dorinda, whom he unintentionally
+wounds with an arrow while out hunting. The pity he feels for her wound
+softens his heart towards her, and all parties are made happy by this
+second marriage.
+
+Such is a skeleton of the story of the "Pastor Fido." It will be observed
+that there is more approach to a plot and to human interest than in any
+previous production of this kind, and some of the situations are well
+conceived for dramatic effect. And accordingly the success which it
+achieved was immediate and immense. Nor, much as the taste of the world
+has been changed since that day, has it ever lost its place in the
+estimation of cultivated Italians.
+
+It would be wholly uninteresting to attempt any account of the
+wide-spreading literary controversies to which the publication of the
+"Pastor Fido" gave rise. The author terms it a tragi-comedy; and this
+title was violently attacked. The poet himself, as may well be imagined
+from the idiosyncrasy of the man, was not slow to reply to his critics,
+and did so in two lengthy treatises entitled from the name of a
+contemporary celebrated actor, "Verato primo," and "Verato secondo," which
+are printed in the four-quarto-volume edition of his works, but which
+probably no mortal eye has read for the last two hundred years!
+
+The question of the rivalry between the "Aminta" of Tasso and the "Pastor
+Fido" has an element of greater interest in it. It is certain that the
+former preceded the latter, and doubtless suggested it. It seems probable
+that Ginguené is right in his suggestion, that Guarini, fully conscious
+that no hope was open to him of rivalling his greater contemporary and
+townsman in epic poetry, strove to surpass him in pastoral. It must be
+admitted that he has at least equalled him. Yet, while it is impossible to
+deny that almost every page of the "Pastor Fido" indicates not so much
+plagiarism as an open and avowed purpose of doing the same thing better,
+if possible, than his rival has done it, the very diverse natural
+character of the two poets is also, at every page, curiously indicated.
+Specially the reader may be recommended to compare the passages in the two
+poems where Tasso under the name of Thyrsis, and Guarini under the name of
+Carino (Act 5, scene 1), represent the sufferings both underwent at the
+court of Alphonso II. The lines of Guarini are perhaps the most vigorous
+in their biting satire. But the gentler and nobler nature of Tasso is
+unmistakable.
+
+It is strange that the Italian critics, who are for the most part so
+lenient to the licentiousness of most of the authors of this period, blame
+Guarini for the too great warmth, amounting to indecency, of his poem. The
+writer of his life in the French "Biographie Universelle" refers to
+certain scenes as highly indecent. I can only say that, on examining the
+passages indicated carefully, I could find no indecency at all. It is
+probable that the writer referred to had never read the pages in question.
+But it is odd that those whose criticism he is no doubt reflecting should
+have said so. No doubt there are passages, not those mentioned by the
+writer in the "Biographie," but for instance the first scene of the second
+act, when a young man in a female disguise is one among a party of girls,
+who propose a prize for her who can give to one of them, the judge, the
+sweetest kiss, which prize he wins, which might be deemed somewhat on the
+sunny side of the hedge that divides the permissible from the
+unpermissible. But in comparison with others of that age Guarini is pure
+as snow.
+
+It has been said in speaking of the sad story of his daughter Anna, that
+she was accused of having given her husband cause for jealousy. It would
+seem very clear that there was no ground for any such accusation. But it
+was said that the misconduct on her part had been due to the corruption of
+her mind by the reading of her father's verses. The utter groundlessness
+of such an assertion might be shown in many ways. But the savage and
+malignant cruelty of it points with considerable evidence to the sources
+of the current talk about the courtier poet's licentiousness.
+
+It is impossible to find room here for a detailed comparison between these
+two celebrated pastorals; and it is the less needed inasmuch as Ginguené
+has done it very completely and at great length in the twenty-fifth
+chapter of the second part of his work.
+
+Guarini also produced a comedy, the "Idropica," which was acted with much
+success at the court of Mantua, and is printed among his works, as well as
+some prose pieces of small importance, the principal of which is "Il
+Secretario," a treatise on the duties of a secretary, not printed among
+his works, but of which an edition exists in pot quarto (186 pages)
+printed at Venice in 1594. Neither have his letters been printed among his
+works. They exist, printed without index or order of any kind, in a volume
+of the same size as the "Secretario," printed at Venice also in 1595, but
+by a different printer.
+
+The name, however, of Batista Guarini would have long since been
+forgotten, had he not written the "Pastor Fido."
+
+ T. ADOLPHUS TROLLOPE, in Belgravia.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[48] The now celebrated pass of the Ampezzo between Venice and Innspruck.
+
+[49] This must probably be Hall on the Inn, a little below Innspruck.
+Certainly any boat which he got there for the descent of the river must
+have been a sufficiently miserable mode of travelling.
+
+[50] Far, that is, from the bank of the river, where he left his boat at
+night.
+
+[51] Lettere del Signor Cavaliere Battista Guarini, Nobile Ferrarese, di
+nuovo in questa seconda impressione di alcune altre accrescinte, e dall'
+Autore stesso corrette, di Agostino Michele raccolte, et al Sereniss.
+Signore il Duca d'Urbino dedicate. Con Privilegio. In Venetia, MDXCV.
+Appresso Gio. Battista Ciotti Senese al segno della Minerva.
+
+[52] I translate literally. Old-fashioned people will remember a somewhat
+similar use of the word "Flame" in English.
+
+[53] I subjoin a literal prose translation in preference to borrowing a
+rhymed one from any of Tasso's translators. This fellow "flits and circles
+around more unstable than dry leaves in the wind. Without faith, without
+love, false are his pretended torments, and false the affection which
+prompts his sighs. A traitorous lover, he loves and despises almost at the
+same moment, and in triumph displays the spoils of women as impious
+trophies."
+
+[54] "See how this fellow, who in vain aims at a lofty goal, by blaming
+others, and by lying accents, sharpens against himself his teeth, while
+without reason he is enraged with me.... Of two flames he boasts, and ties
+and breaks over and over again the same knot; and by these arts (who would
+believe it!) bends in his favour the Gods!" ...
+
+[55] It is odd that he should so write in a paper dated, as the present
+is, from Venice. I suppose the expression came from his feeling that he
+was addressing parsons at Ferrara.
+
+[56] Seeing that, as has been said, his ancestors were of Verona, which
+belonged to Venice.
+
+[57] Barotti gives it at length; but it is hardly worth while to occupy
+space by reproducing it here.
+
+[58] "Guarini sitting here, sang, that which renders the seat the equal of
+a royal throne."
+
+[59] It is very doubtful and very difficult to determine at what period of
+his life the "Pastor Fido" was written. Ginguené (Hist. Ital. Lit. Part
+II. ch. xxv.) has sufficiently shown that the statements of the Italian
+biographers on this point are inaccurate. Probably it was planned and, in
+part, written many years before it was finished. It was first printed in
+1590.
+
+
+
+
+THE VAQUERO.[60]
+
+
+ Oh, who is so free as a gallant _vaquero_?
+ With his beauty of bronze 'neath his shady _sombrero_:
+ He smiles at his love, and he laughs at his fate,
+ For he knows he is lord of a noble estate:
+ The prairie's his own, and he mocks at the great.
+ "Ho-ho! Hai! Ho-ho!
+ Head 'em off! Turn 'em back!
+ Keep 'em up to the track!
+ Ho-hillo! Ho-hillo!
+ Cric--crac!"
+
+ Oh, Donna Luisa is proud as she's fair;
+ But she parted last night with a lock of her hair.
+ And under the stars she roams, seeking for rest,
+ While she thinks of the stranger that came from the West;
+ And Juan bears something wrapped up in his breast--
+ "Ho-ho! Hai! Ho-ho!
+ Head 'em off! Turn 'em back!
+ Keep 'em up to the track!
+ Ho-hillo! Ho-hillo!
+ Cric--crac!'"
+
+ His proudest possessions are prettily placed,
+ His love at his heart, and his life at his waist.
+ And if in a quarrel he happen to fall,
+ Why, the prairie's his grave, and his _poncho's_[61] his pall,
+ And Donna Luisa--gets over it all!
+ "Ho-ho! Hai! Ho-ho!
+ Head 'em off! Turn 'em back!
+ Keep 'em up to the track!
+ Ho-hillo! Ho-hillo!
+ Cric--crac!"
+
+ The Padrč may preach, and the Notary frown,
+ But the _poblanas_[62] smile as he rides through the town:
+ And the Padrč, he knows, likes a kiss on the sly,
+ And the Notary oft has a "drop in his eye,"
+ But all that he does is to love and to die--
+ "Ho-ho! Hai! Ho-ho!
+ Head 'em off! Turn 'em back!
+ Keep 'em up to the track!
+ Ho-hillo! Ho-hillo!
+ Cric--crac!"
+
+ FRANK DESPREZ, _in Temple Bar_.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[60] A California cattle-driver. Furnished with revolver, lasso, and
+long-lashed whip, these adventurous gentry conduct the half-wild cattle of
+the plains over miles of their surface; and, with their gay sashes, high
+boots, gilded and belled spurs, and dark, broad hats (_sombreros_),
+present a very picturesque appearance.
+
+[61] Cloak.
+
+[62] Peasant girls.
+
+
+
+
+TWO MODERN JAPANESE STORIES.
+
+
+The two stories which follow were circulated in the city of Yedo some
+years back, and show that the better educated classes of Japanese are
+keenly alive to the absurdity of the figure cut by their countrymen when
+they attempt to jump over five hundred years in five hundred days.
+
+
+I. A REGULAR MESS.
+
+Some six years back lived in the beautiful village of Minoge an old lady
+who kept the big tea-house of the place known as the "White Pine." Minoge
+is situated at the base of the holy mountain Oyama, and during the months
+of August and September trade in Minoge was always brisk, on account of
+the influx of pilgrims from all parts of Japan, who came hither to perform
+the holy duty of ascending the mountain, and of paying their devoirs at
+the shrine of the Thunder-God, previous to making the grand pilgrimage of
+Fuji-Yama.
+
+The old lady was well off, and her inn bore an unblemished reputation for
+possessing the prettiest serving-girls, the gayest guest-chambers, and the
+primest stewed eels--the dish _par excellence_ of Japanese _gourmets_--of
+any hostelry in the country side. One of her daughters was married in
+Yedo, and a son was studying in one of the European colleges of that city;
+still she was as completely rustic and unacquainted with the march of
+affairs outside as if she had never heard of Yedo, much less of
+foreigners. At that time it was a very rare thing indeed for a foreigner
+to be seen in Minoge, and the stray artists and explorers who had wandered
+there were regarded much in the same way as would have been so many white
+elephants.
+
+It caused, therefore, no little excitement in the village when, one fine
+autumn evening, the rumour came along that a foreigner was making his way
+towards the "White Pine." Every one tried to get a glimpse of him. The
+chubby-cheeked boys and girls at the school threw down their books and
+pens, and crowded to the door and windows; the bath-house was soon empty
+of its patrons and patronesses, who, red as lobsters with boiling water,
+with dishevelled locks and garments hastily bound round them, formed line
+outside; the very Yakunin, or mayor, sentenced a prisoner he was judging
+straight off, without bothering himself to inquire into evidence, so as
+not to be balked of the sight, and every wine and barber's shop sent forth
+its quota of starers into the little street.
+
+Meanwhile the foreigner was leisurely striding along. He was taller by far
+than the tallest man in Minoge, his hair was fair, and even his bronzed
+face and hands were fair compared to those of the natives. On the back of
+his head was a felt wide-awake, he wore a blue jacket and blue half
+trousers (Anglicč, knickerbockers), thick hose, and big boots. In his
+mouth was a pipe--being much shorter than Japanese smoking tubes--in his
+hand a stick, and on his back a satchel.
+
+As he passed, one or two urchins, bolder than the rest, shouted out,
+"Tojin baka" ("Foreign beast") and instantly fled indoors, or behind their
+mothers' skirts; but the majority of the villagers simply stared, with an
+occasional interjection expressive of wonder at his height, fair hair, and
+costume.
+
+At the door of the "White Pine" he halted, unstrapped his bundle, took off
+his boots, and in very fair Japanese requested to be shown his room. The
+old lady, after a full ten minutes' posturing, complimenting, bowing, and
+scraping, ushered him into her best guest-chamber. "For," said she, "being
+a foreigner, he must be rich, and wouldn't like ordinary pilgrim
+accommodation." And she drew to the sliding screens, and went off to
+superintend his repast. Although nothing but the foreigner's boots were to
+be seen outside, a gaping crowd had collected, striving to peer through
+the cracks in the doors, and regarding the boots as if they were infernal
+machines. One, more enterprising than the rest, took a boot up, passed it
+to his neighbour, and in a short time it had circulated from hand to hand
+throughout the population of Minoge, and was even felt and pinched by the
+mayor himself, who replaced it with the reverence due to some religious
+emblem or relic.
+
+Then the hostess served up her banquet--seaweed, sweets, raw "tighe"--the
+salmon of Japan--in slices, garnished with turnips and horse-radish, egg
+soup with pork lumps floating in it, chicken delicately broiled, together
+with a steaming bottle of her choicest "San Toku Shiu," or wine of the
+Three Virtues (which keeps out the cold, appeases hunger, and induces
+sleep).
+
+The foreigner made an excellent meal, eked out by his own white bread, and
+wine from a flask of pure silver, then, lighting his pipe, reclined at
+full length on the mats, talking to the old lady and her three damsels, O
+Hana, O Kiku, and O Riu (Miss Flower, Miss Chrysanthemum, and Miss
+Dragon). He was walking about the country simply for pleasure, he
+said--which astonished the women greatly--he had been away from Yokohama
+three weeks, and was now on his road to the big mountain. The party were
+soon screaming with laughter at his quaint remarks and at his occasional
+colloquial slips, and in a short time all were such good friends that the
+old lady begged him to display the contents of his satchel. "Certainly,"
+said the stranger, pulling it towards him and opening it. A dirty flannel
+shirt or two didn't produce much impression--perhaps wares of a similar
+nature had been imported before into Minoge--nor did a hair-brush,
+tooth-brush, and comb; but when he pulled out a pistol, which was
+warranted to go off six times in as many seconds, and proceeded to
+exemplify the same in the air, popular excitement began to assert itself
+in a series of "naruhodo's" ("really!"). Then he pulled out a portable
+kerosine lamp--(kerosine lamps are now as common in Japan as shrines by
+the road-side)--and the light it made, throwing entirely into the shade
+the native "andon," or oil wick, burning close by, raised the enthusiasm
+still higher. Lastly he showed a small box of medicines, "certain cures,"
+said he, "for every disease known amongst the sons of men."
+
+The old lady and the maids were enchanted, and matters ended, after much
+haggling and disputation, in the foreigner allowing them to keep the three
+articles for the very reasonable sum of fifty dollars--about fifteen
+pounds sterling--which was handed over to the foreigner, who called for
+his bedding and went fast asleep.
+
+The first thing for the old lady to do the next day was to present herself
+and maids in full holiday costume with their recent purchases at the house
+of the mayor. The great man received them and their goods with the dignity
+befitting his rank, and promised that a public trial should be made of the
+pistol, lamp, and medicines, at an early date, in order to determine
+whether they were worthy to be adopted as institutions in the village.
+
+Accordingly, by proclamation, at a fixed date and hour, all Minoge
+assembled in the open space facing the mayor's house, and the articles
+were brought forth. The pistol was first taken and loaded, as directed by
+the foreigner, by the boldest and strongest man in the village. The first
+shot was fired--it wounded a pack-horse, standing some twenty yards away,
+in the leg; he took fright and bolted with a heavy load of wine tubs down
+the street into the fields: the second shot went through a temple roof
+opposite, and shattered the head of the deity in the shrine: the third
+shot perforated the bamboo hat of a pilgrim; and it was decided not to
+test the remaining three barrels.
+
+Then the lamp was brought forth: the wick was turned up full, and the
+village strong man applied a light. The blaze of light was glorious, and
+drew forth the acclamations of the crowd; but the wick had been turned up
+too high, the glass burst with a tremendous report, the strong man
+dropped the lamp, the oil ignited, ran about and set fire to the matting.
+In ten minutes, however, the local fire brigade got the flames under, and
+the experiments proceeded.
+
+The medicine packets were brought forth. The first was a grey powder. A
+man who had been lame from youth upwards was made to limp out. The powder
+mixed with water, according to directions, was given him. He hobbled away
+in frightful convulsions, and nearly injured his whole limb in so doing.
+
+The second packet was then unsealed--it contained pills. A blind man was
+called out--six pills were rammed down his throat, and he was left
+wallowing in a ditch. The third packet, a small book containing sticking
+plaster, was then introduced. A burly peasant, victim to fearful
+toothache, was made to stand forth. The interior of his mouth was lined
+with the plaster, and when he attempted in his disgust to pull it off,
+away came his skin also.
+
+The medicines were condemned _nem. con._
+
+The foreigner returned, asked how matters had gone, and was told in polite
+but firm terms that his machines were not suited to the people of Minoge.
+Whereupon he returned the fifty dollars to the old lady of the "White
+Pine," and went away laughing. Minoge subsided into its ordinary every-day
+groove of life, and it was not till some years after that the inhabitants
+became better used to pistols, lamps, and European medicines.
+
+
+II. PADDLING HIS OWN CANOE.
+
+Takezawa was the head of a large silk and rice house in Yedo. His father
+had been head, his grandfather had been head, his great-grandfather had
+been head: in fact, the date when the first of the name affixed his seal
+to the documents of the house was lost in the mists of antiquity. So, when
+foreigners were first allowed a foot-hold on the sacred soil of Japan,
+none were so jealous of their advance, none so ardent in their wishes to
+see the white barbarians ousted, as the members of the firm of Takezawa
+and Co.
+
+But times changed. Up to the last, Takezawa held out against the
+introduction of foreign innovations in the mode and manner of conducting
+the affairs of the firm; other houses might employ foreign steamboat
+companies as carriers for their produce from port to port, might import
+foreign goods, and even go so far as to allow the better paid of their
+clerks to dress themselves as they liked in foreign costume; but Takezawa
+and Co. were patriotic Japanese merchants, and resolved to run on in the
+old groove of their ancestors.
+
+But times still changed, and the great house, running on in its solid
+old-fashioned manner, found itself left in the lurch by younger and more
+enterprising firms. This would never do. So Takezawa consulted with his
+partners, patrons, clients, and friends, and after much worthy discussion,
+and much vehement opposition on the part of the old man, it was resolved
+to keep pace with the times, as much as possible, without absolutely
+overturning the old status of the house.
+
+Well, Takezawa and Co. had still a very fair share of the export rice and
+silk business; but their slow, heavy-sterned junks were no match for the
+swift, foreign-built steamers employed by other firms; so, with a
+tremendous wince, and not without a side thought at "Hara Kiri"--(the
+"Happy Despatch")--Takezawa consented to the sale of all his junks, and
+the purchase with the proceeds of a big foreign steamer.
+
+The steamer was bought--a fine three-masted, double-funnelled boat,
+complete with every appliance, newly engined, and manned by European
+officers and leading seamen. From the dock at Yokoska, where she was
+lying, a preliminary trip was made; and so smoothly did everything work,
+and so easily did everything seem to act, under the guidance of the
+Europeans, that Takezawa considered his own mariners perfectly competent
+to handle the vessel after an hour's experience on board. So the Europeans
+were discharged with six months' salaries--about six times as much as they
+would have received at home--and Takezawa fixed a day when the ship should
+be rechristened, and should make her trial trip under Japanese management.
+
+It was a beautiful day in autumn--the most glorious period of the year in
+Japan--when Takezawa and a distinguished company assembled on board the
+steamer, to give her a new name, and to send her forth finally as a
+Japanese steamer. The ship looked brave enough as she lay in the
+dock--ports newly painted, brass-work shining, yards squared, and half
+buried in bunting. At the mizen floated the empire flag of Japan--a red
+sun on a white ground--and as Takezawa gazed fore and aft, and his eyes
+rested on brightness, cleanliness, and order everywhere, he wondered to
+himself how he could have been such a fool as to stand out so long against
+the possession of such a treasure, merely on the grounds of its not being
+Japanese. A fair daughter of one of his partners dashed a cup of "sake"
+against the bows of the vessel, and the newly named "Lightning Bird"
+dashed forward into the ocean. Her head was made straight for Yokohama
+(Takezawa had seen the Englishmen at the wheel manipulate her in that
+course on her trial trip, so he knew she couldn't go wrong). And straight
+she went. Every one was delighted; sweetmeats and wine were served round,
+whilst on the quarterdeck a troupe of the best "Geyshas" or singing-girls
+in Yedo mingled their shrill voices and their guitar notes with the sound
+of the fresh morning breeze through the rigging.
+
+The engines worked magnificently: coals were poured into the furnaces by
+the hundredweight, so as to keep a good uniform thick cloud of smoke
+coming from the funnels--if the smoke lacked intensity for a minute,
+Takezawa, fearful that something was wrong, bellowed forth orders for more
+coal to be heaped on, so that in a quarter of an hour's time the
+"Lightning Bird" consumed as much fuel as would have served a P. and O.
+steamer for half a day. On she went, everybody pleased and smiling,
+everything taut and satisfactory. Straight ahead was Treaty Point--a bold
+bluff running out into the sea. The "Lightning Bird" was bound for
+Yokohama--Yokohama lies well behind Treaty Point--but at the pace she was
+going it was very apparent that, unless a sudden and rapid turn to
+starboard was made, she would run, not into Yokohama, but into Treaty
+Point.
+
+The singing and feasting proceeded merrily on deck, but Takezawa was
+uneasy and undecided on the bridge. The helm was put hard a-port, the
+brave vessel obeyed, and leapt on straight for the line of rocks at the
+foot of the Point, over which the waves were breaking in cascades of foam.
+But the gods would not see a vessel, making her first run under Japanese
+auspices, maltreated and destroyed by simple waves and rocks; so, just in
+time to save an ignominious run aground, the helm was put hard over, fresh
+fuel was piled on to the furnaces, and by barely half a ship's length the
+"Lightning Bird" shaved the Point, and stood in straight for Yokohama bay.
+
+Takezawa breathed freely for the moment; but, as he saw ahead the crowd of
+European ships and native junks through which he would have to thread his
+way, he would have given a very large sum to have had a couple of
+Europeans at the wheel in the place of his own half-witted, scared
+mariners.
+
+However, there was no help for it; the ship sped on, and the guests on
+board, many of whom were thorough rustics, were in raptures at the distant
+views of the white houses on the Yokohama Bund, at the big steamers and
+the graceful sailing vessels on all sides. To avoid the chance of a
+collision, Takezawa managed to keep his steamer well outside; they nearly
+ran down a fishing junk or two, and all but sunk the lightship; still,
+they had not as yet come to absolute grief. Round they went for a long
+half-hour; many of the guests were suffering from sickness, and Takezawa
+thought that he might bring the trip to an end. So he bellowed forth
+orders to stop the engines, and anchor. The anchor was promptly let go,
+but stopping the engines was another matter, for nobody on board knew how
+to do so--there was nothing to be done but to allow the vessel to pursue a
+circular course until steam was exhausted; and she could go no farther. It
+was idle to explain to the distinguished company that this was the course
+invariably adopted by Europeans, for under their noses was the graceful P.
+and O. steamer, a moment since ploughing along at full steam, now riding
+at anchor by her buoy. So round and round went the "Lightning Bird," to
+the amazement of the crews of the ships in harbour and of a large crowd
+gathered on the "Bund;" the brave company on board were now assured that
+the judgment of the gods was overtaking them for having ventured to sea in
+a foreign vessel, and poor Takezawa was half resolved to despatch himself,
+and wholly resolved never to make such an experiment as this again. He
+cursed the day when he was finally led to forsake the groove so honourably
+and profitably grubbed along by his fathers, and strode with hasty steps
+up and down the bridge, refusing to be comforted, and terrifying out of
+their few remaining wits the two poor fellows at the wheel. After a few
+circles, an English man-of-war sent a steam launch after the "Lightning
+Bird," and to the intense disgust of the great Japanese people on board,
+who preferred to see eccentricity on the part of their countrymen, to
+interference by foreigners, but to the great delight of the women and
+rustics, who began to be rather tired of the fun, the engines were
+stopped. Takezawa did not hear the last of this for a long, long time;
+caricatures and verses were constantly being circulated bearing upon the
+fiasco, although it would have been as much as any man's life was worth to
+have taunted him openly with it. But it was a salutary lesson; and
+although he still kept the "Lightning Bird," he engaged Europeans to man
+her, until his men proved themselves adepts, and she afterwards became one
+of the smartest and fastest craft on the coast.--_Belgravia._
+
+
+
+
+SUPPOSED CHANGES IN THE MOON.
+
+
+In this Magazine for August last I considered the moon's multitudinous
+small craters with special reference to the theory that some among those
+small craters may have been produced by the downfall of aerolithic or
+meteoric masses upon the moon's once plastic surface. Whether it be
+considered probable that this is really the case or not with regard to
+actually existent lunar craters, it cannot be doubted that during one
+period of the moon's history, a period probably lasting many millions of
+years, many crater-shaped depressions must have been produced in this way.
+As I showed in that essay, it is absolutely certain that thousands of
+meteoric masses, large enough to form visible depressions where they fell,
+must have fallen during the moon's plastic era. It is certain also that
+that era must have been very long-lasting. Nevertheless, it remains
+possible (many will consider it extremely probable, if not absolutely
+certain) that during sequent periods all such traces were removed. There
+is certainly nothing in the aspect of the present lunar craters, even the
+smallest and most numerous, to preclude the possibility that they, like
+the larger ones, were the results of purely volcanic action; and to many
+minds it seems preferable to adopt one general theory respecting all such
+objects as may be classed in a regular series, than to consider that some
+members of the series are to be explained in one way and others in a
+different way. We can form a series extending without break or
+interruption from the largest lunar craters, more than a hundred miles in
+diameter, to the smallest visible craters, less than a quarter of a mile
+across, or even to far smaller craters, if increase of telescopic power
+should reveal such. And therefore many object to adopt any theory in
+explanation of the smaller craters (or some of them) which could
+manifestly not be extended to the largest. Albeit we must remember that
+certainly if any small craters had been formed during the plastic era by
+meteoric downfall, and had remained unchanged after the moon solidified,
+it would now be quite impossible to distinguish these from craters formed
+in the ordinary manner.
+
+While we thus recognise the possibility, at any rate, that multitudes of
+small lunar craters, say from a quarter of a mile to two miles in
+diameter, may have been formed by falling meteoric masses hundreds of
+millions of years ago, and may have remained unchanged even until now, we
+perceive that on the moon later processes must have formed many small
+craters, precisely as such small craters have been formed on our own
+earth. I consider, at the close of the essay above mentioned, the two
+stages of the moon's development which must have followed the period
+during which her surface was wholly or in great part plastic. First, there
+was the stage during which the crust contracted more rapidly than the
+nucleus, and was rent from time to time as though the nucleus were
+expanding within it. Secondly, there came the era when the nucleus, having
+retained a greater share of heat, began to cool, and therefore to contract
+more quickly than the crust, so that the crust became wrinkled or
+corrugated, as it followed up (so to speak) the retreating nucleus.
+
+It would be in the later part of this second great era that the moon (if
+ever) would have resembled the earth. The forms of volcanic activity still
+existing on the earth seem most probably referable to the gradual
+contraction of the nucleus, and the steady resulting contraction of the
+rocky crust. As Mallet and Dana have shown, the heat resulting from the
+contraction, or in reality from the slow downfall of the crust, is amply
+sufficient to account for the whole observed volcanian energy of the
+earth. It has indeed been objected, that if this theory (which is
+considered more fully in my "Pleasant Ways in Science") were correct, we
+ought to find volcanoes occurring indifferently, or at any rate volcanic
+phenomena of various kinds so occurring, in all parts of the earth's
+surface, and not prevalent in special regions and scarcely ever noticed
+elsewhere. But this objection is based on erroneous ideas as to the length
+of time necessary for the development of subterranean changes, and also as
+to the extent of regions which at present find in certain volcanic craters
+a sufficient outlet for their subterranean fires. It is natural that, if a
+region of wide extent has at any time been relieved at some point, that
+spot should long afterwards remain as an outlet, a sort of safety-valve,
+which, by yielding somewhat more quickly than any neighbouring part of the
+crust, would save the whole region from destructive earthquakes; and
+though in the course of time a crater which had acted such a part would
+cease to do so, yet the period required for such a change would be very
+long indeed compared with those periods by which men ordinarily measure
+time. Moreover, it by no means follows that every part of the earth's
+crust would even require an outlet for heat developed beneath it. Over
+wide tracts of the earth's surface the rate of contraction may be such, or
+may be so related to the thickness of the crust, that the heat developed
+can find ready escape by conduction to the surface, and by radiation
+thence into space. Nay, from the part which water is known to play in
+producing volcanic phenomena, it may well be that in every region where
+water does not find its way in large quantities to the parts in which the
+subterranean heat is great, no volcanic action results. Mallet, following
+other experienced vulcanologists, lays down the law, "Without water there
+can be no volcano;" so that the neighbourhood of large oceans, as well as
+special conditions of the crust, must be regarded as probably essential to
+the existence of such outlets as Vesuvius, Etna, Hecla, and the rest.
+
+So much premised, let us enquire whether it is antecedently likely that in
+the moon volcanic action may still be in progress, and afterwards consider
+the recent announcement of a lunar disturbance, which, if really volcanic,
+certainly indicates volcanic action far more intense than any which is at
+present taking place in our own earth. I have already, I may remark,
+considered the evidence respecting this new lunar crater which some
+suppose to have been formed during the last two years. But I am not here
+going over the same ground as in my former paper ("Contemporary Review"
+for August, 1878). Moreover, since that paper was written, new evidence
+has been obtained, and I am now able to speak with considerable confidence
+about points which were in some degree doubtful three months ago.
+
+Let us consider, in the first place, what is the moon's probable age, not
+in years, but in development. Here we have only probable evidence to guide
+us, evidence chiefly derived from the analogy of our own earth. At least,
+we have only such evidence when we are enquiring into the moon's age as a
+preliminary to the consideration of her actual aspect and its meaning. No
+doubt many features revealed by telescopic scrutiny are full of
+significance in this respect. No one who has ever looked at the moon,
+indeed, with a telescope of great power has failed to be struck by the
+appearance of deadness which her surface presents, or to be impressed (at
+a first view, in any case), with the idea that he is looking at a world
+whose period of life must be set in a very remote antiquity. But we must
+not take such considerations into account in discussing the _a priori_
+probabilities that the moon is a very aged world. Thus we have only
+evidence from analogy to guide us in this part of our enquiry. I note the
+point at starting, because the indicative mood is so much more convenient
+than the conditional, that I may frequently in this part of my enquiry use
+the former where the actual nature of the evidence would only justify the
+latter. Let it be understood that the force of the reasoning here depends
+entirely on the weight we are disposed to allow to arguments from analogy.
+
+Assuming the planets and satellites of the solar system to be formed in
+some such manner as Laplace suggested in his "Nebular Hypothesis," the
+moon, as an orb travelling round the earth, must be regarded as very much
+older than she is, even in years. Even if we accept the theory of
+accretion which has been recently suggested as better according with known
+facts, it would still follow that probably the moon had existence, as a
+globe of matter nearly of her present size, long before the earth had
+gathered in the major portion of her substance. Necessarily, therefore, if
+we assume as far more probable than either theory that the earth and moon
+attained their present condition by combined processes of condensation and
+accretion, we should infer that the moon is far the older of the two
+bodies in years.
+
+But if we even suppose that the earth and moon began their career as
+companion planets at about the same epoch, we should still have reason to
+believe that these planets, equal though they were in age so far as mere
+years are concerned, must be very unequally advanced so far as development
+is concerned, and must therefore in that respect be of very unequal age.
+
+It was, I believe, Sir Isaac Newton who first called attention to the
+circumstance that the larger a planet is, the longer will be the various
+stages of its existence. He used the same reasoning which was afterwards
+urged by Buffon, and suggested an experiment which Buffon was the first to
+carry out. If two globes of iron, of unequal size, be heated to the same
+degree, and then left to cool side by side, it will be found that the
+larger glows with a ruddy light after the smaller has become quite dark,
+and that the larger remains intensely hot long after the smaller has
+become cool enough to be handled. The reason of the difference is very
+readily recognised. Indeed, Newton perceived that there would be such a
+difference before the matter had been experimentally tested. The quantity
+of heat in the unequal globes is proportional to the volume, the substance
+of each being the same. The heat is emitted from the surface, and at a
+rate depending on the extent of surface. But the volume of the larger
+exceeds that of the smaller in greater degree than the surface of the
+larger exceeds the surface of the other. Suppose, for instance, the larger
+has a diameter twice as great as that of the smaller, its surface is four
+times as great as that of the smaller, its volume eight times as great.
+Having, then, eight times as much heat as the smaller at the beginning,
+and parting with that heat only four times as fast as the smaller, the
+supply necessarily lasts twice as long; or, more exactly, each stage in
+the cooling of the larger lasts twice as long as the corresponding stage
+in the cooling of the smaller. We see that the duration of the heat is
+greater for the larger in the same degree that the diameter is greater.
+And we should have obtained the same result whatever diameters we had
+considered. Suppose, for instance, we heat two globes of iron, one an inch
+in diameter, the other seven inches, to a white heat. The surface of the
+larger is forty-nine times that of the smaller, and thus it gives out at
+the beginning, and at each corresponding stage of cooling, forty-nine
+times as much heat as the smaller. But it possesses at the beginning three
+hundred and forty-three (seven times seven times seven) times as much
+heat. Consequently, the supply will last seven times as long, precisely as
+a stock of three hundred and forty-three thousand pounds, expended
+forty-nine times as fast as a stock of one thousand pounds only, would
+last seven times as long. In every case we find that the duration of the
+heat-emission for globes of the same material equally heated at the outset
+is proportional to their diameters.
+
+Now, before applying this result to the case of the moon, we must take
+into account two considerations:--First, the probability that when the
+moon was formed she was not nearly so hot as the earth when it first took
+planetary shape; and secondly, the different densities of the earth and
+moon.
+
+The original heat of every member of the solar system, including the sun,
+depended on the gravitating energy of its own mass. The greater that
+energy, the greater the heat generated either by the process of steady
+contraction imagined in Laplace's theory, or by the process of meteoric
+indraught imagined in the aggregation theory. To show how very different
+are the heat-generating powers of two very unequal masses, consider what
+would happen if the earth drew down to its own surface a meteoric mass
+which had approached the earth under her own attraction only. (The case is
+of course purely imaginary, because no meteor can approach the earth which
+has not been subjected to the far greater attractive energy of the sun,
+and does not possess a velocity far greater than any which the earth
+herself could impart). In this case such a mass would strike the earth
+with a velocity of about seven miles per second, and the heat generated
+would be that due to this velocity only. Now, when a meteor strikes the
+sun full tilt after a journey from the star depths under his attraction,
+it reaches his surface with a velocity of nearly three hundred and sixty
+miles per second. The heat generated is nearly fifty times greater than in
+the imagined case of the earth. The moon being very much less than the
+earth, the velocity she can impart to meteoric bodies is still less. It
+amounts, in fact, to only about a mile per second. The condensing energy
+of the moon in her vaporous era was in like manner far less than that of
+the earth, and consequently far less heat was then generated. Thus,
+although we might well believe on _a priori_ grounds, even if not assured
+by actual study of the lunar features, that the moon when first formed as
+a planet had a surface far hotter than molten iron, we must yet believe
+that, when first formed, the moon had a temperature very much below that
+of our earth at the corresponding stage of her existence.
+
+On this account, then, we must consider that the moon started in planetary
+existence in a condition as to heat which our earth did not attain till
+many millions, probably hundreds of millions of years after the epoch of
+her first formation as a planet.
+
+As regards the moon's substance, we have no means of forming a
+satisfactory opinion. But we shall be safe in regarding quantity of matter
+in the moon as a safer basis of calculation than volume, in comparing the
+duration of her various stages of development with those of our own earth.
+When, in the August number of this Magazine, I adopted a relation derived
+from the latter and less correct method, it was because the more correct
+method gave the result most favourable to the argument I was then
+considering. The same is indeed the case now. Yet it will be better to
+adopt the more exact method, because the consideration relates no longer
+to a mere side issue, but belongs to the very essence of my reasoning.
+
+The moon has a mass equal to about one eighty-first part of the earth's.
+Her diameter being less than the earth's, about as two to seven, the
+duration of each stage of her cooling would be in this degree less than
+the corresponding duration for the earth, if her density were the same as
+the earth's, in which case her mass would be only one forty-ninth part of
+the earth's. But her mass being so much less, we must assume that her
+amount of heat at any given stage of cooling was less in similar degree
+than it would have been had her density been the same as the earth's. We
+may, in fact, assume that the moon's total supply of heat would be only
+one eighty-first of the earth's if the two bodies were at the same
+temperature throughout.[63] But the surface of the moon is between
+one-thirteenth and one-fourteenth of the earth's. Since, then, the earth
+at any given stage of cooling parted with her heat between thirteen and
+fourteen times as fast as the moon, but had about eighty-one times as much
+heat to part with (for that stage), it follows that she would take about
+six times as long (six times thirteen and a-half is equal to eighty-one)
+to cool through that particular stage as the moon would.
+
+If we take this relation as the basis of our estimate of the moon's age,
+we shall find that, even if the moon's existence as a planet began
+simultaneously with the earth's instead of many millions of years earlier,
+even if the moon was then as hot as the earth instead of being so much
+cooler that many millions of years would be required for the earth to cool
+to the same temperature--making, I say, these assumptions, which probably
+correspond to the omission of hundreds of millions of years in our
+estimate of the moon's age, we shall still find the moon to be hundreds of
+millions of years older than the earth.
+
+Nay, we may even take a position still less favourable to my argument. Let
+us overlook the long ages during which the two orbs were in the vaporous
+state, and suppose the earth and moon to be simultaneously in that stage
+of planetary existence when the surface has a temperature of two thousand
+degrees Centigrade.
+
+From Bischoff's experiments on the cooling of rocks, it appears to follow
+that some three hundred and twenty millions of years must have elapsed
+between the time when the earth's surface was at this temperature and the
+time when the surface temperature was reduced to two hundred degrees
+Centigrade, or one hundred and eighty degrees Fahrenheit above the
+boiling point. The earth was for that enormous period a mass (in the main)
+of molten rock. In the moon's case this period lasted only one-sixth of
+three hundred and twenty million years, or about fifty-three million
+years, leaving two hundred and sixty-seven million years' interval between
+the time when the moon's surface had cooled down to two hundred degrees
+Centigrade and the later epoch when the earth's surface had attained that
+temperature.
+
+I would not, however, insist on these numerical details. It has always
+seemed to me unsafe to base calculations respecting suns and planets on
+experiments conducted in the laboratory. The circumstances under which the
+heavenly bodies exist, regarding these bodies as wholes, are utterly
+unlike any which can be produced in the laboratory, no matter on what
+scale the experimenter may carry on his researches. I have often been
+amused to see even mathematicians of repute employing a formula based on
+terrestrial experiments, physical, optical, and otherwise, as though the
+formula were an eternal omnipresent reality, without noting that, if
+similarly applied to obtain other determinations, the most stupendously
+absurd results would be deduced. It is as though, having found that a
+child grows three inches in the fifth year of his age, one should infer
+not only that that person but every other person in every age and in every
+planet, nay, in the whole universe, would be thirty inches taller at the
+age of fifteen than at the age of five, without noticing that the same
+method of computation would show everyone to be more than fifteen feet
+taller at the age of sixty-five. It may well be that, instead of three
+hundred and twenty millions of years, the era considered by Bischoff
+lasted less than a hundred millions of years. Or quite as probably it may
+have lasted five or six hundred millions of years. And again, instead of
+the corresponding era of the moon's past history having lasted one sixth
+of the time required to produce the same change in the earth's condition,
+it may have lasted a quarter, or a third, or even half that time, though
+quite as probably it may have lasted much less than a sixth. But in any
+case we cannot reasonably doubt that the moon reached the stage of cooling
+through which the earth is now passing many millions of years ago. We
+shall not probably err very greatly in taking the interval as at least two
+hundred millions of years.
+
+But I could point out that in reality it is a matter of small importance,
+so far as my present argument is concerned, whether we adopt Bischoff's
+period or a period differing greatly from it. For if instead of about
+three hundred millions the earth required only thirty millions of years to
+cool from a surface temperature of two thousand degrees Centigrade to a
+temperature of two hundred degrees, we must assume that the rate of
+cooling is ten times greater than Bischoff supposed. And we must of course
+extend the same assumption to the moon. Now, since the sole question
+before us is to what degree the moon has cooled, it matters nothing
+whether we suppose the moon has been cooling very slowly during many
+millions of years since she was in the same condition as the earth at
+present, or that the moon has been cooling ten times as quickly during a
+tenth part of the time, or a hundred times as quickly during one-hundredth
+part of the time.
+
+We may, therefore, continue to use the numbers resulting from Bischoff's
+calculation, even though we admit the probability that they differ widely
+from the true values of the periods we are considering.
+
+Setting the moon, then, as about two hundred and fifty millions of years
+in advance of the earth in development, even when we overlook all the eras
+preceding that considered by Bischoff, and the entire sequent interval
+(which must be long, for the earth has no longer a surface one hundred
+degrees Centigrade hotter than boiling water), let us consider what is
+suggested by this enormous time-difference.
+
+In the first place, it corresponds to a much greater interval in our
+earth's history. During the two hundred and fifty millions of years the
+moon has been cooling at her rate, not at the earth's. According to the
+conclusion we deduced from the moon's relative mass and surface, she has
+aged as much during those two hundred and fifty million years as the earth
+will during the next fifteen hundred million years.
+
+Now, however slowly we suppose the earth's crust to be changing, it must
+be admitted that in the course of the next fifteen hundred millions of
+years the earth will have parted with far the greater part, if not with
+the whole, of that inherent heat on which the present movements of her
+surface depend. We know that these movements at once depend upon and
+indicate processes of contraction. We know that such processes cannot
+continue at their present rate for many millions of years. If we assume
+that the rate of contraction will steadily diminish--which is equivalent,
+be it noticed, to the assumption that the earth's vulcanian or
+subterranean energies will be diminished--the duration of the process will
+be greater. But even on such an assumption, controlled by consideration of
+the evidence we have respecting the rate at which terrestrial contraction
+is diminishing, it is certain that long before a period of fifteen hundred
+millions of years has elapsed, the process of contraction will to all
+intents and purposes be completed.
+
+We must assume, then, as altogether the most probable view, that the moon
+has reached this stage of planetary decrepitude, even if she has not
+become an absolutely dead world. We can hardly reject the reasoning which
+would show that the moon is far older than has been assumed when long
+stages of her history and our earth's have been neglected. Still less
+reasonable would it be to reject the conclusion that at the very least she
+has reached the hoar antiquity thus inferred. Assuming her to be no older,
+we yet cannot escape the conviction that her state is that of utter
+decrepitude. To suppose that volcanic action can now be in progress on the
+moon, even to as great a degree as on the earth, would be to assume that
+measurable sources of energy can produce practically immeasurable results.
+But no volcanic changes now in process on the earth could possibly be
+discernible at the moon's distance. How utterly unlikely does it seem,
+then, that any volcanic changes can be now taking place on the moon which
+could be recognized from the earth! It seems safe to assume that no
+volcanic changes at all can be in progress; but most certainly the
+evidence which should convince us that volcanic changes of so tremendous a
+character are in progress that at a distance of two hundred and sixty
+thousand miles terrestrial telescopists can discern them, must be of the
+strongest and most satisfactory character.
+
+Evidence of change may indeed be discovered which can be otherwise
+explained. The moon is exposed to the action of heat other than that which
+pervaded her own frame at the time of her first formation. The sun's heat
+is poured upon the moon during the long lunar day of more than a
+fortnight, while during the long lunar night a cold prevails which must
+far exceed that of our bitterest arctic winters. We know from the
+heat-measurements made by the present Lord Rosse, that any part of the
+moon's surface at lunar mid-day is fully five hundred degrees Fahrenheit
+hotter than the same part two weeks later at lunar midnight. The alternate
+expansions and contractions resulting from these changes of temperature
+cannot but produce changes, however slowly, in the contour of the moon's
+surface. Professor Newcomb, indeed, considers that all such changes must
+long since have been completed. But I cannot see how they can be completed
+so long as the moon's surface is uneven, and at present there are regions
+where that surface is altogether rugged. Mighty peaks and walls exist
+which must one day be thrown down, so unstable is their form; deep ravines
+can be seen which must one day be the scene of tremendous landslips, so
+steep and precipitous are their sides. Changes such as these may still
+occur on so vast a scale that telescopists may hope from time to time to
+recognise them. But changes such as these are not volcanic; they attest no
+lunar vitality. They are antecedently so probable, indeed, while volcanic
+changes are antecedently so unlikely, that when any change is clearly
+recognised in the moon's surface, nothing but the most convincing evidence
+could be accepted as demonstrating that the change was of volcanic origin
+and not due to the continued expansion and contraction of the lunar crust.
+
+And now let us see how stands the evidence in the few cases which seem
+most to favour the idea that a real change has taken place.
+
+We may dismiss, in the first place, without any hesitation, the assertion
+that regular changes take place in the floor of the great lunar crater
+Plato. According to statements very confidently advanced a few years ago,
+this wide circular plain, some sixty miles in diameter, grows darker and
+darker as the lunar day advances there until the time corresponding to
+about two o'clock in the afternoon, and then grows gradually lighter again
+till eventide. The idea seems to have been at first that some sort of
+vegetation exists on the floor of this mighty ring-shaped mountain, and
+that, as the sun's heat falls during the long lunar day upon the great
+plain, the vegetation flourishes, darkening the whole region just as we
+might imagine that some far-extending forest on the earth would appear
+darker as seen from the moon when fully clothed with vegetation than when
+the trees were bare and the lighter tints of the ground could be seen
+through them. Another idea was that the ground undergoes some change under
+the sun's heat corresponding to those which are produced in certain
+substances employed in photography; though it was not explained why the
+solar rays should produce no permanent change, as in the terrestrial cases
+adduced in illustration. Yet another and, if possible, an even stranger
+explanation, suggested that, though the moon has no seas, there may be
+large quantities of water beneath her crust, which may evaporate when that
+crust becomes heated, rising in the form of vapour to moisten and so
+darken the crust. Certainly, the idea of a moistening of the lunar crust,
+or of portions thereof, as the sun's rays fall more strongly upon it, is
+so daring that one could almost wish it were admissible, instead of being
+altogether inconsistent, as unfortunately it is, with physical
+possibilities.
+
+But still more unfortunately, the fact supposed to have been observed, on
+which these ingenious speculations were based, has not only been called in
+question, but has been altogether negatived. More exact observations have
+shown that the supposed darkening of the floor of Plato is a mere optical
+illusion. When the sun has lately risen at that part of the moon, the
+ringed wall surrounding this great plain throws long shadows across the
+level surface. These shadows are absolutely black, like all the shadows on
+the moon. By contrast, therefore, the unshadowed part of the floor appears
+lighter than it really is; but the mountain ring which surrounds this dark
+grey plain is of light tint. So soon as the sun has passed high above the
+horizon of this region, the ring appears very brilliant compared with the
+dark plain which it surrounds; thus the plain appears by comparison even
+darker than it really is. As the long lunar afternoon advances, however,
+black shadows are again thrown athwart the floor, which therefore again
+appears by contrast lighter than it really is. All the apparent changes
+are such as might have been anticipated by anyone who considered how
+readily the eye is misled by effects of contrast.
+
+To base any argument in favour of a regular change in the floor of Plato
+on evidence such as this, would be as unwise as it would be to deduce
+inferences as to changes in the heat of water from experiments in which
+the heat was determined by the sensations experienced when the hands were
+successively immersed, one hand having previously been in water as hot as
+could be borne, the other in water as cold as could be borne. We know how
+readily these sensations would deceive us (if we trusted them) into the
+belief that the water had warmed notably during the short interval of time
+which had elapsed between the two immersions; for we know that if both
+hands were immersed at the same moment in lukewarm water, the water would
+appear cold to one hand and warm to the other.
+
+Precisely as in such a case as we have just considered, if we were obliged
+to test the water by so inexact a method, we should make experiments with
+one hand only, and carefully consider the condition of that hand during
+the progress of the experiments, so in the case of the floor of Plato, we
+must exclude as far as possible all effects due to mere contrast. We must
+examine the tint of the plain, at lunar morning, mid-day, and evening,
+with an eye not affected either by the darkness or brightness of adjacent
+regions, or adjacent parts of the same region. This is very readily done.
+All we have to do is to reduce the telescopic field of view to such an
+extent that, instead of the whole floor, only a small portion can be seen.
+It will then be found, as I can myself certify (the more apparently
+because the experience of others confirms my own), that the supposed
+change of tint does not take place. One or two who were and are strong
+believers in the reality of the change do indeed assert that they have
+tried this experiment, and have obtained an entirely different result. But
+this may fairly be regarded as showing how apt an observer is to be
+self-deceived when he is entirely persuaded of the truth of some favourite
+theory. For those who carried out the experiment successfully had no views
+one way or the other; those only failed who were certainly assured
+beforehand that the experiment would confirm their theory.
+
+The case of the lunar crater Linné, which somewhere about November 1865
+attracted the attention of astronomers, belongs to a very different
+category. In my article on the moon in the "Contemporary Review" I have
+fully presented the evidence in the case of this remarkable object. I need
+not therefore consider here the various arguments which have been urged
+for and against the occurrence of change. I may mention, however, that, in
+my anxiety to do full justice to the theory that change has really
+occurred, I took Mädler's description of the crater's interior as "very
+deep," to mean more than Mädler probably intended. There is now a
+depression several hundred yards in depth. If Mädler's description be
+interpreted, as I interpreted it for the occasion in the above article, to
+mean a depth of two or three miles, it is of course certain that there has
+been a very remarkable change. But some of the observers who have devoted
+themselves utterly, it would seem, to the lively occupation of measuring,
+counting, and describing the tens of thousands of lunar craters already
+known, assert that Mädler and Lohrman (who uses the same description)
+meant nothing like so great a depth. Probably Mädler only meant about half
+a mile, or even less. In this case their favourite theory no longer seems
+so strongly supported by the evidence. In some old drawings by the
+well-known observer Schröter, the crater is drawn very much as it now
+appears. Thus, I think we must adopt as most probable the opinion which
+is, I see, advanced by Prof. Newcomb in his excellent "Popular Astronomy,"
+that there has been no actual change in the crater. I must indeed remark
+that, after comparing several drawings of the same regions by Schröter,
+Mädler, Lohrman, and Schmidt, with each other and with the moon's surface,
+I find myself by no means very strongly impressed by the artistic skill of
+any of these observers. I scarcely know a single region in the moon where
+change might not be inferred to have taken place if any one of the
+above-named observers could be implicitly relied upon. As, fortunately,
+their views differ even more widely _inter se_ than from the moon's own
+surface, we are not driven to so startling a conclusion.
+
+However, if we assume even that Linné has undergone change, we still have
+no reason to believe that the change is volcanic. A steep wall, say half a
+mile in height, surrounding a crater four or five miles in diameter, no
+longer stands at this height above the enclosed space, if the believers in
+a real change are to be trusted. But, as Dr. Huggins well remarked long
+ago, if volcanic forces competent to produce disturbance of this kind are
+at work in the moon, we ought more frequently to recognize signs of
+change, for they could scarcely be at work in one part only of the moon's
+surface, or only at long intervals of time. It is so easy to explain the
+overthrow of such a wall as surrounded Linné (always assuming we can rely
+upon former accounts) without imagining volcanic action, that, considering
+the overwhelming weight of _a priori_ probability against such action at
+the present time, it would be very rash to adopt the volcanic theory. The
+expansions and contractions described above would not only be able to
+throw down walls of the kind, but they would be sure to do so from time to
+time. Indeed, as a mere matter of probabilities, it may be truly said that
+it would be exceedingly unlikely that catastrophes such as the one which
+may have occurred in this case would fail to happen at comparatively short
+intervals of time. It would be so unlikely, that I am almost disposed to
+adopt the theory that there really has been a change in Linné, for the
+reason that on that theory we get rid of the difficulty arising from the
+apparent fixity of even the steepest lunar rocks. However, after all, the
+time during which men have studied the moon with the telescope--only two
+hundred and sixty-nine years--is a mere instant compared with the long
+periods during which the moon has been exposed to the sun's intense heat
+by day and a more than arctic intensity of cold by night. It may well be
+that, though lunar landslips occur at short intervals of time, these
+intervals are only short when compared with those periods, hundreds of
+millions of years long, of which we had to speak a little while ago.
+Perhaps in a period of ten or twenty thousand years we might have a fair
+chance of noting the occurrence of one or two catastrophes of the kind,
+whereas we could hardly expect to note any, save by the merest accident,
+in two or three hundred years.
+
+To come now to the last, and, according to some, the most decisive piece
+of evidence in favour of the theory that the moon's crust is still under
+the influence of volcanic forces.
+
+On May 19, 1877, Dr. Hermann J. Klein, of Cologne, observed a crater more
+than two miles in width, where he felt sure that no crater had before
+existed. It was near the centre of the moon's visible hemisphere, and not
+far from a well-known crater called Hyginus. At the time of observation it
+was not far from the boundary between the light and dark parts of the
+moon: in fact, it was near the time of sunrise at this region. Thus the
+floor of the supposed new crater was in shadow--it appeared perfectly
+black. In the conventional language for such cases made and provided (it
+should be stereotyped by selenographers, for it has now been used a great
+many times since Schröter first adopted the belief that the great crater
+Cassini, thirty-six miles in diameter, was a new one) Dr. Klein says, "The
+region having been frequently observed by myself during the last few
+years, I feel certain that no such crater existed in the region at the
+time of my previous observations." He communicated his discovery to Dr.
+Schmidt, who also assured him that the region had been frequently observed
+by himself during the last few years, and he felt certain that no such
+crater, &c., &c. It is not in the maps by Lohrman and by Beer and Mädler,
+or in Schröter's drawings, and so forth. "We know more," says a recent
+writer, singularly ready to believe in lunar changes; "we know that at a
+later period, with the powerful Dorpat telescope, Mädler carefully
+re-examined this particular region, to see if he could detect any
+additional features not shown in his map. He found several smaller
+craterlets _in other parts_" (the italics are mine), "but he could not
+detect any other crater in the region where Dr. Klein now states there
+exist a large crater, though he did find some very small hills close to
+this spot." "This evidence is really conclusive," says this very confident
+writer, "for it is incredible that Mädler could have seen these minute
+hills and overlooked a crater so large that it is the second largest
+crater of the score in this region." Then this writer comes in, of course,
+in his turn, with the customary phrases. "During the six years, 1870-1876,
+I most carefully examined this region, for the express purpose of
+detecting any craters not shown by Mädler," and he also can certify that
+no such crater existed, etc., etc. He was only waiting, when he thus
+wrote, to see the crater for himself. "One suitable evening will settle
+the matter. If I find a deep black crater, three miles in diameter, in the
+place assigned to it by Dr. Klein, and when six years' observation
+convinces me no such crater did exist, I shall know that it must be new."
+
+Astronomers, however, require somewhat better evidence.
+
+It might well be that a new crater-shaped depression should appear in the
+moon without any volcanic action having occurred. For reasons already
+adduced, indeed, I hold it to be to all intents and purposes certain that
+if a new depression is really in question at all, it is in reality only an
+old and formerly shallow crater, whose floor has broken up, yielding at
+length to the expansive and contractive effects above described, which
+would act with exceptional energy at this particular part of the moon's
+surface, close as it is to the lunar equator.
+
+But it is by no means clear that this part of the moon's surface has
+undergone any change whatever. We must not be misled by the very confident
+tone of selenographers. Of course they fully believe what they tell us:
+but they are strongly prejudiced. Their labours, as they well know, have
+now very little interest unless signs of change should be detected in the
+moon. Surveyors who have done exceedingly useful work in mapping a region
+would scarcely expect the public to take much interest in additional
+information about every rock or pebble existing in that region, unless
+they could show that something more than a mere record of rocks and
+pebbles was really involved. Thus selenographers have shown, since the
+days of Schröter, an intense anxiety to prove that our moon deserves, in
+another than Juliet's sense, to be called "the inconstant moon." In
+another sense again they seem disposed to "swear by the inconstant moon,"
+as changing yearly, if not "monthly, in her circled orb." Thus a very
+little evidence satisfies them, and they are very readily persuaded in
+their own mind that former researches of theirs, or of their
+fellow-pebble-counters, have been so close and exact, that craters must
+have been detected then which have been found subsequently to exist in the
+moon. I do not in the slightest degree question their _bona fides_, but a
+long experience of their ways leads me to place very little reliance on
+such stereotyped phrases as I have quoted above.
+
+Now, in my paper in the "Contemporary Review" on this particular crater, I
+called attention to the fact that in the magnificent photograph of the
+moon taken by Dr. Louis Rutherfurd on March 6, 1865 (note well the date)
+there is a small spot of lighter colour than the surrounding region,
+nearly in the place indicated in the imperfect drawing of Klein's record
+which alone was then available to me. For reasons, I did not then more
+closely describe this feature of the finest lunar photograph ever yet
+obtained.
+
+The writer from whom I have already quoted is naturally (being a
+selenographer) altogether unwilling to accept the conclusion that this
+spot is the crater floor as photographed (not as seen) under a somewhat
+higher illumination than that under which the floor of the crater appears
+dark. There are several white spots immediately around the dark crater, he
+says: "which of these is the particular white spot which the author"
+(myself) "assumes I did not see?" a question which, as I had made no
+assumption whatever about this particular writer, nor mentioned him, nor
+even thought of him, as I wrote the article on which he comments, I am
+quite unable to answer. But he has no doubt that I have "mistaken the
+white spot" (which it seems he can identify, after all) "for Klein's
+crater, which is many miles farther north, and which never does appear as
+a white spot: he has simply mistaken its place."
+
+I have waited, therefore, before writing this, until from my own
+observation, or from a drawing carefully executed by Dr. Klein, I might
+ascertain the exact place of the new crater. I could not, as it turned
+out, observe the new crater as a black spot myself, since the question was
+raised; for on the only available occasion I was away from home. But I now
+have before me Dr. Klein's carefully drawn map. In this I find the new
+crater placed not nearly, but _exactly_ where Rutherfurd's crater appears.
+I say "Rutherfurd's crater," for the white spot is manifestly not merely a
+light tinted region on the darker background of the Sea of Vapours (as the
+region in which the crater has been found is called): it is a circular
+crater more than two miles in diameter; and the width of the crescent of
+shadow surrounding its eastern side shows that in March 1865, when
+Rutherfurd took that photograph, the crater was not (for its size) a
+shallow one, but deep.
+
+Now, it is quite true that, to the eye, under high illumination, the floor
+of the crater does not appear lighter than the surrounding region; at
+least, not markedly so, for to my eye it appears slightly lighter. But
+everyone knows that a photograph does not show all objects with the same
+depth of shading that they present to the naked eye. A somewhat dark green
+object will appear rather light in a photograph, while a somewhat light
+orange-yellow object will appear quite dark. We have only to assume that
+the floor of the supposed new crater has a greenish tinge (which is by no
+means uncommon) to understand why, although it is lost to ordinary vision
+when the Sea of Vapours is under full illumination, it yet presents in a
+photograph a decidedly lighter shade than the surrounding region.
+
+I ought to mention that the writer from whom I have quoted says that all
+the photographs were examined and the different objects in this region
+identified within forty-eight hours of the time when Dr. Klein's letter
+reached England. He mentions also that he has himself personally examined
+them. Doubtless at that time the exact position of the supposed new crater
+was not known. By the way, it is strange, considering that the name Louis
+Rutherfurd is distinctly written in large letters upon the magnificent
+photograph in question, that a selenographer who has carefully examined
+that photograph should spell the name Rutherford. He must really not
+assume, when on re-examining the picture he finds the name spelled
+Rutherfurd, that there has been any change, volcanic or otherwise, in the
+photograph.
+
+In conclusion I would point out that another of these laborious
+crater-counters, in a paper recently written with the express purpose of
+advocating a closer and longer-continued scrutiny of the moon, makes a
+statement which is full of significance in connection with the subject of
+lunar changes. After quoting the opinion of a celebrated astronomer, that
+one might as well attempt to catalogue the pebbles on the sea-shore as the
+entire series of lunar craters down to the minutest visible with the most
+powerful telescope, he states that while on the one hand, out of
+thirty-two thousand eight hundred and fifty-six craters given in Schmidt's
+chart, not more than two thousand objects have been entered in the
+Registry he has provided for the purpose (though he has been many years
+collecting materials for it from all sides); on the other hand, "on
+comparing a few of these published objects with Schmidt's map, it has been
+found _that some are not in it_,"--a fact to which he calls attention,
+"not for the purpose of depreciating the greatest selenographical work
+that has yet appeared, but for the real advancement of selenography."
+Truly, the fact is as significant as it is discouraging,--unless we are
+presently to be told that the craters which are not common to both series
+are to be regarded as new formations.
+
+ RICHARD A. PROCTOR, _in Belgravia_.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[63] To some this may appear to be a mere truism. In reality it is far
+from being so. If two globes of equal mass were each of the same exact
+temperature throughout, they might yet have very unequal total quantities
+of heat. If one were of water, for instance, and the other of iron or any
+other metal, the former would have far the larger supply of heat; for more
+heat is required to raise a given weight of water one degree in
+temperature, than to raise an equal weight of iron one degree; and water
+in cooling one degree, or any number of degrees, would give out more heat
+than an equal weight of iron cooling to the same extent.
+
+
+
+
+RECOLLECTIONS OF THACKERAY.
+
+
+In the absence of any complete biography of the late William Makepeace
+Thackeray, every anecdote regarding him has a certain value, in so far as
+it throws a light on his personal character and methods of work. Read in
+this light and this spirit, all the tributes to his memory are valuable
+and interesting. Glancing over some memoranda connected with the life of
+the novelist, contained in a book which has come under our notice,
+entitled "Anecdote Biographies." we gain a ready insight into his
+character. And from the materials thus supplied, we now offer a few
+anecdotes treasured up in these too brief memorials of his life.
+
+Thackeray was born at Calcutta in 1811. While still very young, he was
+sent to England; on the homeward voyage he had a peep at the great
+Napoleon in his exile-home at St. Helena. He received his education at the
+Charterhouse School and at Cambridge, leaving the latter without a degree.
+His fortune at this time amounted to twenty thousand pounds; this he
+afterwards lost through unfortunate speculations, but not before he had
+travelled a good deal on the continent, and acquainted himself with French
+and German everyday life and literature. His first inclination was to
+follow the profession of an artist; and curious to relate, he made
+overtures to Charles Dickens to illustrate his earliest book. Thackeray
+was well equipped both in body and mind when his career as an author
+began; but over ten years of hard toil at newspaper and magazine writing
+were undergone before he became known as the author of "Vanity Fair," and
+one of the first of living novelists. He lectured with fair if not with
+extraordinary success both in England and America, when the sunshine of
+public favour had been secured. His career of successful novel-writing
+terminated suddenly on 24th December 1863, and like Dickens, he had an
+unfinished novel on hand.
+
+One morning Thackeray knocked at the door of Horace Mayhew's chambers in
+Regent Street, crying from without: 'It's no use, Horry Mayhew; open the
+door.' On entering, he said cheerfully: 'Well, young gentleman, you'll
+admit an old fogy.' When leaving, with his hat in his hand, he remarked:
+'By-the-by, how stupid! I was going away without doing part of the
+business of my visit. You spoke the other day of poor George.
+Somebody--most unaccountably--has returned me a five-pound note I lent him
+a long time ago. I didn't expect it. So just hand to George; and tell him,
+when his pocket will bear it, to pass it on to some poor fellow of his
+acquaintance. By-bye.' He was gone! This was one of Thackeray's delicate
+methods of doing a favour; the recipient was asked to _pass it on_.
+
+One of his last acts on leaving America after a lecturing tour, was to
+return twenty-five per cent. of the proceeds of one of his lectures to a
+young speculator who had been a loser by the bargain. While known to hand
+a gold piece to a waiter with the remark: 'My friend, will you do me the
+favour to accept a sovereign?' he has also been known to say to a visitor
+who had proffered a card: 'Don't leave this bit of paper; it has cost you
+two cents, and will be just as good for your next call.' Evidently aware
+that money when properly used is a wonderful health-restorer, he was found
+by a friend who had entered his bedroom in Paris, gravely placing some
+napoleons in a pill-box, on the lid of which was written: 'One to be taken
+occasionally.' When asked to explain, it came out that these strange pills
+were for an old person who said she was very ill, and in distress; and so
+he had concluded that this was the medicine wanted. 'Dr. Thackeray,' he
+remarked, 'intends to leave it with her himself. Let us walk out
+together.' To a young literary man afterwards his amanuensis, he wrote
+thus, on hearing that a loss had befallen him: 'I am sincerely sorry to
+hear of your position, and send the little contribution which came so
+opportunely from another friend whom I was enabled once to help. When you
+are well-to-do again, I know you will pay it back; and I daresay somebody
+else will want the money, which is meanwhile most heartily at your
+service.'
+
+When enjoying an American repast at Boston in 1852, his friends there,
+determined to surprise him with the size of their oysters, had placed six
+of the largest bivalves they could find, on his plate. After swallowing
+number one with some little difficulty, his friend asked him how he felt.
+'Profoundly grateful,' he gasped; 'and as if I had swallowed a little
+baby.' Previous to a farewell dinner given by his American intimates and
+admirers, he remarked that it was very kind of his friends to give him a
+dinner, but that such things always set him trembling. 'Besides,' he
+remarked to his secretary, 'I have to make a speech, and what am I to say?
+Here, take a pen in your hand and sit down, and I'll see if I can hammer
+out something. It's hammering now, I'm afraid it will be stammering
+by-and-by.' His short speeches, when delivered, were as characteristic and
+unmistakable as anything he ever wrote. All the distinct features of his
+written style were present.
+
+It is interesting to remark the sentiments he entertained towards his
+great rival Charles Dickens. Although the latter was more popular as a
+novelist, than he could ever expect to become, he expressed himself in
+unmistakable terms regarding him. When the conversation turned that way,
+we would remark: 'Dickens is making ten thousand a year. He is very angry
+at me for saying so; but I will say it, for it is true. He doesn't like
+me. He knows that my books are a protest against his--that if the one set
+are true, the other must be false. But "Pickwick" is an exception; it is a
+capital book. It is like a glass of good English ale.' When "Dombey and
+Son" appeared in the familiar paper cover, number five contained the
+episode of the death of little Paul. Thackeray appeared much moved in
+reading it over, and putting number five in his pocket, hastened with it
+to the editor's room in "Punch" office. Dashing it down on the table in
+the presence of Mark Lemon, he exclaimed! 'There's no writing against such
+power as this; one has no chance! Read that chapter describing young
+Paul's death; it is unsurpassed--it is stupendous!'
+
+In a conversation with his secretary previous to his American trip, he
+intimated his intention of starting a magazine or journal on his return,
+to be issued in his own name. This scheme eventually took shape, and the
+result was the now well known "Cornhill Magazine." This magazine proved a
+great success, the sale of the first number being one hundred and ten
+thousand copies. Under the excitement of this great success, Thackeray
+left London for Paris. To Mr. Fields, the American publisher, who met him
+by appointment at his hotel in the Rue de la Paix, he remarked: 'London is
+not big enough to contain me now, and I am obliged to add Paris to my
+residence. Good gracious!' said he, throwing up his long arms, 'where will
+this tremendous circulation stop? Who knows but that I shall have to add
+Vienna and Rome to my whereabouts? If the worst come to the worst, New
+York also may fall into my clutches, and only the Rocky Mountains may be
+able to stop my progress.' His spirits continued high during this visit to
+Paris, his friend adding that some restraint was necessary to keep him
+from entering the jewellers' shops and ordering a pocketful of diamonds
+and 'other trifles; for,' said he, 'how can I spend the princely income
+which Smith[64] allows me for editing "Cornhill," unless I begin instantly
+somewhere!' He complained too that he could not sleep at nights 'for
+counting up his subscribers.' On reading a contribution by his young
+daughter to the "Cornhill," he felt much moved, remarking to a friend;
+'When I read it, I blubbered like a child; it is so good, so simple, and
+so honest; and my little girl wrote it, every word of it.'
+
+Dickens in the tender memorial which he penned for the "Cornhill
+Magazine," remarks on his appearance when they dined together. 'No one,'
+he says, 'can ever have seen him more genial, natural, cordial, fresh, and
+honestly impulsive than I have seen him at those times. No one can be
+surer than I of the greatness and goodness of the heart that had then
+disclosed itself.'
+
+Beneath his 'modestly grand' manner, his seeming cynicism and bitterness,
+he bore a very tender and loving heart. In a letter written in 1854, and
+quoted in James Hannay's sketch, he expresses himself thus. 'I hate
+Juvenal,' he says. 'I mean I think him a truculent fellow; and I love
+Horace better than you do, and rate Churchill much lower; and as for
+Swift, you haven't made me alter my opinion. I admire, or rather admit,
+his power as much as you do; but I don't admire that kind or power so much
+as I did fifteen years ago, or twenty shall we say. Love is a higher
+intellectual exercise than hatred; and when you get one or two more of
+those young ones you write so pleasantly about, you'll come over to the
+side of the kind wags, I think, rather than the cruel ones.' The pathetic
+sadness visible in much that he wrote sprung partly from temperament and
+partly from his own private calamities. Loss of fortune was not the only
+cause. When a young man in Paris, he married; and after enjoying domestic
+happiness for several years, his wife caught a fever from which she never
+afterwards sufficiently recovered to be able to be with her husband and
+children. She was henceforth intrusted to the care of a kind family, where
+every comfort and attention was secured for her. The lines in the ballad
+of the "Bouillabaisse" are supposed to refer to this early time of
+domestic felicity:
+
+ Ah me! how quick the days are flitting!
+ I mind me of a time that's gone,
+ When here I'd sit as now I'm sitting,
+ In this place--but not alone.
+ A fair young form was nestled near me,
+ A dear, dear face looked fondly up,
+ And sweetly spoke and smiled to cheer me--
+ There's no one now to share my cup.
+
+In dictating to his amanuensis during the composition of the lectures on
+the "Four Georges," he would light a cigar, pace the room for a few
+minutes, and then resume his work with increased cheerfulness, changing
+his position very frequently, so that he was sometimes sitting, standing,
+walking, or lying about. His enunciation was always clear and distinct,
+and his words and thoughts were so well weighed that the progress of
+writing was but seldom checked. He dictated with calm deliberation, and
+shewed no risible feeling even when he had made a humorous point. His
+whole literary career was one of unremitting industry; he wrote slowly,
+and like 'George Eliot,' gave forth his thoughts in such perfect form,
+that he rarely required to retouch his work. His handwriting was neat and
+plain, often very minute; which led to the remark, that if all trades
+failed, he would earn sixpences by writing the Lord's Prayer and the Creed
+in the size of one. Unlike many men of less talent, he looked upon
+caligraphy as one of the fine arts. When at the height of his fame he was
+satisfied when he wrote six pages a day, generally working during the day,
+seldom at night. An idea which would only be slightly developed in some of
+his shorter stories, he treasured up and expanded in some of his larger
+works.
+
+While Alfred Tennyson the future Laureate received the gold medal at
+Cambridge given by the Chancellor of the university for the best English
+poem, the subject being "Timbuctoo," we find Thackeray satirising the
+subject in a humorous paper called "The Snob." Here are a few lines from
+his clever skit on the prize poem:
+
+ There stalks the tiger--there the lion roars,
+ Who sometimes eats the luckless blackamoors;
+ All that he leaves of them the monster throws
+ To jackals, vultures, dogs, cats, kites and crows;
+ His hunger thus the forest monster gluts,
+ And then lies down 'neath trees called cocoa-nuts.
+
+The personal appearance of Thackeray has been frequently described. His
+nose through an early accident, was misshapen; it was broad at the bridge,
+and stubby at the end. He was near-sighted: and his hair at forty was
+already gray, but massy and abundant--his keen and kindly eyes twinkled
+sometimes through and sometimes over his spectacles. A friend remarked
+that what he 'should call the predominant expression of the countenance
+was courage--a readiness to face the world on its own terms.' Unlike
+Dickens, he took no regular walking exercise, and being regardless of the
+laws of health, suffered in consequence. In reply to one who asked him if
+he had ever received the best medical advice, his reply was: 'What is the
+use of advice if you don't follow it? They tell me not to drink, and I
+_do_ drink. They tell me _not_ to smoke, and I do smoke. They tell me not
+to eat, and I do eat. In short, I do everything that I am desired _not_ to
+do--and therefore, what am I to expect?' And so one morning he was found
+lying, like Dr. Chalmers, in the sleep of death with his arms beneath his
+head, after one of his violent attacks of illness--to be mourned by his
+mother and daughters, who formed his household, and by a wider public
+beyond, which, had learned to love him through his admirable
+works.--_Chambers's Journal._
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[64] Of Smith, Elder, & Co., the well known publishers.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Library Magazine of Select Foreign
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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Library Magazine.
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Library Magazine of Select Foreign
+Literature, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Library Magazine of Select Foreign Literature
+ Volume 1, Part 1
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: John B. Alden
+
+Release Date: March 1, 2011 [EBook #35432]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAGAZINE OF SELECT FOREIGN LITERATURE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Bill Tozier, Christine D. and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='padding'>
+<h1>THE<br />
+<br />
+LIBRARY MAGAZINE</h1>
+
+<p class='center'>OF</p>
+
+<h2>Select Foreign Literature.</h2>
+
+<p class='center'><big>VOLUME 1.</big></p>
+</div>
+<div class='padding'>
+<p class='center'>
+NEW YORK:<br />
+JOHN B. ALDEN, PUBLISHER,<br />
+1883.<br />
+</p></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[Pg iii]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
+<p class='center'>
+<a href="#THE_FUTURE_OF_INDIA"><b>THE FUTURE OF INDIA.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#A_COUP_DETAT"><b>A COUP D'&Eacute;TAT.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#THEATRICAL_MAKE-SHIFTS_AND_BLUNDERS"><b>THEATRICAL MAKE-SHIFTS AND BLUNDERS.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#I_WINTER-MORN_IN_THE_COUNTRY"><b>I.&mdash;WINTER-MORN IN THE COUNTRY.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#II_WINTER-MORN_IN_TOWN"><b>II.&mdash;WINTER-MORN IN TOWN.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#THE_HAPPY_VALLEY"><b>THE HAPPY VALLEY.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#THE_PHOENICIANS_IN_GREECE"><b>THE PH&#338;NICIANS IN GREECE.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#SOME_GOSSIP_ABOUT_LEICESTER_SQUARE"><b>SOME GOSSIP ABOUT LEICESTER SQUARE.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#A_WOMANS_LOVE"><b>A WOMAN'S LOVE.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#AN_IMPERIAL_PARDON"><b>AN IMPERIAL PARDON.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHRISTMAS_IN_MOROCCO"><b>CHRISTMAS IN MOROCCO.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#THE_HOMES_AND_HAUNTS_OF_THE_ITALIAN_POETS"><b>THE HOMES AND HAUNTS OF THE ITALIAN POETS.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#THE_VAQUERO60"><b>THE VAQUERO.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#TWO_MODERN_JAPANESE_STORIES"><b>TWO MODERN JAPANESE STORIES.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#SUPPOSED_CHANGES_IN_THE_MOON"><b>SUPPOSED CHANGES IN THE MOON.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#RECOLLECTIONS_OF_THACKERAY"><b>RECOLLECTIONS OF THACKERAY.</b></a><br />
+</p>
+<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='left'>PAGE.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>About Locusts. "Chambers's Journal,"</td><td align='right'>511</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Alcohol: Its Action and Uses. J. R. Gasquet,</td><td align='right'>597</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>American View of American Competition. Edward Atkinson,</td><td align='right'>335</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>American Churches, The Historical Aspect of the. Dean Stanley,</td><td align='right'>641</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>An Imperial Pardon. F. A. S.,</td><td align='right'>64</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Art Education in Great Britain. Sir Coutts Lindsay,</td><td align='right'>477</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Artificial Somnambulism. Richard A. Proctor,</td><td align='right'>348</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Association of Local Societies, The. J. Clifton Ward,</td><td align='right'>286</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Atheism and the Church. G. H. Curteis,</td><td align='right'>217</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Austin, Alfred. Farmhouse Dirge,</td><td align='right'>177</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Atkinson, Edward. An American View of American Competition,</td><td align='right'>335</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Baker, H. Barton. Theatrical Makeshifts and Blunders,</td><td align='right'>22</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Bayne, Thomas. English Men of Letters,&mdash;Shelley,</td><td align='right'>153</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Besant, Walter. Froissart's Love Story,</td><td align='right'>675</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Biographies of the Season. "London Society,"</td><td align='right'>404</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Black, Algernon. Charles Lamb,</td><td align='right'>310</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Blackie, John Stuart. On a Radical Reform in the Method of Teaching the Classical Languages,</td><td align='right'>290</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Blaikie, W. G. Ferney in Voltaire's Time and Ferney To-day,</td><td align='right'>230</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Buchanan, Robert. Sydney Dobell&mdash;A Personal Sketch,</td><td align='right'>538</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Bunbury, Clement. A Visit to the New Zealand Geysers,</td><td align='right'>761</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Calculating Boys. Richard A. Proctor,</td><td align='right'>705</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Chapters on Socialism. John Stuart Mill,</td><td align='right'>257</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Chances of the English Opera, The. Francis Hueffer,</td><td align='right'>626</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Christmas in Morocco. C. A. P. ("Sarcelle,")</td><td align='right'>75</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Classical Education, On the Worth of a. Bonamy Price,</td><td align='right'>297</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Cobbett, William: A Biography. Thomas Hughes,</td><td align='right'>326</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Commercial Depression and Reciprocity. Bonamy Price,</td><td align='right'>578</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Contemporary Life and Thought in France. G. Monod,</td><td align='right'>186</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Contemporary Life and Thought in Russia. T. S.,</td><td align='right'>312</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Contentment. C. C. Fraser-Tytler,</td><td align='right'>285</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Cooper, Basil H. Fresh Assyrian Finds,</td><td align='right'>463</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Count Fersen,</td><td align='right'>244</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Coup d'Etat, A,</td><td align='right'>21</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Critic on the Hearth, The. James Payn,</td><td align='right'>696</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Cupid's Workshop. Somerville Gibney,</td><td align='right'>453</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Curteis, G. H. Atheism and the Church,</td><td align='right'>217</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Dallas, W. S. Entomology,</td><td align='right'>470</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Defence of Lucknow, The. Alfred Tennyson,</td><td align='right'>385</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Desprez, Frank. The Vaquero,</td><td align='right'>104</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Difficulties of Socialism, The. John Stuart Mill,</td><td align='right'>385</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Discoveries of Astronomers, The.&mdash;Hipparchus. Richard A. Proctor,</td><td align='right'>237</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Dreamland.&mdash;A Last Sketch. Julia Kavanagh,</td><td align='right'>181</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>English Men of Letters.&mdash;Shelley. Thomas Bayne,</td><td align='right'>153</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>English Opera, The Chances of. Francis Hueffer,</td><td align='right'>626</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Entomology. W. S. Dallas,</td><td align='right'>470</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Ewart, Henry C. The Schoolship Shaftesbury,</td><td align='right'>204</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Farmhouse Dirge, A. Alfred Austin,</td><td align='right'>177</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Ferney in Voltaire's Time and Ferney To-day. W. G. Blaikie,</td><td align='right'>230</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Forbes, Archibald. Plain Words About the Afghan Question,</td><td align='right'>434</td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[Pg iv]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Fraser-Tytler, C. C. Contentment,</td><td align='right'>285</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>French Novels. "Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine,"</td><td align='right'>723</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>French Republic and the Catholic Church, The. John Morley,</td><td align='right'>561</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Fresh Assyrian Finds. Basil H. Cooper,</td><td align='right'>463</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Friends and Foes of Russia, The. W. E. Gladstone,</td><td align='right'>129</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Froissart's Love Story. Walter Besant,</td><td align='right'>675</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Future of India, The. Sir Erskine Perry,</td><td align='right'>1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Gasquet, J. R. Alcohol: Its Action and Uses,</td><td align='right'>597</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Gibney, Somerville. Cupid's Workshop,</td><td align='right'>453</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Gladstone, W. E. Greece and the Treaty of Berlin,</td><td align='right'>663</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Gladstone, W. E. Probability as the Guide of Conduct,</td><td align='right'>513</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Gladstone, W. E. The Friends and Foes of Russia,</td><td align='right'>129</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Greece and the Treaty of Berlin. W. E. Gladstone,</td><td align='right'>663</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Greece, The Progress of. R. C. Jebb,</td><td align='right'>366</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Growth of London, The,</td><td align='right'>158</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Hamlet, "Mr. Irving's." "Temple Bar,"</td><td align='right'>386</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Happy Valley, The. L. A.,</td><td align='right'>32</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Harrison, Frederic. On the Choice of Books,</td><td align='right'>414</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Historical Aspect of the American Churches, The. Dean Stanley,</td><td align='right'>641</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Homes and Haunts of the Italian Poets, The&mdash;Guarini. T. Adolphus Trollope,</td><td align='right'>85</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Homes and Haunts of the Italian Poets, The.&mdash;Torquato Tasso. Frances Eleanor Trollope,</td><td align='right'>434</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Hueffer, Francis. The Chances of the English Opera,</td><td align='right'>626</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Hughes, Thomas. William Cobbett: A Biography,</td><td align='right'>326</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Japp, Alex. H. Winter Morn in Country and Winter Morn in Town,</td><td align='right'>31</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Jebb, R. C. The Progress of Greece,</td><td align='right'>366</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Kavanagh, Julia. Dreamland: A Last Sketch,</td><td align='right'>181</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Lamb, Charles. Algernon Black,</td><td align='right'>310</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Languages, Classical, On a Radical Reform in the Method of Teaching the. John Stuart Blackie,</td><td align='right'>290</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Leicester Square, Some Gossip About,</td><td align='right'>53</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Lindsay, Sir Coutts. Art Education in Great Britain,</td><td align='right'>477</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Manzoni's Hymn for Whitsunday. Dean Stanley,</td><td align='right'>637</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Merivale, Herman C. The Royal Wedding,</td><td align='right'>508</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Mill, John Stuart. The Difficulties of Socialism,</td><td align='right'>385</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Mill, John Stuart. Chapters on Socialism,</td><td align='right'>257</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Mivart, St. George. On the Study of Natural History,</td><td align='right'>609</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Monod, G. Contemporary Life and Thought in France,</td><td align='right'>186</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Morley, John. The French Republic and the Catholic Church,</td><td align='right'>561</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Musical Cultus of the Present Day, The. H. Heathcote Statham,</td><td align='right'>687</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>On a Radical Reform in the Method of Teaching the Classical Languages. John Stuart Blackie,</td><td align='right'>290</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>On Being Knocked Down and Picked Up Again.&mdash;A Consolatory Essay,</td><td align='right'>209</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>On the Choice of Books, Frederic Harrison,</td><td align='right'>414</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>On the Study of Natural History. St. George Mivart,</td><td align='right'>609</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>On the Worth of a Classical Education. Bonamy Price,</td><td align='right'>297</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Payn, James. The Critic on the Hearth,</td><td align='right'>696</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Perry, Sir Erskine. The Future of India,</td><td align='right'>1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Philological Society's English Dictionary, The. "The Academy,"</td><td align='right'>639</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Ph&#339;nicians in Greece, The. A. H. Sayce,</td><td align='right'>36</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Plain Words About the Afghan Question. Archibald Forbes,</td><td align='right'>454</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Price, Bonamy. Commercial Depression and Reciprocity,</td><td align='right'>578</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Price, Bonamy. On the Worth of a Classical Education,</td><td align='right'>297</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Probability as the Guide of Conduct. W. E. Gladstone,</td><td align='right'>513</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Progress of Greece, The. R. C. Jebb,</td><td align='right'>366</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Proctor, Richard A. Artificial Somnambulism,</td><td align='right'>348</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Proctor, Richard A. Supposed Changes in the Moon,</td><td align='right'>111</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Proctor, Richard A. Calculating Boys,</td><td align='right'>705</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Proctor, Richard A. The Discoveries of Astronomers&mdash;Hipparchus,</td><td align='right'>237</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Recollections of Thackeray,</td><td align='right'>126</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Rose, Edward. Wagner as a Dramatist,</td><td align='right'>493</td></tr>
+<tr><td><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[Pg v]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Royal Wedding, The. Herman C. Merivale,</td><td align='right'>508</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Russia, The Friends and Foes of. W. E. Gladstone,</td><td align='right'>129</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Sayce, A. H. The Ph&#339;nicians in Greece,</td><td align='right'>36</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Schoolship Shaftesbury. Henry C. Ewart,</td><td align='right'>204</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Schopenhauer on Men, Books and Music. "Fraser's Magazine,"</td><td align='right'>751</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Some Gossip About Leicester Square,</td><td align='right'>53</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Socialism, Chapters on. John Stuart Mill,</td><td align='right'>257</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Socialism, Difficulties of. John Stuart Mill,</td><td align='right'>388</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Stanley, Dean. Manzoni's Hymn for Whitsunday,</td><td align='right'>637</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Stanley, Dean. The Historical Aspect of the American Churches,</td><td align='right'>641</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Statham, H. Heathcote. The Musical Cultus of the Present Day,</td><td align='right'>687</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Supposed Changes in the Moon. Richard A. Proctor,</td><td align='right'>111</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Sydney Dobell: A Personal Sketch. Robert Buchanan,</td><td align='right'>538</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Tasso, Torquato. The Homes and Haunts of the Italian Poets. Frances Eleanor Trollope,</td><td align='right'>434</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Tennyson, Alfred. The Defence of Lucknow,</td><td align='right'>385</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Thackeray, Recollections of,</td><td align='right'>126</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Theatrical Makeshifts and Blunders. H. Barton Baker,</td><td align='right'>22</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Their Appointed Seasons. J. G. Wood,</td><td align='right'>603</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Through the Ages: A Legend of a Stone Axe. "New Quarterly Magazine,"</td><td align='right'>557</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Toilers in Field and Factory. "Time,"</td><td align='right'>483</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Toilers in Field and Factory, No. II.&mdash;Characteristics. "Time,"</td><td align='right'>549</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Transvaal, About the. "Chamber's Journal,"</td><td align='right'>330</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Trollope, Frances Eleanor. The Homes and Haunts of the Italian Poets.&mdash;Torquato Tasso,</td><td align='right'>434</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Trollope, T. Adolphus. The Homes and Haunts of the Italian Poets,</td><td align='right'>85</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Two Modern Japanese Stories,</td><td align='right'>105</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Valvedere, Adrian de. A Woman's Love&mdash;A Slavonian Study,</td><td align='right'>59</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Vaquero, The. Frank Desprez,</td><td align='right'>101</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Visit to the New Zealand Geysers, A. Clement Bunbury,</td><td align='right'>761</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Wagner as a Dramatist. Edward Rose,</td><td align='right'>493</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Ward, J. Clifton. The Association of Local Societies,</td><td align='right'>286</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Winter Morn in Country&mdash;Winter Morn in Town. Alex. H. Japp,</td><td align='right'>31</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Woman's Love. A. A Slavonian Study. Adrian de Valvedere,</td><td align='right'>59</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Wood, J. G. Their Appointed Seasons,</td><td align='right'>603</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE</h2>
+
+<h1>LIBRARY MAGAZINE</h1>
+
+<h3>JANUARY, 1879.</h3>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_FUTURE_OF_INDIA" id="THE_FUTURE_OF_INDIA"></a>THE FUTURE OF INDIA.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Speculation as to the political future is not a very fruitful occupation.
+In looking back to the prognostications of the wisest statesmen, it will
+be observed that they were as little able to foresee what was to come a
+generation or two after their death, as the merest dolt amongst their
+contemporaries. The Whigs at the beginning of the last century thought
+that the liberties of Europe would disappear if a prince of the House of
+Bourbon were securely fixed on the throne of Spain. The Tories in the last
+quarter of that century considered that if England lost her American
+provinces she would sink into the impotence of the Dutch Republic. The
+statesmen who assembled at the Congress of Vienna would have laughed any
+dreamer to scorn who should have suggested that in the lifetime of many of
+them Germany would become an empire in the hands of Prussia, France a
+well-organized and orderly republic, and the "geographical expression" of
+Italy vitalised into one of the great powers of Europe. Nevertheless, if
+politics is ever to approach the dignity of a science, it must justify a
+scientific character by its ability to predict events. The facts are too
+complicated, probably, ever to admit the application of exact deductive
+reasoning; and in the growth of civilised society new and unexpected forms
+are continually springing up. But though practical statesmen will not aim
+at results beyond the immediate future, it is impossible for men who pass
+their lives in the study of the difficult task of government to avoid
+speculations as to the future form of society to which national efforts
+should be directed. Some theory or other, therefore, is always present,
+consciously or unconsciously, to the mind of politicians.</p>
+
+<p>With respect to British India it may be observed that very different views
+of policy prevail. Native writers in the Indian press view their exclusion
+from all the higher offices of Government, and the efforts of Manchester
+to transfer 800,000<i>l.</i> per annum raised on cotton goods to increased
+taxation in India, as a policy based on mere selfishness; and a Russian
+journal, apparently in good faith, assured its readers the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span> other day,
+that India pays into the British treasury an annual tribute of twenty to
+twenty-five millions sterling. On the other hand, some advanced thinkers
+amongst ourselves hold that India is a burden on our resources, and the
+cry of "Perish India!" so far as relates to its dependence on England, is
+considered to be not unsupported by sound reasoning. One of the ablest
+publicists of India, in a published letter to Sir George Campbell, has
+declared his conviction, after twenty years' experience in that country,
+that good government by the British in India is impossible.</p>
+
+<p>It may be admitted that exaggerated notions as to the pecuniary value of
+India to England prevail, and it must also be confessed that, with all our
+self-complacency as to the benefits of British rule, we have to accuse
+ourselves of several shortcomings. Nevertheless, it may be affirmed with
+confidence that the national instinct as to the value of our possessions
+in the East coincides with the views of our most enlightened statesmen. My
+colleague, Colonel Yule, has pointed out, I think with entire justice,
+that the task which we have proposed to ourselves in India, unlike that of
+the Dutch in Java, is to improve and elevate the two hundred millions
+under our charge to the utmost extent of our powers. The national
+conscience is not altogether satisfied with the mode in which some of our
+possessions have been acquired, but impartial inquiry demonstrates that
+unless a higher morality had prevailed than has ever yet been witnessed
+amongst the sons of men, the occasions for conquest and acquisition of
+territory that have presented themselves to the British during the last
+hundred years would not have been foregone by any nation in the world. But
+the feeling I allude to quickens the sense of our obligations to the
+inhabitants of India. Having undertaken the heavy task of their
+government, it is our duty to demonstrate to posterity that under British
+rule we have enabled them to advance in the route of civilization and
+progress. We recognise that in all probability so distant and extensive an
+empire cannot permanently remain in subjection to a small island in the
+West, and therefore our constant task is to render the population of India
+at some day or other capable of self-government. Is such a problem
+susceptible of a favourable solution? I propose to discuss this question
+in the following pages.</p>
+
+
+<h3>I.</h3>
+
+<p>The late Sir George Lewis once observed to me that in his opinion, it was
+labour lost to endeavour to make anything of the Hindus. They were a race
+doomed to subjection whenever they came into collision with peoples more
+vigorous than themselves. They possessed, in short, none of the elements
+which are requisite for self-government. Any opinion of that philosophic
+observer is entitled to grave consideration, and undoubtedly there is much
+in the history of the past that tends to justify the above desponding
+conclusion. The Persians, the Greeks, the Parthians, the Huns, the Arabs,
+the Ghaznivides, the Afghans, the Moguls, the Persians a second time,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span> and
+the British have successfully entered India and made themselves masters of
+the greater part of it. But Sir George had never been called upon to make
+any particular study of Indian history, nor indeed was it open to him
+during the earlier period of his life, which was devoted exclusively to
+study, to acquire the knowledge of India which later erudition and
+research have brought to light. It is possible that a closer attention to
+what has occurred in the past may enable us to regard the future in a more
+favourable aspect. It will, I think, be found, after such a study, that
+more intrinsic vitality and greater recuperative power exist amongst the
+Hindu race than they have been generally accredited with. Unfortunately
+the ancient and copious literature of the Hindus presents extremely little
+of historic value. The tendency of the Indian mind to dreamy speculations
+on the unseen and the unknown, to metaphysics, and to poetry, has led to a
+thorough disregard of the valuable offices of history. Accordingly, we
+find in their great epic poems, which date back, according to the best
+orientalists, at least seven centuries before Christ, the few historical
+facts which are mentioned so enveloped in legends, so encumbered with the
+grossest exaggerations, that it requires assiduous scholarship to extract
+a scintilla of truth from their relations.</p>
+
+<p>Our distinguished countrymen, Sir William Jones and Mr. Colebrooke, led
+the way in applying the resources of European learning to the elucidation
+of the Sanscrit texts. And the happy identification, by the former, of the
+celebrated Chandragupta of the Hindus with the monarch of Pataliputra,
+Sandracottus, at whose court Megasthenes resided for seven years in the
+third century before Christ, laid the first firm foundation for authentic
+Indian history. Since that period the researches of oriental scholars
+following up the lines laid down by their illustrious predecessors; the
+rock inscriptions which have been collected from various parts of India,
+the coins, extending over many ages, of different native dynasties&mdash;all
+these compared together enable a student even as sceptical as Sir George
+Lewis to form a more favourable idea of the Hindus in their political
+capacity than he was disposed to take.</p>
+
+<p>Early European inquirers into Hindu antiquity, with the natural prejudice
+in favour of their studies in a hitherto unknown tongue, were disposed to
+lend far too credulous an ear to the gross exaggerations and reckless
+inaccuracies of the "M&aacute;habh&aacute;rat" and kindred works. James Mill on the
+other hand, who was a Positivist before Auguste Comte had begun to write,
+rejected with scorn all the allusions to the past in these ancient writers
+as entirely fabulous. Careful scholarship, however, working on the
+materials of the past which every day's discoveries are increasing,
+demonstrates that much true history is to be gathered from the works of
+the Sanscrit writers.</p>
+
+<p>The celebrated granite rock of Girnar<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> in the peninsula of Guzerat
+presents in itself an authentic record of three distinct dynasties
+separated from one another by centuries. And we owe to what may be justly
+called the genius of James Prinsep the decipherment of those inscriptions
+of Asoka which have brought to the knowledge of Europe a Hindu monarch of
+the third century before our era, who, whilst he has been equalled by few
+in the extent of his dominions, may claim superiority over nearly every
+king that ever lived, from his tender-hearted regard for the interests of
+his people, and from the wide principles of toleration which he
+inculcated.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Horace Wilson, who may be safely cited as the most calm and judicious
+oriental scholar of our times, asserts that there is nothing to shock
+probability in supposing that the Hindu dynasties, of whom we trace
+vestiges, were spread through twelve centuries anterior to the war of the
+M&aacute;habh&aacute;rat.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> This leads us back to dates about 2600 years <span class="smcap">b.c.</span> We have,
+therefore, the astounding period of over four thousand years during which
+to glean facts relating to the Hindu race and their capacity for
+government, such as may form foundation for conclusions as to the future.
+The characteristics which have most impressed themselves on my mind after
+such study of Indian records as I have been able to bestow are, first, the
+very early appearance of solicitude for the interest and welfare of the
+people, as exhibited by Hindu rulers, such as has rarely or never been
+exhibited in the early histories of other nations; secondly, the
+successful efforts of the Hindu race to re-establish themselves in power
+on the least appearance of decay in the successive foreign dynasties which
+have held rule among them. It is only with the latter phenomenon that I
+propose now to deal, and a rapid retrospect may be permitted.</p>
+
+<p>We learn from European records that Cyrus made conquests in India in the
+sixth century <span class="smcap">b.c.</span>, and the famous inscription of his successor Darius
+includes Sind and the modern Afghanistan amongst his possessions. But when
+Alexander entered India two centuries later he found no trace of Persian
+sway, but powerful Indian princes. Taxiles, Abisares, and the celebrated
+Porus ruled over large kingdoms in the Panj&aacute;b. The latter monarch, whose
+family name Paura is recorded in the M&aacute;habh&aacute;rat, is described by the Greek
+writers to have ruled over 300 cities, and he brought into the field
+against Alexander more than 2,000 elephants, 400 chariots, 4,000 cavalry,
+and 50,000 foot. Against this force Alexander was only able to bring
+16,000 foot and 5,000 horse; but the bulk of the troops were Macedonians,
+and the leader was the greatest general whom the world has seen. We have
+full particulars of the celebrated battle which ensued, and which ended in
+the complete discomfiture of Porus. The conduct of this Indian king,
+however, in the battle extorted the admiration of the Greek historians. He
+received nine wounds during the engagement, and was the last to leave the
+field, affording, as Arrian remarks, a noble contrast to Darius the
+Second, who was the first to fly amongst his host in his similar conflict
+with the Greeks. Alexander, as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span> in the Macedonian conquests generally,
+left satraps in possession of his Indian acquisitions. But a very few
+years ensued before we find a native of India had raised up a mighty
+kingdom, and all trace of Greek rule in the Punjab disappears.
+Chandragupta, or Sandracottus, is said by a Greek writer to have seen
+Alexander in person on the Hydaspes. Justin relates that it was he who
+raised the standard of independence before his fellow-countrymen, and
+successfully drove out Alexander's satraps. He founded the Maurya dynasty,
+and the vast extent of the kingdom ruled over by his grandson Asoka is
+testified by the edicts which the latter caused to be engraved in various
+parts of his dominions. They also record the remarkable fact of his close
+alliance with the Greek rulers of Syria, Egypt, Macedon, Cyrene and
+Epirus. We next find that one of the Greek princes who had established an
+independent dynasty in Bactria, Euthydemus, invaded India, and made
+several conquests, but he also was met in the field and overcome by
+Galoka, son of Asoka, who for some time added Cashmir to his possessions.
+The Bactrian dynasty was put an end to by Mithridates, 140 <span class="smcap">b.c.</span>, and
+consequently the Greeks were driven eastwards, and they planted themselves
+in various parts of India. We find clear traces of them in Guzerat, where
+the town of Junaghur (Javanaghur) still records the name of the Greeks who
+founded the city. The coins and inscriptions of the Sinha rulers of
+Guzerat furnish us with some particulars as to the Greek holdings at this
+period, and they seem to have extended from the Jumna on the east to
+Guzerat and Kutch on the west. The Macedonians seem here, as elsewhere, to
+have placed natives at the head of their district administrations, and the
+Sinha rulers call themselves Satraps and M&aacute;ha Rajahs, and use Greek
+legends on their coins, but evidently they soon acquired complete
+independence. Simultaneously or nearly so with these Indo-Greek
+principalities, we find invasions of India by the race commonly called
+Scythians, but more accurately Jutchi, Sac&aelig;, and White Huns. These also
+formed independent kingdoms. But again native leaders of enterprise arose
+who put an end to foreign dominion. Vikramadit, who founded an era 57
+<span class="smcap">b.c.</span>, and whose exploits have made a deep impression upon the native mind,
+is thought to be one of the Hindu leaders who succeeded in expelling a
+foreign dynasty. And it would appear that towards the middle of the third
+century after Christ all foreign dominion had disappeared from the soil of
+India, except perhaps some small settlements of Jutchi, on the banks of
+the Indus; and except the temporary conquest of Sind by the Arabs in the
+seventh century, from which they were soon expelled by the Sumea
+Rajputs<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>. Thus, during a period of 600 years, we have encountered a
+series of invasions and conquests of portions of India by foreign rulers,
+but all successively driven out by the energy of native leaders. Thereupon
+followed the establishment of native dynasties all over India. It was
+chiefly during the 700 years that now ensued, up to the invasion of India
+by Mahmud of Ghazni, that the great works of Sanscrit literature<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> in
+poetry, grammar, algebra, and astronomy, appeared. During this period also
+the Rajputs, who have been well called the Normans of the East, seem to
+have found their way to nearly every throne in India. Their acquisition of
+power has never been fully traced, and probably the materials are wanting
+for any full or accurate account of it; but the subject is well worthy the
+attention of an Indian student.</p>
+
+<p>The Mahomedan conquests which, with the fanaticism and savage intolerance
+introduced by them, commenced <span class="smcap">a.d.</span> 1001, seem to have exercised most
+depressing effects on the Hindu mind. But here again we meet with the same
+phenomenon. So soon as the Mussulman rule becomes enfeebled, a native
+chief rises up who is enabled to rally his countrymen around him and form
+a dynasty. Sivaji in 1660-80 established an independency which his
+successors, as mayors of the palace, enlarged into a kingdom, out of which
+arose the native powers of Sindia, of the Gaekwar, and of the Bhonslas of
+Berar. Exactly the same occurrence has been witnessed in the present
+century by the success of Ranjit Sing in forming an independent
+principality in the Panj&aacute;b. This remarkable man, who was absolutely
+illiterate, by his own energy of character raised himself from the head of
+a small Sikh clan to the head of a kingdom with a revenue of two and a
+half millions sterling.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> We may be sure that, if the British had not
+been in force, natives of soldierly qualities like Jung Bah&aacute;dar of Nepal,
+or Tantia Topi of the mutinies, would have carved out in the present day
+kingdoms for themselves in other parts of India.</p>
+
+
+<h3>II.</h3>
+
+<p>It may be thought that in the preceding sketch I have been aiming at the
+conclusion that British dominion is in danger of extinction either by
+foreign invasion or internal insurrection. Nothing is more foreign from my
+views. I firmly believe that British rule in the East was never so strong,
+never so able to protect itself against all attacks from without or from
+within, as at the present moment. In a foreign dominion such as ours,
+where unforeseen contingencies may any day arise, and where a considerable
+amount of disaffection must always exist, constant watchfulness on the
+part of Government is no doubt required; but this position is thoroughly
+recognised by all statesmen who occupy themselves with Indian affairs. I
+do not for a moment delude myself with the idea that we have succeeded in
+gaining the affections of the natives. No foreign rulers who have kept
+themselves apart as a separate caste from the conquered nation have
+succeeded in accomplishing this feat. There is something of
+incompatibility between the European and Asiatic, which seems to forbid
+easy amalgamation. Lord Stowell, in one of his fine judgments, has pointed
+out the constant tendency of Europeans in the East to form themselves into
+separate communities, and to abstain from all social intercourse with the
+natives around them, and he illustrates his position with the happy
+quotation&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Scyllis amara suam non intermiscuit undam.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p><p>The English perhaps are distinguishable among all European nations by the
+deep-rooted notions of self-superiority which their insular position and
+great success in history have engendered. The southern races of Europe,
+the Spanish and Portuguese, have shown no reluctance to intermix freely
+with the native races of America, India, and the Philippines, such as has
+always been exhibited by inhabitants of the British Isles when expatriated
+to the East or West. But where race, color, religion, prejudice intervene
+to prevent social intercourse between the English in India and the
+natives, what a wide gulf is placed between them!</p>
+
+<p>In justice, however, it must be stated that, although the haughtiness of
+demeanour and occasional brutality in manners which the <i>aristocratie de
+peau</i> sometimes engenders in our countrymen are much to be deprecated, the
+estrangement which exists in India between the English and the natives is
+not wholly, nor even principally, attributable to the former. A Hindu of
+very humble caste would think himself polluted if he sat down to dinner
+with the European governor of his Presidency. In this instance, as in so
+many others, Hindu opinions have permeated the whole native community; and
+other races transplanted to India, such as Mahomedans and Parsis, are
+equally exclusive in their social life. When I was in Bombay I made an
+attempt to break through the barrier which the latter caste had
+voluntarily erected for themselves. Sir Jamshedji Jijibhai, an able,
+self-raised man, was then the acknowledged head of the Parsi community,
+and was distinguished for his benevolence and enlightened views. I
+endeavored to persuade him to set his countrymen an example, and to come
+to a dinner at which I would assemble the chief authorities of the island;
+and I proposed to him as an inducement that he should send his own cook,
+who should prepare for him his wonted fare. But the step was too startling
+a one for him, though I was glad to find that his son, the second baronet,
+was able to get over his prejudices on his visit, some years after, to
+London. A ludicrous example of the same exclusive feeling has been related
+in connection with a Governor-General. His lordship, desirous to break
+down any notion of social inferiority on the part of a distinguished
+native who was paying him a visit, placed his arm round his neck as they
+walked up and down a verandah engaged in familiar conversation. The
+high-bred Oriental made no sign, but as soon as he could extricate himself
+from the embraces of his Excellency, he hastened home to wash away the
+contamination of a Mlecha's touch.</p>
+
+<p>It may also be observed that the mutual repugnance of the two races to
+such close social intercourse as intermarriage, for example, would
+produce, gives rise to two excellent results. First, there is every reason
+to suppose, judging by what we see of the native Portuguese in India, that
+the English and Hindu would make, in the language of breeders, a very bad
+cross; and it is therefore satisfactory to find that English rulers in
+India, unlike the Normans in England, or the Moguls in India, have never
+intermarried with the natives of the country. The second result is closely
+connected with the first. What has led to the downfall<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span> of previous
+foreign dynasties has been that the invaders of the country had become
+effeminate by their long possession of power, and had lost the original
+energy and vigour which had enabled their predecessors to gain a throne.
+The constant recruitment of English rulers from their fatherland wholly
+prevents this cause of internal decay from making its appearance among the
+British.</p>
+
+<p>It is not, then, by our hold on the affections of the people that we
+maintain our dominion in India. The strength and probable endurance of our
+rule are based on our real power, on our endeavours to do justice, on our
+toleration. The memory of the excesses committed under Mussulman rule has
+probably become dim with the great bulk of the people, but it is very
+vivid among educated Hindus. A strong conviction prevails among them that
+if British rule were to disappear in India, the same rise of military
+adventurers, the same struggles for power, and the same anarchy as
+prevailed during the first half of the last century would again appear.
+The latest expression of Hindu opinion on this subject which I have met
+with is contained in a pamphlet published in the present year by Mr.
+Dadoba Pandurang.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> He is an aged scholar, and though not a Brahmin, well
+versed in the Vedas, but, above all, he is distinguished by his devout
+views and by his desire to elevate and improve his fellow-countrymen. He
+writes:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>If there is a manifestation of the hand of God in history,
+as I undoubtedly believe there is, nothing to my imagination
+appears more vivid and replete with momentous events
+calculated for the mutual welfare and good of both countries
+than this political union of so large, important, rich, and
+interesting a country as Hind in the further south-east with
+a small but wisely governed island of Great Britain in the
+further north-west.... Let us see what England has done to
+India. England, besides governing India politically, has now
+very wisely commenced the important duty of educating the
+millions of her Indian children, and of bringing them up to
+the standard of enlightenment and high civilization which
+her own have obtained. She has already eradicated, I should
+add here, to the great joy of Heaven, several of the most
+barbarous and inhuman practices, such as Sutti,<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
+infanticide, Charak Puja,<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> and what not, which had for
+ages been prevalent among a large portion of the children of
+this her new acquisition. These practices, which had so long
+existed at the dictation of an indigenous priesthood, except
+for the powerful interference of England could not have been
+abolished.</p></div>
+
+<p>Opinions like these, I am persuaded, prevail throughout the educated
+community, and the presence of British rule amongst them is recognised as
+indispensable in the present state of Hindu society.</p>
+
+
+<h3>III.</h3>
+
+<p>With respect to a successful invasion of India, it must be confessed that
+the English mind has always been keenly susceptible of alarm. The wide
+plains of Hisdustan, which offer so ready an access to aggressive armies,
+the absence of fortified places, and the frequency with which India has
+been won and lost in a single pitched battle, all tend to encourage the
+belief that some day or other British domination will be in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> danger from
+some incursion of this sort. It may be observed that for nearly a century
+past the English nation has been subjected to periodic fits of Indian
+panic. Sir John Kaye, in his "History of the Afghan War," states that in
+1797 the whole of India was kept "in a chronic state of unrest" from the
+fears of an Afghan descent upon the plains of Hindustan. In 1800 the
+Emperor Paul of Russia and Napoleon conceived "a mad and impracticable
+scheme of invasion," which greatly increased local alarm. In 1809 these
+fears assumed even larger proportions when an alliance between Napoleon
+and Persia was on foot with a view to the proposed invasion; and the
+mission to Persia under Sir John Malcolm was inaugurated. In 1838 Russia
+took the place which Zeman Shah, Persia, and Napoleon had previously
+occupied, and the disastrous invasion of Afghanistan was commenced by Lord
+Auckland from his mountain retreat at Simla.</p>
+
+<p>Since that period the suspicions of the nation have been continually
+directed against Russia by a small but able party, who, from their chiefly
+belonging to the Presidency of Bombay, have been termed the Bombay school.
+The late General John Jacob was the originator of the anti-Russian policy
+inculcated by them. He was a man of great ability and original views, and,
+if he had moved in a wider sphere, he might have left a name equal to that
+of the most illustrious of his countrymen in India. But he passed the
+greater part of his life on the barren wastes of Sind, and rarely came in
+contact with superior minds. In 1856 General Jacob addressed a singularly
+able paper to Lord Canning, then Governor-General, and which Sir Lewis
+Pelly afterwards published to the world.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> This was just at the close of
+the Crimean War, when England was about to undertake an expedition against
+Persia to repel her aggression on Her&aacute;t. It was Jacob's firm conviction
+that, unless India interposed, Russia, having Persia completely under her
+control, could, whenever she pleased, take possession not only of Her&aacute;t,
+but of Candahar, and thus find an entrance to the plains of India, on
+which our dominion was to disappear. To thwart this contingency, and
+render the approach of a European army towards our frontier impossible, he
+would, as an ultimate measure, garrison Her&aacute;t with twenty thousand troops,
+but in the first instance would occupy Quetta. These proposals were
+carefully considered by Lord Canning's Government, but were rejected.</p>
+
+<p>The same arguments were brought forward eleven years later by Sir Bartle
+Frere, whilst Governor of Bombay, and were laid before the Government of
+India. That Government was then remarkably strong, consisting of Lord
+Lawrence, Sir William Mansfield (Lord Sandhurst), Sir Henry Maine, Mr.
+Massey, and Major-General Sir Henry Durand; but the proposals to improve
+our frontier by extending our dominions westward, and by the annexation of
+independent foreign territory, were unanimously disapproved of.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>About the same time that Sir Bartle Frere was endeavouring to stimulate
+the Government of India to occupy Quetta, my distinguished colleague and
+friend, Sir Henry Rawlinson, published two articles in the "Quarterly
+Review,"<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> in which he called the attention of the public to the rapidly
+increasing extension of the Russian dominions in the direction of our
+Indian frontier, and to the necessity of maintaining outworks such as
+Her&aacute;t and Candahar for the protection of our Eastern Empire. But he raised
+the question in a more solemn form in the confidential memorandum which he
+transmitted to the Government of India in 1868, and which he afterwards
+published in 1875,<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> with additional matter, forming a complete
+conspectus of the aggressive policy to be adopted to guard against a
+Russian invasion. The views of the Government of India on these papers
+have not, I believe, been given to the world, but it is well known in
+Indian circles that the masterly activity therein advocated did not find
+acceptance.</p>
+
+<p>At the present moment Russophobia is raging to a greater extent than at
+any previous period; but this is ground on which for the present I am
+precluded from entering. It is gratifying to observe, however, that in the
+great conflict of opinion which, as it will be seen, has thus been raging
+for the last forty years, as to the best method of protecting our
+north-western frontier from an invading foe, both schools have ultimately
+agreed on one conclusion, namely, that a successful invasion of India by
+Russia is in nowise probable. The one side would avert any possibility of
+an attack by the occupation of Afghanistan, the Suleiman mountains, and
+probably the Hindu Kush; the other would husband the resources of India,
+and not waste blood and treasure in anticipation of a conflict that may
+possibly never occur, and that certainly never will occur without years of
+warning to the nation.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot pursue this interesting question further at a moment when the
+whole question of our policy on the Indian frontier is ripening for
+discussion, and when the materials on which a sound conclusion can be
+drawn are not yet laid before the public. It is sufficient for my present
+purpose to repeat that the probability of British dominion in the East
+being terminated by a Russian invasion is rejected on all sides.</p>
+
+
+<h3>IV.</h3>
+
+<p>If the views which have been now put forward are at all sound, we may
+perhaps conclude that whilst our Indian empire requires on the part of its
+rulers the utmost watchfulness to guard against dangers and contingencies
+which may at any moment arise, yet that with ordinarily wise government we
+may look forward to a period of indefinitely long duration during which
+British dominion may flourish. That sooner or later the links which
+connect England with India will be severed, all history teaches us to
+expect; but when that severance occurs, if the growing spirit of
+philantrophy and increasing sense of national morality<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span> which characterise
+the nineteenth century continue, we may fairly hope that the Englishman
+will have taught the Hindus how to govern themselves. It is England's
+task, as heretofore, "to teach other nations how to live." A very long
+period, however, is required before the lesson can be fully learned, and
+the holders of Indian securities need not fear that the reversionary
+interests of their grandchildren will be endangered. Our rule in India
+dates back little more than a century; and although from the first a wise
+spirit of toleration and an eminent desire to do justice have prevailed,
+it is only within the last thirty or forty years that any serious attempts
+to elevate the character of the nation have been manifested.</p>
+
+<p>The educational movement, which is silently producing prodigious changes
+in India, received its first impulse from England, and the clause in the
+Act of Parliament<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> which recognised the duty of educating the masses,
+enabled men like Lord Macaulay, Sir Edward Ryan, and others, to lay the
+foundations of a system which has since established itself far and wide.
+But the Court of Directors never took heartily to this great innovation of
+modern times, and it was only under the direction of English statesmanship
+that the Indian authorities were induced to act with vigour in this
+momentous undertaking. Sir Charles Wood's celebrated minute on education,
+in 1858, laid the foundation of a national system of education, and the
+principles then inculcated have never since been departed from. Some
+generations will require to pass before the Oriental mind is enabled to
+substitute the accurate forms of European thought for the loose
+speculations that have prevailed through long centuries. But already happy
+results are appearing, and in connection with the subject of this article
+it may be noticed as a most hopeful sign of the future that our English
+schools are turning out native statesmen by whom all our best methods of
+government are being introduced into the dominions of native princes.</p>
+
+<p>The administration reports of some of these gentlemen may vie with those
+of our best English officers; and the names of Sir Dinkar Rao, Sir Madava
+Rao, Sir Salar Jung, and others, give full indication that among the
+natives of India may be found men eminently qualified for the task of
+government. Wittingly or unwittingly, English officials in India are
+preparing materials which some day or other will form the groundwork for a
+native empire or empires. I was thrown closely into contact with the Civil
+Service whilst I was in India, for I employed all my vacations in
+travelling through the country, mostly at a foot's pace. Everywhere I went
+I found a cultivated English gentleman exerting himself to the best of his
+ability to extend the blessings of civilisation&mdash;justice, education, the
+development of all local resources. I firmly believe that no government in
+the world has ever possessed a body of administrators to vie with the
+Civil Service of India. Nor do I speak only of the service as it existed
+under the East India Company, for, from all<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span> that I have heard and
+observed, competition supplies quite as good servants of the State as did
+in earlier days the patronage of the Court of Directors. The truth is,
+that the excellence of the result has been attributable in nowise to the
+mode of selection, but to the local circumstances which call forth in
+either case, in the young Englishman of decent education and of the moral
+tone belonging to the middle classes of this country, the best qualities
+of his nature. But in these energetic, high-principled, and able
+administrators we have a danger to good government which it is necessary
+to point out. Every Englishman in office in India has great power, and
+every Englishman, as the late Lord Lytton once observed to me, is in heart
+a reformer. His native energy will not enable him to sit still with his
+hands before him. He must be improving something. The tendency of the
+English official in India is to over-reform, to introduce what he may deem
+improvements, but which turn out egregious failures, and this, be it
+observed, amongst the most conservative people of the world. Some of the
+most carefully devised schemes for native improvement have culminated in
+native deterioration. A remarkable illustration of this position is
+afforded by the late inquiry into the causes of the riots among the
+cultivators of the Deccan. It has been one of the pretensions of British
+administration that they have instituted for the first time in India pure
+and impartial courts of justice. And the boast is well founded. In the
+Presidency of Bombay also the Government has substituted long leases of
+thirty years on what may be called Crown Lands for the yearly holdings
+formerly in vogue. They have also greatly moderated the assessment. The
+result has been that land in the Bombay Presidency from being unsaleable
+has acquired a value of from ten to twenty years' purchase. But the effect
+of these two measures upon the holders of these lands has been disastrous.
+Finding themselves possessed of property on which they could raise money
+with facility, they have indulged this national propensity out of all
+proportion to their means; and the money-lenders in their turn drag the
+improvident borrowers before a court of justice, and obtain decrees upon
+the indisputable terms of the contract, which no judge feels competent to
+disregard.</p>
+
+<p>Another danger of the same sort arises from the short term of office which
+is allowed to officials in the highest places in India. When the
+Portuguese had large dominions in India, they found that their Viceroys,
+if permitted to remain a long time in the East, became insubordinate, and
+too powerful for the Government at Lisbon to control. They accordingly
+passed a law limiting the tenure of office to five years. This limitation
+seems to have been adopted tacitly in our Eastern administrative system,
+and has undoubtedly been observed for more than a century. But the period
+of five years is very short to enable either a Governor-General, or
+Governor, or member of Council to leave his mark on the country; and there
+is a temptation to attempt something dazzling which would require for its
+proper fulfilment years to elaborate, but which, if not passed at the
+moment, would fail to illustrate the era.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It is needless to observe that a series of ill-considered changes, a
+constant succession of new laws to be followed by amended laws in the next
+session, attempts to change manners and practices (not immoral in
+themselves) that have prevailed for centuries, all tend to make a
+government, especially a foreign government, odious. But there is one
+other rock which it is above all essential to avoid when we are
+considering the problem how best to preserve the duration of British
+government for the benefit of India. Every ardent administrator desires
+improvements in his own department; roads, railways, canals, irrigation,
+improved courts of justice, more efficient police, all find earnest
+advocates in the high places of government. But improved administration is
+always costly, and requires additional taxation. I fear that those in
+authority too often forget that the wisest rulers of a despotic government
+have always abstained from laying fresh burdens on the people. It is, in
+fact, the chief merit of such a government that the taxes are ordinarily
+light, and are such as are familiarised by old usage. New taxes imposed
+without the will, or any appeal to the judgment, of the people create the
+most dangerous kind of disaffection. But if this is true generally, it is
+especially true in India, where the population is extremely poor, and
+where hitherto the financier has not been enabled to make the rich
+contribute their due quota to the revenue of the country.</p>
+
+<p>It has been said by some that we have not yet reached the limits of
+taxation in India, but to them I would oppose the memorable saying of Lord
+Mayo towards the close of his career. "A feeling of discontent and
+dissatisfaction existed," in his opinion, "among every class, both
+European and native, on account of the constant increase of taxation that
+had for years been going on;" and he added: "The continuance of that
+feeling was a political danger, the magnitude of which could hardly be
+over-estimated." The Earl of Northbrook quoted and fully endorsed this
+opinion in his examination before the House of Commons in the present
+year.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
+
+<p>But although this constant aim at improvement among our English
+administrators too often leads to irritating changes, harassing
+legislation, and new fiscal charges on the people, causes are at work
+which tend to eliminate these obstacles to good and stable government. In
+our experimental application of remedies to evils patent on the surface,
+our blunders have chiefly arisen from our ignorance of the people.
+Institutions that had been seen to work well in Europe might, it was
+thought, be transplanted safely to India. Experience alone could teach
+that this is often a grievous error; but experience is being daily
+afforded by our prolonged rule, and by our increasing acquaintance with
+the habits, wants, and feelings of the people. The tendency also to change
+and improvement, which I have before observed upon as leading to
+ill-considered measures, operates here beneficially, for there is never
+any hesitation in a local government to reverse the proceedings of its
+predecessors when found to work injuriously for the community.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But the most cheering symptom of future good government in India is the
+increased disposition of British rulers to associate natives of character
+and ability with themselves in high offices of administration. Parliament
+so long ago as 1833 laid down the principle that no native shall by reason
+of his religion, place of birth, or colour, be disabled from holding any
+office. Her gracious Majesty also in 1858 proclaimed her will "that so far
+as may be, our subjects, of whatever race or creed, be impartially
+admitted to offices in our service, the duties of which they may be
+qualified by their education, ability, and integrity duly to discharge."</p>
+
+<p>Many obstacles have hitherto prevailed, chiefly arising out of the vested
+interests of a close Civil Service, to prevent full operation being given
+to a policy so solemnly laid down. But it is no breach of official
+propriety to announce that Lord Cranbrook has earnestly taken up the
+proposals of the present Viceroy to clear away the difficulties which have
+hitherto intervened, and has sent out a despatch to India which it may be
+fairly anticipated will meet the aspirations of educated natives, and will
+greatly strengthen the foundations of British government in the East.</p>
+
+<p>It will thus be seen that several factors are at work which cannot fail,
+under the continued rule of the British Government, to have most
+beneficial effects on the national character of India. A system of
+education is being established which is opening a door for the
+introduction of all the knowledge accumulated in Europe, and which sooner
+or later must greatly dissipate that ignorance which is at the bottom of
+so many obstacles to good government in the East. Equality before the law
+and the supremacy of law have been fully brought home to the cognisance of
+every inhabitant of India, and they form a striking contrast, fully
+appreciated by the Hindus, to the arbitrary decisions and the race
+prerogatives which characterised their former Mahomedan rulers. Continuous
+efforts at improvement are witnessed in every zillah of India, and if they
+sometimes fail in their operation it is still patent that the permanent
+welfare of the people is the constant aim and object of Government.
+Moreover, the ready ear tendered to any expression of a grievance, the
+minute subjection of every act of authority in India, from the deputy
+magistrate up to the Governor-General, to the scrutiny of the Home
+Government, secure to the meanest inhabitant of India a hearing, and
+inspire the consciousness that he also is a member of the State, and that
+his rights and interests are fully recognised. The association of natives
+with ourselves in the task of government, which has been commenced in the
+lower branches of the judicial administration with the greatest success,
+and which is now about to be attempted on a larger scale, as I have before
+noted, is also a fact of the greatest gravity. On the whole, after very
+close attention to Indian administration for nearly forty years, of which
+about twelve were spent in the country itself in a position where I was
+enabled to take an impartial view of what was going on around me, I am of
+opinion that a bright future presents itself, and, if<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> I could see my way
+more clearly on the very important questions of caste and of the future
+religion of India, I should say a brilliant future, in which perhaps for
+centuries to come the supremacy of England will produce the happiest
+results in India.</p>
+
+
+<h3>V.</h3>
+
+<p>But I must not close this article without reference to the very different
+views which have been lately put forth in this Review under the
+sensational title of the "Bankruptcy of India." Mr. Hyndman, after much
+study of Indian statistics, has arrived at the conclusion that "India has
+been frightfully impoverished under our rule, and that the process is
+going on now at an increasingly rapid rate." The revenue raised by
+taxation is about 36,000,000<i>l.</i>, and "is taken absolutely out of the
+pockets of the people," three-fourths of whom are engaged in agriculture.
+The increase of 12,000,000<i>l.</i> in the revenue which has occurred between
+1857 and 1876 "comes almost entirely out of the pockets of the
+cultivators," and "the greater part of the increase of the salt, stamps,
+and excise is derived from the same source." The cost of maintaining a
+prisoner in the cheapest part of India is 56<i>s.</i> a head, or, making
+allowance for children, 46<i>s.</i>; but the poor cultivator has only 31<i>s.</i>
+6<i>d.</i>, from which he must also defray the charges "for sustenance of
+bullocks, the cost of clothing, repairs to implements, house, &amp;c., and
+<i>for taxation</i>."</p>
+
+<p>He states the debt of India to be "enormous," amounting to 220,000,000<i>l.</i>
+sterling, principally accumulated in the last few years. The railways have
+been constructed at ruinous cost, for which the "unfortunate ryot has had
+to borrow an additional five or ten or twenty rupees of the native
+money-lender at 24, 40, 60 per cent., in order to pay extra taxation."
+Irrigation works "tell nearly the same sad tale. Here again millions have
+been squandered&mdash;squandered needlessly." Moreover, the land is fast
+becoming deteriorated or is being worse cultivated. In short, through a
+long indictment of twenty-three pages, of which I omit many counts, he
+cannot find a single act of British administration that meets his
+approval. All is naught. It is true that the Civil Service of India is
+composed of men who have gained their posts by means of the best education
+that England can supply, and who from an early period of manhood have
+devoted their lives to the practical solution of the many difficult
+problems which Indian administration presents. But Mr. Hyndman finds fault
+with them all.</p>
+
+<p>The article itself is couched in such an evident spirit of philanthropy
+that one feels unwilling to notice pointedly the blunders, the
+exaggerations, and the inaccuracies into which the writer has fallen. But
+Mr. Hyndman has entered the lists so gallantly with a challenge to all the
+Anglo-Indian world, that he of course expects to encounter some hard
+knocks, writing, as he does, on a subject with which he has no practical
+acquaintance. He has already received "a swashing blow" respecting the
+agricultural statistics on which he bases the whole of his argument. On
+data supplied to him by an able native writer, whom I know intimately and
+for whom I have the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> highest respect, he has drawn conclusions which are
+so manifestly absurd, that all practically acquainted with the subject are
+tempted to throw aside his article as mere rubbish. But Mr. D&aacute;dobhai, like
+himself, has no knowledge of the rural life of India, or of agriculture
+generally, or of the practical business of administration. He is a man who
+has passed his whole life in cities, an excellent mathematician, of
+unwearied industry, and distinguished, even among his countrymen, for his
+patriotic endeavours to improve their condition. But the mere study of
+books and of figures&mdash;especially of the imperfect ones which hitherto have
+characterised the agricultural statistics of India&mdash;is not sufficient to
+constitute a great administrator; and when Mr. D&aacute;dobhai, after making
+himself prominent by useful work in the municipality of Bombay, was
+selected to fill the high office of Prime Minister to the Gaekwar of
+Baroda, he was not deemed by his countrymen to have displayed any great
+aptitude in statesmanship.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a></p>
+
+<p>The alarming picture drawn by Mr. Hyndman on data thus supplied attracted
+the attention of the greatest authority in England on agricultural
+matters; for intrinsic evidence clearly shows that the letters signed
+"C.," which appeared in the <i>Times</i> of the 5th of October and the 9th of
+October, can proceed from no other than Mr. Caird. His refutation of Mr.
+Hyndman's pessimist views is so short, that I give the pith of it here:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The conclusions arrived at are so startling that though,
+like Mr. Hyndman, I have never been in India, I, as an
+alarmed Englishman, have tried to test the strength of the
+basis upon which they rest. The only <i>data</i> I have at hand
+are taken from the figures in the last year's report of the
+Punjab. The number of cultivated acres there agrees with
+those quoted by Mr. Hyndman&mdash;say 21,000,000 acres&mdash;and I
+adopt his average value of 1<i>l.</i> 14<i>s.</i> per acre.</p>
+
+<p>The Government assessment is 1,905,000<i>l.</i>, to pay which
+one-sixth of the wheat crop [the produce of 1,120,000] would
+have to be sold and exported. There would remain for
+consumption in the country the produce of 5,500,000 acres of
+wheat and of 12,000,000 acres of other grain, the two
+sufficing to yield for a year 2 lb. per head per day for the
+population of 17,000,000, which is more than double the
+weight of corn eaten by the people of this country. Besides
+this, they would have for consumption their garden
+vegetables and milk; and beyond it the money value of
+845,000 acres of oil-seed, 720,000 acres of cotton and hemp,
+391,000 acres of sugar-cane, 120,000 acres of indigo, 69,000
+acres of tobacco, 88,000 acres of spices, drugs, and dyes,
+19,000 acres of poppy, and 8,800 acres of tea; the aggregate
+value of which, without touching the corn, would leave
+nearly twice the Government assessment.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hyndman has committed the error of arguing from an
+English money value at the place of production upon articles
+of consumption, the true value of which is their
+food-sustaining power to the people who consume them.</p></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span></p><p>When an argument is thus found so completely <i>pecher par sa base</i>, it is
+needless to pursue it further. But I conceive that Mr. Hyndman, when
+studying this overwhelming refutation, must feel somewhat
+conscience-stricken when he reperuses such sentences of his own as the
+following:&mdash;"In India at this time, millions of the ryots are growing
+wheat, cotton, seeds, and other exhausting crops, and send them away
+because these alone will enable them to pay their way at all. They are
+themselves, nevertheless, eating less and less of worse food each year, in
+spite, or rather by reason, of the increasing exports." Thus a farmer is
+damaged by finding new markets for his produce! And he sells his wheat,
+which is the main produce of his arable land in those parts of India where
+it flourishes, to buy some cheaper grain which his land does not grow! The
+youngest assistant in a collector's establishment could inform Mr. Hyndman
+that the food of the agricultural population of India consists of the
+staple most suitable to the soil of the district: in the Punjab wheat, in
+Bengal and all well-watered lowlands rice, on the tablelands of the Deccan
+jow&aacute;ri (<i>holcus sorghum</i>) and b&aacute;jri (<i>panicum spicatum</i>), on the more
+sterile plateau of Southern India the inferior grain r&aacute;gi (<i>eiuesyne
+coracauna</i>).</p>
+
+<p>It must have been under the dominion of the idea produced by Mr.
+D&aacute;dobhai's statistics as to the thoroughly wretched state of the
+agricultural population of India that Mr. Hyndman has been led into
+exaggerated statements which his own article shows he knew to be
+inaccurate. A dreadful case of misgovernment existed in India, and,
+thoroughly to arouse his countrymen to the fact, it was necessary to pile
+up the agony. Thus, in one part of his article he states that the
+"enormous debt" of India amounts to 220,000,000<i>l.</i>, but in a later
+portion he admits that it is only 127,000,000<i>l.</i>, and he knows full well
+that the amount of 100,000,000<i>l.</i> of guaranteed railway debt is not only
+not a present debt due from Government, but is a very valuable property,
+which will probably bring in some millions of revenue when they exercise
+their right of buying up the interests of the several guaranteed
+companies.</p>
+
+<p>Again, he speaks throughout his article of the excessive taxation imposed
+on the poor, half-starved cultivators; and he gives the following table as
+showing the amount "taken absolutely out of the pockets of the people:"&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='left'>Land revenue</td><td align='right'>&pound;21,500,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Excise</td><td align='right'>2,500,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Salt</td><td align='right'>6,240,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Stamps</td><td align='right'>2,830,000</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Customs</td><td align='right'>2,720,000</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>He thus maintains that the portion of the rent paid to Government for
+occupation of the land is a tax upon the cultivator, which is about as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+true as to state that the 67,000,000<i>l.</i> of rental in the United Kingdom
+is a special tax on the farmers of this country. The amount derived from
+excise is chiefly produced by the sale of intoxicating liquors, the use of
+which is forbidden by the social and religious views of the natives; and
+any contribution to the revenue under this head is clearly a voluntary act
+on the part of the transgressor. The revenue from stamps proceeds chiefly
+from what may be called taxes on justice; they are, in my opinion,
+extremely objectionable, but weighty objections may be urged against
+nearly every tax, and a large portion of this tax falls on the wealthier
+class of suitors. The amount contributed by the population under the head
+of customs, although it may take money out of the pocket of the rayat,
+actually adds to his store; for, unless he could buy in the bazaar a piece
+of Manchester long-cloth cheaper than an article of domestic manufacture,
+it is manifest that he would select the latter. There remains only the
+single article of salt on which the cultivator undoubtedly is taxed, and
+which forms the sole tax from which he cannot escape. This tax also is
+extremely objectionable in theory, more perhaps than in practice, for it
+amounts to about 7-1/2<i>d.</i> per head. But even if we take the whole amount
+of taxation as shown by Mr. Hyndman, excluding the land revenue or rental
+of the land, the average per head is only 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, of which more than
+one-third can be avoided at the pleasure of any individual consumer. It is
+not, then, a misstatement to aver that the population of India is more
+lightly taxed than any population in the world living under an orderly
+government.</p>
+
+<p>I have thus far thought it my duty to expose what I believe to be grave
+errors in Mr. Hyndman's sensational article. But I should do him great
+injustice if I did not admit that he has brought out in vivid colours some
+very important facts. It is true that these facts are well known to Indian
+administrators, but they are facts disagreeable to contemplate, and are
+therefore slurred over willingly; but they have such important bearing on
+the proceedings of Government in India that they cannot be too frequently
+paraded before the public eye.</p>
+
+<p>The first of these truths is the undeniable poverty of the great bulk of
+the population. But here Mr. Hyndman does not appear to me to have taken
+full grasp of the fact, or to have ascertained its causes. The dense
+population of India, amounting in its more fertile parts to six and seven
+hundred per square mile, is almost exclusively occupied in agricultural
+pursuits. But the land of India has been farmed from time immemorial by
+men entirely without capital. A farmer in this country has little chance
+of success unless he can supply a capital of 10<i>l.</i> to 20<i>l.</i> an acre. If
+English farms were cultivated by men as deficient in capital as the Indian
+rayats, they would be all thrown on the parish in a year or two. The
+founder of a Hindu village may, by aid of his brethren and friends, have
+strength enough to break up the jungle, dig a well, and with a few rupees
+in his pocket he may purchase seed for the few acres he can bring under
+the plough. If a favourable harvest ensue, he has a large surplus, out of
+which he pays the <i>jamma</i> or rent<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> to Government. But on the first failure
+of the periodical rains his withered crops disappear, he has no capital
+wherewith to meet the Government demand, to obtain food for his family and
+stock, or to purchase seed for the coming year. To meet all these wants he
+must have recourse to the village money-lender, who has always formed as
+indispensable a member of a Hindu agricultural community as the ploughman
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>From time immemorial the cultivator of the soil in India has lived from
+hand to mouth, and when his hand could not supply his mouth from the
+stores of the last harvest he has been driven to the local sauk&aacute;r or
+money-lender to obtain the means of existence. This is the first great
+cause of India's poverty. The second is akin to it, for it exists in the
+infinite divisibility of property which arises under the Hindu system of
+succession, and which throws insuperable obstructions to the growth of
+capital. The rule as to property in Hindu life is that all the members of
+a family, father, grandfather, children, and grandchildren, constitute an
+undivided partnership, having equal shares in the property, although one
+of them, generally the eldest, is recognised as the manager. It is in the
+power of any member to sever himself from the family group, and the
+tendency of our Government has been to encourage efforts of what may be
+called individualism. But the new stock is but the commencement of another
+undivided family, so strong is the Hindu feeling in favour of this
+time-honoured custom. It is obvious that where the skill, foresight, and
+thriftiness required for the creation of capital may be thwarted by the
+extravagance or carelessness of any one of a large number of partners, its
+growth must be seriously impeded.</p>
+
+<p>It will be seen, if the above arguments are sound, that the obstructions
+which oppose themselves to the formation of capital arise out of
+immemorial usages, and are irremediable by any direct interference of
+Government. But whatever may be the causes of this national poverty, the
+fact is undoubted, and it cannot be too steadily contemplated by those who
+desire to rely on fresh taxation for their favourite projects, whether it
+be for improved administration, for magnificent public works, or for the
+extension of our dominions. Mr. Hyndman also points out the great
+expensiveness of a foreign government, and his remarks on this subject are
+undoubtedly true. The high salaries required to tempt Englishmen of
+suitable qualifications to expatriate themselves for the better part of
+their lives, and the heavy dead weight of pensions and furlough charges
+for such officials, form, no doubt, a heavy burden on the resources of
+India. The costliness of a European army is, of course, also undoubtedly
+great. But these are charges which, to a less or greater degree, are
+inseparable from the dominion of a foreign government. The compensation
+for them is to be found in the security they provide against a foreign
+invader or against internal disturbances, and the protection they afford,
+in a degree hitherto unknown in India, to life, property, and character.
+But Mr. Hyndman's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span> diatribes are useful in pointing to the conclusion that
+all the efforts of Government should be directed towards the diminution of
+these charges, where compatible with efficiency, and his striking contrast
+of the home military charges in 1862-63, which then amounted to 28<i>l.</i>
+3<i>s.</i>, and now have risen in the present year to 66<i>l.</i>, deserves most
+serious consideration.</p>
+
+<p>There is only one other statement of Mr. Hyndman which I desire to notice.
+He declares the general opinion of the natives to be that life, as a
+whole, has become harder since the English took the country, and he adds
+his own opinion that the fact is so. Mr. Hyndman, as we have seen, knows
+but little of the actual life of the agricultural population, and of their
+state under native rule he probably knows less. But I am inclined to think
+he fairly represents a very prevailing belief amongst the natives. A vivid
+indication of this native feeling is given in the most instructive work on
+Hindu rural life that I have ever met with.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> Colonel Sleeman thus
+recounts a conversation he held with some natives in one of his rambles&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I got an old landowner from one of the villages to walk on
+with me a mile and put me in the right road. I asked him
+what had been the state of the country under the former
+government of the J&acirc;ts and Mahrattas, and was told that the
+greater part was a wild jungle. "I remember," said the old
+man, "when you could not have got out of the road hereabouts
+without a good deal of risk. I could not have ventured a
+hundred yards from the village without the chance of having
+my clothes stripped off my back. Now the whole country is
+under cultivation, and the roads are safe. Formerly the
+governments kept no faith with their landowners and
+cultivators, exacting ten rupees where they had bargained
+for five whenever they found their crops good. But in spite
+of all this <i>zulm</i> (oppression) there was then more <i>burkul</i>
+(blessings from above) than now; the lands yielded more to
+the cultivator."</p></div>
+
+<p>Colonel Sleeman on the same day asked a respectable farmer what he thought
+of the latter statement. He stated: "The diminished fertility is owing, no
+doubt, to the want of those salutary fallows which the fields got under
+former governments, when invasions and civil wars were things of common
+occurrence, and kept at least <i>two-thirds of the land waste</i>."</p>
+
+<p>The fact is that, under an orderly government like ours, the causes
+alluded to above as impeding the growth of capital become very much
+aggravated. Population largely increases, waste lands are brought under
+the plough, grazing grounds for stock disappear, and the fallows, formerly
+so beneficial in restoring fertility to the soil, can no longer be kept
+free from cultivation. All these considerations form portions of the very
+difficult problems in government which day by day present themselves to
+the Indian administrator. But does Mr. Hyndman think they are to be solved
+by recurrence to the native system of government; by the substitution of a
+local ruler, sometimes paternal, more frequently the reverse, for the
+courts of justice which now administer the law which can be read and
+understood by all; by civil contracts being enforced by the armed servant
+of the creditor, instead of by the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span> officers of a court acting under
+strict surveillance; by the land assessment being collected year by year
+through the farmers of the revenue according to their arbitrary will,
+instead of being payable in a small moderate<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> sum, unalterable for a
+long term of years? If he thinks this&mdash;and his allusion to the system of
+the non-regulation provinces favours the conclusion&mdash;he will not find, I
+think, an educated native in the whole of India who will agree with him.</p>
+
+<p>There are great harshnesses in our rule, there is a rigidity and
+exactitude of procedure which is often distasteful to native opinion,
+there are patent defects arising out of our attempts to administer
+justice, there is great irritation at our constant and often ill-conceived
+experiments in legislation, there is real danger in the fresh burdens we
+lay upon the people in our desire to carry out apparently laudable
+reforms. But with all these blemishes, which have only to be distinctly
+perceived to be removed from our administrative system, the educated
+native feels that he is gradually acquiring the position of a freeman, and
+he would not exchange it for that which Mr. Hyndman appears to desiderate.</p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+<span class="smcap">E. Perry</span>, <i>in Nineteenth Century</i>.<br />
+</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> This rock on its eastern face contains the decrees of Asoka,
+who began to reign 263 <span class="smcap">b.c.</span>; on the western face is the inscription of
+Rudrad&aacute;man, one of the Satrap-rulers under an Indian Greek dynasty, circa
+90 <span class="smcap">b.c.</span>; and the northern face presents the inscription of Skandagupta,
+240 <span class="smcap">a.d.</span></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> Preface to <i>Vishnu Purana</i>.</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> Elphinstone, <i>History of India</i>, vol. i. p. 511.</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> See Aitcheson, <i>Treaties</i>, vol. vi. p. 18.</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>A Hindu Gentleman's Reflections.</i> Spiers, London, 1878.</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> Widow-burning.</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> The swing-sacrifice.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> <i>Views and Opinions of General John Jacob.</i> London, 1858.</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> October 1865, and October 1866.</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> <i>England and Russia in the East.</i> Murray.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> 59 Geo. III. c. 55, s. 43.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> <i>Report on East India Public Works</i>, p. 85.</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> The career of Mr. D&aacute;dobhai Naoroji illustrates in a
+remarkable manner the operation of the system of education introduced
+under our government. A Parsi, born in Bombay of very poor parents, he
+received his education at the Elphinstone College, where he displayed so
+much intelligence that in 1845 an English gentleman, desirous to open up a
+new career for educated natives, offered to send him to England to study
+for the bar if any of the wealthy merchants of his community would pay
+half the expenses. But in those days the Parsis, like the Hindus, dreaded
+contact with England, and the offer fell to the ground. D&aacute;dobhai continued
+at the College, where he obtained employment as a teacher, and
+subsequently became professor of mathematics, no native having previously
+filled such a post. In 1845 he left scholastics and joined the first
+native mercantile house established in London. This firm commenced with
+great success, and D&aacute;dobhai no sooner found himself master of 5,000l. than
+he devoted it to public objects in his native city. The house of Messrs.
+Cama subsequently failed, and D&aacute;dobhai returned to Bombay, where, as above
+noted, he took an active part in municipal affairs, and was subsequently
+appointed Dewan to the Gaekwar. He is now carrying on business as a
+merchant on his own account in London.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> <i>Rambles of an Indian Official</i>, 1844.</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> So long ago as the period when Colonel Sleeman wrote, the
+principle was fully established as to the moderation to be observed in the
+Government assessment. He says: "We may rate the Government share at
+one-fifth as the maximum and one-tenth as the minimum of the gross
+produce." (<i>Rambles of an Indian Official</i>, vol i. p. 251.) In the Blue
+Book laid before Parliament last Session on the Deccan riots, it will be
+seen that the Government share in the gross produce of those districts
+where a high assessment was supposed to have created the disturbances was
+only one-thirteenth.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="A_COUP_DETAT" id="A_COUP_DETAT"></a>A COUP D'&Eacute;TAT.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">If little seeds by slow degree<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Put forth their leaves and flowers unheard,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Our love had grown into a tree,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And bloomed without a single word<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">I haply hit on six o'clock,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The hour her father came from town;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">I gave his own peculiar knock,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And waited slyly, like a clown.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The door was open. There she stood,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Lifting her mouth's delicious brim.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">How could I waste a thing so good!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">I took the kiss she meant for him.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">A moment on an awful brink&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Deep breath, a frown, a smile, a tear;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And then, "O Robert, don't you think<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">That that was rather&mdash;<i>cavalier</i>?"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[<i>London Society.</i><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THEATRICAL_MAKE-SHIFTS_AND_BLUNDERS" id="THEATRICAL_MAKE-SHIFTS_AND_BLUNDERS"></a>THEATRICAL MAKE-SHIFTS AND BLUNDERS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>It is a generally received opinion that all stage wardrobes are made up of
+tawdry rags, and that the landscapes and palaces that look so charming by
+gaslight are but mere daubs by day. But there are wardrobes <i>and</i>
+wardrobes, scenery and scenery. The dresses used for some great "get up"
+at the opera houses, or at the principal London and provincial theatres,
+are costly and magnificent; the scenery, although painted for distance and
+artificial light, is really the product of artists of talent, and there is
+an attention to reality in all the adjuncts that would quite startle the
+believers in the tinsel and tawdry view. A millionaire might take a lesson
+from the stage drawing-rooms of the Prince of Wales and the Court
+theatres, and no cost is spared to procure the <i>real</i> article, whatever it
+may be, that is required for the scene. These minuti&aelig; of realism, however,
+are quite a modern idea, dating no farther back than the days of
+Boucicault and Fechter. Splendid scenery and gorgeous dresses for the
+legitimate dramas were introduced by John Kemble, and developed to the
+utmost extent by Macready and Kean; but it was reserved for the present
+decade to lavish the same attention and expenses upon the petite drama.
+Half a century ago the property maker manufactured the stage furniture,
+the stage books, the candelabra, curtains, cloths, pictures, &amp;c., out of
+papier mache and tinsel; and the drawing-room or library of a gentleman's
+mansion thus presented bore as much resemblance to the reality as sea-side
+furnished lodgings do to a ducal palace. Before the Kemble time a green
+baize, a couple of chairs and a table, sufficed for all furnishing
+purposes, whether for an inn or a palace.</p>
+
+<p>In these days of "theatrical upholstery," we can scarcely realize the
+shabbiness of the stage of the last century. There were a few handsome
+suits for the principal actors, but the less important ones were
+frequently dressed in costumes that had done service for fifty years,
+until they were worn threadbare and frequently in rags. Endeavour to
+realise upon the modern stage such a picture as this given by Tate
+Wilkinson, of his appearance at Covent Garden as "The Fine Gentleman," in
+"Lethe." "A very short old suit of clothes, with a black velvet ground,
+and broad, gold flowers as dingy as the twenty-four letters on a piece of
+gingerbread; it had not seen the light since the first year Garrick played
+'Lothario,' at the theatre. Bedecked in that sable array for the modern
+'Fine Gentleman,' and to make the appearance complete, I added an old red
+surtout, trimmed with a dingy white fur, and a deep skinned cape of the
+same hue, borrowed by old Giffard, I was informed, at Lincoln's Inn Fields
+Theatre, to play 'King Lear' in." When West Digges appeared at the
+Haymarket<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span> as Cardinal Wolsey, it was in the identical dress that Barton
+Booth had worn in Queen Anne's time: a close-fitting habit of gilt leather
+upon a black ground, black stockings, and black gauntlets. No wonder
+Foote, who was in the pit, exclaimed, upon the appearance of this
+extraordinary figure, "A Roman sweep on May-day!" When Quin played the
+youthful fascinating Chamont, in Otway's "Orphan," he wore a long grisly
+half-powdered periwig, hanging low down each side his breast and down his
+back, a huge scarlet coat and waistcoat, heavily trimmed with gold, black
+velvet breeches, black silk neckcloth, black stockings, a pair of
+square-toed shoes, with an old-fashioned pair of stone buckles, stiff
+high-topped white gloves, with a broad old scolloped lace hat. Such a
+costume upon a personage not in his first youth, and more than inclined to
+obesity, must have had an odd effect. But then, as is well known, Garrick
+played "Macbeth" in a scarlet coat and powdered wig; John Kemble performed
+"Othello" in a full suit of British scarlet regimentals, and even when he
+had gone so far as to dress "Macbeth" as a highlander of 1745, wore in his
+bonnet a tremendous hearse plume, until Scott plucked it out, and placed
+an eagle's feather there in its stead. The costumes of the ladies were
+almost more absurd. Whether they appeared as Romans, Greeks, or females of
+the Middle Ages, they dressed the same&mdash;in the huge hoop, and powdered
+hair raised high upon the head, heavy brocaded robes that required two
+pages to hold up, without whose assistance they could scarcely have moved;
+and servants were dressed quite as magnificently as their mistresses.</p>
+
+<p>In scenery there was no attempt at "sets;" a drop, and a pair of "flats,"
+dusty and dim with age, were all the scenic accessories; and two or three
+hoops of tallow candles, suspended above the stage, were all that
+represented the blaze of gas and lime-light to which we are accustomed.
+The candle-snuffer was a theatrical post of some responsibility in those
+days. Garrick was the first who used concealed lights. The uncouth
+appearance of the stage was rendered still worse on crowded nights by
+ranges of seats raised for spectators on each side. The most ridiculous
+<i>contretemps</i> frequently resulted from this incongruity. Romeo, sometimes,
+when he bore out the body of Juliet from the solitary tomb of the
+Capulets, had to almost force his way through a throng of beaux, and
+Macbeth and his lady plotted the murder of Duncan amidst a throng of
+people.</p>
+
+<p>One night, Hamlet, upon the appearance of the Ghost, threw off his hat, as
+usual, preparatory to the address, when a kind-hearted dame, who had heard
+him just before complain of its being "very cold," picked it up and
+good-naturedly clapped it upon his head again. A similar incident once
+happened during the performance of Pizarro. Elvira is discovered asleep
+upon a couch, gracefully covered by a rich velvet cloak; Valverde enters,
+kneels and kisses her hand; Elvira awakes, rises and lets fall the
+covering, and is about to indignantly repulse her unwelcome visitor, when
+a timid female voice says: "Please,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span> ma'am, you've dropped your mantle,"
+and a timid hand is trying to replace it upon the tragedy queen's
+shoulders. Of another kind, but very much worse, was an accident that
+befell Mrs. Siddons at Edinburgh, at the hands of another person who
+failed to distinguish between the real person and the counterfeit. Just
+before going on for the sleep-walking-scene, she had sent a boy for some
+porter, but the cue for her entrance was given before he returned. The
+house was awed into shuddering silence as, in a terrible whisper, she
+uttered the words "Out, out, damned spot!" and with slow mechanical action
+rubbed the guilty hands; when suddenly there emerged from the wings a
+small figure holding out a pewter pot, and a shrill voice broke the awful
+silence with "Here's your porter, mum." Imagine the feelings of the
+stately Siddons! The story is very funny to read, but depend upon it the
+incident gave her the most cruel anguish.</p>
+
+<p>It is not, however, to the uninitiated outsiders alone we are indebted for
+ludicrous stage contretemps; the experts themselves have frequently given
+rise to them. All readers of Elia will remember the name of Bensley, one
+of "the old actors" upon whom he discourses so eloquently&mdash;a grave precise
+man, whose composure no accident could ruffle, as the following anecdote
+will prove. One night, as he was making his first entrance as Richard
+III., at the Dublin Theatre, his wig caught upon a nail in the side scene,
+and was dragged off. Catching his hat by the feather, however, he calmly
+replaced it as he walked to the centre of the stage, but left his <i>hair</i>
+still attached to the nail. Quite unmoved by the occurrence, he commenced
+his soliloquy; but so rich a subject could not escape the wit of an Irish
+audience. "Bensley, darlin'," shouted a voice from the gallery, "put on
+your jaisey!" "Bad luck to your politics, will you suffer a <i>whig</i> to be
+hung?" shouted another. But the tragedian, deaf to all clamour, never
+faltered, never betrayed the least annoyance, spoke the speech to the end,
+stalked to the wing, detached the wig from the nail, and made his exit
+with it in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>Novices under the influence of stage fright will say and do the most
+extraordinary things. Some years ago, I witnessed a laughable incident
+during the performance of "Hamlet" at a theatre in the North. Although a
+very small part, consisting as it does of only one speech, the "Second
+Actor" is a very difficult one, the language being peculiarly cramped. In
+the play scene he assassinates the player king by pouring poison into his
+ear. The speech preceding the action is as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Thoughts black, hands apt, drugs fit, and time agreeing;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Confederate season, else no creature seeing;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thou mixture rank, of midnight weeds collected,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With Hecate's ban thrice blasted, thrice infected,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy natural magic and dire property<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On wholesome life usurp immediately.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Upon which follows the stage direction&mdash;"<i>Pours poison into his ear.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>In a play of so many characters as Hamlet, such a part, in a second-class
+theatre, can be given only to a very inferior performer. The one<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span> to whom
+it was entrusted on the present occasion was a novice. Muffled in a black
+coat and a black slouched hat, and with a face half hidden by burnt cork,
+he looked a most villainous villain, as he stole on and gazed about in the
+most approved melo-dramatic fashion. Then he began, in a strong north
+country brogue,&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Thoughts black, hands apt,&mdash;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>then his memory failed him, and he stuck fast. The prompter whispered
+"drugs fit;" but stage fright had seized him, and he could not take the
+word. He tried back, but stuck again at the same place. Half-a-dozen
+people were all prompting him at the same time now, but all in vain. At
+length one more practical than the rest whispered angrily, "Pour the
+poison in his ear and get off." The suggestion restored a glimmering of
+reason to the trembling, perspiring wretch. He could not remember the
+words of Shakespeare, so he improvised a line. Advancing to the sleeping
+figure, he raised the vial in his hand, and in a terribly tragic tone
+shouted, "Into his ear-hole this I'll <i>power</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Some extraordinary and agonising mistakes, for tragedians, have been made
+in what are called the flying messages in "Richard III." and "Macbeth," by
+novices in their nervousness mixing up their own parts with the context;
+as when Catesby rushed on and cried, "My lord, the Duke of Buckingham's
+taken." There he should have stopped while Richard replied, "Off with his
+head! so much for Buckingham!" But in his flurry the shaking messenger
+added, "and they've cut off his head!" With a furious look at having been
+robbed of one of his finest "points," the tragedian roared out, "Then,
+damn you, go and stick it on again!" Another story is told of an actor
+playing one of the officers in the fifth act of "Macbeth." "My lord," he
+has to say, "there are ten thousand&mdash;&mdash;" "Geese, villain," interrupts
+Macbeth. "Ye&mdash;es, my lord!" answered the messenger, losing his memory in
+his terror.</p>
+
+<p>But a far more dreadful anecdote is related of the same play. A star was
+playing the guilty Thane in a very small company, where each member had to
+sustain three or four different characters. During the performance the man
+appointed to play the first murderer was taken ill. There was not another
+to be spared, and the only resource left was to send on a supernumerary,
+supposed to be intelligent, to stand for the character. "Keep close to the
+wing," said the prompter; "I'll read you the words, and you can repeat
+them after me." The scene was the banquet; the supper was pushed on, and
+Macbeth, striding down the stage, seized his arm and said in a stage
+whisper, "There's blood upon thy face." "'Tis Banquo's, then," was the
+prompt. Lost and bewildered&mdash;having never spoken in his life before upon
+the stage&mdash;by the tragedian's intense yet natural tones, the fellow,
+imitating them in the most confidential manner, answered, "Is there, by
+God?" put his hand up to his forehead, and, finding it stained with rose
+pink, added, "Then the property man's served me a trick!"</p>
+
+<p>Once upon a time I was present at the performance of the celebrated dog
+piece, "The Forest of Bondy," in a small country theatre. The plot<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> turns
+upon a well-known story, the discovery of a murder through the sagacity of
+the victim's dog. The play-bill descanted most eloquently upon the
+wonderful genius of the "highly trained" animal, and was sufficient to
+raise expectation on tip-toe. Yet it had evidently failed to impress the
+public of this town, their experiences probably having rendered them
+sceptical of such pufferies, for the house was miserably bad. The first
+entrance of "the celebrated dog C&aelig;sar," however, in attendance upon his
+master, was greeted with loud applause. He was a fine young black
+Newfoundland, whose features were more descriptive of good nature than
+genius. He sat on his haunches and laughed at the audience, and pricked up
+his ears at the sound of a boy munching a biscuit in the pit. I could
+perceive he was a novice, and that he would forget all he had been taught
+when he came to the test. While Aubrey, the hero, is passing through a
+forest at night, he is attacked by two ruffians, and after a desperate
+combat is killed; the dog is supposed to be kept out of the way. But in
+the very midst of the fight, C&aelig;sar, whose barking had been distinctly
+heard all the time, rushed on the stage. Far from evincing any ferocity
+towards his master's foes, he danced about with a joyous bark, evidently
+considering it famous fun. Aubrey was furious, and kicked out savagely at
+his faithful "dawg," thereby laying himself open to the swords of his
+adversaries, who, however, in consideration that the combat had not been
+long enough, generously refused the advantages. "Get off, you beast!"
+growled Aubrey, who evidently desired to fight it out without canine
+interference. At length, when the faltering applause from the gallery
+began to show that the gods had had enough of it, the assassins buried
+their swords beneath their victim's arms, and he expired in great agony;
+C&aelig;sar looking on from the respectful distance to which his master's kick
+had sent him, with the unconcern of a person who had seen it all done at
+rehearsal and knew it was all sham, but with a decided interest of eye and
+ear in the direction of the biscuit-muncher. In the next act he was to
+leap over a stile and ring the bell at a farm house, and, having awakened
+the inhabitants, seize a lantern which is brought out, and lead them to
+the spot where the villains have buried his master. After a little
+prompting C&aelig;sar leaped the stile and went up to the bell, round the handle
+of which was twisted some red cloth to imitate meat; but there never was a
+more matter-of-fact dog than this; he evidently hated all shams, even
+artistic ones; and after a sniff at the red rag he walked off disgusted,
+and could not be induced to go on again; so the people had to rush out
+without being summoned, carry their own lantern, and find their way by a
+sort of canine instinct, or scent, to the scene of the murder. But C&aelig;sar's
+delinquencies culminated in the last scene, where, after the chief
+villain, in a kind of lynch law trial, has stoutly asserted his innocence,
+the sagacious "dawg" suddenly bounds upon the stage, springs at his
+throat, and puts an end to his infamous career. Being held by the collar,
+and incited on, in the side scene, C&aelig;sar's deep bark sounded terribly
+ferocious, and seemed to foreshadow a bloody catastrophe; but his bark
+proved worse than his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> bite, for when released he trotted on with a most
+affable expression of countenance, his thoughts still evidently bent upon
+biscuits; in vain did the villain show him the red pad upon his throat and
+invite him to seize it. C&aelig;sar had been deceived once, and scorned to
+countenance an imposition. Furious with passion, the villain rushed at
+him, drew him up on his hind legs, clasped him in his arms, then fell upon
+the stage and writhed in frightful agonies, shrieking, "Mussy, mussy, take
+off the dawg!" and the curtain fell amidst the howls and hisses of the
+audience.</p>
+
+<p>Another laughable dog story, although of a different kind, was once
+related to me by a now London actor. In a certain theatre in one of the
+great northern cities business had been so bad for some time that salaries
+were very irregularly paid. It is a peculiarity of the actor that he is
+never so jolly, so full of fun, and altogether so vivacious, as when he is
+impecunious. In prosperity he is dull and melancholy; the yellow dross
+seems to weigh down his spirit, to stultify it; empty his pockets, and it
+etherialises him. At the theatre in question, the actors amused themselves
+if they failed to amuse the audience. Attached to this house was a mongrel
+cur, whom some of them had taught tricks to while away the tedium of long
+waits. "Jack"&mdash;such was his name&mdash;was well known all round the
+neighbourhood, and to most of the <i>habitues</i> of the house. Among his other
+accomplishments he could simulate death at command, and could only be
+recalled to life by a certain piece of information to be presently
+mentioned. One night the manager was performing "The Stranger" to about
+half-a-dozen people. Francis was standing at the wing waiting for his cue
+when his eye fell upon Jack, who was standing just off the stage on the
+opposite side; an impish thought struck him&mdash;he whistled&mdash;Jack pricked up
+his ears, and Francis slapped his leg and called him. Obedient to the
+summons Jack trotted before the audience, but as he reached the centre of
+the stage the word "dead!" struck upon his ear. The next moment he was
+stretched motionless with his two hind legs sticking up at an angle of
+forty-five degrees. The scene was the one in which the Stranger relates to
+Baron Steinfort the story of his wrongs, and he had come to the line, "My
+heart is like a close-shut sepulchre," when a burst of laughter from the
+front drew his attention to Jack. He saw the trick that had been played in
+an instant. "Get off, you brute!" he growled, giving the animal a kick.
+But Jack was too highly trained to heed such an admonition, having learned
+beforehand that the kicking was not so bad as the flogging he would get
+for not performing his part correctly. "Doan't tha' kick poor Jack,"
+called out a rough voice, "give un the word." "Ay, ay, give un the word,"
+echoed half-a-dozen voices. The manager knew better than to disregard the
+advice of his patrons, and ground out between his teeth, "Here's a
+policeman coming." At that "open Sesame" Jack was up and off like a shot.
+It must have been one of the finest bits of burlesque to have seen that
+black-ringlet-wigged, sallow, dyspeptic, tragic-looking individual,
+repeating the clown's formula over a mangy cur.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The failure or forgetfulness of stage properties is frequently a source of
+ludicrous incidents. People are often killed by pistols that will not
+fire, or stabbed with the butt ends. In some play an actor has to seize a
+dagger from a table and stab his rival. One night the dagger was forgotten
+and no substitute was there, <i>except a candle</i>, which the excited actor
+wrenched from the candlestick, and madly plunged <i>at</i> his opponent's
+breast; but it effected its purpose, for the victim expired in strong
+convulsions. It is strange how seldom the audience perceive such
+<i>contretemps</i>, or notice the extraordinary and ludicrous slips of the
+tongue that are so frequent upon the stage.</p>
+
+<p>A playbill is not always the most truth-telling publication in the world.
+Managers, driven to their wits' ends to draw a sluggish public, often
+announce entertainments which they have no means of producing properly, or
+even at all, and have to exercise an equal amount of ingenuity to find
+substitutes, or satisfy a deluded audience. Looking through some
+manuscript letters of R. B. Peake's the other day, I came across a capital
+story of Bunn. While he was manager of the Birmingham Theatre, Power, the
+celebrated Irish comedian, made a starring engagement with him. It was
+about the time that the dramatic version of Mrs. Shelley's
+"Frankenstein"&mdash;done, I believe, by Peake himself&mdash;was making a great
+sensation, and Power announced it for his benefit, playing "the Monster"
+himself. The manager, however, refused to spend a penny upon the
+production. "You must do with what you can find in the theatre," he said.
+There was only one difficulty. In the last scene Frankenstein is buried
+beneath an avalanche, and among the stage scenery of the Theatre Royal,
+Birmingham, there was nothing resembling an avalanche to be found, and the
+<span class="smcap">avalanche</span> was the one prodigious line in the playbill. Power was
+continually urging this difficulty, but Bunn always eluded it with, "Oh,
+we shall find something or other." At length it came to the day of
+performance, and the problem had not yet been solved.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we shall have to change the piece," said Power.</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh, pooh! nonsense!" answered the manager.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no avalanche, and it is impossible to be finished without."</p>
+
+<p>"Can't you cut it out?"</p>
+
+<p>"Impossible."</p>
+
+<p>The manager fell into a brown study for a few moments. Then suddenly
+brightening up, he said, "I have it; but they must let the green curtain
+down instantly on the extraordinary effect. Hanging up in the flies is the
+large elephant made for 'Blue Beard;' we'll have it whitewashed."</p>
+
+<p>"What?" exclaimed Power.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll have it whitewashed," continued the manager coolly; "what is an
+avalanche but a vast mass of white? When Frankenstein is to be
+annihilated, the carpenters shall shove the whitened elephant over the
+flies&mdash;destroy you both in a moment&mdash;and down comes the curtain."</p>
+
+<p>As there was no other alternative, Power e'en submitted. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> whitened
+elephant was "shoved" over at the right moment, the effect was appalling
+from the front, and the curtain descended amidst loud applause.</p>
+
+<p>Not quite so successful was a hoax perpetrated by Elliston, during <i>his</i>
+management of the Birmingham Theatre, many years previously. Then, also,
+business had been very bad, and he was in great difficulties. Let us give
+the managers their due. They do not, as a rule, resort to swindles except
+under strong pressure; then they soothe their consciences with the
+reflection that as an obtuse and ungrateful public will not support their
+legitimate efforts, it deserves to be swindled. And a very good reflection
+it is&mdash;from a managerial point of view. No man was more fertile in
+expedients than Robert William Elliston; so after a long continuance of
+empty benches, the walls and boardings of the town were one morning
+covered with glaring posters announcing that the manager of the Theatre
+Royal had entered into an engagement with a <span class="smcap">Bohemian</span> of extraordinary
+strength and stature, who would perform some astonishing evolutions with a
+stone of upwards of a ton weight, which he would toss about as easily as
+another would a tennis-ball. What all the famous names of the British
+drama and all the talents of its exponents had failed to accomplish, was
+brought about by a stone, and on the evening announced for its appearance
+the house was crammed to the ceiling. The exhibition was to take place
+between the play and the farce, and scarcely had the intellectual audience
+patience to listen to the piece, so eager were they for the noble
+entertainment that was to follow. At length, much to their relief, the
+curtain fell. The usual interval elapsed, the house became impatient,
+impatience soon merged into furious clamour. At length, with a pale,
+distraught countenance, Elliston rushed before the curtain. In a moment
+there was a breathless silence.</p>
+
+<p>"The Bohemian has deceived me!" were his first words. "<i>That</i> I could have
+pardoned; but he has deceived you, my friends, <i>you</i>;" and his voice
+trembled, and he hid his face behind his handkerchief and seemed to sob.</p>
+
+<p>Then, bursting forth again, he went on: "I repeat, he has deceived me; he
+is not here."</p>
+
+<p>A yell of disappointment burst from the house.</p>
+
+<p>"The man," continued Elliston, raising his voice, "of whatever name or
+nation he may be, who breaks his word, commits an offence which&mdash;&mdash;" The
+rest of this Joseph Surface sentiment was drowned in furious clamour, and
+for some minutes he could not make himself heard, until he drew some
+letters from his pocket, and held them up.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is the correspondence," he said. "Does any gentleman here understand
+German? If so, will he oblige me by stepping forward?"</p>
+
+<p>The Birmingham public were not strong in languages in those days, it would
+seem, for no gentleman stepped forward.</p>
+
+<p>"Am I, then, left alone?" he exclaimed in tragic accents. "Well, I will
+translate them for you."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Here there was another uproar, out of which came two or three voices, "No,
+no." Like Buckingham, he chose to construe the two or three into "a
+general acclaim."</p>
+
+<p>"Your commands shall be obeyed," he said bowing, and pocketing the
+correspondence, "I <i>will not</i> read them. But my dear patrons, your
+kindness merits some satisfaction at my hands; your consideration shall
+not go unrewarded. You shall not say you have paid your money for nothing.
+Thank heaven, I can satisfy you of my own integrity, and present you with
+a portion of the entertainment you have paid to see. The Bohemian, the
+villain, is not here. But the <i>stone</i> is, and <span class="smcap">You shall see it</span>." He winked
+at the orchestra, which struck up a lively strain, and up went the
+curtain, disclosing a huge piece of sand rock, upon which was stuck a
+label, bearing the legend in large letters, "<span class="smcap">This is the stone.</span>"</p>
+
+<p>It need scarcely be added that the Bohemian existed only in the manager's
+brain. But it is a question whether the audience which could be only
+brought together by such an exhibition did not deserve to be swindled.</p>
+
+<p>An equally good story is told of his management at Worcester. For his
+benefit he had announced a grand display of fireworks! No greater proof of
+the gullibility of the British public could be adduced than their
+swallowing such an announcement. The theatre was so small that such an
+exhibition was practically impossible. A little before the night Elliston
+called upon the landlord of the property, and in the course of
+conversation hinted at the danger of such a display, as though the idea
+had just struck him; the landlord took alarm, and, as Elliston had
+anticipated, forbade it. Nevertheless the announcements remained on the
+walls, and on the night the theatre was crowded. The performance proceeded
+without any notice being taken by the management of the fireworks, until
+murmurs swelled into clamour and loud cries. Then with his usual kingly
+air, Elliston came forward and bowed. He had made, he said, the most
+elaborate preparation for a magnificent pyrotechnic display; he had left
+nothing undone, but at the last moment came the terrible reflection, would
+it not be dangerous? Would there not be collected within the walls of the
+theatre a number of lovely young tender girls, of respectable matrons, to
+do him honour? What if the house should catch fire&mdash;the panic, the
+struggle for life&mdash;ah, he shuddered at the thought! Then, too, he thought
+of the property of that worthiest of men, the landlord&mdash;he rushed to
+consult him&mdash;and he now called upon him&mdash;there he was, seated in the stage
+box&mdash;to publicly state, for the satisfaction of the distinguished audience
+he saw before him, that he had forbidden the performance from
+considerations of safety. The landlord, a very nervous man, shrank to the
+back of his box, scared by every eye in the house being fixed upon him;
+but the audience, thankful for the terrible danger they had escaped, burst
+into thunders of applause.</p>
+
+<p>The stories are endless of the shifts and swindles to which country<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+managers, at their wits' end, have had to resort to attract a sluggish
+public. How great singers have been advertised that never heard of such an
+engagement, and even forged telegrams read to an expectant audience, to
+account for their non-appearance. How prizes have been distributed on
+benefit nights&mdash;to people who gave them back again. How audiences, the
+victims of some false announcement, have been left waiting patiently for
+the performance to commence, while the manager was on his way to another
+town with their money in his pocket. But there is a great sameness about
+such stories, and one or two are a specimen of all.</p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+<span class="smcap">H. Barton Baker</span>, <i>in Belgravia</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="I_WINTER-MORN_IN_THE_COUNTRY" id="I_WINTER-MORN_IN_THE_COUNTRY"></a>I.&mdash;WINTER-MORN IN THE COUNTRY.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The Sabbath of all Nature! Stillness reigns<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">For snow has fallen, and all the land is white.<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The cottage-roofs slant grey against the light,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And grey the sky, nor cloud nor blue obtains.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The sun is moonlike, as a maiden feigns<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">To veil her beauty, yet sends glances bright<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">That fill the eye, and make the heart delight,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Expectant of some wonder. Lengthened trains<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Of birds wing high, and straight the smoke ascends.<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">All things are fairy-like: the trees empearled<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">With frosty gem-work, like to trees in dream.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Beneath the weight the slender cedar bends<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And looks more ghost-like! 'Tis a wonder-world,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Wherein, indeed, things are not as they seem.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="II_WINTER-MORN_IN_TOWN" id="II_WINTER-MORN_IN_TOWN"></a>II.&mdash;WINTER-MORN IN TOWN.</h2>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Through yellow fog all things take spectral shapes:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Lamps dimly gleam, and through the window pane<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The light is shed in short and broken lane;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And "darkness visible" pants, yawns, and gapes.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">From roofs the water drips, as from high capes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Half-freezes as it falls. Like cries of pain<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Fog-signals faintly heard, and then again<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Grave warning words to him who rashly apes<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The skater, nearer. All is muffled fast<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">In dense dead coils of vapour, nothing clear&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">The world disguised in mumming masquerade.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">O'er each a dull thick clinging veil is cast,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">And no one is what fain he would appear:<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Nor any well-marked track on which to tread,<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+</div></div>
+
+<p class='right'><span class="smcap">Alex. H. Japp</span>, <i>in Belgravia</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_HAPPY_VALLEY" id="THE_HAPPY_VALLEY"></a>THE HAPPY VALLEY.</h2>
+
+<h3>A REMINISCENCE OF THE HIMALAYAS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>The privilege which the families of officers in the service of the State
+may be said exclusively to possess, of reproducing in Upper India&mdash;and
+especially in the Himalayan stations, and valley of Dhera Dhoon&mdash;the
+stately or cottage homes of England, is perhaps one, to a great extent,
+unfamiliar to their relatives at home; and it is scarcely too much to say
+that the general public, which, as a rule, considers the Indian climate an
+insuperable barrier to all enjoyment, has but a faint idea of that
+glorious beauty, which is no "fading flower," in this "Happy Valley," with
+its broad belt of virgin forest, that lies between the Himalayas proper
+and the sharp ridges of the wild Sewalic range. The latter forms a barrier
+between the sultry plains and the cool and romantic retreats, where the
+swords of our gallant defenders may be said to rest in their scabbards,
+and where, surrounded by the pleasures of domestic life, health and
+happiness may, in the intervals of piping times of peace, be enjoyed to
+their fullest extent.</p>
+
+<p>In such favoured spots the exile from home may live, seemingly, for the
+present only; but, in truth, it is not so, for even under such favoured
+circumstances the tie with our natal place is never relaxed, and the hope
+of future return to it adds just that touch of pensiveness&mdash;scarcely
+sadness&mdash;which is the delicate neutral tint that brings out more forcibly
+the gorgeous colours of the picture.</p>
+
+<p>The gaieties of the mountain stations of Mussoorie and Landour were now
+approaching their periodical close, in the early part of October, when the
+cold season commences. The attractive archery meetings on the green
+plateaux of the mountain-spurs had ceased, and balls and sumptuous
+dinner-parties were becoming fewer and fewer; while daily one group of
+friends after another, "with lingering steps and slow," on rough
+hill-ponies or in quaint jam-pans, were wending their way some six or
+seven thousand feet down the umbrageous mountain-sides, watched from above
+by those who still lingered behind, until they seemed like toilsome emmets
+in the far distance.</p>
+
+<p>Now that our summer companions were gone we used to while away many an
+hour with our glasses, scanning in that clear atmosphere the vast plains
+stretched out beneath us like a rich carpet of many colours, but in which
+forms were scarcely to be traced at that distance. Here, twisted silver
+threads represented some great river; there, a sprinkling of rice-like
+grains, the white bungalows of a cantonment; while occasionally a sombre
+mass denoted some forest or mango tope. Around us, and quailing under
+fierce gusts of wind from the passes of the snowy range<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span> rising in peaks
+to nearly twice the altitude of the Alps, the gnarled oaks, now denuded of
+their earlier garniture of parasitical ferns, that used to adorn their
+mossy branches with Nature's own point lace, seemed almost conscious of
+approaching winter.</p>
+
+<p>Landour, now deserted, save by a few invalid soldiers and one or two
+resident families, had few attractions. The snow was lying deep on the
+mountain-sides, and blocking up the narrow roads. But winter in the
+Himalayas is a season of startling phenomena; for it is then that thunder
+storms of appalling grandeur are prevalent, and to a considerable extent
+destructive. During the night, amidst the wild conflict of the elements,
+would, not unfrequently, be heard the bugles of the soldiers' Sanatorium,
+calling to those who could sleep to arouse themselves, and hasten to the
+side of residents whose houses had been struck by the electric fluid.</p>
+
+<p>Still, we clung to our mountain-home to the last, although we knew that
+summer awaited us in the valley below, and that in an hour and a half we
+might with ease exchange an almost hyperborean climate for one where
+summer is perennial, or seems so&mdash;for the rainy season is but an interlude
+of refreshing showers.</p>
+
+<p>At length an incident occurred which somewhat prematurely influenced our
+departure.</p>
+
+<p>As we were sitting at an early breakfast one morning with the children,
+Khalifa, a favourite domestic, and one who rarely failed to observe that
+stately decorum peculiar to Indian servants, rushed wildly into the room,
+with every appearance of terror, screaming, "Janwar! Burra janwar,
+sahib!"<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> at the same time pointing to the window.</p>
+
+<p>We could not at first understand what the poor fellow meant; but on
+looking out, were not a little disconcerted at the sight which presented
+itself.</p>
+
+<p>Crouched on the garden-wall was a huge spotted animal of the leopard
+species. It looked, however, by no means ferocious, but, on the contrary,
+to be imploring compassion and shelter from the snowstorm. Still,
+notwithstanding its demure cat-like aspect, its proximity was by no means
+agreeable. With a strange lack of intelligence, the brute, instead of
+avoiding the cold, had evidently become bewildered, and crawled up the
+mountain side. As we could scarcely be expected to extend the rites of
+hospitality to such a visitor, the harmless discharge of a pistol insured
+his departure at one bound, and with a terrific growl.</p>
+
+<p>Wild beasts are rarely seen about European stations. Those who like them
+must go out of their way to find them. But perhaps stupefied by cold while
+asleep, and pinched by hunger, as on the present occasion, they may lose
+their usual sagacity.</p>
+
+<p>Having got rid of our unwelcome visitor, we determined at once to leave
+our mountain-home.</p>
+
+<p>The servants were only too glad to hasten our departure, and in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+course of an hour everything was packed up, and we were ready for the
+descent into the plains.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the absence of a police force, robberies of houses are
+almost unknown; and therefore it was only necessary for us to draw down
+the blinds and lock the main door, leaving the furniture to take care of
+itself.</p>
+
+<p>The jam-pans and little rough ponies were ready; the servants, although
+shivering in their light clothing, more active than I had ever before seen
+them; and in the course of another hour we were inhaling the balmy air of
+early summer.</p>
+
+<p>The pretty little hotel of Rajpore, at the base of the mountain, was now
+reached; and before us lay the broad and excellent road, shaded with
+trees, which, in the course of another twenty minutes, brought us to the
+charming cantonment of Deyrah. All Nature seemed to be rejoicing; the
+birds were singing; the sounds of bubbling and splashing waters
+(mountain-streams diverted from their natural channels, and brought into
+every garden), and hedges of the double pink and crimson Bareilly rose<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a>
+in full bloom, interspersed with the oleander, and the mehndi (henna of
+Scripture) with its fragrant clusters, filling the air with the perfume of
+mignonette, presented a scene of earthly beauty which cannot be surpassed.</p>
+
+<p>"How stupid we were," I remarked, looking back at our late home, now a
+mere black speck on the top of the snowy mountain far above&mdash;"how very
+foolish and perverse to have fancied ourselves more English in the winter
+up there, when we might all this time have been leading the life of Eden,
+in this enchanting spot!"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed we were," replied my companion. "But it is the way with us in
+India. We give a rupee for an English daisy, and cast aside the honeyed
+champah."</p>
+
+<p>In India there is no difficulty in housing oneself. No important agents
+are necessary, and advertising is scarcely known. Accordingly, without
+ceremony, we took quiet possession of the first vacant bungalow which we
+came to, and our fifteen domestics did not seem to question for a moment
+the propriety of the occupation. Under our somewhat despotic government,
+are not the sahib l&ouml;g<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> above petty social observances?</p>
+
+<p>While A. was busily employed getting his guns ready and preparing for
+shikari in the adjacent forest and jungles, which swarm with peafowl,
+partridges, quail, pigeons, and a variety of other game, my first care was
+to summon the resident mali (gardener), and ascertain how the beautiful
+and extensive garden of which we had taken possession<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> might be further
+stocked.</p>
+
+<p>"Mem sahib,"<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> said the quiet old gardener, with his hands in a
+supplicatory position, "there is abundance here of everything&mdash;aloo, lal<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+sag, anjir, padina, baingan, piyaz, khira, shalgham, kobs, ajmud,
+kharbuza, amb, amrut, anar, narangi&mdash;"<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
+
+<p>"Stay!" I interrupted; "that is enough."</p>
+
+<p>But the old mali had something more to add:</p>
+
+<p>"Mem sahib, all is your own, and your slave shall daily bring his
+customary offering, and flowers for the table; and the protector of the
+poor will not refuse bakshees for the bearer."</p>
+
+<p>I promised to be liberal to the poor old man, and then proceeded to
+inspect the flower-garden.</p>
+
+<p>Here I was surprised to find a perfect fraternisation between the tropical
+flora and our own. Amongst flowers not unfamiliar to the European were
+abundance of the finest roses, superb crimson and gold poincianas, the
+elegant hybiscus, graceful ipom&#339;as, and convolvuli of every hue, the
+purple amaranth, the variegated double balsam, the richest marigolds, the
+pale-blue clusters of the plantago, acacias, jasmines, oranges, and
+pomegranates, intermixed with our own pansies, carnations, cinerarias,
+geraniums, fuchsias, and a wealth of blossoms impossible to remember by
+name.</p>
+
+<p>"If there is a paradise on earth, it is this, it is this!"</p>
+
+<p>Far more beautiful to the homely eye are such gardens than those of
+Shalimar and Pinjore, with their costly marble terraces, geometrical
+walks, fountains and cascades falling over sculptured slabs.</p>
+
+<p>Nor are we in India confined to the enjoyment of Nature. Art<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> finds its
+way to us from Europe, and literature here receives the warmest welcome.
+Our pianos, our musical-boxes&mdash;our costly and richly bound illustrated
+works, fresh from England&mdash;the most thrilling romances of fiction, and all
+the periodicals of the day, are regularly accumulated in these charming
+Indian retreats, and keep up the culture of the mind in a valley whose
+"glorious beauty" is, as I have said, no "fading flower," but the home of
+the missionary, and the resort of the war-worn soldier or truth-loving
+artist.</p>
+
+<p>Nor is this all. Around Deyrah is some of the most exquisitely beautiful
+cave scenery, comparatively unknown even to Europeans; such, for example,
+as the wondrous natural tunnel, whose sides shine with the varied beauty
+of the most delicate mosaics, and are lit up by rents in the hill above;
+the "dropping cave" of Sansadhara, "bosomed high in tufted trees;" and the
+strange ancient shrines sculptured in the romantic glen of
+Tope-Kesur-Mahadeo.</p>
+
+<p>Of these, Sansadhara has lately been made the subject of a beautiful
+photograph, which, however, fails to convey the exquisite charm of the
+original; but the natural tunnel and Tope-Kesur-Mahadeo have never been
+presented by the artist to the public, although there are unique sketches
+of them in the fine collection of a lady<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> who, as the wife of a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> former
+Indian Commander-in-Chief, had opportunities afforded to few of indulging
+her taste.</p>
+
+<p>One might exhaust volumes in attempting to describe such scenes, and even
+then fail to do them the faintest justice. The Alps, with all their
+beauty, lose much of their grandeur after one has been in daily
+contemplation of the majestic snowy range of the Himalayas, while the
+forests and valleys that skirt its base have no counterpart in Europe. In
+these partial solitudes we lose much of our conventionality. The mind is
+to a certain extent elevated by the grand scale on which Nature around is
+presented. The occasional alarm of war teaches the insecurity of all
+earthly happiness. Our life is subject to daily introspection, and before
+the mind's eye is the sublime prospect, perhaps at no very distant period,
+of a Christian India rising from the ruins of a sensuous idolatry in
+immortal beauty.</p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+L. A., <i>in London Society</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<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> "Wild beast! Big wild beast, sir!"
+</p><p>
+L. M.&mdash;I.&mdash;2.</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> A remarkable plant. It is in constant bloom. On every spray
+there is a central crimson blossom, which only lasts one day, surrounded
+by five or six pink ones, which remain for many days.</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> Dominant class.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> House-rent is paid monthly in India, in arrear.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> My lady.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> Potato, spinach, fig, mint, egg-plant, onion, cucumber,
+turnip, cabbage, parsley, melon, mango, guava, pomegranate, orange.</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> There is no intention of disparaging beautiful native art.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Lady Gomm.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_PHOENICIANS_IN_GREECE" id="THE_PHOENICIANS_IN_GREECE"></a>THE PH&#338;NICIANS IN GREECE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Herodotus begins his history by relating how Ph&#339;nician traders brought
+"Egyptian and Assyrian wares" to Argos and other parts of Greece, in those
+remote days when the Greeks were still waiting to receive the elements of
+their culture from the more civilized East. His account was derived from
+Persian and Ph&#339;nician sources, but, it would seem, was accepted by his
+contemporaries with the same unquestioning confidence as by himself. The
+belief of Herodotus was shared by the scholars of Europe after the revival
+of learning, and there were none among them who doubted that the
+civilization of ancient Greece had been brought from Asia or Egypt, or
+from both. Hebrew was regarded as the prim&aelig;val language, and the Hebrew
+records as the fountain-head of all history; just as the Greek vocabulary,
+therefore, was traced back to the Hebrew lexicon, the legends of primitive
+Greece were believed to be the echoes of Old Testament history. <i>Ex
+Oriente lux</i> was the motto of the inquirer, and the key to all that was
+dark or doubtful in the mythology and history of Hellas was to be found in
+the monuments of the Oriental world.</p>
+
+<p>But the age of Creuzer and Bryant was succeeded by an age of scepticism
+and critical investigation. A reaction sat in against the attempt to force
+Greek thought and culture into an Asiatic mould. The Greek scholar was
+repelled by the tasteless insipidity and barbaric exuberance of the East;
+he contrasted the works of Phidias and Praxiteles, of Sophocles and Plato,
+with the monstrous creations of India or Egypt, and the conviction grew
+strong within him that the Greek could never have learnt his first lessons
+of civilization in such a school as this. Between the East and the West a
+sharp line of division was drawn, and to look for the origin of Greek
+culture beyond the boundaries<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> of Greece itself came to be regarded almost
+as sacrilege. Greek mythology, so far from being an echo or caricature of
+Biblical history and Oriental mysticism, was pronounced to be self-evolved
+and independent, and K. O. M&uuml;ller could deny without contradiction the
+Asiatic origin even of the myth of Aphrodite and Adonis, where the name of
+the Semitic sun-god seems of itself to indicate its source. The
+Ph&#339;nician traders of Herodotus, like the royal maiden they carried away
+from Argos, were banished to the nebulous region of rationalistic fable.</p>
+
+<p>Along with this reaction against the Orientalizing school which could see
+in Greece nothing but a deformed copy of Eastern wisdom went another
+reaction against the conception of Greek mythology on which the labours of
+the Orientalizing school had been based. Key after key had been applied to
+Greek mythology, and all in vain; the lock had refused to turn. The light
+which had been supposed to come from the East had turned out to be but a
+will-o'-the-wisp; neither the Hebrew Scriptures nor the Egyptian
+hieroglyphics had solved the problem presented by the Greek myths. And the
+Greek scholar, in despair, had come to the conclusion that the problem was
+insoluble; all that he could do was to accept the facts as they were set
+before him, to classify and repeat the wondrous tales of the Greek poets,
+but to leave their origin unexplained. This is practically the position of
+Grote; he is content to show that all the parts of a myth hang closely
+together, and that any attempt to extract history or philosophy from it
+must be arbitrary and futile. To deprive a myth of its kernel and soul,
+and call the dry husk that is left a historical fact, is to mistake the
+conditions of the problem and the nature of mythology.</p>
+
+<p>It was at this point that the science of comparative mythology stepped in.
+Grote had shown that we cannot look for history in mythology, but he had
+given up the discovery of the origin of this mythology as a hopeless task.
+The same comparative method, however, which has forced nature to disclose
+her secrets has also penetrated to the sources of mythology itself. The
+Greek myths, like the myths of the other nations of the world, are the
+forgotten and misinterpreted records of the beliefs of primitive man, and
+of his earliest attempts to explain the phenomena of nature. Restore the
+original meaning of the language wherein the myth is clothed, and the
+origin of the myth is found. Myths, in fact, are the words of a dead
+language to which a wrong sense has been given by a false method of
+decipherment. A myth, rightly explained, will tell us the beliefs, the
+feelings, and the knowledge of those among whom it first grew up; for the
+evidences and monuments of history we must look elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>But there is an old proverb that "there is no smoke without fire." The war
+of Troy or the beleaguerment of Thebes may be but a repetition of the
+time-worn story of the battle waged by the bright powers of day round the
+battlements of heaven; but there must have been some reason why this story
+should have been specially localized in the Troad and at Thebes. Most of
+the Greek myths have a background in space<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span> and time; and for this
+background there must be some historical cause. The cause, however, if it
+is to be discovered at all, must be discovered by means of those evidences
+which will alone satisfy the critical historian. The localization of a
+myth is merely an indication or sign-post pointing out the direction in
+which he is to look for his facts. If Greek warriors had never fought in
+the plains of Troy, we may be pretty sure that the poems of Homer would
+not have brought Akhilles and Agamemnon under the walls of Ilium. If
+Ph&#339;nician traders had exercised no influence on prim&aelig;val Greece, Greek
+legend would have contained no references to them.</p>
+
+<p>But even the myth itself, when rightly questioned, may be made to yield
+some of the facts upon which the conclusions of the historian are based.
+We now know fairly well what ideas, usages, and proper names have an Aryan
+stamp upon them, and what, on the other hand, belong rather to the Semitic
+world. Now there is a certain portion of Greek mythology which bears but
+little relationship to the mythology of the kindred Aryan tribes, while it
+connects itself very closely with the beliefs and practices of the Semitic
+race. Human sacrifice is very possibly one of these, and it is noticeable
+that two at least of the legends which speak of human sacrifice&mdash;those of
+Athamas and Busiris&mdash;are associated, the one with the Ph&#339;nicians of
+Thebes, the other with the Ph&#339;nicians of the Egyptian Delta. The whole
+cycle of myths grouped about the name of Herakles points as clearly to a
+Semitic source as does the myth of Aphrodite and Adonis; and the
+extravagant lamentations that accompanied the worship of the Akh&aelig;an
+Demeter (Herod. v. 61) come as certainly from the East as the olive, the
+pomegranate, and the myrtle, the sacred symbols of Athena, of Hera, and of
+Aphrodite.<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a></p>
+
+<p>Comparative mythology has thus given us a juster appreciation of the
+historical inferences we may draw from the legends of prehistoric Greece,
+and has led us back to a recognition of the important part played by the
+Ph&#339;nicians in the heroic age. Greek culture, it is true, was not the
+mere copy of that of Semitic Asia, as scholars once believed, but the
+germs of it had come in large measure from an Oriental seed-plot. The
+conclusions derived from a scientific study of the myths have been
+confirmed and widened by the recent researches and discoveries of
+arch&aelig;ology. The spade, it has been said, is the modern instrument for
+reconstructing the history of the past, and in no department in history
+has the spade been more active of late than in that of Greece. From all
+sides light has come upon that remote epoch around which the mist of a
+fabulous antiquity had already been folded in the days of Herodotus; from
+the islands and shores of the &AElig;gean, from the tombs of Asia Minor and
+Palestine, nay, even from the temples and palaces of Egypt and Assyria,
+have the materials been exhumed for sketching in something like clear
+outline the origin and growth of Greek civilization. From nowhere,
+however, have more important<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> revelations been derived than from the
+excavations at Myken&aelig; and Spata, near Athens, and it is with the evidence
+furnished by these that I now propose mainly to deal. A personal
+inspection of the sites and the objects found upon them has convinced me
+of the groundlessness of the doubts which have been thrown out against
+their antiquity, as well as of the intercourse and connection to which
+they testify with the great empires of Babylonia and Assyria. Mr. Poole
+has lately pointed out what materials are furnished by the Egyptian
+monuments for determining the age and character of the antiquities of
+Myken&aelig;.<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> I would now draw attention to the far clearer and more
+tangible materials afforded by Assyrian art and history.</p>
+
+<p>Two facts must first be kept well in view. One of these is the Semitic
+origin of the Greek alphabet. The Ph&#339;nician alphabet, originally
+derived from the alphabet of the Egyptian hieroglyphics, and imported into
+their mother-country by the Ph&#339;nician settlers of the Delta, was
+brought to Greece, not probably by the Ph&#339;nicians of Tyre and Sidon,
+but by the Aram&aelig;ans of the Gulf of Antioch, whose nouns ended with the
+same "emphatic aleph" that we seem to find in the Greek names of the
+letters, <i>alpha</i>, <i>beta</i>, <i>gamma</i>, (<i>gamla</i>). Before the introduction of
+the simpler Ph&#339;nician alphabet, the inhabitants of Asia Minor and the
+neighbouring islands appear to have used a syllabary of some seventy
+characters, which continued to be employed in conservative Cyprus down to
+a very late date; but, so far as we know at present, the Greeks of the
+mainland were unacquainted with writing before the Aram&aelig;o-Ph&#339;nicians
+had taught them their phonetic symbols. The oldest Greek inscriptions are
+probably those of Thera, now Santorin, where the Ph&#339;nicians had been
+settled from time immemorial; and as the forms of the characters found in
+them do not differ very materially from the forms used on the famous
+Moabite Stone, we may infer that the alphabet of Kadmus was brought to the
+West at a date not very remote from that of Mesha and Ahab, perhaps about
+800 <span class="smcap">b.c.</span> We may notice that Thera was an island and a Ph&#339;nician colony,
+and it certainly seems more probable that the alphabet was carried to the
+mainland from the islands of the &AElig;gean than that it was disseminated from
+the inland Ph&#339;nician settlement at Thebes, as the old legends affirmed.
+In any case, the introduction of the alphabet implies a considerable
+amount of civilizing force on the part of those from whom it was borrowed;
+the teachers from whom an illiterate people learns the art of writing are
+generally teachers from whom it has previously learnt the other elements
+of social culture. A barbarous tribe will use its muscles in the service
+of art before it will use its brains; the smith and engraver precede the
+scribe. If, therefore, the Greeks were unacquainted with writing before
+the ninth century, <span class="smcap">b.c.</span>, objects older than that period may be expected to
+exhibit clear traces of Ph&#339;nician influence, though no traces of
+writing.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The other fact to which I allude is the existence of pottery of the same
+material and pattern on all the prehistoric sites of the Greek world,
+however widely separated they may be. We find it, for instance, at Myken&aelig;
+and Tiryns, at Tanagra and Athens, in Rhodes, in Cyprus, and in Thera,
+while I picked up specimens of it in the neighbourhood of the Treasury of
+Minyas and on the site of the Acropolis at Orchomenus. The clay of which
+it is composed is of a drab colour, derived, perhaps in all instances,
+from the volcanic soil of Thera and Melos, and it is ornamented with
+geometrical and other patterns in black and maroon-red. After a time the
+patterns become more complicated and artistic; flowers, animal forms, and
+eventually human figures, take the place of simple lines, and the pottery
+gradually passes into that known as Corinthian or Ph&#339;niko-Greek. It
+needs but little experience to distinguish at a glance this early pottery
+from the red ware of the later Hellenic period.</p>
+
+<p>Ph&#339;nicia, Keft as it was called by the Egyptians, had been brought into
+relation with the monarchy of the Nile at a remote date, and among the
+Semitic settlers in the Delta or "Isle of Caphtor" must have been natives
+of Sidon and the neighbouring towns. After the expulsion of the Hyksos,
+the Pharaohs of the eighteenth and nineteenth dynasties carried their arms
+as far as Mesopotamia and placed Egyptian garrisons in Palestine. A
+tomb-painting of Thothmes III. represents the Kefa or Ph&#339;nicians, clad
+in richly-embroidered kilts and buskins, and bringing their tribute of
+gold and silver vases and earthenware cups, some in the shape of animals
+like the vases found at Myken&aelig; and elsewhere. Ph&#339;nicia, it would seem,
+was already celebrated for its goldsmiths' and potters' work, and the
+ivory the Kefa are sometimes made to carry shows that their commerce must
+have extended far to the east. As early as the sixteenth century <span class="smcap">b.c.</span>,
+therefore, we may conclude that the Ph&#339;nicians were a great commercial
+people, trading between Assyria and Egypt and possessed of a considerable
+amount of artistic skill.</p>
+
+<p>It is not likely that a people of this sort, who, as we know from other
+sources, carried on a large trade in slaves and purple, would have been
+still unacquainted with the seas and coasts of Greece where both slaves
+and the murex or purple-fish were most easily to be obtained. Though the
+Ph&#339;nician alphabet was unknown in Greece till the ninth century <span class="smcap">b.c.</span>,
+we have every reason to expect to find traces of Ph&#339;nician commerce and
+Ph&#339;nician influence there at least five centuries before. And such
+seems to be the case. The excavations carried on in Thera by MM. Fouqu&eacute;
+and Gorceix,<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> in Rhodes by Mr. Newton and Dr. Saltzmann, and in various
+other places such as Megara, Athens, and Melos, have been followed by the
+explorations of Dr. Schliemann at Hissarlik, Tiryns, and Myken&aelig;, of
+General di Cesnola in Cyprus, and of the Arch&aelig;ological Society of Athens
+at Tanagra and Spata.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The accumulations of prehistoric objects on these sites all tell the same
+tale, the influence of the East, and more especially of the Ph&#339;nicians,
+upon the growing civilization of early Greece. Thus in Thera, where a sort
+of Greek Pompeii has been preserved under the lava which once overwhelmed
+it, we find the rude stone hovels of its primitive inhabitants, with roofs
+of wild olive, filled with the bones of dogs and sheep, and containing
+stores of barley, spelt, and chickpea, copper and stone weapons, and
+abundance of pottery. The latter is for the most part extremely coarse,
+but here and there have been discovered vases of artistic workmanship,
+which remind us of those carried by the Kefa, and may have been imported
+from abroad. We know from the tombs found on the island that the
+Ph&#339;nicians afterwards settled in Thera among a population in the same
+condition of civilization as that which had been overtaken by the great
+volcanic eruption. It was from these Ph&#339;nician settlers that the
+embroidered dresses known as Ther&aelig;an were brought to Greece; they were
+adorned with animals and other figures, similar to those seen upon
+Corinthian or Ph&#339;niko-Greek ware.</p>
+
+<p>Now M. Fr. Lenormant has pointed out that much of the pottery used by the
+aboriginal inhabitants of Thera is almost identical in form and make with
+that found by Dr. Schliemann at Hissarlik, in the Troad, and he concludes
+that it must belong to the same period and the same area of civilization.
+There is as yet little, if any, trace of Oriental influence; a few of the
+clay vases from Thera, and some of the gold workmanship at Hissarlik, can
+alone be referred, with more or less hesitation, to Ph&#339;nician artists.
+We have not yet reached the age when Ph&#339;nician trade in the West ceased
+to be the sporadic effort of private individuals, and when trading
+colonies were established in different parts of the Greek world; Europe is
+still unaffected by Eastern culture, and the beginnings of Greek art are
+still free from foreign interference. It is only in certain designs on the
+terra-cotta discs, believed by Dr. Schliemann to be spindle-whorls, that
+we may possibly detect rude copies of Babylonian and Ph&#339;nician
+intaglios.</p>
+
+<p>Among all the objects discovered at Hissarlik, none have been more
+discussed than the vases and clay images in which Dr. Schliemann saw a
+representation of an owl-headed Athena. What Dr. Schliemann took for an
+owl's head, however, is really a rude attempt to imitate the human face,
+and two breasts are frequently moulded in the clay below it. In many
+examples the human countenance is unmistakable, and in most of the others
+the representation is less rude than in the case of the small marble
+statues of Apollo (?) found in the Greek islands, or even of the early
+Hellenic vases where the men seem furnished with the beaks of birds. But
+we now know that these curious vases are not peculiar to the Troad.
+Specimens of them have also been met with in Cyprus, and in these we can
+trace the development of the owl-like head into the more perfect
+portraiture of the human face.<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> In conservative Cyprus there<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span> was not
+that break with the past which occurred in other portions of the Greek
+world.</p>
+
+<p>Cyprus, in fact, lay midway between Greece and Ph&#339;nicia, and was shared
+to the last between an Aryan and a Semitic population. The Ph&#339;nician
+element in the island was strong, if not preponderant; Paphos was a chief
+seat of the worship of the Ph&#339;nician Astarte, and the Ph&#339;nician
+Kitium, the Chittim of the Hebrews, took first rank among the Cyprian
+towns. The antiquities brought to light by General di Cesnola are of all
+ages and all styles&mdash;prehistoric and classical, Ph&#339;nician and Hellenic,
+Assyrian and Egyptian&mdash;and the various styles are combined together in the
+catholic spirit that characterized Ph&#339;nician art.</p>
+
+<p>But we must pause here for a moment to define more accurately what we mean
+by Ph&#339;nician art. Strictly speaking, Ph&#339;nicia had no art of its own;
+its designs were borrowed from Egypt and Assyria, and its artists went to
+school on the banks of the Nile and the Euphrates. The Ph&#339;nician
+combined and improved upon his models; the impulse, the origination came
+from abroad; the modification and elaboration were his own. He entered
+into other men's labours, and made the most of his heritage. The sphinx of
+Egypt became Asiatic, and in its new form was transplanted to Nineveh on
+the one side and to Greece on the other. The rosettes and other patterns
+of the Babylonian cylinders were introduced into the handiwork of
+Ph&#339;nicia, and so passed on to the West, while the hero of the ancient
+Chaldean epic became first the Tyrian Melkarth, and then the Herakles of
+Hellas. It is possible, no doubt, that with all this borrowing there was
+still something that was original in Ph&#339;nician work; such at any rate
+seems to be the case with some of the forms given to the vases; but at
+present we have no means of determining how far this originality may have
+extended. In Assyria, indeed, Ph&#339;nician art exercised a great influence
+in the eighth and seventh centuries <span class="smcap">b.c.</span>; but it had itself previously
+drawn its first inspiration from the empire of the Tigris, and did but
+give back the perfect blossom to those from whom it had received the seed.
+The workmanship of the ivories and bronze bowls found at Nineveh by Mr.
+Layard is thoroughly Ph&#339;nician; but it cannot be separated from that of
+the purely Assyrian pavements and bas-reliefs with which the palaces were
+adorned. The Ph&#339;nician art, in fact, traces of which we find from
+Assyria to Italy, though based on both Egyptian and Assyrian models, owed
+far more to Assyria than it did to Egypt. In art, as in mythology and
+religion, Ph&#339;nicia was but a carrier and intermediary between East and
+West; and just as the Greek legends of Aphrodite and Adonis, of Herakles
+and his twelve labours, and of the other borrowed heroes of Oriental story
+came in the first instance from Assyria, so did that art and culture which
+Kadmus the Ph&#339;nician handed on to the Greek race.</p>
+
+<p>But Assyria itself had been equally an adapter and intermediary. The
+Semites of Assyria and Babylonia had borrowed their culture and
+civilization from the older Accadian race, with its agglutinative
+language,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span> which had preceded them in the possession of Chaldea. So
+slavishly observant were the Assyrians of their Chaldean models that in a
+land where limestone was plentiful they continued to build their palaces
+and temples of brick, and to ornament them with those columns and
+pictorial representations which had been first devised on the alluvial
+plains of Babylonia. To understand Assyrian art, and track it back to its
+source, we must go to the engraved gems and ruined temples of prim&aelig;val
+Babylonia. It is true that Egypt may have had some influence on Assyrian
+art, at the time when the eighteenth dynasty had pushed its conquests to
+the banks of the Tigris; but that influence does not seem to have been
+either deep or permanent. Now the art of Assyria is in great measure the
+art of Ph&#339;nicia, and that again the art of prehistoric Greece. Modern
+research has discovered the prototype of Herakles in the hero of a
+Chaldean epic composed it may be, four thousand years ago; it has also
+discovered the beginnings of Greek columnar architecture and the germs of
+Greek art in the works of the builders and engravers of early Chaldea.</p>
+
+<p>When first I saw, five years ago, the famous sculpture which has guarded
+the Gate of Lions at Myken&aelig; for so many centuries, I was at once struck by
+its Assyrian character. The lions in form and attitude belong to Assyria,
+and the pillar against which they rest may be seen in the bas-reliefs
+brought from Nineveh. Here, at all events, there was clear proof of
+Assyrian influence; the only question was whether that influence had been
+carried through the hands of the Ph&#339;nicians or had travelled along the
+highroad which ran across Asia Minor, the second channel whereby the
+culture of Assyria could have been brought to Greece. The existence of a
+similar sculpture over a rock-tomb at Kumbet in Phrygia might seem to
+favour the latter view.</p>
+
+<p>The discoveries of Dr. Schliemann have gone far to settle the question.
+The pottery excavated at Myken&aelig; is of the Ph&#339;nician type, and the clay
+of which is composed has probably come from Thera. The terra-cotta figures
+of animals and more especially of a goddess with long robe, crowned head,
+and crescent-like arms, are spread over the whole area traversed by the
+Ph&#339;nicians. The image of the goddess in one form or another has been
+found in Thera and Melos, in Naxos and Paros, in Ios, in Sikinos, and in
+Anaphos, and M. Lenormant has traced it back to Babylonia and to the
+Babylonian representation of the goddess Artemis-Nana.<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> At Tanagra the
+image has been found under two forms, both, however, made of the same clay
+and in the same style as the figures from Myken&aelig;. In one the goddess is
+upright, as at Myken&aelig;, with the <i>polos</i> on her head, and the arms either
+outspread or folded over the breast; in the other she is sitting with the
+arms crossed. Now among the gold ornaments exhumed at Myken&aelig; are some
+square pendants of gold which represent the goddess in this sitting
+posture.<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a></p>
+
+<p>The animal forms most commonly met with are those of the lion,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> the stag,
+the bull, the cuttle-fish, and the murex. The last two point unmistakably
+to a seafaring race, and more especially to those Ph&#339;nician sailors
+whose pursuit of the purple-trade first brought them into Greek seas. So
+far as I know, neither the polypus nor the murex, nor the butterfly which
+often accompanies them have been found in Assyria or Egypt, and we may
+therefore see in them original designs of Ph&#339;nician art. Mr. Newton has
+pointed out that the cuttle-fish (like the dolphin) also occurs among the
+prehistoric remains from Ialysos in Rhodes, where, too, pottery of the
+same shape and material as that of Myken&aelig; has been found, as well as beads
+of a curious vitreous substance, and rings in which the back of the chaton
+is rounded so as to fit the finger. It is clear that the art of Ialysos
+belongs to the same age and school as the art of Myken&aelig;; and as a scarab
+of Amenophis III. has been found in one of the Ialysian tombs, it is
+possible that the art may be as old as the fifteenth century <span class="smcap">b.c.</span></p>
+
+<p>Now Ialysos is not the only Rhodian town which has yielded prehistoric
+antiquities. Camirus also has been explored by Messrs. Biliotti and
+Saltzmann; and while objects of the same kind and character as those of
+Ialysos have been discovered there, other objects have been found by their
+side which belong to another and more advanced stage of art. There are
+vases of clay and metal, bronze bowls, and the like, which not only
+display high finish and skill, but are ornamented with the designs
+characteristic of Ph&#339;nician workmanship at Nineveh and elsewhere. Thus
+we have zones of trees and animals, attempts at the representation of
+scenery, and a profusion of ornament, while the influence of Egypt is
+traceable in the sphinxes and scarabs, which also occur plentifully. Here,
+therefore, at Camirus, there is plain evidence of a sudden introduction of
+finished Ph&#339;nician art among a people whose art was still rude and
+backward, although springing from the same germs as the art of Ph&#339;nicia
+itself. Two distinct periods in the history of the &AElig;gean thus seem to lie
+unfolded before us; one in which Eastern influence was more or less
+indirect, content to communicate the seeds of civilization and culture,
+and to import such objects as a barbarous race would prize; and another in
+which the East was, as it were, transported into the West, and the
+development of Greek art was interrupted by the introduction of foreign
+workmen and foreign beliefs. This second period was the period of
+Ph&#339;nician colonization as distinct from that of mere trading
+voyages&mdash;the period, in fact, when Thebes was made a Ph&#339;nician
+fortress, and the Ph&#339;nician alphabet diffused throughout the Greek
+world. It is only in relics of the later part of this period that we can
+look for inscriptions and traces of writing, at least in Greece proper; in
+the islands and on the coast of Asia Minor, the Cypriote syllabary seems
+to have been in use, to be superseded afterwards by the simpler alphabet
+of Kadmus. For reasons presently to be stated, I would distinguish the
+first period by the name of Phrygian.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout the whole of it, however, the Ph&#339;nician trading ships<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> must
+have formed the chief medium of intercourse between Asia and Europe. Proof
+of this has been furnished by the rock tombs of Spata, which have been
+lighted on opportunely to illustrate and explain the discoveries at
+Myken&aelig;. Spata is about nine miles from Athens, on the north-west spur of
+Hymettos, and the two tombs hitherto opened are cut in the soft sandstone
+rock of a small conical hill. Both are approached by long tunnel-like
+entrances, and one of them contains three chambers, leading one into the
+other, and each fashioned after the model of a house. No one who has seen
+the objects unearthed at Spata can doubt for a moment their close
+connection with the Myken&aelig;an antiquities. The very moulds found at Myken&aelig;
+fit the ornaments from Spata, and might easily have been used in the
+manufacture of them. It is more especially with the contents of the sixth
+tomb, discovered by Mr. Stamat&aacute;ki in the <i>enceinte</i> at Myken&aelig; after Dr.
+Schliemann's departure, that the Spata remains agree so remarkably. But
+there is a strong resemblance between them and the Myken&aelig;an antiquities
+generally, in both material, patterns, and character. The cuttle-fish and
+the murex appear in both; the same curious spiral designs, and ornaments
+in the shape of shells or rudely-formed oxheads; the same geometrical
+patterns; the same class of carved work. An ivory in which a lion, of the
+Assyrian type, is depicted as devouring a stag, is but a reproduction of a
+similar design met with among the objects from Myken&aelig;, and it is
+interesting to observe that the same device, in the same style of art, may
+be also seen on a Ph&#339;nician gem from Sardinia.<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> Of still higher
+interest are other ivories, which, like the antiquities of Camirus, belong
+rather to the second than to the first period of Ph&#339;nician influence.
+One of these represents a column, which, like that above the Gate of
+Lions, carries us back to the architecture of Babylonia, while others
+exhibit the Egyptian sphinx, as modified by Ph&#339;nician artists. Thus the
+handle of a comb is divided into two compartments&mdash;the lower occupied by
+three of these sphinxes, the upper by two others, which have their eyes
+fixed on an Assyrian rosette in the middle. Similar sphinxes are engraved
+on a silver cup lately discovered at Palestrina, bearing the Ph&#339;nician
+inscription, in Ph&#339;nician letters, "Eshmun-ya'ar, son of Ashta'."<a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a>
+Another ivory has been carved into the form of a human side face,
+surmounted by a tiara of four plaits. On the one hand the arrangement of
+the hair of the face, the whisker and beard forming a fringe round it, and
+the two lips being closely shorn, reminds us of what we find at
+Palestrina; on the other hand, the head-dress is that of the figures on
+the sculptured rocks of Asia Minor, and of the Hittite princes of
+Carchemish. In spite of this Ph&#339;nician colouring, however, the
+treasures of Spata belong to the earlier part of the Ph&#339;nician period,
+if not to that which I have called Phrygian: there is as yet no sign of
+writing, no trace of the use of iron. But we seem to be approaching the
+close<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> of the bronze age in Greece&mdash;to have reached the time when the
+lions were sculptured over the chief gateway of Myken&aelig;, and the so-called
+treasuries were erected in honour of the dead.</p>
+
+<p>Can any date be assigned, even approximately, to those two periods of
+Ph&#339;nician influence in Greece? Can we localize the era, so to speak, of
+the antiquities discovered at Myken&aelig;, or fix the epoch at which its kings
+ceased to build its long-enduring monuments, and its glory was taken from
+it? I think an answer to these questions may be found in a series of
+engraved gold rings and prisms found upon its site&mdash;the prisms having
+probably once served to ornament the neck. In these we can trace a gradual
+development of art; which in time becomes less Oriental and more Greek,
+and acquires a certain facility in the representation of the human form.</p>
+
+<p>Let us first fix our attention on an engraved gold chaton found, not in
+the tombs, but outside the <i>enceinte</i> among the ruins, as it would seem,
+of a house.<a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> On this we have a rude representation of a figure seated
+under a palm-tree, with another figure behind and three more in front, the
+foremost being of small size, the remaining two considerably taller and in
+flounced dresses. Above are the symbols of the sun and crescent-moon, and
+at the side a row of lions' heads. Now no one who has seen this chaton,
+and also had any acquaintance with the engraved gems of the archaic period
+of Babylonian art, can avoid being struck by the fact that the intaglio is
+a copy of one of the latter. The characteristic workmanship of the
+Babylonian gems is imitated by punches made in the gold which give the
+design a very curious effect. The attitude of the figures is that common
+on the Chaldean cylinders; the owner stands in front of the deity, of
+diminutive size, and in the act of adoration, while the priests are placed
+behind him. The latter wear the flounced dresses peculiar to the early
+Babylonian priests; and what has been supposed to represent female
+breasts, is really a copy of the way in which the breast of a man is
+frequently portrayed on the cylinders.<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> The palm-tree, with its single
+fruit hanging on the left side, is characteristically Babylonian; so also
+are the symbols that encircle the engraving, the sun and moon and lions'
+heads. The chaton of another gold ring, found on the same spot, is covered
+with similar animal heads. This, again, is a copy of early Babylonian art,
+in which such designs were not unfrequent, though, as they were afterwards
+imitated by both Assyrian and Cyprian engravers, too much stress must not
+be laid on the agreement.<a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> The artistic position<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> and age of the other
+ring, however, admits of little doubt. The archaic period of Babylonian
+art may be said to close with the rise of Assyria in the fourteenth
+century <span class="smcap">b.c.</span>; and though archaic Babylonian intaglios continued to be
+imported into the West down to the time of the Romans, it is not likely
+that they were imitated by Western artists after the latter had become
+acquainted with better and more attractive models. I think, therefore,
+that the two rings may be assigned to the period of archaic Babylonian
+power in western Asia, a period that begins with the victories of
+Naram-Sin in Palestine in the seventeenth century <span class="smcap">b.c.</span> or earlier, and
+ends with the conquest of Babylon by the Assyrians and the establishment
+of Assyrian supremacy. This is also the period to which I am inclined to
+refer the introduction among the Ph&#339;nicians and Greeks of the column
+and of certain geometrical patterns, which had their first home in
+Babylonia.<a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> The lentoid gems with their rude intaglios, found in the
+islands, on the site of Her&aelig;um, in the tombs of Myken&aelig; and elsewhere,
+belong to the same age, and point back to the loamy plain of Babylonia
+where stone was rare and precious, and whence, consequently, the art of
+gem-cutting was spread through the ancient world. We can thus understand
+the existence of artistic designs and other evidences of civilizing
+influence among a people who were not yet acquainted with the use of iron.
+The early Chaldean Empire, in spite of the culture to which it had
+attained, was still in the bronze age; iron was almost unknown, and its
+tools and weapons were fashioned of stone, bone, and bronze. Had the
+Greeks and the Ph&#339;nicians before them received their first lessons in
+culture from Egypt or from Asia Minor, where the Khalybes and other allied
+tribes had worked in iron from time immemorial, they would probably have
+received this metal at the same time. But neither at Hissarlik nor at
+Myken&aelig; is there any trace of an iron age.</p>
+
+<p>The second period of Western art and civilization is represented by some
+of the objects found at Myken&aelig; in the tombs themselves. The intaglios have
+ceased to be Babylonian, and have become markedly Assyrian. First of all
+we have a hunting scene, a favourite subject with Assyrian artists, but
+quite unknown to genuine Hellenic art. The disposition of the figures is
+that usual in Assyrian sculpture, and, like the Assyrian king, the
+huntsman is represented as riding in a chariot. A comparison of this
+hunting scene with the bas-reliefs on the tombstones which stood over the
+graves shows that they belong to the same age, while the spiral
+ornamentation of the stones is essentially Assyrian. Equally Assyrian,
+though better engraved, is a lion on one of the gold prisms, which might
+have been cut by an Assyrian workman, so true is it to its Oriental model,
+and after this I would place the representation<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span> of a struggle between a
+man (perhaps Herakles) and a lion, in which, though the lion and attitude
+of the combatants are Assyrian, the man is no longer the Assyrian hero
+Gisdhubar, but a figure of more Western type. In another intaglio,
+representing a fight between armed warriors, the art has ceased to be
+Assyrian, and is struggling to become native. We seem to be approaching
+the period when Greece gave over walking in Eastern leading-strings, and
+began to step forward firmly without help. As I believe, however, that the
+tombs within the <i>enceinte</i> are of older date than the Treasuries outside
+the Acropolis, or the Gate of Lions which belongs to the same age, it is
+plain that we have not yet reached the time when Assyro-Ph&#339;nician
+influence began to decline in Greece. The lions above the gate would alone
+be proof to the contrary.</p>
+
+<p>But, in fact, Ph&#339;nician influence continued to be felt up to the end of
+the seventh century <span class="smcap">b.c.</span> Passing by the so-called Corinthian vases, or the
+antiquities exhumed by General di Cesnola in Cyprus, where the
+Ph&#339;nician element was strong, we have numerous evidences of the fact
+from all parts of Greece. Two objects of bronze discovered at Olympia may
+be specially signalized. One of these is an oblong plate, narrower at one
+end than at the other, ornamented with <i>repousse</i> work, and divided into
+four compartments. In the first compartment are figures of the nondescript
+birds so often seen on the "Corinthian" pottery; in the next come two
+Assyrian gryphons standing, as usual, face to face; while the third
+represents the contest of Herakles with the Kentaur, thoroughly Oriental
+in design. The Kentaur has a human forefront, covered, however, with hair;
+his tail is abnormally long, and a three-branched tree rises behind him.
+The fourth and largest compartment contains the figure of the Asiatic
+goddess with the four wings at the back, and a lion, held by the hind leg,
+in either hand. The face of the goddess is in profile. The whole design is
+Assyro-Ph&#339;nician, and is exactly reproduced on some square gold plates,
+intended probably to adorn the breast, presented to the Louvre by the Duc
+de Luynes. The other object to which I referred is a bronze dish,
+ornamented on the inside with <i>repousse</i> work, which at first sight looks
+Egyptian, but is really that Ph&#339;nician modification of Egyptian art so
+common in the eighth and seventh centuries <span class="smcap">b.c.</span> An inscription in the
+Aramaic characters of the so-called Sidonian branch of the Ph&#339;nician
+alphabet is cut on the outside, and reads: "Belonging to Neger, son of
+Miga."<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a> As the word used for "son" is the Aramaic <i>bar</i> and not the
+Ph&#339;nician <i>ben</i>, we may conclude that the owner of the dish had come
+from northern Syria. It is interesting to find a silver cup embossed with
+precisely the same kind of design, and also bearing an inscription in
+Ph&#339;nician letters, among the treasures discovered in a tomb at
+Palestrina, the ancient Pr&aelig;neste, more than a year ago. This inscription
+is even briefer than the other: "Eshmunya'ar son of 'Asht&acirc;,"<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> where,
+though <i>ben</i> is employed, the father's name has<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span> an Aramaic form. Helbig
+would refer these Italian specimens of Ph&#339;nician skill to the
+Carthaginian epoch, partly on the ground that an African species of ape
+seems sometimes represented on them;<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> in this case they might be as
+late as the fifth century before the Christian era.</p>
+
+<p>During the earlier part of the second period of Ph&#339;nician influence,
+Ph&#339;nicia and the Ph&#339;nician colonies were not the only channel by
+which the elements of Assyrian culture found their way into the West. The
+monuments and religious beliefs of Asia Minor enable us to trace their
+progress from the banks of the Euphrates and the ranges of the Taurus,
+through Cappadocia and Phrygia, to the coasts and islands of the &AElig;gean.
+The near affinity of Greek and Phrygian is recognized even by Plato;<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a>
+the legends of Midas and Gordius formed part of Greek mythology, and the
+royal house of Myken&aelig; was made to come with all its wealth from the golden
+sands of the Paktolus; while on the other hand the cult of M&acirc;, of Attys,
+or of the Ephesian Artemis points back to an Assyrian origin. The
+sculptures found by Perrot<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> and Texier constitute a link between the
+prehistoric art of Greece and that of Asia Minor; the spiral ornaments
+that mark the antiquities of Myken&aelig; are repeated on the royal tombs of
+Asia Minor; and the ruins of Sardis, where once ruled a dynasty derived by
+Greek writers from Ninus or Nineveh, "the son of Bell," the grandson of
+the Assyrian Herakles,<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> may yet pour a flood of light on the earlier
+history of Greece. But it was rather in the first period, which I have
+termed Phrygian, than in the second, that the influence of Asia Minor was
+strongest. The figure of the goddess riding on a leopard, with mural crown
+and peaked shoes, on the rock-tablets of Pterium,<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> is borrowed rather
+from the cylinders of early Babylonia than from the sculptures of Assyria;
+and the Hissarlik collection connects itself more with the primitive
+antiquities of Santorin than with the later art of Myken&aelig; and Cyprus. We
+have already seen, however, the close relationship that exists between
+some of the objects excavated at Myken&aelig; and what we may call the
+pre-Ph&#339;nician art of Ialysos,&mdash;that is to say, the objects in which the
+influence of the East is indirect, and not direct. The discovery of
+metallurgy is associated with Dodona, where the oracle long continued to
+be heard in the ring of a copper chaldron, and where M. Karapanos has
+found bronze plates with the geometrical and circular patterns which
+distinguish the earliest art of Greece; now Dodona is the seat of prim&aelig;val
+Greek civilization, the land of the Selloi or Helloi, of the Graioi
+themselves, and of Pelasgian Zeus, while it is to the north that the
+legends of Orpheus, of Mus&aelig;us, and of other early civilizers looked back.
+But even at Dodona we may detect traces of Asiatic influence in the part
+played there by the doves, as well as in the story of Deucalion's deluge,
+and it may, perhaps, be not too rash to conjecture<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span> that even before the
+days of Ph&#339;nician enterprise and barter, an echo of Babylonian
+civilization had reached Greece through the medium of Asia Minor, whence
+it was carried, partly across the bridge formed by the islands of the
+Archipelago, partly through the mainland of Thrace and Epirus. The
+Hittites, with their capital at Carchemish, seem to have been the centre
+from which this borrowed civilization was spread northward and westward.
+Here was the home of the art which characterizes Asia Minor, and we have
+only to compare the bas-relief of Pterium with the rock sculptures found
+by Mr. Davis associated with "Hamathite" hieroglyphics at Ibreer, in
+Lycaonia,<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> to see how intimate is the connection between the two. These
+hieroglyphics were the still undeciphered writing of the Hittite tribes
+and if, as seems possible, the Cypriote syllabary were derived from them,
+they would be a testimony to the western spread of Hittite influence at a
+very early epoch. The Cypriote characters adopted into the alphabets of
+Lycia and Karia, as well as the occurrence of the same characters on a
+hone and some of the terra-cotta discs found by Dr. Schliemann at
+Hissarlik, go to show that this influence would have extended, at any
+rate, to the coasts of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>The traces of Egyptian influence, on the contrary, are few and faint. No
+doubt the Ph&#339;nician alphabet was ultimately of Egyptian origin, no
+doubt, too, that certain elements of Ph&#339;nician art were borrowed from
+Egypt, but before these were handed on to the West, they had first been
+profoundly modified by the Ph&#339;nician settlers in the Delta and in
+Canaan. The influence exercised immediately by Egypt upon Greece belongs
+to the historic period; the legends which saw an Egyptian emigrant in
+Kekrops or an Egyptian colony in the inhabitants of Argos were fables of a
+late date. Whatever intercourse existed between Egypt and Greece in the
+prehistoric period was carried on, not by the Egyptians, but by the
+Ph&#339;nicians of the Delta; it was they who brought the scarabs of a
+Thothmes or an Amenophis to the islands of the &AElig;gean, like their
+descendants afterwards in Italy, and the proper names found on the
+Egyptian monuments of the eighteenth and nineteenth dynasties, which
+certain Egyptologists have identified with those of Greece and Asia Minor,
+belong rather, I believe, to Libyan and Semitic tribes.<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> Like the
+sphinxes at Spata, the indications of intercourse with Egypt met with at
+Myken&aelig; prove nothing more than the wide extent of Ph&#339;nician commerce
+and the existence of Ph&#339;nician colonies at the mouths of the Nile.
+Ostrich-eggs covered with stucco dolphins have been found not only at
+Myken&aelig;, but also in the grotto of Polledrara near Vulci in Italy; the
+Egyptian porcelain excavated at Myken&aelig; is painted to represent the fringed
+dress of an Assyrian or a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> Ph&#339;nician, not of an Egyptian; and though a
+gold mask belonging to Prince Kha-em-Uas, and resembling the famous masks
+of Myken&aelig;, has brought to the Louvre from an Apis chamber, a similar mask
+of size was discovered last year in a tomb on the site of Aradus. Such
+intercourse, however, as existed between Greece and the Delta must have
+been very restricted; otherwise we should surely have some specimens of
+writing, some traces of the Ph&#339;nician alphabet. It would not have been
+left to the Aram&aelig;ans of Syria to introduce the "Kadmeian letters" into
+Greece, and Myken&aelig;, rather than Thebes, would have been made the centre
+from which they were disseminated. Indeed, we may perhaps infer that even
+the coast of Asia Minor, near as it was to the Ph&#339;nician settlements at
+Kamirus and elsewhere, could have held but little intercourse with the
+Ph&#339;nicians of Egypt from the fact that the Cypriote syllabary was so
+long in use upon it, and that the alphabets afterwards employed were
+derived only indirectly from the Ph&#339;nician through the medium of the
+Greek.</p>
+
+<p>One point more now alone needs to be noticed. The long-continued influence
+upon early Greek culture which we ascribe to the Ph&#339;nicians cannot but
+have left its mark upon the Greek vocabulary also. Some at least of the
+names given by the Ph&#339;nicians to the objects of luxury they brought
+with them must have been adopted by the natives of Hellas. We know that
+this is the case with the letters of the alphabet; is it also the case
+with other words? If not, analogy would almost compel us to treat the
+evidences that have been enumerated of Ph&#339;nician influence as illusory,
+and to fall back upon the position of O. K. M&uuml;ller and his school. By way
+of answer I would refer to the list of Greek words, the Semitic origin of
+which admits of no doubt, lately given by Dr. August M&uuml;ller in
+Bezzenberger's "Beitrage zur Kunde der indogermanischen Sprachen."<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a>
+Amongst these we find articles of luxury like "linen," "shirt,"
+"sackcloth," "myrrh," and "frankincense," "galbanum" and "cassia,"
+"cinnamon" and "soap," "lyres" and "wine-jars," "balsam" and "cosmetics,"
+as well, possibly, as "fine linen" and "gold," along with such evidences
+of trade and literature as the "pledge," "the writing tablet," and the
+"shekel." If these were the only instances of Semitic tincture, they would
+be enough to prove the early presence of the Semitic Ph&#339;nicians in
+Greece. But we must remember that they are but samples of a class, and
+that many words borrowed during the heroic age may have dropped out of use
+or been conformed to the native part of the vocabulary long before the
+beginning of the written literature, while it would be in the lesser known
+dialects of the islands that the Semitic element was strongest. We know
+that the dialect of Cyprus was full of importations from the East.</p>
+
+<p>In what precedes I have made no reference to the Homeric poems, and the
+omission may be thought strange. But Homeric illustrations of the presence
+of the Ph&#339;nicians in Greece will occur to every one, while<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> both the
+Iliad and the Odyssey in their existing form are too modern to be quoted
+without extreme caution. A close investigation of their language shows
+that it is the slow growth of generations; &AElig;olic formul&aelig; from the lays
+first recited in the towns of the Troad are embodied in Ionic poems where
+old Ionic, new Ionic, and even Attic jostle against one another, and
+traditional words and phrases are furnished with mistaken meanings or new
+forms coined by false analogy. It is difficult to separate the old from
+the new, to say with certainty that this allusion belongs to the heroic
+past, this to the Homer of Theopompus and Euphorion, the contemporary of
+the Lydian Gyges. The art of Homer is not the art of Myken&aelig; and of the
+early age of Ph&#339;nician influence; iron is already taking the place of
+bronze, and the shield of Akhilles or the palace of Alkinous bear witness
+to a developed art which has freed itself from its foreign bonds. Six
+times are Ph&#339;nicia and the Ph&#339;nicians mentioned in the Odyssey, once
+in the Iliad;<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> elsewhere it is Sidon and the Sidonians that represented
+them, never Tyre.<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> Such passages, therefore, cannot belong to the epoch
+of Tyrian supremacy, which goes back, at all events, to the age of David,
+but rather to the brief period when the Assyrian king Shalmaneser laid
+siege to Tyre, and his successor Sargon made Sidon powerful at its
+expense. This, too, was the period when Sargon set up his record in
+Cyprus, "the isle of Yavnan" or the Ionians, when Assyria first came into
+immediate contact with the Greeks, and when Ph&#339;nician artists worked at
+the court of Nineveh and carried their wares to Italy and Sardinia. But it
+was not the age to which the relics of Myken&aelig;, in spite of paradoxical
+doubts, reach back, nor that in which the sacred bull of Astarte carried
+the Ph&#339;nician maiden Europa to her new home in the west.</p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+<span class="smcap">A. H. Sayce</span>, in <i>Contemporary Review</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> See E. Curtins: Die griechische G&ouml;tterlehre vom
+geschichtlichen Standpunkt, in <i>Preussische Jahrbucher</i>, xxxvi. pp. 1-17.
+1875.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> <i>Contemporary Review</i>, January, 1878.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> See Fouqu&eacute;'s Mission Scientifique &aacute; l'&icirc;le de Santorin
+(Archives des Missions 2e s&eacute;rie, iv. 1867); Gorceix in the Bulletin de
+l'Ecole francaise d'Ath&egrave;nes, i.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> See, for example, Di Cesnola's <i>Cyprus</i>, pp. 401, 402.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> <i>Gazette Arch&eacute;ologique</i>, ii-. 1, 3.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> See Schliemann's Mycen&aelig; and Tiryns, pl. 273.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> Given by La Marmora in the Memorie della Reale Academia
+delle Scienze di Torino (1854), vol. xiv., pl. 2, fig. 63.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> Given in the Monumenti d. Instituto Romano, 1876.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Schliemann: Mycen&aelig; and Tiryns, p. 530.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> See, for instance, the example given in Rawlinson's Ancient
+Monarchies (1st edit.), i. p. 118, where the flounced priest has what
+looks like a woman's breast. Dancing boys and men in the East still wear
+these flounces, which are variously coloured (see Loftus: Chaldea and
+Susiana, p. 22; George Smith: Assyrian Discoveries, p. 130).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> See, for example, Layard: Nineveh and Babylon, pp. 604, 606;
+Di Cesnola: Cyprus, pl. 31, No. 7; pl. 32, No. 19. A copy of the Myken&aelig;an
+engraving is given in Schliemann's Mycen&aelig; and Tiryns, pl. 531.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> More especially the examples in Rawlinson's Ancient
+Monarchies, iii. p. 403, and i. 413. For Myken&aelig;an examples see
+Schliemann's Myken&aelig; and Tiryns, ppl. 149, 152, &amp;c. Some of the more
+peculiar patterns from Myken&aelig; resemble the forms assumed by the
+"Hamathite" hieroglyphics in the unpublished inscription copied by Mr.
+George Smith from the back of a mutilated statue at Jerabl&ucirc;s
+(Carchemish).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> LNGR. BR. MIGA'.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> ASHMNYA'R. BNA' SHTA.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> Annali d. Istituto Romano, 1876.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> Kratylus, 410 <span class="smcap">a.d.</span></p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> Exploration Arch&eacute;ologique de la Galatie et de la Bithynie.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> See Herodotus, i.7.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> Texier: Description de l'Asie Mineure, i. 1, pl. 78.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> Transactions of the Society of Biblical Arch&aelig;ology, iv. 2,
+1876.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> I have given the reasons of my scepticism in the <i>Academy</i>,
+of May 30, 1874. Brugsch Bey, the leading authority on the geography of
+the Egyptian monuments, would now identify those names with those tribes
+in Kolkhis, and its neighbourhood.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> i. pp. 273-301 (1877).</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> <i>Ph&#339;nicia</i>, Od. iv. 83; xiv. 291. <i>Ph&#339;nicians</i>, Od.
+xiii. 272; xv. 415. <i>A Ph&#339;nician</i>, Od. xiv. 288. <i>A Ph&#339;nician
+woman</i>, Od. xiv. 288; Il. xiv. 321.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> <i>Sidon</i>, <i>Sidonia</i>, Il. vi. 291; Od. xiii. 285; xv. 425.
+<i>Sidonians</i>, Il. vi. 290; Od. iv. 84, 618; xv. 118.</p></div>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="SOME_GOSSIP_ABOUT_LEICESTER_SQUARE" id="SOME_GOSSIP_ABOUT_LEICESTER_SQUARE"></a>SOME GOSSIP ABOUT LEICESTER SQUARE.</h2>
+
+
+<p>In old-world London, Leicester Square played a much more important part
+than it does to-day. It was then the chosen refuge of royalty and the home
+of wit and genius. Time was when it glittered with throngs of
+lace-bedizened gallants; when it trembled beneath the chariot-wheels of
+Beauty and Fashion; when it re-echoed with the cries of jostling chairmen
+and link-boys; when it was trodden by the feet of the greatest men of a
+great epoch&mdash;Newton and Swift, Hogarth, Sir Joshua Reynolds, and a host of
+others more or less distinguished. Mr. Tom Taylor, in his interesting work
+entitled "Leicester Square," tells us that the vicissitudes of a London
+quarter generally tend downwards through a regular series of decades. It
+is first fashionable; then it is professional; then it becomes a favourite
+locality for hotels and lodging-houses; then the industrial element
+predominates, and then not infrequently a still lower depth is reached.
+Leicester Square has been no exception to this rule. Its reputation in
+fact was becoming very shady indeed, when the improvement of its central
+inclosure gave it somewhat of a start upwards and turned attention to its
+early history.</p>
+
+<p>Of old, many of these grand doings took place at Leicester House, which
+was the first house in the Square. It was built by Robert Sidney, Earl of
+Leicester, a staunch Royalist, somewhere about 1636. His sons, Viscount
+Lisle and the famous Algernon Sidney, grew up less of Royalists than he
+was; and to Leicester House, with the sanction and welcome of its head,
+came many of the more prominent Republicans of the day, Vane and Neville,
+Milton and Bradshaw, Ludlow and Lambert. The cream of history lies not so
+much in a bare notation of facts as in the little touches of nature and
+manners which reproduce for us the actual human life of a former age, and
+much of this may be gleaned from the history of the Sidneys. They were an
+interesting family, alike from their rank, their talents, their personal
+beauty, and the vicissitudes of their fortunes. The Countess was a clever
+managing woman; and her letters to her absent lord when ambassador in
+France convey to us many pleasant details of the home-life at Leicester
+House. Still more charming is it to read the pretty little billets
+addressed to the Earl by his elder girls. Of these six beautiful daughters
+of the house of Sidney, four were married and two died in the dawn of
+early womanhood. Of the younger of these, Lady Elizabeth, the father has a
+touching entry in his journal. After narrating her death, he adds: "She
+had to the last the most angelical countenance and beauty, and the most
+heavenly disposition and temper of mind that I think were ever seen in so
+young a creature."</p>
+
+<p>With her death the merry happy family life at Leicester House drew<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> to a
+close. The active bustling mother, whose influence had brought the
+different jarring chords into harmony, died a few mouths afterwards; and
+the busy years as they sped onwards, while consummating the fall of
+Charles and consolidating the power of Cromwell, also put great and
+growing disunion between the Sidney brothers. At the Restoration, Algernon
+was in exile; Lord Lisle's stormy temper had alienated him from his
+father; the Earl's favourite son-in-law was dead; of the three who
+remained he was neither proud nor fond; and lonely and sick at heart, he
+grew weary of the splendid home from which the fair faces of his handsome
+children had gone for ever, and made preparations to leave it. He was
+presented to Charles II.; and immediately afterwards retired to Penshurst
+in Kent; and Leicester House was let, first to the ambassadors of the
+United Provinces; and then to a more remarkable tenant, Elizabeth Stewart,
+the ill-fated Princess and Queen of Bohemia. She had left England in 1613
+a lovely happy girl, the bride of the man she loved, life stretching all
+rainbow-hued before her. She returned to it a weary haggard woman of
+sixty-five, who had drunk to the dregs of every possible cup of
+disappointment and sorrow. Her presence was very unwelcome, as that of the
+unfortunate often is. Charles II., her nephew, was very loath indeed to
+have the pleasure of receiving her as a guest; but she returned to London
+whether he would or not, and Leicester house was taken for her. There she
+languished for a few months in feeble and broken health, and there, on the
+anniversary of her wedding-day, she died.</p>
+
+<p>The house immediately to the west of Leicester House belonged to the
+Marquis of Aylesbury; but in 1698 it was occupied by the Marquis of
+Caermarthen, who was appointed by King William III. cicerone and guide to
+Peter the Great when he came in the January of that year to visit England.
+Peter's great qualities have long been done full justice to; but in the
+far-off January of 1698 he appeared to the English as by no means a very
+august-looking potentate; he had the manners and appearance of an unkempt
+barbarian, and his pastimes were those of a coal-heaver. His favourite
+exercise in the mornings was to run a barrow through and through Evelyn's
+trim holly-hedges at Deptford; and the state in which he left his pretty
+house there is not to be described. His chief pleasure, when the duties of
+the day were over, was to drink all night with the Marquis in his house at
+Leicester Fields, the favourite tipple of the two distinguished topers
+being brandy spiced with pepper; or sack, of which the Czar is reported to
+have drunk eight bottles one day after dinner. Among other sights in
+London, the Marquis took him to see Westminster Hall in full term. "Who
+are all these men in wigs and gowns?" he asked. "Lawyers," was the answer.
+"Lawyers!" he exclaimed. "Why, I have only two in my dominions, and when I
+get back, I intend to hang one of them."</p>
+
+<p>In January 1712 Leicester House, which was then occupied by the imperial
+resident, received another distinguished visitor in the person of Prince
+Eugene, one of the greatest captains of the age. In appearance<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span> he was a
+little sallow wizened old man, with one shoulder higher than the other. A
+soldier of fortune, whose origin was so humble as to be unknown, his
+laurels were stained neither by rapacity nor self-seeking; and in all the
+vicissitudes of his eventful life he bore himself like a hero, and a
+gentleman in the truest and fullest acceptation of the word. Dean Swift
+was also at this time in lodgings in Leicester Fields, noting with clear
+acute unpitying vision the foibles and failings of all around him, and
+writing to Stella from time to time after his cynical fashion, "how the
+world is going mad after Prince Eugene, and how he went to court also, but
+could not see him, the crowd was so great."</p>
+
+<p>A labyrinth of courts, inns, and stable-yards had gradually filled up the
+space between the royal mews and Leicester Fields; and between 1680 and
+1700 several new streets were opened through these; one reason for the
+opening of them being the great influx of French refugees into London, on
+the occasion of the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685. Many of
+these exiles settled in and around Leicester Fields, and for their use
+several chapels were built. The neighbourhood has ever since been a resort
+of French immigrants.</p>
+
+<p>In one of these streets opening into Leicester Square, St. Martin's
+Street, Sir Isaac Newton lived for the last sixteen years of his life. The
+house in which he lived looks dingy enough now; but in those days it was
+considered a very good residence indeed, and Like Leicester House was
+frequented by the best company in the fashionable world. The genius and
+reputation of its master attracted scientific and learned visitors; and
+the beauty of his niece, Mrs. Catharine Barton, drew to her feet all the
+more distinguished wits and beaux of the time.</p>
+
+<p>Between 1717 and 1760 Leicester House became what Pennant calls "the
+pouting-place of princes," being for almost all that time in the
+occupation of a Prince of Wales who was living in fierce opposition to the
+reigning king. In 1718 the Prince of Wales having had a furious quarrel
+with his father George I., on the occasion of the christening of the
+Prince's son George William, left St. James's, and took Leicester House at
+a yearly rent of five hundred pounds; and until he succeeded to the throne
+in 1727, it was his town residence.</p>
+
+<p>Here he held his court&mdash;a court not by any means strait-laced; a gay
+little court at first; a court whose selfish intrigues and wild frolics
+and madcap adventures and humdrum monotony live for us still in the
+sparkling pages of Horace Walpole; or are painted in with vivid clearness
+of touch and execution, but with a darker brush, by Hervey, Pope's Lord
+Fanny, who was a favourite with his mistress the handsome accomplished
+Caroline, Princess of Wales. Piloted by one or other of these exact
+historians, we enter the chamber of the gentlewomen-in-waiting, and are
+introduced to the maids-of-honour, to fair Mary Lepell, to charming Mrs.
+Bellenden, to pensive, gentle Mrs. Howard. We see them eat Westphalia ham
+of a morning, and then set out with their royal master for a
+helter-skelter ride over hedges and ditches, on borrowed hacks. No wonder
+Pope pitied them; and on their return, who<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span> should they fall in with but
+that great poet himself! They are good to him in their way, these saucy
+charming maids-of-honour, and so they take the frail little man under
+their protection and give him his dinner; and then he finishes off the
+day, he tells us, by walking three hours in the moonlight with Mary
+Lepell. We can imagine the affected compliments he paid her and the
+burlesque love he made to her; and the fun she and her sister
+maids-of-honour would have laughing over it all, when she went back to
+Leicester House and he returned to his pretty villa at Twickenham.</p>
+
+<p>As the Prince grew older his court became more and more dull, till at last
+it was almost deserted, when on the 14th of June 1727 the loungers in its
+half-empty chambers were roused by sudden news&mdash;George I. was dead; and
+Leicester House was thronged by a sudden rush of obsequious courtiers,
+among whom was the late king's prime-minister, bluff, jolly, coarse Sir
+Robert Walpole. No one paid any attention to him, for every one knew that
+his disgrace was sealed; the new king had never been at any pains to
+conceal his dislike to him. Sir Robert, however, knew better; he was quite
+well aware who was to be the real ruler of England now; and he knew that
+the Princess Caroline had already accepted him, just as she accepted La
+Walmoden and her good Howard; and so all alone in his corner he chuckled
+to himself as he saw the crowd of sycophants elbow and jostle and push
+poor Lady Walpole as she tried to make her way to the royal feet. Caroline
+saw it too, and with a flash of half-scornful mischief lighting up her
+shrewd eyes, said with a smile: "Sure, there I see a friend." Instantly
+the human stream parted, and made way for her Ladyship.</p>
+
+<p>In 1728 Frederick, the eldest son of George and Caroline, arrived from
+Hanover, where he had remained since his birth in 1707. It was a fatal
+mistake; he came to England a stranger to his parents, and with his place
+in their hearts already filled by his brother. It was inevitable that
+where there was no mutual love, distrust and alienation should come, as in
+no long time they did, with the result that the same pitiful drama was
+played out again on the same stage. In 1743 Frederick Prince of Wales took
+Leicester House and held his receptions there. He was fond of gaiety, and
+had a succession of balls, masques, plays, and supper-parties. His tastes,
+as was natural considering his rearing, were foreign, and Leicester House
+was much frequented by foreigners of every grade. Desnoyers the
+dancing-master was a favourite habitu&eacute;, as was also the charlatan
+St-Germain. In the midst of all this fiddling and buffoonery the Prince
+fell ill; but not so seriously as to cause uneasiness to any one around
+him; consequently all the world was taken by surprise when he suddenly
+died one morning in the arms of his friend the dancing-master. After his
+death his widow remained at Leicester House, and like a sensible woman as
+she was, made her peace with the king her father-in-law, who ever
+afterwards shewed himself very kind and friendly to her.</p>
+
+<p>In October 1760 George III. was proclaimed king; and again a crowd<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span> of
+courtiers thronged to Leicester House to kiss the hand of the new
+sovereign. For six years longer the Princess of Wales continued to live at
+Leicester House; and there in 1765 her youngest son died, and the
+following year she removed to Carlton House.</p>
+
+<p>While the quarrel between George II. and Frederick was at its fiercest,
+the central inclosure of Leicester Square was re-arranged very elegantly
+according to the taste of the day; and an equestrian statue of George I.,
+which had belonged to the first Duke of Chandos and had been bought at the
+sale of his effects, was set up in front of Leicester House, where it
+remained, a dazzling object at first, in all the glory of gilding, which
+passed with the populace for gold; but latterly a most wretched relic of
+the past, an eyesore, which was removed in 1874 in the course of Baron
+Grant's improvements.</p>
+
+<p>Leicester Square had other tenants beside Sir Isaac Newton, compared with
+whom courtiers and gallants and fine gentlemen and ladies look very small
+indeed. Hogarth lived in this street, and so did Sir Joshua Reynolds.
+Hogarth's house was the last but two on the east side of the Square. Here
+he established himself, a young struggling man, with Jane Thornhill, the
+wife with whom he had made a stolen love-match. In this house, with the
+quaint sign of the Golden Head over the door, he worked, not as painters
+generally do, at a multitude of detached pieces, but depicting with his
+vivid brush a whole series of popular allegories on canvas. When he became
+rich, as in process of time he did, he had a house at Chiswick; but he
+still retained the Golden Head as his town-house, and in 1764 returned to
+it to die.</p>
+
+<p>In No. 47 Sir Joshua Reynolds lived, and painted those charming portraits
+which have immortalised for us all that was most beautiful and famous in
+his epoch. He was a kindly genial lovable man, fond of society, and with a
+liking for display. He had a wonderful carriage, with the four seasons
+curiously painted in on the panels, and the wheels ornamented with carved
+foliage and gilding. The servants in attendance on this chariot wore
+silver-laced liveries; and as he had no time to drive in it himself, he
+made his sister take a daily airing in it, much to her discomfort, for she
+was a homely little lady with very simple tastes. He was a great dinner
+giver; and as it was his custom to ask every pleasant person he met
+without any regard to the preparation made to receive them, it may be
+conjectured that there was often a want of the commonest requisites of the
+dinner-table. Even knives, forks, and glasses could not always be procured
+at first. But although his dinners partook very much of the nature of
+unceremonious scrambles, they were thoroughly enjoyable. Whatever was
+awanting, there was always cheerfulness and the pleasant kindly
+interchange of thought. In July 1792 Sir Joshua died in his own house in
+Leicester Square; and within a few hours of his death, an obituary notice
+of him was written by Burke, the manuscript of which was blotted with his
+tears.</p>
+
+<p>In No. 28, on the eastern side of the Square, the celebrated anatomist
+John Hunter lived. Like most distinguished men of the day, he sat to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span> Sir
+Joshua Reynolds for his portrait; but was so restless and preoccupied that
+he made a very bad sitter. At last one day he fell into a reverie. The
+happy moment had come; Sir Joshua, with his instinctive tact, caught the
+expression and presented to us the great surgeon in one of his most
+characteristic attitudes. The other celebrated surgeons, Cruickshank and
+Charles Bell, also lived in this Square. The house in which Bell resided
+for many years was large and ruinous, and had once been inhabited by
+Speaker Onslow. Here he set up his Museum, and began to lecture on
+anatomy, having for a long time, he writes, scarcely forty pupils to
+lecture to.</p>
+
+<p>During all the later portion of its history Leicester Square has been
+famous for shows. In 1771 Sir Ashton Lever exhibited a large and curious
+Museum in Leicester House. In 1796 Charles Dibdin built at Nos. 2 and 3,
+on the east side of Leicester Square, a small theatre in which he gave an
+entertainment consisting of an interesting medley of anecdote and song. In
+1787 Miss Linwood opened her gallery of pictures in needlework, an
+exhibition which lasted forty-seven years, for the last thirty-five of
+which it was exhibited at Savile House, a building which was destroyed by
+fire in 1865.</p>
+
+<p>After Miss Linwood's, one of the best shows in Leicester Square was
+Burford's Panorama, which is now numbered with the things that were, its
+site being occupied by a French chapel and school. In 1851 a new show was
+inaugurated by Mr. Wylde the geographer. It consisted of a monster globe
+sixty feet in diameter, which occupied the central dome of a building
+erected in the garden of the Square. The world was figured in relief on
+the inside of it, and it was viewed from several galleries at different
+elevations. It was exhibited for ten years, and was then taken down by its
+proprietor, owing to a dispute concerning the ownership of the garden. Out
+of this case, which was decided in 1867, the proceedings originated which
+resulted in the purchase and renovation of the garden by Baron Grant, who
+having once more made it trim and neat, handed it over to the Board of
+Works.&mdash;<i>Chambers's Journal.</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="A_WOMANS_LOVE" id="A_WOMANS_LOVE"></a>A WOMAN'S LOVE.</h2>
+
+<h3>A SLAVONIAN STUDY.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Those races that have not undergone the beneficial and domesticating
+influences of civilisation, and that are isolated from the more cultured
+nations, possess to an excess the different qualities or impulses inherent
+to our nature. Amongst the emotions that move the heart of man, love is
+certainly the one that has the greatest empire over him; it rules the soul
+so imperiously that all the other passions are crushed by it. It makes
+cowards of the bravest men, and gives courage to the timid. Love is,
+indeed, the great motive-power of life.</p>
+
+<p>Our passions and our emotions are, however, more subdued than those of the
+semi-civilised nations; for, in the first place, we undergo the softening
+influences of education, and secondly, we are more or less under the
+restraint of the rules which govern society. Besides this, our mind is
+usually engrossed by the numerous cares which our state of living
+necessitates; for we are not like them, contented with little; on the
+contrary, instead of being satisfied with what is necessary, we require
+luxuries and superfluities, the procurement of which takes up a
+considerable portion of our energy and our mental activity.</p>
+
+<p>The Slavonians, and more especially those belonging to the southern
+regions, such as the Dalmatians and Montenegrins, are, as a general rule,
+very passionate; ardent in their affections, they are likewise given to
+anger, resentment, and hatred, the generic sister passion of love.</p>
+
+<p>The Slavonian women are, however, not indolent, nor do they ever indulge
+in idle dreams; for they are not only occupied with the household cares,
+but they also take a share, and not the smallest or the slightest, of
+those toils which in other countries devolve upon the men alone. They
+therefore, in the manly labours of the field, not only get prematurely
+old, but they hardly ever possess much grace, slenderness, or delicate
+complexions. No Slavonian woman, for instance, is ever <i>mignonne</i>. They,
+in compensation, acquire in health, and perhaps in real &aelig;sthetic beauty of
+proportions, what they lose in prettiness or delicacy of appearance,
+consequently they never suffer from vapours or from the numerous nervous
+complaints to which the generality of our ladies are subjected; the
+natural result of this state of things is <i>mens sana in corpore sano</i>;
+this is doubtless the reason why Slavonian women are, as a general rule,
+fond mothers and faithful wives.</p>
+
+<p>They are certainly not endowed with that charming refinement, the
+<i>morbidezza</i> of manners which but too often is but a mask covering a
+morbid selfish disposition, a hypocritical and false nature. Though
+ignorant,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> they are neither void of natural good sense nor wit; they only
+want that smattering of worldly knowledge which the contact of society
+imparts, and which but too often covers nothing but frivolity, gross
+ignorance, and conceit. Their conversation is, perhaps, not peculiarly
+attractive; for being simple and artless, speech was not given to them as
+a means of disguising their thoughts; their lips only disclose the
+fullness of their hearts. Conversation is, besides, a gift conferred to
+few; and even in our polite circles not many persons can converse in an
+interesting manner, and fewer can be witty without backbiting; moreover,
+if man were suddenly to become transparent, would he not have to blush for
+the frivolous demonstrations of friendship daily interchanged in our
+artificial state of society?</p>
+
+<p>The different amusements that absorb so much of our time and occupy our
+minds are unknown in Slavonian countries; the daily occupations and the
+details of the toilet do not captivate the whole attention; so that when a
+simple affection is awakening in the heart of a man or of a woman, it by
+degrees pervades the whole soul and the whole mind, and a strong and
+ardent passion usually ensues. Moreover, amongst those simple-minded
+sincere people flirtations are generally unknown; yet when they do love,
+their affections are genuine; they never exchange amongst each other those
+false coins bearing Cupid's effigy, and known as coquetry; for their lips
+only utter what their hearts really feel. People there do not delight in
+playing with the fire of love, or trying how far they can with impunity
+make game of sentiments which should be held sacred. Amongst the virile
+maidens of Slavonia many of them therefore have virgin hearts, that is to
+say, artless souls, fresh to all the tender sentiments; the reason of this
+is, that from the age of fifteen they do not trifle with their affections
+until they have become so callous and sceptical that marriage is merely
+wealth or a position in life. Men do not first waste away all the tender
+emotions which the human heart is capable of, and then settle down into a
+<i>mariage de raison</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The following story, which happened about a century ago, will serve as an
+illustration of the power of love amongst the Slavonians; it is, indeed, a
+kind of repetition of the fate which attended the lovers of Sestos and
+Abydos. This, however, is no legend, but an historical fact; the place
+where this tragedy happened was the island of St. Andrea, situated between
+those of Malfi and Stagno, not far from the town of Ragusa.</p>
+
+<p>Though no Mus&aelig;us has immortalised this story by his verses, it is,
+however, recorded in the "Revista Dalmata" (1859), in the "Annuario
+Spalatino" of the same year, as well as other Slavonian periodicals.</p>
+
+<p>The hero of this story, whose Christian name was Teodoro, belonged to one
+of the wealthiest patrician families of Ragusa, his father being, it is
+said, Rector of the Republic. He was a young man of a grave character, but
+withal of a gentle and tender disposition; he not only possessed great
+talents, but also great culture, for his time was entirely given up to
+study.</p>
+
+<p>One day, the young patrician having gone from the island of St. Andrea,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+where he had been staying at the Benedictine convent, to one of the other
+two neighboring islands, he in the evening wished to return to his abode.
+He met upon the beach a young girl who was carrying home some baskets of
+fish. Having asked her if she knew of anybody who would take him across to
+the island of St. Andrea, the young girl proffered her services, which the
+young and bashful patrician reluctantly accepted.</p>
+
+<p>The young girl was as beautiful, as chaste, and as proud as the Arrabiata
+of Paul Heyse; and for the first time Teodoro felt a new and vague feeling
+awake in his bosom. He began to talk to the girl, asking her a thousand
+questions about herself, about her home; and the young girl doubtless told
+him that she was an orphan, and that she lived with her brothers. Instead
+of returning to his family, the young nobleman remained at the Benedictine
+convent, with the purpose of studying in retirement; his mind, however,
+was not entirely engrossed by his books, and his visits to the island
+where Margherita lived daily became more frequent.</p>
+
+<p>The love which had kindled in his heart found an echo in the young girl's
+bosom, and instead of endeavouring to suppress their feelings they yielded
+to the charms of this saintly affection, to the rapture of loving and
+being loved. In a few days their mutual feelings had made such progress
+that the young man promised the <i>barcarinola</i> to marry her. His noble
+character and his brave spirit made him forget that he could not with
+impunity break the laws of the society amongst which he lived; for that
+society, which would have smiled had he seduced the young girl and made
+her his mistress, would nevertheless have been scandalised had he taken
+her for his lawful wife.</p>
+
+<p>Peccadilloes are overlooked, and it is almost better in high life to be a
+knave than a fool; it was, indeed, a quixotic notion for a patrician to
+marry a plebeian, an unheard of event in the annals of the aristocratic
+republic of Ragusa. The difficulties which our hero was to encounter were
+therefore insurmountable.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of his thoughtless happiness our young lover was suddenly
+summoned back to his home; for whilst Teodoro was supposed to be deeply
+engaged in his studies his father, without the young man's knowledge, and
+not anticipating any opposition, promised his son in marriage to the
+daughter of one of his friends, a young lady of great wealth and beauty.
+This union had, it is true, been concerted when the children were mere
+babes, and it had until then been a bond between the two families. The
+young lady being now of a marriageable age, and having concentrated all
+her affections on the young man she had always been taught to regard as
+her future husband, she now looked forward with joy for the anticipated
+event.</p>
+
+<p>Teodoro was therefore summoned back home to assist at a great festivity
+given in honour of his betrothal; he at once hastened back to Ragusa, in
+order to break off the engagement contracted for him. Vainly, however, did
+he try to remonstrate, first with his father and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span> then with his mother. He
+avowed that he had no inclination for matrimony, that he felt no love for
+this young lady, nothing but a mere brotherly affection, and that he could
+not cherish her as his wife; he found, nevertheless, both his parents
+inexorable. It was too late; the father had given his word to his friend;
+a refusal would prove an insult, which would provoke a rupture between
+these two families; no option was left but to obey.</p>
+
+<p>Teodoro thereupon retired to his own room, where he remained in the
+strictest confinement, refusing to see any one. The evening of that
+eventful day, the guests were assembled; the bride and her family had
+already arrived; the bridegroom, nevertheless, was missing. This was
+indeed a strange breach of good manners, and numerous comments were
+whispered from ear to ear. The father sent at last a peremptory order to
+his undutiful son to come at once to him. The young man ultimately made
+his appearance, attired like Hamlet at his stepfather's court, in a suit
+of deep mourning, whilst his long hair, which formerly fell in ringlets
+over his shoulders, was all clipped short. In this strange accoutrement he
+came to acquaint his father before the whole assembly that he had decided
+to forego the pleasure, the pomp and vanity of this world, to renounce
+society, and take up his abode in a convent, where he intended passing his
+days in study and meditation.</p>
+
+<p>The scene of confusion which followed this unexpected declaration can be
+imagined. The guests all wished to retire: the first person, however, to
+leave the house was Teodoro, expelled by his father and bearing with him
+the paternal malediction. Thus this day of anticipated joy ended in
+disappointment and humiliation. The discarded bride was borne away by her
+parents, and it is said that her delicate health never recovered from this
+unexpected blow.</p>
+
+<p>That very night the young man retired to the Benedictine convent upon the
+island of St. Andrea, with the firm resolution of passing his life in holy
+seclusion. When a few days had passed, his love proved, nevertheless,
+stronger than his will, and he could not refrain from going to see his
+Margherita, and informing her of all that had happened, telling her that
+he had been driven from home, and that he had taken refuge at the convent,
+where he intended passing his life in a state of holy celibacy.
+Notwithstanding all his good intentions, the sight of the young girl
+proved too great a temptation, her beauty overcame his resolutions, and he
+swore to her that he would brave his parents' opposition, as well as the
+anger of his caste, and that he would marry her in spite of his family and
+of the whole world.</p>
+
+<p>He thus continued seeing this young girl, till at last the fishermen, her
+brothers, having found out why this young patrician visited the island so
+often, severe and jealous like all their countrymen, they waylaid him, and
+threatened to kill him if he were once more caught upon these shores. The
+prior of the Benedictines, finding besides that his <i>protege</i>, far from
+coming to seek peace and tranquillity within the walls of his convent,
+was, on the contrary, an object of scandal, expressed his intention<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> to
+expel him, should he not discontinue his visits to the neighbouring
+island, and reform.</p>
+
+<p>Every new difficulty seemed to give fresh courage to the lovers; they
+would have fled from their native country and their persecutors, but they
+knew that they would be overtaken, brought back, and punished; so they
+decided to wait some time until the wrath of their enemies had abated, and
+the storm had blown over.</p>
+
+<p>As Teodoro could not go any more to see the young girl, it was Margherita
+who now came to visit her lover; to evade, however, the suspicion of her
+brothers, and that of the friars, they only met in the middle of the
+night, and as they always changed their place of meeting, a lighted torch
+was the signal where the young girl was to direct her bark. There were
+nights, nevertheless, when she could not obtain a boat; yet this was no
+obstacle to her brave spirit, for upon those nights, she, like Leander,
+swam across the channel, for nothing could daunt this heroic woman's
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>These ill-fated lovers were happy notwithstanding their adverse fortune,
+for the sacred fire of love which burnt within them was bliss enough to
+compensate for all their woes. Their days were passed in anxious
+expectation for the hour which was to unite them on the sea-shore, amidst
+the darkness of the night. There clasped in one another's arms, the world
+and its inhabitants existed no longer for them; those were moments of
+ineffable rapture, in which it seemed impossible to drain the whole
+chalice of happiness; moments in which time and eternity are confounded,
+instants only to be appreciated by those who have known the infinite bliss
+of loving and being loved. Their souls seemed to leave their bodies, blend
+together and soar into the empyreal spaces, the regions of infinite
+happiness; for them all other sentiments passed away, and nothing was felt
+but an unmitigated love.</p>
+
+<p>The dangers which encompassed them, their loneliness upon the rocky
+shores, the stillness of the night, only served to heighten their joy and
+exultation, for a pleasure dearly bought is always more keenly felt.</p>
+
+<p>Their happiness was, however, not to be of long duration; such felicity is
+celestial; on this earth,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"Les plus belles choses<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ont le pire destin."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Margherita's brothers, knowing the power of love, watched their sister,
+and at last found out that when the young nobleman had ceased coming, it
+was she who by night visited the Island of St. Andrea, and they resolved
+to be revenged upon her. They bided their time, and upon a dark and stormy
+night, the fishermen, knowing that their sister would not be intimidated
+by the heavy sea, went off with the boat and left her to the mercy of the
+waves. The young girl, unable to resist the impulse of her love,
+recommended herself to the Almighty, and bravely plunged into the waters.
+Her treacherous brothers, having watched her movements, plied their oars
+and directed their course towards the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span> island; they landed, went and took
+the lighted torch from the place where it was burning, and fastened it to
+the prow of their boat; having done this, they slowly rowed away into the
+open sea.</p>
+
+<p>Margherita, as usual, swam towards the beacon-light of love, but that
+night all her efforts were useless&mdash;the faster she swam, the greater was
+the distance that separated her from that <i>ignis-fatuus</i> light; doubtless
+she attributed this to the roughness of the sea, and took courage, hoping
+soon to reach that blessed goal.</p>
+
+<p>A flash of lightning, which illumined the dark expanse of the waters, made
+her at last perceive her mistake; she saw the boat towards which she had
+been swimming, and also the island of St. Andrea far behind her. She at
+once directed her course towards it, but there, in the midst of darkness,
+she struggled with the wild waves, until, overpowered by fatigue, she gave
+up all hopes of rejoining her beloved one, and sank down in the briny
+deep.</p>
+
+<p>The cruel sea that separated the lovers was, however, more merciful than
+man, for upon the morrow the waves themselves softly deposited the
+lifeless body of the young girl upon the sand of the beach.</p>
+
+<p>The nobleman, who had passed a night of most terrible anxiety, found at
+daybreak the corpse of the girl he loved. He caused it to be committed to
+the earth, after which he re-entered within the walls of the convent, took
+the Benedictine dress, and spent the rest of his life pining in grief.</p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+<span class="smcap">Adrian de Valvedere</span>, in <i>Tinsley's Magazine</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="AN_IMPERIAL_PARDON" id="AN_IMPERIAL_PARDON"></a>AN IMPERIAL PARDON.</h2>
+
+
+<p>During a journey through some parts of Russia a few years ago, we engaged,
+in preference to the imperial post-chaise, a private conveyance for a
+considerable distance, the driver being a Jew&mdash;generally preferred in the
+East on account of their sobriety and general trustworthiness. On the road
+my companion became communicative, and entered into philosophic-religious
+discussion&mdash;a topic of frequent occurrence among these bilingual
+populations. After a somewhat desultory harangue, he suddenly became
+silent and sad, having just uttered the words: "If a Chassid goes astray,
+what does he become? A meschumed, <i>i.e.</i> an apostate."&mdash;"To what class of
+people do you allude?" I inquired.&mdash;"Well, it just entered my head,
+because we have to pass the house of one of them&mdash;I mean the 'forced
+ones.'"&mdash;"Forced!" I thought of a religious sect. "Are they Christians or
+Jews?"&mdash;"Neither the one nor the other," was the reply, "but simply
+'forced.' Oh, sir, it is a great misery and a great crime! Our children at
+least will not know anything of it, because new victims do not arise, and
+on the marriage of these parties rests a curse&mdash;they remain sterile! But
+what am I saying?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span> It is rather a blessing&mdash;a mercy! Should thus a
+terrible misery be perpetuated? These forced people are childless. Well,
+God knows best. I am a fool, a sinner to speak about it." No entreaty of
+mine would induce my Jewish companion to afford further information
+concerning this peculiar people. But before the end of our journey I heard
+unexpectedly more about this unfortunate class of Russian subjects. We
+travelled westward through the valley of the Dniester, a district but
+thinly peopled, and rested at an inn on the borders of an extensive
+forest.</p>
+
+<p>Amidst the raillery going on in the principal room of this hostelry
+between guests of different nationalities, we had not heard the noise of
+wheels which slowly moved towards the house. It was a very poor
+conveyance, containing a small cask and a basket. The young hostess arose
+hastily, and, approaching the owner, said in a whisper, "What is it you
+want?" A slight paleness overspread her countenance, and stranger still
+was the demeanour of my coachman. "Sir, sir!" he exclaimed loudly, turning
+towards me, stretching out his hands as if seeking support, or warding off
+some impending danger. "What is the matter?" I rejoined, greatly
+surprised: but he merely shook his head, and stared at the new comer.</p>
+
+<p>He was an elderly peasant, attired in the usual garb of the
+country-people; only at a more close inspection I noticed that he wore a
+fine white shirt. Of his face I could see but little, it being hidden
+behind the broad brim of his straw hat.</p>
+
+<p>"Hostess," he said, addressing the young woman, "will you purchase
+something of me? I have some old brandy, wooden spoons and plates,
+pepper-boxes, needle-cases, &amp;c., all made of good hard wood, and very
+cheap." In an almost supplicating tone he uttered these words very slowly,
+with downcast eyes. From his pronunciation he appeared to be a Pole.</p>
+
+<p>The hostess looked shyly up to him.</p>
+
+<p>"You know my brother-in-law has forbidden me to have dealings with you,"
+she said hesitatingly, "on account of your wife; but to-day he is not at
+home." After a momentary silence, turning towards the driver, she
+continued, "Reb R&uuml;ssan, will you betray me? You come frequently this way."
+In reply he merely shrugged his shoulders and moved away. Turning again
+with some impatience to the peasant, she said, "Bring me a dish and two
+spoons." When he had gone to fetch these articles, the woman once more
+accosted my coachman.</p>
+
+<p>"You must not blame me; they are very poor people!"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly they are very poor"&mdash;he replied in a milder tone. "During life,
+hunger and misery, and after death&mdash;hell! and all undeserved!" But the man
+stood already, at this utterance, with his basket in the room. The bargain
+was soon concluded, and the few copeks paid. Curiosity prompted me to step
+forward and examine the merchandise.</p>
+
+<p>"I have also cigar-cases," said the peasant, humbly raising his hat. But
+his face was far more interesting than his wares. You rarely see<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span> such
+features! However great the misery on earth, this pale, pain-stricken
+countenance was unique in its kind, revealing yet traces of sullen
+defiance, and the glance of his eyes moved instantly the heart of the
+beholder&mdash;a weary, almost fixed gaze, and yet full of passionate mourning.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a Pole!" I observed after a pause.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he replied.</p>
+
+<p>"And do you live in this neighbourhood?"</p>
+
+<p>"At the inn eight werst from here. I am the keeper."</p>
+
+<p>"And besides wood-carver?"</p>
+
+<p>"We must do the best we can," was his reply. "We have but rarely any
+guests at our house."</p>
+
+<p>"Does your hostelry lie outside the main road?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, close to the high road, sir. It was at one time the best inn between
+the Bug and the Dniester. But now carriers do not like to stay at our
+house."</p>
+
+<p>"And why not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because they consider it a sin&mdash;especially the Jews." Suddenly, with
+seeming uneasiness and haste, he asked, "Will you purchase anything? This
+box, perhaps. Upon the lid is engraved a fine country-house."</p>
+
+<p>Attracted by the delicate execution, I inquired, "And is this your own
+workmanship?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," was his reply.</p>
+
+<p>"You are an artist! And pray where did you learn wood-engraving?"</p>
+
+<p>"At Kamieniec-Poddski."</p>
+
+<p>"At the fortress?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, during the insurrection of 1863."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you among the insurgents?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, but the authorities feared I might join them&mdash;hence I and the other
+forced ones were incarcerated in the fortress when the insurrection broke
+out, and again set free when it was suppressed."</p>
+
+<p>"Without any cause?"</p>
+
+<p>"Without the slightest. I was already at that time a crushed man. When yet
+a youth the marrow of my bones had been poisoned in the mines of Siberia.
+During the whole time of my settlement, I have been since 1858 keeper of
+that inn; I gave the authorities no cause for suspicion, but I was a
+'forced man,' and that sufficed for pouncing upon me."</p>
+
+<p>"Forced! what does it mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, a person forced to accept, when to others free choice is
+left&mdash;domicile, trade or calling, wife and religion."</p>
+
+<p>"Terrible!" I exclaimed. "And you submitted?" A little smile played around
+his thin lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you so much moved at my fate? We generally bear very easily the most
+severe pains endured by others."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"That is a saying of Larochefoucauld," I said, somewhat surprised. "Have
+you read him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was at one time very fond of French literature. But pardon my acrimony.
+I am but little accustomed to sympathy, and indeed of what avail would it
+be to me now!" He stared painfully at the ground, and I also became
+silent, convinced that any superficial expression of sympathy would, under
+the circumstances, be downright mockery.</p>
+
+<p>A painful pause ensued, which I broke with the question, if he had worked
+the engraving upon the lid of the box after a pattern.</p>
+
+<p>"No, from memory," was his rejoinder.</p>
+
+<p>"It is a peculiar kind of architecture!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is like all gentlemen's houses in Littauen; only the old tree is very
+striking. It was a very old house."</p>
+
+<p>"Has been? Does it exist no longer?"</p>
+
+<p>"It was burnt down seven years ago by the Russians, after they had first
+ransacked it. They evidently were not aware that they destroyed their own
+property. It had been confiscated years before, and had been Crown
+property since 1848."</p>
+
+<p>"And have you yet the outlines of the building so firmly engraved on your
+memory?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course! it was my birth-place, which I had rarely left until I was
+eighteen years old. Such things are not easily forgotten. And although
+more than twenty years have passed since this sad affair, hardly a day
+passed on which I did not think of my paternal home. I was aware of the
+death of my mother, and that my cousin was worse than dead&mdash;perhaps I
+ought to have rejoiced when the old mansion was burnt to the ground; but
+yet I could not suppress a tear when the news reached me. There is hardly
+anything on earth which can now move me." I record literally what the
+unfortunate man related. My Jewish coachman, not easily impressed, had
+during the conversation crept gradually nearer, and shook his head
+seriously and sorrowfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Excuse me, Pani Walerian," he interrupted: "upon my honour, yours is a
+sad story!" He launched out into practical politics, and concluded thus:</p>
+
+<p>"A Pole is not as clever as I am. If he (the Pole) was the equal of the
+Russian, well and good, fight it out; but the Russian is a hundred times
+stronger; therefore, Pani Walerian, why irritate him, why confront him?"</p>
+
+<p>I could not help laughing at these remarks; but the poor "forced one"
+remained unmoved; and only after some silence, he observed, turning
+towards me:</p>
+
+<p>"I have never even confronted the Russians. I merely received the
+punishment of the criminal, without being one, or venturing my all in my
+people's cause. I was very young, when I was transported to
+Siberia&mdash;little more than nineteen years old. My father had died early. I
+managed our small property, and a cousin of mine, a pretty girl, sixteen
+years old, lived at our house. Indeed, I had no thoughts of politics. It<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+is true I wore the national costume, perused our poets, especially
+Mickiewicz and Slowaski, and had on the wall of my bedroom a portrait of
+Kosciuszko. For such kind of high treason even the Russian Government
+would not have crushed me in ordinary times&mdash;but it was the year 1848.
+'Nicolai Pawlowitch' had not sworn in vain that if the whole of Europe was
+in flames, no spark should arise in his empire&mdash;and by streams of blood
+and tears, he achieved his object. Wherever a young Polish noble lived who
+was suspected of revolutionary tendencies, repeated domiciliary searches
+were made; and if only a single prohibited book was found, the dread fiat
+went forth, 'To Siberia with him!'</p>
+
+<p>"In my own case it came like a thunderbolt. I was already in Siberia, and
+could not yet realize my misery. During the whole long journey I was more
+or less delirious. I hoped for a speedy liberation, for I was altogether
+innocent, and at that time," he continued with a bitter smile, "I yet
+believed in God. When all hope became extinct, I began madly to rave, but
+finally settled down utterly crushed and callous. It was a fearful
+state&mdash;for weeks together, all my past life seemed a complete blank, at
+most I still remembered my name. This, sir, is literally true: Siberia is
+a very peculiar place."</p>
+
+<p>The poor fellow had sunk down upon a bench, his hands rested powerless in
+his lap. I never have seen a face so utterly worn and pain-stricken. After
+a while he continued:</p>
+
+<p>"Ten years had thus passed away; at least, I was told so&mdash;I had long
+ceased to count the days of my misery. For what purpose should I have done
+so?</p>
+
+<p>"I had sunk so low that I felt no pity even for my terrible condition. One
+day I was brought before the Inspector, together with some of my
+companions. This official informed us that we had been pardoned on
+condition of becoming colonists in New Russia. The mercy of the Czar would
+assign to each of us a place of residence, a trade, and a lawful wife, who
+would be also a pardoned convict. We must of course, in addition, be
+converted to the Orthodox Greek Church. This latter stipulation did but
+little concern us. We readily accepted the conditions, for the people are
+glad of leaving Siberia, no matter whither, even to meet death itself. And
+had we not been pardoned? Alexander Nikolajewitch is a gracious lord. In
+Siberia the mines are over-crowded, and in South Russia the steppes are
+empty! Oh, he is a philanthropist! decus et delici&aelig; generis humani! But
+perhaps I wrong him. We entered upon our long journey, and proceeded
+slowly south-west. In about eight months we reached Mohilew. Here we were
+only kept in easy confinement, and above all, brought under the influence
+of the pope. This was a rapid proceeding. One morning we were driven
+together into a large room, about one hundred men, and an equal number of
+women. Presently the priest entered; a powerful and dirty fellow, who
+appeared to have invigorated himself for his holy work with a considerable
+dose of gin, for we could smell it at least ten paces off, and he had some
+difficulty in keeping upon his legs.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'You ragamuffins!' he stammered; 'you vermin of humanity! you are to
+become Orthodox Christians; but surely I shall not take much trouble with
+you. For, what do you think I get per head? Ten copeks, you vermin! ten
+copeks per head. Who will be a missionary at such pay? I certainly do it
+to-day for the last time! Indeed, our good father Alexander Nikolajewitch
+caused one rouble to be set in the tariff; but that rascal, the director,
+pockets ninety copeks, and leaves only ten for me. To-day, however, I have
+undertaken your conversion, because I am told there are many of you. Now
+listen! you are now Catholics, Protestants, Jews! That is sad mistake; for
+every Jew is a blood-sucker, every Protestant a dog, and every Catholic a
+pig. Such is their lot in life&mdash;but after death? carrion, my good people,
+carrion! And will Christ have mercy on them at the last day? Verily no! He
+will not dream of such a thing! And until then? Hell-fire! Therefore, good
+people, why should you suffer such torments? Be converted! Those who agree
+to become Orthodox Christians, keep silent; those who demur, receive the
+knout and go back to Siberia. Wherefore, my dear brothers and sisters, I
+ask, will you become Orthodox Christians?'</p>
+
+<p>"We remained silent.</p>
+
+<p>"'Well,' continued the priest, 'now pay attention! Those who are already
+Christians need only to lift up the right hand, and repeat after me the
+creed. That will soon be done. But with the damned Jews one has always a
+special trouble&mdash;the Jews I must first baptise. Jews, step forward!&mdash;the
+other vermin can remain where they now are.' In this solemn manner the
+ceremony was brought to a conclusion.</p>
+
+<p>"On the day following," M. Walerian continued, "the second act was
+performed: the selection of a trade. This act was as spontaneous as our
+religious conversion; only, some individual regard became here
+indispensable. Three young Government officials were deputed to record our
+wishes, and to comply with them as far as the exigencies of the case
+admitted. The official before whom I appeared was very juvenile. Though
+externally very polished, he was in reality a frightfully coarse and cruel
+youth, without a spark of human feeling, so far as we were concerned. We
+afforded him no small amount of merriment. This youth inquired carefully
+concerning our wishes, and invariably ordered the very opposite. Among us
+was a noble lady from Poland, of very ancient lineage, very feeble and
+miserable, whose utter helplessness might well inspire the most callous
+heart with respect and compassion. The lady was too old to be married to
+one of the 'forced ones,' and was therefore asked to state what kind of
+occupation she desired. She entreated to be employed in some school for
+daughters of military officers, there being a demand for such service; but
+the young gentleman ordered her to go as laundress to the barracks at
+Mohilew! An aged Jew had been sent to Siberia for having smuggled
+prohibited books across the frontiers. He had been the owner of a printing
+establishment, and was well acquainted with the business. 'Could he not be
+employed in one of the Imperial printing offices; and if possible,' urged
+the aged<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span> man, 'be permitted to reside in a place where few or no Jews
+lived?' He had under compulsion changed his religion; to which he was yet
+fervently attached, and trembled at the thought that his former
+co-religionists would none the less avoid him as an apostate. The young
+official noted down his request, and made him a police agent at Miaskowka,
+a small town in the government district of Podolien, almost exclusively
+inhabited by Jews. Another, a former schoolmaster, in the last stages of
+consumption, begged on his knees to be permitted to die quietly in some
+country village. 'That is certainly a modest request!' observed this
+worthless youth; and sent him as a waiter to a hospital. Need I tell how I
+fared? Being misled, like the rest, by the hypocritical air and seeming
+concern of this rascal, I made known to him my desire to obtain the post
+of under-steward at some remote Crown estate, where I might have as little
+intercourse as possible with my fellow-men. And thus, sir, I became the
+keeper of the small inn on a much-frequented highway!"</p>
+
+<p>The unfortunate man arose suddenly, and paced the room in a state of great
+excitement.</p>
+
+<p>"But now comes the best of all," he exclaimed, with a desperate
+effort&mdash;"the last act, the choice of a wife." Again an internal struggle
+overpowered the unhappy narrator&mdash;a sudden and heavy tear rolled down his
+care-worn cheek, evidently caused by the remembrance of this abominable
+transaction. "It was a terrible ordeal," he said. "Sir, sir," he continued
+after a momentary pause, "since the sun has risen in our horizon, he has
+shone on many a cruel game which the mighty of the earth have played with
+the helpless, but a more abominable farce has hardly ever been enacted
+than the one I am now relating&mdash;the manner in which we unfortunate people
+were coupled together. In my youth I read how Carrier at Nantes murdered
+the Royalists; how he caused the first best man to be tied with a rope to
+a woman, and carried down the Loire in a boat. In the middle of the river
+a trap-door was suddenly opened, and the unfortunate couple disappeared in
+the waves. But that monster was an angel compared with the officials of
+the Czar; and these republican marriages were a benevolent act in
+comparison with those we were forced to conclude. At Nantes, the victims
+were tied together for a mutual death; we for our mutual lives!... On a
+subsequent morning we were once more ushered into the room where our
+conversion had taken place. There were present about thirty men and an
+equal number of women. Together with the latter entered the official who
+had so considerately ordered our lot as regards a livelihood.</p>
+
+<p>"'Ladies and gentlemen,' he commenced with a nasal twang, 'his Majesty has
+graciously pardoned you, and desires to see you all happy. Now, the lonely
+man is seldom a happy man; and hence you are to marry. Every gentleman is
+free to select a partner, provided of course the lady accepts the choice.
+And in order that none of you gentlemen may be placed in the invidious
+position of having to select a partner unworthy of him, supreme
+benevolence has ordered that an adequate<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span> number of ladies, partly from
+penal settlements and partly from houses of correction, should be now
+offered you. As his Majesty's solicitude for your welfare has already
+assigned you an occupation, you may now follow unhesitatingly the
+promptings of your own hearts in the choice of a wife. Ladies and
+gentlemen, yours is the happy privilege to realise the dream of a purely
+socialistic marriage. Make, then, your selection without delay; and as
+"all genuine love is instantaneous, sudden as a lightning flash, and soft
+as the breezes of spring"&mdash;to use the words of our poet Lermontoff&mdash;I
+consider one hour sufficient. Bear also in mind that marriages are
+ratified in heaven, and trust implicitly to your own heart. I offer you
+beforehand, ladies and gentlemen, my congratulations.'</p>
+
+<p>"After this address, the young rascal placed his watch in front of him on
+the table, sat down, and grinned maliciously at our helpless condition.
+The full measure of scorn implied in this speech but few of us entirely
+realised, for we were in truth a curious assembly. The most extravagant
+imagination could hardly picture more glaring contrasts! Side by side with
+the bestial Bessarabian herdsman, who in a fit of intoxication had slain
+the whole of his family, stood the highly cultivated professor from Wilna,
+whom the love of his country and of freedom had consigned to the mines of
+Siberia; the most desperate thief and shoplifter from Moscow, and the
+Polish nobleman who at the height of his misfortunes still regarded his
+honour as the most precious treasure, the ex-professor from Charkow, and
+the Cossac-robber from the Don; the forger from Odessa, &amp;c. On my own
+right hand stood a thief and deserter from Lipkany, and on the left a
+Baschkire, who had been pardoned at the foot of the gallows, though he had
+once assisted in roasting alive a Jewish family in a village inn. A madly
+assorted medley of human beings! And the women! The dissolute female
+gladly released from the house of correction, because she still more
+depraved her already degraded companions, associated with the unfortunate
+Polish lady, whose pure mind had never been poisoned by a vulgar word, and
+whose quiet happiness had not been disturbed by any prospect of
+misfortune, until a single letter, or act of charity to an exiled
+countryman, brought her into misery. Pressing against the young girl whose
+sole offence consisted in being the unfortunate offspring of a mother sent
+to Siberia, might be seen the infamous hag who had habitually decoyed
+young girls to ruin, in whose soul every spark of womanhood had long been
+extinguished. And these people were called upon to marry; and one hour was
+granted them in which to become acquainted and assorted! Sir, you will now
+perhaps comprehend my emotion in relating this shocking business!</p>
+
+<p>"I consider it the most shocking and at the same time the most curious
+outrage which has ever been committed." The "forced" man paused, a deadly
+pallor suffused his countenance, and his agitation was great. The young
+hostess appeared perfectly stunned, whilst Reb R&uuml;ssan, the coachman, bent
+his head in evident compassion.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>After a while M. Walerian continued in a calmer mood. "It must certainly
+have been an entertaining spectacle to notice the behaviour of this
+ill-assorted people at that trying hour. Even the barefaced monster on his
+raised da&iuml;s betrayed a feverish excitement: he would suddenly jump from
+his chair, and again recline, playing the while nervously with his
+fingers. I am hardly able to describe the details, being not altogether
+unbiassed at this dreadful hour.</p>
+
+<p>"I only know we stood at first in two distinct groups, and for the first
+few moments after the official announcement, not a glance was exchanged
+between the two sexes, much less a word spoken. A deep silence reigned in
+the room, a death-like stillness, varied only by an occasional deep sigh,
+or a nervous movement. The minutes passed, certainly not many, but they
+seemed to me an eternity!</p>
+
+<p>"Suddenly a loud hoarse voice exclaimed, 'Up, my lads! here are some very
+pretty mates!' We all recognised the notorious thief from Moscow, a
+haggard withered fellow, with the ugliest face I ever beheld. He crossed
+over to the women and examined in his way which would be the most
+desirable partner. Here he received an indignant push, and there an
+impudent alluring glance. Others, again&mdash;the better part&mdash;recoiled from
+the approach of the brute. He was followed by the Baschkire, who like a
+clumsy beast of prey drew nigh, muttering incoherently, 'I will have a fat
+woman, the fattest among them.' From his approach even the ugliest and
+most impudent instinctively recoiled&mdash;this wooer was really too hideous,
+at best only suited to a monkey. The third in order who came forward was
+the Don-Cossac, a pretty slender youth. An impudent lass jauntily met him
+and fell on his neck; but he pushed her aside, and walked towards the girl
+who had murdered her child. The discarded female muttered some insulting
+words, and hung the next moment on my own neck. I shook her off, and she
+repeated the attempt with my neighbour, and again unsuccessfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Her example became contagious: presently the more shameless of the women
+made an onslaught on the men. Ten minutes later the scene had changed. In
+the centre of the room stood a number of men and women engaged in eager
+negotiation&mdash;shouting and scolding. The parties who had already agreed
+retired to the window-niches, and here and there a man pulled an
+unfortunate woman, making desperate efforts to escape from him. The
+females who yet retained a spark of womanhood crept into a corner of the
+room; and in another recess were three of us&mdash;the ex-professor, Count S.,
+and myself. We had instinctively come together, watching with painful
+emotion this frantic spectacle, not inclined to participate in it. To me
+at least the thought of selecting a wife here never occurred.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>"'Another half an hour at your disposal, ladies and gentlemen,' exclaimed
+our official tormentor; 'twenty minutes&mdash;yet fifteen minutes!'<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I stood as if rooted to the ground, my knees trembled, my agitation
+increased, but I remained motionless. Indeed, as often as I heard the
+unpleasant voice of the official, the blood rushed to my head, but I
+advanced not one step. My excitement increased&mdash;profound disgust, bitter
+despair&mdash;the wildest indignation which perhaps ever pierced a poor human
+heart. 'No,' I said; 'I must assert the dignity of my manhood!' I was
+determined not to make the selection of a wife under the eyes of this man.
+Another impulse I could hardly suppress&mdash;viz. to throw myself upon this
+imperial delegate and strangle him. And if I finally abstained from an act
+of violence, it was because I yet loved life, and wished not to end it on
+the gallows. Sir," continued M. Walerian, "the source of great misery on
+earth is this overpowering instinct of self-preservation; without it, I
+should be freed this day from all my misery. Thus I stood, so to speak, at
+bay in my corner, using all my efforts to subdue the evil spirit within
+me. My looks most probably betrayed me&mdash;for when my eyes met those of the
+official, I noticed an involuntary shudder. A moment afterwards he
+regarded me with a sly and malignant glance. I turned aside and closed my
+eyes on this harassing scene.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yet five minutes, ladies and gentlemen! Those as yet undecided must
+speed themselves, and unburden their heart, or I shall be compelled by
+virtue of my office to tie them together. And although I shall do so
+conscientiously, and to the best of my knowledge, there is this risk&mdash;that
+you engage in a marriage of mere convenience, instead of one of free
+choice and inclination.'</p>
+
+<p>"Though my agitation reached its climax, I made no move. I considered
+myself an accomplice in this disgraceful outrage, if I within the allotted
+five minutes declared my heart and made a choice. But another thought
+flashed across my mind: 'I may still be able to prevent the worst. Who
+knows with whom that rascal may couple me if I remain altogether passive?
+Choose for yourself!'&mdash;I made a step forward&mdash;a mist seemed before my
+eyes&mdash;my heart beat wildly&mdash;I staggered, I sought figures in order to
+distinguish and recognise myself.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," exclaimed the narrator with a sudden yell, "what scenes did I see
+there? I am no coward, but I&mdash;I dare not venture to speak of it. Thus I
+moved forward; hardly two minutes passed, but days would not suffice to
+relate what passed during these terrible moments through my heart and
+brain. I noticed in a corner a fainting woman, a young and delicate
+creature. I learnt afterwards that she was an orphan child, born of a
+dissolute woman in a penal settlement. A coarse fellow with cunning eyes
+bent over her, endeavouring to raise her from the ground. I suddenly
+pounced upon the fellow, struck him a heavy blow, and carried the
+unconscious woman away as if a mere child. I determined to defend her to
+the last. But no rescue was attempted, though the forger shook his fists
+at me, but had seemingly not the courage to approach nearer. Gazing about
+him, another female embraced him, a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span> repulsive woman. He looked at her
+somewhat abashed, but soon submitted to her caresses.</p>
+
+<p>"'Ladies and gentlemen! the allotted hour has passed,' said the official.
+'I must beg the parties to come forward and make known to me their choice.
+This may be repugnant to some of you, but my duties prescribe it. I
+especially request the gentlemen in yonder corner to advance'&mdash;pointing to
+myself and the forger. I clenched my fists involuntarily, but stepped
+forward with the fainting woman. 'Cossacks, keep your "Kantschu" in
+readiness,' said the official to the guard which surrounded him. Turning
+first to me, he said: "And are you, sir, resolved to carry the woman you
+now hold in your arms, not only in this room, but through life?' I nodded
+assent. 'And what have you to say, damsel?' The poor creature was as yet
+unconscious. 'She is in a swoon,' I replied. 'In that case I am sorry,'
+continued the official, 'to have to refuse in his Majesty's name my
+consent to your union. In the interests of humanity, I require an audible
+yes from all parties. I have watched attentively the whole proceedings,'
+continued the official&mdash;'not from mere curiosity, but partly as a duty,
+and partly out of pure sympathy&mdash;and I can assure you, sir, without
+disparagement to your claims, that the choice of the young lady you now
+hold in your arms fell not upon you, but upon the gentleman yonder,'
+pointing to the forger. 'It was probably the excess of happiness at this
+selection which caused her fainting. For you there is waiting an adequate
+recompense&mdash;that ripe, desirable beauty who now only reluctantly holds the
+arm of your rival. Therefore, changez, Messieurs!' 'Scoundrel!' I
+exclaimed, and advanced to seize him. But ere I could lay hold of him, a
+fearful blow on my head stretched me stunned and bleeding to the ground.
+When I had somewhat recovered, our marriage procession was in progress of
+formation. The woman whom the official had assigned to me knelt at my
+side, bathing my head, endeavouring to revive me. 'I like you,' she
+observed, 'and will treat you well.' She raised me to my feet, placed her
+arm in mine, and pushed me in the ranks of the procession, which moved
+slowly towards the church. On our road a heavy hand seized me suddenly by
+the collar. 'Brother,' grunted a coarse voice in my ear, 'your stout woman
+takes my fancy. Will you change with me? Mine is certainly less corpulent,
+but younger in years.'</p>
+
+<p>"It was the man behind me&mdash;the Baschkire. The female whom he dragged along
+was a lean, ugly, dark-complexioned woman, swooning or near a swoon. An
+expression of unutterable despair overspread her features, rendering them,
+if possible, yet more ugly. 'A woman who can suffer so intensely as this
+one unquestionably does, cannot be without a heart&mdash;is not altogether
+depraved, no matter what cause brought her here.' These reflections
+determined me. 'She is preferable to the woman at my side. Done!' I
+whispered to the Baschkire. Just crossing the threshold of the church, a
+momentary pause ensued, during which we effected the exchange; not without
+a murmur, however, on the part of my intended wife. But the Baschkire kept
+her quiet; and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> a closer inspection of her new partner seemed to satisfy
+her. The poor woman I led forward seemed hardly aware of the exchange, she
+was so entirely absorbed in her grief. We were married. The official only
+afterwards became aware of what had happened, but could not now undo it.
+But I had to suffer for it&mdash;terrible was the punishment."</p>
+
+<p>Not another word was uttered by the unfortunate man. Quite overcome by the
+recital of his cruel fate, he suddenly arose and left the house.</p>
+
+<p>On account of the approach of the Jewish Sabbath, my coachman urged on our
+journey. Half an hour later, we passed the lonely and desolate hostelry of
+poor M. Walerian, the exile of Siberia, who owed so much to imperial
+clemency.&mdash;F. A. S., <i>in Belgravia</i>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHRISTMAS_IN_MOROCCO" id="CHRISTMAS_IN_MOROCCO"></a>CHRISTMAS IN MOROCCO.</h2>
+
+
+<p>"To-morrow Christmas for Moros!" said the gentle Hamed, our Moorish
+servant, entering the room soon after the bang of the last sunset gun of
+Ramadan had shaken our windows, and the thick smoke of the coarse Moorish
+powder had floated away, temporarily obscuring the gorgeous hues bestowed
+by the retiring luminary on the restless waters of the South Atlantic.</p>
+
+<p>"To-morrow Christmas for Moros! In the morning Hamed clean house, go for
+<i>soko</i>; then all day no <i>trabally</i>; have new <i>haik</i>, new slippers, walk
+about all same <i>tejjer</i>."</p>
+
+<p>By which little speech our faithful attendant meant to convey that
+to-morrow's rejoicing at the termination of the long and irksome fast of
+Ramadan was equivalent to the "Ingleez's" Christmas, and that, after
+putting the house in order and bringing the provisions from the <i>soko</i>, or
+market, he would do no more <i>trabally</i>, or work&mdash;the word being a
+corruption of the Spanish <i>trabajo</i>&mdash;but would don the new <i>haik</i> and
+bright yellow slippers for which he had long been saving up, and to the
+purchase of which certain little presents from the children of our
+household had materially contributed; and would be entitled, by
+prescriptive holiday right, to "take his walks abroad" with the <i>dolce far
+niente</i> dignity of a <i>tejjer</i>, or merchant.</p>
+
+<p>I think we members of the little English community of Mogador&mdash;or, as the
+Moors fondly call this pleasantest town of the Morocco seaboard, "El
+Souerah," or The Beautiful&mdash;had almost as good reason as the Moslem
+population to rejoice at the termination of the great fast. The Moors not
+being allowed, during the holy month, to eat, drink, or smoke betwixt the
+rising and the setting of the sun&mdash;the more sternly orthodox even closing
+their nostrils against any pleasant odour that might casually perfume the
+air in their vicinity, and their ears against even the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span> faintest sound of
+music&mdash;debarring themselves, in fact, from whatever could give the
+slightest pleasure to any of the senses, a considerable amount of gloom
+and listlessness was the inevitable result.</p>
+
+<p>The servants in the various households, not over active and intelligent at
+the best of times, became, as the weary days of prayer and fasting wore
+on, appallingly idiotic, sleepy, and sullen, would do but little work, and
+that little never promptly nor well. Meals could not be relied on within
+an hour or two, rooms were left long untidy, essential little errands and
+messages unperformed, and a general gloomy confusion prevailed.</p>
+
+<p>Did I, tempted by the smoothness of the sea, desire a little fishing
+cruise, and send a youthful Moor to the neighbouring rocks to get me a
+basket of mussels for bait, he would probably, directly he got outside the
+town-gates, deposit the basket and himself in the shade of the first wall
+he came to, and slumber sweetly till the tide had risen and covered all
+the rocky ledges where it was possible to collect bait. Had I told the
+youngster over night that he must come out to sea with me in the morning,
+and take care that my boat was put outside the dock, so that she would be
+afloat at a certain hour, I would find, on going down at daybreak with
+rods and tackle, that the boat was high and dry upon the mud, and it would
+take the united efforts of half a dozen Moors and myself to get her afloat
+at the end of nearly an hour's frantic struggling and pushing through mud
+and water, necessitating on my part the expenditure of a great amount of
+perspiration, not a little invective, and sundry silver coins.</p>
+
+<p>And when we were fairly afloat my Mahometan youth would be so weak from
+fasting that his oar would be almost useless; and when we did, after an
+hour or so of the most ignominious zigzaging, reach our anchorage on one
+of the fishing-grounds, then would he speedily become sea-sick, and
+instead of helping me by preparing bait and landing fish, he would lean
+despairingly over the side in abject misery, and implore me to go home
+promptly&mdash;a piteous illustration of the anguish caused by an empty stomach
+contracting on itself.</p>
+
+<p>Nor were these the only discomforts under which we groaned and grumbled.</p>
+
+<p>From the evening when the eager lookers-out from minarets of mosques and
+towers of the fortifications first descried the new moon which ushered in
+the holy month of fasting, every sunset, as it flushed the far-off waves
+with purple and crimson and gold, and turned the fleecy cloudlets in the
+western sky to brightest jewels, and suffused the white houses and towers
+of Mogador with sweetest glow of pink, and gilded the green-tiled top of
+each tall minaret, had been accompanied by the roar of a cannon from the
+battery just below our windows.</p>
+
+<p>"What the deuce is that?" asked a friend of mine, lately arrived from
+England, as we strolled homewards one evening through the dusty streets,
+and the boom of the big gun suddenly fell upon his astonished ear.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Only sunset," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Queer place this," said J. "Does the sun always set with a bang?"</p>
+
+<p>"Always during Ramadan."</p>
+
+<p>"Does it rise with a bang too? I hate to be roused up early in the
+morning!"</p>
+
+<p>"No, there is no gun at sunrise; but there is a very loud one at about
+three in the morning, or sometimes half-past, or four, or later."</p>
+
+<p>"Shocking nuisance!" remarked J. "My bedroom window's just over that
+abominable battery."</p>
+
+<p>The early morning gun was a great trial, certainly. I would not have
+minded being <i>reveille en sursaut</i>, as a Frenchman would say, and then
+turning comfortably over on the other side, and going to sleep again.</p>
+
+<p>But somehow or other I always found myself awake half an hour or an hour
+before the time, and then I <i>could not</i> get to sleep again, but lay
+tossing about and fidgettily listening for the well-known din. At length I
+would hear a sound like the hum of an enormous fiendish nightmarish
+mosquito, caused by a hideous long tin trumpet, the shrill whistle of a
+fife or two, and the occasional tom-tomming of a Moorish drum. "Ha, the
+soldiers coming along the ramparts; they will soon fire now."</p>
+
+<p>But the sound of the discordant instruments with which the soldiery
+solaced themselves in the night for their enforced abstinence from such
+"sweet sounds" in the day would continue for a long time before the red
+flash through my wide-open door would momentarily illumine my little
+chamber on the white flat roof, and then the horrid bang would rend the
+air, followed by a dense cloud of foul-smelling smoke; and then would my
+big dog C&aelig;sar for several minutes rush frantically to and fro upon the
+roof in hot indignation, and utter deep-mouthed barks of defiance at the
+white figures of the "Maghaseni," as they flitted ghost-like along the
+ramparts below, and snort and pant and chafe and refuse to be pacified for
+a long time.</p>
+
+<p>At the firing of the sunset gun the Moors were allowed to take a slight
+refection, which generally consisted of a kind of gruel. I have seen a
+Moorish soldier squatting in the street with a brass porringer in his lap,
+eagerly awaiting the boom of the cannon to dip his well-washed fingers in
+the mess.</p>
+
+<p>At about 9 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> another slight meal was allowed to the true believers, and
+they might eat again at morning gun-fire, after which their mouths were
+closed against all "fixings, solid and liquid," even against the smallest
+draught of water or the lightest puff at the darling little pipe of
+dream-inducing <i>kief</i>.</p>
+
+<p>On the twenty-seventh day of Ramadan we were informed that twenty-seven
+guns would be fired that night, and that we had better leave all our
+windows open, or they would certainly be broken by the violence of the
+discharge. This was pleasant; still more delightful was the glorious
+uncertainty which prevailed in the minds of our informants as to the time
+at which we might expect the infliction.</p>
+
+<p>Some said that the twenty-seven guns would be fired before midnight;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+Hamed opined that the cannonade would not take place till 3 or 4 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> Many
+of the guns on the battery in close proximity to our abode were in a
+fearfully rusty and honeycombed condition, so that apprehensions as to
+some of them bursting were not unnatural, and I thought it extremely
+probable that a few stray fragments might "drop in" on me.</p>
+
+<p>That night I burned the "midnight oil," and lay reading till nearly two,
+when sweet sleep took possession of me, from which I was awakened about
+four in the morning by a terrific bang that fairly shook the house.</p>
+
+<p>A minute more, and there came a red flash and another bang, presently
+another. Thought I, "I will go out and see the show;" so I went on to the
+flat white roof in my airy nocturnal costume, and leaning over the parapet
+looked down on to the platform of the battery below. A group of dim white
+figures, a flickering lantern, a glowing match, a touch at the breech of a
+rusty old gun, a swift skurry of the white figures round a corner, a
+squib-like fountain of sparks from the touch-hole, a red flash from the
+mouth, momentarily illumining the dark violet sea, a bang, and a cloud of
+smoke.</p>
+
+<p>Then the white figures and the lantern appeared again; another squib,
+another flash, another bang, C&aelig;sar galloping up and down over the roof,
+snorting his indignation, but not barking, probably because he felt
+"unable to do justice to the subject;" and at length, after the eleventh
+gun had belched forth crimson flames and foul smoke, all was peace, save a
+distant discord of tin trumpets, <i>gouals</i> and <i>gimbris</i>, and I returned to
+my mosquito-haunted couch with a sigh of relief.</p>
+
+<p>Pass we now to the eve of "Christmas for Moros," and let ethnologist and
+hagiologist derive some satisfaction from the evidences I collected in
+this far-away Moorish town that the gladness of the Mahometan festival
+does, similarly to the purer joy of the Christian, though in a less degree
+perhaps, incline towards "peace and good-will to men," charity and
+kindliness.</p>
+
+<p>As we sat chatting that evening round the tea-table, to us entered Hamed,
+bearing, with honest pride illumining his brown features, a great tray of
+richly engraved brass, heaped up with curious but tempting-looking cakes.</p>
+
+<p>Gracefully presenting them to "the senora," he intimated that this was his
+humble offering or Christmas token of good-will towards the family, and
+that his mother (whom the good fellow maintains out of his modest wages)
+had made them with her own hands.</p>
+
+<p>The cakes were made of long thin strips of the finest paste, plentifully
+sweetened with delicious honey, twisted into quaint shapes, and fried in
+the purest of oil. I need hardly say that the children were delighted, and
+immediately commenced to court indigestion by a vigorous onslaught on the
+new and tempting sweets. Nay, why should I blush to confess that I myself
+have a very sweet tooth in my head, and such a liking for all things
+saccharine that my friends say jokingly that I must be getting into my
+second childhood?&mdash;an imputation which, as I am only<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span> a little on the
+wrong side of thirty, I can bear with equanimity. However, I firmly
+decline to inform an inquisitive public how many of those delightful
+Moorish cakes I ate: truth to tell, I do not remember; but I enjoyed them
+heartily, nor found my digestion impaired thereby.</p>
+
+<p>We had a little chat with Hamed&mdash;whose face was lighted up with the
+broadest of grins as we praised his mother's pastry and showed our
+appreciation of it in the most satisfactory manner&mdash;on certain matters of
+the Mahometan religion and the position of women in the future life. Some
+of the sterner Muslims believe that women have no souls; others opine that
+while good men go to "<i>Eljannah</i>," or heaven, and bad ones to
+"<i>Eljehannam</i>," or hell, women and mediocre characters are deported to a
+vague kind of limbo which they designate as "<i>Bab Maroksh</i>," or the
+Morocco Gate.</p>
+
+<p>But the gentle, liberal, and gallant Hamed informed us, in reply to an
+individual query with regard to our Moorish housemaid, that "if Lanniya
+plenty good, no <i>tiefem</i> (steal), no drinkum <i>sharab</i> (wine), and go for
+<i>scula</i> ("school," or religious instruction in the mosque, or in a
+schoolhouse adjoining it), by and by she go for "<i>Eljannah</i>."</p>
+
+<p>I am hardly correct, by the way, in speaking of Lanniya as "house-<i>maid</i>,"
+for Moorish maidens and wives never go in the service of European
+families, being prohibited by their religion from showing their faces; it
+is only widows and divorced women who may go about unveiled, and mingle
+with Christians.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning, soon after the last gun of Ramadan had sounded its
+joyous boom in my ear, I was up and stirring, donning my shooting apparel
+and preparing for an early country walk with my faithful four-footed
+comrade. I had no fear of exciting the fanaticism of the Muslim population
+by going out shooting on their holy day, for there is not much bigotry in
+Mogador,&mdash;Moors, Christians, and Jews observing their several religions
+peacefully side by side, so that three Sundays come in every week, the
+Mahometan on Friday, the Jewish on Saturday, and then ours.</p>
+
+<p>The sun, just rising from behind the eastern sand-hills, was gilding all
+the house-tops and minarets, till our white town looked like a rich
+assemblage of fairy palaces of gold and ivory; the smiling sea, serene and
+azure, came rippling peacefully up to the base of the rugged brown rocks,
+enlivened to-day by no statuesque figures of Moorish fishermen; nor did a
+single boat dot the broad blue expanse of the unusually smooth South
+Atlantic, of which the fish and the sea-fowl were for once left in
+undisturbed possession.</p>
+
+<p>As I gazed from the flat roof away over the great town, I heard from many
+quarters loud sounds of music and merriment. As I passed presently through
+the narrow streets, with their dead white walls and cool dark arches,
+scarcely a camel was to be seen at the accustomed corners by the stores of
+the merchants, where usually whole fleets of the "ships of the desert" lay
+moored, unloading almonds, and rich gums, and hides, and all the varied
+produce of the distant interior.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Outside the town-gates the very hordes of semi-wild scavenger dogs seemed
+to know that the day was one of peace, for they lay in the sunshine, nor
+barked and snapped at the infidel intruder as he walked over the golden
+sands, along the edge of the marshy pool, past the pleasant-looking
+Moorish cemetery with its graceful verdant palm-trees, a calm oasis in the
+sandy plain, and out across the shallow lagoon formed by overflows of high
+tides, by which a few late trains of homeward-bound camels went softly
+stepping, looking wonderfully picturesque as they marched through shallow
+waters so beautifully gilded by the morning sun, their drivers doubtless
+eager to reach their own home or the shelter of some friendly village to
+participate in the modest revelries of the joyous season. How I wandered
+along the shore of the "many-sounding sea," enjoying a little rough sport,
+and the blithe companionship of the big doggie; how I saw never a Moor
+upon the rocks, but many Jews with long bamboo rods, busily engaged in
+fishing for bream and bass and rock-fish, it boots not to describe with a
+minuteness which might be wearisome to my readers, for I am not now
+writing "of sport, for sportsmen."</p>
+
+<p>So let us turn homewards, as the sun is getting high in the heavens, and
+note the scenes by the way.</p>
+
+<p>Yonder, near the marshy corner of the plain, haunted by wild-fowl, and
+carrion crows, and mongrel jackal-like dogs, is the rough cemetery of the
+despised "Jehoud," the Israelites who form so large and so wealthy a
+portion of the population of Mogador. Among the long flat stones that mark
+the graves of the exiled sons and daughters of Israel there is a winding
+crowd of white-draped figures, a funeral procession. Unwilling to intrude
+upon their grief, I pass on, casting an involuntary glance at the
+picturesque garb and wild gesticulations of the mourners as the women's
+loud and bitter cry of "Ai, Ai, Ai, Ai!" sounds weirdly through the air,
+just as it may have done in the old scriptural times, when "the mourners
+went about the streets" and gave unchecked vent to their grief in public,
+even as they do to this day.</p>
+
+<p>But as I neared Morocco Gate, from the neighbouring "Running Ground" came
+very different sounds&mdash;a din of many drums, a squeaking of merry fifes,
+the firing of many long Moorish guns, the shouting of men and boys, and
+the eerie shrill <i>taghariet</i> of the Moorish women.</p>
+
+<p>And as I passed in front of the round battery, out from the great gate of
+the New Kasbah came the crowd of men, women, and children who had been
+clamouring joyfully in the Running-Ground, a bright throng of brown faces
+and white raiment, interspersed with the gay colours worn by the little
+children, and dotted here and there by the blood-red of the national flag.
+Suddenly from a cannon just behind me came a cloud of smoke enveloping me
+and the dog, and a bang which fairly shook us, and then another and
+another. The firing of the guns from this battery was the spectacle the
+Moorish populace had come out to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span> see.</p>
+
+<p>It was an uncomfortable sensation to have big guns going off just behind
+one; they were only loaded with blank cartridge, of course, but we were
+quite near enough to be knocked down by a stray piece of wadding, and
+something did once whistle past my ear suggestively.</p>
+
+<p>But it would never do for an "Ingleez" to run away in the presence of a
+lot of Moors; so I walked calmly across the sands while the whole battery
+of guns&mdash;twelve, I think&mdash;were fired, C&aelig;sar meanwhile prancing about
+majestically, and loudly giving vent to his indignation at a proceeding
+which he evidently considered, as he always does the firing of any gun or
+pistol by any one but me, an express insult to his master, and an
+infringement of his peculiar privileges.</p>
+
+<p>I went home by way of the Water-Port, where there was no movement of
+lighters or fishing-craft, no stir of bare-legged porters and fishermen,
+no bustle of Jewish and European merchants; nearly all the boats were
+drawn up on the shore, and those which remained afloat, slumbered
+tenantless on the broad blue bosom of the sea. On rocks, and in the
+pleasant shade of walls and arches, a few figures, in bright and gauzy
+<i>haiks</i> and gorgeous new slippers, lounged and dozed, perchance tired with
+the revelries they had gone through since daybreak, and recruiting their
+energies for fresh rejoicings towards evening. Reaching home about eleven,
+I rested a while, deposited my birds in the larder, and then proceeded to
+stroll about the streets and see how the populace comported themselves on
+this festive occasion. I was sorry to learn that some of the younger and
+more fanatical of the Moors had been relieving their feelings by abusing
+the Jews, some of whom had had stones thrown at them, and their heads
+slightly broken. But this temporary riot was over, and now all was "peace
+and good-will," except that perhaps there may have lurked a little not
+unnatural ill-feeling in the minds of the broken-headed Israelites, who
+could not help feeling rather disgusted at the manner in which the Muslim
+youths had celebrated "Christmas for Moros."</p>
+
+<p>As I passed along the narrow lane wherein the soldiers of the Kaid or
+Governor, in the snowiest of <i>haiks</i> and tallest and reddest of
+<i>tarbooshes</i>, squatted against the wall, chatting blithely as they awaited
+the advent of their master, a grave and venerable-looking Moorish
+grandpapa, hurrying along with a great armful of cakes in one of the folds
+of his <i>haik</i>, stumbled against a loose stone and dropped several of the
+cakes.</p>
+
+<p>I hastily stooped and picked them up; the old man muttered a few words of
+blessing upon me, insisted on my accepting the dainties I had rescued from
+the dust, utterly refused to receive them back, pressed my hand, and
+hurried on, leaving me in a state of embarrassment, from which I was
+opportunely relieved by the arrival of a bright-eyed little Moor of seven
+or eight summers, who was perfectly willing to relieve me from all trouble
+connected with the handful of cakes. Passing into the busy streets of the
+Moorish quarter, I found the population coming out of the various mosques,
+where they had been to morning service, and now going in for a systematic
+course of "greetings in the market-place,"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span> and purchasing of presents. O,
+for an artist's pencil and colours to depict the gorgeous costumes of the
+town Moors, the quaint, wild garb of their country cousins; the gauzy
+cream-tinted <i>haiks</i> from Morocco; the rich silken <i>caftans</i> of purple, or
+crimson, or yellow, or green, or azure, or pink, sweetly half-veiled by a
+fold or two of snowy gauze thrown over them; the bright red fez caps, and
+voluminous snowy turbans of the patriarchal-looking old men; the broad
+silken sashes from Fez, heavy and stiff with rich embroidery of gold; the
+great curved daggers in their richly chased silver or brass sheaths,
+suspended amid the folds of the <i>haik</i> by thick woolen cords of gay
+colours; the handsome brown faces, the flashing black eyes, the wonderful
+white teeth, the sinewy brown bare legs, the brand-new yellow slippers of
+the merry Moors of Mogador!</p>
+
+<p>And the negroes, or, as old Fuller would quaintly have called them, "the
+images of God cut in ebony," how their honest black features glistened,
+and how their bright teeth grinned beneath turban or fez, or gaudy
+handkerchief of many colours!</p>
+
+<p>The negro servant of one of the European residents, a good-humoured giant
+of nearly seven feet, whom his master is wont to describe as "his nigger
+and a half," came stalking down amongst the little shops and stalls with a
+flaunting bandanna round his head, a purple jacket, a most gorgeous sash,
+a pair of green baggy breeches, a glittering silver-sheathed dagger, and a
+most imposing <i>haik</i>, thrown in toga-like folds over all.</p>
+
+<p>Negro women, unveiled, white-clad, adorned as to their shiny black arms
+with rude heavy bracelets of silver or brass, sat at street-corners with
+baskets of sweet cakes and little loaves for sale. Veiled Moorish women,
+perchance showing just one bright black eye to tantalise the beholder,
+glided along like substantial ghosts in the white raiment which enveloped
+them from their heads down to the little feet shod with red or yellow
+slippers embroidered with gold thread or bright-coloured silks. Women
+leading tiny toddlers of children, little bright-eyed boys with crowns
+shaven all but one queer little tufted ridge in the middle, deftly curled
+this morning by mamma's loving fingers; foreheads adorned with quaint
+frontlets, from which hung curious ornaments of gold and coral and silver,
+spells against the evil eye, talismans, and what not.</p>
+
+<p>Little boys in beautiful cloth or silken cloaks of pale blue, or delicate
+purple, or crimson, or rich green, or golden yellow, trotting along as
+proud as peacocks, holding by the hand some tiny brother who can barely
+toddle. Children who have just had new slippers purchased for them, and
+are carrying them home in triumph; children who, with funny little copper
+coins in their hand, are congregating round the stall of the swarthy
+seller of sweetstuffs, who is ejaculating loudly, "<i>Heloua</i>, <i>Heloua</i>!"
+busily brandishing a feathery branch of green <i>artim</i> the while, to keep
+the vagrom flies off his stores of rich dainties composed of walnut and
+almond toffee, pastes made of almonds and honey and sugar, little brown
+sugar balls thickly strewn with cummin-seeds, long sticks of peppermint,
+and other delicacies difficult to describe.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>As to the grown-up Moors, never was seen such a hand-shaking as is going
+on amongst them. Everybody is shaking hands with everybody else, each
+wishing the other the Arabic substitute for "A merry Christmas," and after
+each handshaking each of the participants puts his hand to his lips and
+proceeds, to be stopped two yards farther on for a repetition of the
+performance.</p>
+
+<p>On we go through the meat-market, and note pityingly the leanness of the
+Moors' Christmas beef, which has just been butchered, and of which an
+eager good-humored crowd are buying small pieces amid much vociferation,
+chaff, and "compliments of the season" generally.</p>
+
+<p>Then we come to the green-grocers' shops, where we see huge radishes,
+great pomegranates, sweet potatoes, and bunches of fragrant mint for the
+flavouring of the Moors' passionately loved beverage, green tea; then to
+the grocers' quarter, where, asking a grave and portly Moor for a
+pennyworth <i>fakea</i> (dried fruit), he puts into half a gourd-shell a
+pleasant collection of dates, almonds, figs, and raisins, hands them to us
+with benign politeness. Opposite his store is a low table covered with
+queer bottles of all shapes and sizes, filled with a dubious-looking pink
+fluid, resembling the most delicious hair oil, but apparently highly
+appreciated by the Moorish and Jewish youth who crowd around.</p>
+
+<p>In the centre is a burly brandy-bottle, bearing the well-known label of
+"J. and F. Martell," now filled with a fluid presumably more innocuous
+than the choicest cognac; the big bottle is flanked by rows of little
+medicine-vials and long thin bottles such as are used for attar of roses
+and other Eastern scents; for the vendor of this bright-coloured liquor
+does not possess cups or tumblers, but dispenses it in the little bottles.
+A bare-headed youth, with shaven crown, tenders a <i>mozouna</i>, receives a
+two-ounce vial, empties it solemnly amid the envious looks of his
+comrades, sets it down, and walks gravely away.</p>
+
+<p>Away we go too, C&aelig;sar and I, and I note that there is hardly a Jew to be
+seen in the streets; they are afraid of stone-throwing, and outbursts of
+the slumbering hatred and contempt with which they are regarded by the
+orthodox Muslim.</p>
+
+<p>As for Christians, Englishmen especially, they are much more tolerated and
+respected; and I know that I may walk the town all day without fear of
+molestation, and get plenty of kindly greetings and many a smile and shake
+of the hand.</p>
+
+<p>Out of the busy market, up the narrow and shady streets, hearing sounds of
+the fearsome trumpet, which I have already compared to an exaggerated
+mosquito, meeting that instrument presently at a corner&mdash;a horrid tin
+thing about two yards long, wielded by a sinewy little man in a blue
+tunic, accompanying a gaily-dressed boy on a sleek and patient donkey.
+Fifing and drumming and firing of guns going on all around.</p>
+
+<p>Fierce-looking Moors and Arabs from the country leaning on their long
+silver-mounted guns, scowling at the "Kaffer," whom they have perchance
+not seen until they came to El Sou&euml;rah. A veiled, but evidently<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span> portly,
+dame, leading by the hand a pretty little girl, in a red skirt below a
+rich garment of lace or embroidery, with a crimson hooded cloak or
+<i>djelab</i> over it, rich ornaments on her smooth brown forehead, enormous
+silver anklets, little bare feet, dyed, like her hands and those of most
+of the little girls and many of the big ones, a bright red with henna.
+Little girl shrinks behind her mother, afraid of the Giaour or of his big
+dog; the Giaour slips by with a smile, doggie with a friendly wag of his
+tail, and we go homeward for a while; C&aelig;sar to make a hearty meal of the
+biscuits which have come all the way from England for him; his master to
+partake of lunch, then smoke a pipe on the roof, and look wistfully out
+over the bright blue sky, and let his thoughts wander far, far away to
+many a pleasant Christmas in a pleasant corner of the fair Western land:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Where is now the merry party<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">I remember long ago,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Laughing round the Christmas fireside,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Brightened by its ruddy glow?"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>But the Moor's Christmas has come early in October; there is time yet, and
+plenty of English steamers going backwards and forwards; who knows whether
+the wanderer may not yet spend the next Christmas by a genial English
+fireside, and recount to prattling children on his knee (others' children,
+alas!) the curious sights, sounds, and scenes of "Christmas for Moros?"
+But I have not quite done with you yet, kindly reader. I must just briefly
+tell you how I went out again in the afternoon with C&aelig;sar and a two-legged
+friend, and found more shopping going on and more handshaking, and found
+the more festive spirits getting hilarious over green tea and coffee and
+<i>kief</i>; how we strolled down to the Water-Port and sat on the quay,
+surrounded by merry young Moors in their "Sunday best;" how my friend
+essayed to sketch one or two of them, and they did not like it, but
+thought some evil spell would be put upon them thereby; how they asked us
+many questions about England, and particularly wanted to know how many
+dollars we possessed; how my companion won the hearts of some of the
+younger members of the party by teaching them how to whistle between their
+thumbs, and how to make a certain very loud and direfully discordant
+screech; and how J. and I finished the afternoon by partaking of a
+delightful bottle of English ale in the courtyard of a cool store, leaning
+our chairs against massive stone pillars, and smoking the pipe of peace.</p>
+
+<p>But I fear the stern Editor will not grant me any more space, and I must
+leave at present the recital of all that I saw on the ensuing day, which
+the gentle Hamed, if he were a <i>little</i> more closely acquainted with our
+institutions, would call "Boxing-day for Moros."</p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+C. A. P. ("<span class="smcap">Sarcelle</span>"), <i>in London Society</i>,</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Mogador.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_HOMES_AND_HAUNTS_OF_THE_ITALIAN_POETS" id="THE_HOMES_AND_HAUNTS_OF_THE_ITALIAN_POETS"></a>THE HOMES AND HAUNTS OF THE ITALIAN POETS.</h2>
+
+
+<h3>GUARINI.</h3>
+
+<p>Pastoral poetry had in Italy a tendency to a rapid degeneration from the
+first. "Decipit exemplum vitiis imitabile." The earliest "pastorals" were
+far from being without merit, and merit of a high order. But they were
+eminently "vitiis imitabiles." Two specimens of Italian Arcadian poetry
+stand out, from the incredibly huge mass of such productions still extant,
+superior to all the innumerable imitations to which they gave rise in a
+more marked degree even than "originals" usually surpass imitations in
+value. These are the "Aminta" of Tasso, and the "Pastor Fido" of the poet
+with whom it is the object of these pages to make the English nineteenth
+century reader, who never will find the time to read him, in some degree
+acquainted&mdash;Batista Guarini. It would be difficult to say which of these
+two celebrated pastoral dramas was received with the greater amount of
+delight and enthusiasm by the world of their contemporaries, or even which
+of them is the better performance. The almost simultaneous production of
+these two masterpieces in their kind is a striking instance of the, one
+may almost say, epidemic nature of the influences which rule the
+production of the human intellect; influences which certainly did not
+cease to operate for many generations after that of the authors of the
+"Aminta" and the "Pastor Fido," although the servile imitation of those
+greatly admired works unquestionably went for much in causing the
+overwhelming flood of pastorals which deluged Italy immediately subsequent
+to their enormous success.</p>
+
+<p>I have said that it would be difficult to assign a pre&euml;minence to either
+of these poems. But it must not be supposed that it is intended thence to
+insinuate an equality between the authors of them. Tasso would occupy no
+lower place on the Italian Parnassus if he had never written the "Aminta."
+His fame rests upon a very much larger and firmer basis. But Guarini would
+be nowhere&mdash;would not be heard of at all&mdash;had he not written the "Pastor
+Fido." Having, however, produced that work&mdash;a work of which forty editions
+are said to have been printed in his lifetime, and which has been
+translated into almost every civilised language, including Latin, Greek,
+and Hebrew&mdash;he has always filled a space in the eyes of his countrymen,
+and occupied a position in the roll of fame, which render his admission as
+one of our select band here imperative. He is, besides, a representative
+poet; the head and captain of the pastoral school, which attained
+everywhere so considerable a vogue, and in Italy such colossal
+proportions.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Guarini was born in the year 1537 in Ferrara,&mdash;desolate, dreary, shrunken,
+grass-grown, tumble-down Ferrara, which in the course of one half-century
+gave to the world, besides a host of lesser names, three such poets as
+Tasso, Ariosto and Guarini. Ariosto died four years before Guarini was
+born; but Tasso was nearly his contemporary, being but seven years his
+junior.</p>
+
+<p>In very few cases in all the world and in all ages has it happened that
+intellectual distinction has been the appanage of one family for as many
+generations as in that of the Guarini. They came originally from Verona,
+where Guarino, the first of the family on record, who was born in 1370,
+taught the learned languages, and was one of the most notable of the band
+of scholars who laboured at the restoration of classical literature. He
+lived to be ninety years old, and is recorded to have had twenty-three
+sons. It is certain that he had twelve living in 1438. One of them,
+Giovanni Batista, succeeded his father in his professorship at Ferrara, to
+which city the old scholar had been invited by Duke Hercules I. It would
+seem that another of his sons must also have shared the work of teaching
+in the University of Ferrara: for Batista the poet was educated by his
+great-uncle Alessandro, and succeeded him in his professorship. Of the
+poet's father we only learn that he was a mighty hunter, and further, that
+he and his poet-son were engaged in litigation respecting the inheritance
+of the poet's grandfather and great-uncle. It is probable that the two old
+scholars wished to bequeath their property, which included a landed
+estate, to their grandson and great-nephew, who already was manifesting
+tastes and capacities quite in accordance with their own, rather than to
+that exceptional member of the race who cared for nothing but dogs and
+horses.</p>
+
+<p>Nor was Batista the last of his race who distinguished himself in the same
+career. His son succeeded him in his chair at the university; and we have
+thus at least four generations of scholars and professors following the
+same course in the same university, which was in their day one of the most
+renowned in Europe.</p>
+
+<p>All this sounds very stable, very prosperous, very full of the element of
+contentment. And there is every reason to believe that the
+great-grandfather, the grandfather, the great-uncle, the son, were all as
+tranquil and contented and happy as well-to-do scholars in a prosperous
+university city should be. But not so the poet. His life was anything but
+tranquil, or happy, or contented. The lives of few men, it may be hoped,
+have been less so.</p>
+
+<p>Yet his morning was brilliant enough. He distinguished himself so
+remarkably by his success in his early studies that, on the death of his
+great-uncle Alexander when he was only nineteen, he was appointed to
+succeed him. This was in 1556, when Hercules II. was Duke of Ferrara, and
+when that court of the Este princes was at the apogee of its splendour,
+renown, and magnificence. The young professor remained working at the
+proper labours of his profession for ten years; and they were in all
+probability the best and happiest, the only happy ones of his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span> life. Happy
+is the nation, it has been said, which has no history; and much the same
+probably may be said of an individual. Respecting these ten years of
+Guarini's life but little has been recorded. No doubt the chronicle of
+them would have been monotonous enough. The same quiet duties quietly and
+successfully discharged; the same morning walk to his school, the same
+evening return from it, through the same streets, with salutations to the
+same friends, and leisurely pauses by the way to chat, Italian fashion,
+with one and another, as they were met in the streets, not then, as now,
+deserted, grass-grown, and almost weird in their pale sun-baked
+desolation, but thronged with bustling citizens, mingled with gay
+courtiers, and a very unusually large proportion of men whose names were
+known from one end of Italy to the other. Those school haunts in the
+Ferrarese University were haunts which the world-weary ex-professor must
+often throughout the years of his remaining life&mdash;some forty-five of them,
+for he did not die till 1612, when he was seventy-five&mdash;have looked back
+on as the best and happiest of his storm-tossed existence.</p>
+
+<p>There is, however, one record belonging to this happy time which must not
+be forgotten. It was at Padua, <i>Padova la dotta</i>, as she has been in all
+ages and is still called, Padua the learned, in the year 1565. Guarini was
+then in his twenty-eighth year, and had been a professor at Ferrara for
+the last eight years. Probably it was due to the circumstance that his
+friend and fellow-townsman, Torquato Tasso, was then pursuing his studies
+at Padua, that the young Ferrarese professor turned his steps in that
+direction, bound "on a long vacation ramble." Tasso was only
+one-and-twenty at the time; but he was already a member of the famous
+Paduan Academy of the "Etherials," which Guarini was not. And we may
+readily fancy the pride and pleasure with which the younger man, doing the
+honours of the place to his learned friend, procured him to be elected a
+member of the "Etherials." Guarini (so called <i>nel secolo</i>&mdash;in the world),
+was <i>Il Costante</i>&mdash;the "Constant One" among the "Etherials." Scipio
+Gonzaga, who became subsequently the famous Cardinal, spoke an oration of
+welcome to him on his election. Then what congratulations, what
+anticipations of fame, what loving protestations of eternal friendship,
+what na&iuml;ve acceptance of the importance and serious value of their
+Etherial Academic play, as the two youths strolling at the evening hour
+among the crowds of gravely clad but in no wise gravely speaking students
+who thronged the colonnades in deep shadow under their low-browed arches,
+sally forth from beneath them as the sun nears the west, on to the vast
+open space which lies around the great church of St. Antony! Advancing in
+close talk they come up to Donatello's superb equestrian statue of the
+Venetian General Gattamelata, and lean awhile against the tall pedestal,
+finishing their chat before entering the church for the evening prayer.</p>
+
+<p>The "Etherials" of Padua constituted one of the innumerable "Academies"
+which existed at that day and for a couple of centuries subsequently in
+every one of the hundred cities of Italy. The "Arcadian"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span> craze was the
+generating cause of all of them. All the members were "shepherds;" all
+assumed a fancy name on becoming a member, by which they were known in
+literary circles; and every Academy printed all the rhymes its members
+strung together!</p>
+
+<p>Those must have been pleasant days in old Padua, before the young
+Professor returned to his work in the neighbouring university of Ferrara.
+The two young men were then, and for some time afterwards, loving friends;
+for they had not yet become rival poets.</p>
+
+<p>At the end of those ten years of university life he may be said to have
+entered on a new existence&mdash;to have begun life afresh&mdash;so entirely
+dis-severed was his old life from the new that then opened on him.
+Alphonso II., who had succeeded his father, Hercules II., as Duke of
+Ferrara in 1559, "called him to the court" in 1567, and he began life as a
+courtier, or a "servant" of the Duke, in the language of the country and
+time.</p>
+
+<p>Well, in 1567 he entered into the service of the Duke, his sovereign, and
+never had another happy or contented hour!</p>
+
+<p>The first service on which the Duke employed him, and for the performance
+of which he seems specially to have taken him from his professional chair,
+was an embassy to Venice, to congratulate the new Doge, Pietro Loredano,
+on his elevation to the ducal throne, to which he had been elected on the
+previous 19th of June. On this occasion the Professor was created
+Cavaliere, a title to which his landed estate of Guarina, so called from
+the ancestor on whom it had been originally bestowed by a former duke,
+fairly entitled him.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly afterwards he was sent as ambassador to the court of Turin; and
+then to that of the Emperor Maximilian at Innspruck. Then he was twice
+sent to Poland; the first time on the occasion of the election of Henry
+the Third of France to the throne of that kingdom; and the second time
+when Henry quitted it to ascend that of France on the death of his brother
+Charles IX. The object of this second embassy was to intrigue for the
+election to the Polish crown of Alphonso. But, as it is hardly necessary
+to say, his mission was unsuccessful.</p>
+
+<p>It seems, too, to have been well-nigh fatal to the ambassador. There is
+extant a letter written from Warsaw to his wife, which gives a curious and
+interesting account of the sufferings he endured on the journey and at the
+place of his destination. He tells his wife not to be discontented that
+his silence has been so long, but to be thankful that it was not eternal,
+as it was very near being! "I started, as you know, more in the fashion of
+a courier than of an ambassador. And that would have been more tolerable
+if bodily fatigue had been all. But the same hand that had to flog the
+horses by day, had to hold the pen by night. Nature could not bear up
+against this double labour of body and mind; especially after I had
+travelled by Serravelles and Ampez,<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> which is more disagreeable and
+difficult than I can tell you, from the ruggedness no<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span> less of the country
+than of the people, from the scarcity of horses, the miserable mode of
+living, and the want of every necessary. So much so that on reaching
+Hala<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> I had a violent fever. I embarked, however, for Vienna
+notwithstanding. What with fever, discouragement, an intense thirst,
+scarcity of remedies and of medical assistance, bad lodging, generally far
+to seek,<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> and often infected with disease, food disgusting, even to
+persons in health, bed where you are smothered in feathers, in a word,
+none of the necessaries or comforts of life! I leave you to imagine what I
+have suffered. The evil increased; my strength grew less. I lost my
+appetite for everything save wine. In a word, little hope remained to me
+of life, and that little was odious to me. There is on the Danube, which I
+was navigating, a vast whirlpool, so rapid that if the boatmen did not
+avail themselves of the assistance of a great number of men belonging to
+the locality, strong and powerful and well acquainted with the danger, who
+are there constantly for the purpose, and who struggle with their oars
+against the rapacious gulf, there is not a vessel in that great river
+which would not be engulfed! The place is worthy of the name of "the Door
+of Death," which with a notoriety of evil fame it has gained for itself.
+There is no passenger so bold as not to pass that bit of the course of the
+river on foot; for the thing is truly formidable and terrible. But I was
+so overcome by illness, that having lost all sense of danger or desire to
+live, I did not care to leave the boat, but remained in it, with those
+strong men, I hardly know whether to say stupidly or intrepidly&mdash;but I
+will say intrepidly, since at one point, where I was within an ace of
+destruction, I felt no fear."</p>
+
+<p>He goes on to tell how at Vienna a physician treated him amiss, and made
+him worse; how every kind of consideration, and his own desire to save his
+life, counselled him to delay there; but how the honour, the
+responsibility of the embassy wholly on his shoulders, his duty to his
+sovereign prevailed to drive him onwards. He feared, too, lest it should
+be supposed at Warsaw that he preferred his life to the business on which
+he came, an accusation which might have been made use of by suspicious and
+malignant adversaries to deprive him of all the credit of his labours, and
+"to snatch from my Prince the crown which we are striving to place on his
+head. It is impossible to imagine," he continues, "what I suffered in that
+journey of more than six hundred miles from Vienna to Warsaw, dragged
+rather than carried in carts, broken and knocked to pieces. I wonder that
+I am still alive! The obstinate fever, the want of rest, of food, and of
+medicine, the excessive cold, the infinite hardships, the uninhabited
+deserts, were killing me. More often than not it was a much lesser evil to
+crouch by night in the cart, which dislocated my bones by day, rather than
+to be suffocated in the foulness of those dens, or stables rather, where
+the dogs and cats, the cocks and hens, and the geese, the pigs and the
+calves, and sometimes the children, kept me waiting."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He proceeds to tell how the country was overrun, in that time of
+interregnum, by lawless bands of Cossacks; how he was obliged to travel
+with a strong escort, but nevertheless was obliged several times to
+deviate from the direct road to avoid the Cossacks, but on two occasions
+had very narrow escapes from falling into their hands. When he reached
+Warsaw at last, more dead than alive, the only improvement of his position
+was that he was stationary instead of in motion. "The cart no more
+lacerates my limbs!" But there was no rest to be got. "The place, the
+season, the food, the drink, the water, the servants, the medicines, the
+doctors, mental trouble, and a thousand other ills make up my torment.
+Figure to yourself all the kingdom lodged in one little town, and my room
+in the midst of it! There is no place from the top to the bottom, on the
+right or on the left, by day or by night, that is not full of tumult and
+noise. There is no special time here destined for business. Negotiation is
+going on always, because drinking is going on always; and business is dry
+work without wine. When business is over, visits begin; and when these are
+at an end, drums, trumpets, bombs, uproar, cries, quarrels, fighting,
+split one's head in a manner piteous to think of. Ah! if I suffered all
+this labour and this torment for the love and the glory of God, I should
+be a martyr!" (one thinks of Wolsey!) "But is he not worthy of the name
+who serves without hope of recompense?"</p>
+
+<p>He concludes his letter, bidding his wife not to weep for him, but to live
+and care for her children, in a manner which indicates that he had even
+then but little hope of returning alive.</p>
+
+<p>We are nevertheless assured by his biographers that he acquitted himself
+upon all these occasions in such sort as to give satisfaction to his
+sovereign and to acquire for himself the reputation of an upright and able
+minister. The Italian practice of entrusting embassies especially to men
+of letters, which we first had occasion to note when tracing the
+vicissitudes of the life of Dante in the thirteenth century, which we saw
+subsequently exemplified in the cases of Petrarch, Boccaccio, and Ariosto,
+and which might be further exemplified in the persons of many other
+Italian scholars and men of letters, still, as we see, prevailed in the
+sixteenth century, and continued to do so for some little time longer.</p>
+
+<p>But in no one instance, of all those I have mentioned, does the poet thus
+employed in functions which in other lands and other times have usually
+led to honours and abundant recognition of a more solid kind, appear to
+have reaped any advantage in return for the service performed, or to have
+been otherwise than dissatisfied and discontented with the treatment
+accorded to him.</p>
+
+<p>It would have been very interesting to learn somewhat of the impression
+made upon an Italian scholar of the sixteenth century by the places
+visited, and persons with whom he must have come in contact in those<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+transalpine lands, which were then so far off, so contrasted in all
+respects with the home scenes among which his life had been passed in the
+low-lying, fat, and fertile valley of the Po. Of all this his various
+biographers and contemporaries tell us no word! But there is a volume of
+his letters, a little square quarto volume, now somewhat rare, printed at
+Venice in the year 1595.<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> These letters have somewhat unaccountably not
+been included in any of the editions of his works, and they are but little
+known. But turning to this little volume, and looking over the dates of
+the letters (many of them, however, are undated), I found three written
+"Di Spruch," and eagerly turned to them, thinking that I should certainly
+find there what I was seeking. The letters belong to a later period of
+Guarini's life, having been written in 1592, when he was again sent on an
+embassy to the German Emperor. This circumstance, however, is of no
+importance as regards the purpose for which I wanted the letters. I was
+disappointed. But I must nevertheless give one of these letters, not
+wantonly to compel my reader to share my disappointment, but because it is
+a curiosity in its way. The person to whom he writes is a lady, the
+Contessa Pia di Sala, with whom he was evidently intimate. He is at
+Innspruck at the Court of the Emperor Maximilian. The lady is at Mantua,
+and this is what he writes to her:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class='right'>
+"Di Spruch, Nov. 29, 1592.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"The letter of your Illustrious Ladyship, together with
+which you send me that of your most excellent brother,
+written at the end of August, reached me yesterday, at first
+to my very great anger at having been for so long a time
+deprived of so precious a thing, while I appeared in fault
+towards so distinguished a lady; but finally to my very
+great good fortune. For if a letter written by the most
+lovely flame<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> in the world had arrived, while the skies
+were burning, what would have become of me, when, now that
+winter is beginning, I can scarcely prevent myself from
+falling into ashes? And in truth, when I think that those so
+courteous thoughts come from the mind which informs so
+lovely a person, that those characters have been traced by a
+hand of such excellent beauty, I am all ablaze, no less than
+if the paper were fire, the words flames, and all the
+syllables sparks. But God grant that, while I am set on fire
+by the letter of your Illustrious Ladyship, you may not be
+inflamed by anger against me, from thinking that the terms
+in which I write are too bold. Have no such doubt, my
+honoured mistress! I want nothing from the flaming of my
+letter, but to have made by the light of it more vivid and
+more brilliant in you, the natural purity of your beautiful
+face, even as it seems to me that I can see it at this
+distance. My love is nothing else save honour; my flame is
+reverence; my fire is ardent desire to serve you. And only
+so long will the appointment in his service, which it has
+pleased my Lord His Serene Highness the Duke of Mantua to
+give me, and on which your Illustrious Ladyship has been
+kind enough to congratulate me so cordially, be dear to me,
+as you shall know that I am fit for it, and more worthy and
+more ready to receive the favour of your commands, which
+will always be to me a most sure testimony that you esteem
+me, not for my own worth, as you too courteously say, but
+for the worth which you confer on me, since I am not worthy
+of such esteem for any other merit than that which comes to
+me from being honoured by so noble and beautiful a lady. I
+kiss the hand of your Illustrious Ladyship, wishing the
+culmination of every felicity."</p></div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span></p><p>Now, this letter I consider to be a very great curiosity! The other two
+written from the same place, one to a Signor Bulgarini at Siena, the other
+to a lady, the Marchesa di Grana, at Mantua, are of an entirely similar
+description. I turned to them in the hope of finding how Innspruck, its
+stupendous scenery, its court, its manners so widely different from those
+to which the writer and his correspondents were used, its streets, its
+people, impressed a sixteenth century Italian from the valley of the Po. I
+find instead a psychological phenomenon! The writer is a grave, austere
+man (Guarini was notably such), celebrated throughout Italy for his
+intellectual attainments, in the fifty-seventh year of his age, with a
+wife and family; he is amidst scenes which must, one would have thought,
+have impressed in the very highest degree the imagination of a poet, and
+must, it might have been supposed, have interested those he was writing to
+in an only somewhat less degree, and he writes the stuff the reader has
+just waded through. It is clear that this Italian sixteenth century
+scholar, poet and of cultivated intellect as he was, saw nothing amid the
+strange scenes to which a hard and irksome duty called him, which he
+thought worthy of being mentioned even by a passing word to his friends!
+Surely this is a curious trait of national character.</p>
+
+<p>He remained in the service of the court for fourteen years, employed
+mainly, as it should seem, in a variety of embassies; an employment which
+seems to have left him a disappointed, soured, and embittered man. He
+considered that he had not been remunerated as his labour deserved, that
+the heavy expenses to which he had been put in his long journeys had not
+been satisfactorily made up to him, and that he had not been treated in
+any of the foreign countries to which his embassies had carried him with
+the respect due to his own character and to his office.</p>
+
+<p>He determined therefore to leave the court and retire to Padua, a
+residence in which city, it being not far distant from his estate of
+Guarina, would offer him, he thought, a convenient opportunity of
+overlooking his property and restoring order to his finances, which had
+suffered much during his travels. This was in the year 1582, when Guarini
+was in the forty-fifth year of his age. It is not clear, however, that
+this retirement was wholly spontaneous; and the probability is that the
+Duke and his ambassador were equally out of humour with each other. And it
+is probable that the faults were not all on the side of the Duke. There is
+sufficient evidence that the author of the "Pastor Fido" must have been a
+difficult man to live with.</p>
+
+<p>The old friendship of happier days with Tasso had not survived the wear
+and tear of life at court. It was known that they no longer saw or spoke
+with each other. And everybody&mdash;if not of their contemporaries, at least
+of subsequent writers&mdash;jumped to the conclusion<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span> that the writer of the
+"Aminta" and the writer of the "Pastor Fido" must be jealous of each
+other. Jealousy there certainly was. But some frailer and more mortal
+female than the Muse was the cause of it. The Abate Serassi in his life of
+Tasso admits that Tasso first gave offence to Guarini by a sonnet in which
+he endeavoured to alienate the affections of a lady from him, by
+representing him as a faithless and fickle lover. The lines in which Tasso
+attacked his brother poet are, it must be admitted, sharp enough!</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">Si muove e si raggira<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Instabil pi&ugrave; che arida fronde ai venti;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nulla f&egrave;, null' amor, falsi i tormenti<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sono, e falso l'affeto ond' ei sospira.<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Insidioso amante, ama e disprezza<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Quasi in un punto, e trionfando spiega<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Di femminile spoglie empi trofei.<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a>...<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The attack was savage enough, it must be admitted, and well calculated to
+leave a lasting wound. Guarini immediately answered the cruel sonnet by
+another, the comparative weakness of which is undeniable.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">Questi che indarno ad alta mira aspira<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Con altrui biasmi, e con bugiardi accenti,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Vedi come in se stesso arruota i denti,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mentre contra ragion meco s'adira.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">Di due fiamme si vanta, e stringe e spezza<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Pi&ugrave; volte un nodo; e con quest' arti piega<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">(Chi 'l crederebbe!) a suo favore i Dei.<a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a>...<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>There is reason to think that the accusation of many times binding and
+loosing the same knot, may have hit home. The sneer about bending the gods
+to favour him, alludes to Tasso's favour at court, then in the ascendant,
+and may well have been as offensive to the Duke and the ladies of his
+court as to the object of his satire. Both angry poets show themselves
+somewhat earth-stained members of the Paduan "Etherials." But the sequel
+of the estrangement was all in favour of the greater bard. Tasso, in
+desiring a friend to show his poems in manuscript to certain friends, two
+or three in number, on whose opinion he set a high value, named Guarini
+among the number. And upon another occasion wishing to have Guarini's
+opinion as to the best of two proposed, methods of terminating a sonnet,
+and not venturing to communicate directly with him, he employed a common
+friend to obtain<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> his brother-poet's criticism. Tasso had also in his
+dialogue entitled the "Messagero" given public testimony to Guarini's high
+intellectual and civil merits. But Guarini appears never to have forgiven
+the offence. He never once went to see Tasso in his miserable confinement
+in the hospital of St. Anne; nor, as has been seen, would hold any
+communication with him.</p>
+
+<p>He must have been a stern and unforgiving man. And indeed all the
+available testimony represents him as having been so,&mdash;upright, honest,
+and honourable, but haughty, punctilious, litigious, quick to take
+offence, slow to forget or forgive it, and cursed with a thin-skinned
+<i>amour propre</i> easily wounded and propense to credit others with the
+intention of wounding where no such intention existed. The remainder of
+the story of his life offers an almost unbroken series of testimonies to
+the truth of such an estimate of his character.</p>
+
+<p>It was after fourteen years' service in the court of Duke Alphonso, as has
+been said, that he retired disgusted and weary to live in independence and
+nurse his estate in the neighbourhood of Padua. But the part of
+Cincinnatus is not for every man! It was in 1582 that he retired from the
+court intending to bid it and its splendours, its disappointments and its
+jealousies, an eternal adieu. In 1585, on an offer from the Duke to make
+him his secretary, he returned and put himself into harness again!</p>
+
+<p>But this second attempt to submit himself to the service, to the caprices
+and exigencies of a master and of a court ended in a quicker and more
+damaging catastrophe than the first. In a diary kept by the poet's nephew,
+Marcantonio Guarini, under the date of July 13, 1587, we find it written
+that "the Cavalier Batista Guarini, Secretary of the Duke, considering
+that his services did not meet with sufficient consideration in proportion
+to his worth, released himself from that servitude." The phrase here
+translated "released himself" is a peculiar one&mdash;<i>si licenzio</i>&mdash;"dismissed
+himself." To receive <i>licenza</i>, or to be <i>licenziato</i>, is to be dismissed,
+or at least parted with in accordance with the will of the employer. But
+the phrase used by the diarist seems intended to express exactly what
+happened when the poet, once more discontented, took himself off from
+Ferrara and its Duke. He seems to have done so in a manner which gave deep
+and lasting offence. In a subsequent passage of the above-quoted diary we
+read, "the Cavaliere Batista Guarini having absented himself from Ferrara,
+disgusted with the Duke, betook himself to Florence, and then, by the
+intermedium of Guido Coccapani the agent, asked for his dismissal in form
+and obtained it." We happen, however, to have a letter written by this
+Coccapani, who seems to have been the Duke's private secretary and
+managing man, in which he gives his version of the matter. He was
+"stupefied," he says, "when he received the extravagant letter of the
+Cavaliere Guarini, and began to think that it would be with him as it had
+been with Tasso," who by that time had fallen into disgrace. There is
+reason to think that he left Ferrara secretly, without taking leave of the
+Duke, or letting anybody<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span> at court know where he had gone. He did,
+however, obtain his formal dismissal, as has been said, but the Duke by no
+means forgave him.</p>
+
+<p>Though it would appear that on leaving Ferrara in this irregular manner he
+went in the first instance to Florence, it seems that he had had hopes
+given him of a comfortable position and honourable provision at Turin. He
+was to have been made a Counsellor of State, and entrusted with the task
+of remodelling the course of study at the university, with a stipend of
+six hundred crowns annually. But on arriving at Turin he found
+difficulties in the way. In fact, the angry Duke of Ferrara had used his
+influence with the Duke of Savoy to prevent anything being done for his
+contumacious Secretary of State. Guarini, extremely mortified, had to
+leave Turin, and betook himself to Venice.</p>
+
+<p>His adventure, however, was of a nature to cause great scandal in that
+clime and time. As usual, the Italians were offended at the "imprudence"
+of which Guarini's temper had led him to be guilty, more than they would
+have been by many a fault which among ourselves would be deemed a very
+much worse one. A violence of temper or indignation shown in such a manner
+as to injure <i>one's own</i> interests is, and in a yet greater degree was, a
+spectacle extremely disgusting to Italian moral sentiment.</p>
+
+<p>The outcry against Guarini on this occasion was so great that he found
+himself obliged to put forth an exculpatory statement.</p>
+
+<p>"If human actions, my most kind readers," he begins, "always bore marked
+on the front of them the aims and motives which have produced them, or if
+those who talk about them were always well informed enough to be able to
+judge of them without injury to the persons of whom they speak, I should
+not be compelled, at my age, and after so many years of a life led in the
+eyes of the world, and often busied in defending the honour of others, to
+defend this day my own, which has always been dearer to me than my life.
+Having heard, then, that my having left the service of His Serene Highness
+the Duke of Ferrara and entered that of the Duke of Savoy has given
+occasion to some persons, ignorant probably of the real state of the case,
+to make various remarks, and form various opinions, I have determined to
+publish the truth, and at the same time to declare my own sentiments in
+the matter.</p>
+
+<p>"I declare, then, that previously to my said departure I consigned to the
+proper person everything, small as it was, which was in my hands regarding
+my office, which had always been exercised by me uprightly and without any
+other object in view than the service of my sovereign and the public
+welfare. Further, that I, by a written paper under my own hand (as the
+press of time and my need rendered necessary), requested a free and
+decorous dismissal from the Duke in question, and also, that I set forth
+in all humility the causes which led me to that determination; and I added
+(some of the circumstances in which I was compelling me to do so) that if
+His Serene Highness did not please to give me any other answer, I would
+take his silence as a consent to my request of dismissal. I declare
+further that the paper was delivered to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span> the principal Minister of his
+Serene Highness, and lastly, that my salary was, without any further
+communication with me, stopped, and cancelled from the roll of payments.
+And as this is the truth, so it is equally true that my appointment as
+reformer of the University of Turin, and Counsellor of State with six
+hundred crowns yearly, was settled and concluded with His Serene Highness
+the Duke of Savoy, and that I declined to bind myself, and did not bind
+myself, to ask any other dismissal from His Serene Highness the Duke of
+Ferrara than that which I have already spoken. And, finally, it is true
+that, as I should not have gone to Turin if I had not been engaged for
+that service and invited thither, so I should not have left, or wished to
+leave this place,<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> had I not known that I received my dismissal in the
+manner above related. Now, as to the cause which may have retarded and may
+still retard the fulfillment of the engagement above mentioned, I have
+neither object, nor obligation, nor need to declare it. Suffice it that it
+is not retarded by any fault of mine, or difficulty on my side. In
+justification of which I offered myself, and by these presents now again
+offer myself, to present myself wheresoever, whensoever, and in whatsoever
+manner, and under whatsoever conditions and penalties, as may be seen more
+clearly set forth in the instrument of agreement sent by me to His
+Highness. From all which, I would have the world to know, while these
+affairs of mine are still in suspension, that I am a man of honour, and am
+always ready to maintain the same in whatsoever manner may be fitting to
+my condition and duty. And as I do not at all doubt that some decision of
+some kind not unworthy of so just and so magnanimous a prince will be
+forthcoming; so, let it be what it may, it will be received by me with
+composure and contentment; since, by God's grace, and that of the serene
+and exalted power under the most just and happy dominion of which I am now
+living, and whose subject, if not by birth, yet by origin and family, I
+am,<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> I have a comfortable and honoured existence. And may you, my
+honoured readers, live in happiness and contentment. Venice, February 1,
+1589."</p>
+
+<p>We must, I think, nevertheless be permitted to doubt the contentment and
+happiness of the life he led, as it should seem, for the next four years,
+at Venice. No such decision of any kind, as he hoped from the Duke of
+Savoy, was forthcoming. He was shunted! He had quarrelled with his own
+sovereign, and evidently the other would have none of him. The Italians of
+one city were in those days to a wonderful degree foreigners in another
+ruled by a different government; and there can be little doubt that
+Guarini wandered among the quays and "calle" of Venice, or paced the great
+piazza at the evening hour, a moody and discontented man!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>At last, after nearly four years of this sad life, there came an
+invitation from the Duke of Mantua proposing that Guarini should come to
+Mantua together with his son Alessandro, to occupy honourable positions in
+that court. The poet, heartily sick of "retirement," accepted at once, and
+went to Mantua. But there, too, another disappointment awaited him. The
+"magnanimous" Duke Alphonso would not tolerate that the man who had so
+cavalierly left his service should find employment elsewhere. It is
+probable that this position was obtained for him by the influence of his
+old friend and fellow-member of the "Etherials" at Padua, Scipione
+Gonzaga; and it would seem that he occupied it for a while, and went on
+behalf of the Duke of Mantua to Innspruck, whence he wrote the wonderful
+letters which have been quoted.</p>
+
+<p>The Cardinal's influence, however, was not strong enough to prevail
+against the spite of a neighbouring sovereign. There are two letters
+extant from the Duke, or his private secretary, to that same Coccapani
+whom we saw so scandalized at Guarini's hurried and informal departure
+from Ferrara, and who was residing as Alphonso's representative at Mantua,
+in which the Minister is instructed to represent to the Duke of Mantua
+that his brother of Ferrara "did not think it well that the former should
+take any of the Guarini family into his service, and when they should see
+each other he would tell him his reasons. For the present he would only
+say that he wished the Duke to know that it would be excessively pleasing
+to him if the Duke would have nothing to say to any of them."</p>
+
+<p>This was in 1593; and the world-weary poet found himself at fifty-six once
+again cast adrift upon the world. The extremity of his disgust and
+weariness of all things may be measured by the nature of the next step he
+took. He conceived, says his biographer Barotti, that "God called him by
+internal voices, and by promise of a more tranquil life, to accept the
+tonsure." His wife had died some little time before; and it was therefore
+open to him to do so. He went to Rome accordingly for the purpose of there
+taking orders. But during the short delay which intervened between the
+manifestation of his purpose and the fulfilment of it, news reached him
+that his friend and protectress the Duchess of Urbino, Alphonso's sister,
+had interceded for him with the Duke, and that he was forgiven! It was
+open to him to return to his former employment! And no sooner did the news
+reach him than he perceived that "the internal voices" were altogether a
+mistake. God had never called him at all, and Alphonso had! All thoughts
+of the Church were abandoned on the instant, and he hastened to Ferrara,
+arriving there on the 15th of April, 1595.</p>
+
+<p>But neither on this occasion was he destined to find the tranquillity
+which he seemed fated never to attain! And this time the break-up was a
+greater and more final one than the last. Duke Alphonso died in 1597; and
+the Pontificial Court, which had long had its eye on the possibility of
+enforcing certain pretended claims to the Duchy of Ferrara, found the
+means at Alphonso's death of ousting his successor the Duke<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span> Cesare, who
+remained thenceforward Duke of Modena only, but no longer of Ferrara.</p>
+
+<p>Guarini was once more adrift! Nor were the political changes in Ferrara
+the only thing which rendered the place no longer a home for him. Other
+misfortunes combined to render a residence in the city odious to him. His
+daughter Anna had married a noble gentleman of Ferrara, the Count Ercole
+Trotti, by whom she was on the 3rd of May, 1598, murdered at his villa of
+Zanzalino near Ferrara. Some attempt was made to assert that the husband
+had reason to suspect that his wife was plotting against his life. But
+there seems to have been no foundation for any accusation of the sort; and
+the crime was prompted probably by jealousy. Guarini, always on bad terms
+with his sons, and constantly involved in litigation with them, as he had
+been with his father, was exceedingly attached to this unfortunate
+daughter.</p>
+
+<p>But even this terrible loss was not the only bitterness which resulted
+from this crime. Guarini composed a long Latin epitaph, in which he
+strongly affirms her absolute innocence of everything that had been laid
+to her charge, and speaks with reprobation of the husband's<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a> crime. But
+scarcely had the stone bearing the inscription been erected than the
+indignant father was required by the authorities of the city to remove it.
+A declaration, which he published on the subject, dated June 15, 1598, is
+still extant. "On that day," he writes, "the Vice-legate of Ferrara spoke
+with me, in the name of the Holy Father, as to the removing of the epitaph
+written by me on Anna my daughter in the church of Sta. Catherina. He said
+that there were things in it that might provoke other persons to
+resentment, and occasion much scandal; and that, besides that, there were
+in the inscription words of Sacred Scripture, which ought not to be used
+in such a place. I defended my cause, and transmitted a memorial to his
+Holiness, having good reason to know that these objections were the mere
+malignity of those who favour the opposite party, and of those who caused
+the death of my innocent child. But at last, on the 22nd, I caused the
+epitaph to be removed, intimating that it was my intention to take up the
+body, and inter it elsewhere. On which it is worthy of remark, that having
+made my demand to that effect, I was forbidden to do so." He further adds:
+"Note! news was brought to me here that my son Girolamo, who was evidently
+discovered to be the accomplice, and principal atrocious author of the
+death of his sister Anna, received from the Potesta of Rovigo licence to
+come into the Polisina with twelve men armed with arquebuses."</p>
+
+<p>All this is very sad; and whether these terrible suspicions may or may not
+have had any foundation other than the envenomed temper generated by the
+family litigations, it must equally have had the effect of making the life
+of Guarini a very miserable one, and contributing to his determination to
+abandon finally his native city.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>More surprising is it that, after so many disgusts and disappointments, he
+should once again have been tempted to seek, what he had never yet been
+able to find there, in a court. In a letter written in November, 1598, he
+informs the Duke Cesare (Duke of Modena, though no longer of Ferrara) that
+the Grand Duke of Florence had offered him a position at Florence. And his
+Serene Highness, more kindly and forgiving than the late Duke, wrote him
+an obliging and congratulatory letter in the following month.</p>
+
+<p>At Florence everything at first seemed to be going well with him, and he
+seemed to stand high in favour with the Grand Duke Ferdinand. But very
+shortly he quitted Florence in anger and disgust on the discovery of the
+secret marriage of his third son, Guarini, with a woman of low condition
+at Pisa, with at least the connivance, as the poet thought, whether justly
+or not there is nothing to show, of the Grand Duke.</p>
+
+<p>After that his old friend the Duchess of Urbino once again stood his
+friend, and he obtained a position in the court of Urbino, then one of the
+most widely famed centres of cultivation and letters in Italy. And for a
+while everything seemed at last to be well with him there. On the 23rd of
+February, 1603, he writes to his sister, who apparently had been pressing
+him to come home to Ferrara:&mdash;"I should like to come home, my sister. I
+have great need and a great desire for home; but I am treated so well
+here, and with so much distinction and so much kindness, that I cannot
+come. I must tell you that all expenses for myself and my servants are
+supplied, so that I have not to spend a farthing for anything in the world
+that I need. The orders are that anything I ask for should be furnished to
+me. Besides all which, they give me three hundred crowns a year; so that,
+what with money and expenses, the position is worth six hundred crowns a
+year to me. You may judge, then, if I can throw it up. May God grant you
+every happiness!</p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+Your brother,&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br />
+<span class="smcap">B. Guarini</span>."<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>But all would not do. He had been but a very little time in this little
+Umbrian Athens among the Apennines before he once again threw up his
+position in anger and disgust, because he did not obtain all the marks of
+distinction to which he thought that he was entitled. This was in 1603. He
+was now sixty-six, and seems at length to have made no further attempt to
+haunt at court. Once again he was at Rome in 1605, having undertaken, at
+the request of the citizens of Ferrara, to carry their felicitations to
+the new Pope, Paul the Fifth. And with the exception of that short
+expedition his last years were spent in the retirement of his ancestral
+estate of Guarina.</p>
+
+<p>The property is situated in the district of Lendinara, on the fat and
+fertile low-lying region between Rovigo and Padua, and belongs to the
+commune&mdash;parish, as we should say&mdash;of St. Bellino. The house, dating
+probably from the latter part of the fifteenth century, is not much more<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+than a hundred yards or so from the <i>piazza</i> of the village, which boasts
+two thousand inhabitants. The road between the two is bordered with trees.
+The whole district is as flat as a billiard table, and as prosaical in its
+well-to-do fertility as can be imagined. It is intersected by a variety of
+streams, natural and artificial. About a couple of miles from the house to
+the south is the Canalbianco; and a little farther to the north the
+Adigetto. To the east runs the Scortico. St. Bellino, from whom the
+village is named, was, it seems, enrolled among the martyrs by Pope
+Eugenius the Third in 1152. He has a great specialty for curing the bite
+of mad dogs. There is a grand cenotaph in his honour in the village
+church, which was raised by some of the Guarini family. But this, too,
+like all else, became a subject of trouble and litigation to our poet. A
+certain Baldassare Bonifaccio of Rovigo wanted to transport the saint to
+that city. Guarini would not hear of this; litigated the matter before the
+tribunals of Venice, and prevailed. So the saint still resides at St.
+Bellino to the comfort of all those bitten by mad dogs in those parts. The
+house and estate have passed through several hands since that time; but a
+number of old family portraits may still be seen on the walls, together
+with the family arms, and the motto, "Fortis est in asperis non turbari."
+The armchair and writing table of the poet are also still preserved in the
+house, and a fig-tree is pointed out close by it, under the shade of which
+the poet, as tradition tells, wrote on that table and in that chair his
+"Pastor Fido." There is an inscription on the chair as follows: "Guarin
+sedendo qui canto, che vale al paragon seggio reale."<a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a></p>
+
+<p>It was not, however, during this his last residence here that the "Pastor
+Fido" was written, but long previously. It was doubtless his habit to
+escape from the cares of official life in Ferrara from time to time as he
+could; and it must have been in such moments that the celebrated pastoral
+was written.<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a></p>
+
+<p>The idea of a scholar and a poet, full of years and honours, passing the
+quiet evening of his life in a tranquil retirement in his own house on his
+own land, is a pleasing one. But it is to be feared that in the case of
+the author of the "Pastor Fido" it would be a fallacious one. Guarini
+would not have come to live on his estate if he could have lived
+contentedly in any city. We may picture him to ourselves sitting under his
+fig-tree, or pacing at evening under the trees of the straight avenue
+between his house and the village, or on the banks of one of the sluggish
+streams slowly finding their way through the flat fields towards the Po;
+but I am afraid the picture must be of one "Remote, unfriended,
+melancholy, slow," with eyes bent earthwards, and discontented mind:
+"remote," because to the Italian mind all places beyond the easy reach of
+a city are so; "unfriended," because he had quarrelled with everybody;
+"melancholy," because all had gone amiss with him, and his life had been a
+failure; "slow," because no spring of hope in the mind gave any elasticity
+to his step.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>One other "haunt" of the aged poet must, however, be mentioned, because it
+is a very characteristic one. During this last residence at Guarina, he
+hired an apartment at Ferrara, selecting it in a crowded part of the
+centre of the city, especially frequented by the lawyers, that he might be
+in the midst of them, when he went into the city on the various business
+connected with his interminable lawsuits. The most crowded part of the
+heart of the city of Ferrara! It would be difficult to find any such part
+now. But the picture offered to the imagination, of the aged poet,
+professor, courtier, haunting the courts, the lawyers' chambers, leaving
+his, at least, tranquil retreat at St. Bellino, to drag weary feet through
+the lanes of the city in which he had in earlier days played so different
+a part, is a sad one. But there are people who like contention so much
+that such work is a labour of love to them. And certainly, if the
+inference may be drawn from the fact of his never having been free from
+lawsuits in one quarrel or another, Guarini must have been one of these.
+But it is passing strange that the same man should have been the author of
+the "Pastor Fido."</p>
+
+<p>They pursued him to the end, these litigations; or he pursued them! And at
+last he died, not at Guarina, but at Venice, on the 7th of October, 1612,
+where, characteristically enough, he chanced to be on business connected
+with some lawsuit.</p>
+
+<p>And now a few words must be said about his great work, the "Pastor Fido."
+It is one of the strangest things in the range of literary history that
+such a man should have written such a poem. He was, one would have said,
+the last man in the world to produce such a work. The first ten years of
+his working life were spent in the labour of a pedagogue; the rest of it
+in the inexpressibly dry, frivolous, and ungenial routine of a small
+Italian court, or in wandering from one to the other of them in the vain
+and always disappointed search for such employment. We are told that he
+was a punctilious, stiff, unbending, angular man; upright and honourable,
+but unforgiving and wont to nurse his enmities. He was soured,
+disappointed, discontented with everybody and everything, involved in
+litigation first with his father, and then with his own children. And this
+was the man who wrote the "Pastor Fido," of all poems comparable to it in
+reputation the lightest, the airiest, and the most fantastic! The argument
+of it is as follows:</p>
+
+<p>The Arcadians, suffering in various ways from the anger of Diana, were at
+last informed by the oracle that the evils which afflicted them would
+cease when a youth and a maiden, both descended from the Immortals, as it
+should seem the <i>creme de la creme</i> of Arcadian society mostly was, should
+be joined together in faithful love. Thereupon<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span> Montano, a priest of the
+goddess who was descended from Hercules, arranged that his only son Silvio
+should be betrothed to Amaryllis, the only daughter of Tytirus, who was
+descended from Pan. The arrangement seemed all that could be desired, only
+that a difficulty arose from the fact that Silvio, whose sole passion was
+the chase, could not be brought to care the least in the world for
+Amaryllis. Meantime Mirtillo, the son, as was supposed, of the shepherd
+Carino, fell desperately in love with Amaryllis. She was equally attached
+to him, but dared not in the smallest degree confess her love, because the
+law of Arcadia would have punished with death her infidelity to her
+betrothed vows. A certain Corisca, however, who had conceived a violent
+but unrequited passion for Mirtillo, perceiving or guessing the love of
+Amaryllis for him, hating her accordingly, and hoping that, if she could
+be got out of the way, she might win Mirtillo's love, schemes by deceit
+and lies to induce Mirtillo and Amaryllis to enter together a cave, which
+they do in perfect innocence, and without any thought of harm. Then he
+contrives that they should be caught there, and denounced by a satyr; and
+Amaryllis is condemned to die. The law, however, permits that her life may
+be saved by any Arcadian who will voluntarily die in her stead; and this
+Mirtillo determines to do, although he believes that Amaryllis cares
+nothing for him, and also is led by the false Corisca to believe that she
+had gone into the cave for the purpose of meeting with another lover. The
+duty of sacrificing him devolves on Montano the priest; and he is about to
+carry out the law, when Carino, who has been seeking his reputed son
+Mirtillo, comes in, and while attempting to make out that he is a
+foreigner, and therefore not capable of satisfying the law by his death,
+brings unwittingly to light circumstances that prove that he is in truth a
+son of Montano, and therefore a descendant of the god Hercules. It thus
+appears that a marriage between Mirtillo and Amaryllis will exactly
+satisfy the conditions demanded by the oracle. There is an under-plot,
+which consists in providing a lover and a marriage for the woman-hater
+Silvio. He is loved in vain by the nymph Dorinda, whom he unintentionally
+wounds with an arrow while out hunting. The pity he feels for her wound
+softens his heart towards her, and all parties are made happy by this
+second marriage.</p>
+
+<p>Such is a skeleton of the story of the "Pastor Fido." It will be observed
+that there is more approach to a plot and to human interest than in any
+previous production of this kind, and some of the situations are well
+conceived for dramatic effect. And accordingly the success which it
+achieved was immediate and immense. Nor, much as the taste of the world
+has been changed since that day, has it ever lost its place in the
+estimation of cultivated Italians.</p>
+
+<p>It would be wholly uninteresting to attempt any account of the
+wide-spreading literary controversies to which the publication of the
+"Pastor Fido" gave rise. The author terms it a tragi-comedy; and this
+title was violently attacked. The poet himself, as may well be imagined
+from the idiosyncrasy of the man, was not slow to reply to his critics,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+and did so in two lengthy treatises entitled from the name of a
+contemporary celebrated actor, "Verato primo," and "Verato secondo," which
+are printed in the four-quarto-volume edition of his works, but which
+probably no mortal eye has read for the last two hundred years!</p>
+
+<p>The question of the rivalry between the "Aminta" of Tasso and the "Pastor
+Fido" has an element of greater interest in it. It is certain that the
+former preceded the latter, and doubtless suggested it. It seems probable
+that Ginguen&eacute; is right in his suggestion, that Guarini, fully conscious
+that no hope was open to him of rivalling his greater contemporary and
+townsman in epic poetry, strove to surpass him in pastoral. It must be
+admitted that he has at least equalled him. Yet, while it is impossible to
+deny that almost every page of the "Pastor Fido" indicates not so much
+plagiarism as an open and avowed purpose of doing the same thing better,
+if possible, than his rival has done it, the very diverse natural
+character of the two poets is also, at every page, curiously indicated.
+Specially the reader may be recommended to compare the passages in the two
+poems where Tasso under the name of Thyrsis, and Guarini under the name of
+Carino (Act 5, scene 1), represent the sufferings both underwent at the
+court of Alphonso II. The lines of Guarini are perhaps the most vigorous
+in their biting satire. But the gentler and nobler nature of Tasso is
+unmistakable.</p>
+
+<p>It is strange that the Italian critics, who are for the most part so
+lenient to the licentiousness of most of the authors of this period, blame
+Guarini for the too great warmth, amounting to indecency, of his poem. The
+writer of his life in the French "Biographie Universelle" refers to
+certain scenes as highly indecent. I can only say that, on examining the
+passages indicated carefully, I could find no indecency at all. It is
+probable that the writer referred to had never read the pages in question.
+But it is odd that those whose criticism he is no doubt reflecting should
+have said so. No doubt there are passages, not those mentioned by the
+writer in the "Biographie," but for instance the first scene of the second
+act, when a young man in a female disguise is one among a party of girls,
+who propose a prize for her who can give to one of them, the judge, the
+sweetest kiss, which prize he wins, which might be deemed somewhat on the
+sunny side of the hedge that divides the permissible from the
+unpermissible. But in comparison with others of that age Guarini is pure
+as snow.</p>
+
+<p>It has been said in speaking of the sad story of his daughter Anna, that
+she was accused of having given her husband cause for jealousy. It would
+seem very clear that there was no ground for any such accusation. But it
+was said that the misconduct on her part had been due to the corruption of
+her mind by the reading of her father's verses. The utter groundlessness
+of such an assertion might be shown in many ways. But the savage and
+malignant cruelty of it points with considerable evidence to the sources
+of the current talk about the courtier poet's licentiousness.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It is impossible to find room here for a detailed comparison between these
+two celebrated pastorals; and it is the less needed inasmuch as Ginguen&eacute;
+has done it very completely and at great length in the twenty-fifth
+chapter of the second part of his work.</p>
+
+<p>Guarini also produced a comedy, the "Idropica," which was acted with much
+success at the court of Mantua, and is printed among his works, as well as
+some prose pieces of small importance, the principal of which is "Il
+Secretario," a treatise on the duties of a secretary, not printed among
+his works, but of which an edition exists in pot quarto (186 pages)
+printed at Venice in 1594. Neither have his letters been printed among his
+works. They exist, printed without index or order of any kind, in a volume
+of the same size as the "Secretario," printed at Venice also in 1595, but
+by a different printer.</p>
+
+<p>The name, however, of Batista Guarini would have long since been
+forgotten, had he not written the "Pastor Fido."</p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+<span class="smcap">T. Adolphus Trollope</span>, in Belgravia.<br />
+</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> The now celebrated pass of the Ampezzo between Venice and
+Innspruck.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> This must probably be Hall on the Inn, a little below
+Innspruck. Certainly any boat which he got there for the descent of the
+river must have been a sufficiently miserable mode of travelling.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> Far, that is, from the bank of the river, where he left his
+boat at night.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> Lettere del Signor Cavaliere Battista Guarini, Nobile
+Ferrarese, di nuovo in questa seconda impressione di alcune altre
+accrescinte, e dall' Autore stesso corrette, di Agostino Michele raccolte,
+et al Sereniss. Signore il Duca d'Urbino dedicate. Con Privilegio. In
+Venetia, <span class="smcap">mdxcv</span>. Appresso Gio. Battista Ciotti Senese al segno della
+Minerva.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> I translate literally. Old-fashioned people will remember a
+somewhat similar use of the word "Flame" in English.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> I subjoin a literal prose translation in preference to
+borrowing a rhymed one from any of Tasso's translators. This fellow "flits
+and circles around more unstable than dry leaves in the wind. Without
+faith, without love, false are his pretended torments, and false the
+affection which prompts his sighs. A traitorous lover, he loves and
+despises almost at the same moment, and in triumph displays the spoils of
+women as impious trophies."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> "See how this fellow, who in vain aims at a lofty goal, by
+blaming others, and by lying accents, sharpens against himself his teeth,
+while without reason he is enraged with me.... Of two flames he boasts,
+and ties and breaks over and over again the same knot; and by these arts
+(who would believe it!) bends in his favour the Gods!" ...</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> It is odd that he should so write in a paper dated, as the
+present is, from Venice. I suppose the expression came from his feeling
+that he was addressing parsons at Ferrara.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> Seeing that, as has been said, his ancestors were of Verona,
+which belonged to Venice.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> Barotti gives it at length; but it is hardly worth while to
+occupy space by reproducing it here.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> "Guarini sitting here, sang, that which renders the seat the
+equal of a royal throne."</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> It is very doubtful and very difficult to determine at what
+period of his life the "Pastor Fido" was written. Ginguen&eacute; (Hist. Ital.
+Lit. Part II. ch. xxv.) has sufficiently shown that the statements of the
+Italian biographers on this point are inaccurate. Probably it was planned
+and, in part, written many years before it was finished. It was first
+printed in 1590.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="THE_VAQUERO60" id="THE_VAQUERO60"></a>THE VAQUERO.<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a></h2>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Oh, who is so free as a gallant <i>vaquero</i>?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With his beauty of bronze 'neath his shady <i>sombrero</i>:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">He smiles at his love, and he laughs at his fate,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For he knows he is lord of a noble estate:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The prairie's his own, and he mocks at the great.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">"Ho-ho! Hai! Ho-ho!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Head 'em off! Turn 'em back!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Keep 'em up to the track!<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Ho-hillo! Ho-hillo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Cric&mdash;crac!"<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Oh, Donna Luisa is proud as she's fair;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But she parted last night with a lock of her hair.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And under the stars she roams, seeking for rest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While she thinks of the stranger that came from the West;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And Juan bears something wrapped up in his breast&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">"Ho-ho! Hai! Ho-ho!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Head 'em off! Turn 'em back!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Keep 'em up to the track!<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Ho-hillo! Ho-hillo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Cric&mdash;crac!'"<br /></span>
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span></div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">His proudest possessions are prettily placed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His love at his heart, and his life at his waist.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And if in a quarrel he happen to fall,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Why, the prairie's his grave, and his <i>poncho's</i><a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> his pall,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And Donna Luisa&mdash;gets over it all!<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">"Ho-ho! Hai! Ho-ho!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Head 'em off! Turn 'em back!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Keep 'em up to the track!<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Ho-hillo! Ho-hillo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Cric&mdash;crac!"<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The Padr&egrave; may preach, and the Notary frown,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But the <i>poblanas</i><a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> smile as he rides through the town:<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the Padr&egrave;, he knows, likes a kiss on the sly,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And the Notary oft has a "drop in his eye,"<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But all that he does is to love and to die&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">"Ho-ho! Hai! Ho-ho!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Head 'em off! Turn 'em back!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Keep 'em up to the track!<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Ho-hillo! Ho-hillo!<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Cric&mdash;crac!"<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Frank Desprez</span>, <i>in Temple Bar</i>.</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> A California cattle-driver. Furnished with revolver, lasso,
+and long-lashed whip, these adventurous gentry conduct the half-wild
+cattle of the plains over miles of their surface; and, with their gay
+sashes, high boots, gilded and belled spurs, and dark, broad hats
+(<i>sombreros</i>), present a very picturesque appearance.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> Cloak.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> Peasant girls.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="TWO_MODERN_JAPANESE_STORIES" id="TWO_MODERN_JAPANESE_STORIES"></a>TWO MODERN JAPANESE STORIES.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The two stories which follow were circulated in the city of Yedo some
+years back, and show that the better educated classes of Japanese are
+keenly alive to the absurdity of the figure cut by their countrymen when
+they attempt to jump over five hundred years in five hundred days.</p>
+
+
+<h3>I. A REGULAR MESS.</h3>
+
+<p>Some six years back lived in the beautiful village of Minoge an old lady
+who kept the big tea-house of the place known as the "White Pine." Minoge
+is situated at the base of the holy mountain Oyama, and during the months
+of August and September trade in Minoge was always brisk, on account of
+the influx of pilgrims from all parts of Japan, who came hither to perform
+the holy duty of ascending the mountain, and of paying their devoirs at
+the shrine of the Thunder-God, previous to making the grand pilgrimage of
+Fuji-Yama.</p>
+
+<p>The old lady was well off, and her inn bore an unblemished reputation for
+possessing the prettiest serving-girls, the gayest guest-chambers, and the
+primest stewed eels&mdash;the dish <i>par excellence</i> of Japanese <i>gourmets</i>&mdash;of
+any hostelry in the country side. One of her daughters was married in
+Yedo, and a son was studying in one of the European colleges of that city;
+still she was as completely rustic and unacquainted with the march of
+affairs outside as if she had never heard of Yedo, much less of
+foreigners. At that time it was a very rare thing indeed for a foreigner
+to be seen in Minoge, and the stray artists and explorers who had wandered
+there were regarded much in the same way as would have been so many white
+elephants.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It caused, therefore, no little excitement in the village when, one fine
+autumn evening, the rumour came along that a foreigner was making his way
+towards the "White Pine." Every one tried to get a glimpse of him. The
+chubby-cheeked boys and girls at the school threw down their books and
+pens, and crowded to the door and windows; the bath-house was soon empty
+of its patrons and patronesses, who, red as lobsters with boiling water,
+with dishevelled locks and garments hastily bound round them, formed line
+outside; the very Yakunin, or mayor, sentenced a prisoner he was judging
+straight off, without bothering himself to inquire into evidence, so as
+not to be balked of the sight, and every wine and barber's shop sent forth
+its quota of starers into the little street.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the foreigner was leisurely striding along. He was taller by far
+than the tallest man in Minoge, his hair was fair, and even his bronzed
+face and hands were fair compared to those of the natives. On the back of
+his head was a felt wide-awake, he wore a blue jacket and blue half
+trousers (Anglic&egrave;, knickerbockers), thick hose, and big boots. In his
+mouth was a pipe&mdash;being much shorter than Japanese smoking tubes&mdash;in his
+hand a stick, and on his back a satchel.</p>
+
+<p>As he passed, one or two urchins, bolder than the rest, shouted out,
+"Tojin baka" ("Foreign beast") and instantly fled indoors, or behind their
+mothers' skirts; but the majority of the villagers simply stared, with an
+occasional interjection expressive of wonder at his height, fair hair, and
+costume.</p>
+
+<p>At the door of the "White Pine" he halted, unstrapped his bundle, took off
+his boots, and in very fair Japanese requested to be shown his room. The
+old lady, after a full ten minutes' posturing, complimenting, bowing, and
+scraping, ushered him into her best guest-chamber. "For," said she, "being
+a foreigner, he must be rich, and wouldn't like ordinary pilgrim
+accommodation." And she drew to the sliding screens, and went off to
+superintend his repast. Although nothing but the foreigner's boots were to
+be seen outside, a gaping crowd had collected, striving to peer through
+the cracks in the doors, and regarding the boots as if they were infernal
+machines. One, more enterprising than the rest, took a boot up, passed it
+to his neighbour, and in a short time it had circulated from hand to hand
+throughout the population of Minoge, and was even felt and pinched by the
+mayor himself, who replaced it with the reverence due to some religious
+emblem or relic.</p>
+
+<p>Then the hostess served up her banquet&mdash;seaweed, sweets, raw "tighe"&mdash;the
+salmon of Japan&mdash;in slices, garnished with turnips and horse-radish, egg
+soup with pork lumps floating in it, chicken delicately broiled, together
+with a steaming bottle of her choicest "San Toku Shiu," or wine of the
+Three Virtues (which keeps out the cold, appeases hunger, and induces
+sleep).</p>
+
+<p>The foreigner made an excellent meal, eked out by his own white bread, and
+wine from a flask of pure silver, then, lighting his pipe, reclined at
+full length on the mats, talking to the old lady<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span> and her three damsels, O
+Hana, O Kiku, and O Riu (Miss Flower, Miss Chrysanthemum, and Miss
+Dragon). He was walking about the country simply for pleasure, he
+said&mdash;which astonished the women greatly&mdash;he had been away from Yokohama
+three weeks, and was now on his road to the big mountain. The party were
+soon screaming with laughter at his quaint remarks and at his occasional
+colloquial slips, and in a short time all were such good friends that the
+old lady begged him to display the contents of his satchel. "Certainly,"
+said the stranger, pulling it towards him and opening it. A dirty flannel
+shirt or two didn't produce much impression&mdash;perhaps wares of a similar
+nature had been imported before into Minoge&mdash;nor did a hair-brush,
+tooth-brush, and comb; but when he pulled out a pistol, which was
+warranted to go off six times in as many seconds, and proceeded to
+exemplify the same in the air, popular excitement began to assert itself
+in a series of "naruhodo's" ("really!"). Then he pulled out a portable
+kerosine lamp&mdash;(kerosine lamps are now as common in Japan as shrines by
+the road-side)&mdash;and the light it made, throwing entirely into the shade
+the native "andon," or oil wick, burning close by, raised the enthusiasm
+still higher. Lastly he showed a small box of medicines, "certain cures,"
+said he, "for every disease known amongst the sons of men."</p>
+
+<p>The old lady and the maids were enchanted, and matters ended, after much
+haggling and disputation, in the foreigner allowing them to keep the three
+articles for the very reasonable sum of fifty dollars&mdash;about fifteen
+pounds sterling&mdash;which was handed over to the foreigner, who called for
+his bedding and went fast asleep.</p>
+
+<p>The first thing for the old lady to do the next day was to present herself
+and maids in full holiday costume with their recent purchases at the house
+of the mayor. The great man received them and their goods with the dignity
+befitting his rank, and promised that a public trial should be made of the
+pistol, lamp, and medicines, at an early date, in order to determine
+whether they were worthy to be adopted as institutions in the village.</p>
+
+<p>Accordingly, by proclamation, at a fixed date and hour, all Minoge
+assembled in the open space facing the mayor's house, and the articles
+were brought forth. The pistol was first taken and loaded, as directed by
+the foreigner, by the boldest and strongest man in the village. The first
+shot was fired&mdash;it wounded a pack-horse, standing some twenty yards away,
+in the leg; he took fright and bolted with a heavy load of wine tubs down
+the street into the fields: the second shot went through a temple roof
+opposite, and shattered the head of the deity in the shrine: the third
+shot perforated the bamboo hat of a pilgrim; and it was decided not to
+test the remaining three barrels.</p>
+
+<p>Then the lamp was brought forth: the wick was turned up full, and the
+village strong man applied a light. The blaze of light was glorious, and
+drew forth the acclamations of the crowd; but the wick had been turned up
+too high, the glass burst with a tremendous report, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span> strong man
+dropped the lamp, the oil ignited, ran about and set fire to the matting.
+In ten minutes, however, the local fire brigade got the flames under, and
+the experiments proceeded.</p>
+
+<p>The medicine packets were brought forth. The first was a grey powder. A
+man who had been lame from youth upwards was made to limp out. The powder
+mixed with water, according to directions, was given him. He hobbled away
+in frightful convulsions, and nearly injured his whole limb in so doing.</p>
+
+<p>The second packet was then unsealed&mdash;it contained pills. A blind man was
+called out&mdash;six pills were rammed down his throat, and he was left
+wallowing in a ditch. The third packet, a small book containing sticking
+plaster, was then introduced. A burly peasant, victim to fearful
+toothache, was made to stand forth. The interior of his mouth was lined
+with the plaster, and when he attempted in his disgust to pull it off,
+away came his skin also.</p>
+
+<p>The medicines were condemned <i>nem. con.</i></p>
+
+<p>The foreigner returned, asked how matters had gone, and was told in polite
+but firm terms that his machines were not suited to the people of Minoge.
+Whereupon he returned the fifty dollars to the old lady of the "White
+Pine," and went away laughing. Minoge subsided into its ordinary every-day
+groove of life, and it was not till some years after that the inhabitants
+became better used to pistols, lamps, and European medicines.</p>
+
+
+<h3>II. PADDLING HIS OWN CANOE.</h3>
+
+<p>Takezawa was the head of a large silk and rice house in Yedo. His father
+had been head, his grandfather had been head, his great-grandfather had
+been head: in fact, the date when the first of the name affixed his seal
+to the documents of the house was lost in the mists of antiquity. So, when
+foreigners were first allowed a foot-hold on the sacred soil of Japan,
+none were so jealous of their advance, none so ardent in their wishes to
+see the white barbarians ousted, as the members of the firm of Takezawa
+and Co.</p>
+
+<p>But times changed. Up to the last, Takezawa held out against the
+introduction of foreign innovations in the mode and manner of conducting
+the affairs of the firm; other houses might employ foreign steamboat
+companies as carriers for their produce from port to port, might import
+foreign goods, and even go so far as to allow the better paid of their
+clerks to dress themselves as they liked in foreign costume; but Takezawa
+and Co. were patriotic Japanese merchants, and resolved to run on in the
+old groove of their ancestors.</p>
+
+<p>But times still changed, and the great house, running on in its solid
+old-fashioned manner, found itself left in the lurch by younger and more
+enterprising firms. This would never do. So Takezawa consulted with his
+partners, patrons, clients, and friends, and after much worthy discussion,
+and much vehement opposition on the part of the old man, it was resolved
+to keep pace with the times, as much as possible, without absolutely
+overturning the old status of the house.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Well, Takezawa and Co. had still a very fair share of the export rice and
+silk business; but their slow, heavy-sterned junks were no match for the
+swift, foreign-built steamers employed by other firms; so, with a
+tremendous wince, and not without a side thought at "Hara Kiri"&mdash;(the
+"Happy Despatch")&mdash;Takezawa consented to the sale of all his junks, and
+the purchase with the proceeds of a big foreign steamer.</p>
+
+<p>The steamer was bought&mdash;a fine three-masted, double-funnelled boat,
+complete with every appliance, newly engined, and manned by European
+officers and leading seamen. From the dock at Yokoska, where she was
+lying, a preliminary trip was made; and so smoothly did everything work,
+and so easily did everything seem to act, under the guidance of the
+Europeans, that Takezawa considered his own mariners perfectly competent
+to handle the vessel after an hour's experience on board. So the Europeans
+were discharged with six months' salaries&mdash;about six times as much as they
+would have received at home&mdash;and Takezawa fixed a day when the ship should
+be rechristened, and should make her trial trip under Japanese management.</p>
+
+<p>It was a beautiful day in autumn&mdash;the most glorious period of the year in
+Japan&mdash;when Takezawa and a distinguished company assembled on board the
+steamer, to give her a new name, and to send her forth finally as a
+Japanese steamer. The ship looked brave enough as she lay in the
+dock&mdash;ports newly painted, brass-work shining, yards squared, and half
+buried in bunting. At the mizen floated the empire flag of Japan&mdash;a red
+sun on a white ground&mdash;and as Takezawa gazed fore and aft, and his eyes
+rested on brightness, cleanliness, and order everywhere, he wondered to
+himself how he could have been such a fool as to stand out so long against
+the possession of such a treasure, merely on the grounds of its not being
+Japanese. A fair daughter of one of his partners dashed a cup of "sake"
+against the bows of the vessel, and the newly named "Lightning Bird"
+dashed forward into the ocean. Her head was made straight for Yokohama
+(Takezawa had seen the Englishmen at the wheel manipulate her in that
+course on her trial trip, so he knew she couldn't go wrong). And straight
+she went. Every one was delighted; sweetmeats and wine were served round,
+whilst on the quarterdeck a troupe of the best "Geyshas" or singing-girls
+in Yedo mingled their shrill voices and their guitar notes with the sound
+of the fresh morning breeze through the rigging.</p>
+
+<p>The engines worked magnificently: coals were poured into the furnaces by
+the hundredweight, so as to keep a good uniform thick cloud of smoke
+coming from the funnels&mdash;if the smoke lacked intensity for a minute,
+Takezawa, fearful that something was wrong, bellowed forth orders for more
+coal to be heaped on, so that in a quarter of an hour's time the
+"Lightning Bird" consumed as much fuel as would have served a P. and O.
+steamer for half a day. On she went, everybody pleased and smiling,
+everything taut and satisfactory. Straight ahead was Treaty Point&mdash;a bold
+bluff running out into the sea. The "Lightning Bird" was bound for
+Yokohama&mdash;Yokohama lies well behind<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span> Treaty Point&mdash;but at the pace she was
+going it was very apparent that, unless a sudden and rapid turn to
+starboard was made, she would run, not into Yokohama, but into Treaty
+Point.</p>
+
+<p>The singing and feasting proceeded merrily on deck, but Takezawa was
+uneasy and undecided on the bridge. The helm was put hard a-port, the
+brave vessel obeyed, and leapt on straight for the line of rocks at the
+foot of the Point, over which the waves were breaking in cascades of foam.
+But the gods would not see a vessel, making her first run under Japanese
+auspices, maltreated and destroyed by simple waves and rocks; so, just in
+time to save an ignominious run aground, the helm was put hard over, fresh
+fuel was piled on to the furnaces, and by barely half a ship's length the
+"Lightning Bird" shaved the Point, and stood in straight for Yokohama bay.</p>
+
+<p>Takezawa breathed freely for the moment; but, as he saw ahead the crowd of
+European ships and native junks through which he would have to thread his
+way, he would have given a very large sum to have had a couple of
+Europeans at the wheel in the place of his own half-witted, scared
+mariners.</p>
+
+<p>However, there was no help for it; the ship sped on, and the guests on
+board, many of whom were thorough rustics, were in raptures at the distant
+views of the white houses on the Yokohama Bund, at the big steamers and
+the graceful sailing vessels on all sides. To avoid the chance of a
+collision, Takezawa managed to keep his steamer well outside; they nearly
+ran down a fishing junk or two, and all but sunk the lightship; still,
+they had not as yet come to absolute grief. Round they went for a long
+half-hour; many of the guests were suffering from sickness, and Takezawa
+thought that he might bring the trip to an end. So he bellowed forth
+orders to stop the engines, and anchor. The anchor was promptly let go,
+but stopping the engines was another matter, for nobody on board knew how
+to do so&mdash;there was nothing to be done but to allow the vessel to pursue a
+circular course until steam was exhausted; and she could go no farther. It
+was idle to explain to the distinguished company that this was the course
+invariably adopted by Europeans, for under their noses was the graceful P.
+and O. steamer, a moment since ploughing along at full steam, now riding
+at anchor by her buoy. So round and round went the "Lightning Bird," to
+the amazement of the crews of the ships in harbour and of a large crowd
+gathered on the "Bund;" the brave company on board were now assured that
+the judgment of the gods was overtaking them for having ventured to sea in
+a foreign vessel, and poor Takezawa was half resolved to despatch himself,
+and wholly resolved never to make such an experiment as this again. He
+cursed the day when he was finally led to forsake the groove so honourably
+and profitably grubbed along by his fathers, and strode with hasty steps
+up and down the bridge, refusing to be comforted, and terrifying out of
+their few remaining wits the two poor fellows at the wheel. After a few
+circles, an English man-of-war sent a steam launch<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span> after the "Lightning
+Bird," and to the intense disgust of the great Japanese people on board,
+who preferred to see eccentricity on the part of their countrymen, to
+interference by foreigners, but to the great delight of the women and
+rustics, who began to be rather tired of the fun, the engines were
+stopped. Takezawa did not hear the last of this for a long, long time;
+caricatures and verses were constantly being circulated bearing upon the
+fiasco, although it would have been as much as any man's life was worth to
+have taunted him openly with it. But it was a salutary lesson; and
+although he still kept the "Lightning Bird," he engaged Europeans to man
+her, until his men proved themselves adepts, and she afterwards became one
+of the smartest and fastest craft on the coast.&mdash;<i>Belgravia.</i></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="SUPPOSED_CHANGES_IN_THE_MOON" id="SUPPOSED_CHANGES_IN_THE_MOON"></a>SUPPOSED CHANGES IN THE MOON.</h2>
+
+
+<p>In this Magazine for August last I considered the moon's multitudinous
+small craters with special reference to the theory that some among those
+small craters may have been produced by the downfall of aerolithic or
+meteoric masses upon the moon's once plastic surface. Whether it be
+considered probable that this is really the case or not with regard to
+actually existent lunar craters, it cannot be doubted that during one
+period of the moon's history, a period probably lasting many millions of
+years, many crater-shaped depressions must have been produced in this way.
+As I showed in that essay, it is absolutely certain that thousands of
+meteoric masses, large enough to form visible depressions where they fell,
+must have fallen during the moon's plastic era. It is certain also that
+that era must have been very long-lasting. Nevertheless, it remains
+possible (many will consider it extremely probable, if not absolutely
+certain) that during sequent periods all such traces were removed. There
+is certainly nothing in the aspect of the present lunar craters, even the
+smallest and most numerous, to preclude the possibility that they, like
+the larger ones, were the results of purely volcanic action; and to many
+minds it seems preferable to adopt one general theory respecting all such
+objects as may be classed in a regular series, than to consider that some
+members of the series are to be explained in one way and others in a
+different way. We can form a series extending without break or
+interruption from the largest lunar craters, more than a hundred miles in
+diameter, to the smallest visible craters, less than a quarter of a mile
+across, or even to far smaller craters, if increase of telescopic power
+should reveal such. And therefore many object to adopt any theory in
+explanation of the smaller craters (or some of them) which could
+manifestly not be extended to the largest. Albeit we must remember that
+certainly if any small craters had been formed during the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span> plastic era by
+meteoric downfall, and had remained unchanged after the moon solidified,
+it would now be quite impossible to distinguish these from craters formed
+in the ordinary manner.</p>
+
+<p>While we thus recognise the possibility, at any rate, that multitudes of
+small lunar craters, say from a quarter of a mile to two miles in
+diameter, may have been formed by falling meteoric masses hundreds of
+millions of years ago, and may have remained unchanged even until now, we
+perceive that on the moon later processes must have formed many small
+craters, precisely as such small craters have been formed on our own
+earth. I consider, at the close of the essay above mentioned, the two
+stages of the moon's development which must have followed the period
+during which her surface was wholly or in great part plastic. First, there
+was the stage during which the crust contracted more rapidly than the
+nucleus, and was rent from time to time as though the nucleus were
+expanding within it. Secondly, there came the era when the nucleus, having
+retained a greater share of heat, began to cool, and therefore to contract
+more quickly than the crust, so that the crust became wrinkled or
+corrugated, as it followed up (so to speak) the retreating nucleus.</p>
+
+<p>It would be in the later part of this second great era that the moon (if
+ever) would have resembled the earth. The forms of volcanic activity still
+existing on the earth seem most probably referable to the gradual
+contraction of the nucleus, and the steady resulting contraction of the
+rocky crust. As Mallet and Dana have shown, the heat resulting from the
+contraction, or in reality from the slow downfall of the crust, is amply
+sufficient to account for the whole observed volcanian energy of the
+earth. It has indeed been objected, that if this theory (which is
+considered more fully in my "Pleasant Ways in Science") were correct, we
+ought to find volcanoes occurring indifferently, or at any rate volcanic
+phenomena of various kinds so occurring, in all parts of the earth's
+surface, and not prevalent in special regions and scarcely ever noticed
+elsewhere. But this objection is based on erroneous ideas as to the length
+of time necessary for the development of subterranean changes, and also as
+to the extent of regions which at present find in certain volcanic craters
+a sufficient outlet for their subterranean fires. It is natural that, if a
+region of wide extent has at any time been relieved at some point, that
+spot should long afterwards remain as an outlet, a sort of safety-valve,
+which, by yielding somewhat more quickly than any neighbouring part of the
+crust, would save the whole region from destructive earthquakes; and
+though in the course of time a crater which had acted such a part would
+cease to do so, yet the period required for such a change would be very
+long indeed compared with those periods by which men ordinarily measure
+time. Moreover, it by no means follows that every part of the earth's
+crust would even require an outlet for heat developed beneath it. Over
+wide tracts of the earth's surface the rate of contraction may be such, or
+may be so related to the thickness of the crust, that the heat developed
+can find ready escape by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span> conduction to the surface, and by radiation
+thence into space. Nay, from the part which water is known to play in
+producing volcanic phenomena, it may well be that in every region where
+water does not find its way in large quantities to the parts in which the
+subterranean heat is great, no volcanic action results. Mallet, following
+other experienced vulcanologists, lays down the law, "Without water there
+can be no volcano;" so that the neighbourhood of large oceans, as well as
+special conditions of the crust, must be regarded as probably essential to
+the existence of such outlets as Vesuvius, Etna, Hecla, and the rest.</p>
+
+<p>So much premised, let us enquire whether it is antecedently likely that in
+the moon volcanic action may still be in progress, and afterwards consider
+the recent announcement of a lunar disturbance, which, if really volcanic,
+certainly indicates volcanic action far more intense than any which is at
+present taking place in our own earth. I have already, I may remark,
+considered the evidence respecting this new lunar crater which some
+suppose to have been formed during the last two years. But I am not here
+going over the same ground as in my former paper ("Contemporary Review"
+for August, 1878). Moreover, since that paper was written, new evidence
+has been obtained, and I am now able to speak with considerable confidence
+about points which were in some degree doubtful three months ago.</p>
+
+<p>Let us consider, in the first place, what is the moon's probable age, not
+in years, but in development. Here we have only probable evidence to guide
+us, evidence chiefly derived from the analogy of our own earth. At least,
+we have only such evidence when we are enquiring into the moon's age as a
+preliminary to the consideration of her actual aspect and its meaning. No
+doubt many features revealed by telescopic scrutiny are full of
+significance in this respect. No one who has ever looked at the moon,
+indeed, with a telescope of great power has failed to be struck by the
+appearance of deadness which her surface presents, or to be impressed (at
+a first view, in any case), with the idea that he is looking at a world
+whose period of life must be set in a very remote antiquity. But we must
+not take such considerations into account in discussing the <i>a priori</i>
+probabilities that the moon is a very aged world. Thus we have only
+evidence from analogy to guide us in this part of our enquiry. I note the
+point at starting, because the indicative mood is so much more convenient
+than the conditional, that I may frequently in this part of my enquiry use
+the former where the actual nature of the evidence would only justify the
+latter. Let it be understood that the force of the reasoning here depends
+entirely on the weight we are disposed to allow to arguments from analogy.</p>
+
+<p>Assuming the planets and satellites of the solar system to be formed in
+some such manner as Laplace suggested in his "Nebular Hypothesis," the
+moon, as an orb travelling round the earth, must be regarded as very much
+older than she is, even in years. Even if we accept the theory of
+accretion which has been recently suggested as better according with known
+facts, it would still follow that probably the moon had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span> existence, as a
+globe of matter nearly of her present size, long before the earth had
+gathered in the major portion of her substance. Necessarily, therefore, if
+we assume as far more probable than either theory that the earth and moon
+attained their present condition by combined processes of condensation and
+accretion, we should infer that the moon is far the older of the two
+bodies in years.</p>
+
+<p>But if we even suppose that the earth and moon began their career as
+companion planets at about the same epoch, we should still have reason to
+believe that these planets, equal though they were in age so far as mere
+years are concerned, must be very unequally advanced so far as development
+is concerned, and must therefore in that respect be of very unequal age.</p>
+
+<p>It was, I believe, Sir Isaac Newton who first called attention to the
+circumstance that the larger a planet is, the longer will be the various
+stages of its existence. He used the same reasoning which was afterwards
+urged by Buffon, and suggested an experiment which Buffon was the first to
+carry out. If two globes of iron, of unequal size, be heated to the same
+degree, and then left to cool side by side, it will be found that the
+larger glows with a ruddy light after the smaller has become quite dark,
+and that the larger remains intensely hot long after the smaller has
+become cool enough to be handled. The reason of the difference is very
+readily recognised. Indeed, Newton perceived that there would be such a
+difference before the matter had been experimentally tested. The quantity
+of heat in the unequal globes is proportional to the volume, the substance
+of each being the same. The heat is emitted from the surface, and at a
+rate depending on the extent of surface. But the volume of the larger
+exceeds that of the smaller in greater degree than the surface of the
+larger exceeds the surface of the other. Suppose, for instance, the larger
+has a diameter twice as great as that of the smaller, its surface is four
+times as great as that of the smaller, its volume eight times as great.
+Having, then, eight times as much heat as the smaller at the beginning,
+and parting with that heat only four times as fast as the smaller, the
+supply necessarily lasts twice as long; or, more exactly, each stage in
+the cooling of the larger lasts twice as long as the corresponding stage
+in the cooling of the smaller. We see that the duration of the heat is
+greater for the larger in the same degree that the diameter is greater.
+And we should have obtained the same result whatever diameters we had
+considered. Suppose, for instance, we heat two globes of iron, one an inch
+in diameter, the other seven inches, to a white heat. The surface of the
+larger is forty-nine times that of the smaller, and thus it gives out at
+the beginning, and at each corresponding stage of cooling, forty-nine
+times as much heat as the smaller. But it possesses at the beginning three
+hundred and forty-three (seven times seven times seven) times as much
+heat. Consequently, the supply will last seven times as long, precisely as
+a stock of three hundred and forty-three thousand pounds, expended
+forty-nine times as fast as a stock of one thousand pounds only, would
+last seven<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span> times as long. In every case we find that the duration of the
+heat-emission for globes of the same material equally heated at the outset
+is proportional to their diameters.</p>
+
+<p>Now, before applying this result to the case of the moon, we must take
+into account two considerations:&mdash;First, the probability that when the
+moon was formed she was not nearly so hot as the earth when it first took
+planetary shape; and secondly, the different densities of the earth and
+moon.</p>
+
+<p>The original heat of every member of the solar system, including the sun,
+depended on the gravitating energy of its own mass. The greater that
+energy, the greater the heat generated either by the process of steady
+contraction imagined in Laplace's theory, or by the process of meteoric
+indraught imagined in the aggregation theory. To show how very different
+are the heat-generating powers of two very unequal masses, consider what
+would happen if the earth drew down to its own surface a meteoric mass
+which had approached the earth under her own attraction only. (The case is
+of course purely imaginary, because no meteor can approach the earth which
+has not been subjected to the far greater attractive energy of the sun,
+and does not possess a velocity far greater than any which the earth
+herself could impart). In this case such a mass would strike the earth
+with a velocity of about seven miles per second, and the heat generated
+would be that due to this velocity only. Now, when a meteor strikes the
+sun full tilt after a journey from the star depths under his attraction,
+it reaches his surface with a velocity of nearly three hundred and sixty
+miles per second. The heat generated is nearly fifty times greater than in
+the imagined case of the earth. The moon being very much less than the
+earth, the velocity she can impart to meteoric bodies is still less. It
+amounts, in fact, to only about a mile per second. The condensing energy
+of the moon in her vaporous era was in like manner far less than that of
+the earth, and consequently far less heat was then generated. Thus,
+although we might well believe on <i>a priori</i> grounds, even if not assured
+by actual study of the lunar features, that the moon when first formed as
+a planet had a surface far hotter than molten iron, we must yet believe
+that, when first formed, the moon had a temperature very much below that
+of our earth at the corresponding stage of her existence.</p>
+
+<p>On this account, then, we must consider that the moon started in planetary
+existence in a condition as to heat which our earth did not attain till
+many millions, probably hundreds of millions of years after the epoch of
+her first formation as a planet.</p>
+
+<p>As regards the moon's substance, we have no means of forming a
+satisfactory opinion. But we shall be safe in regarding quantity of matter
+in the moon as a safer basis of calculation than volume, in comparing the
+duration of her various stages of development with those of our own earth.
+When, in the August number of this Magazine, I adopted a relation derived
+from the latter and less correct method, it was because the more correct
+method gave the result most favourable to the argument<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span> I was then
+considering. The same is indeed the case now. Yet it will be better to
+adopt the more exact method, because the consideration relates no longer
+to a mere side issue, but belongs to the very essence of my reasoning.</p>
+
+<p>The moon has a mass equal to about one eighty-first part of the earth's.
+Her diameter being less than the earth's, about as two to seven, the
+duration of each stage of her cooling would be in this degree less than
+the corresponding duration for the earth, if her density were the same as
+the earth's, in which case her mass would be only one forty-ninth part of
+the earth's. But her mass being so much less, we must assume that her
+amount of heat at any given stage of cooling was less in similar degree
+than it would have been had her density been the same as the earth's. We
+may, in fact, assume that the moon's total supply of heat would be only
+one eighty-first of the earth's if the two bodies were at the same
+temperature throughout.<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> But the surface of the moon is between
+one-thirteenth and one-fourteenth of the earth's. Since, then, the earth
+at any given stage of cooling parted with her heat between thirteen and
+fourteen times as fast as the moon, but had about eighty-one times as much
+heat to part with (for that stage), it follows that she would take about
+six times as long (six times thirteen and a-half is equal to eighty-one)
+to cool through that particular stage as the moon would.</p>
+
+<p>If we take this relation as the basis of our estimate of the moon's age,
+we shall find that, even if the moon's existence as a planet began
+simultaneously with the earth's instead of many millions of years earlier,
+even if the moon was then as hot as the earth instead of being so much
+cooler that many millions of years would be required for the earth to cool
+to the same temperature&mdash;making, I say, these assumptions, which probably
+correspond to the omission of hundreds of millions of years in our
+estimate of the moon's age, we shall still find the moon to be hundreds of
+millions of years older than the earth.</p>
+
+<p>Nay, we may even take a position still less favourable to my argument. Let
+us overlook the long ages during which the two orbs were in the vaporous
+state, and suppose the earth and moon to be simultaneously in that stage
+of planetary existence when the surface has a temperature of two thousand
+degrees Centigrade.</p>
+
+<p>From Bischoff's experiments on the cooling of rocks, it appears to follow
+that some three hundred and twenty millions of years must have elapsed
+between the time when the earth's surface was at this temperature and the
+time when the surface temperature was reduced to two hundred degrees
+Centigrade, or one hundred and eighty<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span> degrees Fahrenheit above the
+boiling point. The earth was for that enormous period a mass (in the main)
+of molten rock. In the moon's case this period lasted only one-sixth of
+three hundred and twenty million years, or about fifty-three million
+years, leaving two hundred and sixty-seven million years' interval between
+the time when the moon's surface had cooled down to two hundred degrees
+Centigrade and the later epoch when the earth's surface had attained that
+temperature.</p>
+
+<p>I would not, however, insist on these numerical details. It has always
+seemed to me unsafe to base calculations respecting suns and planets on
+experiments conducted in the laboratory. The circumstances under which the
+heavenly bodies exist, regarding these bodies as wholes, are utterly
+unlike any which can be produced in the laboratory, no matter on what
+scale the experimenter may carry on his researches. I have often been
+amused to see even mathematicians of repute employing a formula based on
+terrestrial experiments, physical, optical, and otherwise, as though the
+formula were an eternal omnipresent reality, without noting that, if
+similarly applied to obtain other determinations, the most stupendously
+absurd results would be deduced. It is as though, having found that a
+child grows three inches in the fifth year of his age, one should infer
+not only that that person but every other person in every age and in every
+planet, nay, in the whole universe, would be thirty inches taller at the
+age of fifteen than at the age of five, without noticing that the same
+method of computation would show everyone to be more than fifteen feet
+taller at the age of sixty-five. It may well be that, instead of three
+hundred and twenty millions of years, the era considered by Bischoff
+lasted less than a hundred millions of years. Or quite as probably it may
+have lasted five or six hundred millions of years. And again, instead of
+the corresponding era of the moon's past history having lasted one sixth
+of the time required to produce the same change in the earth's condition,
+it may have lasted a quarter, or a third, or even half that time, though
+quite as probably it may have lasted much less than a sixth. But in any
+case we cannot reasonably doubt that the moon reached the stage of cooling
+through which the earth is now passing many millions of years ago. We
+shall not probably err very greatly in taking the interval as at least two
+hundred millions of years.</p>
+
+<p>But I could point out that in reality it is a matter of small importance,
+so far as my present argument is concerned, whether we adopt Bischoff's
+period or a period differing greatly from it. For if instead of about
+three hundred millions the earth required only thirty millions of years to
+cool from a surface temperature of two thousand degrees Centigrade to a
+temperature of two hundred degrees, we must assume that the rate of
+cooling is ten times greater than Bischoff supposed. And we must of course
+extend the same assumption to the moon. Now, since the sole question
+before us is to what degree the moon has cooled, it matters nothing
+whether we suppose the moon has been cooling very slowly during many
+millions of years since she was in the same condition as the earth at
+present, or that the moon has been cooling ten times<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span> as quickly during a
+tenth part of the time, or a hundred times as quickly during one-hundredth
+part of the time.</p>
+
+<p>We may, therefore, continue to use the numbers resulting from Bischoff's
+calculation, even though we admit the probability that they differ widely
+from the true values of the periods we are considering.</p>
+
+<p>Setting the moon, then, as about two hundred and fifty millions of years
+in advance of the earth in development, even when we overlook all the eras
+preceding that considered by Bischoff, and the entire sequent interval
+(which must be long, for the earth has no longer a surface one hundred
+degrees Centigrade hotter than boiling water), let us consider what is
+suggested by this enormous time-difference.</p>
+
+<p>In the first place, it corresponds to a much greater interval in our
+earth's history. During the two hundred and fifty millions of years the
+moon has been cooling at her rate, not at the earth's. According to the
+conclusion we deduced from the moon's relative mass and surface, she has
+aged as much during those two hundred and fifty million years as the earth
+will during the next fifteen hundred million years.</p>
+
+<p>Now, however slowly we suppose the earth's crust to be changing, it must
+be admitted that in the course of the next fifteen hundred millions of
+years the earth will have parted with far the greater part, if not with
+the whole, of that inherent heat on which the present movements of her
+surface depend. We know that these movements at once depend upon and
+indicate processes of contraction. We know that such processes cannot
+continue at their present rate for many millions of years. If we assume
+that the rate of contraction will steadily diminish&mdash;which is equivalent,
+be it noticed, to the assumption that the earth's vulcanian or
+subterranean energies will be diminished&mdash;the duration of the process will
+be greater. But even on such an assumption, controlled by consideration of
+the evidence we have respecting the rate at which terrestrial contraction
+is diminishing, it is certain that long before a period of fifteen hundred
+millions of years has elapsed, the process of contraction will to all
+intents and purposes be completed.</p>
+
+<p>We must assume, then, as altogether the most probable view, that the moon
+has reached this stage of planetary decrepitude, even if she has not
+become an absolutely dead world. We can hardly reject the reasoning which
+would show that the moon is far older than has been assumed when long
+stages of her history and our earth's have been neglected. Still less
+reasonable would it be to reject the conclusion that at the very least she
+has reached the hoar antiquity thus inferred. Assuming her to be no older,
+we yet cannot escape the conviction that her state is that of utter
+decrepitude. To suppose that volcanic action can now be in progress on the
+moon, even to as great a degree as on the earth, would be to assume that
+measurable sources of energy can produce practically immeasurable results.
+But no volcanic changes now in process on the earth could possibly be
+discernible at the moon's distance. How utterly unlikely does it seem,
+then, that any volcanic changes can be now taking place on the moon which
+could be recognized<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span> from the earth! It seems safe to assume that no
+volcanic changes at all can be in progress; but most certainly the
+evidence which should convince us that volcanic changes of so tremendous a
+character are in progress that at a distance of two hundred and sixty
+thousand miles terrestrial telescopists can discern them, must be of the
+strongest and most satisfactory character.</p>
+
+<p>Evidence of change may indeed be discovered which can be otherwise
+explained. The moon is exposed to the action of heat other than that which
+pervaded her own frame at the time of her first formation. The sun's heat
+is poured upon the moon during the long lunar day of more than a
+fortnight, while during the long lunar night a cold prevails which must
+far exceed that of our bitterest arctic winters. We know from the
+heat-measurements made by the present Lord Rosse, that any part of the
+moon's surface at lunar mid-day is fully five hundred degrees Fahrenheit
+hotter than the same part two weeks later at lunar midnight. The alternate
+expansions and contractions resulting from these changes of temperature
+cannot but produce changes, however slowly, in the contour of the moon's
+surface. Professor Newcomb, indeed, considers that all such changes must
+long since have been completed. But I cannot see how they can be completed
+so long as the moon's surface is uneven, and at present there are regions
+where that surface is altogether rugged. Mighty peaks and walls exist
+which must one day be thrown down, so unstable is their form; deep ravines
+can be seen which must one day be the scene of tremendous landslips, so
+steep and precipitous are their sides. Changes such as these may still
+occur on so vast a scale that telescopists may hope from time to time to
+recognise them. But changes such as these are not volcanic; they attest no
+lunar vitality. They are antecedently so probable, indeed, while volcanic
+changes are antecedently so unlikely, that when any change is clearly
+recognised in the moon's surface, nothing but the most convincing evidence
+could be accepted as demonstrating that the change was of volcanic origin
+and not due to the continued expansion and contraction of the lunar crust.</p>
+
+<p>And now let us see how stands the evidence in the few cases which seem
+most to favour the idea that a real change has taken place.</p>
+
+<p>We may dismiss, in the first place, without any hesitation, the assertion
+that regular changes take place in the floor of the great lunar crater
+Plato. According to statements very confidently advanced a few years ago,
+this wide circular plain, some sixty miles in diameter, grows darker and
+darker as the lunar day advances there until the time corresponding to
+about two o'clock in the afternoon, and then grows gradually lighter again
+till eventide. The idea seems to have been at first that some sort of
+vegetation exists on the floor of this mighty ring-shaped mountain, and
+that, as the sun's heat falls during the long lunar day upon the great
+plain, the vegetation flourishes, darkening the whole region just as we
+might imagine that some far-extending forest on the earth would appear
+darker as seen from the moon when fully clothed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span> with vegetation than when
+the trees were bare and the lighter tints of the ground could be seen
+through them. Another idea was that the ground undergoes some change under
+the sun's heat corresponding to those which are produced in certain
+substances employed in photography; though it was not explained why the
+solar rays should produce no permanent change, as in the terrestrial cases
+adduced in illustration. Yet another and, if possible, an even stranger
+explanation, suggested that, though the moon has no seas, there may be
+large quantities of water beneath her crust, which may evaporate when that
+crust becomes heated, rising in the form of vapour to moisten and so
+darken the crust. Certainly, the idea of a moistening of the lunar crust,
+or of portions thereof, as the sun's rays fall more strongly upon it, is
+so daring that one could almost wish it were admissible, instead of being
+altogether inconsistent, as unfortunately it is, with physical
+possibilities.</p>
+
+<p>But still more unfortunately, the fact supposed to have been observed, on
+which these ingenious speculations were based, has not only been called in
+question, but has been altogether negatived. More exact observations have
+shown that the supposed darkening of the floor of Plato is a mere optical
+illusion. When the sun has lately risen at that part of the moon, the
+ringed wall surrounding this great plain throws long shadows across the
+level surface. These shadows are absolutely black, like all the shadows on
+the moon. By contrast, therefore, the unshadowed part of the floor appears
+lighter than it really is; but the mountain ring which surrounds this dark
+grey plain is of light tint. So soon as the sun has passed high above the
+horizon of this region, the ring appears very brilliant compared with the
+dark plain which it surrounds; thus the plain appears by comparison even
+darker than it really is. As the long lunar afternoon advances, however,
+black shadows are again thrown athwart the floor, which therefore again
+appears by contrast lighter than it really is. All the apparent changes
+are such as might have been anticipated by anyone who considered how
+readily the eye is misled by effects of contrast.</p>
+
+<p>To base any argument in favour of a regular change in the floor of Plato
+on evidence such as this, would be as unwise as it would be to deduce
+inferences as to changes in the heat of water from experiments in which
+the heat was determined by the sensations experienced when the hands were
+successively immersed, one hand having previously been in water as hot as
+could be borne, the other in water as cold as could be borne. We know how
+readily these sensations would deceive us (if we trusted them) into the
+belief that the water had warmed notably during the short interval of time
+which had elapsed between the two immersions; for we know that if both
+hands were immersed at the same moment in lukewarm water, the water would
+appear cold to one hand and warm to the other.</p>
+
+<p>Precisely as in such a case as we have just considered, if we were obliged
+to test the water by so inexact a method, we should make experiments<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span> with
+one hand only, and carefully consider the condition of that hand during
+the progress of the experiments, so in the case of the floor of Plato, we
+must exclude as far as possible all effects due to mere contrast. We must
+examine the tint of the plain, at lunar morning, mid-day, and evening,
+with an eye not affected either by the darkness or brightness of adjacent
+regions, or adjacent parts of the same region. This is very readily done.
+All we have to do is to reduce the telescopic field of view to such an
+extent that, instead of the whole floor, only a small portion can be seen.
+It will then be found, as I can myself certify (the more apparently
+because the experience of others confirms my own), that the supposed
+change of tint does not take place. One or two who were and are strong
+believers in the reality of the change do indeed assert that they have
+tried this experiment, and have obtained an entirely different result. But
+this may fairly be regarded as showing how apt an observer is to be
+self-deceived when he is entirely persuaded of the truth of some favourite
+theory. For those who carried out the experiment successfully had no views
+one way or the other; those only failed who were certainly assured
+beforehand that the experiment would confirm their theory.</p>
+
+<p>The case of the lunar crater Linn&eacute;, which somewhere about November 1865
+attracted the attention of astronomers, belongs to a very different
+category. In my article on the moon in the "Contemporary Review" I have
+fully presented the evidence in the case of this remarkable object. I need
+not therefore consider here the various arguments which have been urged
+for and against the occurrence of change. I may mention, however, that, in
+my anxiety to do full justice to the theory that change has really
+occurred, I took M&auml;dler's description of the crater's interior as "very
+deep," to mean more than M&auml;dler probably intended. There is now a
+depression several hundred yards in depth. If M&auml;dler's description be
+interpreted, as I interpreted it for the occasion in the above article, to
+mean a depth of two or three miles, it is of course certain that there has
+been a very remarkable change. But some of the observers who have devoted
+themselves utterly, it would seem, to the lively occupation of measuring,
+counting, and describing the tens of thousands of lunar craters already
+known, assert that M&auml;dler and Lohrman (who uses the same description)
+meant nothing like so great a depth. Probably M&auml;dler only meant about half
+a mile, or even less. In this case their favourite theory no longer seems
+so strongly supported by the evidence. In some old drawings by the
+well-known observer Schr&ouml;ter, the crater is drawn very much as it now
+appears. Thus, I think we must adopt as most probable the opinion which
+is, I see, advanced by Prof. Newcomb in his excellent "Popular Astronomy,"
+that there has been no actual change in the crater. I must indeed remark
+that, after comparing several drawings of the same regions by Schr&ouml;ter,
+M&auml;dler, Lohrman, and Schmidt, with each other and with the moon's surface,
+I find myself by no means very strongly impressed by the artistic skill of
+any of these observers. I scarcely know a single region in the moon<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span> where
+change might not be inferred to have taken place if any one of the
+above-named observers could be implicitly relied upon. As, fortunately,
+their views differ even more widely <i>inter se</i> than from the moon's own
+surface, we are not driven to so startling a conclusion.</p>
+
+<p>However, if we assume even that Linn&eacute; has undergone change, we still have
+no reason to believe that the change is volcanic. A steep wall, say half a
+mile in height, surrounding a crater four or five miles in diameter, no
+longer stands at this height above the enclosed space, if the believers in
+a real change are to be trusted. But, as Dr. Huggins well remarked long
+ago, if volcanic forces competent to produce disturbance of this kind are
+at work in the moon, we ought more frequently to recognize signs of
+change, for they could scarcely be at work in one part only of the moon's
+surface, or only at long intervals of time. It is so easy to explain the
+overthrow of such a wall as surrounded Linn&eacute; (always assuming we can rely
+upon former accounts) without imagining volcanic action, that, considering
+the overwhelming weight of <i>a priori</i> probability against such action at
+the present time, it would be very rash to adopt the volcanic theory. The
+expansions and contractions described above would not only be able to
+throw down walls of the kind, but they would be sure to do so from time to
+time. Indeed, as a mere matter of probabilities, it may be truly said that
+it would be exceedingly unlikely that catastrophes such as the one which
+may have occurred in this case would fail to happen at comparatively short
+intervals of time. It would be so unlikely, that I am almost disposed to
+adopt the theory that there really has been a change in Linn&eacute;, for the
+reason that on that theory we get rid of the difficulty arising from the
+apparent fixity of even the steepest lunar rocks. However, after all, the
+time during which men have studied the moon with the telescope&mdash;only two
+hundred and sixty-nine years&mdash;is a mere instant compared with the long
+periods during which the moon has been exposed to the sun's intense heat
+by day and a more than arctic intensity of cold by night. It may well be
+that, though lunar landslips occur at short intervals of time, these
+intervals are only short when compared with those periods, hundreds of
+millions of years long, of which we had to speak a little while ago.
+Perhaps in a period of ten or twenty thousand years we might have a fair
+chance of noting the occurrence of one or two catastrophes of the kind,
+whereas we could hardly expect to note any, save by the merest accident,
+in two or three hundred years.</p>
+
+<p>To come now to the last, and, according to some, the most decisive piece
+of evidence in favour of the theory that the moon's crust is still under
+the influence of volcanic forces.</p>
+
+<p>On May 19, 1877, Dr. Hermann J. Klein, of Cologne, observed a crater more
+than two miles in width, where he felt sure that no crater had before
+existed. It was near the centre of the moon's visible hemisphere, and not
+far from a well-known crater called Hyginus. At the time of observation it
+was not far from the boundary between the light and dark parts of the
+moon: in fact, it was near the time of sunrise at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span> this region. Thus the
+floor of the supposed new crater was in shadow&mdash;it appeared perfectly
+black. In the conventional language for such cases made and provided (it
+should be stereotyped by selenographers, for it has now been used a great
+many times since Schr&ouml;ter first adopted the belief that the great crater
+Cassini, thirty-six miles in diameter, was a new one) Dr. Klein says, "The
+region having been frequently observed by myself during the last few
+years, I feel certain that no such crater existed in the region at the
+time of my previous observations." He communicated his discovery to Dr.
+Schmidt, who also assured him that the region had been frequently observed
+by himself during the last few years, and he felt certain that no such
+crater, &amp;c., &amp;c. It is not in the maps by Lohrman and by Beer and M&auml;dler,
+or in Schr&ouml;ter's drawings, and so forth. "We know more," says a recent
+writer, singularly ready to believe in lunar changes; "we know that at a
+later period, with the powerful Dorpat telescope, M&auml;dler carefully
+re-examined this particular region, to see if he could detect any
+additional features not shown in his map. He found several smaller
+craterlets <i>in other parts</i>" (the italics are mine), "but he could not
+detect any other crater in the region where Dr. Klein now states there
+exist a large crater, though he did find some very small hills close to
+this spot." "This evidence is really conclusive," says this very confident
+writer, "for it is incredible that M&auml;dler could have seen these minute
+hills and overlooked a crater so large that it is the second largest
+crater of the score in this region." Then this writer comes in, of course,
+in his turn, with the customary phrases. "During the six years, 1870-1876,
+I most carefully examined this region, for the express purpose of
+detecting any craters not shown by M&auml;dler," and he also can certify that
+no such crater existed, etc., etc. He was only waiting, when he thus
+wrote, to see the crater for himself. "One suitable evening will settle
+the matter. If I find a deep black crater, three miles in diameter, in the
+place assigned to it by Dr. Klein, and when six years' observation
+convinces me no such crater did exist, I shall know that it must be new."</p>
+
+<p>Astronomers, however, require somewhat better evidence.</p>
+
+<p>It might well be that a new crater-shaped depression should appear in the
+moon without any volcanic action having occurred. For reasons already
+adduced, indeed, I hold it to be to all intents and purposes certain that
+if a new depression is really in question at all, it is in reality only an
+old and formerly shallow crater, whose floor has broken up, yielding at
+length to the expansive and contractive effects above described, which
+would act with exceptional energy at this particular part of the moon's
+surface, close as it is to the lunar equator.</p>
+
+<p>But it is by no means clear that this part of the moon's surface has
+undergone any change whatever. We must not be misled by the very confident
+tone of selenographers. Of course they fully believe what they tell us:
+but they are strongly prejudiced. Their labours, as they well know, have
+now very little interest unless signs of change should be detected in the
+moon. Surveyors who have done exceedingly useful<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span> work in mapping a region
+would scarcely expect the public to take much interest in additional
+information about every rock or pebble existing in that region, unless
+they could show that something more than a mere record of rocks and
+pebbles was really involved. Thus selenographers have shown, since the
+days of Schr&ouml;ter, an intense anxiety to prove that our moon deserves, in
+another than Juliet's sense, to be called "the inconstant moon." In
+another sense again they seem disposed to "swear by the inconstant moon,"
+as changing yearly, if not "monthly, in her circled orb." Thus a very
+little evidence satisfies them, and they are very readily persuaded in
+their own mind that former researches of theirs, or of their
+fellow-pebble-counters, have been so close and exact, that craters must
+have been detected then which have been found subsequently to exist in the
+moon. I do not in the slightest degree question their <i>bona fides</i>, but a
+long experience of their ways leads me to place very little reliance on
+such stereotyped phrases as I have quoted above.</p>
+
+<p>Now, in my paper in the "Contemporary Review" on this particular crater, I
+called attention to the fact that in the magnificent photograph of the
+moon taken by Dr. Louis Rutherfurd on March 6, 1865 (note well the date)
+there is a small spot of lighter colour than the surrounding region,
+nearly in the place indicated in the imperfect drawing of Klein's record
+which alone was then available to me. For reasons, I did not then more
+closely describe this feature of the finest lunar photograph ever yet
+obtained.</p>
+
+<p>The writer from whom I have already quoted is naturally (being a
+selenographer) altogether unwilling to accept the conclusion that this
+spot is the crater floor as photographed (not as seen) under a somewhat
+higher illumination than that under which the floor of the crater appears
+dark. There are several white spots immediately around the dark crater, he
+says: "which of these is the particular white spot which the author"
+(myself) "assumes I did not see?" a question which, as I had made no
+assumption whatever about this particular writer, nor mentioned him, nor
+even thought of him, as I wrote the article on which he comments, I am
+quite unable to answer. But he has no doubt that I have "mistaken the
+white spot" (which it seems he can identify, after all) "for Klein's
+crater, which is many miles farther north, and which never does appear as
+a white spot: he has simply mistaken its place."</p>
+
+<p>I have waited, therefore, before writing this, until from my own
+observation, or from a drawing carefully executed by Dr. Klein, I might
+ascertain the exact place of the new crater. I could not, as it turned
+out, observe the new crater as a black spot myself, since the question was
+raised; for on the only available occasion I was away from home. But I now
+have before me Dr. Klein's carefully drawn map. In this I find the new
+crater placed not nearly, but <i>exactly</i> where Rutherfurd's crater appears.
+I say "Rutherfurd's crater," for the white spot is manifestly not merely a
+light tinted region on the darker background of the Sea of Vapours (as the
+region in which the crater has been found is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span> called): it is a circular
+crater more than two miles in diameter; and the width of the crescent of
+shadow surrounding its eastern side shows that in March 1865, when
+Rutherfurd took that photograph, the crater was not (for its size) a
+shallow one, but deep.</p>
+
+<p>Now, it is quite true that, to the eye, under high illumination, the floor
+of the crater does not appear lighter than the surrounding region; at
+least, not markedly so, for to my eye it appears slightly lighter. But
+everyone knows that a photograph does not show all objects with the same
+depth of shading that they present to the naked eye. A somewhat dark green
+object will appear rather light in a photograph, while a somewhat light
+orange-yellow object will appear quite dark. We have only to assume that
+the floor of the supposed new crater has a greenish tinge (which is by no
+means uncommon) to understand why, although it is lost to ordinary vision
+when the Sea of Vapours is under full illumination, it yet presents in a
+photograph a decidedly lighter shade than the surrounding region.</p>
+
+<p>I ought to mention that the writer from whom I have quoted says that all
+the photographs were examined and the different objects in this region
+identified within forty-eight hours of the time when Dr. Klein's letter
+reached England. He mentions also that he has himself personally examined
+them. Doubtless at that time the exact position of the supposed new crater
+was not known. By the way, it is strange, considering that the name Louis
+Rutherfurd is distinctly written in large letters upon the magnificent
+photograph in question, that a selenographer who has carefully examined
+that photograph should spell the name Rutherford. He must really not
+assume, when on re-examining the picture he finds the name spelled
+Rutherfurd, that there has been any change, volcanic or otherwise, in the
+photograph.</p>
+
+<p>In conclusion I would point out that another of these laborious
+crater-counters, in a paper recently written with the express purpose of
+advocating a closer and longer-continued scrutiny of the moon, makes a
+statement which is full of significance in connection with the subject of
+lunar changes. After quoting the opinion of a celebrated astronomer, that
+one might as well attempt to catalogue the pebbles on the sea-shore as the
+entire series of lunar craters down to the minutest visible with the most
+powerful telescope, he states that while on the one hand, out of
+thirty-two thousand eight hundred and fifty-six craters given in Schmidt's
+chart, not more than two thousand objects have been entered in the
+Registry he has provided for the purpose (though he has been many years
+collecting materials for it from all sides); on the other hand, "on
+comparing a few of these published objects with Schmidt's map, it has been
+found <i>that some are not in it</i>,"&mdash;a fact to which he calls attention,
+"not for the purpose of depreciating the greatest selenographical work
+that has yet appeared, but for the real advancement of selenography."
+Truly, the fact is as significant as it is discouraging,&mdash;unless we are
+presently to be told that the craters which are not common to both series
+are to be regarded as new formations.</p>
+
+<p class='right'>
+<span class="smcap">Richard A. Proctor</span>, <i>in Belgravia</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> To some this may appear to be a mere truism. In reality it
+is far from being so. If two globes of equal mass were each of the same
+exact temperature throughout, they might yet have very unequal total
+quantities of heat. If one were of water, for instance, and the other of
+iron or any other metal, the former would have far the larger supply of
+heat; for more heat is required to raise a given weight of water one
+degree in temperature, than to raise an equal weight of iron one degree;
+and water in cooling one degree, or any number of degrees, would give out
+more heat than an equal weight of iron cooling to the same extent.</p></div>
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="RECOLLECTIONS_OF_THACKERAY" id="RECOLLECTIONS_OF_THACKERAY"></a>RECOLLECTIONS OF THACKERAY.</h2>
+
+
+<p>In the absence of any complete biography of the late William Makepeace
+Thackeray, every anecdote regarding him has a certain value, in so far as
+it throws a light on his personal character and methods of work. Read in
+this light and this spirit, all the tributes to his memory are valuable
+and interesting. Glancing over some memoranda connected with the life of
+the novelist, contained in a book which has come under our notice,
+entitled "Anecdote Biographies," we gain a ready insight into his
+character. And from the materials thus supplied, we now offer a few
+anecdotes treasured up in these too brief memorials of his life.</p>
+
+<p>Thackeray was born at Calcutta in 1811. While still very young, he was
+sent to England; on the homeward voyage he had a peep at the great
+Napoleon in his exile-home at St. Helena. He received his education at the
+Charterhouse School and at Cambridge, leaving the latter without a degree.
+His fortune at this time amounted to twenty thousand pounds; this he
+afterwards lost through unfortunate speculations, but not before he had
+travelled a good deal on the continent, and acquainted himself with French
+and German everyday life and literature. His first inclination was to
+follow the profession of an artist; and curious to relate, he made
+overtures to Charles Dickens to illustrate his earliest book. Thackeray
+was well equipped both in body and mind when his career as an author
+began; but over ten years of hard toil at newspaper and magazine writing
+were undergone before he became known as the author of "Vanity Fair," and
+one of the first of living novelists. He lectured with fair if not with
+extraordinary success both in England and America, when the sunshine of
+public favour had been secured. His career of successful novel-writing
+terminated suddenly on 24th December 1863, and like Dickens, he had an
+unfinished novel on hand.</p>
+
+<p>One morning Thackeray knocked at the door of Horace Mayhew's chambers in
+Regent Street, crying from without: 'It's no use, Horry Mayhew; open the
+door.' On entering, he said cheerfully: 'Well, young gentleman, you'll
+admit an old fogy.' When leaving, with his hat in his hand, he remarked:
+'By-the-by, how stupid! I was going away without doing part of the
+business of my visit. You spoke the other day of poor George.
+Somebody&mdash;most unaccountably&mdash;has returned me a five-pound note I lent him
+a long time ago. I didn't expect it. So just hand to George; and tell him,
+when his pocket will bear it, to pass it on to some poor fellow of his
+acquaintance. By-bye.' He was gone! This was one of Thackeray's delicate
+methods of doing a favour; the recipient was asked to <i>pass it on</i>.</p>
+
+<p>One of his last acts on leaving America after a lecturing tour, was to
+return twenty-five per cent. of the proceeds of one of his lectures to a
+young speculator who had been a loser by the bargain. While known to hand
+a gold piece to a waiter with the remark: 'My friend, will you do me the
+favour to accept a sovereign?' he has also been known to say to a visitor
+who had proffered a card: 'Don't leave this bit of paper; it has cost you
+two cents, and will be just as good for your next call.' Evidently aware
+that money when properly used is a wonderful health-restorer, he was found
+by a friend who had entered his bedroom in Paris, gravely placing some
+napoleons in a pill-box, on the lid of which was written: 'One to be taken
+occasionally.' When asked to explain, it came out that these strange pills
+were for an old person who said she was very ill, and in distress; and so
+he had concluded that this was the medicine wanted. 'Dr. Thackeray,' he
+remarked, 'intends to leave it with her himself. Let us walk out
+together.' To a young literary man afterwards his amanuensis, he wrote
+thus, on hearing that a loss had befallen him: 'I am sincerely sorry to
+hear of your position, and send the little contribution which came so
+opportunely from another friend whom I was enabled once to help. When you
+are well-to-do again, I know you will pay it back; and I daresay somebody
+else will want the money, which is meanwhile most heartily at your
+service.'</p>
+
+<p>When enjoying an American repast at Boston in 1852, his friends there,
+determined to surprise him with the size of their oysters, had placed six
+of the largest bivalves they could find, on his plate. After swallowing
+number one with some little difficulty, his friend asked him how he felt.
+'Profoundly grateful,' he gasped; 'and as if I had swallowed a little
+baby.' Previous to a farewell dinner given by his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span> American intimates and
+admirers, he remarked that it was very kind of his friends to give him a
+dinner, but that such things always set him trembling. 'Besides,' he
+remarked to his secretary, 'I have to make a speech, and what am I to say?
+Here, take a pen in your hand and sit down, and I'll see if I can hammer
+out something. It's hammering now, I'm afraid it will be stammering
+by-and-by.' His short speeches, when delivered, were as characteristic and
+unmistakable as anything he ever wrote. All the distinct features of his
+written style were present.</p>
+
+<p>It is interesting to remark the sentiments he entertained towards his
+great rival Charles Dickens. Although the latter was more popular as a
+novelist, than he could ever expect to become, he expressed himself in
+unmistakable terms regarding him. When the conversation turned that way,
+we would remark: 'Dickens is making ten thousand a year. He is very angry
+at me for saying so; but I will say it, for it is true. He doesn't like
+me. He knows that my books are a protest against his&mdash;that if the one set
+are true, the other must be false. But "Pickwick" is an exception; it is a
+capital book. It is like a glass of good English ale.' When "Dombey and
+Son" appeared in the familiar paper cover, number five contained the
+episode of the death of little Paul. Thackeray appeared much moved in
+reading it over, and putting number five in his pocket, hastened with it
+to the editor's room in "Punch" office. Dashing it down on the table in
+the presence of Mark Lemon, he exclaimed! 'There's no writing against such
+power as this; one has no chance! Read that chapter describing young
+Paul's death; it is unsurpassed&mdash;it is stupendous!'</p>
+
+<p>In a conversation with his secretary previous to his American trip, he
+intimated his intention of starting a magazine or journal on his return,
+to be issued in his own name. This scheme eventually took shape, and the
+result was the now well known "Cornhill Magazine." This magazine proved a
+great success, the sale of the first number being one hundred and ten
+thousand copies. Under the excitement of this great success, Thackeray
+left London for Paris. To Mr. Fields, the American publisher, who met him
+by appointment at his hotel in the Rue de la Paix, he remarked: 'London is
+not big enough to contain me now, and I am obliged to add Paris to my
+residence. Good gracious!' said he, throwing up his long arms, 'where will
+this tremendous circulation stop? Who knows but that I shall have to add
+Vienna and Rome to my whereabouts? If the worst come to the worst, New
+York also may fall into my clutches, and only the Rocky Mountains may be
+able to stop my progress.' His spirits continued high during this visit to
+Paris, his friend adding that some restraint was necessary to keep him
+from entering the jewellers' shops and ordering a pocketful of diamonds
+and 'other trifles; for,' said he, 'how can I spend the princely income
+which Smith<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a> allows me for editing "Cornhill," unless I begin instantly
+somewhere!' He complained too that he could not sleep at nights 'for
+counting up his subscribers.' On reading a contribution by his young
+daughter to the "Cornhill," he felt much moved, remarking to a friend;
+'When I read it, I blubbered like a child; it is so good, so simple, and
+so honest; and my little girl wrote it, every word of it.'</p>
+
+<p>Dickens in the tender memorial which he penned for the "Cornhill
+Magazine," remarks on his appearance when they dined together. 'No one,'
+he says, 'can ever have seen him more genial, natural, cordial, fresh, and
+honestly impulsive than I have seen him at those times. No one can be
+surer than I of the greatness and goodness of the heart that had then
+disclosed itself.'</p>
+
+<p>Beneath his 'modestly grand' manner, his seeming cynicism and bitterness,
+he bore a very tender and loving heart. In a letter written in 1854, and
+quoted in James Hannay's sketch, he expresses himself thus. 'I hate
+Juvenal,' he says. 'I mean I think him a truculent fellow; and I love
+Horace better than you do, and rate Churchill much lower; and as for
+Swift, you haven't made me alter my opinion. I admire, or rather admit,
+his power as much as you do; but I don't admire that kind or power so much
+as I did fifteen years ago, or twenty shall we say. Love is a higher
+intellectual exercise than hatred; and when you get one or two more of
+those young ones you write so pleasantly about, you'll come over to the
+side of the kind wags, I think, rather than the cruel ones.' The pathetic
+sadness visible in much that he wrote sprung partly from temperament and
+partly from his own private calamities. Loss<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span> of fortune was not the only
+cause. When a young man in Paris, he married; and after enjoying domestic
+happiness for several years, his wife caught a fever from which she never
+afterwards sufficiently recovered to be able to be with her husband and
+children. She was henceforth intrusted to the care of a kind family, where
+every comfort and attention was secured for her. The lines in the ballad
+of the "Bouillabaisse" are supposed to refer to this early time of
+domestic felicity:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Ah me! how quick the days are flitting!<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">I mind me of a time that's gone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When here I'd sit as now I'm sitting,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">In this place&mdash;but not alone.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A fair young form was nestled near me,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">A dear, dear face looked fondly up,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And sweetly spoke and smiled to cheer me&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">There's no one now to share my cup.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In dictating to his amanuensis during the composition of the lectures on
+the "Four Georges," he would light a cigar, pace the room for a few
+minutes, and then resume his work with increased cheerfulness, changing
+his position very frequently, so that he was sometimes sitting, standing,
+walking, or lying about. His enunciation was always clear and distinct,
+and his words and thoughts were so well weighed that the progress of
+writing was but seldom checked. He dictated with calm deliberation, and
+shewed no risible feeling even when he had made a humorous point. His
+whole literary career was one of unremitting industry; he wrote slowly,
+and like 'George Eliot,' gave forth his thoughts in such perfect form,
+that he rarely required to retouch his work. His handwriting was neat and
+plain, often very minute; which led to the remark, that if all trades
+failed, he would earn sixpences by writing the Lord's Prayer and the Creed
+in the size of one. Unlike many men of less talent, he looked upon
+caligraphy as one of the fine arts. When at the height of his fame he was
+satisfied when he wrote six pages a day, generally working during the day,
+seldom at night. An idea which would only be slightly developed in some of
+his shorter stories, he treasured up and expanded in some of his larger
+works.</p>
+
+<p>While Alfred Tennyson the future Laureate received the gold medal at
+Cambridge given by the Chancellor of the university for the best English
+poem, the subject being "Timbuctoo," we find Thackeray satirising the
+subject in a humorous paper called "The Snob." Here are a few lines from
+his clever skit on the prize poem:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">There stalks the tiger&mdash;there the lion roars,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Who sometimes eats the luckless blackamoors;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All that he leaves of them the monster throws<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To jackals, vultures, dogs, cats, kites and crows;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">His hunger thus the forest monster gluts,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And then lies down 'neath trees called cocoa-nuts.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The personal appearance of Thackeray has been frequently described. His
+nose through an early accident, was misshapen; it was broad at the bridge,
+and stubby at the end. He was near-sighted: and his hair at forty was
+already gray, but massy and abundant&mdash;his keen and kindly eyes twinkled
+sometimes through and sometimes over his spectacles. A friend remarked
+that what he 'should call the predominant expression of the countenance
+was courage&mdash;a readiness to face the world on its own terms.' Unlike
+Dickens, he took no regular walking exercise, and being regardless of the
+laws of health, suffered in consequence. In reply to one who asked him if
+he had ever received the best medical advice, his reply was: 'What is the
+use of advice if you don't follow it? They tell me not to drink, and I
+<i>do</i> drink. They tell me <i>not</i> to smoke, and I do smoke. They tell me not
+to eat, and I do eat. In short, I do everything that I am desired <i>not</i> to
+do&mdash;and therefore, what am I to expect?' And so one morning he was found
+lying, like Dr. Chalmers, in the sleep of death with his arms beneath his
+head, after one of his violent attacks of illness&mdash;to be mourned by his
+mother and daughters, who formed his household, and by a wider public
+beyond, which, had learned to love him through his admirable
+works.&mdash;<i>Chambers's Journal.</i></p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> Of Smith, Elder, &amp; Co., the well known publishers.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Library Magazine of Select Foreign
+Literature, by Various
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Library Magazine of Select Foreign
+Literature, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Library Magazine of Select Foreign Literature
+ Volume 1, Part 1
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: John B. Alden
+
+Release Date: March 1, 2011 [EBook #35432]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAGAZINE OF SELECT FOREIGN LITERATURE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Barbara Tozier, Bill Tozier, Christine D. and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+
+ LIBRARY MAGAZINE
+
+ OF
+
+ Select Foreign Literature.
+
+ VOLUME 1.
+
+ NEW YORK:
+ JOHN B. ALDEN, PUBLISHER,
+ 1883.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE.
+
+ About Locusts. "Chambers's Journal," 511
+ Alcohol: Its Action and Uses. J. R. Gasquet, 597
+ American View of American Competition. Edward Atkinson, 335
+ American Churches, The Historical Aspect of the. Dean Stanley, 641
+ An Imperial Pardon. F. A. S., 64
+ Art Education in Great Britain. Sir Coutts Lindsay, 477
+ Artificial Somnambulism. Richard A. Proctor, 348
+ Association of Local Societies, The. J. Clifton Ward, 286
+ Atheism and the Church. G. H. Curteis, 217
+ Austin, Alfred. Farmhouse Dirge, 177
+ Atkinson, Edward. An American View of American Competition, 335
+ Baker, H. Barton. Theatrical Makeshifts and Blunders, 22
+ Bayne, Thomas. English Men of Letters,--Shelley, 153
+ Besant, Walter. Froissart's Love Story, 675
+ Biographies of the Season. "London Society," 404
+ Black, Algernon. Charles Lamb, 310
+ Blackie, John Stuart. On a Radical Reform in the Method of Teaching
+ the Classical Languages, 290
+ Blaikie, W. G. Ferney in Voltaire's Time and Ferney To-day, 230
+ Buchanan, Robert. Sydney Dobell--A Personal Sketch, 538
+ Bunbury, Clement. A Visit to the New Zealand Geysers, 761
+ Calculating Boys. Richard A. Proctor, 705
+ Chapters on Socialism. John Stuart Mill, 257
+ Chances of the English Opera, The. Francis Hueffer, 626
+ Christmas in Morocco. C. A. P. ("Sarcelle,") 75
+ Classical Education, On the Worth of a. Bonamy Price, 297
+ Cobbett, William: A Biography. Thomas Hughes, 326
+ Commercial Depression and Reciprocity. Bonamy Price, 578
+ Contemporary Life and Thought in France. G. Monod, 186
+ Contemporary Life and Thought in Russia. T. S., 312
+ Contentment. C. C. Fraser-Tytler, 285
+ Cooper, Basil H. Fresh Assyrian Finds, 463
+ Count Fersen, 244
+ Coup d'Etat, A, 21
+ Critic on the Hearth, The. James Payn, 696
+ Cupid's Workshop. Somerville Gibney, 453
+ Curteis, G. H. Atheism and the Church, 217
+ Dallas, W. S. Entomology, 470
+ Defence of Lucknow, The. Alfred Tennyson, 385
+ Desprez, Frank. The Vaquero, 104
+ Difficulties of Socialism, The. John Stuart Mill, 385
+ Discoveries of Astronomers, The.--Hipparchus. Richard A. Proctor, 237
+ Dreamland.--A Last Sketch. Julia Kavanagh, 181
+ English Men of Letters.--Shelley. Thomas Bayne, 153
+ English Opera, The Chances of. Francis Hueffer, 626
+ Entomology. W. S. Dallas, 470
+ Ewart, Henry C. The Schoolship Shaftesbury, 204
+ Farmhouse Dirge, A. Alfred Austin, 177
+ Ferney in Voltaire's Time and Ferney To-day. W. G. Blaikie, 230
+ Forbes, Archibald. Plain Words About the Afghan Question, 434
+ Fraser-Tytler, C. C. Contentment, 285
+ French Novels. "Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine," 723
+ French Republic and the Catholic Church, The. John Morley, 561
+ Fresh Assyrian Finds. Basil H. Cooper, 463
+ Friends and Foes of Russia, The. W. E. Gladstone, 129
+ Froissart's Love Story. Walter Besant, 675
+ Future of India, The. Sir Erskine Perry, 1
+ Gasquet, J. R. Alcohol: Its Action and Uses, 597
+ Gibney, Somerville. Cupid's Workshop, 453
+ Gladstone, W. E. Greece and the Treaty of Berlin, 663
+ Gladstone, W. E. Probability as the Guide of Conduct, 513
+ Gladstone, W. E. The Friends and Foes of Russia, 129
+ Greece and the Treaty of Berlin. W. E. Gladstone, 663
+ Greece, The Progress of. R. C. Jebb, 366
+ Growth of London, The, 158
+ Hamlet, "Mr. Irving's." "Temple Bar," 386
+ Happy Valley, The. L. A., 32
+ Harrison, Frederic. On the Choice of Books, 414
+ Historical Aspect of the American Churches, The. Dean Stanley, 641
+ Homes and Haunts of the Italian Poets, The--Guarini. T. Adolphus
+ Trollope, 85
+ Homes and Haunts of the Italian Poets, The.--Torquato Tasso. Frances
+ Eleanor Trollope, 434
+ Hueffer, Francis. The Chances of the English Opera, 626
+ Hughes, Thomas. William Cobbett: A Biography, 326
+ Japp, Alex. H. Winter Morn in Country and Winter Morn in Town, 31
+ Jebb, R. C. The Progress of Greece, 366
+ Kavanagh, Julia. Dreamland: A Last Sketch, 181
+ Lamb, Charles. Algernon Black, 310
+ Languages, Classical, On a Radical Reform in the Method of Teaching
+ the. John Stuart Blackie, 290
+ Leicester Square, Some Gossip About, 53
+ Lindsay, Sir Coutts. Art Education in Great Britain, 477
+ Manzoni's Hymn for Whitsunday. Dean Stanley, 637
+ Merivale, Herman C. The Royal Wedding, 508
+ Mill, John Stuart. The Difficulties of Socialism, 385
+ Mill, John Stuart. Chapters on Socialism, 257
+ Mivart, St. George. On the Study of Natural History, 609
+ Monod, G. Contemporary Life and Thought in France, 186
+ Morley, John. The French Republic and the Catholic Church, 561
+ Musical Cultus of the Present Day, The. H. Heathcote Statham, 687
+ On a Radical Reform in the Method of Teaching the Classical
+ Languages. John Stuart Blackie, 290
+ On Being Knocked Down and Picked Up Again.--A Consolatory Essay, 209
+ On the Choice of Books, Frederic Harrison, 414
+ On the Study of Natural History. St. George Mivart, 609
+ On the Worth of a Classical Education. Bonamy Price, 297
+ Payn, James. The Critic on the Hearth, 696
+ Perry, Sir Erskine. The Future of India, 1
+ Philological Society's English Dictionary, The. "The Academy," 639
+ Phoenicians in Greece, The. A. H. Sayce, 36
+ Plain Words About the Afghan Question. Archibald Forbes, 454
+ Price, Bonamy. Commercial Depression and Reciprocity, 578
+ Price, Bonamy. On the Worth of a Classical Education, 297
+ Probability as the Guide of Conduct. W. E. Gladstone, 513
+ Progress of Greece, The. R. C. Jebb, 366
+ Proctor, Richard A. Artificial Somnambulism, 348
+ Proctor, Richard A. Supposed Changes in the Moon, 111
+ Proctor, Richard A. Calculating Boys, 705
+ Proctor, Richard A. The Discoveries of Astronomers--Hipparchus, 237
+ Recollections of Thackeray, 126
+ Rose, Edward. Wagner as a Dramatist, 493
+ Royal Wedding, The. Herman C. Merivale, 508
+ Russia, The Friends and Foes of. W. E. Gladstone, 129
+ Sayce, A. H. The Phoenicians in Greece, 36
+ Schoolship Shaftesbury. Henry C. Ewart, 204
+ Schopenhauer on Men, Books and Music. "Fraser's Magazine," 751
+ Some Gossip About Leicester Square, 53
+ Socialism, Chapters on. John Stuart Mill, 257
+ Socialism, Difficulties of. John Stuart Mill, 388
+ Stanley, Dean. Manzoni's Hymn for Whitsunday, 637
+ Stanley, Dean. The Historical Aspect of the American Churches, 641
+ Statham, H. Heathcote. The Musical Cultus of the Present Day, 687
+ Supposed Changes in the Moon. Richard A. Proctor, 111
+ Sydney Dobell: A Personal Sketch. Robert Buchanan, 538
+ Tasso, Torquato. The Homes and Haunts of the Italian Poets. Frances
+ Eleanor Trollope, 434
+ Tennyson, Alfred. The Defence of Lucknow, 385
+ Thackeray, Recollections of, 126
+ Theatrical Makeshifts and Blunders. H. Barton Baker, 22
+ Their Appointed Seasons. J. G. Wood, 603
+ Through the Ages: A Legend of a Stone Axe. "New Quarterly Magazine," 557
+ Toilers in Field and Factory. "Time," 483
+ Toilers in Field and Factory, No. II.--Characteristics. "Time," 549
+ Transvaal, About the. "Chamber's Journal," 330
+ Trollope, Frances Eleanor. The Homes and Haunts of the Italian
+ Poets.--Torquato Tasso, 434
+ Trollope, T. Adolphus. The Homes and Haunts of the Italian Poets, 85
+ Two Modern Japanese Stories, 105
+ Valvedere, Adrian de. A Woman's Love--A Slavonian Study, 59
+ Vaquero, The. Frank Desprez, 101
+ Visit to the New Zealand Geysers, A. Clement Bunbury, 761
+ Wagner as a Dramatist. Edward Rose, 493
+ Ward, J. Clifton. The Association of Local Societies, 286
+ Winter Morn in Country--Winter Morn in Town. Alex. H. Japp, 31
+ Woman's Love. A. A Slavonian Study. Adrian de Valvedere, 59
+ Wood, J. G. Their Appointed Seasons, 603
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+LIBRARY MAGAZINE
+
+JANUARY, 1879.
+
+
+
+
+THE FUTURE OF INDIA.
+
+
+Speculation as to the political future is not a very fruitful occupation.
+In looking back to the prognostications of the wisest statesmen, it will
+be observed that they were as little able to foresee what was to come a
+generation or two after their death, as the merest dolt amongst their
+contemporaries. The Whigs at the beginning of the last century thought
+that the liberties of Europe would disappear if a prince of the House of
+Bourbon were securely fixed on the throne of Spain. The Tories in the last
+quarter of that century considered that if England lost her American
+provinces she would sink into the impotence of the Dutch Republic. The
+statesmen who assembled at the Congress of Vienna would have laughed any
+dreamer to scorn who should have suggested that in the lifetime of many of
+them Germany would become an empire in the hands of Prussia, France a
+well-organized and orderly republic, and the "geographical expression" of
+Italy vitalised into one of the great powers of Europe. Nevertheless, if
+politics is ever to approach the dignity of a science, it must justify a
+scientific character by its ability to predict events. The facts are too
+complicated, probably, ever to admit the application of exact deductive
+reasoning; and in the growth of civilised society new and unexpected forms
+are continually springing up. But though practical statesmen will not aim
+at results beyond the immediate future, it is impossible for men who pass
+their lives in the study of the difficult task of government to avoid
+speculations as to the future form of society to which national efforts
+should be directed. Some theory or other, therefore, is always present,
+consciously or unconsciously, to the mind of politicians.
+
+With respect to British India it may be observed that very different views
+of policy prevail. Native writers in the Indian press view their exclusion
+from all the higher offices of Government, and the efforts of Manchester
+to transfer 800,000_l._ per annum raised on cotton goods to increased
+taxation in India, as a policy based on mere selfishness; and a Russian
+journal, apparently in good faith, assured its readers the other day,
+that India pays into the British treasury an annual tribute of twenty to
+twenty-five millions sterling. On the other hand, some advanced thinkers
+amongst ourselves hold that India is a burden on our resources, and the
+cry of "Perish India!" so far as relates to its dependence on England, is
+considered to be not unsupported by sound reasoning. One of the ablest
+publicists of India, in a published letter to Sir George Campbell, has
+declared his conviction, after twenty years' experience in that country,
+that good government by the British in India is impossible.
+
+It may be admitted that exaggerated notions as to the pecuniary value of
+India to England prevail, and it must also be confessed that, with all our
+self-complacency as to the benefits of British rule, we have to accuse
+ourselves of several shortcomings. Nevertheless, it may be affirmed with
+confidence that the national instinct as to the value of our possessions
+in the East coincides with the views of our most enlightened statesmen. My
+colleague, Colonel Yule, has pointed out, I think with entire justice,
+that the task which we have proposed to ourselves in India, unlike that of
+the Dutch in Java, is to improve and elevate the two hundred millions
+under our charge to the utmost extent of our powers. The national
+conscience is not altogether satisfied with the mode in which some of our
+possessions have been acquired, but impartial inquiry demonstrates that
+unless a higher morality had prevailed than has ever yet been witnessed
+amongst the sons of men, the occasions for conquest and acquisition of
+territory that have presented themselves to the British during the last
+hundred years would not have been foregone by any nation in the world. But
+the feeling I allude to quickens the sense of our obligations to the
+inhabitants of India. Having undertaken the heavy task of their
+government, it is our duty to demonstrate to posterity that under British
+rule we have enabled them to advance in the route of civilization and
+progress. We recognise that in all probability so distant and extensive an
+empire cannot permanently remain in subjection to a small island in the
+West, and therefore our constant task is to render the population of India
+at some day or other capable of self-government. Is such a problem
+susceptible of a favourable solution? I propose to discuss this question
+in the following pages.
+
+
+I.
+
+The late Sir George Lewis once observed to me that in his opinion, it was
+labour lost to endeavour to make anything of the Hindus. They were a race
+doomed to subjection whenever they came into collision with peoples more
+vigorous than themselves. They possessed, in short, none of the elements
+which are requisite for self-government. Any opinion of that philosophic
+observer is entitled to grave consideration, and undoubtedly there is much
+in the history of the past that tends to justify the above desponding
+conclusion. The Persians, the Greeks, the Parthians, the Huns, the Arabs,
+the Ghaznivides, the Afghans, the Moguls, the Persians a second time, and
+the British have successfully entered India and made themselves masters of
+the greater part of it. But Sir George had never been called upon to make
+any particular study of Indian history, nor indeed was it open to him
+during the earlier period of his life, which was devoted exclusively to
+study, to acquire the knowledge of India which later erudition and
+research have brought to light. It is possible that a closer attention to
+what has occurred in the past may enable us to regard the future in a more
+favourable aspect. It will, I think, be found, after such a study, that
+more intrinsic vitality and greater recuperative power exist amongst the
+Hindu race than they have been generally accredited with. Unfortunately
+the ancient and copious literature of the Hindus presents extremely little
+of historic value. The tendency of the Indian mind to dreamy speculations
+on the unseen and the unknown, to metaphysics, and to poetry, has led to a
+thorough disregard of the valuable offices of history. Accordingly, we
+find in their great epic poems, which date back, according to the best
+orientalists, at least seven centuries before Christ, the few historical
+facts which are mentioned so enveloped in legends, so encumbered with the
+grossest exaggerations, that it requires assiduous scholarship to extract
+a scintilla of truth from their relations.
+
+Our distinguished countrymen, Sir William Jones and Mr. Colebrooke, led
+the way in applying the resources of European learning to the elucidation
+of the Sanscrit texts. And the happy identification, by the former, of the
+celebrated Chandragupta of the Hindus with the monarch of Pataliputra,
+Sandracottus, at whose court Megasthenes resided for seven years in the
+third century before Christ, laid the first firm foundation for authentic
+Indian history. Since that period the researches of oriental scholars
+following up the lines laid down by their illustrious predecessors; the
+rock inscriptions which have been collected from various parts of India,
+the coins, extending over many ages, of different native dynasties--all
+these compared together enable a student even as sceptical as Sir George
+Lewis to form a more favourable idea of the Hindus in their political
+capacity than he was disposed to take.
+
+Early European inquirers into Hindu antiquity, with the natural prejudice
+in favour of their studies in a hitherto unknown tongue, were disposed to
+lend far too credulous an ear to the gross exaggerations and reckless
+inaccuracies of the "Mahabharat" and kindred works. James Mill on the
+other hand, who was a Positivist before Auguste Comte had begun to write,
+rejected with scorn all the allusions to the past in these ancient writers
+as entirely fabulous. Careful scholarship, however, working on the
+materials of the past which every day's discoveries are increasing,
+demonstrates that much true history is to be gathered from the works of
+the Sanscrit writers.
+
+The celebrated granite rock of Girnar[1] in the peninsula of Guzerat
+presents in itself an authentic record of three distinct dynasties
+separated from one another by centuries. And we owe to what may be justly
+called the genius of James Prinsep the decipherment of those inscriptions
+of Asoka which have brought to the knowledge of Europe a Hindu monarch of
+the third century before our era, who, whilst he has been equalled by few
+in the extent of his dominions, may claim superiority over nearly every
+king that ever lived, from his tender-hearted regard for the interests of
+his people, and from the wide principles of toleration which he
+inculcated.
+
+Horace Wilson, who may be safely cited as the most calm and judicious
+oriental scholar of our times, asserts that there is nothing to shock
+probability in supposing that the Hindu dynasties, of whom we trace
+vestiges, were spread through twelve centuries anterior to the war of the
+Mahabharat.[2] This leads us back to dates about 2600 years B.C. We have,
+therefore, the astounding period of over four thousand years during which
+to glean facts relating to the Hindu race and their capacity for
+government, such as may form foundation for conclusions as to the future.
+The characteristics which have most impressed themselves on my mind after
+such study of Indian records as I have been able to bestow are, first, the
+very early appearance of solicitude for the interest and welfare of the
+people, as exhibited by Hindu rulers, such as has rarely or never been
+exhibited in the early histories of other nations; secondly, the
+successful efforts of the Hindu race to re-establish themselves in power
+on the least appearance of decay in the successive foreign dynasties which
+have held rule among them. It is only with the latter phenomenon that I
+propose now to deal, and a rapid retrospect may be permitted.
+
+We learn from European records that Cyrus made conquests in India in the
+sixth century B.C., and the famous inscription of his successor Darius
+includes Sind and the modern Afghanistan amongst his possessions. But when
+Alexander entered India two centuries later he found no trace of Persian
+sway, but powerful Indian princes. Taxiles, Abisares, and the celebrated
+Porus ruled over large kingdoms in the Panjab. The latter monarch, whose
+family name Paura is recorded in the Mahabharat, is described by the Greek
+writers to have ruled over 300 cities, and he brought into the field
+against Alexander more than 2,000 elephants, 400 chariots, 4,000 cavalry,
+and 50,000 foot. Against this force Alexander was only able to bring
+16,000 foot and 5,000 horse; but the bulk of the troops were Macedonians,
+and the leader was the greatest general whom the world has seen. We have
+full particulars of the celebrated battle which ensued, and which ended in
+the complete discomfiture of Porus. The conduct of this Indian king,
+however, in the battle extorted the admiration of the Greek historians. He
+received nine wounds during the engagement, and was the last to leave the
+field, affording, as Arrian remarks, a noble contrast to Darius the
+Second, who was the first to fly amongst his host in his similar conflict
+with the Greeks. Alexander, as in the Macedonian conquests generally,
+left satraps in possession of his Indian acquisitions. But a very few
+years ensued before we find a native of India had raised up a mighty
+kingdom, and all trace of Greek rule in the Punjab disappears.
+Chandragupta, or Sandracottus, is said by a Greek writer to have seen
+Alexander in person on the Hydaspes. Justin relates that it was he who
+raised the standard of independence before his fellow-countrymen, and
+successfully drove out Alexander's satraps. He founded the Maurya dynasty,
+and the vast extent of the kingdom ruled over by his grandson Asoka is
+testified by the edicts which the latter caused to be engraved in various
+parts of his dominions. They also record the remarkable fact of his close
+alliance with the Greek rulers of Syria, Egypt, Macedon, Cyrene and
+Epirus. We next find that one of the Greek princes who had established an
+independent dynasty in Bactria, Euthydemus, invaded India, and made
+several conquests, but he also was met in the field and overcome by
+Galoka, son of Asoka, who for some time added Cashmir to his possessions.
+The Bactrian dynasty was put an end to by Mithridates, 140 B.C., and
+consequently the Greeks were driven eastwards, and they planted themselves
+in various parts of India. We find clear traces of them in Guzerat, where
+the town of Junaghur (Javanaghur) still records the name of the Greeks who
+founded the city. The coins and inscriptions of the Sinha rulers of
+Guzerat furnish us with some particulars as to the Greek holdings at this
+period, and they seem to have extended from the Jumna on the east to
+Guzerat and Kutch on the west. The Macedonians seem here, as elsewhere, to
+have placed natives at the head of their district administrations, and the
+Sinha rulers call themselves Satraps and Maha Rajahs, and use Greek
+legends on their coins, but evidently they soon acquired complete
+independence. Simultaneously or nearly so with these Indo-Greek
+principalities, we find invasions of India by the race commonly called
+Scythians, but more accurately Jutchi, Sacae, and White Huns. These also
+formed independent kingdoms. But again native leaders of enterprise arose
+who put an end to foreign dominion. Vikramadit, who founded an era 57
+B.C., and whose exploits have made a deep impression upon the native mind,
+is thought to be one of the Hindu leaders who succeeded in expelling a
+foreign dynasty. And it would appear that towards the middle of the third
+century after Christ all foreign dominion had disappeared from the soil of
+India, except perhaps some small settlements of Jutchi, on the banks of
+the Indus; and except the temporary conquest of Sind by the Arabs in the
+seventh century, from which they were soon expelled by the Sumea
+Rajputs[3]. Thus, during a period of 600 years, we have encountered a
+series of invasions and conquests of portions of India by foreign rulers,
+but all successively driven out by the energy of native leaders. Thereupon
+followed the establishment of native dynasties all over India. It was
+chiefly during the 700 years that now ensued, up to the invasion of India
+by Mahmud of Ghazni, that the great works of Sanscrit literature in
+poetry, grammar, algebra, and astronomy, appeared. During this period also
+the Rajputs, who have been well called the Normans of the East, seem to
+have found their way to nearly every throne in India. Their acquisition of
+power has never been fully traced, and probably the materials are wanting
+for any full or accurate account of it; but the subject is well worthy the
+attention of an Indian student.
+
+The Mahomedan conquests which, with the fanaticism and savage intolerance
+introduced by them, commenced A.D. 1001, seem to have exercised most
+depressing effects on the Hindu mind. But here again we meet with the same
+phenomenon. So soon as the Mussulman rule becomes enfeebled, a native
+chief rises up who is enabled to rally his countrymen around him and form
+a dynasty. Sivaji in 1660-80 established an independency which his
+successors, as mayors of the palace, enlarged into a kingdom, out of which
+arose the native powers of Sindia, of the Gaekwar, and of the Bhonslas of
+Berar. Exactly the same occurrence has been witnessed in the present
+century by the success of Ranjit Sing in forming an independent
+principality in the Panjab. This remarkable man, who was absolutely
+illiterate, by his own energy of character raised himself from the head of
+a small Sikh clan to the head of a kingdom with a revenue of two and a
+half millions sterling.[4] We may be sure that, if the British had not
+been in force, natives of soldierly qualities like Jung Bahadar of Nepal,
+or Tantia Topi of the mutinies, would have carved out in the present day
+kingdoms for themselves in other parts of India.
+
+
+II.
+
+It may be thought that in the preceding sketch I have been aiming at the
+conclusion that British dominion is in danger of extinction either by
+foreign invasion or internal insurrection. Nothing is more foreign from my
+views. I firmly believe that British rule in the East was never so strong,
+never so able to protect itself against all attacks from without or from
+within, as at the present moment. In a foreign dominion such as ours,
+where unforeseen contingencies may any day arise, and where a considerable
+amount of disaffection must always exist, constant watchfulness on the
+part of Government is no doubt required; but this position is thoroughly
+recognised by all statesmen who occupy themselves with Indian affairs. I
+do not for a moment delude myself with the idea that we have succeeded in
+gaining the affections of the natives. No foreign rulers who have kept
+themselves apart as a separate caste from the conquered nation have
+succeeded in accomplishing this feat. There is something of
+incompatibility between the European and Asiatic, which seems to forbid
+easy amalgamation. Lord Stowell, in one of his fine judgments, has pointed
+out the constant tendency of Europeans in the East to form themselves into
+separate communities, and to abstain from all social intercourse with the
+natives around them, and he illustrates his position with the happy
+quotation--
+
+ Scyllis amara suam non intermiscuit undam.
+
+The English perhaps are distinguishable among all European nations by the
+deep-rooted notions of self-superiority which their insular position and
+great success in history have engendered. The southern races of Europe,
+the Spanish and Portuguese, have shown no reluctance to intermix freely
+with the native races of America, India, and the Philippines, such as has
+always been exhibited by inhabitants of the British Isles when expatriated
+to the East or West. But where race, color, religion, prejudice intervene
+to prevent social intercourse between the English in India and the
+natives, what a wide gulf is placed between them!
+
+In justice, however, it must be stated that, although the haughtiness of
+demeanour and occasional brutality in manners which the _aristocratie de
+peau_ sometimes engenders in our countrymen are much to be deprecated, the
+estrangement which exists in India between the English and the natives is
+not wholly, nor even principally, attributable to the former. A Hindu of
+very humble caste would think himself polluted if he sat down to dinner
+with the European governor of his Presidency. In this instance, as in so
+many others, Hindu opinions have permeated the whole native community; and
+other races transplanted to India, such as Mahomedans and Parsis, are
+equally exclusive in their social life. When I was in Bombay I made an
+attempt to break through the barrier which the latter caste had
+voluntarily erected for themselves. Sir Jamshedji Jijibhai, an able,
+self-raised man, was then the acknowledged head of the Parsi community,
+and was distinguished for his benevolence and enlightened views. I
+endeavored to persuade him to set his countrymen an example, and to come
+to a dinner at which I would assemble the chief authorities of the island;
+and I proposed to him as an inducement that he should send his own cook,
+who should prepare for him his wonted fare. But the step was too startling
+a one for him, though I was glad to find that his son, the second baronet,
+was able to get over his prejudices on his visit, some years after, to
+London. A ludicrous example of the same exclusive feeling has been related
+in connection with a Governor-General. His lordship, desirous to break
+down any notion of social inferiority on the part of a distinguished
+native who was paying him a visit, placed his arm round his neck as they
+walked up and down a verandah engaged in familiar conversation. The
+high-bred Oriental made no sign, but as soon as he could extricate himself
+from the embraces of his Excellency, he hastened home to wash away the
+contamination of a Mlecha's touch.
+
+It may also be observed that the mutual repugnance of the two races to
+such close social intercourse as intermarriage, for example, would
+produce, gives rise to two excellent results. First, there is every reason
+to suppose, judging by what we see of the native Portuguese in India, that
+the English and Hindu would make, in the language of breeders, a very bad
+cross; and it is therefore satisfactory to find that English rulers in
+India, unlike the Normans in England, or the Moguls in India, have never
+intermarried with the natives of the country. The second result is closely
+connected with the first. What has led to the downfall of previous
+foreign dynasties has been that the invaders of the country had become
+effeminate by their long possession of power, and had lost the original
+energy and vigour which had enabled their predecessors to gain a throne.
+The constant recruitment of English rulers from their fatherland wholly
+prevents this cause of internal decay from making its appearance among the
+British.
+
+It is not, then, by our hold on the affections of the people that we
+maintain our dominion in India. The strength and probable endurance of our
+rule are based on our real power, on our endeavours to do justice, on our
+toleration. The memory of the excesses committed under Mussulman rule has
+probably become dim with the great bulk of the people, but it is very
+vivid among educated Hindus. A strong conviction prevails among them that
+if British rule were to disappear in India, the same rise of military
+adventurers, the same struggles for power, and the same anarchy as
+prevailed during the first half of the last century would again appear.
+The latest expression of Hindu opinion on this subject which I have met
+with is contained in a pamphlet published in the present year by Mr.
+Dadoba Pandurang.[5] He is an aged scholar, and though not a Brahmin, well
+versed in the Vedas, but, above all, he is distinguished by his devout
+views and by his desire to elevate and improve his fellow-countrymen. He
+writes:--
+
+ If there is a manifestation of the hand of God in history,
+ as I undoubtedly believe there is, nothing to my imagination
+ appears more vivid and replete with momentous events
+ calculated for the mutual welfare and good of both countries
+ than this political union of so large, important, rich, and
+ interesting a country as Hind in the further south-east with
+ a small but wisely governed island of Great Britain in the
+ further north-west.... Let us see what England has done to
+ India. England, besides governing India politically, has now
+ very wisely commenced the important duty of educating the
+ millions of her Indian children, and of bringing them up to
+ the standard of enlightenment and high civilization which
+ her own have obtained. She has already eradicated, I should
+ add here, to the great joy of Heaven, several of the most
+ barbarous and inhuman practices, such as Sutti,[6]
+ infanticide, Charak Puja,[7] and what not, which had for
+ ages been prevalent among a large portion of the children of
+ this her new acquisition. These practices, which had so long
+ existed at the dictation of an indigenous priesthood, except
+ for the powerful interference of England could not have been
+ abolished.
+
+Opinions like these, I am persuaded, prevail throughout the educated
+community, and the presence of British rule amongst them is recognised as
+indispensable in the present state of Hindu society.
+
+
+III.
+
+With respect to a successful invasion of India, it must be confessed that
+the English mind has always been keenly susceptible of alarm. The wide
+plains of Hisdustan, which offer so ready an access to aggressive armies,
+the absence of fortified places, and the frequency with which India has
+been won and lost in a single pitched battle, all tend to encourage the
+belief that some day or other British domination will be in danger from
+some incursion of this sort. It may be observed that for nearly a century
+past the English nation has been subjected to periodic fits of Indian
+panic. Sir John Kaye, in his "History of the Afghan War," states that in
+1797 the whole of India was kept "in a chronic state of unrest" from the
+fears of an Afghan descent upon the plains of Hindustan. In 1800 the
+Emperor Paul of Russia and Napoleon conceived "a mad and impracticable
+scheme of invasion," which greatly increased local alarm. In 1809 these
+fears assumed even larger proportions when an alliance between Napoleon
+and Persia was on foot with a view to the proposed invasion; and the
+mission to Persia under Sir John Malcolm was inaugurated. In 1838 Russia
+took the place which Zeman Shah, Persia, and Napoleon had previously
+occupied, and the disastrous invasion of Afghanistan was commenced by Lord
+Auckland from his mountain retreat at Simla.
+
+Since that period the suspicions of the nation have been continually
+directed against Russia by a small but able party, who, from their chiefly
+belonging to the Presidency of Bombay, have been termed the Bombay school.
+The late General John Jacob was the originator of the anti-Russian policy
+inculcated by them. He was a man of great ability and original views, and,
+if he had moved in a wider sphere, he might have left a name equal to that
+of the most illustrious of his countrymen in India. But he passed the
+greater part of his life on the barren wastes of Sind, and rarely came in
+contact with superior minds. In 1856 General Jacob addressed a singularly
+able paper to Lord Canning, then Governor-General, and which Sir Lewis
+Pelly afterwards published to the world.[8] This was just at the close of
+the Crimean War, when England was about to undertake an expedition against
+Persia to repel her aggression on Herat. It was Jacob's firm conviction
+that, unless India interposed, Russia, having Persia completely under her
+control, could, whenever she pleased, take possession not only of Herat,
+but of Candahar, and thus find an entrance to the plains of India, on
+which our dominion was to disappear. To thwart this contingency, and
+render the approach of a European army towards our frontier impossible, he
+would, as an ultimate measure, garrison Herat with twenty thousand troops,
+but in the first instance would occupy Quetta. These proposals were
+carefully considered by Lord Canning's Government, but were rejected.
+
+The same arguments were brought forward eleven years later by Sir Bartle
+Frere, whilst Governor of Bombay, and were laid before the Government of
+India. That Government was then remarkably strong, consisting of Lord
+Lawrence, Sir William Mansfield (Lord Sandhurst), Sir Henry Maine, Mr.
+Massey, and Major-General Sir Henry Durand; but the proposals to improve
+our frontier by extending our dominions westward, and by the annexation of
+independent foreign territory, were unanimously disapproved of.
+
+About the same time that Sir Bartle Frere was endeavouring to stimulate
+the Government of India to occupy Quetta, my distinguished colleague and
+friend, Sir Henry Rawlinson, published two articles in the "Quarterly
+Review,"[9] in which he called the attention of the public to the rapidly
+increasing extension of the Russian dominions in the direction of our
+Indian frontier, and to the necessity of maintaining outworks such as
+Herat and Candahar for the protection of our Eastern Empire. But he raised
+the question in a more solemn form in the confidential memorandum which he
+transmitted to the Government of India in 1868, and which he afterwards
+published in 1875,[10] with additional matter, forming a complete
+conspectus of the aggressive policy to be adopted to guard against a
+Russian invasion. The views of the Government of India on these papers
+have not, I believe, been given to the world, but it is well known in
+Indian circles that the masterly activity therein advocated did not find
+acceptance.
+
+At the present moment Russophobia is raging to a greater extent than at
+any previous period; but this is ground on which for the present I am
+precluded from entering. It is gratifying to observe, however, that in the
+great conflict of opinion which, as it will be seen, has thus been raging
+for the last forty years, as to the best method of protecting our
+north-western frontier from an invading foe, both schools have ultimately
+agreed on one conclusion, namely, that a successful invasion of India by
+Russia is in nowise probable. The one side would avert any possibility of
+an attack by the occupation of Afghanistan, the Suleiman mountains, and
+probably the Hindu Kush; the other would husband the resources of India,
+and not waste blood and treasure in anticipation of a conflict that may
+possibly never occur, and that certainly never will occur without years of
+warning to the nation.
+
+I cannot pursue this interesting question further at a moment when the
+whole question of our policy on the Indian frontier is ripening for
+discussion, and when the materials on which a sound conclusion can be
+drawn are not yet laid before the public. It is sufficient for my present
+purpose to repeat that the probability of British dominion in the East
+being terminated by a Russian invasion is rejected on all sides.
+
+
+IV.
+
+If the views which have been now put forward are at all sound, we may
+perhaps conclude that whilst our Indian empire requires on the part of its
+rulers the utmost watchfulness to guard against dangers and contingencies
+which may at any moment arise, yet that with ordinarily wise government we
+may look forward to a period of indefinitely long duration during which
+British dominion may flourish. That sooner or later the links which
+connect England with India will be severed, all history teaches us to
+expect; but when that severance occurs, if the growing spirit of
+philantrophy and increasing sense of national morality which characterise
+the nineteenth century continue, we may fairly hope that the Englishman
+will have taught the Hindus how to govern themselves. It is England's
+task, as heretofore, "to teach other nations how to live." A very long
+period, however, is required before the lesson can be fully learned, and
+the holders of Indian securities need not fear that the reversionary
+interests of their grandchildren will be endangered. Our rule in India
+dates back little more than a century; and although from the first a wise
+spirit of toleration and an eminent desire to do justice have prevailed,
+it is only within the last thirty or forty years that any serious attempts
+to elevate the character of the nation have been manifested.
+
+The educational movement, which is silently producing prodigious changes
+in India, received its first impulse from England, and the clause in the
+Act of Parliament[11] which recognised the duty of educating the masses,
+enabled men like Lord Macaulay, Sir Edward Ryan, and others, to lay the
+foundations of a system which has since established itself far and wide.
+But the Court of Directors never took heartily to this great innovation of
+modern times, and it was only under the direction of English statesmanship
+that the Indian authorities were induced to act with vigour in this
+momentous undertaking. Sir Charles Wood's celebrated minute on education,
+in 1858, laid the foundation of a national system of education, and the
+principles then inculcated have never since been departed from. Some
+generations will require to pass before the Oriental mind is enabled to
+substitute the accurate forms of European thought for the loose
+speculations that have prevailed through long centuries. But already happy
+results are appearing, and in connection with the subject of this article
+it may be noticed as a most hopeful sign of the future that our English
+schools are turning out native statesmen by whom all our best methods of
+government are being introduced into the dominions of native princes.
+
+The administration reports of some of these gentlemen may vie with those
+of our best English officers; and the names of Sir Dinkar Rao, Sir Madava
+Rao, Sir Salar Jung, and others, give full indication that among the
+natives of India may be found men eminently qualified for the task of
+government. Wittingly or unwittingly, English officials in India are
+preparing materials which some day or other will form the groundwork for a
+native empire or empires. I was thrown closely into contact with the Civil
+Service whilst I was in India, for I employed all my vacations in
+travelling through the country, mostly at a foot's pace. Everywhere I went
+I found a cultivated English gentleman exerting himself to the best of his
+ability to extend the blessings of civilisation--justice, education, the
+development of all local resources. I firmly believe that no government in
+the world has ever possessed a body of administrators to vie with the
+Civil Service of India. Nor do I speak only of the service as it existed
+under the East India Company, for, from all that I have heard and
+observed, competition supplies quite as good servants of the State as did
+in earlier days the patronage of the Court of Directors. The truth is,
+that the excellence of the result has been attributable in nowise to the
+mode of selection, but to the local circumstances which call forth in
+either case, in the young Englishman of decent education and of the moral
+tone belonging to the middle classes of this country, the best qualities
+of his nature. But in these energetic, high-principled, and able
+administrators we have a danger to good government which it is necessary
+to point out. Every Englishman in office in India has great power, and
+every Englishman, as the late Lord Lytton once observed to me, is in heart
+a reformer. His native energy will not enable him to sit still with his
+hands before him. He must be improving something. The tendency of the
+English official in India is to over-reform, to introduce what he may deem
+improvements, but which turn out egregious failures, and this, be it
+observed, amongst the most conservative people of the world. Some of the
+most carefully devised schemes for native improvement have culminated in
+native deterioration. A remarkable illustration of this position is
+afforded by the late inquiry into the causes of the riots among the
+cultivators of the Deccan. It has been one of the pretensions of British
+administration that they have instituted for the first time in India pure
+and impartial courts of justice. And the boast is well founded. In the
+Presidency of Bombay also the Government has substituted long leases of
+thirty years on what may be called Crown Lands for the yearly holdings
+formerly in vogue. They have also greatly moderated the assessment. The
+result has been that land in the Bombay Presidency from being unsaleable
+has acquired a value of from ten to twenty years' purchase. But the effect
+of these two measures upon the holders of these lands has been disastrous.
+Finding themselves possessed of property on which they could raise money
+with facility, they have indulged this national propensity out of all
+proportion to their means; and the money-lenders in their turn drag the
+improvident borrowers before a court of justice, and obtain decrees upon
+the indisputable terms of the contract, which no judge feels competent to
+disregard.
+
+Another danger of the same sort arises from the short term of office which
+is allowed to officials in the highest places in India. When the
+Portuguese had large dominions in India, they found that their Viceroys,
+if permitted to remain a long time in the East, became insubordinate, and
+too powerful for the Government at Lisbon to control. They accordingly
+passed a law limiting the tenure of office to five years. This limitation
+seems to have been adopted tacitly in our Eastern administrative system,
+and has undoubtedly been observed for more than a century. But the period
+of five years is very short to enable either a Governor-General, or
+Governor, or member of Council to leave his mark on the country; and there
+is a temptation to attempt something dazzling which would require for its
+proper fulfilment years to elaborate, but which, if not passed at the
+moment, would fail to illustrate the era.
+
+It is needless to observe that a series of ill-considered changes, a
+constant succession of new laws to be followed by amended laws in the next
+session, attempts to change manners and practices (not immoral in
+themselves) that have prevailed for centuries, all tend to make a
+government, especially a foreign government, odious. But there is one
+other rock which it is above all essential to avoid when we are
+considering the problem how best to preserve the duration of British
+government for the benefit of India. Every ardent administrator desires
+improvements in his own department; roads, railways, canals, irrigation,
+improved courts of justice, more efficient police, all find earnest
+advocates in the high places of government. But improved administration is
+always costly, and requires additional taxation. I fear that those in
+authority too often forget that the wisest rulers of a despotic government
+have always abstained from laying fresh burdens on the people. It is, in
+fact, the chief merit of such a government that the taxes are ordinarily
+light, and are such as are familiarised by old usage. New taxes imposed
+without the will, or any appeal to the judgment, of the people create the
+most dangerous kind of disaffection. But if this is true generally, it is
+especially true in India, where the population is extremely poor, and
+where hitherto the financier has not been enabled to make the rich
+contribute their due quota to the revenue of the country.
+
+It has been said by some that we have not yet reached the limits of
+taxation in India, but to them I would oppose the memorable saying of Lord
+Mayo towards the close of his career. "A feeling of discontent and
+dissatisfaction existed," in his opinion, "among every class, both
+European and native, on account of the constant increase of taxation that
+had for years been going on;" and he added: "The continuance of that
+feeling was a political danger, the magnitude of which could hardly be
+over-estimated." The Earl of Northbrook quoted and fully endorsed this
+opinion in his examination before the House of Commons in the present
+year.[12]
+
+But although this constant aim at improvement among our English
+administrators too often leads to irritating changes, harassing
+legislation, and new fiscal charges on the people, causes are at work
+which tend to eliminate these obstacles to good and stable government. In
+our experimental application of remedies to evils patent on the surface,
+our blunders have chiefly arisen from our ignorance of the people.
+Institutions that had been seen to work well in Europe might, it was
+thought, be transplanted safely to India. Experience alone could teach
+that this is often a grievous error; but experience is being daily
+afforded by our prolonged rule, and by our increasing acquaintance with
+the habits, wants, and feelings of the people. The tendency also to change
+and improvement, which I have before observed upon as leading to
+ill-considered measures, operates here beneficially, for there is never
+any hesitation in a local government to reverse the proceedings of its
+predecessors when found to work injuriously for the community.
+
+But the most cheering symptom of future good government in India is the
+increased disposition of British rulers to associate natives of character
+and ability with themselves in high offices of administration. Parliament
+so long ago as 1833 laid down the principle that no native shall by reason
+of his religion, place of birth, or colour, be disabled from holding any
+office. Her gracious Majesty also in 1858 proclaimed her will "that so far
+as may be, our subjects, of whatever race or creed, be impartially
+admitted to offices in our service, the duties of which they may be
+qualified by their education, ability, and integrity duly to discharge."
+
+Many obstacles have hitherto prevailed, chiefly arising out of the vested
+interests of a close Civil Service, to prevent full operation being given
+to a policy so solemnly laid down. But it is no breach of official
+propriety to announce that Lord Cranbrook has earnestly taken up the
+proposals of the present Viceroy to clear away the difficulties which have
+hitherto intervened, and has sent out a despatch to India which it may be
+fairly anticipated will meet the aspirations of educated natives, and will
+greatly strengthen the foundations of British government in the East.
+
+It will thus be seen that several factors are at work which cannot fail,
+under the continued rule of the British Government, to have most
+beneficial effects on the national character of India. A system of
+education is being established which is opening a door for the
+introduction of all the knowledge accumulated in Europe, and which sooner
+or later must greatly dissipate that ignorance which is at the bottom of
+so many obstacles to good government in the East. Equality before the law
+and the supremacy of law have been fully brought home to the cognisance of
+every inhabitant of India, and they form a striking contrast, fully
+appreciated by the Hindus, to the arbitrary decisions and the race
+prerogatives which characterised their former Mahomedan rulers. Continuous
+efforts at improvement are witnessed in every zillah of India, and if they
+sometimes fail in their operation it is still patent that the permanent
+welfare of the people is the constant aim and object of Government.
+Moreover, the ready ear tendered to any expression of a grievance, the
+minute subjection of every act of authority in India, from the deputy
+magistrate up to the Governor-General, to the scrutiny of the Home
+Government, secure to the meanest inhabitant of India a hearing, and
+inspire the consciousness that he also is a member of the State, and that
+his rights and interests are fully recognised. The association of natives
+with ourselves in the task of government, which has been commenced in the
+lower branches of the judicial administration with the greatest success,
+and which is now about to be attempted on a larger scale, as I have before
+noted, is also a fact of the greatest gravity. On the whole, after very
+close attention to Indian administration for nearly forty years, of which
+about twelve were spent in the country itself in a position where I was
+enabled to take an impartial view of what was going on around me, I am of
+opinion that a bright future presents itself, and, if I could see my way
+more clearly on the very important questions of caste and of the future
+religion of India, I should say a brilliant future, in which perhaps for
+centuries to come the supremacy of England will produce the happiest
+results in India.
+
+
+V.
+
+But I must not close this article without reference to the very different
+views which have been lately put forth in this Review under the
+sensational title of the "Bankruptcy of India." Mr. Hyndman, after much
+study of Indian statistics, has arrived at the conclusion that "India has
+been frightfully impoverished under our rule, and that the process is
+going on now at an increasingly rapid rate." The revenue raised by
+taxation is about 36,000,000_l._, and "is taken absolutely out of the
+pockets of the people," three-fourths of whom are engaged in agriculture.
+The increase of 12,000,000_l._ in the revenue which has occurred between
+1857 and 1876 "comes almost entirely out of the pockets of the
+cultivators," and "the greater part of the increase of the salt, stamps,
+and excise is derived from the same source." The cost of maintaining a
+prisoner in the cheapest part of India is 56_s._ a head, or, making
+allowance for children, 46_s._; but the poor cultivator has only 31_s._
+6_d._, from which he must also defray the charges "for sustenance of
+bullocks, the cost of clothing, repairs to implements, house, &c., and
+_for taxation_."
+
+He states the debt of India to be "enormous," amounting to 220,000,000_l._
+sterling, principally accumulated in the last few years. The railways have
+been constructed at ruinous cost, for which the "unfortunate ryot has had
+to borrow an additional five or ten or twenty rupees of the native
+money-lender at 24, 40, 60 per cent., in order to pay extra taxation."
+Irrigation works "tell nearly the same sad tale. Here again millions have
+been squandered--squandered needlessly." Moreover, the land is fast
+becoming deteriorated or is being worse cultivated. In short, through a
+long indictment of twenty-three pages, of which I omit many counts, he
+cannot find a single act of British administration that meets his
+approval. All is naught. It is true that the Civil Service of India is
+composed of men who have gained their posts by means of the best education
+that England can supply, and who from an early period of manhood have
+devoted their lives to the practical solution of the many difficult
+problems which Indian administration presents. But Mr. Hyndman finds fault
+with them all.
+
+The article itself is couched in such an evident spirit of philanthropy
+that one feels unwilling to notice pointedly the blunders, the
+exaggerations, and the inaccuracies into which the writer has fallen. But
+Mr. Hyndman has entered the lists so gallantly with a challenge to all the
+Anglo-Indian world, that he of course expects to encounter some hard
+knocks, writing, as he does, on a subject with which he has no practical
+acquaintance. He has already received "a swashing blow" respecting the
+agricultural statistics on which he bases the whole of his argument. On
+data supplied to him by an able native writer, whom I know intimately and
+for whom I have the highest respect, he has drawn conclusions which are
+so manifestly absurd, that all practically acquainted with the subject are
+tempted to throw aside his article as mere rubbish. But Mr. Dadobhai, like
+himself, has no knowledge of the rural life of India, or of agriculture
+generally, or of the practical business of administration. He is a man who
+has passed his whole life in cities, an excellent mathematician, of
+unwearied industry, and distinguished, even among his countrymen, for his
+patriotic endeavours to improve their condition. But the mere study of
+books and of figures--especially of the imperfect ones which hitherto have
+characterised the agricultural statistics of India--is not sufficient to
+constitute a great administrator; and when Mr. Dadobhai, after making
+himself prominent by useful work in the municipality of Bombay, was
+selected to fill the high office of Prime Minister to the Gaekwar of
+Baroda, he was not deemed by his countrymen to have displayed any great
+aptitude in statesmanship.[13]
+
+The alarming picture drawn by Mr. Hyndman on data thus supplied attracted
+the attention of the greatest authority in England on agricultural
+matters; for intrinsic evidence clearly shows that the letters signed
+"C.," which appeared in the _Times_ of the 5th of October and the 9th of
+October, can proceed from no other than Mr. Caird. His refutation of Mr.
+Hyndman's pessimist views is so short, that I give the pith of it here:--
+
+ The conclusions arrived at are so startling that though,
+ like Mr. Hyndman, I have never been in India, I, as an
+ alarmed Englishman, have tried to test the strength of the
+ basis upon which they rest. The only _data_ I have at hand
+ are taken from the figures in the last year's report of the
+ Punjab. The number of cultivated acres there agrees with
+ those quoted by Mr. Hyndman--say 21,000,000 acres--and I
+ adopt his average value of 1_l._ 14_s._ per acre.
+
+ The Government assessment is 1,905,000_l._, to pay which
+ one-sixth of the wheat crop [the produce of 1,120,000] would
+ have to be sold and exported. There would remain for
+ consumption in the country the produce of 5,500,000 acres of
+ wheat and of 12,000,000 acres of other grain, the two
+ sufficing to yield for a year 2 lb. per head per day for the
+ population of 17,000,000, which is more than double the
+ weight of corn eaten by the people of this country. Besides
+ this, they would have for consumption their garden
+ vegetables and milk; and beyond it the money value of
+ 845,000 acres of oil-seed, 720,000 acres of cotton and hemp,
+ 391,000 acres of sugar-cane, 120,000 acres of indigo, 69,000
+ acres of tobacco, 88,000 acres of spices, drugs, and dyes,
+ 19,000 acres of poppy, and 8,800 acres of tea; the aggregate
+ value of which, without touching the corn, would leave
+ nearly twice the Government assessment.
+
+ Mr. Hyndman has committed the error of arguing from an
+ English money value at the place of production upon articles
+ of consumption, the true value of which is their
+ food-sustaining power to the people who consume them.
+
+When an argument is thus found so completely _pecher par sa base_, it is
+needless to pursue it further. But I conceive that Mr. Hyndman, when
+studying this overwhelming refutation, must feel somewhat
+conscience-stricken when he reperuses such sentences of his own as the
+following:--"In India at this time, millions of the ryots are growing
+wheat, cotton, seeds, and other exhausting crops, and send them away
+because these alone will enable them to pay their way at all. They are
+themselves, nevertheless, eating less and less of worse food each year, in
+spite, or rather by reason, of the increasing exports." Thus a farmer is
+damaged by finding new markets for his produce! And he sells his wheat,
+which is the main produce of his arable land in those parts of India where
+it flourishes, to buy some cheaper grain which his land does not grow! The
+youngest assistant in a collector's establishment could inform Mr. Hyndman
+that the food of the agricultural population of India consists of the
+staple most suitable to the soil of the district: in the Punjab wheat, in
+Bengal and all well-watered lowlands rice, on the tablelands of the Deccan
+jowari (_holcus sorghum_) and bajri (_panicum spicatum_), on the more
+sterile plateau of Southern India the inferior grain ragi (_eiuesyne
+coracauna_).
+
+It must have been under the dominion of the idea produced by Mr.
+Dadobhai's statistics as to the thoroughly wretched state of the
+agricultural population of India that Mr. Hyndman has been led into
+exaggerated statements which his own article shows he knew to be
+inaccurate. A dreadful case of misgovernment existed in India, and,
+thoroughly to arouse his countrymen to the fact, it was necessary to pile
+up the agony. Thus, in one part of his article he states that the
+"enormous debt" of India amounts to 220,000,000_l._, but in a later
+portion he admits that it is only 127,000,000_l._, and he knows full well
+that the amount of 100,000,000_l._ of guaranteed railway debt is not only
+not a present debt due from Government, but is a very valuable property,
+which will probably bring in some millions of revenue when they exercise
+their right of buying up the interests of the several guaranteed
+companies.
+
+Again, he speaks throughout his article of the excessive taxation imposed
+on the poor, half-starved cultivators; and he gives the following table as
+showing the amount "taken absolutely out of the pockets of the people:"--
+
+ Land revenue L21,500,000
+ Excise 2,500,000
+ Salt 6,240,000
+ Stamps 2,830,000
+ Customs 2,720,000
+
+He thus maintains that the portion of the rent paid to Government for
+occupation of the land is a tax upon the cultivator, which is about as
+true as to state that the 67,000,000_l._ of rental in the United Kingdom
+is a special tax on the farmers of this country. The amount derived from
+excise is chiefly produced by the sale of intoxicating liquors, the use of
+which is forbidden by the social and religious views of the natives; and
+any contribution to the revenue under this head is clearly a voluntary act
+on the part of the transgressor. The revenue from stamps proceeds chiefly
+from what may be called taxes on justice; they are, in my opinion,
+extremely objectionable, but weighty objections may be urged against
+nearly every tax, and a large portion of this tax falls on the wealthier
+class of suitors. The amount contributed by the population under the head
+of customs, although it may take money out of the pocket of the rayat,
+actually adds to his store; for, unless he could buy in the bazaar a piece
+of Manchester long-cloth cheaper than an article of domestic manufacture,
+it is manifest that he would select the latter. There remains only the
+single article of salt on which the cultivator undoubtedly is taxed, and
+which forms the sole tax from which he cannot escape. This tax also is
+extremely objectionable in theory, more perhaps than in practice, for it
+amounts to about 7-1/2_d._ per head. But even if we take the whole amount
+of taxation as shown by Mr. Hyndman, excluding the land revenue or rental
+of the land, the average per head is only 1_s._ 6_d._, of which more than
+one-third can be avoided at the pleasure of any individual consumer. It is
+not, then, a misstatement to aver that the population of India is more
+lightly taxed than any population in the world living under an orderly
+government.
+
+I have thus far thought it my duty to expose what I believe to be grave
+errors in Mr. Hyndman's sensational article. But I should do him great
+injustice if I did not admit that he has brought out in vivid colours some
+very important facts. It is true that these facts are well known to Indian
+administrators, but they are facts disagreeable to contemplate, and are
+therefore slurred over willingly; but they have such important bearing on
+the proceedings of Government in India that they cannot be too frequently
+paraded before the public eye.
+
+The first of these truths is the undeniable poverty of the great bulk of
+the population. But here Mr. Hyndman does not appear to me to have taken
+full grasp of the fact, or to have ascertained its causes. The dense
+population of India, amounting in its more fertile parts to six and seven
+hundred per square mile, is almost exclusively occupied in agricultural
+pursuits. But the land of India has been farmed from time immemorial by
+men entirely without capital. A farmer in this country has little chance
+of success unless he can supply a capital of 10_l._ to 20_l._ an acre. If
+English farms were cultivated by men as deficient in capital as the Indian
+rayats, they would be all thrown on the parish in a year or two. The
+founder of a Hindu village may, by aid of his brethren and friends, have
+strength enough to break up the jungle, dig a well, and with a few rupees
+in his pocket he may purchase seed for the few acres he can bring under
+the plough. If a favourable harvest ensue, he has a large surplus, out of
+which he pays the _jamma_ or rent to Government. But on the first failure
+of the periodical rains his withered crops disappear, he has no capital
+wherewith to meet the Government demand, to obtain food for his family and
+stock, or to purchase seed for the coming year. To meet all these wants he
+must have recourse to the village money-lender, who has always formed as
+indispensable a member of a Hindu agricultural community as the ploughman
+himself.
+
+From time immemorial the cultivator of the soil in India has lived from
+hand to mouth, and when his hand could not supply his mouth from the
+stores of the last harvest he has been driven to the local saukar or
+money-lender to obtain the means of existence. This is the first great
+cause of India's poverty. The second is akin to it, for it exists in the
+infinite divisibility of property which arises under the Hindu system of
+succession, and which throws insuperable obstructions to the growth of
+capital. The rule as to property in Hindu life is that all the members of
+a family, father, grandfather, children, and grandchildren, constitute an
+undivided partnership, having equal shares in the property, although one
+of them, generally the eldest, is recognised as the manager. It is in the
+power of any member to sever himself from the family group, and the
+tendency of our Government has been to encourage efforts of what may be
+called individualism. But the new stock is but the commencement of another
+undivided family, so strong is the Hindu feeling in favour of this
+time-honoured custom. It is obvious that where the skill, foresight, and
+thriftiness required for the creation of capital may be thwarted by the
+extravagance or carelessness of any one of a large number of partners, its
+growth must be seriously impeded.
+
+It will be seen, if the above arguments are sound, that the obstructions
+which oppose themselves to the formation of capital arise out of
+immemorial usages, and are irremediable by any direct interference of
+Government. But whatever may be the causes of this national poverty, the
+fact is undoubted, and it cannot be too steadily contemplated by those who
+desire to rely on fresh taxation for their favourite projects, whether it
+be for improved administration, for magnificent public works, or for the
+extension of our dominions. Mr. Hyndman also points out the great
+expensiveness of a foreign government, and his remarks on this subject are
+undoubtedly true. The high salaries required to tempt Englishmen of
+suitable qualifications to expatriate themselves for the better part of
+their lives, and the heavy dead weight of pensions and furlough charges
+for such officials, form, no doubt, a heavy burden on the resources of
+India. The costliness of a European army is, of course, also undoubtedly
+great. But these are charges which, to a less or greater degree, are
+inseparable from the dominion of a foreign government. The compensation
+for them is to be found in the security they provide against a foreign
+invader or against internal disturbances, and the protection they afford,
+in a degree hitherto unknown in India, to life, property, and character.
+But Mr. Hyndman's diatribes are useful in pointing to the conclusion that
+all the efforts of Government should be directed towards the diminution of
+these charges, where compatible with efficiency, and his striking contrast
+of the home military charges in 1862-63, which then amounted to 28_l._
+3_s._, and now have risen in the present year to 66_l._, deserves most
+serious consideration.
+
+There is only one other statement of Mr. Hyndman which I desire to notice.
+He declares the general opinion of the natives to be that life, as a
+whole, has become harder since the English took the country, and he adds
+his own opinion that the fact is so. Mr. Hyndman, as we have seen, knows
+but little of the actual life of the agricultural population, and of their
+state under native rule he probably knows less. But I am inclined to think
+he fairly represents a very prevailing belief amongst the natives. A vivid
+indication of this native feeling is given in the most instructive work on
+Hindu rural life that I have ever met with.[14] Colonel Sleeman thus
+recounts a conversation he held with some natives in one of his rambles--
+
+ I got an old landowner from one of the villages to walk on
+ with me a mile and put me in the right road. I asked him
+ what had been the state of the country under the former
+ government of the Jats and Mahrattas, and was told that the
+ greater part was a wild jungle. "I remember," said the old
+ man, "when you could not have got out of the road hereabouts
+ without a good deal of risk. I could not have ventured a
+ hundred yards from the village without the chance of having
+ my clothes stripped off my back. Now the whole country is
+ under cultivation, and the roads are safe. Formerly the
+ governments kept no faith with their landowners and
+ cultivators, exacting ten rupees where they had bargained
+ for five whenever they found their crops good. But in spite
+ of all this _zulm_ (oppression) there was then more _burkul_
+ (blessings from above) than now; the lands yielded more to
+ the cultivator."
+
+Colonel Sleeman on the same day asked a respectable farmer what he thought
+of the latter statement. He stated: "The diminished fertility is owing, no
+doubt, to the want of those salutary fallows which the fields got under
+former governments, when invasions and civil wars were things of common
+occurrence, and kept at least _two-thirds of the land waste_."
+
+The fact is that, under an orderly government like ours, the causes
+alluded to above as impeding the growth of capital become very much
+aggravated. Population largely increases, waste lands are brought under
+the plough, grazing grounds for stock disappear, and the fallows, formerly
+so beneficial in restoring fertility to the soil, can no longer be kept
+free from cultivation. All these considerations form portions of the very
+difficult problems in government which day by day present themselves to
+the Indian administrator. But does Mr. Hyndman think they are to be solved
+by recurrence to the native system of government; by the substitution of a
+local ruler, sometimes paternal, more frequently the reverse, for the
+courts of justice which now administer the law which can be read and
+understood by all; by civil contracts being enforced by the armed servant
+of the creditor, instead of by the officers of a court acting under
+strict surveillance; by the land assessment being collected year by year
+through the farmers of the revenue according to their arbitrary will,
+instead of being payable in a small moderate[15] sum, unalterable for a
+long term of years? If he thinks this--and his allusion to the system of
+the non-regulation provinces favours the conclusion--he will not find, I
+think, an educated native in the whole of India who will agree with him.
+
+There are great harshnesses in our rule, there is a rigidity and
+exactitude of procedure which is often distasteful to native opinion,
+there are patent defects arising out of our attempts to administer
+justice, there is great irritation at our constant and often ill-conceived
+experiments in legislation, there is real danger in the fresh burdens we
+lay upon the people in our desire to carry out apparently laudable
+reforms. But with all these blemishes, which have only to be distinctly
+perceived to be removed from our administrative system, the educated
+native feels that he is gradually acquiring the position of a freeman, and
+he would not exchange it for that which Mr. Hyndman appears to desiderate.
+
+ E. PERRY, _in Nineteenth Century_.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[1] This rock on its eastern face contains the decrees of Asoka, who began
+to reign 263 B.C.; on the western face is the inscription of Rudradaman,
+one of the Satrap-rulers under an Indian Greek dynasty, circa 90 B.C.; and
+the northern face presents the inscription of Skandagupta, 240 A.D.
+
+[2] Preface to _Vishnu Purana_.
+
+[3] Elphinstone, _History of India_, vol. i. p. 511.
+
+[4] See Aitcheson, _Treaties_, vol. vi. p. 18.
+
+[5] _A Hindu Gentleman's Reflections._ Spiers, London, 1878.
+
+[6] Widow-burning.
+
+[7] The swing-sacrifice.
+
+[8] _Views and Opinions of General John Jacob._ London, 1858.
+
+[9] October 1865, and October 1866.
+
+[10] _England and Russia in the East._ Murray.
+
+[11] 59 Geo. III. c. 55, s. 43.
+
+[12] _Report on East India Public Works_, p. 85.
+
+[13] The career of Mr. Dadobhai Naoroji illustrates in a remarkable manner
+the operation of the system of education introduced under our government.
+A Parsi, born in Bombay of very poor parents, he received his education at
+the Elphinstone College, where he displayed so much intelligence that in
+1845 an English gentleman, desirous to open up a new career for educated
+natives, offered to send him to England to study for the bar if any of the
+wealthy merchants of his community would pay half the expenses. But in
+those days the Parsis, like the Hindus, dreaded contact with England, and
+the offer fell to the ground. Dadobhai continued at the College, where he
+obtained employment as a teacher, and subsequently became professor of
+mathematics, no native having previously filled such a post. In 1845 he
+left scholastics and joined the first native mercantile house established
+in London. This firm commenced with great success, and Dadobhai no sooner
+found himself master of 5,000l. than he devoted it to public objects in
+his native city. The house of Messrs. Cama subsequently failed, and
+Dadobhai returned to Bombay, where, as above noted, he took an active part
+in municipal affairs, and was subsequently appointed Dewan to the Gaekwar.
+He is now carrying on business as a merchant on his own account in London.
+
+[14] _Rambles of an Indian Official_, 1844.
+
+[15] So long ago as the period when Colonel Sleeman wrote, the principle
+was fully established as to the moderation to be observed in the
+Government assessment. He says: "We may rate the Government share at
+one-fifth as the maximum and one-tenth as the minimum of the gross
+produce." (_Rambles of an Indian Official_, vol i. p. 251.) In the Blue
+Book laid before Parliament last Session on the Deccan riots, it will be
+seen that the Government share in the gross produce of those districts
+where a high assessment was supposed to have created the disturbances was
+only one-thirteenth.
+
+
+
+
+A COUP D'ETAT.
+
+
+ If little seeds by slow degree
+ Put forth their leaves and flowers unheard,
+ Our love had grown into a tree,
+ And bloomed without a single word
+
+ I haply hit on six o'clock,
+ The hour her father came from town;
+ I gave his own peculiar knock,
+ And waited slyly, like a clown.
+
+ The door was open. There she stood,
+ Lifting her mouth's delicious brim.
+ How could I waste a thing so good!
+ I took the kiss she meant for him.
+
+ A moment on an awful brink--
+ Deep breath, a frown, a smile, a tear;
+ And then, "O Robert, don't you think
+ That that was rather--_cavalier_?" [_London Society._
+
+
+
+
+THEATRICAL MAKE-SHIFTS AND BLUNDERS.
+
+
+It is a generally received opinion that all stage wardrobes are made up of
+tawdry rags, and that the landscapes and palaces that look so charming by
+gaslight are but mere daubs by day. But there are wardrobes _and_
+wardrobes, scenery and scenery. The dresses used for some great "get up"
+at the opera houses, or at the principal London and provincial theatres,
+are costly and magnificent; the scenery, although painted for distance and
+artificial light, is really the product of artists of talent, and there is
+an attention to reality in all the adjuncts that would quite startle the
+believers in the tinsel and tawdry view. A millionaire might take a lesson
+from the stage drawing-rooms of the Prince of Wales and the Court
+theatres, and no cost is spared to procure the _real_ article, whatever it
+may be, that is required for the scene. These minutiae of realism, however,
+are quite a modern idea, dating no farther back than the days of
+Boucicault and Fechter. Splendid scenery and gorgeous dresses for the
+legitimate dramas were introduced by John Kemble, and developed to the
+utmost extent by Macready and Kean; but it was reserved for the present
+decade to lavish the same attention and expenses upon the petite drama.
+Half a century ago the property maker manufactured the stage furniture,
+the stage books, the candelabra, curtains, cloths, pictures, &c., out of
+papier mache and tinsel; and the drawing-room or library of a gentleman's
+mansion thus presented bore as much resemblance to the reality as sea-side
+furnished lodgings do to a ducal palace. Before the Kemble time a green
+baize, a couple of chairs and a table, sufficed for all furnishing
+purposes, whether for an inn or a palace.
+
+In these days of "theatrical upholstery," we can scarcely realize the
+shabbiness of the stage of the last century. There were a few handsome
+suits for the principal actors, but the less important ones were
+frequently dressed in costumes that had done service for fifty years,
+until they were worn threadbare and frequently in rags. Endeavour to
+realise upon the modern stage such a picture as this given by Tate
+Wilkinson, of his appearance at Covent Garden as "The Fine Gentleman," in
+"Lethe." "A very short old suit of clothes, with a black velvet ground,
+and broad, gold flowers as dingy as the twenty-four letters on a piece of
+gingerbread; it had not seen the light since the first year Garrick played
+'Lothario,' at the theatre. Bedecked in that sable array for the modern
+'Fine Gentleman,' and to make the appearance complete, I added an old red
+surtout, trimmed with a dingy white fur, and a deep skinned cape of the
+same hue, borrowed by old Giffard, I was informed, at Lincoln's Inn Fields
+Theatre, to play 'King Lear' in." When West Digges appeared at the
+Haymarket as Cardinal Wolsey, it was in the identical dress that Barton
+Booth had worn in Queen Anne's time: a close-fitting habit of gilt leather
+upon a black ground, black stockings, and black gauntlets. No wonder
+Foote, who was in the pit, exclaimed, upon the appearance of this
+extraordinary figure, "A Roman sweep on May-day!" When Quin played the
+youthful fascinating Chamont, in Otway's "Orphan," he wore a long grisly
+half-powdered periwig, hanging low down each side his breast and down his
+back, a huge scarlet coat and waistcoat, heavily trimmed with gold, black
+velvet breeches, black silk neckcloth, black stockings, a pair of
+square-toed shoes, with an old-fashioned pair of stone buckles, stiff
+high-topped white gloves, with a broad old scolloped lace hat. Such a
+costume upon a personage not in his first youth, and more than inclined to
+obesity, must have had an odd effect. But then, as is well known, Garrick
+played "Macbeth" in a scarlet coat and powdered wig; John Kemble performed
+"Othello" in a full suit of British scarlet regimentals, and even when he
+had gone so far as to dress "Macbeth" as a highlander of 1745, wore in his
+bonnet a tremendous hearse plume, until Scott plucked it out, and placed
+an eagle's feather there in its stead. The costumes of the ladies were
+almost more absurd. Whether they appeared as Romans, Greeks, or females of
+the Middle Ages, they dressed the same--in the huge hoop, and powdered
+hair raised high upon the head, heavy brocaded robes that required two
+pages to hold up, without whose assistance they could scarcely have moved;
+and servants were dressed quite as magnificently as their mistresses.
+
+In scenery there was no attempt at "sets;" a drop, and a pair of "flats,"
+dusty and dim with age, were all the scenic accessories; and two or three
+hoops of tallow candles, suspended above the stage, were all that
+represented the blaze of gas and lime-light to which we are accustomed.
+The candle-snuffer was a theatrical post of some responsibility in those
+days. Garrick was the first who used concealed lights. The uncouth
+appearance of the stage was rendered still worse on crowded nights by
+ranges of seats raised for spectators on each side. The most ridiculous
+_contretemps_ frequently resulted from this incongruity. Romeo, sometimes,
+when he bore out the body of Juliet from the solitary tomb of the
+Capulets, had to almost force his way through a throng of beaux, and
+Macbeth and his lady plotted the murder of Duncan amidst a throng of
+people.
+
+One night, Hamlet, upon the appearance of the Ghost, threw off his hat, as
+usual, preparatory to the address, when a kind-hearted dame, who had heard
+him just before complain of its being "very cold," picked it up and
+good-naturedly clapped it upon his head again. A similar incident once
+happened during the performance of Pizarro. Elvira is discovered asleep
+upon a couch, gracefully covered by a rich velvet cloak; Valverde enters,
+kneels and kisses her hand; Elvira awakes, rises and lets fall the
+covering, and is about to indignantly repulse her unwelcome visitor, when
+a timid female voice says: "Please, ma'am, you've dropped your mantle,"
+and a timid hand is trying to replace it upon the tragedy queen's
+shoulders. Of another kind, but very much worse, was an accident that
+befell Mrs. Siddons at Edinburgh, at the hands of another person who
+failed to distinguish between the real person and the counterfeit. Just
+before going on for the sleep-walking-scene, she had sent a boy for some
+porter, but the cue for her entrance was given before he returned. The
+house was awed into shuddering silence as, in a terrible whisper, she
+uttered the words "Out, out, damned spot!" and with slow mechanical action
+rubbed the guilty hands; when suddenly there emerged from the wings a
+small figure holding out a pewter pot, and a shrill voice broke the awful
+silence with "Here's your porter, mum." Imagine the feelings of the
+stately Siddons! The story is very funny to read, but depend upon it the
+incident gave her the most cruel anguish.
+
+It is not, however, to the uninitiated outsiders alone we are indebted for
+ludicrous stage contretemps; the experts themselves have frequently given
+rise to them. All readers of Elia will remember the name of Bensley, one
+of "the old actors" upon whom he discourses so eloquently--a grave precise
+man, whose composure no accident could ruffle, as the following anecdote
+will prove. One night, as he was making his first entrance as Richard
+III., at the Dublin Theatre, his wig caught upon a nail in the side scene,
+and was dragged off. Catching his hat by the feather, however, he calmly
+replaced it as he walked to the centre of the stage, but left his _hair_
+still attached to the nail. Quite unmoved by the occurrence, he commenced
+his soliloquy; but so rich a subject could not escape the wit of an Irish
+audience. "Bensley, darlin'," shouted a voice from the gallery, "put on
+your jaisey!" "Bad luck to your politics, will you suffer a _whig_ to be
+hung?" shouted another. But the tragedian, deaf to all clamour, never
+faltered, never betrayed the least annoyance, spoke the speech to the end,
+stalked to the wing, detached the wig from the nail, and made his exit
+with it in his hand.
+
+Novices under the influence of stage fright will say and do the most
+extraordinary things. Some years ago, I witnessed a laughable incident
+during the performance of "Hamlet" at a theatre in the North. Although a
+very small part, consisting as it does of only one speech, the "Second
+Actor" is a very difficult one, the language being peculiarly cramped. In
+the play scene he assassinates the player king by pouring poison into his
+ear. The speech preceding the action is as follows:
+
+ Thoughts black, hands apt, drugs fit, and time agreeing;
+ Confederate season, else no creature seeing;
+ Thou mixture rank, of midnight weeds collected,
+ With Hecate's ban thrice blasted, thrice infected,
+ Thy natural magic and dire property
+ On wholesome life usurp immediately.
+
+Upon which follows the stage direction--"_Pours poison into his ear._"
+
+In a play of so many characters as Hamlet, such a part, in a second-class
+theatre, can be given only to a very inferior performer. The one to whom
+it was entrusted on the present occasion was a novice. Muffled in a black
+coat and a black slouched hat, and with a face half hidden by burnt cork,
+he looked a most villainous villain, as he stole on and gazed about in the
+most approved melo-dramatic fashion. Then he began, in a strong north
+country brogue,--
+
+ Thoughts black, hands apt,--
+
+then his memory failed him, and he stuck fast. The prompter whispered
+"drugs fit;" but stage fright had seized him, and he could not take the
+word. He tried back, but stuck again at the same place. Half-a-dozen
+people were all prompting him at the same time now, but all in vain. At
+length one more practical than the rest whispered angrily, "Pour the
+poison in his ear and get off." The suggestion restored a glimmering of
+reason to the trembling, perspiring wretch. He could not remember the
+words of Shakespeare, so he improvised a line. Advancing to the sleeping
+figure, he raised the vial in his hand, and in a terribly tragic tone
+shouted, "Into his ear-hole this I'll _power_!"
+
+Some extraordinary and agonising mistakes, for tragedians, have been made
+in what are called the flying messages in "Richard III." and "Macbeth," by
+novices in their nervousness mixing up their own parts with the context;
+as when Catesby rushed on and cried, "My lord, the Duke of Buckingham's
+taken." There he should have stopped while Richard replied, "Off with his
+head! so much for Buckingham!" But in his flurry the shaking messenger
+added, "and they've cut off his head!" With a furious look at having been
+robbed of one of his finest "points," the tragedian roared out, "Then,
+damn you, go and stick it on again!" Another story is told of an actor
+playing one of the officers in the fifth act of "Macbeth." "My lord," he
+has to say, "there are ten thousand----" "Geese, villain," interrupts
+Macbeth. "Ye--es, my lord!" answered the messenger, losing his memory in
+his terror.
+
+But a far more dreadful anecdote is related of the same play. A star was
+playing the guilty Thane in a very small company, where each member had to
+sustain three or four different characters. During the performance the man
+appointed to play the first murderer was taken ill. There was not another
+to be spared, and the only resource left was to send on a supernumerary,
+supposed to be intelligent, to stand for the character. "Keep close to the
+wing," said the prompter; "I'll read you the words, and you can repeat
+them after me." The scene was the banquet; the supper was pushed on, and
+Macbeth, striding down the stage, seized his arm and said in a stage
+whisper, "There's blood upon thy face." "'Tis Banquo's, then," was the
+prompt. Lost and bewildered--having never spoken in his life before upon
+the stage--by the tragedian's intense yet natural tones, the fellow,
+imitating them in the most confidential manner, answered, "Is there, by
+God?" put his hand up to his forehead, and, finding it stained with rose
+pink, added, "Then the property man's served me a trick!"
+
+Once upon a time I was present at the performance of the celebrated dog
+piece, "The Forest of Bondy," in a small country theatre. The plot turns
+upon a well-known story, the discovery of a murder through the sagacity of
+the victim's dog. The play-bill descanted most eloquently upon the
+wonderful genius of the "highly trained" animal, and was sufficient to
+raise expectation on tip-toe. Yet it had evidently failed to impress the
+public of this town, their experiences probably having rendered them
+sceptical of such pufferies, for the house was miserably bad. The first
+entrance of "the celebrated dog Caesar," however, in attendance upon his
+master, was greeted with loud applause. He was a fine young black
+Newfoundland, whose features were more descriptive of good nature than
+genius. He sat on his haunches and laughed at the audience, and pricked up
+his ears at the sound of a boy munching a biscuit in the pit. I could
+perceive he was a novice, and that he would forget all he had been taught
+when he came to the test. While Aubrey, the hero, is passing through a
+forest at night, he is attacked by two ruffians, and after a desperate
+combat is killed; the dog is supposed to be kept out of the way. But in
+the very midst of the fight, Caesar, whose barking had been distinctly
+heard all the time, rushed on the stage. Far from evincing any ferocity
+towards his master's foes, he danced about with a joyous bark, evidently
+considering it famous fun. Aubrey was furious, and kicked out savagely at
+his faithful "dawg," thereby laying himself open to the swords of his
+adversaries, who, however, in consideration that the combat had not been
+long enough, generously refused the advantages. "Get off, you beast!"
+growled Aubrey, who evidently desired to fight it out without canine
+interference. At length, when the faltering applause from the gallery
+began to show that the gods had had enough of it, the assassins buried
+their swords beneath their victim's arms, and he expired in great agony;
+Caesar looking on from the respectful distance to which his master's kick
+had sent him, with the unconcern of a person who had seen it all done at
+rehearsal and knew it was all sham, but with a decided interest of eye and
+ear in the direction of the biscuit-muncher. In the next act he was to
+leap over a stile and ring the bell at a farm house, and, having awakened
+the inhabitants, seize a lantern which is brought out, and lead them to
+the spot where the villains have buried his master. After a little
+prompting Caesar leaped the stile and went up to the bell, round the handle
+of which was twisted some red cloth to imitate meat; but there never was a
+more matter-of-fact dog than this; he evidently hated all shams, even
+artistic ones; and after a sniff at the red rag he walked off disgusted,
+and could not be induced to go on again; so the people had to rush out
+without being summoned, carry their own lantern, and find their way by a
+sort of canine instinct, or scent, to the scene of the murder. But Caesar's
+delinquencies culminated in the last scene, where, after the chief
+villain, in a kind of lynch law trial, has stoutly asserted his innocence,
+the sagacious "dawg" suddenly bounds upon the stage, springs at his
+throat, and puts an end to his infamous career. Being held by the collar,
+and incited on, in the side scene, Caesar's deep bark sounded terribly
+ferocious, and seemed to foreshadow a bloody catastrophe; but his bark
+proved worse than his bite, for when released he trotted on with a most
+affable expression of countenance, his thoughts still evidently bent upon
+biscuits; in vain did the villain show him the red pad upon his throat and
+invite him to seize it. Caesar had been deceived once, and scorned to
+countenance an imposition. Furious with passion, the villain rushed at
+him, drew him up on his hind legs, clasped him in his arms, then fell upon
+the stage and writhed in frightful agonies, shrieking, "Mussy, mussy, take
+off the dawg!" and the curtain fell amidst the howls and hisses of the
+audience.
+
+Another laughable dog story, although of a different kind, was once
+related to me by a now London actor. In a certain theatre in one of the
+great northern cities business had been so bad for some time that salaries
+were very irregularly paid. It is a peculiarity of the actor that he is
+never so jolly, so full of fun, and altogether so vivacious, as when he is
+impecunious. In prosperity he is dull and melancholy; the yellow dross
+seems to weigh down his spirit, to stultify it; empty his pockets, and it
+etherialises him. At the theatre in question, the actors amused themselves
+if they failed to amuse the audience. Attached to this house was a mongrel
+cur, whom some of them had taught tricks to while away the tedium of long
+waits. "Jack"--such was his name--was well known all round the
+neighbourhood, and to most of the _habitues_ of the house. Among his other
+accomplishments he could simulate death at command, and could only be
+recalled to life by a certain piece of information to be presently
+mentioned. One night the manager was performing "The Stranger" to about
+half-a-dozen people. Francis was standing at the wing waiting for his cue
+when his eye fell upon Jack, who was standing just off the stage on the
+opposite side; an impish thought struck him--he whistled--Jack pricked up
+his ears, and Francis slapped his leg and called him. Obedient to the
+summons Jack trotted before the audience, but as he reached the centre of
+the stage the word "dead!" struck upon his ear. The next moment he was
+stretched motionless with his two hind legs sticking up at an angle of
+forty-five degrees. The scene was the one in which the Stranger relates to
+Baron Steinfort the story of his wrongs, and he had come to the line, "My
+heart is like a close-shut sepulchre," when a burst of laughter from the
+front drew his attention to Jack. He saw the trick that had been played in
+an instant. "Get off, you brute!" he growled, giving the animal a kick.
+But Jack was too highly trained to heed such an admonition, having learned
+beforehand that the kicking was not so bad as the flogging he would get
+for not performing his part correctly. "Doan't tha' kick poor Jack,"
+called out a rough voice, "give un the word." "Ay, ay, give un the word,"
+echoed half-a-dozen voices. The manager knew better than to disregard the
+advice of his patrons, and ground out between his teeth, "Here's a
+policeman coming." At that "open Sesame" Jack was up and off like a shot.
+It must have been one of the finest bits of burlesque to have seen that
+black-ringlet-wigged, sallow, dyspeptic, tragic-looking individual,
+repeating the clown's formula over a mangy cur.
+
+The failure or forgetfulness of stage properties is frequently a source of
+ludicrous incidents. People are often killed by pistols that will not
+fire, or stabbed with the butt ends. In some play an actor has to seize a
+dagger from a table and stab his rival. One night the dagger was forgotten
+and no substitute was there, _except a candle_, which the excited actor
+wrenched from the candlestick, and madly plunged _at_ his opponent's
+breast; but it effected its purpose, for the victim expired in strong
+convulsions. It is strange how seldom the audience perceive such
+_contretemps_, or notice the extraordinary and ludicrous slips of the
+tongue that are so frequent upon the stage.
+
+A playbill is not always the most truth-telling publication in the world.
+Managers, driven to their wits' ends to draw a sluggish public, often
+announce entertainments which they have no means of producing properly, or
+even at all, and have to exercise an equal amount of ingenuity to find
+substitutes, or satisfy a deluded audience. Looking through some
+manuscript letters of R. B. Peake's the other day, I came across a capital
+story of Bunn. While he was manager of the Birmingham Theatre, Power, the
+celebrated Irish comedian, made a starring engagement with him. It was
+about the time that the dramatic version of Mrs. Shelley's
+"Frankenstein"--done, I believe, by Peake himself--was making a great
+sensation, and Power announced it for his benefit, playing "the Monster"
+himself. The manager, however, refused to spend a penny upon the
+production. "You must do with what you can find in the theatre," he said.
+There was only one difficulty. In the last scene Frankenstein is buried
+beneath an avalanche, and among the stage scenery of the Theatre Royal,
+Birmingham, there was nothing resembling an avalanche to be found, and the
+AVALANCHE was the one prodigious line in the playbill. Power was
+continually urging this difficulty, but Bunn always eluded it with, "Oh,
+we shall find something or other." At length it came to the day of
+performance, and the problem had not yet been solved.
+
+"Well, we shall have to change the piece," said Power.
+
+"Pooh, pooh! nonsense!" answered the manager.
+
+"There is no avalanche, and it is impossible to be finished without."
+
+"Can't you cut it out?"
+
+"Impossible."
+
+The manager fell into a brown study for a few moments. Then suddenly
+brightening up, he said, "I have it; but they must let the green curtain
+down instantly on the extraordinary effect. Hanging up in the flies is the
+large elephant made for 'Blue Beard;' we'll have it whitewashed."
+
+"What?" exclaimed Power.
+
+"We'll have it whitewashed," continued the manager coolly; "what is an
+avalanche but a vast mass of white? When Frankenstein is to be
+annihilated, the carpenters shall shove the whitened elephant over the
+flies--destroy you both in a moment--and down comes the curtain."
+
+As there was no other alternative, Power e'en submitted. The whitened
+elephant was "shoved" over at the right moment, the effect was appalling
+from the front, and the curtain descended amidst loud applause.
+
+Not quite so successful was a hoax perpetrated by Elliston, during _his_
+management of the Birmingham Theatre, many years previously. Then, also,
+business had been very bad, and he was in great difficulties. Let us give
+the managers their due. They do not, as a rule, resort to swindles except
+under strong pressure; then they soothe their consciences with the
+reflection that as an obtuse and ungrateful public will not support their
+legitimate efforts, it deserves to be swindled. And a very good reflection
+it is--from a managerial point of view. No man was more fertile in
+expedients than Robert William Elliston; so after a long continuance of
+empty benches, the walls and boardings of the town were one morning
+covered with glaring posters announcing that the manager of the Theatre
+Royal had entered into an engagement with a BOHEMIAN of extraordinary
+strength and stature, who would perform some astonishing evolutions with a
+stone of upwards of a ton weight, which he would toss about as easily as
+another would a tennis-ball. What all the famous names of the British
+drama and all the talents of its exponents had failed to accomplish, was
+brought about by a stone, and on the evening announced for its appearance
+the house was crammed to the ceiling. The exhibition was to take place
+between the play and the farce, and scarcely had the intellectual audience
+patience to listen to the piece, so eager were they for the noble
+entertainment that was to follow. At length, much to their relief, the
+curtain fell. The usual interval elapsed, the house became impatient,
+impatience soon merged into furious clamour. At length, with a pale,
+distraught countenance, Elliston rushed before the curtain. In a moment
+there was a breathless silence.
+
+"The Bohemian has deceived me!" were his first words. "_That_ I could have
+pardoned; but he has deceived you, my friends, _you_;" and his voice
+trembled, and he hid his face behind his handkerchief and seemed to sob.
+
+Then, bursting forth again, he went on: "I repeat, he has deceived me; he
+is not here."
+
+A yell of disappointment burst from the house.
+
+"The man," continued Elliston, raising his voice, "of whatever name or
+nation he may be, who breaks his word, commits an offence which----" The
+rest of this Joseph Surface sentiment was drowned in furious clamour, and
+for some minutes he could not make himself heard, until he drew some
+letters from his pocket, and held them up.
+
+"Here is the correspondence," he said. "Does any gentleman here understand
+German? If so, will he oblige me by stepping forward?"
+
+The Birmingham public were not strong in languages in those days, it would
+seem, for no gentleman stepped forward.
+
+"Am I, then, left alone?" he exclaimed in tragic accents. "Well, I will
+translate them for you."
+
+Here there was another uproar, out of which came two or three voices, "No,
+no." Like Buckingham, he chose to construe the two or three into "a
+general acclaim."
+
+"Your commands shall be obeyed," he said bowing, and pocketing the
+correspondence, "I _will not_ read them. But my dear patrons, your
+kindness merits some satisfaction at my hands; your consideration shall
+not go unrewarded. You shall not say you have paid your money for nothing.
+Thank heaven, I can satisfy you of my own integrity, and present you with
+a portion of the entertainment you have paid to see. The Bohemian, the
+villain, is not here. But the _stone_ is, and YOU SHALL SEE IT." He winked
+at the orchestra, which struck up a lively strain, and up went the
+curtain, disclosing a huge piece of sand rock, upon which was stuck a
+label, bearing the legend in large letters, "THIS IS THE STONE."
+
+It need scarcely be added that the Bohemian existed only in the manager's
+brain. But it is a question whether the audience which could be only
+brought together by such an exhibition did not deserve to be swindled.
+
+An equally good story is told of his management at Worcester. For his
+benefit he had announced a grand display of fireworks! No greater proof of
+the gullibility of the British public could be adduced than their
+swallowing such an announcement. The theatre was so small that such an
+exhibition was practically impossible. A little before the night Elliston
+called upon the landlord of the property, and in the course of
+conversation hinted at the danger of such a display, as though the idea
+had just struck him; the landlord took alarm, and, as Elliston had
+anticipated, forbade it. Nevertheless the announcements remained on the
+walls, and on the night the theatre was crowded. The performance proceeded
+without any notice being taken by the management of the fireworks, until
+murmurs swelled into clamour and loud cries. Then with his usual kingly
+air, Elliston came forward and bowed. He had made, he said, the most
+elaborate preparation for a magnificent pyrotechnic display; he had left
+nothing undone, but at the last moment came the terrible reflection, would
+it not be dangerous? Would there not be collected within the walls of the
+theatre a number of lovely young tender girls, of respectable matrons, to
+do him honour? What if the house should catch fire--the panic, the
+struggle for life--ah, he shuddered at the thought! Then, too, he thought
+of the property of that worthiest of men, the landlord--he rushed to
+consult him--and he now called upon him--there he was, seated in the stage
+box--to publicly state, for the satisfaction of the distinguished audience
+he saw before him, that he had forbidden the performance from
+considerations of safety. The landlord, a very nervous man, shrank to the
+back of his box, scared by every eye in the house being fixed upon him;
+but the audience, thankful for the terrible danger they had escaped, burst
+into thunders of applause.
+
+The stories are endless of the shifts and swindles to which country
+managers, at their wits' end, have had to resort to attract a sluggish
+public. How great singers have been advertised that never heard of such an
+engagement, and even forged telegrams read to an expectant audience, to
+account for their non-appearance. How prizes have been distributed on
+benefit nights--to people who gave them back again. How audiences, the
+victims of some false announcement, have been left waiting patiently for
+the performance to commence, while the manager was on his way to another
+town with their money in his pocket. But there is a great sameness about
+such stories, and one or two are a specimen of all.
+
+ H. BARTON BAKER, _in Belgravia_.
+
+
+
+
+I.--WINTER-MORN IN THE COUNTRY.
+
+
+ The Sabbath of all Nature! Stillness reigns
+ For snow has fallen, and all the land is white.
+ The cottage-roofs slant grey against the light,
+ And grey the sky, nor cloud nor blue obtains.
+
+ The sun is moonlike, as a maiden feigns
+ To veil her beauty, yet sends glances bright
+ That fill the eye, and make the heart delight,
+ Expectant of some wonder. Lengthened trains
+
+ Of birds wing high, and straight the smoke ascends.
+ All things are fairy-like: the trees empearled
+ With frosty gem-work, like to trees in dream.
+
+ Beneath the weight the slender cedar bends
+ And looks more ghost-like! 'Tis a wonder-world,
+ Wherein, indeed, things are not as they seem.
+
+
+
+
+II.--WINTER-MORN IN TOWN.
+
+ Through yellow fog all things take spectral shapes:
+ Lamps dimly gleam, and through the window pane
+ The light is shed in short and broken lane;
+ And "darkness visible" pants, yawns, and gapes.
+
+ From roofs the water drips, as from high capes,
+ Half-freezes as it falls. Like cries of pain
+ Fog-signals faintly heard, and then again
+ Grave warning words to him who rashly apes
+
+ The skater, nearer. All is muffled fast
+ In dense dead coils of vapour, nothing clear--
+ The world disguised in mumming masquerade.
+
+ O'er each a dull thick clinging veil is cast,
+ And no one is what fain he would appear:
+ Nor any well-marked track on which to tread,
+
+ ALEX. H. JAPP, _in Belgravia_.
+
+
+
+
+THE HAPPY VALLEY.
+
+A REMINISCENCE OF THE HIMALAYAS.
+
+
+The privilege which the families of officers in the service of the State
+may be said exclusively to possess, of reproducing in Upper India--and
+especially in the Himalayan stations, and valley of Dhera Dhoon--the
+stately or cottage homes of England, is perhaps one, to a great extent,
+unfamiliar to their relatives at home; and it is scarcely too much to say
+that the general public, which, as a rule, considers the Indian climate an
+insuperable barrier to all enjoyment, has but a faint idea of that
+glorious beauty, which is no "fading flower," in this "Happy Valley," with
+its broad belt of virgin forest, that lies between the Himalayas proper
+and the sharp ridges of the wild Sewalic range. The latter forms a barrier
+between the sultry plains and the cool and romantic retreats, where the
+swords of our gallant defenders may be said to rest in their scabbards,
+and where, surrounded by the pleasures of domestic life, health and
+happiness may, in the intervals of piping times of peace, be enjoyed to
+their fullest extent.
+
+In such favoured spots the exile from home may live, seemingly, for the
+present only; but, in truth, it is not so, for even under such favoured
+circumstances the tie with our natal place is never relaxed, and the hope
+of future return to it adds just that touch of pensiveness--scarcely
+sadness--which is the delicate neutral tint that brings out more forcibly
+the gorgeous colours of the picture.
+
+The gaieties of the mountain stations of Mussoorie and Landour were now
+approaching their periodical close, in the early part of October, when the
+cold season commences. The attractive archery meetings on the green
+plateaux of the mountain-spurs had ceased, and balls and sumptuous
+dinner-parties were becoming fewer and fewer; while daily one group of
+friends after another, "with lingering steps and slow," on rough
+hill-ponies or in quaint jam-pans, were wending their way some six or
+seven thousand feet down the umbrageous mountain-sides, watched from above
+by those who still lingered behind, until they seemed like toilsome emmets
+in the far distance.
+
+Now that our summer companions were gone we used to while away many an
+hour with our glasses, scanning in that clear atmosphere the vast plains
+stretched out beneath us like a rich carpet of many colours, but in which
+forms were scarcely to be traced at that distance. Here, twisted silver
+threads represented some great river; there, a sprinkling of rice-like
+grains, the white bungalows of a cantonment; while occasionally a sombre
+mass denoted some forest or mango tope. Around us, and quailing under
+fierce gusts of wind from the passes of the snowy range rising in peaks
+to nearly twice the altitude of the Alps, the gnarled oaks, now denuded of
+their earlier garniture of parasitical ferns, that used to adorn their
+mossy branches with Nature's own point lace, seemed almost conscious of
+approaching winter.
+
+Landour, now deserted, save by a few invalid soldiers and one or two
+resident families, had few attractions. The snow was lying deep on the
+mountain-sides, and blocking up the narrow roads. But winter in the
+Himalayas is a season of startling phenomena; for it is then that thunder
+storms of appalling grandeur are prevalent, and to a considerable extent
+destructive. During the night, amidst the wild conflict of the elements,
+would, not unfrequently, be heard the bugles of the soldiers' Sanatorium,
+calling to those who could sleep to arouse themselves, and hasten to the
+side of residents whose houses had been struck by the electric fluid.
+
+Still, we clung to our mountain-home to the last, although we knew that
+summer awaited us in the valley below, and that in an hour and a half we
+might with ease exchange an almost hyperborean climate for one where
+summer is perennial, or seems so--for the rainy season is but an interlude
+of refreshing showers.
+
+At length an incident occurred which somewhat prematurely influenced our
+departure.
+
+As we were sitting at an early breakfast one morning with the children,
+Khalifa, a favourite domestic, and one who rarely failed to observe that
+stately decorum peculiar to Indian servants, rushed wildly into the room,
+with every appearance of terror, screaming, "Janwar! Burra janwar,
+sahib!"[16] at the same time pointing to the window.
+
+We could not at first understand what the poor fellow meant; but on
+looking out, were not a little disconcerted at the sight which presented
+itself.
+
+Crouched on the garden-wall was a huge spotted animal of the leopard
+species. It looked, however, by no means ferocious, but, on the contrary,
+to be imploring compassion and shelter from the snowstorm. Still,
+notwithstanding its demure cat-like aspect, its proximity was by no means
+agreeable. With a strange lack of intelligence, the brute, instead of
+avoiding the cold, had evidently become bewildered, and crawled up the
+mountain side. As we could scarcely be expected to extend the rites of
+hospitality to such a visitor, the harmless discharge of a pistol insured
+his departure at one bound, and with a terrific growl.
+
+Wild beasts are rarely seen about European stations. Those who like them
+must go out of their way to find them. But perhaps stupefied by cold while
+asleep, and pinched by hunger, as on the present occasion, they may lose
+their usual sagacity.
+
+Having got rid of our unwelcome visitor, we determined at once to leave
+our mountain-home.
+
+The servants were only too glad to hasten our departure, and in the
+course of an hour everything was packed up, and we were ready for the
+descent into the plains.
+
+Notwithstanding the absence of a police force, robberies of houses are
+almost unknown; and therefore it was only necessary for us to draw down
+the blinds and lock the main door, leaving the furniture to take care of
+itself.
+
+The jam-pans and little rough ponies were ready; the servants, although
+shivering in their light clothing, more active than I had ever before seen
+them; and in the course of another hour we were inhaling the balmy air of
+early summer.
+
+The pretty little hotel of Rajpore, at the base of the mountain, was now
+reached; and before us lay the broad and excellent road, shaded with
+trees, which, in the course of another twenty minutes, brought us to the
+charming cantonment of Deyrah. All Nature seemed to be rejoicing; the
+birds were singing; the sounds of bubbling and splashing waters
+(mountain-streams diverted from their natural channels, and brought into
+every garden), and hedges of the double pink and crimson Bareilly rose[17]
+in full bloom, interspersed with the oleander, and the mehndi (henna of
+Scripture) with its fragrant clusters, filling the air with the perfume of
+mignonette, presented a scene of earthly beauty which cannot be surpassed.
+
+"How stupid we were," I remarked, looking back at our late home, now a
+mere black speck on the top of the snowy mountain far above--"how very
+foolish and perverse to have fancied ourselves more English in the winter
+up there, when we might all this time have been leading the life of Eden,
+in this enchanting spot!"
+
+"Indeed we were," replied my companion. "But it is the way with us in
+India. We give a rupee for an English daisy, and cast aside the honeyed
+champah."
+
+In India there is no difficulty in housing oneself. No important agents
+are necessary, and advertising is scarcely known. Accordingly, without
+ceremony, we took quiet possession of the first vacant bungalow which we
+came to, and our fifteen domestics did not seem to question for a moment
+the propriety of the occupation. Under our somewhat despotic government,
+are not the sahib loeg[18] above petty social observances?
+
+While A. was busily employed getting his guns ready and preparing for
+shikari in the adjacent forest and jungles, which swarm with peafowl,
+partridges, quail, pigeons, and a variety of other game, my first care was
+to summon the resident mali (gardener), and ascertain how the beautiful
+and extensive garden of which we had taken possession[19] might be further
+stocked.
+
+"Mem sahib,"[20] said the quiet old gardener, with his hands in a
+supplicatory position, "there is abundance here of everything--aloo, lal
+sag, anjir, padina, baingan, piyaz, khira, shalgham, kobs, ajmud,
+kharbuza, amb, amrut, anar, narangi--"[21]
+
+"Stay!" I interrupted; "that is enough."
+
+But the old mali had something more to add:
+
+"Mem sahib, all is your own, and your slave shall daily bring his
+customary offering, and flowers for the table; and the protector of the
+poor will not refuse bakshees for the bearer."
+
+I promised to be liberal to the poor old man, and then proceeded to
+inspect the flower-garden.
+
+Here I was surprised to find a perfect fraternisation between the tropical
+flora and our own. Amongst flowers not unfamiliar to the European were
+abundance of the finest roses, superb crimson and gold poincianas, the
+elegant hybiscus, graceful ipomoeas, and convolvuli of every hue, the
+purple amaranth, the variegated double balsam, the richest marigolds, the
+pale-blue clusters of the plantago, acacias, jasmines, oranges, and
+pomegranates, intermixed with our own pansies, carnations, cinerarias,
+geraniums, fuchsias, and a wealth of blossoms impossible to remember by
+name.
+
+"If there is a paradise on earth, it is this, it is this!"
+
+Far more beautiful to the homely eye are such gardens than those of
+Shalimar and Pinjore, with their costly marble terraces, geometrical
+walks, fountains and cascades falling over sculptured slabs.
+
+Nor are we in India confined to the enjoyment of Nature. Art[22] finds its
+way to us from Europe, and literature here receives the warmest welcome.
+Our pianos, our musical-boxes--our costly and richly bound illustrated
+works, fresh from England--the most thrilling romances of fiction, and all
+the periodicals of the day, are regularly accumulated in these charming
+Indian retreats, and keep up the culture of the mind in a valley whose
+"glorious beauty" is, as I have said, no "fading flower," but the home of
+the missionary, and the resort of the war-worn soldier or truth-loving
+artist.
+
+Nor is this all. Around Deyrah is some of the most exquisitely beautiful
+cave scenery, comparatively unknown even to Europeans; such, for example,
+as the wondrous natural tunnel, whose sides shine with the varied beauty
+of the most delicate mosaics, and are lit up by rents in the hill above;
+the "dropping cave" of Sansadhara, "bosomed high in tufted trees;" and the
+strange ancient shrines sculptured in the romantic glen of
+Tope-Kesur-Mahadeo.
+
+Of these, Sansadhara has lately been made the subject of a beautiful
+photograph, which, however, fails to convey the exquisite charm of the
+original; but the natural tunnel and Tope-Kesur-Mahadeo have never been
+presented by the artist to the public, although there are unique sketches
+of them in the fine collection of a lady[23] who, as the wife of a former
+Indian Commander-in-Chief, had opportunities afforded to few of indulging
+her taste.
+
+One might exhaust volumes in attempting to describe such scenes, and even
+then fail to do them the faintest justice. The Alps, with all their
+beauty, lose much of their grandeur after one has been in daily
+contemplation of the majestic snowy range of the Himalayas, while the
+forests and valleys that skirt its base have no counterpart in Europe. In
+these partial solitudes we lose much of our conventionality. The mind is
+to a certain extent elevated by the grand scale on which Nature around is
+presented. The occasional alarm of war teaches the insecurity of all
+earthly happiness. Our life is subject to daily introspection, and before
+the mind's eye is the sublime prospect, perhaps at no very distant period,
+of a Christian India rising from the ruins of a sensuous idolatry in
+immortal beauty.
+
+ L. A., _in London Society_.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[16] "Wild beast! Big wild beast, sir!"
+
+L. M.--I.--2.
+
+[17] A remarkable plant. It is in constant bloom. On every spray there is
+a central crimson blossom, which only lasts one day, surrounded by five or
+six pink ones, which remain for many days.
+
+[18] Dominant class.
+
+[19] House-rent is paid monthly in India, in arrear.
+
+[20] My lady.
+
+[21] Potato, spinach, fig, mint, egg-plant, onion, cucumber, turnip,
+cabbage, parsley, melon, mango, guava, pomegranate, orange.
+
+[22] There is no intention of disparaging beautiful native art.
+
+[23] Lady Gomm.
+
+
+
+
+THE PHOENICIANS IN GREECE.
+
+
+Herodotus begins his history by relating how Phoenician traders brought
+"Egyptian and Assyrian wares" to Argos and other parts of Greece, in those
+remote days when the Greeks were still waiting to receive the elements of
+their culture from the more civilized East. His account was derived from
+Persian and Phoenician sources, but, it would seem, was accepted by his
+contemporaries with the same unquestioning confidence as by himself. The
+belief of Herodotus was shared by the scholars of Europe after the revival
+of learning, and there were none among them who doubted that the
+civilization of ancient Greece had been brought from Asia or Egypt, or
+from both. Hebrew was regarded as the primaeval language, and the Hebrew
+records as the fountain-head of all history; just as the Greek vocabulary,
+therefore, was traced back to the Hebrew lexicon, the legends of primitive
+Greece were believed to be the echoes of Old Testament history. _Ex
+Oriente lux_ was the motto of the inquirer, and the key to all that was
+dark or doubtful in the mythology and history of Hellas was to be found in
+the monuments of the Oriental world.
+
+But the age of Creuzer and Bryant was succeeded by an age of scepticism
+and critical investigation. A reaction sat in against the attempt to force
+Greek thought and culture into an Asiatic mould. The Greek scholar was
+repelled by the tasteless insipidity and barbaric exuberance of the East;
+he contrasted the works of Phidias and Praxiteles, of Sophocles and Plato,
+with the monstrous creations of India or Egypt, and the conviction grew
+strong within him that the Greek could never have learnt his first lessons
+of civilization in such a school as this. Between the East and the West a
+sharp line of division was drawn, and to look for the origin of Greek
+culture beyond the boundaries of Greece itself came to be regarded almost
+as sacrilege. Greek mythology, so far from being an echo or caricature of
+Biblical history and Oriental mysticism, was pronounced to be self-evolved
+and independent, and K. O. Mueller could deny without contradiction the
+Asiatic origin even of the myth of Aphrodite and Adonis, where the name of
+the Semitic sun-god seems of itself to indicate its source. The
+Phoenician traders of Herodotus, like the royal maiden they carried away
+from Argos, were banished to the nebulous region of rationalistic fable.
+
+Along with this reaction against the Orientalizing school which could see
+in Greece nothing but a deformed copy of Eastern wisdom went another
+reaction against the conception of Greek mythology on which the labours of
+the Orientalizing school had been based. Key after key had been applied to
+Greek mythology, and all in vain; the lock had refused to turn. The light
+which had been supposed to come from the East had turned out to be but a
+will-o'-the-wisp; neither the Hebrew Scriptures nor the Egyptian
+hieroglyphics had solved the problem presented by the Greek myths. And the
+Greek scholar, in despair, had come to the conclusion that the problem was
+insoluble; all that he could do was to accept the facts as they were set
+before him, to classify and repeat the wondrous tales of the Greek poets,
+but to leave their origin unexplained. This is practically the position of
+Grote; he is content to show that all the parts of a myth hang closely
+together, and that any attempt to extract history or philosophy from it
+must be arbitrary and futile. To deprive a myth of its kernel and soul,
+and call the dry husk that is left a historical fact, is to mistake the
+conditions of the problem and the nature of mythology.
+
+It was at this point that the science of comparative mythology stepped in.
+Grote had shown that we cannot look for history in mythology, but he had
+given up the discovery of the origin of this mythology as a hopeless task.
+The same comparative method, however, which has forced nature to disclose
+her secrets has also penetrated to the sources of mythology itself. The
+Greek myths, like the myths of the other nations of the world, are the
+forgotten and misinterpreted records of the beliefs of primitive man, and
+of his earliest attempts to explain the phenomena of nature. Restore the
+original meaning of the language wherein the myth is clothed, and the
+origin of the myth is found. Myths, in fact, are the words of a dead
+language to which a wrong sense has been given by a false method of
+decipherment. A myth, rightly explained, will tell us the beliefs, the
+feelings, and the knowledge of those among whom it first grew up; for the
+evidences and monuments of history we must look elsewhere.
+
+But there is an old proverb that "there is no smoke without fire." The war
+of Troy or the beleaguerment of Thebes may be but a repetition of the
+time-worn story of the battle waged by the bright powers of day round the
+battlements of heaven; but there must have been some reason why this story
+should have been specially localized in the Troad and at Thebes. Most of
+the Greek myths have a background in space and time; and for this
+background there must be some historical cause. The cause, however, if it
+is to be discovered at all, must be discovered by means of those evidences
+which will alone satisfy the critical historian. The localization of a
+myth is merely an indication or sign-post pointing out the direction in
+which he is to look for his facts. If Greek warriors had never fought in
+the plains of Troy, we may be pretty sure that the poems of Homer would
+not have brought Akhilles and Agamemnon under the walls of Ilium. If
+Phoenician traders had exercised no influence on primaeval Greece, Greek
+legend would have contained no references to them.
+
+But even the myth itself, when rightly questioned, may be made to yield
+some of the facts upon which the conclusions of the historian are based.
+We now know fairly well what ideas, usages, and proper names have an Aryan
+stamp upon them, and what, on the other hand, belong rather to the Semitic
+world. Now there is a certain portion of Greek mythology which bears but
+little relationship to the mythology of the kindred Aryan tribes, while it
+connects itself very closely with the beliefs and practices of the Semitic
+race. Human sacrifice is very possibly one of these, and it is noticeable
+that two at least of the legends which speak of human sacrifice--those of
+Athamas and Busiris--are associated, the one with the Phoenicians of
+Thebes, the other with the Phoenicians of the Egyptian Delta. The whole
+cycle of myths grouped about the name of Herakles points as clearly to a
+Semitic source as does the myth of Aphrodite and Adonis; and the
+extravagant lamentations that accompanied the worship of the Akhaean
+Demeter (Herod. v. 61) come as certainly from the East as the olive, the
+pomegranate, and the myrtle, the sacred symbols of Athena, of Hera, and of
+Aphrodite.[24]
+
+Comparative mythology has thus given us a juster appreciation of the
+historical inferences we may draw from the legends of prehistoric Greece,
+and has led us back to a recognition of the important part played by the
+Phoenicians in the heroic age. Greek culture, it is true, was not the
+mere copy of that of Semitic Asia, as scholars once believed, but the
+germs of it had come in large measure from an Oriental seed-plot. The
+conclusions derived from a scientific study of the myths have been
+confirmed and widened by the recent researches and discoveries of
+archaeology. The spade, it has been said, is the modern instrument for
+reconstructing the history of the past, and in no department in history
+has the spade been more active of late than in that of Greece. From all
+sides light has come upon that remote epoch around which the mist of a
+fabulous antiquity had already been folded in the days of Herodotus; from
+the islands and shores of the AEgean, from the tombs of Asia Minor and
+Palestine, nay, even from the temples and palaces of Egypt and Assyria,
+have the materials been exhumed for sketching in something like clear
+outline the origin and growth of Greek civilization. From nowhere,
+however, have more important revelations been derived than from the
+excavations at Mykenae and Spata, near Athens, and it is with the evidence
+furnished by these that I now propose mainly to deal. A personal
+inspection of the sites and the objects found upon them has convinced me
+of the groundlessness of the doubts which have been thrown out against
+their antiquity, as well as of the intercourse and connection to which
+they testify with the great empires of Babylonia and Assyria. Mr. Poole
+has lately pointed out what materials are furnished by the Egyptian
+monuments for determining the age and character of the antiquities of
+Mykenae.[25] I would now draw attention to the far clearer and more
+tangible materials afforded by Assyrian art and history.
+
+Two facts must first be kept well in view. One of these is the Semitic
+origin of the Greek alphabet. The Phoenician alphabet, originally
+derived from the alphabet of the Egyptian hieroglyphics, and imported into
+their mother-country by the Phoenician settlers of the Delta, was
+brought to Greece, not probably by the Phoenicians of Tyre and Sidon,
+but by the Aramaeans of the Gulf of Antioch, whose nouns ended with the
+same "emphatic aleph" that we seem to find in the Greek names of the
+letters, _alpha_, _beta_, _gamma_, (_gamla_). Before the introduction of
+the simpler Phoenician alphabet, the inhabitants of Asia Minor and the
+neighbouring islands appear to have used a syllabary of some seventy
+characters, which continued to be employed in conservative Cyprus down to
+a very late date; but, so far as we know at present, the Greeks of the
+mainland were unacquainted with writing before the Aramaeo-Phoenicians
+had taught them their phonetic symbols. The oldest Greek inscriptions are
+probably those of Thera, now Santorin, where the Phoenicians had been
+settled from time immemorial; and as the forms of the characters found in
+them do not differ very materially from the forms used on the famous
+Moabite Stone, we may infer that the alphabet of Kadmus was brought to the
+West at a date not very remote from that of Mesha and Ahab, perhaps about
+800 B.C. We may notice that Thera was an island and a Phoenician colony,
+and it certainly seems more probable that the alphabet was carried to the
+mainland from the islands of the AEgean than that it was disseminated from
+the inland Phoenician settlement at Thebes, as the old legends affirmed.
+In any case, the introduction of the alphabet implies a considerable
+amount of civilizing force on the part of those from whom it was borrowed;
+the teachers from whom an illiterate people learns the art of writing are
+generally teachers from whom it has previously learnt the other elements
+of social culture. A barbarous tribe will use its muscles in the service
+of art before it will use its brains; the smith and engraver precede the
+scribe. If, therefore, the Greeks were unacquainted with writing before
+the ninth century, B.C., objects older than that period may be expected to
+exhibit clear traces of Phoenician influence, though no traces of
+writing.
+
+The other fact to which I allude is the existence of pottery of the same
+material and pattern on all the prehistoric sites of the Greek world,
+however widely separated they may be. We find it, for instance, at Mykenae
+and Tiryns, at Tanagra and Athens, in Rhodes, in Cyprus, and in Thera,
+while I picked up specimens of it in the neighbourhood of the Treasury of
+Minyas and on the site of the Acropolis at Orchomenus. The clay of which
+it is composed is of a drab colour, derived, perhaps in all instances,
+from the volcanic soil of Thera and Melos, and it is ornamented with
+geometrical and other patterns in black and maroon-red. After a time the
+patterns become more complicated and artistic; flowers, animal forms, and
+eventually human figures, take the place of simple lines, and the pottery
+gradually passes into that known as Corinthian or Phoeniko-Greek. It
+needs but little experience to distinguish at a glance this early pottery
+from the red ware of the later Hellenic period.
+
+Phoenicia, Keft as it was called by the Egyptians, had been brought into
+relation with the monarchy of the Nile at a remote date, and among the
+Semitic settlers in the Delta or "Isle of Caphtor" must have been natives
+of Sidon and the neighbouring towns. After the expulsion of the Hyksos,
+the Pharaohs of the eighteenth and nineteenth dynasties carried their arms
+as far as Mesopotamia and placed Egyptian garrisons in Palestine. A
+tomb-painting of Thothmes III. represents the Kefa or Phoenicians, clad
+in richly-embroidered kilts and buskins, and bringing their tribute of
+gold and silver vases and earthenware cups, some in the shape of animals
+like the vases found at Mykenae and elsewhere. Phoenicia, it would seem,
+was already celebrated for its goldsmiths' and potters' work, and the
+ivory the Kefa are sometimes made to carry shows that their commerce must
+have extended far to the east. As early as the sixteenth century B.C.,
+therefore, we may conclude that the Phoenicians were a great commercial
+people, trading between Assyria and Egypt and possessed of a considerable
+amount of artistic skill.
+
+It is not likely that a people of this sort, who, as we know from other
+sources, carried on a large trade in slaves and purple, would have been
+still unacquainted with the seas and coasts of Greece where both slaves
+and the murex or purple-fish were most easily to be obtained. Though the
+Phoenician alphabet was unknown in Greece till the ninth century B.C.,
+we have every reason to expect to find traces of Phoenician commerce and
+Phoenician influence there at least five centuries before. And such
+seems to be the case. The excavations carried on in Thera by MM. Fouque
+and Gorceix,[26] in Rhodes by Mr. Newton and Dr. Saltzmann, and in various
+other places such as Megara, Athens, and Melos, have been followed by the
+explorations of Dr. Schliemann at Hissarlik, Tiryns, and Mykenae, of
+General di Cesnola in Cyprus, and of the Archaeological Society of Athens
+at Tanagra and Spata.
+
+The accumulations of prehistoric objects on these sites all tell the same
+tale, the influence of the East, and more especially of the Phoenicians,
+upon the growing civilization of early Greece. Thus in Thera, where a sort
+of Greek Pompeii has been preserved under the lava which once overwhelmed
+it, we find the rude stone hovels of its primitive inhabitants, with roofs
+of wild olive, filled with the bones of dogs and sheep, and containing
+stores of barley, spelt, and chickpea, copper and stone weapons, and
+abundance of pottery. The latter is for the most part extremely coarse,
+but here and there have been discovered vases of artistic workmanship,
+which remind us of those carried by the Kefa, and may have been imported
+from abroad. We know from the tombs found on the island that the
+Phoenicians afterwards settled in Thera among a population in the same
+condition of civilization as that which had been overtaken by the great
+volcanic eruption. It was from these Phoenician settlers that the
+embroidered dresses known as Theraean were brought to Greece; they were
+adorned with animals and other figures, similar to those seen upon
+Corinthian or Phoeniko-Greek ware.
+
+Now M. Fr. Lenormant has pointed out that much of the pottery used by the
+aboriginal inhabitants of Thera is almost identical in form and make with
+that found by Dr. Schliemann at Hissarlik, in the Troad, and he concludes
+that it must belong to the same period and the same area of civilization.
+There is as yet little, if any, trace of Oriental influence; a few of the
+clay vases from Thera, and some of the gold workmanship at Hissarlik, can
+alone be referred, with more or less hesitation, to Phoenician artists.
+We have not yet reached the age when Phoenician trade in the West ceased
+to be the sporadic effort of private individuals, and when trading
+colonies were established in different parts of the Greek world; Europe is
+still unaffected by Eastern culture, and the beginnings of Greek art are
+still free from foreign interference. It is only in certain designs on the
+terra-cotta discs, believed by Dr. Schliemann to be spindle-whorls, that
+we may possibly detect rude copies of Babylonian and Phoenician
+intaglios.
+
+Among all the objects discovered at Hissarlik, none have been more
+discussed than the vases and clay images in which Dr. Schliemann saw a
+representation of an owl-headed Athena. What Dr. Schliemann took for an
+owl's head, however, is really a rude attempt to imitate the human face,
+and two breasts are frequently moulded in the clay below it. In many
+examples the human countenance is unmistakable, and in most of the others
+the representation is less rude than in the case of the small marble
+statues of Apollo (?) found in the Greek islands, or even of the early
+Hellenic vases where the men seem furnished with the beaks of birds. But
+we now know that these curious vases are not peculiar to the Troad.
+Specimens of them have also been met with in Cyprus, and in these we can
+trace the development of the owl-like head into the more perfect
+portraiture of the human face.[27] In conservative Cyprus there was not
+that break with the past which occurred in other portions of the Greek
+world.
+
+Cyprus, in fact, lay midway between Greece and Phoenicia, and was shared
+to the last between an Aryan and a Semitic population. The Phoenician
+element in the island was strong, if not preponderant; Paphos was a chief
+seat of the worship of the Phoenician Astarte, and the Phoenician
+Kitium, the Chittim of the Hebrews, took first rank among the Cyprian
+towns. The antiquities brought to light by General di Cesnola are of all
+ages and all styles--prehistoric and classical, Phoenician and Hellenic,
+Assyrian and Egyptian--and the various styles are combined together in the
+catholic spirit that characterized Phoenician art.
+
+But we must pause here for a moment to define more accurately what we mean
+by Phoenician art. Strictly speaking, Phoenicia had no art of its own;
+its designs were borrowed from Egypt and Assyria, and its artists went to
+school on the banks of the Nile and the Euphrates. The Phoenician
+combined and improved upon his models; the impulse, the origination came
+from abroad; the modification and elaboration were his own. He entered
+into other men's labours, and made the most of his heritage. The sphinx of
+Egypt became Asiatic, and in its new form was transplanted to Nineveh on
+the one side and to Greece on the other. The rosettes and other patterns
+of the Babylonian cylinders were introduced into the handiwork of
+Phoenicia, and so passed on to the West, while the hero of the ancient
+Chaldean epic became first the Tyrian Melkarth, and then the Herakles of
+Hellas. It is possible, no doubt, that with all this borrowing there was
+still something that was original in Phoenician work; such at any rate
+seems to be the case with some of the forms given to the vases; but at
+present we have no means of determining how far this originality may have
+extended. In Assyria, indeed, Phoenician art exercised a great influence
+in the eighth and seventh centuries B.C.; but it had itself previously
+drawn its first inspiration from the empire of the Tigris, and did but
+give back the perfect blossom to those from whom it had received the seed.
+The workmanship of the ivories and bronze bowls found at Nineveh by Mr.
+Layard is thoroughly Phoenician; but it cannot be separated from that of
+the purely Assyrian pavements and bas-reliefs with which the palaces were
+adorned. The Phoenician art, in fact, traces of which we find from
+Assyria to Italy, though based on both Egyptian and Assyrian models, owed
+far more to Assyria than it did to Egypt. In art, as in mythology and
+religion, Phoenicia was but a carrier and intermediary between East and
+West; and just as the Greek legends of Aphrodite and Adonis, of Herakles
+and his twelve labours, and of the other borrowed heroes of Oriental story
+came in the first instance from Assyria, so did that art and culture which
+Kadmus the Phoenician handed on to the Greek race.
+
+But Assyria itself had been equally an adapter and intermediary. The
+Semites of Assyria and Babylonia had borrowed their culture and
+civilization from the older Accadian race, with its agglutinative
+language, which had preceded them in the possession of Chaldea. So
+slavishly observant were the Assyrians of their Chaldean models that in a
+land where limestone was plentiful they continued to build their palaces
+and temples of brick, and to ornament them with those columns and
+pictorial representations which had been first devised on the alluvial
+plains of Babylonia. To understand Assyrian art, and track it back to its
+source, we must go to the engraved gems and ruined temples of primaeval
+Babylonia. It is true that Egypt may have had some influence on Assyrian
+art, at the time when the eighteenth dynasty had pushed its conquests to
+the banks of the Tigris; but that influence does not seem to have been
+either deep or permanent. Now the art of Assyria is in great measure the
+art of Phoenicia, and that again the art of prehistoric Greece. Modern
+research has discovered the prototype of Herakles in the hero of a
+Chaldean epic composed it may be, four thousand years ago; it has also
+discovered the beginnings of Greek columnar architecture and the germs of
+Greek art in the works of the builders and engravers of early Chaldea.
+
+When first I saw, five years ago, the famous sculpture which has guarded
+the Gate of Lions at Mykenae for so many centuries, I was at once struck by
+its Assyrian character. The lions in form and attitude belong to Assyria,
+and the pillar against which they rest may be seen in the bas-reliefs
+brought from Nineveh. Here, at all events, there was clear proof of
+Assyrian influence; the only question was whether that influence had been
+carried through the hands of the Phoenicians or had travelled along the
+highroad which ran across Asia Minor, the second channel whereby the
+culture of Assyria could have been brought to Greece. The existence of a
+similar sculpture over a rock-tomb at Kumbet in Phrygia might seem to
+favour the latter view.
+
+The discoveries of Dr. Schliemann have gone far to settle the question.
+The pottery excavated at Mykenae is of the Phoenician type, and the clay
+of which is composed has probably come from Thera. The terra-cotta figures
+of animals and more especially of a goddess with long robe, crowned head,
+and crescent-like arms, are spread over the whole area traversed by the
+Phoenicians. The image of the goddess in one form or another has been
+found in Thera and Melos, in Naxos and Paros, in Ios, in Sikinos, and in
+Anaphos, and M. Lenormant has traced it back to Babylonia and to the
+Babylonian representation of the goddess Artemis-Nana.[28] At Tanagra the
+image has been found under two forms, both, however, made of the same clay
+and in the same style as the figures from Mykenae. In one the goddess is
+upright, as at Mykenae, with the _polos_ on her head, and the arms either
+outspread or folded over the breast; in the other she is sitting with the
+arms crossed. Now among the gold ornaments exhumed at Mykenae are some
+square pendants of gold which represent the goddess in this sitting
+posture.[29]
+
+The animal forms most commonly met with are those of the lion, the stag,
+the bull, the cuttle-fish, and the murex. The last two point unmistakably
+to a seafaring race, and more especially to those Phoenician sailors
+whose pursuit of the purple-trade first brought them into Greek seas. So
+far as I know, neither the polypus nor the murex, nor the butterfly which
+often accompanies them have been found in Assyria or Egypt, and we may
+therefore see in them original designs of Phoenician art. Mr. Newton has
+pointed out that the cuttle-fish (like the dolphin) also occurs among the
+prehistoric remains from Ialysos in Rhodes, where, too, pottery of the
+same shape and material as that of Mykenae has been found, as well as beads
+of a curious vitreous substance, and rings in which the back of the chaton
+is rounded so as to fit the finger. It is clear that the art of Ialysos
+belongs to the same age and school as the art of Mykenae; and as a scarab
+of Amenophis III. has been found in one of the Ialysian tombs, it is
+possible that the art may be as old as the fifteenth century B.C.
+
+Now Ialysos is not the only Rhodian town which has yielded prehistoric
+antiquities. Camirus also has been explored by Messrs. Biliotti and
+Saltzmann; and while objects of the same kind and character as those of
+Ialysos have been discovered there, other objects have been found by their
+side which belong to another and more advanced stage of art. There are
+vases of clay and metal, bronze bowls, and the like, which not only
+display high finish and skill, but are ornamented with the designs
+characteristic of Phoenician workmanship at Nineveh and elsewhere. Thus
+we have zones of trees and animals, attempts at the representation of
+scenery, and a profusion of ornament, while the influence of Egypt is
+traceable in the sphinxes and scarabs, which also occur plentifully. Here,
+therefore, at Camirus, there is plain evidence of a sudden introduction of
+finished Phoenician art among a people whose art was still rude and
+backward, although springing from the same germs as the art of Phoenicia
+itself. Two distinct periods in the history of the AEgean thus seem to lie
+unfolded before us; one in which Eastern influence was more or less
+indirect, content to communicate the seeds of civilization and culture,
+and to import such objects as a barbarous race would prize; and another in
+which the East was, as it were, transported into the West, and the
+development of Greek art was interrupted by the introduction of foreign
+workmen and foreign beliefs. This second period was the period of
+Phoenician colonization as distinct from that of mere trading
+voyages--the period, in fact, when Thebes was made a Phoenician
+fortress, and the Phoenician alphabet diffused throughout the Greek
+world. It is only in relics of the later part of this period that we can
+look for inscriptions and traces of writing, at least in Greece proper; in
+the islands and on the coast of Asia Minor, the Cypriote syllabary seems
+to have been in use, to be superseded afterwards by the simpler alphabet
+of Kadmus. For reasons presently to be stated, I would distinguish the
+first period by the name of Phrygian.
+
+Throughout the whole of it, however, the Phoenician trading ships must
+have formed the chief medium of intercourse between Asia and Europe. Proof
+of this has been furnished by the rock tombs of Spata, which have been
+lighted on opportunely to illustrate and explain the discoveries at
+Mykenae. Spata is about nine miles from Athens, on the north-west spur of
+Hymettos, and the two tombs hitherto opened are cut in the soft sandstone
+rock of a small conical hill. Both are approached by long tunnel-like
+entrances, and one of them contains three chambers, leading one into the
+other, and each fashioned after the model of a house. No one who has seen
+the objects unearthed at Spata can doubt for a moment their close
+connection with the Mykenaean antiquities. The very moulds found at Mykenae
+fit the ornaments from Spata, and might easily have been used in the
+manufacture of them. It is more especially with the contents of the sixth
+tomb, discovered by Mr. Stamataki in the _enceinte_ at Mykenae after Dr.
+Schliemann's departure, that the Spata remains agree so remarkably. But
+there is a strong resemblance between them and the Mykenaean antiquities
+generally, in both material, patterns, and character. The cuttle-fish and
+the murex appear in both; the same curious spiral designs, and ornaments
+in the shape of shells or rudely-formed oxheads; the same geometrical
+patterns; the same class of carved work. An ivory in which a lion, of the
+Assyrian type, is depicted as devouring a stag, is but a reproduction of a
+similar design met with among the objects from Mykenae, and it is
+interesting to observe that the same device, in the same style of art, may
+be also seen on a Phoenician gem from Sardinia.[30] Of still higher
+interest are other ivories, which, like the antiquities of Camirus, belong
+rather to the second than to the first period of Phoenician influence.
+One of these represents a column, which, like that above the Gate of
+Lions, carries us back to the architecture of Babylonia, while others
+exhibit the Egyptian sphinx, as modified by Phoenician artists. Thus the
+handle of a comb is divided into two compartments--the lower occupied by
+three of these sphinxes, the upper by two others, which have their eyes
+fixed on an Assyrian rosette in the middle. Similar sphinxes are engraved
+on a silver cup lately discovered at Palestrina, bearing the Phoenician
+inscription, in Phoenician letters, "Eshmun-ya'ar, son of Ashta'."[31]
+Another ivory has been carved into the form of a human side face,
+surmounted by a tiara of four plaits. On the one hand the arrangement of
+the hair of the face, the whisker and beard forming a fringe round it, and
+the two lips being closely shorn, reminds us of what we find at
+Palestrina; on the other hand, the head-dress is that of the figures on
+the sculptured rocks of Asia Minor, and of the Hittite princes of
+Carchemish. In spite of this Phoenician colouring, however, the
+treasures of Spata belong to the earlier part of the Phoenician period,
+if not to that which I have called Phrygian: there is as yet no sign of
+writing, no trace of the use of iron. But we seem to be approaching the
+close of the bronze age in Greece--to have reached the time when the
+lions were sculptured over the chief gateway of Mykenae, and the so-called
+treasuries were erected in honour of the dead.
+
+Can any date be assigned, even approximately, to those two periods of
+Phoenician influence in Greece? Can we localize the era, so to speak, of
+the antiquities discovered at Mykenae, or fix the epoch at which its kings
+ceased to build its long-enduring monuments, and its glory was taken from
+it? I think an answer to these questions may be found in a series of
+engraved gold rings and prisms found upon its site--the prisms having
+probably once served to ornament the neck. In these we can trace a gradual
+development of art; which in time becomes less Oriental and more Greek,
+and acquires a certain facility in the representation of the human form.
+
+Let us first fix our attention on an engraved gold chaton found, not in
+the tombs, but outside the _enceinte_ among the ruins, as it would seem,
+of a house.[32] On this we have a rude representation of a figure seated
+under a palm-tree, with another figure behind and three more in front, the
+foremost being of small size, the remaining two considerably taller and in
+flounced dresses. Above are the symbols of the sun and crescent-moon, and
+at the side a row of lions' heads. Now no one who has seen this chaton,
+and also had any acquaintance with the engraved gems of the archaic period
+of Babylonian art, can avoid being struck by the fact that the intaglio is
+a copy of one of the latter. The characteristic workmanship of the
+Babylonian gems is imitated by punches made in the gold which give the
+design a very curious effect. The attitude of the figures is that common
+on the Chaldean cylinders; the owner stands in front of the deity, of
+diminutive size, and in the act of adoration, while the priests are placed
+behind him. The latter wear the flounced dresses peculiar to the early
+Babylonian priests; and what has been supposed to represent female
+breasts, is really a copy of the way in which the breast of a man is
+frequently portrayed on the cylinders.[33] The palm-tree, with its single
+fruit hanging on the left side, is characteristically Babylonian; so also
+are the symbols that encircle the engraving, the sun and moon and lions'
+heads. The chaton of another gold ring, found on the same spot, is covered
+with similar animal heads. This, again, is a copy of early Babylonian art,
+in which such designs were not unfrequent, though, as they were afterwards
+imitated by both Assyrian and Cyprian engravers, too much stress must not
+be laid on the agreement.[34] The artistic position and age of the other
+ring, however, admits of little doubt. The archaic period of Babylonian
+art may be said to close with the rise of Assyria in the fourteenth
+century B.C.; and though archaic Babylonian intaglios continued to be
+imported into the West down to the time of the Romans, it is not likely
+that they were imitated by Western artists after the latter had become
+acquainted with better and more attractive models. I think, therefore,
+that the two rings may be assigned to the period of archaic Babylonian
+power in western Asia, a period that begins with the victories of
+Naram-Sin in Palestine in the seventeenth century B.C. or earlier, and
+ends with the conquest of Babylon by the Assyrians and the establishment
+of Assyrian supremacy. This is also the period to which I am inclined to
+refer the introduction among the Phoenicians and Greeks of the column
+and of certain geometrical patterns, which had their first home in
+Babylonia.[35] The lentoid gems with their rude intaglios, found in the
+islands, on the site of Heraeum, in the tombs of Mykenae and elsewhere,
+belong to the same age, and point back to the loamy plain of Babylonia
+where stone was rare and precious, and whence, consequently, the art of
+gem-cutting was spread through the ancient world. We can thus understand
+the existence of artistic designs and other evidences of civilizing
+influence among a people who were not yet acquainted with the use of iron.
+The early Chaldean Empire, in spite of the culture to which it had
+attained, was still in the bronze age; iron was almost unknown, and its
+tools and weapons were fashioned of stone, bone, and bronze. Had the
+Greeks and the Phoenicians before them received their first lessons in
+culture from Egypt or from Asia Minor, where the Khalybes and other allied
+tribes had worked in iron from time immemorial, they would probably have
+received this metal at the same time. But neither at Hissarlik nor at
+Mykenae is there any trace of an iron age.
+
+The second period of Western art and civilization is represented by some
+of the objects found at Mykenae in the tombs themselves. The intaglios have
+ceased to be Babylonian, and have become markedly Assyrian. First of all
+we have a hunting scene, a favourite subject with Assyrian artists, but
+quite unknown to genuine Hellenic art. The disposition of the figures is
+that usual in Assyrian sculpture, and, like the Assyrian king, the
+huntsman is represented as riding in a chariot. A comparison of this
+hunting scene with the bas-reliefs on the tombstones which stood over the
+graves shows that they belong to the same age, while the spiral
+ornamentation of the stones is essentially Assyrian. Equally Assyrian,
+though better engraved, is a lion on one of the gold prisms, which might
+have been cut by an Assyrian workman, so true is it to its Oriental model,
+and after this I would place the representation of a struggle between a
+man (perhaps Herakles) and a lion, in which, though the lion and attitude
+of the combatants are Assyrian, the man is no longer the Assyrian hero
+Gisdhubar, but a figure of more Western type. In another intaglio,
+representing a fight between armed warriors, the art has ceased to be
+Assyrian, and is struggling to become native. We seem to be approaching
+the period when Greece gave over walking in Eastern leading-strings, and
+began to step forward firmly without help. As I believe, however, that the
+tombs within the _enceinte_ are of older date than the Treasuries outside
+the Acropolis, or the Gate of Lions which belongs to the same age, it is
+plain that we have not yet reached the time when Assyro-Phoenician
+influence began to decline in Greece. The lions above the gate would alone
+be proof to the contrary.
+
+But, in fact, Phoenician influence continued to be felt up to the end of
+the seventh century B.C. Passing by the so-called Corinthian vases, or the
+antiquities exhumed by General di Cesnola in Cyprus, where the
+Phoenician element was strong, we have numerous evidences of the fact
+from all parts of Greece. Two objects of bronze discovered at Olympia may
+be specially signalized. One of these is an oblong plate, narrower at one
+end than at the other, ornamented with _repousse_ work, and divided into
+four compartments. In the first compartment are figures of the nondescript
+birds so often seen on the "Corinthian" pottery; in the next come two
+Assyrian gryphons standing, as usual, face to face; while the third
+represents the contest of Herakles with the Kentaur, thoroughly Oriental
+in design. The Kentaur has a human forefront, covered, however, with hair;
+his tail is abnormally long, and a three-branched tree rises behind him.
+The fourth and largest compartment contains the figure of the Asiatic
+goddess with the four wings at the back, and a lion, held by the hind leg,
+in either hand. The face of the goddess is in profile. The whole design is
+Assyro-Phoenician, and is exactly reproduced on some square gold plates,
+intended probably to adorn the breast, presented to the Louvre by the Duc
+de Luynes. The other object to which I referred is a bronze dish,
+ornamented on the inside with _repousse_ work, which at first sight looks
+Egyptian, but is really that Phoenician modification of Egyptian art so
+common in the eighth and seventh centuries B.C. An inscription in the
+Aramaic characters of the so-called Sidonian branch of the Phoenician
+alphabet is cut on the outside, and reads: "Belonging to Neger, son of
+Miga."[36] As the word used for "son" is the Aramaic _bar_ and not the
+Phoenician _ben_, we may conclude that the owner of the dish had come
+from northern Syria. It is interesting to find a silver cup embossed with
+precisely the same kind of design, and also bearing an inscription in
+Phoenician letters, among the treasures discovered in a tomb at
+Palestrina, the ancient Praeneste, more than a year ago. This inscription
+is even briefer than the other: "Eshmunya'ar son of 'Ashta,"[37] where,
+though _ben_ is employed, the father's name has an Aramaic form. Helbig
+would refer these Italian specimens of Phoenician skill to the
+Carthaginian epoch, partly on the ground that an African species of ape
+seems sometimes represented on them;[38] in this case they might be as
+late as the fifth century before the Christian era.
+
+During the earlier part of the second period of Phoenician influence,
+Phoenicia and the Phoenician colonies were not the only channel by
+which the elements of Assyrian culture found their way into the West. The
+monuments and religious beliefs of Asia Minor enable us to trace their
+progress from the banks of the Euphrates and the ranges of the Taurus,
+through Cappadocia and Phrygia, to the coasts and islands of the AEgean.
+The near affinity of Greek and Phrygian is recognized even by Plato;[39]
+the legends of Midas and Gordius formed part of Greek mythology, and the
+royal house of Mykenae was made to come with all its wealth from the golden
+sands of the Paktolus; while on the other hand the cult of Ma, of Attys,
+or of the Ephesian Artemis points back to an Assyrian origin. The
+sculptures found by Perrot[40] and Texier constitute a link between the
+prehistoric art of Greece and that of Asia Minor; the spiral ornaments
+that mark the antiquities of Mykenae are repeated on the royal tombs of
+Asia Minor; and the ruins of Sardis, where once ruled a dynasty derived by
+Greek writers from Ninus or Nineveh, "the son of Bell," the grandson of
+the Assyrian Herakles,[41] may yet pour a flood of light on the earlier
+history of Greece. But it was rather in the first period, which I have
+termed Phrygian, than in the second, that the influence of Asia Minor was
+strongest. The figure of the goddess riding on a leopard, with mural crown
+and peaked shoes, on the rock-tablets of Pterium,[42] is borrowed rather
+from the cylinders of early Babylonia than from the sculptures of Assyria;
+and the Hissarlik collection connects itself more with the primitive
+antiquities of Santorin than with the later art of Mykenae and Cyprus. We
+have already seen, however, the close relationship that exists between
+some of the objects excavated at Mykenae and what we may call the
+pre-Phoenician art of Ialysos,--that is to say, the objects in which the
+influence of the East is indirect, and not direct. The discovery of
+metallurgy is associated with Dodona, where the oracle long continued to
+be heard in the ring of a copper chaldron, and where M. Karapanos has
+found bronze plates with the geometrical and circular patterns which
+distinguish the earliest art of Greece; now Dodona is the seat of primaeval
+Greek civilization, the land of the Selloi or Helloi, of the Graioi
+themselves, and of Pelasgian Zeus, while it is to the north that the
+legends of Orpheus, of Musaeus, and of other early civilizers looked back.
+But even at Dodona we may detect traces of Asiatic influence in the part
+played there by the doves, as well as in the story of Deucalion's deluge,
+and it may, perhaps, be not too rash to conjecture that even before the
+days of Phoenician enterprise and barter, an echo of Babylonian
+civilization had reached Greece through the medium of Asia Minor, whence
+it was carried, partly across the bridge formed by the islands of the
+Archipelago, partly through the mainland of Thrace and Epirus. The
+Hittites, with their capital at Carchemish, seem to have been the centre
+from which this borrowed civilization was spread northward and westward.
+Here was the home of the art which characterizes Asia Minor, and we have
+only to compare the bas-relief of Pterium with the rock sculptures found
+by Mr. Davis associated with "Hamathite" hieroglyphics at Ibreer, in
+Lycaonia,[43] to see how intimate is the connection between the two. These
+hieroglyphics were the still undeciphered writing of the Hittite tribes
+and if, as seems possible, the Cypriote syllabary were derived from them,
+they would be a testimony to the western spread of Hittite influence at a
+very early epoch. The Cypriote characters adopted into the alphabets of
+Lycia and Karia, as well as the occurrence of the same characters on a
+hone and some of the terra-cotta discs found by Dr. Schliemann at
+Hissarlik, go to show that this influence would have extended, at any
+rate, to the coasts of the sea.
+
+The traces of Egyptian influence, on the contrary, are few and faint. No
+doubt the Phoenician alphabet was ultimately of Egyptian origin, no
+doubt, too, that certain elements of Phoenician art were borrowed from
+Egypt, but before these were handed on to the West, they had first been
+profoundly modified by the Phoenician settlers in the Delta and in
+Canaan. The influence exercised immediately by Egypt upon Greece belongs
+to the historic period; the legends which saw an Egyptian emigrant in
+Kekrops or an Egyptian colony in the inhabitants of Argos were fables of a
+late date. Whatever intercourse existed between Egypt and Greece in the
+prehistoric period was carried on, not by the Egyptians, but by the
+Phoenicians of the Delta; it was they who brought the scarabs of a
+Thothmes or an Amenophis to the islands of the AEgean, like their
+descendants afterwards in Italy, and the proper names found on the
+Egyptian monuments of the eighteenth and nineteenth dynasties, which
+certain Egyptologists have identified with those of Greece and Asia Minor,
+belong rather, I believe, to Libyan and Semitic tribes.[44] Like the
+sphinxes at Spata, the indications of intercourse with Egypt met with at
+Mykenae prove nothing more than the wide extent of Phoenician commerce
+and the existence of Phoenician colonies at the mouths of the Nile.
+Ostrich-eggs covered with stucco dolphins have been found not only at
+Mykenae, but also in the grotto of Polledrara near Vulci in Italy; the
+Egyptian porcelain excavated at Mykenae is painted to represent the fringed
+dress of an Assyrian or a Phoenician, not of an Egyptian; and though a
+gold mask belonging to Prince Kha-em-Uas, and resembling the famous masks
+of Mykenae, has brought to the Louvre from an Apis chamber, a similar mask
+of size was discovered last year in a tomb on the site of Aradus. Such
+intercourse, however, as existed between Greece and the Delta must have
+been very restricted; otherwise we should surely have some specimens of
+writing, some traces of the Phoenician alphabet. It would not have been
+left to the Aramaeans of Syria to introduce the "Kadmeian letters" into
+Greece, and Mykenae, rather than Thebes, would have been made the centre
+from which they were disseminated. Indeed, we may perhaps infer that even
+the coast of Asia Minor, near as it was to the Phoenician settlements at
+Kamirus and elsewhere, could have held but little intercourse with the
+Phoenicians of Egypt from the fact that the Cypriote syllabary was so
+long in use upon it, and that the alphabets afterwards employed were
+derived only indirectly from the Phoenician through the medium of the
+Greek.
+
+One point more now alone needs to be noticed. The long-continued influence
+upon early Greek culture which we ascribe to the Phoenicians cannot but
+have left its mark upon the Greek vocabulary also. Some at least of the
+names given by the Phoenicians to the objects of luxury they brought
+with them must have been adopted by the natives of Hellas. We know that
+this is the case with the letters of the alphabet; is it also the case
+with other words? If not, analogy would almost compel us to treat the
+evidences that have been enumerated of Phoenician influence as illusory,
+and to fall back upon the position of O. K. Mueller and his school. By way
+of answer I would refer to the list of Greek words, the Semitic origin of
+which admits of no doubt, lately given by Dr. August Mueller in
+Bezzenberger's "Beitrage zur Kunde der indogermanischen Sprachen."[45]
+Amongst these we find articles of luxury like "linen," "shirt,"
+"sackcloth," "myrrh," and "frankincense," "galbanum" and "cassia,"
+"cinnamon" and "soap," "lyres" and "wine-jars," "balsam" and "cosmetics,"
+as well, possibly, as "fine linen" and "gold," along with such evidences
+of trade and literature as the "pledge," "the writing tablet," and the
+"shekel." If these were the only instances of Semitic tincture, they would
+be enough to prove the early presence of the Semitic Phoenicians in
+Greece. But we must remember that they are but samples of a class, and
+that many words borrowed during the heroic age may have dropped out of use
+or been conformed to the native part of the vocabulary long before the
+beginning of the written literature, while it would be in the lesser known
+dialects of the islands that the Semitic element was strongest. We know
+that the dialect of Cyprus was full of importations from the East.
+
+In what precedes I have made no reference to the Homeric poems, and the
+omission may be thought strange. But Homeric illustrations of the presence
+of the Phoenicians in Greece will occur to every one, while both the
+Iliad and the Odyssey in their existing form are too modern to be quoted
+without extreme caution. A close investigation of their language shows
+that it is the slow growth of generations; AEolic formulae from the lays
+first recited in the towns of the Troad are embodied in Ionic poems where
+old Ionic, new Ionic, and even Attic jostle against one another, and
+traditional words and phrases are furnished with mistaken meanings or new
+forms coined by false analogy. It is difficult to separate the old from
+the new, to say with certainty that this allusion belongs to the heroic
+past, this to the Homer of Theopompus and Euphorion, the contemporary of
+the Lydian Gyges. The art of Homer is not the art of Mykenae and of the
+early age of Phoenician influence; iron is already taking the place of
+bronze, and the shield of Akhilles or the palace of Alkinous bear witness
+to a developed art which has freed itself from its foreign bonds. Six
+times are Phoenicia and the Phoenicians mentioned in the Odyssey, once
+in the Iliad;[46] elsewhere it is Sidon and the Sidonians that represented
+them, never Tyre.[47] Such passages, therefore, cannot belong to the epoch
+of Tyrian supremacy, which goes back, at all events, to the age of David,
+but rather to the brief period when the Assyrian king Shalmaneser laid
+siege to Tyre, and his successor Sargon made Sidon powerful at its
+expense. This, too, was the period when Sargon set up his record in
+Cyprus, "the isle of Yavnan" or the Ionians, when Assyria first came into
+immediate contact with the Greeks, and when Phoenician artists worked at
+the court of Nineveh and carried their wares to Italy and Sardinia. But it
+was not the age to which the relics of Mykenae, in spite of paradoxical
+doubts, reach back, nor that in which the sacred bull of Astarte carried
+the Phoenician maiden Europa to her new home in the west.
+
+ A. H. SAYCE, in _Contemporary Review_.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[24] See E. Curtins: Die griechische Goetterlehre vom geschichtlichen
+Standpunkt, in _Preussische Jahrbucher_, xxxvi. pp. 1-17. 1875.
+
+[25] _Contemporary Review_, January, 1878.
+
+[26] See Fouque's Mission Scientifique a l'ile de Santorin (Archives des
+Missions 2e serie, iv. 1867); Gorceix in the Bulletin de l'Ecole francaise
+d'Athenes, i.
+
+[27] See, for example, Di Cesnola's _Cyprus_, pp. 401, 402.
+
+[28] _Gazette Archeologique_, ii-. 1, 3.
+
+[29] See Schliemann's Mycenae and Tiryns, pl. 273.
+
+[30] Given by La Marmora in the Memorie della Reale Academia delle Scienze
+di Torino (1854), vol. xiv., pl. 2, fig. 63.
+
+[31] Given in the Monumenti d. Instituto Romano, 1876.
+
+[32] Schliemann: Mycenae and Tiryns, p. 530.
+
+[33] See, for instance, the example given in Rawlinson's Ancient
+Monarchies (1st edit.), i. p. 118, where the flounced priest has what
+looks like a woman's breast. Dancing boys and men in the East still wear
+these flounces, which are variously coloured (see Loftus: Chaldea and
+Susiana, p. 22; George Smith: Assyrian Discoveries, p. 130).
+
+[34] See, for example, Layard: Nineveh and Babylon, pp. 604, 606; Di
+Cesnola: Cyprus, pl. 31, No. 7; pl. 32, No. 19. A copy of the Mykenaean
+engraving is given in Schliemann's Mycenae and Tiryns, pl. 531.
+
+[35] More especially the examples in Rawlinson's Ancient Monarchies, iii.
+p. 403, and i. 413. For Mykenaean examples see Schliemann's Mykenae and
+Tiryns, ppl. 149, 152, &c. Some of the more peculiar patterns from Mykenae
+resemble the forms assumed by the "Hamathite" hieroglyphics in the
+unpublished inscription copied by Mr. George Smith from the back of a
+mutilated statue at Jerablus (Carchemish).
+
+[36] LNGR. BR. MIGA'.
+
+[37] ASHMNYA'R. BNA' SHTA.
+
+[38] Annali d. Istituto Romano, 1876.
+
+[39] Kratylus, 410 A.D.
+
+[40] Exploration Archeologique de la Galatie et de la Bithynie.
+
+[41] See Herodotus, i.7.
+
+[42] Texier: Description de l'Asie Mineure, i. 1, pl. 78.
+
+[43] Transactions of the Society of Biblical Archaeology, iv. 2, 1876.
+
+[44] I have given the reasons of my scepticism in the _Academy_, of May
+30, 1874. Brugsch Bey, the leading authority on the geography of the
+Egyptian monuments, would now identify those names with those tribes in
+Kolkhis, and its neighbourhood.
+
+[45] i. pp. 273-301 (1877).
+
+[46] _Phoenicia_, Od. iv. 83; xiv. 291. _Phoenicians_, Od. xiii. 272; xv.
+415. _A Phoenician_, Od. xiv. 288. _A Phoenician woman_, Od. xiv. 288; Il.
+xiv. 321.
+
+[47] _Sidon_, _Sidonia_, Il. vi. 291; Od. xiii. 285; xv. 425. _Sidonians_,
+Il. vi. 290; Od. iv. 84, 618; xv. 118.
+
+
+
+
+SOME GOSSIP ABOUT LEICESTER SQUARE.
+
+
+In old-world London, Leicester Square played a much more important part
+than it does to-day. It was then the chosen refuge of royalty and the home
+of wit and genius. Time was when it glittered with throngs of
+lace-bedizened gallants; when it trembled beneath the chariot-wheels of
+Beauty and Fashion; when it re-echoed with the cries of jostling chairmen
+and link-boys; when it was trodden by the feet of the greatest men of a
+great epoch--Newton and Swift, Hogarth, Sir Joshua Reynolds, and a host of
+others more or less distinguished. Mr. Tom Taylor, in his interesting work
+entitled "Leicester Square," tells us that the vicissitudes of a London
+quarter generally tend downwards through a regular series of decades. It
+is first fashionable; then it is professional; then it becomes a favourite
+locality for hotels and lodging-houses; then the industrial element
+predominates, and then not infrequently a still lower depth is reached.
+Leicester Square has been no exception to this rule. Its reputation in
+fact was becoming very shady indeed, when the improvement of its central
+inclosure gave it somewhat of a start upwards and turned attention to its
+early history.
+
+Of old, many of these grand doings took place at Leicester House, which
+was the first house in the Square. It was built by Robert Sidney, Earl of
+Leicester, a staunch Royalist, somewhere about 1636. His sons, Viscount
+Lisle and the famous Algernon Sidney, grew up less of Royalists than he
+was; and to Leicester House, with the sanction and welcome of its head,
+came many of the more prominent Republicans of the day, Vane and Neville,
+Milton and Bradshaw, Ludlow and Lambert. The cream of history lies not so
+much in a bare notation of facts as in the little touches of nature and
+manners which reproduce for us the actual human life of a former age, and
+much of this may be gleaned from the history of the Sidneys. They were an
+interesting family, alike from their rank, their talents, their personal
+beauty, and the vicissitudes of their fortunes. The Countess was a clever
+managing woman; and her letters to her absent lord when ambassador in
+France convey to us many pleasant details of the home-life at Leicester
+House. Still more charming is it to read the pretty little billets
+addressed to the Earl by his elder girls. Of these six beautiful daughters
+of the house of Sidney, four were married and two died in the dawn of
+early womanhood. Of the younger of these, Lady Elizabeth, the father has a
+touching entry in his journal. After narrating her death, he adds: "She
+had to the last the most angelical countenance and beauty, and the most
+heavenly disposition and temper of mind that I think were ever seen in so
+young a creature."
+
+With her death the merry happy family life at Leicester House drew to a
+close. The active bustling mother, whose influence had brought the
+different jarring chords into harmony, died a few mouths afterwards; and
+the busy years as they sped onwards, while consummating the fall of
+Charles and consolidating the power of Cromwell, also put great and
+growing disunion between the Sidney brothers. At the Restoration, Algernon
+was in exile; Lord Lisle's stormy temper had alienated him from his
+father; the Earl's favourite son-in-law was dead; of the three who
+remained he was neither proud nor fond; and lonely and sick at heart, he
+grew weary of the splendid home from which the fair faces of his handsome
+children had gone for ever, and made preparations to leave it. He was
+presented to Charles II.; and immediately afterwards retired to Penshurst
+in Kent; and Leicester House was let, first to the ambassadors of the
+United Provinces; and then to a more remarkable tenant, Elizabeth Stewart,
+the ill-fated Princess and Queen of Bohemia. She had left England in 1613
+a lovely happy girl, the bride of the man she loved, life stretching all
+rainbow-hued before her. She returned to it a weary haggard woman of
+sixty-five, who had drunk to the dregs of every possible cup of
+disappointment and sorrow. Her presence was very unwelcome, as that of the
+unfortunate often is. Charles II., her nephew, was very loath indeed to
+have the pleasure of receiving her as a guest; but she returned to London
+whether he would or not, and Leicester house was taken for her. There she
+languished for a few months in feeble and broken health, and there, on the
+anniversary of her wedding-day, she died.
+
+The house immediately to the west of Leicester House belonged to the
+Marquis of Aylesbury; but in 1698 it was occupied by the Marquis of
+Caermarthen, who was appointed by King William III. cicerone and guide to
+Peter the Great when he came in the January of that year to visit England.
+Peter's great qualities have long been done full justice to; but in the
+far-off January of 1698 he appeared to the English as by no means a very
+august-looking potentate; he had the manners and appearance of an unkempt
+barbarian, and his pastimes were those of a coal-heaver. His favourite
+exercise in the mornings was to run a barrow through and through Evelyn's
+trim holly-hedges at Deptford; and the state in which he left his pretty
+house there is not to be described. His chief pleasure, when the duties of
+the day were over, was to drink all night with the Marquis in his house at
+Leicester Fields, the favourite tipple of the two distinguished topers
+being brandy spiced with pepper; or sack, of which the Czar is reported to
+have drunk eight bottles one day after dinner. Among other sights in
+London, the Marquis took him to see Westminster Hall in full term. "Who
+are all these men in wigs and gowns?" he asked. "Lawyers," was the answer.
+"Lawyers!" he exclaimed. "Why, I have only two in my dominions, and when I
+get back, I intend to hang one of them."
+
+In January 1712 Leicester House, which was then occupied by the imperial
+resident, received another distinguished visitor in the person of Prince
+Eugene, one of the greatest captains of the age. In appearance he was a
+little sallow wizened old man, with one shoulder higher than the other. A
+soldier of fortune, whose origin was so humble as to be unknown, his
+laurels were stained neither by rapacity nor self-seeking; and in all the
+vicissitudes of his eventful life he bore himself like a hero, and a
+gentleman in the truest and fullest acceptation of the word. Dean Swift
+was also at this time in lodgings in Leicester Fields, noting with clear
+acute unpitying vision the foibles and failings of all around him, and
+writing to Stella from time to time after his cynical fashion, "how the
+world is going mad after Prince Eugene, and how he went to court also, but
+could not see him, the crowd was so great."
+
+A labyrinth of courts, inns, and stable-yards had gradually filled up the
+space between the royal mews and Leicester Fields; and between 1680 and
+1700 several new streets were opened through these; one reason for the
+opening of them being the great influx of French refugees into London, on
+the occasion of the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685. Many of
+these exiles settled in and around Leicester Fields, and for their use
+several chapels were built. The neighbourhood has ever since been a resort
+of French immigrants.
+
+In one of these streets opening into Leicester Square, St. Martin's
+Street, Sir Isaac Newton lived for the last sixteen years of his life. The
+house in which he lived looks dingy enough now; but in those days it was
+considered a very good residence indeed, and Like Leicester House was
+frequented by the best company in the fashionable world. The genius and
+reputation of its master attracted scientific and learned visitors; and
+the beauty of his niece, Mrs. Catharine Barton, drew to her feet all the
+more distinguished wits and beaux of the time.
+
+Between 1717 and 1760 Leicester House became what Pennant calls "the
+pouting-place of princes," being for almost all that time in the
+occupation of a Prince of Wales who was living in fierce opposition to the
+reigning king. In 1718 the Prince of Wales having had a furious quarrel
+with his father George I., on the occasion of the christening of the
+Prince's son George William, left St. James's, and took Leicester House at
+a yearly rent of five hundred pounds; and until he succeeded to the throne
+in 1727, it was his town residence.
+
+Here he held his court--a court not by any means strait-laced; a gay
+little court at first; a court whose selfish intrigues and wild frolics
+and madcap adventures and humdrum monotony live for us still in the
+sparkling pages of Horace Walpole; or are painted in with vivid clearness
+of touch and execution, but with a darker brush, by Hervey, Pope's Lord
+Fanny, who was a favourite with his mistress the handsome accomplished
+Caroline, Princess of Wales. Piloted by one or other of these exact
+historians, we enter the chamber of the gentlewomen-in-waiting, and are
+introduced to the maids-of-honour, to fair Mary Lepell, to charming Mrs.
+Bellenden, to pensive, gentle Mrs. Howard. We see them eat Westphalia ham
+of a morning, and then set out with their royal master for a
+helter-skelter ride over hedges and ditches, on borrowed hacks. No wonder
+Pope pitied them; and on their return, who should they fall in with but
+that great poet himself! They are good to him in their way, these saucy
+charming maids-of-honour, and so they take the frail little man under
+their protection and give him his dinner; and then he finishes off the
+day, he tells us, by walking three hours in the moonlight with Mary
+Lepell. We can imagine the affected compliments he paid her and the
+burlesque love he made to her; and the fun she and her sister
+maids-of-honour would have laughing over it all, when she went back to
+Leicester House and he returned to his pretty villa at Twickenham.
+
+As the Prince grew older his court became more and more dull, till at last
+it was almost deserted, when on the 14th of June 1727 the loungers in its
+half-empty chambers were roused by sudden news--George I. was dead; and
+Leicester House was thronged by a sudden rush of obsequious courtiers,
+among whom was the late king's prime-minister, bluff, jolly, coarse Sir
+Robert Walpole. No one paid any attention to him, for every one knew that
+his disgrace was sealed; the new king had never been at any pains to
+conceal his dislike to him. Sir Robert, however, knew better; he was quite
+well aware who was to be the real ruler of England now; and he knew that
+the Princess Caroline had already accepted him, just as she accepted La
+Walmoden and her good Howard; and so all alone in his corner he chuckled
+to himself as he saw the crowd of sycophants elbow and jostle and push
+poor Lady Walpole as she tried to make her way to the royal feet. Caroline
+saw it too, and with a flash of half-scornful mischief lighting up her
+shrewd eyes, said with a smile: "Sure, there I see a friend." Instantly
+the human stream parted, and made way for her Ladyship.
+
+In 1728 Frederick, the eldest son of George and Caroline, arrived from
+Hanover, where he had remained since his birth in 1707. It was a fatal
+mistake; he came to England a stranger to his parents, and with his place
+in their hearts already filled by his brother. It was inevitable that
+where there was no mutual love, distrust and alienation should come, as in
+no long time they did, with the result that the same pitiful drama was
+played out again on the same stage. In 1743 Frederick Prince of Wales took
+Leicester House and held his receptions there. He was fond of gaiety, and
+had a succession of balls, masques, plays, and supper-parties. His tastes,
+as was natural considering his rearing, were foreign, and Leicester House
+was much frequented by foreigners of every grade. Desnoyers the
+dancing-master was a favourite habitue, as was also the charlatan
+St-Germain. In the midst of all this fiddling and buffoonery the Prince
+fell ill; but not so seriously as to cause uneasiness to any one around
+him; consequently all the world was taken by surprise when he suddenly
+died one morning in the arms of his friend the dancing-master. After his
+death his widow remained at Leicester House, and like a sensible woman as
+she was, made her peace with the king her father-in-law, who ever
+afterwards shewed himself very kind and friendly to her.
+
+In October 1760 George III. was proclaimed king; and again a crowd of
+courtiers thronged to Leicester House to kiss the hand of the new
+sovereign. For six years longer the Princess of Wales continued to live at
+Leicester House; and there in 1765 her youngest son died, and the
+following year she removed to Carlton House.
+
+While the quarrel between George II. and Frederick was at its fiercest,
+the central inclosure of Leicester Square was re-arranged very elegantly
+according to the taste of the day; and an equestrian statue of George I.,
+which had belonged to the first Duke of Chandos and had been bought at the
+sale of his effects, was set up in front of Leicester House, where it
+remained, a dazzling object at first, in all the glory of gilding, which
+passed with the populace for gold; but latterly a most wretched relic of
+the past, an eyesore, which was removed in 1874 in the course of Baron
+Grant's improvements.
+
+Leicester Square had other tenants beside Sir Isaac Newton, compared with
+whom courtiers and gallants and fine gentlemen and ladies look very small
+indeed. Hogarth lived in this street, and so did Sir Joshua Reynolds.
+Hogarth's house was the last but two on the east side of the Square. Here
+he established himself, a young struggling man, with Jane Thornhill, the
+wife with whom he had made a stolen love-match. In this house, with the
+quaint sign of the Golden Head over the door, he worked, not as painters
+generally do, at a multitude of detached pieces, but depicting with his
+vivid brush a whole series of popular allegories on canvas. When he became
+rich, as in process of time he did, he had a house at Chiswick; but he
+still retained the Golden Head as his town-house, and in 1764 returned to
+it to die.
+
+In No. 47 Sir Joshua Reynolds lived, and painted those charming portraits
+which have immortalised for us all that was most beautiful and famous in
+his epoch. He was a kindly genial lovable man, fond of society, and with a
+liking for display. He had a wonderful carriage, with the four seasons
+curiously painted in on the panels, and the wheels ornamented with carved
+foliage and gilding. The servants in attendance on this chariot wore
+silver-laced liveries; and as he had no time to drive in it himself, he
+made his sister take a daily airing in it, much to her discomfort, for she
+was a homely little lady with very simple tastes. He was a great dinner
+giver; and as it was his custom to ask every pleasant person he met
+without any regard to the preparation made to receive them, it may be
+conjectured that there was often a want of the commonest requisites of the
+dinner-table. Even knives, forks, and glasses could not always be procured
+at first. But although his dinners partook very much of the nature of
+unceremonious scrambles, they were thoroughly enjoyable. Whatever was
+awanting, there was always cheerfulness and the pleasant kindly
+interchange of thought. In July 1792 Sir Joshua died in his own house in
+Leicester Square; and within a few hours of his death, an obituary notice
+of him was written by Burke, the manuscript of which was blotted with his
+tears.
+
+In No. 28, on the eastern side of the Square, the celebrated anatomist
+John Hunter lived. Like most distinguished men of the day, he sat to Sir
+Joshua Reynolds for his portrait; but was so restless and preoccupied that
+he made a very bad sitter. At last one day he fell into a reverie. The
+happy moment had come; Sir Joshua, with his instinctive tact, caught the
+expression and presented to us the great surgeon in one of his most
+characteristic attitudes. The other celebrated surgeons, Cruickshank and
+Charles Bell, also lived in this Square. The house in which Bell resided
+for many years was large and ruinous, and had once been inhabited by
+Speaker Onslow. Here he set up his Museum, and began to lecture on
+anatomy, having for a long time, he writes, scarcely forty pupils to
+lecture to.
+
+During all the later portion of its history Leicester Square has been
+famous for shows. In 1771 Sir Ashton Lever exhibited a large and curious
+Museum in Leicester House. In 1796 Charles Dibdin built at Nos. 2 and 3,
+on the east side of Leicester Square, a small theatre in which he gave an
+entertainment consisting of an interesting medley of anecdote and song. In
+1787 Miss Linwood opened her gallery of pictures in needlework, an
+exhibition which lasted forty-seven years, for the last thirty-five of
+which it was exhibited at Savile House, a building which was destroyed by
+fire in 1865.
+
+After Miss Linwood's, one of the best shows in Leicester Square was
+Burford's Panorama, which is now numbered with the things that were, its
+site being occupied by a French chapel and school. In 1851 a new show was
+inaugurated by Mr. Wylde the geographer. It consisted of a monster globe
+sixty feet in diameter, which occupied the central dome of a building
+erected in the garden of the Square. The world was figured in relief on
+the inside of it, and it was viewed from several galleries at different
+elevations. It was exhibited for ten years, and was then taken down by its
+proprietor, owing to a dispute concerning the ownership of the garden. Out
+of this case, which was decided in 1867, the proceedings originated which
+resulted in the purchase and renovation of the garden by Baron Grant, who
+having once more made it trim and neat, handed it over to the Board of
+Works.--_Chambers's Journal._
+
+
+
+
+A WOMAN'S LOVE.
+
+A SLAVONIAN STUDY.
+
+
+Those races that have not undergone the beneficial and domesticating
+influences of civilisation, and that are isolated from the more cultured
+nations, possess to an excess the different qualities or impulses inherent
+to our nature. Amongst the emotions that move the heart of man, love is
+certainly the one that has the greatest empire over him; it rules the soul
+so imperiously that all the other passions are crushed by it. It makes
+cowards of the bravest men, and gives courage to the timid. Love is,
+indeed, the great motive-power of life.
+
+Our passions and our emotions are, however, more subdued than those of the
+semi-civilised nations; for, in the first place, we undergo the softening
+influences of education, and secondly, we are more or less under the
+restraint of the rules which govern society. Besides this, our mind is
+usually engrossed by the numerous cares which our state of living
+necessitates; for we are not like them, contented with little; on the
+contrary, instead of being satisfied with what is necessary, we require
+luxuries and superfluities, the procurement of which takes up a
+considerable portion of our energy and our mental activity.
+
+The Slavonians, and more especially those belonging to the southern
+regions, such as the Dalmatians and Montenegrins, are, as a general rule,
+very passionate; ardent in their affections, they are likewise given to
+anger, resentment, and hatred, the generic sister passion of love.
+
+The Slavonian women are, however, not indolent, nor do they ever indulge
+in idle dreams; for they are not only occupied with the household cares,
+but they also take a share, and not the smallest or the slightest, of
+those toils which in other countries devolve upon the men alone. They
+therefore, in the manly labours of the field, not only get prematurely
+old, but they hardly ever possess much grace, slenderness, or delicate
+complexions. No Slavonian woman, for instance, is ever _mignonne_. They,
+in compensation, acquire in health, and perhaps in real aesthetic beauty of
+proportions, what they lose in prettiness or delicacy of appearance,
+consequently they never suffer from vapours or from the numerous nervous
+complaints to which the generality of our ladies are subjected; the
+natural result of this state of things is _mens sana in corpore sano_;
+this is doubtless the reason why Slavonian women are, as a general rule,
+fond mothers and faithful wives.
+
+They are certainly not endowed with that charming refinement, the
+_morbidezza_ of manners which but too often is but a mask covering a
+morbid selfish disposition, a hypocritical and false nature. Though
+ignorant, they are neither void of natural good sense nor wit; they only
+want that smattering of worldly knowledge which the contact of society
+imparts, and which but too often covers nothing but frivolity, gross
+ignorance, and conceit. Their conversation is, perhaps, not peculiarly
+attractive; for being simple and artless, speech was not given to them as
+a means of disguising their thoughts; their lips only disclose the
+fullness of their hearts. Conversation is, besides, a gift conferred to
+few; and even in our polite circles not many persons can converse in an
+interesting manner, and fewer can be witty without backbiting; moreover,
+if man were suddenly to become transparent, would he not have to blush for
+the frivolous demonstrations of friendship daily interchanged in our
+artificial state of society?
+
+The different amusements that absorb so much of our time and occupy our
+minds are unknown in Slavonian countries; the daily occupations and the
+details of the toilet do not captivate the whole attention; so that when a
+simple affection is awakening in the heart of a man or of a woman, it by
+degrees pervades the whole soul and the whole mind, and a strong and
+ardent passion usually ensues. Moreover, amongst those simple-minded
+sincere people flirtations are generally unknown; yet when they do love,
+their affections are genuine; they never exchange amongst each other those
+false coins bearing Cupid's effigy, and known as coquetry; for their lips
+only utter what their hearts really feel. People there do not delight in
+playing with the fire of love, or trying how far they can with impunity
+make game of sentiments which should be held sacred. Amongst the virile
+maidens of Slavonia many of them therefore have virgin hearts, that is to
+say, artless souls, fresh to all the tender sentiments; the reason of this
+is, that from the age of fifteen they do not trifle with their affections
+until they have become so callous and sceptical that marriage is merely
+wealth or a position in life. Men do not first waste away all the tender
+emotions which the human heart is capable of, and then settle down into a
+_mariage de raison_.
+
+The following story, which happened about a century ago, will serve as an
+illustration of the power of love amongst the Slavonians; it is, indeed, a
+kind of repetition of the fate which attended the lovers of Sestos and
+Abydos. This, however, is no legend, but an historical fact; the place
+where this tragedy happened was the island of St. Andrea, situated between
+those of Malfi and Stagno, not far from the town of Ragusa.
+
+Though no Musaeus has immortalised this story by his verses, it is,
+however, recorded in the "Revista Dalmata" (1859), in the "Annuario
+Spalatino" of the same year, as well as other Slavonian periodicals.
+
+The hero of this story, whose Christian name was Teodoro, belonged to one
+of the wealthiest patrician families of Ragusa, his father being, it is
+said, Rector of the Republic. He was a young man of a grave character, but
+withal of a gentle and tender disposition; he not only possessed great
+talents, but also great culture, for his time was entirely given up to
+study.
+
+One day, the young patrician having gone from the island of St. Andrea,
+where he had been staying at the Benedictine convent, to one of the other
+two neighboring islands, he in the evening wished to return to his abode.
+He met upon the beach a young girl who was carrying home some baskets of
+fish. Having asked her if she knew of anybody who would take him across to
+the island of St. Andrea, the young girl proffered her services, which the
+young and bashful patrician reluctantly accepted.
+
+The young girl was as beautiful, as chaste, and as proud as the Arrabiata
+of Paul Heyse; and for the first time Teodoro felt a new and vague feeling
+awake in his bosom. He began to talk to the girl, asking her a thousand
+questions about herself, about her home; and the young girl doubtless told
+him that she was an orphan, and that she lived with her brothers. Instead
+of returning to his family, the young nobleman remained at the Benedictine
+convent, with the purpose of studying in retirement; his mind, however,
+was not entirely engrossed by his books, and his visits to the island
+where Margherita lived daily became more frequent.
+
+The love which had kindled in his heart found an echo in the young girl's
+bosom, and instead of endeavouring to suppress their feelings they yielded
+to the charms of this saintly affection, to the rapture of loving and
+being loved. In a few days their mutual feelings had made such progress
+that the young man promised the _barcarinola_ to marry her. His noble
+character and his brave spirit made him forget that he could not with
+impunity break the laws of the society amongst which he lived; for that
+society, which would have smiled had he seduced the young girl and made
+her his mistress, would nevertheless have been scandalised had he taken
+her for his lawful wife.
+
+Peccadilloes are overlooked, and it is almost better in high life to be a
+knave than a fool; it was, indeed, a quixotic notion for a patrician to
+marry a plebeian, an unheard of event in the annals of the aristocratic
+republic of Ragusa. The difficulties which our hero was to encounter were
+therefore insurmountable.
+
+In the midst of his thoughtless happiness our young lover was suddenly
+summoned back to his home; for whilst Teodoro was supposed to be deeply
+engaged in his studies his father, without the young man's knowledge, and
+not anticipating any opposition, promised his son in marriage to the
+daughter of one of his friends, a young lady of great wealth and beauty.
+This union had, it is true, been concerted when the children were mere
+babes, and it had until then been a bond between the two families. The
+young lady being now of a marriageable age, and having concentrated all
+her affections on the young man she had always been taught to regard as
+her future husband, she now looked forward with joy for the anticipated
+event.
+
+Teodoro was therefore summoned back home to assist at a great festivity
+given in honour of his betrothal; he at once hastened back to Ragusa, in
+order to break off the engagement contracted for him. Vainly, however, did
+he try to remonstrate, first with his father and then with his mother. He
+avowed that he had no inclination for matrimony, that he felt no love for
+this young lady, nothing but a mere brotherly affection, and that he could
+not cherish her as his wife; he found, nevertheless, both his parents
+inexorable. It was too late; the father had given his word to his friend;
+a refusal would prove an insult, which would provoke a rupture between
+these two families; no option was left but to obey.
+
+Teodoro thereupon retired to his own room, where he remained in the
+strictest confinement, refusing to see any one. The evening of that
+eventful day, the guests were assembled; the bride and her family had
+already arrived; the bridegroom, nevertheless, was missing. This was
+indeed a strange breach of good manners, and numerous comments were
+whispered from ear to ear. The father sent at last a peremptory order to
+his undutiful son to come at once to him. The young man ultimately made
+his appearance, attired like Hamlet at his stepfather's court, in a suit
+of deep mourning, whilst his long hair, which formerly fell in ringlets
+over his shoulders, was all clipped short. In this strange accoutrement he
+came to acquaint his father before the whole assembly that he had decided
+to forego the pleasure, the pomp and vanity of this world, to renounce
+society, and take up his abode in a convent, where he intended passing his
+days in study and meditation.
+
+The scene of confusion which followed this unexpected declaration can be
+imagined. The guests all wished to retire: the first person, however, to
+leave the house was Teodoro, expelled by his father and bearing with him
+the paternal malediction. Thus this day of anticipated joy ended in
+disappointment and humiliation. The discarded bride was borne away by her
+parents, and it is said that her delicate health never recovered from this
+unexpected blow.
+
+That very night the young man retired to the Benedictine convent upon the
+island of St. Andrea, with the firm resolution of passing his life in holy
+seclusion. When a few days had passed, his love proved, nevertheless,
+stronger than his will, and he could not refrain from going to see his
+Margherita, and informing her of all that had happened, telling her that
+he had been driven from home, and that he had taken refuge at the convent,
+where he intended passing his life in a state of holy celibacy.
+Notwithstanding all his good intentions, the sight of the young girl
+proved too great a temptation, her beauty overcame his resolutions, and he
+swore to her that he would brave his parents' opposition, as well as the
+anger of his caste, and that he would marry her in spite of his family and
+of the whole world.
+
+He thus continued seeing this young girl, till at last the fishermen, her
+brothers, having found out why this young patrician visited the island so
+often, severe and jealous like all their countrymen, they waylaid him, and
+threatened to kill him if he were once more caught upon these shores. The
+prior of the Benedictines, finding besides that his _protege_, far from
+coming to seek peace and tranquillity within the walls of his convent,
+was, on the contrary, an object of scandal, expressed his intention to
+expel him, should he not discontinue his visits to the neighbouring
+island, and reform.
+
+Every new difficulty seemed to give fresh courage to the lovers; they
+would have fled from their native country and their persecutors, but they
+knew that they would be overtaken, brought back, and punished; so they
+decided to wait some time until the wrath of their enemies had abated, and
+the storm had blown over.
+
+As Teodoro could not go any more to see the young girl, it was Margherita
+who now came to visit her lover; to evade, however, the suspicion of her
+brothers, and that of the friars, they only met in the middle of the
+night, and as they always changed their place of meeting, a lighted torch
+was the signal where the young girl was to direct her bark. There were
+nights, nevertheless, when she could not obtain a boat; yet this was no
+obstacle to her brave spirit, for upon those nights, she, like Leander,
+swam across the channel, for nothing could daunt this heroic woman's
+heart.
+
+These ill-fated lovers were happy notwithstanding their adverse fortune,
+for the sacred fire of love which burnt within them was bliss enough to
+compensate for all their woes. Their days were passed in anxious
+expectation for the hour which was to unite them on the sea-shore, amidst
+the darkness of the night. There clasped in one another's arms, the world
+and its inhabitants existed no longer for them; those were moments of
+ineffable rapture, in which it seemed impossible to drain the whole
+chalice of happiness; moments in which time and eternity are confounded,
+instants only to be appreciated by those who have known the infinite bliss
+of loving and being loved. Their souls seemed to leave their bodies, blend
+together and soar into the empyreal spaces, the regions of infinite
+happiness; for them all other sentiments passed away, and nothing was felt
+but an unmitigated love.
+
+The dangers which encompassed them, their loneliness upon the rocky
+shores, the stillness of the night, only served to heighten their joy and
+exultation, for a pleasure dearly bought is always more keenly felt.
+
+Their happiness was, however, not to be of long duration; such felicity is
+celestial; on this earth,
+
+ "Les plus belles choses
+ Ont le pire destin."
+
+Margherita's brothers, knowing the power of love, watched their sister,
+and at last found out that when the young nobleman had ceased coming, it
+was she who by night visited the Island of St. Andrea, and they resolved
+to be revenged upon her. They bided their time, and upon a dark and stormy
+night, the fishermen, knowing that their sister would not be intimidated
+by the heavy sea, went off with the boat and left her to the mercy of the
+waves. The young girl, unable to resist the impulse of her love,
+recommended herself to the Almighty, and bravely plunged into the waters.
+Her treacherous brothers, having watched her movements, plied their oars
+and directed their course towards the island; they landed, went and took
+the lighted torch from the place where it was burning, and fastened it to
+the prow of their boat; having done this, they slowly rowed away into the
+open sea.
+
+Margherita, as usual, swam towards the beacon-light of love, but that
+night all her efforts were useless--the faster she swam, the greater was
+the distance that separated her from that _ignis-fatuus_ light; doubtless
+she attributed this to the roughness of the sea, and took courage, hoping
+soon to reach that blessed goal.
+
+A flash of lightning, which illumined the dark expanse of the waters, made
+her at last perceive her mistake; she saw the boat towards which she had
+been swimming, and also the island of St. Andrea far behind her. She at
+once directed her course towards it, but there, in the midst of darkness,
+she struggled with the wild waves, until, overpowered by fatigue, she gave
+up all hopes of rejoining her beloved one, and sank down in the briny
+deep.
+
+The cruel sea that separated the lovers was, however, more merciful than
+man, for upon the morrow the waves themselves softly deposited the
+lifeless body of the young girl upon the sand of the beach.
+
+The nobleman, who had passed a night of most terrible anxiety, found at
+daybreak the corpse of the girl he loved. He caused it to be committed to
+the earth, after which he re-entered within the walls of the convent, took
+the Benedictine dress, and spent the rest of his life pining in grief.
+
+ ADRIAN DE VALVEDERE, in _Tinsley's Magazine_.
+
+
+
+
+AN IMPERIAL PARDON.
+
+
+During a journey through some parts of Russia a few years ago, we engaged,
+in preference to the imperial post-chaise, a private conveyance for a
+considerable distance, the driver being a Jew--generally preferred in the
+East on account of their sobriety and general trustworthiness. On the road
+my companion became communicative, and entered into philosophic-religious
+discussion--a topic of frequent occurrence among these bilingual
+populations. After a somewhat desultory harangue, he suddenly became
+silent and sad, having just uttered the words: "If a Chassid goes astray,
+what does he become? A meschumed, _i.e._ an apostate."--"To what class of
+people do you allude?" I inquired.--"Well, it just entered my head,
+because we have to pass the house of one of them--I mean the 'forced
+ones.'"--"Forced!" I thought of a religious sect. "Are they Christians or
+Jews?"--"Neither the one nor the other," was the reply, "but simply
+'forced.' Oh, sir, it is a great misery and a great crime! Our children at
+least will not know anything of it, because new victims do not arise, and
+on the marriage of these parties rests a curse--they remain sterile! But
+what am I saying? It is rather a blessing--a mercy! Should thus a
+terrible misery be perpetuated? These forced people are childless. Well,
+God knows best. I am a fool, a sinner to speak about it." No entreaty of
+mine would induce my Jewish companion to afford further information
+concerning this peculiar people. But before the end of our journey I heard
+unexpectedly more about this unfortunate class of Russian subjects. We
+travelled westward through the valley of the Dniester, a district but
+thinly peopled, and rested at an inn on the borders of an extensive
+forest.
+
+Amidst the raillery going on in the principal room of this hostelry
+between guests of different nationalities, we had not heard the noise of
+wheels which slowly moved towards the house. It was a very poor
+conveyance, containing a small cask and a basket. The young hostess arose
+hastily, and, approaching the owner, said in a whisper, "What is it you
+want?" A slight paleness overspread her countenance, and stranger still
+was the demeanour of my coachman. "Sir, sir!" he exclaimed loudly, turning
+towards me, stretching out his hands as if seeking support, or warding off
+some impending danger. "What is the matter?" I rejoined, greatly
+surprised: but he merely shook his head, and stared at the new comer.
+
+He was an elderly peasant, attired in the usual garb of the
+country-people; only at a more close inspection I noticed that he wore a
+fine white shirt. Of his face I could see but little, it being hidden
+behind the broad brim of his straw hat.
+
+"Hostess," he said, addressing the young woman, "will you purchase
+something of me? I have some old brandy, wooden spoons and plates,
+pepper-boxes, needle-cases, &c., all made of good hard wood, and very
+cheap." In an almost supplicating tone he uttered these words very slowly,
+with downcast eyes. From his pronunciation he appeared to be a Pole.
+
+The hostess looked shyly up to him.
+
+"You know my brother-in-law has forbidden me to have dealings with you,"
+she said hesitatingly, "on account of your wife; but to-day he is not at
+home." After a momentary silence, turning towards the driver, she
+continued, "Reb Ruessan, will you betray me? You come frequently this way."
+In reply he merely shrugged his shoulders and moved away. Turning again
+with some impatience to the peasant, she said, "Bring me a dish and two
+spoons." When he had gone to fetch these articles, the woman once more
+accosted my coachman.
+
+"You must not blame me; they are very poor people!"
+
+"Certainly they are very poor"--he replied in a milder tone. "During life,
+hunger and misery, and after death--hell! and all undeserved!" But the man
+stood already, at this utterance, with his basket in the room. The bargain
+was soon concluded, and the few copeks paid. Curiosity prompted me to step
+forward and examine the merchandise.
+
+"I have also cigar-cases," said the peasant, humbly raising his hat. But
+his face was far more interesting than his wares. You rarely see such
+features! However great the misery on earth, this pale, pain-stricken
+countenance was unique in its kind, revealing yet traces of sullen
+defiance, and the glance of his eyes moved instantly the heart of the
+beholder--a weary, almost fixed gaze, and yet full of passionate mourning.
+
+"You are a Pole!" I observed after a pause.
+
+"Yes," he replied.
+
+"And do you live in this neighbourhood?"
+
+"At the inn eight werst from here. I am the keeper."
+
+"And besides wood-carver?"
+
+"We must do the best we can," was his reply. "We have but rarely any
+guests at our house."
+
+"Does your hostelry lie outside the main road?"
+
+"No, close to the high road, sir. It was at one time the best inn between
+the Bug and the Dniester. But now carriers do not like to stay at our
+house."
+
+"And why not?"
+
+"Because they consider it a sin--especially the Jews." Suddenly, with
+seeming uneasiness and haste, he asked, "Will you purchase anything? This
+box, perhaps. Upon the lid is engraved a fine country-house."
+
+Attracted by the delicate execution, I inquired, "And is this your own
+workmanship?"
+
+"Yes," was his reply.
+
+"You are an artist! And pray where did you learn wood-engraving?"
+
+"At Kamieniec-Poddski."
+
+"At the fortress?"
+
+"Yes, during the insurrection of 1863."
+
+"Were you among the insurgents?"
+
+"No, but the authorities feared I might join them--hence I and the other
+forced ones were incarcerated in the fortress when the insurrection broke
+out, and again set free when it was suppressed."
+
+"Without any cause?"
+
+"Without the slightest. I was already at that time a crushed man. When yet
+a youth the marrow of my bones had been poisoned in the mines of Siberia.
+During the whole time of my settlement, I have been since 1858 keeper of
+that inn; I gave the authorities no cause for suspicion, but I was a
+'forced man,' and that sufficed for pouncing upon me."
+
+"Forced! what does it mean?"
+
+"Well, a person forced to accept, when to others free choice is
+left--domicile, trade or calling, wife and religion."
+
+"Terrible!" I exclaimed. "And you submitted?" A little smile played around
+his thin lips.
+
+"Are you so much moved at my fate? We generally bear very easily the most
+severe pains endured by others."
+
+"That is a saying of Larochefoucauld," I said, somewhat surprised. "Have
+you read him?"
+
+"I was at one time very fond of French literature. But pardon my acrimony.
+I am but little accustomed to sympathy, and indeed of what avail would it
+be to me now!" He stared painfully at the ground, and I also became
+silent, convinced that any superficial expression of sympathy would, under
+the circumstances, be downright mockery.
+
+A painful pause ensued, which I broke with the question, if he had worked
+the engraving upon the lid of the box after a pattern.
+
+"No, from memory," was his rejoinder.
+
+"It is a peculiar kind of architecture!"
+
+"It is like all gentlemen's houses in Littauen; only the old tree is very
+striking. It was a very old house."
+
+"Has been? Does it exist no longer?"
+
+"It was burnt down seven years ago by the Russians, after they had first
+ransacked it. They evidently were not aware that they destroyed their own
+property. It had been confiscated years before, and had been Crown
+property since 1848."
+
+"And have you yet the outlines of the building so firmly engraved on your
+memory?"
+
+"Of course! it was my birth-place, which I had rarely left until I was
+eighteen years old. Such things are not easily forgotten. And although
+more than twenty years have passed since this sad affair, hardly a day
+passed on which I did not think of my paternal home. I was aware of the
+death of my mother, and that my cousin was worse than dead--perhaps I
+ought to have rejoiced when the old mansion was burnt to the ground; but
+yet I could not suppress a tear when the news reached me. There is hardly
+anything on earth which can now move me." I record literally what the
+unfortunate man related. My Jewish coachman, not easily impressed, had
+during the conversation crept gradually nearer, and shook his head
+seriously and sorrowfully.
+
+"Excuse me, Pani Walerian," he interrupted: "upon my honour, yours is a
+sad story!" He launched out into practical politics, and concluded thus:
+
+"A Pole is not as clever as I am. If he (the Pole) was the equal of the
+Russian, well and good, fight it out; but the Russian is a hundred times
+stronger; therefore, Pani Walerian, why irritate him, why confront him?"
+
+I could not help laughing at these remarks; but the poor "forced one"
+remained unmoved; and only after some silence, he observed, turning
+towards me:
+
+"I have never even confronted the Russians. I merely received the
+punishment of the criminal, without being one, or venturing my all in my
+people's cause. I was very young, when I was transported to
+Siberia--little more than nineteen years old. My father had died early. I
+managed our small property, and a cousin of mine, a pretty girl, sixteen
+years old, lived at our house. Indeed, I had no thoughts of politics. It
+is true I wore the national costume, perused our poets, especially
+Mickiewicz and Slowaski, and had on the wall of my bedroom a portrait of
+Kosciuszko. For such kind of high treason even the Russian Government
+would not have crushed me in ordinary times--but it was the year 1848.
+'Nicolai Pawlowitch' had not sworn in vain that if the whole of Europe was
+in flames, no spark should arise in his empire--and by streams of blood
+and tears, he achieved his object. Wherever a young Polish noble lived who
+was suspected of revolutionary tendencies, repeated domiciliary searches
+were made; and if only a single prohibited book was found, the dread fiat
+went forth, 'To Siberia with him!'
+
+"In my own case it came like a thunderbolt. I was already in Siberia, and
+could not yet realize my misery. During the whole long journey I was more
+or less delirious. I hoped for a speedy liberation, for I was altogether
+innocent, and at that time," he continued with a bitter smile, "I yet
+believed in God. When all hope became extinct, I began madly to rave, but
+finally settled down utterly crushed and callous. It was a fearful
+state--for weeks together, all my past life seemed a complete blank, at
+most I still remembered my name. This, sir, is literally true: Siberia is
+a very peculiar place."
+
+The poor fellow had sunk down upon a bench, his hands rested powerless in
+his lap. I never have seen a face so utterly worn and pain-stricken. After
+a while he continued:
+
+"Ten years had thus passed away; at least, I was told so--I had long
+ceased to count the days of my misery. For what purpose should I have done
+so?
+
+"I had sunk so low that I felt no pity even for my terrible condition. One
+day I was brought before the Inspector, together with some of my
+companions. This official informed us that we had been pardoned on
+condition of becoming colonists in New Russia. The mercy of the Czar would
+assign to each of us a place of residence, a trade, and a lawful wife, who
+would be also a pardoned convict. We must of course, in addition, be
+converted to the Orthodox Greek Church. This latter stipulation did but
+little concern us. We readily accepted the conditions, for the people are
+glad of leaving Siberia, no matter whither, even to meet death itself. And
+had we not been pardoned? Alexander Nikolajewitch is a gracious lord. In
+Siberia the mines are over-crowded, and in South Russia the steppes are
+empty! Oh, he is a philanthropist! decus et deliciae generis humani! But
+perhaps I wrong him. We entered upon our long journey, and proceeded
+slowly south-west. In about eight months we reached Mohilew. Here we were
+only kept in easy confinement, and above all, brought under the influence
+of the pope. This was a rapid proceeding. One morning we were driven
+together into a large room, about one hundred men, and an equal number of
+women. Presently the priest entered; a powerful and dirty fellow, who
+appeared to have invigorated himself for his holy work with a considerable
+dose of gin, for we could smell it at least ten paces off, and he had some
+difficulty in keeping upon his legs.
+
+"'You ragamuffins!' he stammered; 'you vermin of humanity! you are to
+become Orthodox Christians; but surely I shall not take much trouble with
+you. For, what do you think I get per head? Ten copeks, you vermin! ten
+copeks per head. Who will be a missionary at such pay? I certainly do it
+to-day for the last time! Indeed, our good father Alexander Nikolajewitch
+caused one rouble to be set in the tariff; but that rascal, the director,
+pockets ninety copeks, and leaves only ten for me. To-day, however, I have
+undertaken your conversion, because I am told there are many of you. Now
+listen! you are now Catholics, Protestants, Jews! That is sad mistake; for
+every Jew is a blood-sucker, every Protestant a dog, and every Catholic a
+pig. Such is their lot in life--but after death? carrion, my good people,
+carrion! And will Christ have mercy on them at the last day? Verily no! He
+will not dream of such a thing! And until then? Hell-fire! Therefore, good
+people, why should you suffer such torments? Be converted! Those who agree
+to become Orthodox Christians, keep silent; those who demur, receive the
+knout and go back to Siberia. Wherefore, my dear brothers and sisters, I
+ask, will you become Orthodox Christians?'
+
+"We remained silent.
+
+"'Well,' continued the priest, 'now pay attention! Those who are already
+Christians need only to lift up the right hand, and repeat after me the
+creed. That will soon be done. But with the damned Jews one has always a
+special trouble--the Jews I must first baptise. Jews, step forward!--the
+other vermin can remain where they now are.' In this solemn manner the
+ceremony was brought to a conclusion.
+
+"On the day following," M. Walerian continued, "the second act was
+performed: the selection of a trade. This act was as spontaneous as our
+religious conversion; only, some individual regard became here
+indispensable. Three young Government officials were deputed to record our
+wishes, and to comply with them as far as the exigencies of the case
+admitted. The official before whom I appeared was very juvenile. Though
+externally very polished, he was in reality a frightfully coarse and cruel
+youth, without a spark of human feeling, so far as we were concerned. We
+afforded him no small amount of merriment. This youth inquired carefully
+concerning our wishes, and invariably ordered the very opposite. Among us
+was a noble lady from Poland, of very ancient lineage, very feeble and
+miserable, whose utter helplessness might well inspire the most callous
+heart with respect and compassion. The lady was too old to be married to
+one of the 'forced ones,' and was therefore asked to state what kind of
+occupation she desired. She entreated to be employed in some school for
+daughters of military officers, there being a demand for such service; but
+the young gentleman ordered her to go as laundress to the barracks at
+Mohilew! An aged Jew had been sent to Siberia for having smuggled
+prohibited books across the frontiers. He had been the owner of a printing
+establishment, and was well acquainted with the business. 'Could he not be
+employed in one of the Imperial printing offices; and if possible,' urged
+the aged man, 'be permitted to reside in a place where few or no Jews
+lived?' He had under compulsion changed his religion; to which he was yet
+fervently attached, and trembled at the thought that his former
+co-religionists would none the less avoid him as an apostate. The young
+official noted down his request, and made him a police agent at Miaskowka,
+a small town in the government district of Podolien, almost exclusively
+inhabited by Jews. Another, a former schoolmaster, in the last stages of
+consumption, begged on his knees to be permitted to die quietly in some
+country village. 'That is certainly a modest request!' observed this
+worthless youth; and sent him as a waiter to a hospital. Need I tell how I
+fared? Being misled, like the rest, by the hypocritical air and seeming
+concern of this rascal, I made known to him my desire to obtain the post
+of under-steward at some remote Crown estate, where I might have as little
+intercourse as possible with my fellow-men. And thus, sir, I became the
+keeper of the small inn on a much-frequented highway!"
+
+The unfortunate man arose suddenly, and paced the room in a state of great
+excitement.
+
+"But now comes the best of all," he exclaimed, with a desperate
+effort--"the last act, the choice of a wife." Again an internal struggle
+overpowered the unhappy narrator--a sudden and heavy tear rolled down his
+care-worn cheek, evidently caused by the remembrance of this abominable
+transaction. "It was a terrible ordeal," he said. "Sir, sir," he continued
+after a momentary pause, "since the sun has risen in our horizon, he has
+shone on many a cruel game which the mighty of the earth have played with
+the helpless, but a more abominable farce has hardly ever been enacted
+than the one I am now relating--the manner in which we unfortunate people
+were coupled together. In my youth I read how Carrier at Nantes murdered
+the Royalists; how he caused the first best man to be tied with a rope to
+a woman, and carried down the Loire in a boat. In the middle of the river
+a trap-door was suddenly opened, and the unfortunate couple disappeared in
+the waves. But that monster was an angel compared with the officials of
+the Czar; and these republican marriages were a benevolent act in
+comparison with those we were forced to conclude. At Nantes, the victims
+were tied together for a mutual death; we for our mutual lives!... On a
+subsequent morning we were once more ushered into the room where our
+conversion had taken place. There were present about thirty men and an
+equal number of women. Together with the latter entered the official who
+had so considerately ordered our lot as regards a livelihood.
+
+"'Ladies and gentlemen,' he commenced with a nasal twang, 'his Majesty has
+graciously pardoned you, and desires to see you all happy. Now, the lonely
+man is seldom a happy man; and hence you are to marry. Every gentleman is
+free to select a partner, provided of course the lady accepts the choice.
+And in order that none of you gentlemen may be placed in the invidious
+position of having to select a partner unworthy of him, supreme
+benevolence has ordered that an adequate number of ladies, partly from
+penal settlements and partly from houses of correction, should be now
+offered you. As his Majesty's solicitude for your welfare has already
+assigned you an occupation, you may now follow unhesitatingly the
+promptings of your own hearts in the choice of a wife. Ladies and
+gentlemen, yours is the happy privilege to realise the dream of a purely
+socialistic marriage. Make, then, your selection without delay; and as
+"all genuine love is instantaneous, sudden as a lightning flash, and soft
+as the breezes of spring"--to use the words of our poet Lermontoff--I
+consider one hour sufficient. Bear also in mind that marriages are
+ratified in heaven, and trust implicitly to your own heart. I offer you
+beforehand, ladies and gentlemen, my congratulations.'
+
+"After this address, the young rascal placed his watch in front of him on
+the table, sat down, and grinned maliciously at our helpless condition.
+The full measure of scorn implied in this speech but few of us entirely
+realised, for we were in truth a curious assembly. The most extravagant
+imagination could hardly picture more glaring contrasts! Side by side with
+the bestial Bessarabian herdsman, who in a fit of intoxication had slain
+the whole of his family, stood the highly cultivated professor from Wilna,
+whom the love of his country and of freedom had consigned to the mines of
+Siberia; the most desperate thief and shoplifter from Moscow, and the
+Polish nobleman who at the height of his misfortunes still regarded his
+honour as the most precious treasure, the ex-professor from Charkow, and
+the Cossac-robber from the Don; the forger from Odessa, &c. On my own
+right hand stood a thief and deserter from Lipkany, and on the left a
+Baschkire, who had been pardoned at the foot of the gallows, though he had
+once assisted in roasting alive a Jewish family in a village inn. A madly
+assorted medley of human beings! And the women! The dissolute female
+gladly released from the house of correction, because she still more
+depraved her already degraded companions, associated with the unfortunate
+Polish lady, whose pure mind had never been poisoned by a vulgar word, and
+whose quiet happiness had not been disturbed by any prospect of
+misfortune, until a single letter, or act of charity to an exiled
+countryman, brought her into misery. Pressing against the young girl whose
+sole offence consisted in being the unfortunate offspring of a mother sent
+to Siberia, might be seen the infamous hag who had habitually decoyed
+young girls to ruin, in whose soul every spark of womanhood had long been
+extinguished. And these people were called upon to marry; and one hour was
+granted them in which to become acquainted and assorted! Sir, you will now
+perhaps comprehend my emotion in relating this shocking business!
+
+"I consider it the most shocking and at the same time the most curious
+outrage which has ever been committed." The "forced" man paused, a deadly
+pallor suffused his countenance, and his agitation was great. The young
+hostess appeared perfectly stunned, whilst Reb Ruessan, the coachman, bent
+his head in evident compassion.
+
+After a while M. Walerian continued in a calmer mood. "It must certainly
+have been an entertaining spectacle to notice the behaviour of this
+ill-assorted people at that trying hour. Even the barefaced monster on his
+raised dais betrayed a feverish excitement: he would suddenly jump from
+his chair, and again recline, playing the while nervously with his
+fingers. I am hardly able to describe the details, being not altogether
+unbiassed at this dreadful hour.
+
+"I only know we stood at first in two distinct groups, and for the first
+few moments after the official announcement, not a glance was exchanged
+between the two sexes, much less a word spoken. A deep silence reigned in
+the room, a death-like stillness, varied only by an occasional deep sigh,
+or a nervous movement. The minutes passed, certainly not many, but they
+seemed to me an eternity!
+
+"Suddenly a loud hoarse voice exclaimed, 'Up, my lads! here are some very
+pretty mates!' We all recognised the notorious thief from Moscow, a
+haggard withered fellow, with the ugliest face I ever beheld. He crossed
+over to the women and examined in his way which would be the most
+desirable partner. Here he received an indignant push, and there an
+impudent alluring glance. Others, again--the better part--recoiled from
+the approach of the brute. He was followed by the Baschkire, who like a
+clumsy beast of prey drew nigh, muttering incoherently, 'I will have a fat
+woman, the fattest among them.' From his approach even the ugliest and
+most impudent instinctively recoiled--this wooer was really too hideous,
+at best only suited to a monkey. The third in order who came forward was
+the Don-Cossac, a pretty slender youth. An impudent lass jauntily met him
+and fell on his neck; but he pushed her aside, and walked towards the girl
+who had murdered her child. The discarded female muttered some insulting
+words, and hung the next moment on my own neck. I shook her off, and she
+repeated the attempt with my neighbour, and again unsuccessfully.
+
+"Her example became contagious: presently the more shameless of the women
+made an onslaught on the men. Ten minutes later the scene had changed. In
+the centre of the room stood a number of men and women engaged in eager
+negotiation--shouting and scolding. The parties who had already agreed
+retired to the window-niches, and here and there a man pulled an
+unfortunate woman, making desperate efforts to escape from him. The
+females who yet retained a spark of womanhood crept into a corner of the
+room; and in another recess were three of us--the ex-professor, Count S.,
+and myself. We had instinctively come together, watching with painful
+emotion this frantic spectacle, not inclined to participate in it. To me
+at least the thought of selecting a wife here never occurred.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"'Another half an hour at your disposal, ladies and gentlemen,' exclaimed
+our official tormentor; 'twenty minutes--yet fifteen minutes!'
+
+"I stood as if rooted to the ground, my knees trembled, my agitation
+increased, but I remained motionless. Indeed, as often as I heard the
+unpleasant voice of the official, the blood rushed to my head, but I
+advanced not one step. My excitement increased--profound disgust, bitter
+despair--the wildest indignation which perhaps ever pierced a poor human
+heart. 'No,' I said; 'I must assert the dignity of my manhood!' I was
+determined not to make the selection of a wife under the eyes of this man.
+Another impulse I could hardly suppress--viz. to throw myself upon this
+imperial delegate and strangle him. And if I finally abstained from an act
+of violence, it was because I yet loved life, and wished not to end it on
+the gallows. Sir," continued M. Walerian, "the source of great misery on
+earth is this overpowering instinct of self-preservation; without it, I
+should be freed this day from all my misery. Thus I stood, so to speak, at
+bay in my corner, using all my efforts to subdue the evil spirit within
+me. My looks most probably betrayed me--for when my eyes met those of the
+official, I noticed an involuntary shudder. A moment afterwards he
+regarded me with a sly and malignant glance. I turned aside and closed my
+eyes on this harassing scene.
+
+"'Yet five minutes, ladies and gentlemen! Those as yet undecided must
+speed themselves, and unburden their heart, or I shall be compelled by
+virtue of my office to tie them together. And although I shall do so
+conscientiously, and to the best of my knowledge, there is this risk--that
+you engage in a marriage of mere convenience, instead of one of free
+choice and inclination.'
+
+"Though my agitation reached its climax, I made no move. I considered
+myself an accomplice in this disgraceful outrage, if I within the allotted
+five minutes declared my heart and made a choice. But another thought
+flashed across my mind: 'I may still be able to prevent the worst. Who
+knows with whom that rascal may couple me if I remain altogether passive?
+Choose for yourself!'--I made a step forward--a mist seemed before my
+eyes--my heart beat wildly--I staggered, I sought figures in order to
+distinguish and recognise myself.
+
+"Sir," exclaimed the narrator with a sudden yell, "what scenes did I see
+there? I am no coward, but I--I dare not venture to speak of it. Thus I
+moved forward; hardly two minutes passed, but days would not suffice to
+relate what passed during these terrible moments through my heart and
+brain. I noticed in a corner a fainting woman, a young and delicate
+creature. I learnt afterwards that she was an orphan child, born of a
+dissolute woman in a penal settlement. A coarse fellow with cunning eyes
+bent over her, endeavouring to raise her from the ground. I suddenly
+pounced upon the fellow, struck him a heavy blow, and carried the
+unconscious woman away as if a mere child. I determined to defend her to
+the last. But no rescue was attempted, though the forger shook his fists
+at me, but had seemingly not the courage to approach nearer. Gazing about
+him, another female embraced him, a repulsive woman. He looked at her
+somewhat abashed, but soon submitted to her caresses.
+
+"'Ladies and gentlemen! the allotted hour has passed,' said the official.
+'I must beg the parties to come forward and make known to me their choice.
+This may be repugnant to some of you, but my duties prescribe it. I
+especially request the gentlemen in yonder corner to advance'--pointing to
+myself and the forger. I clenched my fists involuntarily, but stepped
+forward with the fainting woman. 'Cossacks, keep your "Kantschu" in
+readiness,' said the official to the guard which surrounded him. Turning
+first to me, he said: "And are you, sir, resolved to carry the woman you
+now hold in your arms, not only in this room, but through life?' I nodded
+assent. 'And what have you to say, damsel?' The poor creature was as yet
+unconscious. 'She is in a swoon,' I replied. 'In that case I am sorry,'
+continued the official, 'to have to refuse in his Majesty's name my
+consent to your union. In the interests of humanity, I require an audible
+yes from all parties. I have watched attentively the whole proceedings,'
+continued the official--'not from mere curiosity, but partly as a duty,
+and partly out of pure sympathy--and I can assure you, sir, without
+disparagement to your claims, that the choice of the young lady you now
+hold in your arms fell not upon you, but upon the gentleman yonder,'
+pointing to the forger. 'It was probably the excess of happiness at this
+selection which caused her fainting. For you there is waiting an adequate
+recompense--that ripe, desirable beauty who now only reluctantly holds the
+arm of your rival. Therefore, changez, Messieurs!' 'Scoundrel!' I
+exclaimed, and advanced to seize him. But ere I could lay hold of him, a
+fearful blow on my head stretched me stunned and bleeding to the ground.
+When I had somewhat recovered, our marriage procession was in progress of
+formation. The woman whom the official had assigned to me knelt at my
+side, bathing my head, endeavouring to revive me. 'I like you,' she
+observed, 'and will treat you well.' She raised me to my feet, placed her
+arm in mine, and pushed me in the ranks of the procession, which moved
+slowly towards the church. On our road a heavy hand seized me suddenly by
+the collar. 'Brother,' grunted a coarse voice in my ear, 'your stout woman
+takes my fancy. Will you change with me? Mine is certainly less corpulent,
+but younger in years.'
+
+"It was the man behind me--the Baschkire. The female whom he dragged along
+was a lean, ugly, dark-complexioned woman, swooning or near a swoon. An
+expression of unutterable despair overspread her features, rendering them,
+if possible, yet more ugly. 'A woman who can suffer so intensely as this
+one unquestionably does, cannot be without a heart--is not altogether
+depraved, no matter what cause brought her here.' These reflections
+determined me. 'She is preferable to the woman at my side. Done!' I
+whispered to the Baschkire. Just crossing the threshold of the church, a
+momentary pause ensued, during which we effected the exchange; not without
+a murmur, however, on the part of my intended wife. But the Baschkire kept
+her quiet; and a closer inspection of her new partner seemed to satisfy
+her. The poor woman I led forward seemed hardly aware of the exchange, she
+was so entirely absorbed in her grief. We were married. The official only
+afterwards became aware of what had happened, but could not now undo it.
+But I had to suffer for it--terrible was the punishment."
+
+Not another word was uttered by the unfortunate man. Quite overcome by the
+recital of his cruel fate, he suddenly arose and left the house.
+
+On account of the approach of the Jewish Sabbath, my coachman urged on our
+journey. Half an hour later, we passed the lonely and desolate hostelry of
+poor M. Walerian, the exile of Siberia, who owed so much to imperial
+clemency.--F. A. S., _in Belgravia_.
+
+
+
+
+CHRISTMAS IN MOROCCO.
+
+
+"To-morrow Christmas for Moros!" said the gentle Hamed, our Moorish
+servant, entering the room soon after the bang of the last sunset gun of
+Ramadan had shaken our windows, and the thick smoke of the coarse Moorish
+powder had floated away, temporarily obscuring the gorgeous hues bestowed
+by the retiring luminary on the restless waters of the South Atlantic.
+
+"To-morrow Christmas for Moros! In the morning Hamed clean house, go for
+_soko_; then all day no _trabally_; have new _haik_, new slippers, walk
+about all same _tejjer_."
+
+By which little speech our faithful attendant meant to convey that
+to-morrow's rejoicing at the termination of the long and irksome fast of
+Ramadan was equivalent to the "Ingleez's" Christmas, and that, after
+putting the house in order and bringing the provisions from the _soko_, or
+market, he would do no more _trabally_, or work--the word being a
+corruption of the Spanish _trabajo_--but would don the new _haik_ and
+bright yellow slippers for which he had long been saving up, and to the
+purchase of which certain little presents from the children of our
+household had materially contributed; and would be entitled, by
+prescriptive holiday right, to "take his walks abroad" with the _dolce far
+niente_ dignity of a _tejjer_, or merchant.
+
+I think we members of the little English community of Mogador--or, as the
+Moors fondly call this pleasantest town of the Morocco seaboard, "El
+Souerah," or The Beautiful--had almost as good reason as the Moslem
+population to rejoice at the termination of the great fast. The Moors not
+being allowed, during the holy month, to eat, drink, or smoke betwixt the
+rising and the setting of the sun--the more sternly orthodox even closing
+their nostrils against any pleasant odour that might casually perfume the
+air in their vicinity, and their ears against even the faintest sound of
+music--debarring themselves, in fact, from whatever could give the
+slightest pleasure to any of the senses, a considerable amount of gloom
+and listlessness was the inevitable result.
+
+The servants in the various households, not over active and intelligent at
+the best of times, became, as the weary days of prayer and fasting wore
+on, appallingly idiotic, sleepy, and sullen, would do but little work, and
+that little never promptly nor well. Meals could not be relied on within
+an hour or two, rooms were left long untidy, essential little errands and
+messages unperformed, and a general gloomy confusion prevailed.
+
+Did I, tempted by the smoothness of the sea, desire a little fishing
+cruise, and send a youthful Moor to the neighbouring rocks to get me a
+basket of mussels for bait, he would probably, directly he got outside the
+town-gates, deposit the basket and himself in the shade of the first wall
+he came to, and slumber sweetly till the tide had risen and covered all
+the rocky ledges where it was possible to collect bait. Had I told the
+youngster over night that he must come out to sea with me in the morning,
+and take care that my boat was put outside the dock, so that she would be
+afloat at a certain hour, I would find, on going down at daybreak with
+rods and tackle, that the boat was high and dry upon the mud, and it would
+take the united efforts of half a dozen Moors and myself to get her afloat
+at the end of nearly an hour's frantic struggling and pushing through mud
+and water, necessitating on my part the expenditure of a great amount of
+perspiration, not a little invective, and sundry silver coins.
+
+And when we were fairly afloat my Mahometan youth would be so weak from
+fasting that his oar would be almost useless; and when we did, after an
+hour or so of the most ignominious zigzaging, reach our anchorage on one
+of the fishing-grounds, then would he speedily become sea-sick, and
+instead of helping me by preparing bait and landing fish, he would lean
+despairingly over the side in abject misery, and implore me to go home
+promptly--a piteous illustration of the anguish caused by an empty stomach
+contracting on itself.
+
+Nor were these the only discomforts under which we groaned and grumbled.
+
+From the evening when the eager lookers-out from minarets of mosques and
+towers of the fortifications first descried the new moon which ushered in
+the holy month of fasting, every sunset, as it flushed the far-off waves
+with purple and crimson and gold, and turned the fleecy cloudlets in the
+western sky to brightest jewels, and suffused the white houses and towers
+of Mogador with sweetest glow of pink, and gilded the green-tiled top of
+each tall minaret, had been accompanied by the roar of a cannon from the
+battery just below our windows.
+
+"What the deuce is that?" asked a friend of mine, lately arrived from
+England, as we strolled homewards one evening through the dusty streets,
+and the boom of the big gun suddenly fell upon his astonished ear.
+
+"Only sunset," I replied.
+
+"Queer place this," said J. "Does the sun always set with a bang?"
+
+"Always during Ramadan."
+
+"Does it rise with a bang too? I hate to be roused up early in the
+morning!"
+
+"No, there is no gun at sunrise; but there is a very loud one at about
+three in the morning, or sometimes half-past, or four, or later."
+
+"Shocking nuisance!" remarked J. "My bedroom window's just over that
+abominable battery."
+
+The early morning gun was a great trial, certainly. I would not have
+minded being _reveille en sursaut_, as a Frenchman would say, and then
+turning comfortably over on the other side, and going to sleep again.
+
+But somehow or other I always found myself awake half an hour or an hour
+before the time, and then I _could not_ get to sleep again, but lay
+tossing about and fidgettily listening for the well-known din. At length I
+would hear a sound like the hum of an enormous fiendish nightmarish
+mosquito, caused by a hideous long tin trumpet, the shrill whistle of a
+fife or two, and the occasional tom-tomming of a Moorish drum. "Ha, the
+soldiers coming along the ramparts; they will soon fire now."
+
+But the sound of the discordant instruments with which the soldiery
+solaced themselves in the night for their enforced abstinence from such
+"sweet sounds" in the day would continue for a long time before the red
+flash through my wide-open door would momentarily illumine my little
+chamber on the white flat roof, and then the horrid bang would rend the
+air, followed by a dense cloud of foul-smelling smoke; and then would my
+big dog Caesar for several minutes rush frantically to and fro upon the
+roof in hot indignation, and utter deep-mouthed barks of defiance at the
+white figures of the "Maghaseni," as they flitted ghost-like along the
+ramparts below, and snort and pant and chafe and refuse to be pacified for
+a long time.
+
+At the firing of the sunset gun the Moors were allowed to take a slight
+refection, which generally consisted of a kind of gruel. I have seen a
+Moorish soldier squatting in the street with a brass porringer in his lap,
+eagerly awaiting the boom of the cannon to dip his well-washed fingers in
+the mess.
+
+At about 9 P.M. another slight meal was allowed to the true believers, and
+they might eat again at morning gun-fire, after which their mouths were
+closed against all "fixings, solid and liquid," even against the smallest
+draught of water or the lightest puff at the darling little pipe of
+dream-inducing _kief_.
+
+On the twenty-seventh day of Ramadan we were informed that twenty-seven
+guns would be fired that night, and that we had better leave all our
+windows open, or they would certainly be broken by the violence of the
+discharge. This was pleasant; still more delightful was the glorious
+uncertainty which prevailed in the minds of our informants as to the time
+at which we might expect the infliction.
+
+Some said that the twenty-seven guns would be fired before midnight;
+Hamed opined that the cannonade would not take place till 3 or 4 A.M. Many
+of the guns on the battery in close proximity to our abode were in a
+fearfully rusty and honeycombed condition, so that apprehensions as to
+some of them bursting were not unnatural, and I thought it extremely
+probable that a few stray fragments might "drop in" on me.
+
+That night I burned the "midnight oil," and lay reading till nearly two,
+when sweet sleep took possession of me, from which I was awakened about
+four in the morning by a terrific bang that fairly shook the house.
+
+A minute more, and there came a red flash and another bang, presently
+another. Thought I, "I will go out and see the show;" so I went on to the
+flat white roof in my airy nocturnal costume, and leaning over the parapet
+looked down on to the platform of the battery below. A group of dim white
+figures, a flickering lantern, a glowing match, a touch at the breech of a
+rusty old gun, a swift skurry of the white figures round a corner, a
+squib-like fountain of sparks from the touch-hole, a red flash from the
+mouth, momentarily illumining the dark violet sea, a bang, and a cloud of
+smoke.
+
+Then the white figures and the lantern appeared again; another squib,
+another flash, another bang, Caesar galloping up and down over the roof,
+snorting his indignation, but not barking, probably because he felt
+"unable to do justice to the subject;" and at length, after the eleventh
+gun had belched forth crimson flames and foul smoke, all was peace, save a
+distant discord of tin trumpets, _gouals_ and _gimbris_, and I returned to
+my mosquito-haunted couch with a sigh of relief.
+
+Pass we now to the eve of "Christmas for Moros," and let ethnologist and
+hagiologist derive some satisfaction from the evidences I collected in
+this far-away Moorish town that the gladness of the Mahometan festival
+does, similarly to the purer joy of the Christian, though in a less degree
+perhaps, incline towards "peace and good-will to men," charity and
+kindliness.
+
+As we sat chatting that evening round the tea-table, to us entered Hamed,
+bearing, with honest pride illumining his brown features, a great tray of
+richly engraved brass, heaped up with curious but tempting-looking cakes.
+
+Gracefully presenting them to "the senora," he intimated that this was his
+humble offering or Christmas token of good-will towards the family, and
+that his mother (whom the good fellow maintains out of his modest wages)
+had made them with her own hands.
+
+The cakes were made of long thin strips of the finest paste, plentifully
+sweetened with delicious honey, twisted into quaint shapes, and fried in
+the purest of oil. I need hardly say that the children were delighted, and
+immediately commenced to court indigestion by a vigorous onslaught on the
+new and tempting sweets. Nay, why should I blush to confess that I myself
+have a very sweet tooth in my head, and such a liking for all things
+saccharine that my friends say jokingly that I must be getting into my
+second childhood?--an imputation which, as I am only a little on the
+wrong side of thirty, I can bear with equanimity. However, I firmly
+decline to inform an inquisitive public how many of those delightful
+Moorish cakes I ate: truth to tell, I do not remember; but I enjoyed them
+heartily, nor found my digestion impaired thereby.
+
+We had a little chat with Hamed--whose face was lighted up with the
+broadest of grins as we praised his mother's pastry and showed our
+appreciation of it in the most satisfactory manner--on certain matters of
+the Mahometan religion and the position of women in the future life. Some
+of the sterner Muslims believe that women have no souls; others opine that
+while good men go to "_Eljannah_," or heaven, and bad ones to
+"_Eljehannam_," or hell, women and mediocre characters are deported to a
+vague kind of limbo which they designate as "_Bab Maroksh_," or the
+Morocco Gate.
+
+But the gentle, liberal, and gallant Hamed informed us, in reply to an
+individual query with regard to our Moorish housemaid, that "if Lanniya
+plenty good, no _tiefem_ (steal), no drinkum _sharab_ (wine), and go for
+_scula_ ("school," or religious instruction in the mosque, or in a
+schoolhouse adjoining it), by and by she go for "_Eljannah_."
+
+I am hardly correct, by the way, in speaking of Lanniya as "house-_maid_,"
+for Moorish maidens and wives never go in the service of European
+families, being prohibited by their religion from showing their faces; it
+is only widows and divorced women who may go about unveiled, and mingle
+with Christians.
+
+The next morning, soon after the last gun of Ramadan had sounded its
+joyous boom in my ear, I was up and stirring, donning my shooting apparel
+and preparing for an early country walk with my faithful four-footed
+comrade. I had no fear of exciting the fanaticism of the Muslim population
+by going out shooting on their holy day, for there is not much bigotry in
+Mogador,--Moors, Christians, and Jews observing their several religions
+peacefully side by side, so that three Sundays come in every week, the
+Mahometan on Friday, the Jewish on Saturday, and then ours.
+
+The sun, just rising from behind the eastern sand-hills, was gilding all
+the house-tops and minarets, till our white town looked like a rich
+assemblage of fairy palaces of gold and ivory; the smiling sea, serene and
+azure, came rippling peacefully up to the base of the rugged brown rocks,
+enlivened to-day by no statuesque figures of Moorish fishermen; nor did a
+single boat dot the broad blue expanse of the unusually smooth South
+Atlantic, of which the fish and the sea-fowl were for once left in
+undisturbed possession.
+
+As I gazed from the flat roof away over the great town, I heard from many
+quarters loud sounds of music and merriment. As I passed presently through
+the narrow streets, with their dead white walls and cool dark arches,
+scarcely a camel was to be seen at the accustomed corners by the stores of
+the merchants, where usually whole fleets of the "ships of the desert" lay
+moored, unloading almonds, and rich gums, and hides, and all the varied
+produce of the distant interior.
+
+Outside the town-gates the very hordes of semi-wild scavenger dogs seemed
+to know that the day was one of peace, for they lay in the sunshine, nor
+barked and snapped at the infidel intruder as he walked over the golden
+sands, along the edge of the marshy pool, past the pleasant-looking
+Moorish cemetery with its graceful verdant palm-trees, a calm oasis in the
+sandy plain, and out across the shallow lagoon formed by overflows of high
+tides, by which a few late trains of homeward-bound camels went softly
+stepping, looking wonderfully picturesque as they marched through shallow
+waters so beautifully gilded by the morning sun, their drivers doubtless
+eager to reach their own home or the shelter of some friendly village to
+participate in the modest revelries of the joyous season. How I wandered
+along the shore of the "many-sounding sea," enjoying a little rough sport,
+and the blithe companionship of the big doggie; how I saw never a Moor
+upon the rocks, but many Jews with long bamboo rods, busily engaged in
+fishing for bream and bass and rock-fish, it boots not to describe with a
+minuteness which might be wearisome to my readers, for I am not now
+writing "of sport, for sportsmen."
+
+So let us turn homewards, as the sun is getting high in the heavens, and
+note the scenes by the way.
+
+Yonder, near the marshy corner of the plain, haunted by wild-fowl, and
+carrion crows, and mongrel jackal-like dogs, is the rough cemetery of the
+despised "Jehoud," the Israelites who form so large and so wealthy a
+portion of the population of Mogador. Among the long flat stones that mark
+the graves of the exiled sons and daughters of Israel there is a winding
+crowd of white-draped figures, a funeral procession. Unwilling to intrude
+upon their grief, I pass on, casting an involuntary glance at the
+picturesque garb and wild gesticulations of the mourners as the women's
+loud and bitter cry of "Ai, Ai, Ai, Ai!" sounds weirdly through the air,
+just as it may have done in the old scriptural times, when "the mourners
+went about the streets" and gave unchecked vent to their grief in public,
+even as they do to this day.
+
+But as I neared Morocco Gate, from the neighbouring "Running Ground" came
+very different sounds--a din of many drums, a squeaking of merry fifes,
+the firing of many long Moorish guns, the shouting of men and boys, and
+the eerie shrill _taghariet_ of the Moorish women.
+
+And as I passed in front of the round battery, out from the great gate of
+the New Kasbah came the crowd of men, women, and children who had been
+clamouring joyfully in the Running-Ground, a bright throng of brown faces
+and white raiment, interspersed with the gay colours worn by the little
+children, and dotted here and there by the blood-red of the national flag.
+Suddenly from a cannon just behind me came a cloud of smoke enveloping me
+and the dog, and a bang which fairly shook us, and then another and
+another. The firing of the guns from this battery was the spectacle the
+Moorish populace had come out to see.
+
+It was an uncomfortable sensation to have big guns going off just behind
+one; they were only loaded with blank cartridge, of course, but we were
+quite near enough to be knocked down by a stray piece of wadding, and
+something did once whistle past my ear suggestively.
+
+But it would never do for an "Ingleez" to run away in the presence of a
+lot of Moors; so I walked calmly across the sands while the whole battery
+of guns--twelve, I think--were fired, Caesar meanwhile prancing about
+majestically, and loudly giving vent to his indignation at a proceeding
+which he evidently considered, as he always does the firing of any gun or
+pistol by any one but me, an express insult to his master, and an
+infringement of his peculiar privileges.
+
+I went home by way of the Water-Port, where there was no movement of
+lighters or fishing-craft, no stir of bare-legged porters and fishermen,
+no bustle of Jewish and European merchants; nearly all the boats were
+drawn up on the shore, and those which remained afloat, slumbered
+tenantless on the broad blue bosom of the sea. On rocks, and in the
+pleasant shade of walls and arches, a few figures, in bright and gauzy
+_haiks_ and gorgeous new slippers, lounged and dozed, perchance tired with
+the revelries they had gone through since daybreak, and recruiting their
+energies for fresh rejoicings towards evening. Reaching home about eleven,
+I rested a while, deposited my birds in the larder, and then proceeded to
+stroll about the streets and see how the populace comported themselves on
+this festive occasion. I was sorry to learn that some of the younger and
+more fanatical of the Moors had been relieving their feelings by abusing
+the Jews, some of whom had had stones thrown at them, and their heads
+slightly broken. But this temporary riot was over, and now all was "peace
+and good-will," except that perhaps there may have lurked a little not
+unnatural ill-feeling in the minds of the broken-headed Israelites, who
+could not help feeling rather disgusted at the manner in which the Muslim
+youths had celebrated "Christmas for Moros."
+
+As I passed along the narrow lane wherein the soldiers of the Kaid or
+Governor, in the snowiest of _haiks_ and tallest and reddest of
+_tarbooshes_, squatted against the wall, chatting blithely as they awaited
+the advent of their master, a grave and venerable-looking Moorish
+grandpapa, hurrying along with a great armful of cakes in one of the folds
+of his _haik_, stumbled against a loose stone and dropped several of the
+cakes.
+
+I hastily stooped and picked them up; the old man muttered a few words of
+blessing upon me, insisted on my accepting the dainties I had rescued from
+the dust, utterly refused to receive them back, pressed my hand, and
+hurried on, leaving me in a state of embarrassment, from which I was
+opportunely relieved by the arrival of a bright-eyed little Moor of seven
+or eight summers, who was perfectly willing to relieve me from all trouble
+connected with the handful of cakes. Passing into the busy streets of the
+Moorish quarter, I found the population coming out of the various mosques,
+where they had been to morning service, and now going in for a systematic
+course of "greetings in the market-place," and purchasing of presents. O,
+for an artist's pencil and colours to depict the gorgeous costumes of the
+town Moors, the quaint, wild garb of their country cousins; the gauzy
+cream-tinted _haiks_ from Morocco; the rich silken _caftans_ of purple, or
+crimson, or yellow, or green, or azure, or pink, sweetly half-veiled by a
+fold or two of snowy gauze thrown over them; the bright red fez caps, and
+voluminous snowy turbans of the patriarchal-looking old men; the broad
+silken sashes from Fez, heavy and stiff with rich embroidery of gold; the
+great curved daggers in their richly chased silver or brass sheaths,
+suspended amid the folds of the _haik_ by thick woolen cords of gay
+colours; the handsome brown faces, the flashing black eyes, the wonderful
+white teeth, the sinewy brown bare legs, the brand-new yellow slippers of
+the merry Moors of Mogador!
+
+And the negroes, or, as old Fuller would quaintly have called them, "the
+images of God cut in ebony," how their honest black features glistened,
+and how their bright teeth grinned beneath turban or fez, or gaudy
+handkerchief of many colours!
+
+The negro servant of one of the European residents, a good-humoured giant
+of nearly seven feet, whom his master is wont to describe as "his nigger
+and a half," came stalking down amongst the little shops and stalls with a
+flaunting bandanna round his head, a purple jacket, a most gorgeous sash,
+a pair of green baggy breeches, a glittering silver-sheathed dagger, and a
+most imposing _haik_, thrown in toga-like folds over all.
+
+Negro women, unveiled, white-clad, adorned as to their shiny black arms
+with rude heavy bracelets of silver or brass, sat at street-corners with
+baskets of sweet cakes and little loaves for sale. Veiled Moorish women,
+perchance showing just one bright black eye to tantalise the beholder,
+glided along like substantial ghosts in the white raiment which enveloped
+them from their heads down to the little feet shod with red or yellow
+slippers embroidered with gold thread or bright-coloured silks. Women
+leading tiny toddlers of children, little bright-eyed boys with crowns
+shaven all but one queer little tufted ridge in the middle, deftly curled
+this morning by mamma's loving fingers; foreheads adorned with quaint
+frontlets, from which hung curious ornaments of gold and coral and silver,
+spells against the evil eye, talismans, and what not.
+
+Little boys in beautiful cloth or silken cloaks of pale blue, or delicate
+purple, or crimson, or rich green, or golden yellow, trotting along as
+proud as peacocks, holding by the hand some tiny brother who can barely
+toddle. Children who have just had new slippers purchased for them, and
+are carrying them home in triumph; children who, with funny little copper
+coins in their hand, are congregating round the stall of the swarthy
+seller of sweetstuffs, who is ejaculating loudly, "_Heloua_, _Heloua_!"
+busily brandishing a feathery branch of green _artim_ the while, to keep
+the vagrom flies off his stores of rich dainties composed of walnut and
+almond toffee, pastes made of almonds and honey and sugar, little brown
+sugar balls thickly strewn with cummin-seeds, long sticks of peppermint,
+and other delicacies difficult to describe.
+
+As to the grown-up Moors, never was seen such a hand-shaking as is going
+on amongst them. Everybody is shaking hands with everybody else, each
+wishing the other the Arabic substitute for "A merry Christmas," and after
+each handshaking each of the participants puts his hand to his lips and
+proceeds, to be stopped two yards farther on for a repetition of the
+performance.
+
+On we go through the meat-market, and note pityingly the leanness of the
+Moors' Christmas beef, which has just been butchered, and of which an
+eager good-humored crowd are buying small pieces amid much vociferation,
+chaff, and "compliments of the season" generally.
+
+Then we come to the green-grocers' shops, where we see huge radishes,
+great pomegranates, sweet potatoes, and bunches of fragrant mint for the
+flavouring of the Moors' passionately loved beverage, green tea; then to
+the grocers' quarter, where, asking a grave and portly Moor for a
+pennyworth _fakea_ (dried fruit), he puts into half a gourd-shell a
+pleasant collection of dates, almonds, figs, and raisins, hands them to us
+with benign politeness. Opposite his store is a low table covered with
+queer bottles of all shapes and sizes, filled with a dubious-looking pink
+fluid, resembling the most delicious hair oil, but apparently highly
+appreciated by the Moorish and Jewish youth who crowd around.
+
+In the centre is a burly brandy-bottle, bearing the well-known label of
+"J. and F. Martell," now filled with a fluid presumably more innocuous
+than the choicest cognac; the big bottle is flanked by rows of little
+medicine-vials and long thin bottles such as are used for attar of roses
+and other Eastern scents; for the vendor of this bright-coloured liquor
+does not possess cups or tumblers, but dispenses it in the little bottles.
+A bare-headed youth, with shaven crown, tenders a _mozouna_, receives a
+two-ounce vial, empties it solemnly amid the envious looks of his
+comrades, sets it down, and walks gravely away.
+
+Away we go too, Caesar and I, and I note that there is hardly a Jew to be
+seen in the streets; they are afraid of stone-throwing, and outbursts of
+the slumbering hatred and contempt with which they are regarded by the
+orthodox Muslim.
+
+As for Christians, Englishmen especially, they are much more tolerated and
+respected; and I know that I may walk the town all day without fear of
+molestation, and get plenty of kindly greetings and many a smile and shake
+of the hand.
+
+Out of the busy market, up the narrow and shady streets, hearing sounds of
+the fearsome trumpet, which I have already compared to an exaggerated
+mosquito, meeting that instrument presently at a corner--a horrid tin
+thing about two yards long, wielded by a sinewy little man in a blue
+tunic, accompanying a gaily-dressed boy on a sleek and patient donkey.
+Fifing and drumming and firing of guns going on all around.
+
+Fierce-looking Moors and Arabs from the country leaning on their long
+silver-mounted guns, scowling at the "Kaffer," whom they have perchance
+not seen until they came to El Souerah. A veiled, but evidently portly,
+dame, leading by the hand a pretty little girl, in a red skirt below a
+rich garment of lace or embroidery, with a crimson hooded cloak or
+_djelab_ over it, rich ornaments on her smooth brown forehead, enormous
+silver anklets, little bare feet, dyed, like her hands and those of most
+of the little girls and many of the big ones, a bright red with henna.
+Little girl shrinks behind her mother, afraid of the Giaour or of his big
+dog; the Giaour slips by with a smile, doggie with a friendly wag of his
+tail, and we go homeward for a while; Caesar to make a hearty meal of the
+biscuits which have come all the way from England for him; his master to
+partake of lunch, then smoke a pipe on the roof, and look wistfully out
+over the bright blue sky, and let his thoughts wander far, far away to
+many a pleasant Christmas in a pleasant corner of the fair Western land:
+
+ "Where is now the merry party
+ I remember long ago,
+ Laughing round the Christmas fireside,
+ Brightened by its ruddy glow?"
+
+But the Moor's Christmas has come early in October; there is time yet, and
+plenty of English steamers going backwards and forwards; who knows whether
+the wanderer may not yet spend the next Christmas by a genial English
+fireside, and recount to prattling children on his knee (others' children,
+alas!) the curious sights, sounds, and scenes of "Christmas for Moros?"
+But I have not quite done with you yet, kindly reader. I must just briefly
+tell you how I went out again in the afternoon with Caesar and a two-legged
+friend, and found more shopping going on and more handshaking, and found
+the more festive spirits getting hilarious over green tea and coffee and
+_kief_; how we strolled down to the Water-Port and sat on the quay,
+surrounded by merry young Moors in their "Sunday best;" how my friend
+essayed to sketch one or two of them, and they did not like it, but
+thought some evil spell would be put upon them thereby; how they asked us
+many questions about England, and particularly wanted to know how many
+dollars we possessed; how my companion won the hearts of some of the
+younger members of the party by teaching them how to whistle between their
+thumbs, and how to make a certain very loud and direfully discordant
+screech; and how J. and I finished the afternoon by partaking of a
+delightful bottle of English ale in the courtyard of a cool store, leaning
+our chairs against massive stone pillars, and smoking the pipe of peace.
+
+But I fear the stern Editor will not grant me any more space, and I must
+leave at present the recital of all that I saw on the ensuing day, which
+the gentle Hamed, if he were a _little_ more closely acquainted with our
+institutions, would call "Boxing-day for Moros."
+
+ C. A. P. ("SARCELLE"), _in London Society_,
+ MOGADOR.
+
+
+
+
+THE HOMES AND HAUNTS OF THE ITALIAN POETS.
+
+
+GUARINI.
+
+Pastoral poetry had in Italy a tendency to a rapid degeneration from the
+first. "Decipit exemplum vitiis imitabile." The earliest "pastorals" were
+far from being without merit, and merit of a high order. But they were
+eminently "vitiis imitabiles." Two specimens of Italian Arcadian poetry
+stand out, from the incredibly huge mass of such productions still extant,
+superior to all the innumerable imitations to which they gave rise in a
+more marked degree even than "originals" usually surpass imitations in
+value. These are the "Aminta" of Tasso, and the "Pastor Fido" of the poet
+with whom it is the object of these pages to make the English nineteenth
+century reader, who never will find the time to read him, in some degree
+acquainted--Batista Guarini. It would be difficult to say which of these
+two celebrated pastoral dramas was received with the greater amount of
+delight and enthusiasm by the world of their contemporaries, or even which
+of them is the better performance. The almost simultaneous production of
+these two masterpieces in their kind is a striking instance of the, one
+may almost say, epidemic nature of the influences which rule the
+production of the human intellect; influences which certainly did not
+cease to operate for many generations after that of the authors of the
+"Aminta" and the "Pastor Fido," although the servile imitation of those
+greatly admired works unquestionably went for much in causing the
+overwhelming flood of pastorals which deluged Italy immediately subsequent
+to their enormous success.
+
+I have said that it would be difficult to assign a preeminence to either
+of these poems. But it must not be supposed that it is intended thence to
+insinuate an equality between the authors of them. Tasso would occupy no
+lower place on the Italian Parnassus if he had never written the "Aminta."
+His fame rests upon a very much larger and firmer basis. But Guarini would
+be nowhere--would not be heard of at all--had he not written the "Pastor
+Fido." Having, however, produced that work--a work of which forty editions
+are said to have been printed in his lifetime, and which has been
+translated into almost every civilised language, including Latin, Greek,
+and Hebrew--he has always filled a space in the eyes of his countrymen,
+and occupied a position in the roll of fame, which render his admission as
+one of our select band here imperative. He is, besides, a representative
+poet; the head and captain of the pastoral school, which attained
+everywhere so considerable a vogue, and in Italy such colossal
+proportions.
+
+Guarini was born in the year 1537 in Ferrara,--desolate, dreary, shrunken,
+grass-grown, tumble-down Ferrara, which in the course of one half-century
+gave to the world, besides a host of lesser names, three such poets as
+Tasso, Ariosto and Guarini. Ariosto died four years before Guarini was
+born; but Tasso was nearly his contemporary, being but seven years his
+junior.
+
+In very few cases in all the world and in all ages has it happened that
+intellectual distinction has been the appanage of one family for as many
+generations as in that of the Guarini. They came originally from Verona,
+where Guarino, the first of the family on record, who was born in 1370,
+taught the learned languages, and was one of the most notable of the band
+of scholars who laboured at the restoration of classical literature. He
+lived to be ninety years old, and is recorded to have had twenty-three
+sons. It is certain that he had twelve living in 1438. One of them,
+Giovanni Batista, succeeded his father in his professorship at Ferrara, to
+which city the old scholar had been invited by Duke Hercules I. It would
+seem that another of his sons must also have shared the work of teaching
+in the University of Ferrara: for Batista the poet was educated by his
+great-uncle Alessandro, and succeeded him in his professorship. Of the
+poet's father we only learn that he was a mighty hunter, and further, that
+he and his poet-son were engaged in litigation respecting the inheritance
+of the poet's grandfather and great-uncle. It is probable that the two old
+scholars wished to bequeath their property, which included a landed
+estate, to their grandson and great-nephew, who already was manifesting
+tastes and capacities quite in accordance with their own, rather than to
+that exceptional member of the race who cared for nothing but dogs and
+horses.
+
+Nor was Batista the last of his race who distinguished himself in the same
+career. His son succeeded him in his chair at the university; and we have
+thus at least four generations of scholars and professors following the
+same course in the same university, which was in their day one of the most
+renowned in Europe.
+
+All this sounds very stable, very prosperous, very full of the element of
+contentment. And there is every reason to believe that the
+great-grandfather, the grandfather, the great-uncle, the son, were all as
+tranquil and contented and happy as well-to-do scholars in a prosperous
+university city should be. But not so the poet. His life was anything but
+tranquil, or happy, or contented. The lives of few men, it may be hoped,
+have been less so.
+
+Yet his morning was brilliant enough. He distinguished himself so
+remarkably by his success in his early studies that, on the death of his
+great-uncle Alexander when he was only nineteen, he was appointed to
+succeed him. This was in 1556, when Hercules II. was Duke of Ferrara, and
+when that court of the Este princes was at the apogee of its splendour,
+renown, and magnificence. The young professor remained working at the
+proper labours of his profession for ten years; and they were in all
+probability the best and happiest, the only happy ones of his life. Happy
+is the nation, it has been said, which has no history; and much the same
+probably may be said of an individual. Respecting these ten years of
+Guarini's life but little has been recorded. No doubt the chronicle of
+them would have been monotonous enough. The same quiet duties quietly and
+successfully discharged; the same morning walk to his school, the same
+evening return from it, through the same streets, with salutations to the
+same friends, and leisurely pauses by the way to chat, Italian fashion,
+with one and another, as they were met in the streets, not then, as now,
+deserted, grass-grown, and almost weird in their pale sun-baked
+desolation, but thronged with bustling citizens, mingled with gay
+courtiers, and a very unusually large proportion of men whose names were
+known from one end of Italy to the other. Those school haunts in the
+Ferrarese University were haunts which the world-weary ex-professor must
+often throughout the years of his remaining life--some forty-five of them,
+for he did not die till 1612, when he was seventy-five--have looked back
+on as the best and happiest of his storm-tossed existence.
+
+There is, however, one record belonging to this happy time which must not
+be forgotten. It was at Padua, _Padova la dotta_, as she has been in all
+ages and is still called, Padua the learned, in the year 1565. Guarini was
+then in his twenty-eighth year, and had been a professor at Ferrara for
+the last eight years. Probably it was due to the circumstance that his
+friend and fellow-townsman, Torquato Tasso, was then pursuing his studies
+at Padua, that the young Ferrarese professor turned his steps in that
+direction, bound "on a long vacation ramble." Tasso was only
+one-and-twenty at the time; but he was already a member of the famous
+Paduan Academy of the "Etherials," which Guarini was not. And we may
+readily fancy the pride and pleasure with which the younger man, doing the
+honours of the place to his learned friend, procured him to be elected a
+member of the "Etherials." Guarini (so called _nel secolo_--in the world),
+was _Il Costante_--the "Constant One" among the "Etherials." Scipio
+Gonzaga, who became subsequently the famous Cardinal, spoke an oration of
+welcome to him on his election. Then what congratulations, what
+anticipations of fame, what loving protestations of eternal friendship,
+what naive acceptance of the importance and serious value of their
+Etherial Academic play, as the two youths strolling at the evening hour
+among the crowds of gravely clad but in no wise gravely speaking students
+who thronged the colonnades in deep shadow under their low-browed arches,
+sally forth from beneath them as the sun nears the west, on to the vast
+open space which lies around the great church of St. Antony! Advancing in
+close talk they come up to Donatello's superb equestrian statue of the
+Venetian General Gattamelata, and lean awhile against the tall pedestal,
+finishing their chat before entering the church for the evening prayer.
+
+The "Etherials" of Padua constituted one of the innumerable "Academies"
+which existed at that day and for a couple of centuries subsequently in
+every one of the hundred cities of Italy. The "Arcadian" craze was the
+generating cause of all of them. All the members were "shepherds;" all
+assumed a fancy name on becoming a member, by which they were known in
+literary circles; and every Academy printed all the rhymes its members
+strung together!
+
+Those must have been pleasant days in old Padua, before the young
+Professor returned to his work in the neighbouring university of Ferrara.
+The two young men were then, and for some time afterwards, loving friends;
+for they had not yet become rival poets.
+
+At the end of those ten years of university life he may be said to have
+entered on a new existence--to have begun life afresh--so entirely
+dis-severed was his old life from the new that then opened on him.
+Alphonso II., who had succeeded his father, Hercules II., as Duke of
+Ferrara in 1559, "called him to the court" in 1567, and he began life as a
+courtier, or a "servant" of the Duke, in the language of the country and
+time.
+
+Well, in 1567 he entered into the service of the Duke, his sovereign, and
+never had another happy or contented hour!
+
+The first service on which the Duke employed him, and for the performance
+of which he seems specially to have taken him from his professional chair,
+was an embassy to Venice, to congratulate the new Doge, Pietro Loredano,
+on his elevation to the ducal throne, to which he had been elected on the
+previous 19th of June. On this occasion the Professor was created
+Cavaliere, a title to which his landed estate of Guarina, so called from
+the ancestor on whom it had been originally bestowed by a former duke,
+fairly entitled him.
+
+Shortly afterwards he was sent as ambassador to the court of Turin; and
+then to that of the Emperor Maximilian at Innspruck. Then he was twice
+sent to Poland; the first time on the occasion of the election of Henry
+the Third of France to the throne of that kingdom; and the second time
+when Henry quitted it to ascend that of France on the death of his brother
+Charles IX. The object of this second embassy was to intrigue for the
+election to the Polish crown of Alphonso. But, as it is hardly necessary
+to say, his mission was unsuccessful.
+
+It seems, too, to have been well-nigh fatal to the ambassador. There is
+extant a letter written from Warsaw to his wife, which gives a curious and
+interesting account of the sufferings he endured on the journey and at the
+place of his destination. He tells his wife not to be discontented that
+his silence has been so long, but to be thankful that it was not eternal,
+as it was very near being! "I started, as you know, more in the fashion of
+a courier than of an ambassador. And that would have been more tolerable
+if bodily fatigue had been all. But the same hand that had to flog the
+horses by day, had to hold the pen by night. Nature could not bear up
+against this double labour of body and mind; especially after I had
+travelled by Serravelles and Ampez,[48] which is more disagreeable and
+difficult than I can tell you, from the ruggedness no less of the country
+than of the people, from the scarcity of horses, the miserable mode of
+living, and the want of every necessary. So much so that on reaching
+Hala[49] I had a violent fever. I embarked, however, for Vienna
+notwithstanding. What with fever, discouragement, an intense thirst,
+scarcity of remedies and of medical assistance, bad lodging, generally far
+to seek,[50] and often infected with disease, food disgusting, even to
+persons in health, bed where you are smothered in feathers, in a word,
+none of the necessaries or comforts of life! I leave you to imagine what I
+have suffered. The evil increased; my strength grew less. I lost my
+appetite for everything save wine. In a word, little hope remained to me
+of life, and that little was odious to me. There is on the Danube, which I
+was navigating, a vast whirlpool, so rapid that if the boatmen did not
+avail themselves of the assistance of a great number of men belonging to
+the locality, strong and powerful and well acquainted with the danger, who
+are there constantly for the purpose, and who struggle with their oars
+against the rapacious gulf, there is not a vessel in that great river
+which would not be engulfed! The place is worthy of the name of "the Door
+of Death," which with a notoriety of evil fame it has gained for itself.
+There is no passenger so bold as not to pass that bit of the course of the
+river on foot; for the thing is truly formidable and terrible. But I was
+so overcome by illness, that having lost all sense of danger or desire to
+live, I did not care to leave the boat, but remained in it, with those
+strong men, I hardly know whether to say stupidly or intrepidly--but I
+will say intrepidly, since at one point, where I was within an ace of
+destruction, I felt no fear."
+
+He goes on to tell how at Vienna a physician treated him amiss, and made
+him worse; how every kind of consideration, and his own desire to save his
+life, counselled him to delay there; but how the honour, the
+responsibility of the embassy wholly on his shoulders, his duty to his
+sovereign prevailed to drive him onwards. He feared, too, lest it should
+be supposed at Warsaw that he preferred his life to the business on which
+he came, an accusation which might have been made use of by suspicious and
+malignant adversaries to deprive him of all the credit of his labours, and
+"to snatch from my Prince the crown which we are striving to place on his
+head. It is impossible to imagine," he continues, "what I suffered in that
+journey of more than six hundred miles from Vienna to Warsaw, dragged
+rather than carried in carts, broken and knocked to pieces. I wonder that
+I am still alive! The obstinate fever, the want of rest, of food, and of
+medicine, the excessive cold, the infinite hardships, the uninhabited
+deserts, were killing me. More often than not it was a much lesser evil to
+crouch by night in the cart, which dislocated my bones by day, rather than
+to be suffocated in the foulness of those dens, or stables rather, where
+the dogs and cats, the cocks and hens, and the geese, the pigs and the
+calves, and sometimes the children, kept me waiting."
+
+He proceeds to tell how the country was overrun, in that time of
+interregnum, by lawless bands of Cossacks; how he was obliged to travel
+with a strong escort, but nevertheless was obliged several times to
+deviate from the direct road to avoid the Cossacks, but on two occasions
+had very narrow escapes from falling into their hands. When he reached
+Warsaw at last, more dead than alive, the only improvement of his position
+was that he was stationary instead of in motion. "The cart no more
+lacerates my limbs!" But there was no rest to be got. "The place, the
+season, the food, the drink, the water, the servants, the medicines, the
+doctors, mental trouble, and a thousand other ills make up my torment.
+Figure to yourself all the kingdom lodged in one little town, and my room
+in the midst of it! There is no place from the top to the bottom, on the
+right or on the left, by day or by night, that is not full of tumult and
+noise. There is no special time here destined for business. Negotiation is
+going on always, because drinking is going on always; and business is dry
+work without wine. When business is over, visits begin; and when these are
+at an end, drums, trumpets, bombs, uproar, cries, quarrels, fighting,
+split one's head in a manner piteous to think of. Ah! if I suffered all
+this labour and this torment for the love and the glory of God, I should
+be a martyr!" (one thinks of Wolsey!) "But is he not worthy of the name
+who serves without hope of recompense?"
+
+He concludes his letter, bidding his wife not to weep for him, but to live
+and care for her children, in a manner which indicates that he had even
+then but little hope of returning alive.
+
+We are nevertheless assured by his biographers that he acquitted himself
+upon all these occasions in such sort as to give satisfaction to his
+sovereign and to acquire for himself the reputation of an upright and able
+minister. The Italian practice of entrusting embassies especially to men
+of letters, which we first had occasion to note when tracing the
+vicissitudes of the life of Dante in the thirteenth century, which we saw
+subsequently exemplified in the cases of Petrarch, Boccaccio, and Ariosto,
+and which might be further exemplified in the persons of many other
+Italian scholars and men of letters, still, as we see, prevailed in the
+sixteenth century, and continued to do so for some little time longer.
+
+But in no one instance, of all those I have mentioned, does the poet thus
+employed in functions which in other lands and other times have usually
+led to honours and abundant recognition of a more solid kind, appear to
+have reaped any advantage in return for the service performed, or to have
+been otherwise than dissatisfied and discontented with the treatment
+accorded to him.
+
+It would have been very interesting to learn somewhat of the impression
+made upon an Italian scholar of the sixteenth century by the places
+visited, and persons with whom he must have come in contact in those
+transalpine lands, which were then so far off, so contrasted in all
+respects with the home scenes among which his life had been passed in the
+low-lying, fat, and fertile valley of the Po. Of all this his various
+biographers and contemporaries tell us no word! But there is a volume of
+his letters, a little square quarto volume, now somewhat rare, printed at
+Venice in the year 1595.[51] These letters have somewhat unaccountably not
+been included in any of the editions of his works, and they are but little
+known. But turning to this little volume, and looking over the dates of
+the letters (many of them, however, are undated), I found three written
+"Di Spruch," and eagerly turned to them, thinking that I should certainly
+find there what I was seeking. The letters belong to a later period of
+Guarini's life, having been written in 1592, when he was again sent on an
+embassy to the German Emperor. This circumstance, however, is of no
+importance as regards the purpose for which I wanted the letters. I was
+disappointed. But I must nevertheless give one of these letters, not
+wantonly to compel my reader to share my disappointment, but because it is
+a curiosity in its way. The person to whom he writes is a lady, the
+Contessa Pia di Sala, with whom he was evidently intimate. He is at
+Innspruck at the Court of the Emperor Maximilian. The lady is at Mantua,
+and this is what he writes to her:
+
+ "Di Spruch, Nov. 29, 1592.
+
+ "The letter of your Illustrious Ladyship, together with
+ which you send me that of your most excellent brother,
+ written at the end of August, reached me yesterday, at first
+ to my very great anger at having been for so long a time
+ deprived of so precious a thing, while I appeared in fault
+ towards so distinguished a lady; but finally to my very
+ great good fortune. For if a letter written by the most
+ lovely flame[52] in the world had arrived, while the skies
+ were burning, what would have become of me, when, now that
+ winter is beginning, I can scarcely prevent myself from
+ falling into ashes? And in truth, when I think that those so
+ courteous thoughts come from the mind which informs so
+ lovely a person, that those characters have been traced by a
+ hand of such excellent beauty, I am all ablaze, no less than
+ if the paper were fire, the words flames, and all the
+ syllables sparks. But God grant that, while I am set on fire
+ by the letter of your Illustrious Ladyship, you may not be
+ inflamed by anger against me, from thinking that the terms
+ in which I write are too bold. Have no such doubt, my
+ honoured mistress! I want nothing from the flaming of my
+ letter, but to have made by the light of it more vivid and
+ more brilliant in you, the natural purity of your beautiful
+ face, even as it seems to me that I can see it at this
+ distance. My love is nothing else save honour; my flame is
+ reverence; my fire is ardent desire to serve you. And only
+ so long will the appointment in his service, which it has
+ pleased my Lord His Serene Highness the Duke of Mantua to
+ give me, and on which your Illustrious Ladyship has been
+ kind enough to congratulate me so cordially, be dear to me,
+ as you shall know that I am fit for it, and more worthy and
+ more ready to receive the favour of your commands, which
+ will always be to me a most sure testimony that you esteem
+ me, not for my own worth, as you too courteously say, but
+ for the worth which you confer on me, since I am not worthy
+ of such esteem for any other merit than that which comes to
+ me from being honoured by so noble and beautiful a lady. I
+ kiss the hand of your Illustrious Ladyship, wishing the
+ culmination of every felicity."
+
+Now, this letter I consider to be a very great curiosity! The other two
+written from the same place, one to a Signor Bulgarini at Siena, the other
+to a lady, the Marchesa di Grana, at Mantua, are of an entirely similar
+description. I turned to them in the hope of finding how Innspruck, its
+stupendous scenery, its court, its manners so widely different from those
+to which the writer and his correspondents were used, its streets, its
+people, impressed a sixteenth century Italian from the valley of the Po. I
+find instead a psychological phenomenon! The writer is a grave, austere
+man (Guarini was notably such), celebrated throughout Italy for his
+intellectual attainments, in the fifty-seventh year of his age, with a
+wife and family; he is amidst scenes which must, one would have thought,
+have impressed in the very highest degree the imagination of a poet, and
+must, it might have been supposed, have interested those he was writing to
+in an only somewhat less degree, and he writes the stuff the reader has
+just waded through. It is clear that this Italian sixteenth century
+scholar, poet and of cultivated intellect as he was, saw nothing amid the
+strange scenes to which a hard and irksome duty called him, which he
+thought worthy of being mentioned even by a passing word to his friends!
+Surely this is a curious trait of national character.
+
+He remained in the service of the court for fourteen years, employed
+mainly, as it should seem, in a variety of embassies; an employment which
+seems to have left him a disappointed, soured, and embittered man. He
+considered that he had not been remunerated as his labour deserved, that
+the heavy expenses to which he had been put in his long journeys had not
+been satisfactorily made up to him, and that he had not been treated in
+any of the foreign countries to which his embassies had carried him with
+the respect due to his own character and to his office.
+
+He determined therefore to leave the court and retire to Padua, a
+residence in which city, it being not far distant from his estate of
+Guarina, would offer him, he thought, a convenient opportunity of
+overlooking his property and restoring order to his finances, which had
+suffered much during his travels. This was in the year 1582, when Guarini
+was in the forty-fifth year of his age. It is not clear, however, that
+this retirement was wholly spontaneous; and the probability is that the
+Duke and his ambassador were equally out of humour with each other. And it
+is probable that the faults were not all on the side of the Duke. There is
+sufficient evidence that the author of the "Pastor Fido" must have been a
+difficult man to live with.
+
+The old friendship of happier days with Tasso had not survived the wear
+and tear of life at court. It was known that they no longer saw or spoke
+with each other. And everybody--if not of their contemporaries, at least
+of subsequent writers--jumped to the conclusion that the writer of the
+"Aminta" and the writer of the "Pastor Fido" must be jealous of each
+other. Jealousy there certainly was. But some frailer and more mortal
+female than the Muse was the cause of it. The Abate Serassi in his life of
+Tasso admits that Tasso first gave offence to Guarini by a sonnet in which
+he endeavoured to alienate the affections of a lady from him, by
+representing him as a faithless and fickle lover. The lines in which Tasso
+attacked his brother poet are, it must be admitted, sharp enough!
+
+ Si muove e si raggira
+ Instabil piu che arida fronde ai venti;
+ Nulla fe, null' amor, falsi i tormenti
+ Sono, e falso l'affeto ond' ei sospira.
+ Insidioso amante, ama e disprezza
+ Quasi in un punto, e trionfando spiega
+ Di femminile spoglie empi trofei.[53]...
+
+The attack was savage enough, it must be admitted, and well calculated to
+leave a lasting wound. Guarini immediately answered the cruel sonnet by
+another, the comparative weakness of which is undeniable.
+
+ Questi che indarno ad alta mira aspira
+ Con altrui biasmi, e con bugiardi accenti,
+ Vedi come in se stesso arruota i denti,
+ Mentre contra ragion meco s'adira.
+
+ Di due fiamme si vanta, e stringe e spezza
+ Piu volte un nodo; e con quest' arti piega
+ (Chi 'l crederebbe!) a suo favore i Dei.[54]...
+
+There is reason to think that the accusation of many times binding and
+loosing the same knot, may have hit home. The sneer about bending the gods
+to favour him, alludes to Tasso's favour at court, then in the ascendant,
+and may well have been as offensive to the Duke and the ladies of his
+court as to the object of his satire. Both angry poets show themselves
+somewhat earth-stained members of the Paduan "Etherials." But the sequel
+of the estrangement was all in favour of the greater bard. Tasso, in
+desiring a friend to show his poems in manuscript to certain friends, two
+or three in number, on whose opinion he set a high value, named Guarini
+among the number. And upon another occasion wishing to have Guarini's
+opinion as to the best of two proposed, methods of terminating a sonnet,
+and not venturing to communicate directly with him, he employed a common
+friend to obtain his brother-poet's criticism. Tasso had also in his
+dialogue entitled the "Messagero" given public testimony to Guarini's high
+intellectual and civil merits. But Guarini appears never to have forgiven
+the offence. He never once went to see Tasso in his miserable confinement
+in the hospital of St. Anne; nor, as has been seen, would hold any
+communication with him.
+
+He must have been a stern and unforgiving man. And indeed all the
+available testimony represents him as having been so,--upright, honest,
+and honourable, but haughty, punctilious, litigious, quick to take
+offence, slow to forget or forgive it, and cursed with a thin-skinned
+_amour propre_ easily wounded and propense to credit others with the
+intention of wounding where no such intention existed. The remainder of
+the story of his life offers an almost unbroken series of testimonies to
+the truth of such an estimate of his character.
+
+It was after fourteen years' service in the court of Duke Alphonso, as has
+been said, that he retired disgusted and weary to live in independence and
+nurse his estate in the neighbourhood of Padua. But the part of
+Cincinnatus is not for every man! It was in 1582 that he retired from the
+court intending to bid it and its splendours, its disappointments and its
+jealousies, an eternal adieu. In 1585, on an offer from the Duke to make
+him his secretary, he returned and put himself into harness again!
+
+But this second attempt to submit himself to the service, to the caprices
+and exigencies of a master and of a court ended in a quicker and more
+damaging catastrophe than the first. In a diary kept by the poet's nephew,
+Marcantonio Guarini, under the date of July 13, 1587, we find it written
+that "the Cavalier Batista Guarini, Secretary of the Duke, considering
+that his services did not meet with sufficient consideration in proportion
+to his worth, released himself from that servitude." The phrase here
+translated "released himself" is a peculiar one--_si licenzio_--"dismissed
+himself." To receive _licenza_, or to be _licenziato_, is to be dismissed,
+or at least parted with in accordance with the will of the employer. But
+the phrase used by the diarist seems intended to express exactly what
+happened when the poet, once more discontented, took himself off from
+Ferrara and its Duke. He seems to have done so in a manner which gave deep
+and lasting offence. In a subsequent passage of the above-quoted diary we
+read, "the Cavaliere Batista Guarini having absented himself from Ferrara,
+disgusted with the Duke, betook himself to Florence, and then, by the
+intermedium of Guido Coccapani the agent, asked for his dismissal in form
+and obtained it." We happen, however, to have a letter written by this
+Coccapani, who seems to have been the Duke's private secretary and
+managing man, in which he gives his version of the matter. He was
+"stupefied," he says, "when he received the extravagant letter of the
+Cavaliere Guarini, and began to think that it would be with him as it had
+been with Tasso," who by that time had fallen into disgrace. There is
+reason to think that he left Ferrara secretly, without taking leave of the
+Duke, or letting anybody at court know where he had gone. He did,
+however, obtain his formal dismissal, as has been said, but the Duke by no
+means forgave him.
+
+Though it would appear that on leaving Ferrara in this irregular manner he
+went in the first instance to Florence, it seems that he had had hopes
+given him of a comfortable position and honourable provision at Turin. He
+was to have been made a Counsellor of State, and entrusted with the task
+of remodelling the course of study at the university, with a stipend of
+six hundred crowns annually. But on arriving at Turin he found
+difficulties in the way. In fact, the angry Duke of Ferrara had used his
+influence with the Duke of Savoy to prevent anything being done for his
+contumacious Secretary of State. Guarini, extremely mortified, had to
+leave Turin, and betook himself to Venice.
+
+His adventure, however, was of a nature to cause great scandal in that
+clime and time. As usual, the Italians were offended at the "imprudence"
+of which Guarini's temper had led him to be guilty, more than they would
+have been by many a fault which among ourselves would be deemed a very
+much worse one. A violence of temper or indignation shown in such a manner
+as to injure _one's own_ interests is, and in a yet greater degree was, a
+spectacle extremely disgusting to Italian moral sentiment.
+
+The outcry against Guarini on this occasion was so great that he found
+himself obliged to put forth an exculpatory statement.
+
+"If human actions, my most kind readers," he begins, "always bore marked
+on the front of them the aims and motives which have produced them, or if
+those who talk about them were always well informed enough to be able to
+judge of them without injury to the persons of whom they speak, I should
+not be compelled, at my age, and after so many years of a life led in the
+eyes of the world, and often busied in defending the honour of others, to
+defend this day my own, which has always been dearer to me than my life.
+Having heard, then, that my having left the service of His Serene Highness
+the Duke of Ferrara and entered that of the Duke of Savoy has given
+occasion to some persons, ignorant probably of the real state of the case,
+to make various remarks, and form various opinions, I have determined to
+publish the truth, and at the same time to declare my own sentiments in
+the matter.
+
+"I declare, then, that previously to my said departure I consigned to the
+proper person everything, small as it was, which was in my hands regarding
+my office, which had always been exercised by me uprightly and without any
+other object in view than the service of my sovereign and the public
+welfare. Further, that I, by a written paper under my own hand (as the
+press of time and my need rendered necessary), requested a free and
+decorous dismissal from the Duke in question, and also, that I set forth
+in all humility the causes which led me to that determination; and I added
+(some of the circumstances in which I was compelling me to do so) that if
+His Serene Highness did not please to give me any other answer, I would
+take his silence as a consent to my request of dismissal. I declare
+further that the paper was delivered to the principal Minister of his
+Serene Highness, and lastly, that my salary was, without any further
+communication with me, stopped, and cancelled from the roll of payments.
+And as this is the truth, so it is equally true that my appointment as
+reformer of the University of Turin, and Counsellor of State with six
+hundred crowns yearly, was settled and concluded with His Serene Highness
+the Duke of Savoy, and that I declined to bind myself, and did not bind
+myself, to ask any other dismissal from His Serene Highness the Duke of
+Ferrara than that which I have already spoken. And, finally, it is true
+that, as I should not have gone to Turin if I had not been engaged for
+that service and invited thither, so I should not have left, or wished to
+leave this place,[55] had I not known that I received my dismissal in the
+manner above related. Now, as to the cause which may have retarded and may
+still retard the fulfillment of the engagement above mentioned, I have
+neither object, nor obligation, nor need to declare it. Suffice it that it
+is not retarded by any fault of mine, or difficulty on my side. In
+justification of which I offered myself, and by these presents now again
+offer myself, to present myself wheresoever, whensoever, and in whatsoever
+manner, and under whatsoever conditions and penalties, as may be seen more
+clearly set forth in the instrument of agreement sent by me to His
+Highness. From all which, I would have the world to know, while these
+affairs of mine are still in suspension, that I am a man of honour, and am
+always ready to maintain the same in whatsoever manner may be fitting to
+my condition and duty. And as I do not at all doubt that some decision of
+some kind not unworthy of so just and so magnanimous a prince will be
+forthcoming; so, let it be what it may, it will be received by me with
+composure and contentment; since, by God's grace, and that of the serene
+and exalted power under the most just and happy dominion of which I am now
+living, and whose subject, if not by birth, yet by origin and family, I
+am,[56] I have a comfortable and honoured existence. And may you, my
+honoured readers, live in happiness and contentment. Venice, February 1,
+1589."
+
+We must, I think, nevertheless be permitted to doubt the contentment and
+happiness of the life he led, as it should seem, for the next four years,
+at Venice. No such decision of any kind, as he hoped from the Duke of
+Savoy, was forthcoming. He was shunted! He had quarrelled with his own
+sovereign, and evidently the other would have none of him. The Italians of
+one city were in those days to a wonderful degree foreigners in another
+ruled by a different government; and there can be little doubt that
+Guarini wandered among the quays and "calle" of Venice, or paced the great
+piazza at the evening hour, a moody and discontented man!
+
+At last, after nearly four years of this sad life, there came an
+invitation from the Duke of Mantua proposing that Guarini should come to
+Mantua together with his son Alessandro, to occupy honourable positions in
+that court. The poet, heartily sick of "retirement," accepted at once, and
+went to Mantua. But there, too, another disappointment awaited him. The
+"magnanimous" Duke Alphonso would not tolerate that the man who had so
+cavalierly left his service should find employment elsewhere. It is
+probable that this position was obtained for him by the influence of his
+old friend and fellow-member of the "Etherials" at Padua, Scipione
+Gonzaga; and it would seem that he occupied it for a while, and went on
+behalf of the Duke of Mantua to Innspruck, whence he wrote the wonderful
+letters which have been quoted.
+
+The Cardinal's influence, however, was not strong enough to prevail
+against the spite of a neighbouring sovereign. There are two letters
+extant from the Duke, or his private secretary, to that same Coccapani
+whom we saw so scandalized at Guarini's hurried and informal departure
+from Ferrara, and who was residing as Alphonso's representative at Mantua,
+in which the Minister is instructed to represent to the Duke of Mantua
+that his brother of Ferrara "did not think it well that the former should
+take any of the Guarini family into his service, and when they should see
+each other he would tell him his reasons. For the present he would only
+say that he wished the Duke to know that it would be excessively pleasing
+to him if the Duke would have nothing to say to any of them."
+
+This was in 1593; and the world-weary poet found himself at fifty-six once
+again cast adrift upon the world. The extremity of his disgust and
+weariness of all things may be measured by the nature of the next step he
+took. He conceived, says his biographer Barotti, that "God called him by
+internal voices, and by promise of a more tranquil life, to accept the
+tonsure." His wife had died some little time before; and it was therefore
+open to him to do so. He went to Rome accordingly for the purpose of there
+taking orders. But during the short delay which intervened between the
+manifestation of his purpose and the fulfilment of it, news reached him
+that his friend and protectress the Duchess of Urbino, Alphonso's sister,
+had interceded for him with the Duke, and that he was forgiven! It was
+open to him to return to his former employment! And no sooner did the news
+reach him than he perceived that "the internal voices" were altogether a
+mistake. God had never called him at all, and Alphonso had! All thoughts
+of the Church were abandoned on the instant, and he hastened to Ferrara,
+arriving there on the 15th of April, 1595.
+
+But neither on this occasion was he destined to find the tranquillity
+which he seemed fated never to attain! And this time the break-up was a
+greater and more final one than the last. Duke Alphonso died in 1597; and
+the Pontificial Court, which had long had its eye on the possibility of
+enforcing certain pretended claims to the Duchy of Ferrara, found the
+means at Alphonso's death of ousting his successor the Duke Cesare, who
+remained thenceforward Duke of Modena only, but no longer of Ferrara.
+
+Guarini was once more adrift! Nor were the political changes in Ferrara
+the only thing which rendered the place no longer a home for him. Other
+misfortunes combined to render a residence in the city odious to him. His
+daughter Anna had married a noble gentleman of Ferrara, the Count Ercole
+Trotti, by whom she was on the 3rd of May, 1598, murdered at his villa of
+Zanzalino near Ferrara. Some attempt was made to assert that the husband
+had reason to suspect that his wife was plotting against his life. But
+there seems to have been no foundation for any accusation of the sort; and
+the crime was prompted probably by jealousy. Guarini, always on bad terms
+with his sons, and constantly involved in litigation with them, as he had
+been with his father, was exceedingly attached to this unfortunate
+daughter.
+
+But even this terrible loss was not the only bitterness which resulted
+from this crime. Guarini composed a long Latin epitaph, in which he
+strongly affirms her absolute innocence of everything that had been laid
+to her charge, and speaks with reprobation of the husband's[57] crime. But
+scarcely had the stone bearing the inscription been erected than the
+indignant father was required by the authorities of the city to remove it.
+A declaration, which he published on the subject, dated June 15, 1598, is
+still extant. "On that day," he writes, "the Vice-legate of Ferrara spoke
+with me, in the name of the Holy Father, as to the removing of the epitaph
+written by me on Anna my daughter in the church of Sta. Catherina. He said
+that there were things in it that might provoke other persons to
+resentment, and occasion much scandal; and that, besides that, there were
+in the inscription words of Sacred Scripture, which ought not to be used
+in such a place. I defended my cause, and transmitted a memorial to his
+Holiness, having good reason to know that these objections were the mere
+malignity of those who favour the opposite party, and of those who caused
+the death of my innocent child. But at last, on the 22nd, I caused the
+epitaph to be removed, intimating that it was my intention to take up the
+body, and inter it elsewhere. On which it is worthy of remark, that having
+made my demand to that effect, I was forbidden to do so." He further adds:
+"Note! news was brought to me here that my son Girolamo, who was evidently
+discovered to be the accomplice, and principal atrocious author of the
+death of his sister Anna, received from the Potesta of Rovigo licence to
+come into the Polisina with twelve men armed with arquebuses."
+
+All this is very sad; and whether these terrible suspicions may or may not
+have had any foundation other than the envenomed temper generated by the
+family litigations, it must equally have had the effect of making the life
+of Guarini a very miserable one, and contributing to his determination to
+abandon finally his native city.
+
+More surprising is it that, after so many disgusts and disappointments, he
+should once again have been tempted to seek, what he had never yet been
+able to find there, in a court. In a letter written in November, 1598, he
+informs the Duke Cesare (Duke of Modena, though no longer of Ferrara) that
+the Grand Duke of Florence had offered him a position at Florence. And his
+Serene Highness, more kindly and forgiving than the late Duke, wrote him
+an obliging and congratulatory letter in the following month.
+
+At Florence everything at first seemed to be going well with him, and he
+seemed to stand high in favour with the Grand Duke Ferdinand. But very
+shortly he quitted Florence in anger and disgust on the discovery of the
+secret marriage of his third son, Guarini, with a woman of low condition
+at Pisa, with at least the connivance, as the poet thought, whether justly
+or not there is nothing to show, of the Grand Duke.
+
+After that his old friend the Duchess of Urbino once again stood his
+friend, and he obtained a position in the court of Urbino, then one of the
+most widely famed centres of cultivation and letters in Italy. And for a
+while everything seemed at last to be well with him there. On the 23rd of
+February, 1603, he writes to his sister, who apparently had been pressing
+him to come home to Ferrara:--"I should like to come home, my sister. I
+have great need and a great desire for home; but I am treated so well
+here, and with so much distinction and so much kindness, that I cannot
+come. I must tell you that all expenses for myself and my servants are
+supplied, so that I have not to spend a farthing for anything in the world
+that I need. The orders are that anything I ask for should be furnished to
+me. Besides all which, they give me three hundred crowns a year; so that,
+what with money and expenses, the position is worth six hundred crowns a
+year to me. You may judge, then, if I can throw it up. May God grant you
+every happiness!
+
+ Your brother,
+ B. GUARINI."
+
+But all would not do. He had been but a very little time in this little
+Umbrian Athens among the Apennines before he once again threw up his
+position in anger and disgust, because he did not obtain all the marks of
+distinction to which he thought that he was entitled. This was in 1603. He
+was now sixty-six, and seems at length to have made no further attempt to
+haunt at court. Once again he was at Rome in 1605, having undertaken, at
+the request of the citizens of Ferrara, to carry their felicitations to
+the new Pope, Paul the Fifth. And with the exception of that short
+expedition his last years were spent in the retirement of his ancestral
+estate of Guarina.
+
+The property is situated in the district of Lendinara, on the fat and
+fertile low-lying region between Rovigo and Padua, and belongs to the
+commune--parish, as we should say--of St. Bellino. The house, dating
+probably from the latter part of the fifteenth century, is not much more
+than a hundred yards or so from the _piazza_ of the village, which boasts
+two thousand inhabitants. The road between the two is bordered with trees.
+The whole district is as flat as a billiard table, and as prosaical in its
+well-to-do fertility as can be imagined. It is intersected by a variety of
+streams, natural and artificial. About a couple of miles from the house to
+the south is the Canalbianco; and a little farther to the north the
+Adigetto. To the east runs the Scortico. St. Bellino, from whom the
+village is named, was, it seems, enrolled among the martyrs by Pope
+Eugenius the Third in 1152. He has a great specialty for curing the bite
+of mad dogs. There is a grand cenotaph in his honour in the village
+church, which was raised by some of the Guarini family. But this, too,
+like all else, became a subject of trouble and litigation to our poet. A
+certain Baldassare Bonifaccio of Rovigo wanted to transport the saint to
+that city. Guarini would not hear of this; litigated the matter before the
+tribunals of Venice, and prevailed. So the saint still resides at St.
+Bellino to the comfort of all those bitten by mad dogs in those parts. The
+house and estate have passed through several hands since that time; but a
+number of old family portraits may still be seen on the walls, together
+with the family arms, and the motto, "Fortis est in asperis non turbari."
+The armchair and writing table of the poet are also still preserved in the
+house, and a fig-tree is pointed out close by it, under the shade of which
+the poet, as tradition tells, wrote on that table and in that chair his
+"Pastor Fido." There is an inscription on the chair as follows: "Guarin
+sedendo qui canto, che vale al paragon seggio reale."[58]
+
+It was not, however, during this his last residence here that the "Pastor
+Fido" was written, but long previously. It was doubtless his habit to
+escape from the cares of official life in Ferrara from time to time as he
+could; and it must have been in such moments that the celebrated pastoral
+was written.[59]
+
+The idea of a scholar and a poet, full of years and honours, passing the
+quiet evening of his life in a tranquil retirement in his own house on his
+own land, is a pleasing one. But it is to be feared that in the case of
+the author of the "Pastor Fido" it would be a fallacious one. Guarini
+would not have come to live on his estate if he could have lived
+contentedly in any city. We may picture him to ourselves sitting under his
+fig-tree, or pacing at evening under the trees of the straight avenue
+between his house and the village, or on the banks of one of the sluggish
+streams slowly finding their way through the flat fields towards the Po;
+but I am afraid the picture must be of one "Remote, unfriended,
+melancholy, slow," with eyes bent earthwards, and discontented mind:
+"remote," because to the Italian mind all places beyond the easy reach of
+a city are so; "unfriended," because he had quarrelled with everybody;
+"melancholy," because all had gone amiss with him, and his life had been a
+failure; "slow," because no spring of hope in the mind gave any elasticity
+to his step.
+
+One other "haunt" of the aged poet must, however, be mentioned, because it
+is a very characteristic one. During this last residence at Guarina, he
+hired an apartment at Ferrara, selecting it in a crowded part of the
+centre of the city, especially frequented by the lawyers, that he might be
+in the midst of them, when he went into the city on the various business
+connected with his interminable lawsuits. The most crowded part of the
+heart of the city of Ferrara! It would be difficult to find any such part
+now. But the picture offered to the imagination, of the aged poet,
+professor, courtier, haunting the courts, the lawyers' chambers, leaving
+his, at least, tranquil retreat at St. Bellino, to drag weary feet through
+the lanes of the city in which he had in earlier days played so different
+a part, is a sad one. But there are people who like contention so much
+that such work is a labour of love to them. And certainly, if the
+inference may be drawn from the fact of his never having been free from
+lawsuits in one quarrel or another, Guarini must have been one of these.
+But it is passing strange that the same man should have been the author of
+the "Pastor Fido."
+
+They pursued him to the end, these litigations; or he pursued them! And at
+last he died, not at Guarina, but at Venice, on the 7th of October, 1612,
+where, characteristically enough, he chanced to be on business connected
+with some lawsuit.
+
+And now a few words must be said about his great work, the "Pastor Fido."
+It is one of the strangest things in the range of literary history that
+such a man should have written such a poem. He was, one would have said,
+the last man in the world to produce such a work. The first ten years of
+his working life were spent in the labour of a pedagogue; the rest of it
+in the inexpressibly dry, frivolous, and ungenial routine of a small
+Italian court, or in wandering from one to the other of them in the vain
+and always disappointed search for such employment. We are told that he
+was a punctilious, stiff, unbending, angular man; upright and honourable,
+but unforgiving and wont to nurse his enmities. He was soured,
+disappointed, discontented with everybody and everything, involved in
+litigation first with his father, and then with his own children. And this
+was the man who wrote the "Pastor Fido," of all poems comparable to it in
+reputation the lightest, the airiest, and the most fantastic! The argument
+of it is as follows:
+
+The Arcadians, suffering in various ways from the anger of Diana, were at
+last informed by the oracle that the evils which afflicted them would
+cease when a youth and a maiden, both descended from the Immortals, as it
+should seem the _creme de la creme_ of Arcadian society mostly was, should
+be joined together in faithful love. Thereupon Montano, a priest of the
+goddess who was descended from Hercules, arranged that his only son Silvio
+should be betrothed to Amaryllis, the only daughter of Tytirus, who was
+descended from Pan. The arrangement seemed all that could be desired, only
+that a difficulty arose from the fact that Silvio, whose sole passion was
+the chase, could not be brought to care the least in the world for
+Amaryllis. Meantime Mirtillo, the son, as was supposed, of the shepherd
+Carino, fell desperately in love with Amaryllis. She was equally attached
+to him, but dared not in the smallest degree confess her love, because the
+law of Arcadia would have punished with death her infidelity to her
+betrothed vows. A certain Corisca, however, who had conceived a violent
+but unrequited passion for Mirtillo, perceiving or guessing the love of
+Amaryllis for him, hating her accordingly, and hoping that, if she could
+be got out of the way, she might win Mirtillo's love, schemes by deceit
+and lies to induce Mirtillo and Amaryllis to enter together a cave, which
+they do in perfect innocence, and without any thought of harm. Then he
+contrives that they should be caught there, and denounced by a satyr; and
+Amaryllis is condemned to die. The law, however, permits that her life may
+be saved by any Arcadian who will voluntarily die in her stead; and this
+Mirtillo determines to do, although he believes that Amaryllis cares
+nothing for him, and also is led by the false Corisca to believe that she
+had gone into the cave for the purpose of meeting with another lover. The
+duty of sacrificing him devolves on Montano the priest; and he is about to
+carry out the law, when Carino, who has been seeking his reputed son
+Mirtillo, comes in, and while attempting to make out that he is a
+foreigner, and therefore not capable of satisfying the law by his death,
+brings unwittingly to light circumstances that prove that he is in truth a
+son of Montano, and therefore a descendant of the god Hercules. It thus
+appears that a marriage between Mirtillo and Amaryllis will exactly
+satisfy the conditions demanded by the oracle. There is an under-plot,
+which consists in providing a lover and a marriage for the woman-hater
+Silvio. He is loved in vain by the nymph Dorinda, whom he unintentionally
+wounds with an arrow while out hunting. The pity he feels for her wound
+softens his heart towards her, and all parties are made happy by this
+second marriage.
+
+Such is a skeleton of the story of the "Pastor Fido." It will be observed
+that there is more approach to a plot and to human interest than in any
+previous production of this kind, and some of the situations are well
+conceived for dramatic effect. And accordingly the success which it
+achieved was immediate and immense. Nor, much as the taste of the world
+has been changed since that day, has it ever lost its place in the
+estimation of cultivated Italians.
+
+It would be wholly uninteresting to attempt any account of the
+wide-spreading literary controversies to which the publication of the
+"Pastor Fido" gave rise. The author terms it a tragi-comedy; and this
+title was violently attacked. The poet himself, as may well be imagined
+from the idiosyncrasy of the man, was not slow to reply to his critics,
+and did so in two lengthy treatises entitled from the name of a
+contemporary celebrated actor, "Verato primo," and "Verato secondo," which
+are printed in the four-quarto-volume edition of his works, but which
+probably no mortal eye has read for the last two hundred years!
+
+The question of the rivalry between the "Aminta" of Tasso and the "Pastor
+Fido" has an element of greater interest in it. It is certain that the
+former preceded the latter, and doubtless suggested it. It seems probable
+that Ginguene is right in his suggestion, that Guarini, fully conscious
+that no hope was open to him of rivalling his greater contemporary and
+townsman in epic poetry, strove to surpass him in pastoral. It must be
+admitted that he has at least equalled him. Yet, while it is impossible to
+deny that almost every page of the "Pastor Fido" indicates not so much
+plagiarism as an open and avowed purpose of doing the same thing better,
+if possible, than his rival has done it, the very diverse natural
+character of the two poets is also, at every page, curiously indicated.
+Specially the reader may be recommended to compare the passages in the two
+poems where Tasso under the name of Thyrsis, and Guarini under the name of
+Carino (Act 5, scene 1), represent the sufferings both underwent at the
+court of Alphonso II. The lines of Guarini are perhaps the most vigorous
+in their biting satire. But the gentler and nobler nature of Tasso is
+unmistakable.
+
+It is strange that the Italian critics, who are for the most part so
+lenient to the licentiousness of most of the authors of this period, blame
+Guarini for the too great warmth, amounting to indecency, of his poem. The
+writer of his life in the French "Biographie Universelle" refers to
+certain scenes as highly indecent. I can only say that, on examining the
+passages indicated carefully, I could find no indecency at all. It is
+probable that the writer referred to had never read the pages in question.
+But it is odd that those whose criticism he is no doubt reflecting should
+have said so. No doubt there are passages, not those mentioned by the
+writer in the "Biographie," but for instance the first scene of the second
+act, when a young man in a female disguise is one among a party of girls,
+who propose a prize for her who can give to one of them, the judge, the
+sweetest kiss, which prize he wins, which might be deemed somewhat on the
+sunny side of the hedge that divides the permissible from the
+unpermissible. But in comparison with others of that age Guarini is pure
+as snow.
+
+It has been said in speaking of the sad story of his daughter Anna, that
+she was accused of having given her husband cause for jealousy. It would
+seem very clear that there was no ground for any such accusation. But it
+was said that the misconduct on her part had been due to the corruption of
+her mind by the reading of her father's verses. The utter groundlessness
+of such an assertion might be shown in many ways. But the savage and
+malignant cruelty of it points with considerable evidence to the sources
+of the current talk about the courtier poet's licentiousness.
+
+It is impossible to find room here for a detailed comparison between these
+two celebrated pastorals; and it is the less needed inasmuch as Ginguene
+has done it very completely and at great length in the twenty-fifth
+chapter of the second part of his work.
+
+Guarini also produced a comedy, the "Idropica," which was acted with much
+success at the court of Mantua, and is printed among his works, as well as
+some prose pieces of small importance, the principal of which is "Il
+Secretario," a treatise on the duties of a secretary, not printed among
+his works, but of which an edition exists in pot quarto (186 pages)
+printed at Venice in 1594. Neither have his letters been printed among his
+works. They exist, printed without index or order of any kind, in a volume
+of the same size as the "Secretario," printed at Venice also in 1595, but
+by a different printer.
+
+The name, however, of Batista Guarini would have long since been
+forgotten, had he not written the "Pastor Fido."
+
+ T. ADOLPHUS TROLLOPE, in Belgravia.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[48] The now celebrated pass of the Ampezzo between Venice and Innspruck.
+
+[49] This must probably be Hall on the Inn, a little below Innspruck.
+Certainly any boat which he got there for the descent of the river must
+have been a sufficiently miserable mode of travelling.
+
+[50] Far, that is, from the bank of the river, where he left his boat at
+night.
+
+[51] Lettere del Signor Cavaliere Battista Guarini, Nobile Ferrarese, di
+nuovo in questa seconda impressione di alcune altre accrescinte, e dall'
+Autore stesso corrette, di Agostino Michele raccolte, et al Sereniss.
+Signore il Duca d'Urbino dedicate. Con Privilegio. In Venetia, MDXCV.
+Appresso Gio. Battista Ciotti Senese al segno della Minerva.
+
+[52] I translate literally. Old-fashioned people will remember a somewhat
+similar use of the word "Flame" in English.
+
+[53] I subjoin a literal prose translation in preference to borrowing a
+rhymed one from any of Tasso's translators. This fellow "flits and circles
+around more unstable than dry leaves in the wind. Without faith, without
+love, false are his pretended torments, and false the affection which
+prompts his sighs. A traitorous lover, he loves and despises almost at the
+same moment, and in triumph displays the spoils of women as impious
+trophies."
+
+[54] "See how this fellow, who in vain aims at a lofty goal, by blaming
+others, and by lying accents, sharpens against himself his teeth, while
+without reason he is enraged with me.... Of two flames he boasts, and ties
+and breaks over and over again the same knot; and by these arts (who would
+believe it!) bends in his favour the Gods!" ...
+
+[55] It is odd that he should so write in a paper dated, as the present
+is, from Venice. I suppose the expression came from his feeling that he
+was addressing parsons at Ferrara.
+
+[56] Seeing that, as has been said, his ancestors were of Verona, which
+belonged to Venice.
+
+[57] Barotti gives it at length; but it is hardly worth while to occupy
+space by reproducing it here.
+
+[58] "Guarini sitting here, sang, that which renders the seat the equal of
+a royal throne."
+
+[59] It is very doubtful and very difficult to determine at what period of
+his life the "Pastor Fido" was written. Ginguene (Hist. Ital. Lit. Part
+II. ch. xxv.) has sufficiently shown that the statements of the Italian
+biographers on this point are inaccurate. Probably it was planned and, in
+part, written many years before it was finished. It was first printed in
+1590.
+
+
+
+
+THE VAQUERO.[60]
+
+
+ Oh, who is so free as a gallant _vaquero_?
+ With his beauty of bronze 'neath his shady _sombrero_:
+ He smiles at his love, and he laughs at his fate,
+ For he knows he is lord of a noble estate:
+ The prairie's his own, and he mocks at the great.
+ "Ho-ho! Hai! Ho-ho!
+ Head 'em off! Turn 'em back!
+ Keep 'em up to the track!
+ Ho-hillo! Ho-hillo!
+ Cric--crac!"
+
+ Oh, Donna Luisa is proud as she's fair;
+ But she parted last night with a lock of her hair.
+ And under the stars she roams, seeking for rest,
+ While she thinks of the stranger that came from the West;
+ And Juan bears something wrapped up in his breast--
+ "Ho-ho! Hai! Ho-ho!
+ Head 'em off! Turn 'em back!
+ Keep 'em up to the track!
+ Ho-hillo! Ho-hillo!
+ Cric--crac!'"
+
+ His proudest possessions are prettily placed,
+ His love at his heart, and his life at his waist.
+ And if in a quarrel he happen to fall,
+ Why, the prairie's his grave, and his _poncho's_[61] his pall,
+ And Donna Luisa--gets over it all!
+ "Ho-ho! Hai! Ho-ho!
+ Head 'em off! Turn 'em back!
+ Keep 'em up to the track!
+ Ho-hillo! Ho-hillo!
+ Cric--crac!"
+
+ The Padre may preach, and the Notary frown,
+ But the _poblanas_[62] smile as he rides through the town:
+ And the Padre, he knows, likes a kiss on the sly,
+ And the Notary oft has a "drop in his eye,"
+ But all that he does is to love and to die--
+ "Ho-ho! Hai! Ho-ho!
+ Head 'em off! Turn 'em back!
+ Keep 'em up to the track!
+ Ho-hillo! Ho-hillo!
+ Cric--crac!"
+
+ FRANK DESPREZ, _in Temple Bar_.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[60] A California cattle-driver. Furnished with revolver, lasso, and
+long-lashed whip, these adventurous gentry conduct the half-wild cattle of
+the plains over miles of their surface; and, with their gay sashes, high
+boots, gilded and belled spurs, and dark, broad hats (_sombreros_),
+present a very picturesque appearance.
+
+[61] Cloak.
+
+[62] Peasant girls.
+
+
+
+
+TWO MODERN JAPANESE STORIES.
+
+
+The two stories which follow were circulated in the city of Yedo some
+years back, and show that the better educated classes of Japanese are
+keenly alive to the absurdity of the figure cut by their countrymen when
+they attempt to jump over five hundred years in five hundred days.
+
+
+I. A REGULAR MESS.
+
+Some six years back lived in the beautiful village of Minoge an old lady
+who kept the big tea-house of the place known as the "White Pine." Minoge
+is situated at the base of the holy mountain Oyama, and during the months
+of August and September trade in Minoge was always brisk, on account of
+the influx of pilgrims from all parts of Japan, who came hither to perform
+the holy duty of ascending the mountain, and of paying their devoirs at
+the shrine of the Thunder-God, previous to making the grand pilgrimage of
+Fuji-Yama.
+
+The old lady was well off, and her inn bore an unblemished reputation for
+possessing the prettiest serving-girls, the gayest guest-chambers, and the
+primest stewed eels--the dish _par excellence_ of Japanese _gourmets_--of
+any hostelry in the country side. One of her daughters was married in
+Yedo, and a son was studying in one of the European colleges of that city;
+still she was as completely rustic and unacquainted with the march of
+affairs outside as if she had never heard of Yedo, much less of
+foreigners. At that time it was a very rare thing indeed for a foreigner
+to be seen in Minoge, and the stray artists and explorers who had wandered
+there were regarded much in the same way as would have been so many white
+elephants.
+
+It caused, therefore, no little excitement in the village when, one fine
+autumn evening, the rumour came along that a foreigner was making his way
+towards the "White Pine." Every one tried to get a glimpse of him. The
+chubby-cheeked boys and girls at the school threw down their books and
+pens, and crowded to the door and windows; the bath-house was soon empty
+of its patrons and patronesses, who, red as lobsters with boiling water,
+with dishevelled locks and garments hastily bound round them, formed line
+outside; the very Yakunin, or mayor, sentenced a prisoner he was judging
+straight off, without bothering himself to inquire into evidence, so as
+not to be balked of the sight, and every wine and barber's shop sent forth
+its quota of starers into the little street.
+
+Meanwhile the foreigner was leisurely striding along. He was taller by far
+than the tallest man in Minoge, his hair was fair, and even his bronzed
+face and hands were fair compared to those of the natives. On the back of
+his head was a felt wide-awake, he wore a blue jacket and blue half
+trousers (Anglice, knickerbockers), thick hose, and big boots. In his
+mouth was a pipe--being much shorter than Japanese smoking tubes--in his
+hand a stick, and on his back a satchel.
+
+As he passed, one or two urchins, bolder than the rest, shouted out,
+"Tojin baka" ("Foreign beast") and instantly fled indoors, or behind their
+mothers' skirts; but the majority of the villagers simply stared, with an
+occasional interjection expressive of wonder at his height, fair hair, and
+costume.
+
+At the door of the "White Pine" he halted, unstrapped his bundle, took off
+his boots, and in very fair Japanese requested to be shown his room. The
+old lady, after a full ten minutes' posturing, complimenting, bowing, and
+scraping, ushered him into her best guest-chamber. "For," said she, "being
+a foreigner, he must be rich, and wouldn't like ordinary pilgrim
+accommodation." And she drew to the sliding screens, and went off to
+superintend his repast. Although nothing but the foreigner's boots were to
+be seen outside, a gaping crowd had collected, striving to peer through
+the cracks in the doors, and regarding the boots as if they were infernal
+machines. One, more enterprising than the rest, took a boot up, passed it
+to his neighbour, and in a short time it had circulated from hand to hand
+throughout the population of Minoge, and was even felt and pinched by the
+mayor himself, who replaced it with the reverence due to some religious
+emblem or relic.
+
+Then the hostess served up her banquet--seaweed, sweets, raw "tighe"--the
+salmon of Japan--in slices, garnished with turnips and horse-radish, egg
+soup with pork lumps floating in it, chicken delicately broiled, together
+with a steaming bottle of her choicest "San Toku Shiu," or wine of the
+Three Virtues (which keeps out the cold, appeases hunger, and induces
+sleep).
+
+The foreigner made an excellent meal, eked out by his own white bread, and
+wine from a flask of pure silver, then, lighting his pipe, reclined at
+full length on the mats, talking to the old lady and her three damsels, O
+Hana, O Kiku, and O Riu (Miss Flower, Miss Chrysanthemum, and Miss
+Dragon). He was walking about the country simply for pleasure, he
+said--which astonished the women greatly--he had been away from Yokohama
+three weeks, and was now on his road to the big mountain. The party were
+soon screaming with laughter at his quaint remarks and at his occasional
+colloquial slips, and in a short time all were such good friends that the
+old lady begged him to display the contents of his satchel. "Certainly,"
+said the stranger, pulling it towards him and opening it. A dirty flannel
+shirt or two didn't produce much impression--perhaps wares of a similar
+nature had been imported before into Minoge--nor did a hair-brush,
+tooth-brush, and comb; but when he pulled out a pistol, which was
+warranted to go off six times in as many seconds, and proceeded to
+exemplify the same in the air, popular excitement began to assert itself
+in a series of "naruhodo's" ("really!"). Then he pulled out a portable
+kerosine lamp--(kerosine lamps are now as common in Japan as shrines by
+the road-side)--and the light it made, throwing entirely into the shade
+the native "andon," or oil wick, burning close by, raised the enthusiasm
+still higher. Lastly he showed a small box of medicines, "certain cures,"
+said he, "for every disease known amongst the sons of men."
+
+The old lady and the maids were enchanted, and matters ended, after much
+haggling and disputation, in the foreigner allowing them to keep the three
+articles for the very reasonable sum of fifty dollars--about fifteen
+pounds sterling--which was handed over to the foreigner, who called for
+his bedding and went fast asleep.
+
+The first thing for the old lady to do the next day was to present herself
+and maids in full holiday costume with their recent purchases at the house
+of the mayor. The great man received them and their goods with the dignity
+befitting his rank, and promised that a public trial should be made of the
+pistol, lamp, and medicines, at an early date, in order to determine
+whether they were worthy to be adopted as institutions in the village.
+
+Accordingly, by proclamation, at a fixed date and hour, all Minoge
+assembled in the open space facing the mayor's house, and the articles
+were brought forth. The pistol was first taken and loaded, as directed by
+the foreigner, by the boldest and strongest man in the village. The first
+shot was fired--it wounded a pack-horse, standing some twenty yards away,
+in the leg; he took fright and bolted with a heavy load of wine tubs down
+the street into the fields: the second shot went through a temple roof
+opposite, and shattered the head of the deity in the shrine: the third
+shot perforated the bamboo hat of a pilgrim; and it was decided not to
+test the remaining three barrels.
+
+Then the lamp was brought forth: the wick was turned up full, and the
+village strong man applied a light. The blaze of light was glorious, and
+drew forth the acclamations of the crowd; but the wick had been turned up
+too high, the glass burst with a tremendous report, the strong man
+dropped the lamp, the oil ignited, ran about and set fire to the matting.
+In ten minutes, however, the local fire brigade got the flames under, and
+the experiments proceeded.
+
+The medicine packets were brought forth. The first was a grey powder. A
+man who had been lame from youth upwards was made to limp out. The powder
+mixed with water, according to directions, was given him. He hobbled away
+in frightful convulsions, and nearly injured his whole limb in so doing.
+
+The second packet was then unsealed--it contained pills. A blind man was
+called out--six pills were rammed down his throat, and he was left
+wallowing in a ditch. The third packet, a small book containing sticking
+plaster, was then introduced. A burly peasant, victim to fearful
+toothache, was made to stand forth. The interior of his mouth was lined
+with the plaster, and when he attempted in his disgust to pull it off,
+away came his skin also.
+
+The medicines were condemned _nem. con._
+
+The foreigner returned, asked how matters had gone, and was told in polite
+but firm terms that his machines were not suited to the people of Minoge.
+Whereupon he returned the fifty dollars to the old lady of the "White
+Pine," and went away laughing. Minoge subsided into its ordinary every-day
+groove of life, and it was not till some years after that the inhabitants
+became better used to pistols, lamps, and European medicines.
+
+
+II. PADDLING HIS OWN CANOE.
+
+Takezawa was the head of a large silk and rice house in Yedo. His father
+had been head, his grandfather had been head, his great-grandfather had
+been head: in fact, the date when the first of the name affixed his seal
+to the documents of the house was lost in the mists of antiquity. So, when
+foreigners were first allowed a foot-hold on the sacred soil of Japan,
+none were so jealous of their advance, none so ardent in their wishes to
+see the white barbarians ousted, as the members of the firm of Takezawa
+and Co.
+
+But times changed. Up to the last, Takezawa held out against the
+introduction of foreign innovations in the mode and manner of conducting
+the affairs of the firm; other houses might employ foreign steamboat
+companies as carriers for their produce from port to port, might import
+foreign goods, and even go so far as to allow the better paid of their
+clerks to dress themselves as they liked in foreign costume; but Takezawa
+and Co. were patriotic Japanese merchants, and resolved to run on in the
+old groove of their ancestors.
+
+But times still changed, and the great house, running on in its solid
+old-fashioned manner, found itself left in the lurch by younger and more
+enterprising firms. This would never do. So Takezawa consulted with his
+partners, patrons, clients, and friends, and after much worthy discussion,
+and much vehement opposition on the part of the old man, it was resolved
+to keep pace with the times, as much as possible, without absolutely
+overturning the old status of the house.
+
+Well, Takezawa and Co. had still a very fair share of the export rice and
+silk business; but their slow, heavy-sterned junks were no match for the
+swift, foreign-built steamers employed by other firms; so, with a
+tremendous wince, and not without a side thought at "Hara Kiri"--(the
+"Happy Despatch")--Takezawa consented to the sale of all his junks, and
+the purchase with the proceeds of a big foreign steamer.
+
+The steamer was bought--a fine three-masted, double-funnelled boat,
+complete with every appliance, newly engined, and manned by European
+officers and leading seamen. From the dock at Yokoska, where she was
+lying, a preliminary trip was made; and so smoothly did everything work,
+and so easily did everything seem to act, under the guidance of the
+Europeans, that Takezawa considered his own mariners perfectly competent
+to handle the vessel after an hour's experience on board. So the Europeans
+were discharged with six months' salaries--about six times as much as they
+would have received at home--and Takezawa fixed a day when the ship should
+be rechristened, and should make her trial trip under Japanese management.
+
+It was a beautiful day in autumn--the most glorious period of the year in
+Japan--when Takezawa and a distinguished company assembled on board the
+steamer, to give her a new name, and to send her forth finally as a
+Japanese steamer. The ship looked brave enough as she lay in the
+dock--ports newly painted, brass-work shining, yards squared, and half
+buried in bunting. At the mizen floated the empire flag of Japan--a red
+sun on a white ground--and as Takezawa gazed fore and aft, and his eyes
+rested on brightness, cleanliness, and order everywhere, he wondered to
+himself how he could have been such a fool as to stand out so long against
+the possession of such a treasure, merely on the grounds of its not being
+Japanese. A fair daughter of one of his partners dashed a cup of "sake"
+against the bows of the vessel, and the newly named "Lightning Bird"
+dashed forward into the ocean. Her head was made straight for Yokohama
+(Takezawa had seen the Englishmen at the wheel manipulate her in that
+course on her trial trip, so he knew she couldn't go wrong). And straight
+she went. Every one was delighted; sweetmeats and wine were served round,
+whilst on the quarterdeck a troupe of the best "Geyshas" or singing-girls
+in Yedo mingled their shrill voices and their guitar notes with the sound
+of the fresh morning breeze through the rigging.
+
+The engines worked magnificently: coals were poured into the furnaces by
+the hundredweight, so as to keep a good uniform thick cloud of smoke
+coming from the funnels--if the smoke lacked intensity for a minute,
+Takezawa, fearful that something was wrong, bellowed forth orders for more
+coal to be heaped on, so that in a quarter of an hour's time the
+"Lightning Bird" consumed as much fuel as would have served a P. and O.
+steamer for half a day. On she went, everybody pleased and smiling,
+everything taut and satisfactory. Straight ahead was Treaty Point--a bold
+bluff running out into the sea. The "Lightning Bird" was bound for
+Yokohama--Yokohama lies well behind Treaty Point--but at the pace she was
+going it was very apparent that, unless a sudden and rapid turn to
+starboard was made, she would run, not into Yokohama, but into Treaty
+Point.
+
+The singing and feasting proceeded merrily on deck, but Takezawa was
+uneasy and undecided on the bridge. The helm was put hard a-port, the
+brave vessel obeyed, and leapt on straight for the line of rocks at the
+foot of the Point, over which the waves were breaking in cascades of foam.
+But the gods would not see a vessel, making her first run under Japanese
+auspices, maltreated and destroyed by simple waves and rocks; so, just in
+time to save an ignominious run aground, the helm was put hard over, fresh
+fuel was piled on to the furnaces, and by barely half a ship's length the
+"Lightning Bird" shaved the Point, and stood in straight for Yokohama bay.
+
+Takezawa breathed freely for the moment; but, as he saw ahead the crowd of
+European ships and native junks through which he would have to thread his
+way, he would have given a very large sum to have had a couple of
+Europeans at the wheel in the place of his own half-witted, scared
+mariners.
+
+However, there was no help for it; the ship sped on, and the guests on
+board, many of whom were thorough rustics, were in raptures at the distant
+views of the white houses on the Yokohama Bund, at the big steamers and
+the graceful sailing vessels on all sides. To avoid the chance of a
+collision, Takezawa managed to keep his steamer well outside; they nearly
+ran down a fishing junk or two, and all but sunk the lightship; still,
+they had not as yet come to absolute grief. Round they went for a long
+half-hour; many of the guests were suffering from sickness, and Takezawa
+thought that he might bring the trip to an end. So he bellowed forth
+orders to stop the engines, and anchor. The anchor was promptly let go,
+but stopping the engines was another matter, for nobody on board knew how
+to do so--there was nothing to be done but to allow the vessel to pursue a
+circular course until steam was exhausted; and she could go no farther. It
+was idle to explain to the distinguished company that this was the course
+invariably adopted by Europeans, for under their noses was the graceful P.
+and O. steamer, a moment since ploughing along at full steam, now riding
+at anchor by her buoy. So round and round went the "Lightning Bird," to
+the amazement of the crews of the ships in harbour and of a large crowd
+gathered on the "Bund;" the brave company on board were now assured that
+the judgment of the gods was overtaking them for having ventured to sea in
+a foreign vessel, and poor Takezawa was half resolved to despatch himself,
+and wholly resolved never to make such an experiment as this again. He
+cursed the day when he was finally led to forsake the groove so honourably
+and profitably grubbed along by his fathers, and strode with hasty steps
+up and down the bridge, refusing to be comforted, and terrifying out of
+their few remaining wits the two poor fellows at the wheel. After a few
+circles, an English man-of-war sent a steam launch after the "Lightning
+Bird," and to the intense disgust of the great Japanese people on board,
+who preferred to see eccentricity on the part of their countrymen, to
+interference by foreigners, but to the great delight of the women and
+rustics, who began to be rather tired of the fun, the engines were
+stopped. Takezawa did not hear the last of this for a long, long time;
+caricatures and verses were constantly being circulated bearing upon the
+fiasco, although it would have been as much as any man's life was worth to
+have taunted him openly with it. But it was a salutary lesson; and
+although he still kept the "Lightning Bird," he engaged Europeans to man
+her, until his men proved themselves adepts, and she afterwards became one
+of the smartest and fastest craft on the coast.--_Belgravia._
+
+
+
+
+SUPPOSED CHANGES IN THE MOON.
+
+
+In this Magazine for August last I considered the moon's multitudinous
+small craters with special reference to the theory that some among those
+small craters may have been produced by the downfall of aerolithic or
+meteoric masses upon the moon's once plastic surface. Whether it be
+considered probable that this is really the case or not with regard to
+actually existent lunar craters, it cannot be doubted that during one
+period of the moon's history, a period probably lasting many millions of
+years, many crater-shaped depressions must have been produced in this way.
+As I showed in that essay, it is absolutely certain that thousands of
+meteoric masses, large enough to form visible depressions where they fell,
+must have fallen during the moon's plastic era. It is certain also that
+that era must have been very long-lasting. Nevertheless, it remains
+possible (many will consider it extremely probable, if not absolutely
+certain) that during sequent periods all such traces were removed. There
+is certainly nothing in the aspect of the present lunar craters, even the
+smallest and most numerous, to preclude the possibility that they, like
+the larger ones, were the results of purely volcanic action; and to many
+minds it seems preferable to adopt one general theory respecting all such
+objects as may be classed in a regular series, than to consider that some
+members of the series are to be explained in one way and others in a
+different way. We can form a series extending without break or
+interruption from the largest lunar craters, more than a hundred miles in
+diameter, to the smallest visible craters, less than a quarter of a mile
+across, or even to far smaller craters, if increase of telescopic power
+should reveal such. And therefore many object to adopt any theory in
+explanation of the smaller craters (or some of them) which could
+manifestly not be extended to the largest. Albeit we must remember that
+certainly if any small craters had been formed during the plastic era by
+meteoric downfall, and had remained unchanged after the moon solidified,
+it would now be quite impossible to distinguish these from craters formed
+in the ordinary manner.
+
+While we thus recognise the possibility, at any rate, that multitudes of
+small lunar craters, say from a quarter of a mile to two miles in
+diameter, may have been formed by falling meteoric masses hundreds of
+millions of years ago, and may have remained unchanged even until now, we
+perceive that on the moon later processes must have formed many small
+craters, precisely as such small craters have been formed on our own
+earth. I consider, at the close of the essay above mentioned, the two
+stages of the moon's development which must have followed the period
+during which her surface was wholly or in great part plastic. First, there
+was the stage during which the crust contracted more rapidly than the
+nucleus, and was rent from time to time as though the nucleus were
+expanding within it. Secondly, there came the era when the nucleus, having
+retained a greater share of heat, began to cool, and therefore to contract
+more quickly than the crust, so that the crust became wrinkled or
+corrugated, as it followed up (so to speak) the retreating nucleus.
+
+It would be in the later part of this second great era that the moon (if
+ever) would have resembled the earth. The forms of volcanic activity still
+existing on the earth seem most probably referable to the gradual
+contraction of the nucleus, and the steady resulting contraction of the
+rocky crust. As Mallet and Dana have shown, the heat resulting from the
+contraction, or in reality from the slow downfall of the crust, is amply
+sufficient to account for the whole observed volcanian energy of the
+earth. It has indeed been objected, that if this theory (which is
+considered more fully in my "Pleasant Ways in Science") were correct, we
+ought to find volcanoes occurring indifferently, or at any rate volcanic
+phenomena of various kinds so occurring, in all parts of the earth's
+surface, and not prevalent in special regions and scarcely ever noticed
+elsewhere. But this objection is based on erroneous ideas as to the length
+of time necessary for the development of subterranean changes, and also as
+to the extent of regions which at present find in certain volcanic craters
+a sufficient outlet for their subterranean fires. It is natural that, if a
+region of wide extent has at any time been relieved at some point, that
+spot should long afterwards remain as an outlet, a sort of safety-valve,
+which, by yielding somewhat more quickly than any neighbouring part of the
+crust, would save the whole region from destructive earthquakes; and
+though in the course of time a crater which had acted such a part would
+cease to do so, yet the period required for such a change would be very
+long indeed compared with those periods by which men ordinarily measure
+time. Moreover, it by no means follows that every part of the earth's
+crust would even require an outlet for heat developed beneath it. Over
+wide tracts of the earth's surface the rate of contraction may be such, or
+may be so related to the thickness of the crust, that the heat developed
+can find ready escape by conduction to the surface, and by radiation
+thence into space. Nay, from the part which water is known to play in
+producing volcanic phenomena, it may well be that in every region where
+water does not find its way in large quantities to the parts in which the
+subterranean heat is great, no volcanic action results. Mallet, following
+other experienced vulcanologists, lays down the law, "Without water there
+can be no volcano;" so that the neighbourhood of large oceans, as well as
+special conditions of the crust, must be regarded as probably essential to
+the existence of such outlets as Vesuvius, Etna, Hecla, and the rest.
+
+So much premised, let us enquire whether it is antecedently likely that in
+the moon volcanic action may still be in progress, and afterwards consider
+the recent announcement of a lunar disturbance, which, if really volcanic,
+certainly indicates volcanic action far more intense than any which is at
+present taking place in our own earth. I have already, I may remark,
+considered the evidence respecting this new lunar crater which some
+suppose to have been formed during the last two years. But I am not here
+going over the same ground as in my former paper ("Contemporary Review"
+for August, 1878). Moreover, since that paper was written, new evidence
+has been obtained, and I am now able to speak with considerable confidence
+about points which were in some degree doubtful three months ago.
+
+Let us consider, in the first place, what is the moon's probable age, not
+in years, but in development. Here we have only probable evidence to guide
+us, evidence chiefly derived from the analogy of our own earth. At least,
+we have only such evidence when we are enquiring into the moon's age as a
+preliminary to the consideration of her actual aspect and its meaning. No
+doubt many features revealed by telescopic scrutiny are full of
+significance in this respect. No one who has ever looked at the moon,
+indeed, with a telescope of great power has failed to be struck by the
+appearance of deadness which her surface presents, or to be impressed (at
+a first view, in any case), with the idea that he is looking at a world
+whose period of life must be set in a very remote antiquity. But we must
+not take such considerations into account in discussing the _a priori_
+probabilities that the moon is a very aged world. Thus we have only
+evidence from analogy to guide us in this part of our enquiry. I note the
+point at starting, because the indicative mood is so much more convenient
+than the conditional, that I may frequently in this part of my enquiry use
+the former where the actual nature of the evidence would only justify the
+latter. Let it be understood that the force of the reasoning here depends
+entirely on the weight we are disposed to allow to arguments from analogy.
+
+Assuming the planets and satellites of the solar system to be formed in
+some such manner as Laplace suggested in his "Nebular Hypothesis," the
+moon, as an orb travelling round the earth, must be regarded as very much
+older than she is, even in years. Even if we accept the theory of
+accretion which has been recently suggested as better according with known
+facts, it would still follow that probably the moon had existence, as a
+globe of matter nearly of her present size, long before the earth had
+gathered in the major portion of her substance. Necessarily, therefore, if
+we assume as far more probable than either theory that the earth and moon
+attained their present condition by combined processes of condensation and
+accretion, we should infer that the moon is far the older of the two
+bodies in years.
+
+But if we even suppose that the earth and moon began their career as
+companion planets at about the same epoch, we should still have reason to
+believe that these planets, equal though they were in age so far as mere
+years are concerned, must be very unequally advanced so far as development
+is concerned, and must therefore in that respect be of very unequal age.
+
+It was, I believe, Sir Isaac Newton who first called attention to the
+circumstance that the larger a planet is, the longer will be the various
+stages of its existence. He used the same reasoning which was afterwards
+urged by Buffon, and suggested an experiment which Buffon was the first to
+carry out. If two globes of iron, of unequal size, be heated to the same
+degree, and then left to cool side by side, it will be found that the
+larger glows with a ruddy light after the smaller has become quite dark,
+and that the larger remains intensely hot long after the smaller has
+become cool enough to be handled. The reason of the difference is very
+readily recognised. Indeed, Newton perceived that there would be such a
+difference before the matter had been experimentally tested. The quantity
+of heat in the unequal globes is proportional to the volume, the substance
+of each being the same. The heat is emitted from the surface, and at a
+rate depending on the extent of surface. But the volume of the larger
+exceeds that of the smaller in greater degree than the surface of the
+larger exceeds the surface of the other. Suppose, for instance, the larger
+has a diameter twice as great as that of the smaller, its surface is four
+times as great as that of the smaller, its volume eight times as great.
+Having, then, eight times as much heat as the smaller at the beginning,
+and parting with that heat only four times as fast as the smaller, the
+supply necessarily lasts twice as long; or, more exactly, each stage in
+the cooling of the larger lasts twice as long as the corresponding stage
+in the cooling of the smaller. We see that the duration of the heat is
+greater for the larger in the same degree that the diameter is greater.
+And we should have obtained the same result whatever diameters we had
+considered. Suppose, for instance, we heat two globes of iron, one an inch
+in diameter, the other seven inches, to a white heat. The surface of the
+larger is forty-nine times that of the smaller, and thus it gives out at
+the beginning, and at each corresponding stage of cooling, forty-nine
+times as much heat as the smaller. But it possesses at the beginning three
+hundred and forty-three (seven times seven times seven) times as much
+heat. Consequently, the supply will last seven times as long, precisely as
+a stock of three hundred and forty-three thousand pounds, expended
+forty-nine times as fast as a stock of one thousand pounds only, would
+last seven times as long. In every case we find that the duration of the
+heat-emission for globes of the same material equally heated at the outset
+is proportional to their diameters.
+
+Now, before applying this result to the case of the moon, we must take
+into account two considerations:--First, the probability that when the
+moon was formed she was not nearly so hot as the earth when it first took
+planetary shape; and secondly, the different densities of the earth and
+moon.
+
+The original heat of every member of the solar system, including the sun,
+depended on the gravitating energy of its own mass. The greater that
+energy, the greater the heat generated either by the process of steady
+contraction imagined in Laplace's theory, or by the process of meteoric
+indraught imagined in the aggregation theory. To show how very different
+are the heat-generating powers of two very unequal masses, consider what
+would happen if the earth drew down to its own surface a meteoric mass
+which had approached the earth under her own attraction only. (The case is
+of course purely imaginary, because no meteor can approach the earth which
+has not been subjected to the far greater attractive energy of the sun,
+and does not possess a velocity far greater than any which the earth
+herself could impart). In this case such a mass would strike the earth
+with a velocity of about seven miles per second, and the heat generated
+would be that due to this velocity only. Now, when a meteor strikes the
+sun full tilt after a journey from the star depths under his attraction,
+it reaches his surface with a velocity of nearly three hundred and sixty
+miles per second. The heat generated is nearly fifty times greater than in
+the imagined case of the earth. The moon being very much less than the
+earth, the velocity she can impart to meteoric bodies is still less. It
+amounts, in fact, to only about a mile per second. The condensing energy
+of the moon in her vaporous era was in like manner far less than that of
+the earth, and consequently far less heat was then generated. Thus,
+although we might well believe on _a priori_ grounds, even if not assured
+by actual study of the lunar features, that the moon when first formed as
+a planet had a surface far hotter than molten iron, we must yet believe
+that, when first formed, the moon had a temperature very much below that
+of our earth at the corresponding stage of her existence.
+
+On this account, then, we must consider that the moon started in planetary
+existence in a condition as to heat which our earth did not attain till
+many millions, probably hundreds of millions of years after the epoch of
+her first formation as a planet.
+
+As regards the moon's substance, we have no means of forming a
+satisfactory opinion. But we shall be safe in regarding quantity of matter
+in the moon as a safer basis of calculation than volume, in comparing the
+duration of her various stages of development with those of our own earth.
+When, in the August number of this Magazine, I adopted a relation derived
+from the latter and less correct method, it was because the more correct
+method gave the result most favourable to the argument I was then
+considering. The same is indeed the case now. Yet it will be better to
+adopt the more exact method, because the consideration relates no longer
+to a mere side issue, but belongs to the very essence of my reasoning.
+
+The moon has a mass equal to about one eighty-first part of the earth's.
+Her diameter being less than the earth's, about as two to seven, the
+duration of each stage of her cooling would be in this degree less than
+the corresponding duration for the earth, if her density were the same as
+the earth's, in which case her mass would be only one forty-ninth part of
+the earth's. But her mass being so much less, we must assume that her
+amount of heat at any given stage of cooling was less in similar degree
+than it would have been had her density been the same as the earth's. We
+may, in fact, assume that the moon's total supply of heat would be only
+one eighty-first of the earth's if the two bodies were at the same
+temperature throughout.[63] But the surface of the moon is between
+one-thirteenth and one-fourteenth of the earth's. Since, then, the earth
+at any given stage of cooling parted with her heat between thirteen and
+fourteen times as fast as the moon, but had about eighty-one times as much
+heat to part with (for that stage), it follows that she would take about
+six times as long (six times thirteen and a-half is equal to eighty-one)
+to cool through that particular stage as the moon would.
+
+If we take this relation as the basis of our estimate of the moon's age,
+we shall find that, even if the moon's existence as a planet began
+simultaneously with the earth's instead of many millions of years earlier,
+even if the moon was then as hot as the earth instead of being so much
+cooler that many millions of years would be required for the earth to cool
+to the same temperature--making, I say, these assumptions, which probably
+correspond to the omission of hundreds of millions of years in our
+estimate of the moon's age, we shall still find the moon to be hundreds of
+millions of years older than the earth.
+
+Nay, we may even take a position still less favourable to my argument. Let
+us overlook the long ages during which the two orbs were in the vaporous
+state, and suppose the earth and moon to be simultaneously in that stage
+of planetary existence when the surface has a temperature of two thousand
+degrees Centigrade.
+
+From Bischoff's experiments on the cooling of rocks, it appears to follow
+that some three hundred and twenty millions of years must have elapsed
+between the time when the earth's surface was at this temperature and the
+time when the surface temperature was reduced to two hundred degrees
+Centigrade, or one hundred and eighty degrees Fahrenheit above the
+boiling point. The earth was for that enormous period a mass (in the main)
+of molten rock. In the moon's case this period lasted only one-sixth of
+three hundred and twenty million years, or about fifty-three million
+years, leaving two hundred and sixty-seven million years' interval between
+the time when the moon's surface had cooled down to two hundred degrees
+Centigrade and the later epoch when the earth's surface had attained that
+temperature.
+
+I would not, however, insist on these numerical details. It has always
+seemed to me unsafe to base calculations respecting suns and planets on
+experiments conducted in the laboratory. The circumstances under which the
+heavenly bodies exist, regarding these bodies as wholes, are utterly
+unlike any which can be produced in the laboratory, no matter on what
+scale the experimenter may carry on his researches. I have often been
+amused to see even mathematicians of repute employing a formula based on
+terrestrial experiments, physical, optical, and otherwise, as though the
+formula were an eternal omnipresent reality, without noting that, if
+similarly applied to obtain other determinations, the most stupendously
+absurd results would be deduced. It is as though, having found that a
+child grows three inches in the fifth year of his age, one should infer
+not only that that person but every other person in every age and in every
+planet, nay, in the whole universe, would be thirty inches taller at the
+age of fifteen than at the age of five, without noticing that the same
+method of computation would show everyone to be more than fifteen feet
+taller at the age of sixty-five. It may well be that, instead of three
+hundred and twenty millions of years, the era considered by Bischoff
+lasted less than a hundred millions of years. Or quite as probably it may
+have lasted five or six hundred millions of years. And again, instead of
+the corresponding era of the moon's past history having lasted one sixth
+of the time required to produce the same change in the earth's condition,
+it may have lasted a quarter, or a third, or even half that time, though
+quite as probably it may have lasted much less than a sixth. But in any
+case we cannot reasonably doubt that the moon reached the stage of cooling
+through which the earth is now passing many millions of years ago. We
+shall not probably err very greatly in taking the interval as at least two
+hundred millions of years.
+
+But I could point out that in reality it is a matter of small importance,
+so far as my present argument is concerned, whether we adopt Bischoff's
+period or a period differing greatly from it. For if instead of about
+three hundred millions the earth required only thirty millions of years to
+cool from a surface temperature of two thousand degrees Centigrade to a
+temperature of two hundred degrees, we must assume that the rate of
+cooling is ten times greater than Bischoff supposed. And we must of course
+extend the same assumption to the moon. Now, since the sole question
+before us is to what degree the moon has cooled, it matters nothing
+whether we suppose the moon has been cooling very slowly during many
+millions of years since she was in the same condition as the earth at
+present, or that the moon has been cooling ten times as quickly during a
+tenth part of the time, or a hundred times as quickly during one-hundredth
+part of the time.
+
+We may, therefore, continue to use the numbers resulting from Bischoff's
+calculation, even though we admit the probability that they differ widely
+from the true values of the periods we are considering.
+
+Setting the moon, then, as about two hundred and fifty millions of years
+in advance of the earth in development, even when we overlook all the eras
+preceding that considered by Bischoff, and the entire sequent interval
+(which must be long, for the earth has no longer a surface one hundred
+degrees Centigrade hotter than boiling water), let us consider what is
+suggested by this enormous time-difference.
+
+In the first place, it corresponds to a much greater interval in our
+earth's history. During the two hundred and fifty millions of years the
+moon has been cooling at her rate, not at the earth's. According to the
+conclusion we deduced from the moon's relative mass and surface, she has
+aged as much during those two hundred and fifty million years as the earth
+will during the next fifteen hundred million years.
+
+Now, however slowly we suppose the earth's crust to be changing, it must
+be admitted that in the course of the next fifteen hundred millions of
+years the earth will have parted with far the greater part, if not with
+the whole, of that inherent heat on which the present movements of her
+surface depend. We know that these movements at once depend upon and
+indicate processes of contraction. We know that such processes cannot
+continue at their present rate for many millions of years. If we assume
+that the rate of contraction will steadily diminish--which is equivalent,
+be it noticed, to the assumption that the earth's vulcanian or
+subterranean energies will be diminished--the duration of the process will
+be greater. But even on such an assumption, controlled by consideration of
+the evidence we have respecting the rate at which terrestrial contraction
+is diminishing, it is certain that long before a period of fifteen hundred
+millions of years has elapsed, the process of contraction will to all
+intents and purposes be completed.
+
+We must assume, then, as altogether the most probable view, that the moon
+has reached this stage of planetary decrepitude, even if she has not
+become an absolutely dead world. We can hardly reject the reasoning which
+would show that the moon is far older than has been assumed when long
+stages of her history and our earth's have been neglected. Still less
+reasonable would it be to reject the conclusion that at the very least she
+has reached the hoar antiquity thus inferred. Assuming her to be no older,
+we yet cannot escape the conviction that her state is that of utter
+decrepitude. To suppose that volcanic action can now be in progress on the
+moon, even to as great a degree as on the earth, would be to assume that
+measurable sources of energy can produce practically immeasurable results.
+But no volcanic changes now in process on the earth could possibly be
+discernible at the moon's distance. How utterly unlikely does it seem,
+then, that any volcanic changes can be now taking place on the moon which
+could be recognized from the earth! It seems safe to assume that no
+volcanic changes at all can be in progress; but most certainly the
+evidence which should convince us that volcanic changes of so tremendous a
+character are in progress that at a distance of two hundred and sixty
+thousand miles terrestrial telescopists can discern them, must be of the
+strongest and most satisfactory character.
+
+Evidence of change may indeed be discovered which can be otherwise
+explained. The moon is exposed to the action of heat other than that which
+pervaded her own frame at the time of her first formation. The sun's heat
+is poured upon the moon during the long lunar day of more than a
+fortnight, while during the long lunar night a cold prevails which must
+far exceed that of our bitterest arctic winters. We know from the
+heat-measurements made by the present Lord Rosse, that any part of the
+moon's surface at lunar mid-day is fully five hundred degrees Fahrenheit
+hotter than the same part two weeks later at lunar midnight. The alternate
+expansions and contractions resulting from these changes of temperature
+cannot but produce changes, however slowly, in the contour of the moon's
+surface. Professor Newcomb, indeed, considers that all such changes must
+long since have been completed. But I cannot see how they can be completed
+so long as the moon's surface is uneven, and at present there are regions
+where that surface is altogether rugged. Mighty peaks and walls exist
+which must one day be thrown down, so unstable is their form; deep ravines
+can be seen which must one day be the scene of tremendous landslips, so
+steep and precipitous are their sides. Changes such as these may still
+occur on so vast a scale that telescopists may hope from time to time to
+recognise them. But changes such as these are not volcanic; they attest no
+lunar vitality. They are antecedently so probable, indeed, while volcanic
+changes are antecedently so unlikely, that when any change is clearly
+recognised in the moon's surface, nothing but the most convincing evidence
+could be accepted as demonstrating that the change was of volcanic origin
+and not due to the continued expansion and contraction of the lunar crust.
+
+And now let us see how stands the evidence in the few cases which seem
+most to favour the idea that a real change has taken place.
+
+We may dismiss, in the first place, without any hesitation, the assertion
+that regular changes take place in the floor of the great lunar crater
+Plato. According to statements very confidently advanced a few years ago,
+this wide circular plain, some sixty miles in diameter, grows darker and
+darker as the lunar day advances there until the time corresponding to
+about two o'clock in the afternoon, and then grows gradually lighter again
+till eventide. The idea seems to have been at first that some sort of
+vegetation exists on the floor of this mighty ring-shaped mountain, and
+that, as the sun's heat falls during the long lunar day upon the great
+plain, the vegetation flourishes, darkening the whole region just as we
+might imagine that some far-extending forest on the earth would appear
+darker as seen from the moon when fully clothed with vegetation than when
+the trees were bare and the lighter tints of the ground could be seen
+through them. Another idea was that the ground undergoes some change under
+the sun's heat corresponding to those which are produced in certain
+substances employed in photography; though it was not explained why the
+solar rays should produce no permanent change, as in the terrestrial cases
+adduced in illustration. Yet another and, if possible, an even stranger
+explanation, suggested that, though the moon has no seas, there may be
+large quantities of water beneath her crust, which may evaporate when that
+crust becomes heated, rising in the form of vapour to moisten and so
+darken the crust. Certainly, the idea of a moistening of the lunar crust,
+or of portions thereof, as the sun's rays fall more strongly upon it, is
+so daring that one could almost wish it were admissible, instead of being
+altogether inconsistent, as unfortunately it is, with physical
+possibilities.
+
+But still more unfortunately, the fact supposed to have been observed, on
+which these ingenious speculations were based, has not only been called in
+question, but has been altogether negatived. More exact observations have
+shown that the supposed darkening of the floor of Plato is a mere optical
+illusion. When the sun has lately risen at that part of the moon, the
+ringed wall surrounding this great plain throws long shadows across the
+level surface. These shadows are absolutely black, like all the shadows on
+the moon. By contrast, therefore, the unshadowed part of the floor appears
+lighter than it really is; but the mountain ring which surrounds this dark
+grey plain is of light tint. So soon as the sun has passed high above the
+horizon of this region, the ring appears very brilliant compared with the
+dark plain which it surrounds; thus the plain appears by comparison even
+darker than it really is. As the long lunar afternoon advances, however,
+black shadows are again thrown athwart the floor, which therefore again
+appears by contrast lighter than it really is. All the apparent changes
+are such as might have been anticipated by anyone who considered how
+readily the eye is misled by effects of contrast.
+
+To base any argument in favour of a regular change in the floor of Plato
+on evidence such as this, would be as unwise as it would be to deduce
+inferences as to changes in the heat of water from experiments in which
+the heat was determined by the sensations experienced when the hands were
+successively immersed, one hand having previously been in water as hot as
+could be borne, the other in water as cold as could be borne. We know how
+readily these sensations would deceive us (if we trusted them) into the
+belief that the water had warmed notably during the short interval of time
+which had elapsed between the two immersions; for we know that if both
+hands were immersed at the same moment in lukewarm water, the water would
+appear cold to one hand and warm to the other.
+
+Precisely as in such a case as we have just considered, if we were obliged
+to test the water by so inexact a method, we should make experiments with
+one hand only, and carefully consider the condition of that hand during
+the progress of the experiments, so in the case of the floor of Plato, we
+must exclude as far as possible all effects due to mere contrast. We must
+examine the tint of the plain, at lunar morning, mid-day, and evening,
+with an eye not affected either by the darkness or brightness of adjacent
+regions, or adjacent parts of the same region. This is very readily done.
+All we have to do is to reduce the telescopic field of view to such an
+extent that, instead of the whole floor, only a small portion can be seen.
+It will then be found, as I can myself certify (the more apparently
+because the experience of others confirms my own), that the supposed
+change of tint does not take place. One or two who were and are strong
+believers in the reality of the change do indeed assert that they have
+tried this experiment, and have obtained an entirely different result. But
+this may fairly be regarded as showing how apt an observer is to be
+self-deceived when he is entirely persuaded of the truth of some favourite
+theory. For those who carried out the experiment successfully had no views
+one way or the other; those only failed who were certainly assured
+beforehand that the experiment would confirm their theory.
+
+The case of the lunar crater Linne, which somewhere about November 1865
+attracted the attention of astronomers, belongs to a very different
+category. In my article on the moon in the "Contemporary Review" I have
+fully presented the evidence in the case of this remarkable object. I need
+not therefore consider here the various arguments which have been urged
+for and against the occurrence of change. I may mention, however, that, in
+my anxiety to do full justice to the theory that change has really
+occurred, I took Maedler's description of the crater's interior as "very
+deep," to mean more than Maedler probably intended. There is now a
+depression several hundred yards in depth. If Maedler's description be
+interpreted, as I interpreted it for the occasion in the above article, to
+mean a depth of two or three miles, it is of course certain that there has
+been a very remarkable change. But some of the observers who have devoted
+themselves utterly, it would seem, to the lively occupation of measuring,
+counting, and describing the tens of thousands of lunar craters already
+known, assert that Maedler and Lohrman (who uses the same description)
+meant nothing like so great a depth. Probably Maedler only meant about half
+a mile, or even less. In this case their favourite theory no longer seems
+so strongly supported by the evidence. In some old drawings by the
+well-known observer Schroeter, the crater is drawn very much as it now
+appears. Thus, I think we must adopt as most probable the opinion which
+is, I see, advanced by Prof. Newcomb in his excellent "Popular Astronomy,"
+that there has been no actual change in the crater. I must indeed remark
+that, after comparing several drawings of the same regions by Schroeter,
+Maedler, Lohrman, and Schmidt, with each other and with the moon's surface,
+I find myself by no means very strongly impressed by the artistic skill of
+any of these observers. I scarcely know a single region in the moon where
+change might not be inferred to have taken place if any one of the
+above-named observers could be implicitly relied upon. As, fortunately,
+their views differ even more widely _inter se_ than from the moon's own
+surface, we are not driven to so startling a conclusion.
+
+However, if we assume even that Linne has undergone change, we still have
+no reason to believe that the change is volcanic. A steep wall, say half a
+mile in height, surrounding a crater four or five miles in diameter, no
+longer stands at this height above the enclosed space, if the believers in
+a real change are to be trusted. But, as Dr. Huggins well remarked long
+ago, if volcanic forces competent to produce disturbance of this kind are
+at work in the moon, we ought more frequently to recognize signs of
+change, for they could scarcely be at work in one part only of the moon's
+surface, or only at long intervals of time. It is so easy to explain the
+overthrow of such a wall as surrounded Linne (always assuming we can rely
+upon former accounts) without imagining volcanic action, that, considering
+the overwhelming weight of _a priori_ probability against such action at
+the present time, it would be very rash to adopt the volcanic theory. The
+expansions and contractions described above would not only be able to
+throw down walls of the kind, but they would be sure to do so from time to
+time. Indeed, as a mere matter of probabilities, it may be truly said that
+it would be exceedingly unlikely that catastrophes such as the one which
+may have occurred in this case would fail to happen at comparatively short
+intervals of time. It would be so unlikely, that I am almost disposed to
+adopt the theory that there really has been a change in Linne, for the
+reason that on that theory we get rid of the difficulty arising from the
+apparent fixity of even the steepest lunar rocks. However, after all, the
+time during which men have studied the moon with the telescope--only two
+hundred and sixty-nine years--is a mere instant compared with the long
+periods during which the moon has been exposed to the sun's intense heat
+by day and a more than arctic intensity of cold by night. It may well be
+that, though lunar landslips occur at short intervals of time, these
+intervals are only short when compared with those periods, hundreds of
+millions of years long, of which we had to speak a little while ago.
+Perhaps in a period of ten or twenty thousand years we might have a fair
+chance of noting the occurrence of one or two catastrophes of the kind,
+whereas we could hardly expect to note any, save by the merest accident,
+in two or three hundred years.
+
+To come now to the last, and, according to some, the most decisive piece
+of evidence in favour of the theory that the moon's crust is still under
+the influence of volcanic forces.
+
+On May 19, 1877, Dr. Hermann J. Klein, of Cologne, observed a crater more
+than two miles in width, where he felt sure that no crater had before
+existed. It was near the centre of the moon's visible hemisphere, and not
+far from a well-known crater called Hyginus. At the time of observation it
+was not far from the boundary between the light and dark parts of the
+moon: in fact, it was near the time of sunrise at this region. Thus the
+floor of the supposed new crater was in shadow--it appeared perfectly
+black. In the conventional language for such cases made and provided (it
+should be stereotyped by selenographers, for it has now been used a great
+many times since Schroeter first adopted the belief that the great crater
+Cassini, thirty-six miles in diameter, was a new one) Dr. Klein says, "The
+region having been frequently observed by myself during the last few
+years, I feel certain that no such crater existed in the region at the
+time of my previous observations." He communicated his discovery to Dr.
+Schmidt, who also assured him that the region had been frequently observed
+by himself during the last few years, and he felt certain that no such
+crater, &c., &c. It is not in the maps by Lohrman and by Beer and Maedler,
+or in Schroeter's drawings, and so forth. "We know more," says a recent
+writer, singularly ready to believe in lunar changes; "we know that at a
+later period, with the powerful Dorpat telescope, Maedler carefully
+re-examined this particular region, to see if he could detect any
+additional features not shown in his map. He found several smaller
+craterlets _in other parts_" (the italics are mine), "but he could not
+detect any other crater in the region where Dr. Klein now states there
+exist a large crater, though he did find some very small hills close to
+this spot." "This evidence is really conclusive," says this very confident
+writer, "for it is incredible that Maedler could have seen these minute
+hills and overlooked a crater so large that it is the second largest
+crater of the score in this region." Then this writer comes in, of course,
+in his turn, with the customary phrases. "During the six years, 1870-1876,
+I most carefully examined this region, for the express purpose of
+detecting any craters not shown by Maedler," and he also can certify that
+no such crater existed, etc., etc. He was only waiting, when he thus
+wrote, to see the crater for himself. "One suitable evening will settle
+the matter. If I find a deep black crater, three miles in diameter, in the
+place assigned to it by Dr. Klein, and when six years' observation
+convinces me no such crater did exist, I shall know that it must be new."
+
+Astronomers, however, require somewhat better evidence.
+
+It might well be that a new crater-shaped depression should appear in the
+moon without any volcanic action having occurred. For reasons already
+adduced, indeed, I hold it to be to all intents and purposes certain that
+if a new depression is really in question at all, it is in reality only an
+old and formerly shallow crater, whose floor has broken up, yielding at
+length to the expansive and contractive effects above described, which
+would act with exceptional energy at this particular part of the moon's
+surface, close as it is to the lunar equator.
+
+But it is by no means clear that this part of the moon's surface has
+undergone any change whatever. We must not be misled by the very confident
+tone of selenographers. Of course they fully believe what they tell us:
+but they are strongly prejudiced. Their labours, as they well know, have
+now very little interest unless signs of change should be detected in the
+moon. Surveyors who have done exceedingly useful work in mapping a region
+would scarcely expect the public to take much interest in additional
+information about every rock or pebble existing in that region, unless
+they could show that something more than a mere record of rocks and
+pebbles was really involved. Thus selenographers have shown, since the
+days of Schroeter, an intense anxiety to prove that our moon deserves, in
+another than Juliet's sense, to be called "the inconstant moon." In
+another sense again they seem disposed to "swear by the inconstant moon,"
+as changing yearly, if not "monthly, in her circled orb." Thus a very
+little evidence satisfies them, and they are very readily persuaded in
+their own mind that former researches of theirs, or of their
+fellow-pebble-counters, have been so close and exact, that craters must
+have been detected then which have been found subsequently to exist in the
+moon. I do not in the slightest degree question their _bona fides_, but a
+long experience of their ways leads me to place very little reliance on
+such stereotyped phrases as I have quoted above.
+
+Now, in my paper in the "Contemporary Review" on this particular crater, I
+called attention to the fact that in the magnificent photograph of the
+moon taken by Dr. Louis Rutherfurd on March 6, 1865 (note well the date)
+there is a small spot of lighter colour than the surrounding region,
+nearly in the place indicated in the imperfect drawing of Klein's record
+which alone was then available to me. For reasons, I did not then more
+closely describe this feature of the finest lunar photograph ever yet
+obtained.
+
+The writer from whom I have already quoted is naturally (being a
+selenographer) altogether unwilling to accept the conclusion that this
+spot is the crater floor as photographed (not as seen) under a somewhat
+higher illumination than that under which the floor of the crater appears
+dark. There are several white spots immediately around the dark crater, he
+says: "which of these is the particular white spot which the author"
+(myself) "assumes I did not see?" a question which, as I had made no
+assumption whatever about this particular writer, nor mentioned him, nor
+even thought of him, as I wrote the article on which he comments, I am
+quite unable to answer. But he has no doubt that I have "mistaken the
+white spot" (which it seems he can identify, after all) "for Klein's
+crater, which is many miles farther north, and which never does appear as
+a white spot: he has simply mistaken its place."
+
+I have waited, therefore, before writing this, until from my own
+observation, or from a drawing carefully executed by Dr. Klein, I might
+ascertain the exact place of the new crater. I could not, as it turned
+out, observe the new crater as a black spot myself, since the question was
+raised; for on the only available occasion I was away from home. But I now
+have before me Dr. Klein's carefully drawn map. In this I find the new
+crater placed not nearly, but _exactly_ where Rutherfurd's crater appears.
+I say "Rutherfurd's crater," for the white spot is manifestly not merely a
+light tinted region on the darker background of the Sea of Vapours (as the
+region in which the crater has been found is called): it is a circular
+crater more than two miles in diameter; and the width of the crescent of
+shadow surrounding its eastern side shows that in March 1865, when
+Rutherfurd took that photograph, the crater was not (for its size) a
+shallow one, but deep.
+
+Now, it is quite true that, to the eye, under high illumination, the floor
+of the crater does not appear lighter than the surrounding region; at
+least, not markedly so, for to my eye it appears slightly lighter. But
+everyone knows that a photograph does not show all objects with the same
+depth of shading that they present to the naked eye. A somewhat dark green
+object will appear rather light in a photograph, while a somewhat light
+orange-yellow object will appear quite dark. We have only to assume that
+the floor of the supposed new crater has a greenish tinge (which is by no
+means uncommon) to understand why, although it is lost to ordinary vision
+when the Sea of Vapours is under full illumination, it yet presents in a
+photograph a decidedly lighter shade than the surrounding region.
+
+I ought to mention that the writer from whom I have quoted says that all
+the photographs were examined and the different objects in this region
+identified within forty-eight hours of the time when Dr. Klein's letter
+reached England. He mentions also that he has himself personally examined
+them. Doubtless at that time the exact position of the supposed new crater
+was not known. By the way, it is strange, considering that the name Louis
+Rutherfurd is distinctly written in large letters upon the magnificent
+photograph in question, that a selenographer who has carefully examined
+that photograph should spell the name Rutherford. He must really not
+assume, when on re-examining the picture he finds the name spelled
+Rutherfurd, that there has been any change, volcanic or otherwise, in the
+photograph.
+
+In conclusion I would point out that another of these laborious
+crater-counters, in a paper recently written with the express purpose of
+advocating a closer and longer-continued scrutiny of the moon, makes a
+statement which is full of significance in connection with the subject of
+lunar changes. After quoting the opinion of a celebrated astronomer, that
+one might as well attempt to catalogue the pebbles on the sea-shore as the
+entire series of lunar craters down to the minutest visible with the most
+powerful telescope, he states that while on the one hand, out of
+thirty-two thousand eight hundred and fifty-six craters given in Schmidt's
+chart, not more than two thousand objects have been entered in the
+Registry he has provided for the purpose (though he has been many years
+collecting materials for it from all sides); on the other hand, "on
+comparing a few of these published objects with Schmidt's map, it has been
+found _that some are not in it_,"--a fact to which he calls attention,
+"not for the purpose of depreciating the greatest selenographical work
+that has yet appeared, but for the real advancement of selenography."
+Truly, the fact is as significant as it is discouraging,--unless we are
+presently to be told that the craters which are not common to both series
+are to be regarded as new formations.
+
+ RICHARD A. PROCTOR, _in Belgravia_.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[63] To some this may appear to be a mere truism. In reality it is far
+from being so. If two globes of equal mass were each of the same exact
+temperature throughout, they might yet have very unequal total quantities
+of heat. If one were of water, for instance, and the other of iron or any
+other metal, the former would have far the larger supply of heat; for more
+heat is required to raise a given weight of water one degree in
+temperature, than to raise an equal weight of iron one degree; and water
+in cooling one degree, or any number of degrees, would give out more heat
+than an equal weight of iron cooling to the same extent.
+
+
+
+
+RECOLLECTIONS OF THACKERAY.
+
+
+In the absence of any complete biography of the late William Makepeace
+Thackeray, every anecdote regarding him has a certain value, in so far as
+it throws a light on his personal character and methods of work. Read in
+this light and this spirit, all the tributes to his memory are valuable
+and interesting. Glancing over some memoranda connected with the life of
+the novelist, contained in a book which has come under our notice,
+entitled "Anecdote Biographies." we gain a ready insight into his
+character. And from the materials thus supplied, we now offer a few
+anecdotes treasured up in these too brief memorials of his life.
+
+Thackeray was born at Calcutta in 1811. While still very young, he was
+sent to England; on the homeward voyage he had a peep at the great
+Napoleon in his exile-home at St. Helena. He received his education at the
+Charterhouse School and at Cambridge, leaving the latter without a degree.
+His fortune at this time amounted to twenty thousand pounds; this he
+afterwards lost through unfortunate speculations, but not before he had
+travelled a good deal on the continent, and acquainted himself with French
+and German everyday life and literature. His first inclination was to
+follow the profession of an artist; and curious to relate, he made
+overtures to Charles Dickens to illustrate his earliest book. Thackeray
+was well equipped both in body and mind when his career as an author
+began; but over ten years of hard toil at newspaper and magazine writing
+were undergone before he became known as the author of "Vanity Fair," and
+one of the first of living novelists. He lectured with fair if not with
+extraordinary success both in England and America, when the sunshine of
+public favour had been secured. His career of successful novel-writing
+terminated suddenly on 24th December 1863, and like Dickens, he had an
+unfinished novel on hand.
+
+One morning Thackeray knocked at the door of Horace Mayhew's chambers in
+Regent Street, crying from without: 'It's no use, Horry Mayhew; open the
+door.' On entering, he said cheerfully: 'Well, young gentleman, you'll
+admit an old fogy.' When leaving, with his hat in his hand, he remarked:
+'By-the-by, how stupid! I was going away without doing part of the
+business of my visit. You spoke the other day of poor George.
+Somebody--most unaccountably--has returned me a five-pound note I lent him
+a long time ago. I didn't expect it. So just hand to George; and tell him,
+when his pocket will bear it, to pass it on to some poor fellow of his
+acquaintance. By-bye.' He was gone! This was one of Thackeray's delicate
+methods of doing a favour; the recipient was asked to _pass it on_.
+
+One of his last acts on leaving America after a lecturing tour, was to
+return twenty-five per cent. of the proceeds of one of his lectures to a
+young speculator who had been a loser by the bargain. While known to hand
+a gold piece to a waiter with the remark: 'My friend, will you do me the
+favour to accept a sovereign?' he has also been known to say to a visitor
+who had proffered a card: 'Don't leave this bit of paper; it has cost you
+two cents, and will be just as good for your next call.' Evidently aware
+that money when properly used is a wonderful health-restorer, he was found
+by a friend who had entered his bedroom in Paris, gravely placing some
+napoleons in a pill-box, on the lid of which was written: 'One to be taken
+occasionally.' When asked to explain, it came out that these strange pills
+were for an old person who said she was very ill, and in distress; and so
+he had concluded that this was the medicine wanted. 'Dr. Thackeray,' he
+remarked, 'intends to leave it with her himself. Let us walk out
+together.' To a young literary man afterwards his amanuensis, he wrote
+thus, on hearing that a loss had befallen him: 'I am sincerely sorry to
+hear of your position, and send the little contribution which came so
+opportunely from another friend whom I was enabled once to help. When you
+are well-to-do again, I know you will pay it back; and I daresay somebody
+else will want the money, which is meanwhile most heartily at your
+service.'
+
+When enjoying an American repast at Boston in 1852, his friends there,
+determined to surprise him with the size of their oysters, had placed six
+of the largest bivalves they could find, on his plate. After swallowing
+number one with some little difficulty, his friend asked him how he felt.
+'Profoundly grateful,' he gasped; 'and as if I had swallowed a little
+baby.' Previous to a farewell dinner given by his American intimates and
+admirers, he remarked that it was very kind of his friends to give him a
+dinner, but that such things always set him trembling. 'Besides,' he
+remarked to his secretary, 'I have to make a speech, and what am I to say?
+Here, take a pen in your hand and sit down, and I'll see if I can hammer
+out something. It's hammering now, I'm afraid it will be stammering
+by-and-by.' His short speeches, when delivered, were as characteristic and
+unmistakable as anything he ever wrote. All the distinct features of his
+written style were present.
+
+It is interesting to remark the sentiments he entertained towards his
+great rival Charles Dickens. Although the latter was more popular as a
+novelist, than he could ever expect to become, he expressed himself in
+unmistakable terms regarding him. When the conversation turned that way,
+we would remark: 'Dickens is making ten thousand a year. He is very angry
+at me for saying so; but I will say it, for it is true. He doesn't like
+me. He knows that my books are a protest against his--that if the one set
+are true, the other must be false. But "Pickwick" is an exception; it is a
+capital book. It is like a glass of good English ale.' When "Dombey and
+Son" appeared in the familiar paper cover, number five contained the
+episode of the death of little Paul. Thackeray appeared much moved in
+reading it over, and putting number five in his pocket, hastened with it
+to the editor's room in "Punch" office. Dashing it down on the table in
+the presence of Mark Lemon, he exclaimed! 'There's no writing against such
+power as this; one has no chance! Read that chapter describing young
+Paul's death; it is unsurpassed--it is stupendous!'
+
+In a conversation with his secretary previous to his American trip, he
+intimated his intention of starting a magazine or journal on his return,
+to be issued in his own name. This scheme eventually took shape, and the
+result was the now well known "Cornhill Magazine." This magazine proved a
+great success, the sale of the first number being one hundred and ten
+thousand copies. Under the excitement of this great success, Thackeray
+left London for Paris. To Mr. Fields, the American publisher, who met him
+by appointment at his hotel in the Rue de la Paix, he remarked: 'London is
+not big enough to contain me now, and I am obliged to add Paris to my
+residence. Good gracious!' said he, throwing up his long arms, 'where will
+this tremendous circulation stop? Who knows but that I shall have to add
+Vienna and Rome to my whereabouts? If the worst come to the worst, New
+York also may fall into my clutches, and only the Rocky Mountains may be
+able to stop my progress.' His spirits continued high during this visit to
+Paris, his friend adding that some restraint was necessary to keep him
+from entering the jewellers' shops and ordering a pocketful of diamonds
+and 'other trifles; for,' said he, 'how can I spend the princely income
+which Smith[64] allows me for editing "Cornhill," unless I begin instantly
+somewhere!' He complained too that he could not sleep at nights 'for
+counting up his subscribers.' On reading a contribution by his young
+daughter to the "Cornhill," he felt much moved, remarking to a friend;
+'When I read it, I blubbered like a child; it is so good, so simple, and
+so honest; and my little girl wrote it, every word of it.'
+
+Dickens in the tender memorial which he penned for the "Cornhill
+Magazine," remarks on his appearance when they dined together. 'No one,'
+he says, 'can ever have seen him more genial, natural, cordial, fresh, and
+honestly impulsive than I have seen him at those times. No one can be
+surer than I of the greatness and goodness of the heart that had then
+disclosed itself.'
+
+Beneath his 'modestly grand' manner, his seeming cynicism and bitterness,
+he bore a very tender and loving heart. In a letter written in 1854, and
+quoted in James Hannay's sketch, he expresses himself thus. 'I hate
+Juvenal,' he says. 'I mean I think him a truculent fellow; and I love
+Horace better than you do, and rate Churchill much lower; and as for
+Swift, you haven't made me alter my opinion. I admire, or rather admit,
+his power as much as you do; but I don't admire that kind or power so much
+as I did fifteen years ago, or twenty shall we say. Love is a higher
+intellectual exercise than hatred; and when you get one or two more of
+those young ones you write so pleasantly about, you'll come over to the
+side of the kind wags, I think, rather than the cruel ones.' The pathetic
+sadness visible in much that he wrote sprung partly from temperament and
+partly from his own private calamities. Loss of fortune was not the only
+cause. When a young man in Paris, he married; and after enjoying domestic
+happiness for several years, his wife caught a fever from which she never
+afterwards sufficiently recovered to be able to be with her husband and
+children. She was henceforth intrusted to the care of a kind family, where
+every comfort and attention was secured for her. The lines in the ballad
+of the "Bouillabaisse" are supposed to refer to this early time of
+domestic felicity:
+
+ Ah me! how quick the days are flitting!
+ I mind me of a time that's gone,
+ When here I'd sit as now I'm sitting,
+ In this place--but not alone.
+ A fair young form was nestled near me,
+ A dear, dear face looked fondly up,
+ And sweetly spoke and smiled to cheer me--
+ There's no one now to share my cup.
+
+In dictating to his amanuensis during the composition of the lectures on
+the "Four Georges," he would light a cigar, pace the room for a few
+minutes, and then resume his work with increased cheerfulness, changing
+his position very frequently, so that he was sometimes sitting, standing,
+walking, or lying about. His enunciation was always clear and distinct,
+and his words and thoughts were so well weighed that the progress of
+writing was but seldom checked. He dictated with calm deliberation, and
+shewed no risible feeling even when he had made a humorous point. His
+whole literary career was one of unremitting industry; he wrote slowly,
+and like 'George Eliot,' gave forth his thoughts in such perfect form,
+that he rarely required to retouch his work. His handwriting was neat and
+plain, often very minute; which led to the remark, that if all trades
+failed, he would earn sixpences by writing the Lord's Prayer and the Creed
+in the size of one. Unlike many men of less talent, he looked upon
+caligraphy as one of the fine arts. When at the height of his fame he was
+satisfied when he wrote six pages a day, generally working during the day,
+seldom at night. An idea which would only be slightly developed in some of
+his shorter stories, he treasured up and expanded in some of his larger
+works.
+
+While Alfred Tennyson the future Laureate received the gold medal at
+Cambridge given by the Chancellor of the university for the best English
+poem, the subject being "Timbuctoo," we find Thackeray satirising the
+subject in a humorous paper called "The Snob." Here are a few lines from
+his clever skit on the prize poem:
+
+ There stalks the tiger--there the lion roars,
+ Who sometimes eats the luckless blackamoors;
+ All that he leaves of them the monster throws
+ To jackals, vultures, dogs, cats, kites and crows;
+ His hunger thus the forest monster gluts,
+ And then lies down 'neath trees called cocoa-nuts.
+
+The personal appearance of Thackeray has been frequently described. His
+nose through an early accident, was misshapen; it was broad at the bridge,
+and stubby at the end. He was near-sighted: and his hair at forty was
+already gray, but massy and abundant--his keen and kindly eyes twinkled
+sometimes through and sometimes over his spectacles. A friend remarked
+that what he 'should call the predominant expression of the countenance
+was courage--a readiness to face the world on its own terms.' Unlike
+Dickens, he took no regular walking exercise, and being regardless of the
+laws of health, suffered in consequence. In reply to one who asked him if
+he had ever received the best medical advice, his reply was: 'What is the
+use of advice if you don't follow it? They tell me not to drink, and I
+_do_ drink. They tell me _not_ to smoke, and I do smoke. They tell me not
+to eat, and I do eat. In short, I do everything that I am desired _not_ to
+do--and therefore, what am I to expect?' And so one morning he was found
+lying, like Dr. Chalmers, in the sleep of death with his arms beneath his
+head, after one of his violent attacks of illness--to be mourned by his
+mother and daughters, who formed his household, and by a wider public
+beyond, which, had learned to love him through his admirable
+works.--_Chambers's Journal._
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[64] Of Smith, Elder, & Co., the well known publishers.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Library Magazine of Select Foreign
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