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@@ -1,35 +1,4 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 64,
-No.394, August, 1848, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 64, No.394, August, 1848
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: July 3, 2012 [EBook #40128]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE, AUGUST 1848 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Brendan OConnor, Jonathan Ingram and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Library of Early Journals.)
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-
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40128 ***
Transcriber's note:
@@ -9514,361 +9483,4 @@ long,--a prominent object in the scenes of the _Parisian Sketch-book_.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume
64, No.394, August, 1848, by Various
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE, AUGUST 1848 ***
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40128 ***
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- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
<meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
<title>
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 64, No.384, August, 1848 by Various.
@@ -190,46 +190,7 @@ li.pad { padding-top: 2.0%; }
</style>
</head>
<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 64,
-No.394, August, 1848, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 64, No.394, August, 1848
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: July 3, 2012 [EBook #40128]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE, AUGUST 1848 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Brendan OConnor, Jonathan Ingram and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Library of Early Journals.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40128 ***</div>
<div class="tn"><h3>Transcriber's note:</h3>
<p>Spelling and punctuation are sometimes erratic. A few obvious misprints have been corrected, but in general the original spelling and
@@ -284,7 +245,7 @@ PRINTED BY WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS, EDINBURGH.</p>
<h3>PART III.</h3>
-<p>La Bonté and his companions proceeded
+<p>La Bonté and his companions proceeded
up the river, the Black Hills
on their left hand, from which several
small creeks or feeders swell the waters
@@ -297,7 +258,7 @@ Deer Creek to the ridge of the
Black Hills, they crossed the mountain
on to the waters of the Medicine
Bow, and here they discovered a few
-lodges, and La Bonté set his first trap.
+lodges, and La Bonté set his first trap.
He and old Luke finding "cuttings"
near the camp, followed the "sign"
along the bank until the practised eye
@@ -334,7 +295,7 @@ drowned beaver between its teeth.</p>
they returned to camp with the choicest
portions of the meat, and the tails, on
which they most luxuriously supped;
-and La Bonté was fain to confess that
+and La Bonté was fain to confess that
all his ideas of the superexcellence of
buffalo were thrown in the shade by
the delicious beaver tail, the rich meat
@@ -344,7 +305,7 @@ was "great eating," unsurpassed by
meat of whatever kind he had eaten
of before.</p>
-<p>The country where La Bonté and
+<p>The country where La Bonté and
his companions were trapping, is very
curiously situated in the extensive bend
of the Platte which encloses the Black
@@ -423,7 +384,7 @@ leaders of trapping parties, soon arrived.
Sublette came in with his men
from Yellow Stone, and many of
Wyeth's New Englanders were there.
-Chábonard with his half-breeds, Wahkeitchas
+Chábonard with his half-breeds, Wahkeitchas
all, brought his peltries from
the lower country; and half-a-dozen
Shawanee and Delaware Indians, with
@@ -474,7 +435,7 @@ enough to answer all the questions which
would be referred to his decision.</p>
<p>Before the winter was over, La
-Bonté had lost all traces of civilised
+Bonté had lost all traces of civilised
humanity, and might justly claim to
be considered as "hard a case" as
any of the mountaineers then present.
@@ -516,7 +477,7 @@ animals, the lone trapper scarcely
noticed their arrival, his eyes being
still intently fixed upon the water.
Looking round at last, he was instantly
-recognised by one of La Bonté's
+recognised by one of La Bonté's
companions, and saluted as "Old
Rube." Dressed from head to foot in
buckskin, his face, neck, and hands appeared
@@ -542,7 +503,7 @@ good ever came of sleeping here, I tell
you, and the worst kind of devils are
in those dancing waters."</p>
-<p>"Why, old hos," cried La Bonté,
+<p>"Why, old hos," cried La Bonté,
"what brings you hyar then, and
camp at that?"</p>
@@ -582,7 +543,7 @@ Indian in his simple heart, he implicitly
believed to inhabit their mysterious
waters. When the others
had, as he thought, fallen asleep, La
-Bonté observed the ill-starred trapper
+Bonté observed the ill-starred trapper
take from his pouch a curiously carved
red stone pipe, which he carefully
charged with tobacco and kinnik-kinnik.
@@ -657,7 +618,7 @@ into camp at sundown, and were regaled,
with such meat as the larder afforded.
They appeared to have no other
food in their village but bags of dried
-ants and their larvæ, and a few roots
+ants and their larvæ, and a few roots
of the yampah. Their huts were constructed
of a few bushes of grease-wood,
piled up as a sort of breakwind, in
@@ -666,7 +627,7 @@ skins. During the night, they crawled
up to the camp and stole two of the
horses, and the next morning not a
sign of them was visible. Now La
-Bonté witnessed a case of mountain
+Bonté witnessed a case of mountain
law, and the practical effects of the
"lex talionis" of the Far West.</p>
@@ -676,7 +637,7 @@ skirt of a barren waterless desert,
which stretches far away from the
southern shores of the Salt Lake to the
borders of Upper California. La
-Bonté, with three others, determined
+Bonté, with three others, determined
to follow the thieves, recover their animals,
and then rejoin the other two
(Luke and Rube) on a creek two
@@ -755,13 +716,13 @@ towards them, and almost before
the hunters were aware of his presence,
he discharged an arrow at a few
yards' distance, which buried itself in
-the ground not a foot from La Bonté's
+the ground not a foot from La Bonté's
head as he bent over the body of the
Indian he was scalping; and hardly
had the whiz ceased, when whirr flew
another, striking him in his right
shoulder. Before the Indian could
-fit a third arrow to his bow, La Bonté
+fit a third arrow to his bow, La Bonté
sprang upon him, seized him by the
middle, and spinning the pigmy form
of the Indian round his head, as easily
@@ -853,7 +814,7 @@ some eight or ten miles distant. On
arriving at the base, the most minute
search failed to discover the slightest
traces of water, and the vegetation
-merely consisted of dwarf piñon and
+merely consisted of dwarf piñon and
cedar. With their sufferings increased
by the exertions they had used in
reaching the mountain, they once
@@ -904,7 +865,7 @@ the north and the miserable stunted
Digger of the deserts of the Far West.
On the morning of the fifth day, the
party were sitting round a small fire
-of piñon, hardly able to rise and commence
+of piñon, hardly able to rise and commence
their journey, the squaws
squatting over another at a little distance,
when Forey commenced again
@@ -927,7 +888,7 @@ for the neighbouring uplands, each
taking a different direction.</p>
<p>It was nearly sunset when La
-Bonté returned to the camp, where he
+Bonté returned to the camp, where he
already espied one of his companions
engaged in cooking something over it.
Hurrying to the spot, overjoyed with
@@ -950,7 +911,7 @@ turning his meat with the point of his
butcher knife. "There's the meat,
hos&mdash;help yourself."</p>
-<p>La Bonté drew the knife from his
+<p>La Bonté drew the knife from his
scabbard, and approached the spot his
companion was pointing to; but what
was his horror to see the yet quivering
@@ -969,7 +930,7 @@ with plenty of meat, and about
to start again on their hunt, having
given up the others for lost. From
the day they parted, nothing was ever
-heard of La Bonté's two companions,
+heard of La Bonté's two companions,
who doubtless fell a prey to utter exhaustion,
and were unable to return
to the camp. And thus ended the
@@ -995,7 +956,7 @@ as he would have in sending his rifle-ball<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13
through the brain of a Crow or
Blackfoot warrior.</p>
-<p>La Bonté now found himself without
+<p>La Bonté now found himself without
animals, and fairly "afoot;" consequently
nothing remained for him
but to seek some of the trapping bands,
@@ -1061,7 +1022,7 @@ twisted and writhed in his grasp, as
he sought to avoid the trapper's uplifted
knife. Many of the latter's
companions advanced to administer
-the <i>coup-de-grâce</i> to the savage, but
+the <i>coup-de-grâce</i> to the savage, but
the trapper cried to them to keep off:
"If he couldn't whip the Injun," he
said, "he'd go under."</p>
@@ -1362,7 +1323,7 @@ early in the fall, where they quickly
disposed of their peltries, and were
once more on "the loose."</p>
-<p>Here La Bonté married a Snake
+<p>Here La Bonté married a Snake
squaw, with whom he crossed the
mountains and proceeded to the Platte
through the Bayou Salado, where he
@@ -1382,7 +1343,7 @@ the shadow of the mountains, watered
by Vermilion Creek, and in which
abundance of buffalo, elk, deer, and
antelope fed and fattened on the rich
-grass, La Bonté raised his lodge, employing
+grass, La Bonté raised his lodge, employing
himself in hunting, and fully
occupying his wives' time in dressing
the skins of the many animals he
@@ -1427,7 +1388,7 @@ lodge poles and made a fire&mdash;led his
beasts to water and hobbled them,
threw a piece of buffalo meat upon the
coals, squatted down before the fire,
-and lit his pipe. La Bonté was a true
+and lit his pipe. La Bonté was a true
philosopher. Notwithstanding that his
house, his squaws, his peltries, were
gone "at one fell swoop," the loss
@@ -1551,7 +1512,7 @@ not unfrequently deem it their bounden
duty to inflict upon their squaws for
some dereliction of domestic duty.</p>
-<p>To return, however, to La Bonté.
+<p>To return, however, to La Bonté.
That worthy thought himself a lucky
man to have lost but one of his wives,
and the worst at that. "Here's the
@@ -1648,14 +1609,14 @@ this," says a hunter, to express the
delicious flavour of an extraordinary
cut of "tender loin," or delicate fleece.</p>
-<p>La Bonté started with his squaw
+<p>La Bonté started with his squaw
for the North Fork early in November,
and arrived at the Laramie at the
moment that the big village of the
Sioux came up for their winter trade.
Two other villages were encamped
lower down the Platte, including the
-Brulés and the Yanka-taus, who were
+Brulés and the Yanka-taus, who were
now on more friendly terms with the
whites. The first band numbered several
hundred lodges, and presented quite
@@ -1918,7 +1879,7 @@ difficulty.</p>
however, were, when a number of
squaws sallied out to the grove, with
their long-nosed, wolfish-looking dogs
-harnessed to their <i>travées</i> or trabogans,
+harnessed to their <i>travées</i> or trabogans,
on which loads of cotton-wood were
piled. The dogs, knowing full well
the duty required of them, refuse to
@@ -1930,7 +1891,7 @@ their haunches, with tongues hanging
out of their long mouths, the picture
of indecision, removing a short distance
as the irate squaw approaches.
-When once harnessed to the travée,
+When once harnessed to the travée,
however, which is simply a couple of
lodge-poles lashed on either side of the
dog, with a couple of cross-bars near
@@ -1948,7 +1909,7 @@ their long poles trailing after them,
pursued by the yelling and half frantic
squaws.</p>
-<p>When the travées are laden, the
+<p>When the travées are laden, the
squaws take the lead, bent double
under loads of wood sufficient to break
a porter's back, and calling to the
@@ -1960,7 +1921,7 @@ mistresses, turn a deaf ear to their
coaxings, lying down every few yards
to rest, growling and fighting with
each other, in which encounters every
-cur joins, the <i>mêlée</i>, charging pell-mell
+cur joins, the <i>mêlée</i>, charging pell-mell
into the yelping throng; upsetting the
squalling children, and making confusion
worse confounded. Then, armed
@@ -2045,7 +2006,7 @@ near the ends, which trail along the
ground,&mdash;two or three squaws or children
mounted on the same horse, or
the smallest of the latter borne in the
-dog travées. A set of lodge-poles
+dog travées. A set of lodge-poles
will last from three to seven years,
unless the village is constantly on the
move, when they are soon worn out
@@ -2144,7 +2105,7 @@ the ground, and the buffalo are always
plentiful and fat."</p>
<p>As soon as the streams opened, La
-Bonté, now reduced to but two animals
+Bonté, now reduced to but two animals
and four traps, sallied forth
again, this time seeking the dangerous
country of the Blackfeet, on the head
@@ -2155,7 +2116,7 @@ and one Cross-Eagle, a Swede, who
had been many years in the western
country. Reaching the fork of a
small creek, on both of which appeared
-plenty of beaver sign, La Bonté followed
+plenty of beaver sign, La Bonté followed
the left-hand one alone, whilst
the others trapped the right in company,
the former leaving his squaw in
@@ -2168,7 +2129,7 @@ and again descended them. The
larger party were the first to reach
the rendezvous, and camped on the
banks of the main stream to await the
-arrival of La Bonté.</p>
+arrival of La Bonté.</p>
<p>The morning after their return, they
had just risen from their blankets, and
@@ -2203,7 +2164,7 @@ had fallen by his hand.</p>
<p>The two squaws were carried off,
and, shortly after, one was sold to some
white men at the trading ports on the
-Platte; but La Bonté never recovered
+Platte; but La Bonté never recovered
the "Bending Reed," nor even heard
of her existence from that day. So
once more was the mountaineer bereft
@@ -2220,7 +2181,7 @@ had recounted the miserable fate of her
husband and his companions on the
forks of the creek, which, from the
fact of that trapper being the leader
-of the party, is still called La Bonté's
+of the party, is still called La Bonté's
Creek.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, he continued his solitary
@@ -2232,7 +2193,7 @@ speedily loading both his animals with
beaver, he thought of bending his
steps to some of the trading rendezvous
on the other side of the mountains,
-where employés of the Great Northwest
+where employés of the Great Northwest
Fur Company meet the trappers
with the produce of their hunts, on
Lewis's fork of the Columbia, or one
@@ -3352,7 +3313,7 @@ employed his humour as to set it
beside his most tragic scenes, with an
effect that made the pathos deeper?
In such a sense was Hogarth "comic."
-His "Marriage à la Mode" is the
+His "Marriage à la Mode" is the
deepest of tragedies.</p>
<p>We turn to Mr Cleghorn's two interesting
@@ -3524,7 +3485,7 @@ of Alexander. We should not say
that the Augustan age was exactly
the age of liberty, but it was the age
of literature. The easier solution may
-be, "Sint Mæcenates, non deerunt
+be, "Sint Mæcenates, non deerunt
Marones." Munificent patronage will
often raise what that state which
passes under the name of liberty will
@@ -3545,7 +3506,7 @@ and consulted their patrons,
between whom there reigned a mutual
enthusiasm, good understanding, and
respect. Such were Pericles, Alexander
-the Great, Julius Cæsar, Augustus,
+the Great, Julius Cæsar, Augustus,
Hadrian, Francis I. of France,
Julius II., Lorenzo and Leo X. of the
Medici, the nobles and rulers of the
@@ -4294,7 +4255,7 @@ reed ceilings, and thirty-five thousand
acres of mountain and plain, having
the reputation of one of the best farms
in the district. The cost of this was
-about £2000; and the property was
+about £2000; and the property was
calculated to maintain five or six
thousand sheep, four hundred oxen,
besides horses. There were four
@@ -4829,7 +4790,7 @@ charge!' 'Hurrah!' was echoed back;
and on they dashed, dragoons, Cape corps,
burghers, Hottentots, and Fingos. They
found the enemy up and in position. Such
-a mêlée! The cavalry dashed through
+a mêlée! The cavalry dashed through
the phalanx of Kaffirs, and for want of
more cavalry to support them, dashed
back again! A Hottentot soldier, one of
@@ -4903,7 +4864,7 @@ figures make up a capital mark for
the bullet of a lurking foe; and the
unfortunate warriors go perspiring
through the bush, with the thermometer
-at 120° in the shade, cursing
+at 120° in the shade, cursing
the Kaffirs, but rarely catching them,
their clattering scabbards betraying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
their approach, and their lofty helmets
@@ -5169,7 +5130,7 @@ a farm. The question then is, how do
the Dutch manage? since the "late
resident" admits the superior success
and contentedness found amongst the
-Boërs, and which were far more evident
+Boërs, and which were far more evident
before the wealthiest and most
intelligent of them had left the colony,
to seek at Port Natal refuge from
@@ -5285,7 +5246,7 @@ Zwellendam they abound, and frequently
occasion severe loss by biting
the sheep. Amongst the beasts of
prey, lions are getting thinned by the
-guns of Boërs, settlers, and English
+guns of Boërs, settlers, and English
officers; the jackals and hyenas are
cowardly creatures, and fly from man,
but play the mischief with the flocks.
@@ -5788,7 +5749,7 @@ that after he has incurred or escaped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id
a great danger, his spirits rise wonderfully&mdash;he
is in a state of pleasing
excitement. So it was with me. I
-talked to the gardener <i>à c&oelig;ur ouvert</i>,
+talked to the gardener <i>à c&oelig;ur ouvert</i>,
as the French say: and I did not
observe that his short monosyllables
in rejoinder all served to draw out
@@ -5900,7 +5861,7 @@ my whole family, that in five minutes
I felt myself at home. Lady Ellinor
listened with a smile (though with
moistened eyes, which she wiped every
-now and then) to my <i>naïve</i> details. At
+now and then) to my <i>naïve</i> details. At
length she said&mdash;</p>
<p>"Have you never heard your father
@@ -7346,7 +7307,7 @@ puts on her wings for that unknown
spot called Vienna; sends in
her card to nobles and ministers; caricatures
them too; talks of faces which
-she had never seen, describes fêtes
+she had never seen, describes fêtes
to which she would never have
been admitted, and quotes conversations
which she never heard. Another
@@ -7568,7 +7529,7 @@ evidently clustered like Arab tents,
but in Upper Egypt and Nubia: they
are to be found also in Mesopotamia.
The Birs Nimrod, (the temple
-of Belus,) and the Mujelibè, near
+of Belus,) and the Mujelibè, near
Babylon, were evidently built on
the pyramidal plan, if not actual
pyramids. They have been found in
@@ -8227,7 +8188,7 @@ does, the retreat from Moscow
affording him fine opportunities,
whereof he unsparingly avails himself.
The closing chapter shows us the very
-numerous <i>dramatis personæ</i> reduced
+numerous <i>dramatis personæ</i> reduced
to two happy couples, dwelling, turtle-dove
fashion, in a garden near Dresden,
and to an elderly Polish lady,
@@ -9260,7 +9221,7 @@ rather too warmly-coloured scenes in
the bride's apartment near Smolensko,
and in the boudoir or <i>clapier</i>&mdash;or whatever
we are to call it&mdash;of Mademoiselle
-Françoise Alisette, the French singing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
+Françoise Alisette, the French singing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
woman. (Mr Rellstab, by the way, is
particularly given to having his billing
and cooing done where 'cannons are
@@ -11769,7 +11730,7 @@ poetical college, founded at Vienna by
Maximilian I., produced few native
laureates worthy of the honour. Yet
"the Emperors of Germany," says
-D'Israeli, who condemned the Abbé
+D'Israeli, who condemned the Abbé
Resnel's memoir on the subject, "retained
the laureateship in all its splendour.
The selected bard was called
@@ -11845,13 +11806,13 @@ an accordant rhyme, still extant,
to the holy chant of the monks
of Ely, as his bargemen rowed him
down the Ouse, under the chapel wall.
-It is not apparent that <i>trouvères</i> followed
+It is not apparent that <i>trouvères</i> followed
William of Normandy to Sussex
<i>officially</i>, or celebrated his triumph
over Harold,&mdash;for the story of Taliefer
is hardly a case in point, and we do
not hear much about the northern
-trouvères till somewhat later, though
+trouvères till somewhat later, though
some writers will have it that they
are of older standing than the troubadours
of the south of France. We
@@ -11920,8 +11881,8 @@ of some repute in Robert Baston.
He was a Carmelite monk, and
attained the dignity of prior of the
convent of that order at Scarborough.
-Bishop Bale (in his <i>Illustrûm Majoris
-Britanniæ Scriptorum Summarium</i>)
+Bishop Bale (in his <i>Illustrûm Majoris
+Britanniæ Scriptorum Summarium</i>)
says that Baston was a laureated
poet and public orator at Oxford,
which Wood denies. But Bale might
@@ -12080,7 +12041,7 @@ For, besides the siege of Stirling,
we find on the list of Baston's productions
one entitled "De Altero
Scotorum Bello," and another "De
-Scotiæ guerris Variis." Baston survived
+Scotiæ guerris Variis." Baston survived
his master, the broken <i>Malleus
Scotorum</i>, only three years. It is
uncertain whether he retained his
@@ -12452,7 +12413,7 @@ were not small; and neither the
Fairy Queen herself, (gigantic fairy!)
nor her sage counsellor Cecil, is justly
responsible for the unhappiness of
-Spenser. His pension of £50 a-year
+Spenser. His pension of £50 a-year
was but a portion of the emoluments
he derived from court interest. That
pension, which he received till his
@@ -12489,7 +12450,7 @@ labourer is worthy of his hire. Jonson
received, "in consideration of services
of wit and pen already done to us and
our father, and which we expect from
-him," £100 a-year and a tierce of
+him," £100 a-year and a tierce of
Spanish canary, his best-beloved Hippocrene,
out of the royal cellars at
Whitehall.</p>
@@ -12876,7 +12837,7 @@ flight which occurs in the Cibberian
<span class="i0"><i>So on the towering eagle's wing</i><br /></span>
<span class="i0"><i>The lowly linnet soars to sing.</i><br /></span>
<span class="i2">Had her Pindar of old<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Known her Cæsar to sing,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Known her Cæsar to sing,<br /></span>
<span class="i0">More rapid his raptures had roll'd;<br /></span>
<span class="i0">But never had Greece such a king!"<br /></span>
</div>
@@ -12890,7 +12851,7 @@ for his sluggishness&mdash;</p>
<div class="poem">
<span class="i2">"Had the lyrist of old<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Had our Cæsar to sing,<br /></span>
+<span class="i2">Had our Cæsar to sing,<br /></span>
<span class="i0">More rapid his numbers had roll'd;<br /></span>
<span class="i0">But never had Greece such a king,<br /></span>
<span class="i0">No, never had Greece such a king!"<br /></span>
@@ -12919,7 +12880,7 @@ OF THE LAUREATE'S ODES.</p>
<p>Dr Johnson honoured him with another,
equally complimentary to Cibber
-and his Cæsar.</p>
+and his Cæsar.</p>
<div class="poem">
<span class="i0">"Augustus still survives in Maro's strain,<br /></span>
@@ -14949,7 +14910,7 @@ herb."</p>
<p>And to gratify his young guest, the
minister struck up the beautiful Danish
air&mdash;"<i>Jeg gik mig ud en Sommerdag
-at höre</i>"&mdash;beating the time with his long
+at höre</i>"&mdash;beating the time with his long
pipe-stick of Hungarian cherry. The
eyes of the sensitive student were
already dim with tears, when the
@@ -15223,7 +15184,7 @@ alone worthy to paint them! But
great breadth of light and shade, and
powerful colouring, must not be sought
for in a scrap of a vignette. Perhaps
-we have not stumbled so utterly <i>malà
+we have not stumbled so utterly <i>malà
propos</i> upon these pictures; for since
the <i>ateliers nationaux</i> were so intimately
connected with the pretexted
@@ -15462,7 +15423,7 @@ that has fallen upon trade. Those who
have not shut up entirely, have discharged
the greater part of their former
servitors, who now are turned
-adrift in hundreds upon the <i>pavé</i> of
+adrift in hundreds upon the <i>pavé</i> of
Paris, and know not how or where to
seek their bread. Those hands have
been accustomed to handle the velvet,
@@ -15538,7 +15499,7 @@ earth is wheeled off elsewhere; another
heap of earth is made upon another
spot, or the hole that has been
made is again filled. It is the endless
-task of the Danaïdes, condemned to
+task of the Danaïdes, condemned to
fill a bottomless tun, on which they
are engaged; or it is that of the web
of Penelope, undone as soon as done:
@@ -15593,7 +15554,7 @@ influence of the <i>ateliers nationaux</i>, or
rather of their instigators and supporters,
they have got far beyond Louis
Blanc, the high-priest of the one deity
-of the Republican trinity, <i>Egalité</i>, and
+of the Republican trinity, <i>Egalité</i>, and
his utopian talent-levelling theories
for the organisation of labour. Listen
to the declamations that come rolling
@@ -15627,7 +15588,7 @@ again, when the time shall come, to do
once more their bidding. And how
have they kept their word? The blood-red
standard of that fantastic vision of
-blood, the <i>République Sociale et Démocratique</i>,
+blood, the <i>République Sociale et Démocratique</i>,
the Republic of spoliation
and destruction, is raised aloft in
the <i>ateliers nationaux</i>, to be planted
@@ -15691,7 +15652,7 @@ own little share of this sovereignty,
he will reply&mdash;No such thing&mdash;you
are not of the people, you are,
a <i>bourgeois</i>, a <i>mange-tout</i>, an <i>accapareur</i>,
-a <i>riche</i>, a <i>fainéant</i> (what is
+a <i>riche</i>, a <i>fainéant</i> (what is
<i>he</i> doing?) an <i>aristocrate</i>: this last
word is the climax of the terms of
objurgation. Endeavour to explain
@@ -15806,7 +15767,7 @@ by universal suffrage as the
sovereign power of the country, and
to substitute their own regime of
tyranny and terror in its place. There
-sit the moody Barbés, whose ideas
+sit the moody Barbés, whose ideas
of republicanism go no further than
constant subversion of "what <i>is</i>;"
and the cold-blooded and cunning,
@@ -15827,13 +15788,13 @@ leaders upon whom a furious party
counts, as the master-spirits who are
to lead it on to power. Their liberation
from confinement is the dream of
-the party: in every <i>émeute</i> with
+the party: in every <i>émeute</i> with
which the streets of Paris has been
almost daily, or rather nightly, animated,
the cry has been, "<i>Vive
-Barbés!</i>" in the fearful insurrection
+Barbés!</i>" in the fearful insurrection
and the civil conflicts of June, the
-name of Barbés was the rallying
+name of Barbés was the rallying
cry. Long before that period of
terrific memory, the government knew
that plots were constantly being laid
@@ -15890,7 +15851,7 @@ soldiers is being cooked, from among
the trees; then <i>improviso al fresco</i>
kitchens are glimmering, and crackling,
and smoking heavily in all directions.
-The jaunty <i>vivandières</i>, in their
+The jaunty <i>vivandières</i>, in their
short blue petticoats, their tight red
jacket boddices, and their little boots,
with hats, bearing tricolor-cockades,
@@ -15985,8 +15946,8 @@ and instil poison in their ears. Look!
there are jovial fellows reeling about
under the influence of strong drink,&mdash;they
have already thrown away all
-disguise&mdash;they cry "<i>Vive Barbés! Vive
-la République Démocratique et Sociale!
+disguise&mdash;they cry "<i>Vive Barbés! Vive
+la République Démocratique et Sociale!
A bas tout le monde!</i>" They at least
show that they are ripe for revolt.
Some brandish their spades in their
@@ -16093,7 +16054,7 @@ many, and dark to utter blackness.
Connected with the same <i>suite</i> of
subjects, also, is the nature of the
small room in the crooked streets of
-the <i>Cité</i>, or the suburb, with a table
+the <i>Cité</i>, or the suburb, with a table
spread with papers, around which sit
bearded full-faced men, discussing
sternly, as may be seen by the scanty
@@ -16207,7 +16168,7 @@ wounded, upon straw littered down
on the pavement, attended by the
doctor in his common black attire,
contrasting with the pure white cap
-and pinners of the <i>s&oelig;ur de charité</i>;
+and pinners of the <i>s&oelig;ur de charité</i>;
the uniforms, now smeared with blood
and blackened by smoke, mingling
with the long dark dress and falling
@@ -16470,7 +16431,7 @@ and littered beds of straw, and cooking
fires, and groups of men in uniform,
in all the various attitudes of
the camp and battle-field; and in the
-glittering Champs Elysées are tents
+glittering Champs Elysées are tents
and temporary stabling, and horses,
and assembled troops; and beneath
the fine trees of the garden of
@@ -16522,7 +16483,7 @@ his thick mustaches give him a rough
bold look, which does not, however,
detract from his prepossessing appearance.
This is the young General de
-Lamoricière, also of African fame.
+Lamoricière, also of African fame.
He is now minister at war. There
are others, also, of the heroes of Algeria,
who have not fallen in the street
@@ -16537,7 +16498,7 @@ few days have again changed so
rapidly. We cannot look upon their
striking portraits in these sketches,
without asking ourselves how long
-Cæsar and Anthony may be content
+Cæsar and Anthony may be content
to rule the country hand-in-hand, or
how soon the jealousy of the young
generals may not be turned against
@@ -16706,384 +16667,6 @@ collection, <i>Der Neue Pitaval</i>. 7 Band.</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 mineral spring in the parish of Vinding, dedicated to St Matthew by the
monks of a neighbouring convent, which existed there previously to the Reformation.</p></div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume
-64, No.394, August, 1848, by Various
-
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