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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 18:39:23 -0700
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+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 67, No. 411, January-June 1850, by Various.
+ </title>
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+ </head>
+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44332 ***</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 471px;">
+<img src="images/titlepage.jpg" width="459" height="754" alt="titlepage" />
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h1>
+BLACKWOOD'S<br />
+
+<span class="oldenglish">Edinburgh</span><br />
+
+MAGAZINE.</h1>
+
+<p class="center">VOL. LXVII.</p>
+
+<p class="center">JANUARY-JUNE, 1850.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 125px;">
+<img src="images/buchanan.jpg" width="125" height="142" alt="Buchanan" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="center">WILLIAM BLACKWOOD &amp; SONS, EDINBURGH;<br />
+<small>AND</small><br />
+37 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON.<br />
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;<br />
+1850.
+</p>
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p class="center"><small>BY WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS, EDINBURGH.</small></p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<p class="center b15"><small>BLACKWOOD'S</small><br />
+EDINBURGH MAGAZINE.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">No. CCCCXI.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;JANUARY, 1850.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class="smcap">Vol. LXVII.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="contents">
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Year of Reaction</span>,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">My Peninsular Medal. By an Old Peninsular.</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Part III.</span>,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_15">15</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">American Adventure</span>,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_34">34</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Howard</span>,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_50">50</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Dark Waggon. By Delta</span>,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Green Hand&mdash;A "Short" Yarn. Part VII.</span>,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">British Agriculture and Foreign Competition</span>,</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_94">94</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p class="center space-above">
+<strong>SECOND EDITION.</strong><br />
+<br />
+EDINBURGH:<br />
+WILLIAM BLACKWOOD &amp; SONS, 45, GEORGE STREET;<br />
+AND 37, PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON.<br />
+<br />
+<em>To whom all communications (post paid) must be addressed.</em><br />
+<br />
+<small>SOLD BY ALL THE BOOKSELLERS IN THE UNITED KINGDOM.</small><br />
+&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;<br />
+<small>PRINTED BY WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS, EDINBURGH.</small><br />
+</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">&nbsp;</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<p class="center b15">BLACKWOOD'S<br />
+
+EDINBURGH MAGAZINE.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">No. CCCCXI.</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;JANUARY, 1850.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class="smcap">Vol. LXVII.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>THE YEAR OF REACTION.</h2>
+
+
+<p>If the year 1848&mdash;"<small>THE YEAR OF
+REVOLUTIONS</small>" was one pre-eminent
+among all others for the magnitude
+and interest of the events it brought
+forth, the year which has just expired&mdash;<small>THE
+YEAR OF REACTION</small>&mdash;is still
+more worthy of serious reflection, and
+affords subjects for more cheering
+meditation. If the first exhibited
+the whirlwind of anarchy let loose,
+the second showed the power by
+which it is restrained; if the former
+filled every heart with dread at the
+fierce passions which were developed,
+and the portentous events which
+occurred in the world, the latter
+afforded reason for profound thankfulness,
+at the silent but irresistible
+force with which Omnipotence overrules
+the wickedness of men, and restrains
+the madness of the people.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i12">"Celsâ sedet Æolus arce,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sceptra tenens, mollitque animos, et temperat iras.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ni faciat, maria ac terras c&oelig;lumque profundum<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Quippe ferant rapidi secum, verruntque per auras.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sed Pater Omnipotens speluncis abdidit atris,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Hoc metuens; regemque dedit qui f&oelig;dere certo<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Et premere et laxas sciret dare jussus habenas."<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The history of the world during
+those periods of convulsion, happily
+of very rare occurrence, when an
+eruption of popular passions takes
+place&mdash;when thrones are overturned,
+and the long-established order of
+things is subverted&mdash;is nothing else
+but the folly and wickedness of man
+warring against the wisdom of nature.
+All history demonstrates that there is
+a certain order of things which is
+favourable to human felicity&mdash;under
+which industry flourishes, population
+increases, the arts are encouraged,
+agriculture improves, general happiness
+is diffused. The basis of such
+a state of things is the <em>security of
+property</em>; the moving power which
+puts in motion the whole complicated
+machine of society, is the certainty
+that every man will enjoy the fruits
+of his toil. As clearly do past events
+demonstrate, that there is a state
+of things wherein the reverse of all
+this takes place; when industry is paralysed,
+population arrested, the arts
+languish, agriculture decays, general
+misery prevails. The chief cause of
+such a state of things is to be found
+in the insecurity of property, the
+dread that industry will not reap its
+appointed reward; but that external
+violence or domestic spoliation may
+interfere between the labourer and
+the fruits of his toil. When such a
+state of things arises from internal
+commotion, it is generally preceded
+by the warmest hopes, and the most
+unbounded anticipations of felicity.
+It is universally characterised by a
+resolute disregard of experience, and
+a universal passion for innovation
+in all the institutions of society, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
+all the relations of life. It constantly
+appeals to the generous affections:
+speaks of humanity, justice, and fraternity;
+proclaims mankind as brothers;
+and professes the warmest
+desire for general felicity, and the
+diminution of the sources of human
+suffering. It veils the advance of
+selfishness under the guise of generosity.
+Revolutions demonstrate that
+the homage which vice pays to
+virtue is not confined to individuals.
+The maxim of Rochefoucault applies
+also to nations. Its truth is never
+seen with such brightness as during
+the intensity of a revolution; and
+this demonstrates at once the wisdom
+which governs, and the selfishness
+which desolates the world.</p>
+
+<p>So prone, however, are the bulk of
+mankind to delusion; so easily are
+they led away by expressions which
+appeal to their passions, or projects
+which seem to forward their interests;
+so little are the lessons of experience
+either known to, or heeded by, the immense
+majority of men, that we should
+be led to despair of the fortunes of
+the species, and dread in every age
+a repetition of the seductive passions
+which had desolated the one that
+had preceded it, were it not that a
+provision is made for the extinction
+of popular passion in the very first
+effects of its ebullition. It is in its
+<em>effect upon property</em> that the curb is
+found which restrains the madness of
+the people; by the insolvency it induces
+that the barrier is formed,
+which as a matter of necessity forces
+back society to its habitual forms and
+relations. In the complicated state
+of social relations in which we live,
+it is by the capital of the rich that the
+industry of the poor is put in motion;
+by their expenditure that it is alimented.
+However specious and alluring
+the projects may be which are
+brought forward by the popular leaders,
+they involve in them one source
+of weakness, which inevitably ere long
+paralyses all their influence. Directly
+or indirectly, they all tend to the destruction
+of property. To excite the
+passions of the working classes, they
+are obliged to hold out to them the
+prospect of a division of property, or
+such a system of taxation as practically
+amounts to the same thing:
+the immediate effect of which is a
+cessation of expenditure on the part
+of the affluent classes; a hoarding of
+capital; a run upon the banks for
+specie; universal scarcity of money,
+general distrust, and a fearful decrease
+of employment. These evils
+are first felt by the working classes,
+because, having no stock, they are
+affected by any diminution in their
+daily wages; and they are felt with
+the more bitterness that they immediately
+succeed extravagant hopes,
+and highly wrought expectations.
+Invariably the effects of revolutions
+are precisely the reverse of the predictions
+of its supporters. No man is
+insensible to his own suffering, however
+much he may be so to that of
+his predecessors; and thence the universal
+and general reaction which,
+sooner or later, takes place against
+revolutions.</p>
+
+<p>That this reaction would take
+place to a certainty, in the end, with
+the French revolution of 1848, as it
+had done with all similar convulsions
+since the beginning of the world, could
+be doubted by none who had the least
+historical information: and in our
+first article on that event, within a
+few weeks of its occurrence, we distinctly
+foretold that this would be the
+case.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> But we confess we did not
+anticipate the <em>rapidity</em> with which the
+reaction has set in. Not two years
+have elapsed since the throne of Louis
+Philippe was overturned, and a republic
+proclaimed in Paris amidst the
+transports of the revolutionary party
+over all Europe, and the gaze in astonishment
+of all the world; and already
+the delusion is over, the transports
+are at an end, the Jacobins are
+silent, and the convulsed commonwealth
+is fast sinking back to its
+pristine monarchical form of government.
+Every country in Europe felt
+the shock. The passions were universally
+let loose; sanguinary wars arose
+on every side; and while the enlightened
+Free-traders of England were
+dreaming, amidst their cotton bales, of
+universal and perpetual peace, which
+should open to them the markets of
+the world, hostilities the most terrible,
+contests the most dreadful, dissensions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
+the most implacable, broke
+out in all quarters. It was not merely
+the war of opinion which Mr Canning
+long ago prophesied as the next which
+would desolate Europe: to it was
+superadded the still more frightful
+contest of races. The Lombard rose
+against the German, the Bohemian
+against the Imperialist, the Hungarian
+against the Austrian; the Celt and
+the Saxon stood in arms against each
+other. Naples was rent in twain; a
+revolutionary state was established in
+Sicily; the supreme pontiff was dethroned
+at Rome; Piedmont joined
+the innovating party; Lombardy rose
+up against Austria, Bohemia was in
+arms against Vienna, the Magyars
+revived against the Germans the fierce
+hostility of five centuries; Prussia
+was revolutionised, Baden ravaged,
+Denmark invaded; the Poles could
+with difficulty be restrained amidst
+the general effervescence; the Irish
+openly made preparations for rebellion
+and separation from Great Britain.
+England itself was shaken: the
+gravity and practical tendency of the
+Anglo-Saxon character in part yielded
+to the general contagion. London
+was threatened with a revolutionary
+movement; the Chartists in all the
+manufacturing towns were prepared to
+follow the example; treasonable
+placards, calling on the people to rise,
+were to be seen on all sides; and the
+mighty conqueror who had struck
+down Napoleon exerted his consummate
+skill in baffling the rebellion of
+his own countrymen, and won a victory
+over anarchy not less momentous
+than that of Waterloo, and not the
+less memorable that it did not cost a
+drop of human blood.</p>
+
+<p>What a contrast, within the short
+period of eighteen months, did Europe
+afterwards exhibit! France, the
+centre of impulsion to the civilised
+world, was restrained; the demon of
+anarchy was crushed in its birthplace;
+the visions of the Socialists had been
+extinguished in the blood of the
+barricades. Dispersed, dejected, in
+despair, the heroes of February were
+languishing in exile, or mourning in
+prison the blasting of their hopes, the
+ruin of their prospects, the unveiling
+of their sophistries. Revolution had
+been crushed without the effusion of
+blood in Berlin: law had regained its
+ascendency; rebellion had quailed
+before the undaunted aspect of the
+defenders of order and the throne.
+Naples had regained the dominion of
+Sicily; the arms of France had restored
+the Pope at Rome; the Eternal
+City had yielded to the assault of
+the soldiers of Louis Napoleon. Austria
+had regained her ascendency in
+Italy; the perfidious aggression of
+Charles Albert had been signally
+chastised by the skill and determination
+of the veteran Radetsky; Milan
+was again the seat of Imperial government;
+the dream of a Venetian republic
+had passed away, and the Place
+of St Mark again beheld the double-headed
+eagle of Austria at the summit
+of its domes. Baden was conquered,
+Saxony pacified; the fumes of revolutionary
+aggression in Schleswig had
+been dissipated by the firmness of
+Denmark, and the ready, although
+unexerted, support of Russia. Poland
+was overawed by the Colossus of the
+North; and even the heroic valour of
+the Magyars, so often in happier days
+the bulwark of the Cross, had yielded
+to that loyalty and tenacity of purpose
+which has so long distinguished the
+Austrian people, joined and aided by
+the support which, on this as on many
+previous occasions, Russia has afforded
+to the cause of order in Europe. Though
+last, not least, Great Britain was
+pacified: the dreams of the Socialists,
+the treason of the Chartists, had recoiled
+before the energy of a people
+yet on the whole loyal and united.
+Ireland, blasted by the triple curse of
+rebellion, pestilence, and famine, had
+ceased to be an object of disquietude
+to England, save from the incessant
+misery which it exhibited; and its
+furious patriots, abandoning in multitudes
+the land of their birth, were
+carrying into Transatlantic regions
+those principles of anarchy, and deathless
+hatred at civilisation, which had
+so long laid waste their own country.</p>
+
+<p>Acknowledging, as all must do, with
+devout thankfulness, that it is to the
+Great Disposer of events that we are
+to ascribe so marvellous a <small>DELIVERANCE
+FROM EVIL</small>&mdash;so blessed an
+escape from a fate which would have
+renewed, in Europe, a devastation as
+wide-spread, and darkness as thick,
+as occurred during the middle ages&mdash;it
+may yet, humanly speaking, be discerned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
+how it is that our salvation
+has been effected. The days of miracles
+are past; the law is not now delivered
+amidst the thunders of Mount
+Sinai; the walls of fortresses do not
+fall down at the sound of the Lord's
+trumpet; there is no longer a chosen
+people, over whose safety the eye of
+Omnipotence watches, and whom, in
+the last extremity, the destroying angel
+rescues from their enemies. The direction
+of human affairs by Supreme
+Wisdom; the coercion of wickedness;
+the support of virtue; the ceaseless
+advance of the race of man, amidst all
+the folly and selfishness with which its
+concerns are conducted, have not, indeed,
+passed away: all these are in as
+complete operation now as when the
+Red Sea opened to the retreating Israelites,
+or the walls of Jericho fell before
+the blast of Joshua's trumpet, or the
+rending of the vail of the Temple announced
+that the era had commenced
+when the whole human race was to be
+admitted to the sanctuary of the temple.
+But it is by human means alone that
+Providence now acts; it is by general
+laws that the affairs of men are regulated.
+The agents of Omnipotence
+are the moving principles of the human
+heart: the safeguards against ruin are
+to be found in the barriers which, in
+injured interests or counteracting passions,
+are raised up amidst the agitated
+multitude, against the further progress
+of devastation. It is not from oblivion,
+therefore, but with a constant recognition
+of Divine superintendence, that
+we shall now endeavour to trace out
+the means by which the most alarming
+moral pestilence which ever appeared
+in modern times has been arrested;
+the happiness of Europe saved, for the
+time at least, from the destruction
+by which it was menaced&mdash;from the
+earthquake in its own bosom; and the
+progress of real freedom throughout
+the world prevented from being blasted
+by the selfish ambition or insane delusions
+of the demagogues who, for a
+time, got possession of its current.</p>
+
+<p>The first circumstance which must
+strike every observer, in the contemplation
+of the terrible crisis through
+which we have passed, is, that the
+destruction with which we were
+threatened was mainly, if not entirely,
+owing to <em>want of moral courage</em> on the
+part of the depositaries of power.
+The Revolution in Paris, it is well
+known, owed its success entirely to
+the pusillanimity of the <em>men</em> of the
+royal family. Louis Philippe, old and
+enfeebled by disease, was paralysed
+by a still more fatal source of weakness&mdash;the
+consciousness of a throne
+won by treason&mdash;the terror inspired
+by the sight of the barricades, behind
+which his own government had been
+constructed. His sons who were present
+showed that the Orleans family
+had lost, with the possession of a
+usurped throne, the courage which, for
+several generations, had constituted
+the only virtue of their race. The
+King of Prussia abandoned the contest
+in Berlin in the moment of victory&mdash;a
+nervous reluctance to the
+shedding of blood paralysed, as it had
+done in the days of Louis XVI., the
+defenders of the throne. In Austria,
+the known imbecility, physical and
+moral, of the emperor, rendered him
+wholly unequal to the crisis in which
+he was placed&mdash;delivered over the
+empire, undefended, to a set of revolutionary
+murderers, and rendered a
+change in the reigning sovereign indispensable.
+In Rome, the Pope himself
+began the movement&mdash;he first
+headed the reform crusade; and whatever
+his unhappy subjects have since
+suffered is to be ascribed to his blind
+delusion and weak concessions. Such
+was the conduct of the kings of
+Europe&mdash;such the front which our sex
+in high places opposed to the revolutionary
+tempest. But women often,
+in the last extremity, exhibit a courage
+which puts to shame the pusillanimity
+of the men by whom they are surrounded;
+and never was this more
+signally evinced than in the present
+instance. The Queen of France tried
+in vain, at the Tuileries, to inspire her
+husband with her own heroic spirit;
+the Duchess of Orleans showed it in
+front of levelled muskets in the
+Chamber of Deputies; and, that order
+is still preserved in our country, is to
+be ascribed in no small degree to the
+firm conduct of the sovereign on the
+throne, and the determination with
+which she inspired her government to
+risk everything rather than concede
+one iota to the revolutionists.</p>
+
+<p>As it was the opposite conduct from
+this, and the moral weakness of the
+depositaries of power, which mainly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
+induced the revolutions of 1848, and
+rendered them so formidable, so those
+causes which have at length arrested
+that terrible convulsion seem to have
+been no other but the moral laws of
+nature, destined for the correction of
+wickedness and the coercion of passion,
+when they have risen to such a
+pitch as seriously to endanger the
+existence of society. And, without
+presuming to scan too deeply the intentions
+of Providence, or the great
+system by which evil is brought out
+of good, and an irresistible power
+says to the madness of the people, as
+to the storms of the ocean, "Hitherto
+shalt thou come, and no farther, and
+here shall thy proud waves be staid,"
+we may probably discover, humanly
+speaking, the means by which the
+evil has been arrested.</p>
+
+<p>The first circumstance which has
+produced the reaction, and arrested
+the progress of evil so much more
+rapidly than was the case in the former
+great convulsion, is the memory of
+that convulsion itself. It is no doubt
+true, that every generation is taught
+by its own and none by its predecessors'
+sufferings; but, in the case of
+the first French Revolution, the suffering
+was so long-continued and
+dreadful, that the memory of it descended
+to the next generation. It
+was impossible that the sons of the
+men who had been guillotined, exiled,
+or mown down by the conscription,
+who had seen their estates and
+honours torn from them by the ruthless
+hand of Revolutionary violence,
+should not retain a vivid sense of the
+sufferings they had experienced, and
+the wrongs they had undergone. All
+classes, not excluding even those who
+had been most ardent and active in support
+of the first Revolution, had writhed
+alike under the calamities and exactions
+of the latter years of the war,
+and the ignominious conquest in which
+it had terminated, which was only
+felt the more keenly from the unparalleled
+triumphs to which the nation
+had so long been habituated. Add to
+this, that the attention of all the
+intelligent classes of society in Europe
+generally, and in France in particular,
+had been long, and to an extent of
+which in this country we can scarcely
+form an idea, riveted on the events
+of the first Revolution. The Reign
+of Terror was not forgotten; the
+prophecy of the historian<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> proved
+true:&mdash;"A second French Revolution,
+of the same character as the
+former, and the age in which it is to
+arise must be ignorant of the first."
+Its heartstirring incidents, its mournful
+catastrophes, its tragic events, its
+heroic virtue, its appalling wickedness,
+its streams of blood, were indelibly
+engraven on the hearts of a
+considerable, and that too the most
+influential, part of the people. The
+revolutionists, indeed, in every country&mdash;the
+Red Republicans in France,
+the Chartists in England, the Rebels
+in Ireland, the Carbonari in Italy,
+the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Illuminés</i> in Germany, were perfectly
+prepared to renew for their
+own profit the same scenes of spoliation,
+bloodshed, and massacre. But
+such extreme characters form, even in
+the most depraved society, but a
+small part of the whole inhabitants.
+It is the delusion or timidity of the
+great body, not the absolute strength
+or numbers of the violent party,
+which is the principal danger. The
+force of the first Revolution consisted
+in its novelty; in the enchantment of
+its visions, the warmth of its professed
+philanthropy, the magnitude of its promises.
+But time had dispelled these,
+as it does many other delusions. The
+mask had fallen from the spectre
+which had charmed the world, and
+the awful form of <span class="smcap">Death</span> had appeared.</p>
+
+<p>The second circumstance which
+tended to coerce, more rapidly than
+could have been hoped for, the progress
+of the revolution of 1848, was
+the firmness and loyalty of the soldiers.
+It is historically known that it
+was the defection of the troops which
+brought on, and rendered irresistible
+the march of the first Revolution:
+which induced, in rapid succession,
+the Reign of Terror, the assignats, the
+conscription, the capture of Paris, the
+subjugation of the kingdom. But
+here, too, experience and suffering
+came to the aid of deluded and wandering
+humanity. It was seen that
+what is unjust and dishonourable is
+<em>never</em> expedient: that the violation of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
+their oaths by the sworn defenders of
+order is not the commencement of the
+regeneration, but the first step in the
+decline of society: and that to fear
+God and honour the king is the only
+way to insure, not only the preservation
+of order, but the ultimate ascendancy
+of freedom. On the foundation
+of the revolt of the Gardes Françaises
+in 1789, were successively
+built the despotism of the Committee
+of Public Salvation, the blood of Robespierre,
+the carnage of Napoleon. The
+awful example was not lost on the
+next generation. The throne of
+Charles X. was overthrown by the
+defection of the troops of the line;
+but it was again found that the glorious
+fabric of civil liberty was not to be
+erected on the basis of treachery and
+treason. None of the troops revolted
+on the crisis of February 1848. The
+Guards and the line were alike steady.
+Marshal Bugeaud, when he received
+the command, speedily passed the
+whole barricades, and in six hours
+would have extinguished the revolt.
+The throne was lost not by the defection
+of the troops, but by the pusillanimity
+of the princes of the blood; and
+accordingly, when the next contest
+occurred&mdash;as occur it ever will in such
+cases&mdash;the troops were resolutely led,
+the revolution was put down under
+circumstances ten times more formidable,
+though not without a frightful
+loss of human life.</p>
+
+<p>We are so accustomed to the loyalty
+and steadiness of the English army,
+that the possibility of their wavering
+never enters into our imagination.
+But still all must admit that we too,
+with all our boasted safeguards of
+popular representation, general information,
+a free press, and centuries of
+freedom, stood on the edge of an
+abyss; and that, not less than Austria
+or Prussia, our salvation had come to
+depend chiefly, if not entirely, on the
+fidelity of the soldiers. If the six thousand
+men who garrisoned London on
+the 10th April 1848 had wavered, and
+one-half of them had joined the insurgents,
+where would now have been
+the British constitution? Had a hundred
+thousand men from Kennington
+Common crossed Waterloo Bridge,
+headed by a regiment of the Guards,
+and three regiments of the line, where
+would now have been the British
+liberties? Where would have been
+all the safeguards formed, all the hopes
+expressed, all the prophecies hazarded,
+as to its being perpetual? But in
+that dread hour, perhaps the most
+eventful that England ever knew, we
+were saved by the courage of the
+Queen, the firmness of the government,
+the admirable arrangements of
+the Duke of Wellington, and the universal
+steadiness and loyalty of our
+soldiers. We are quite aware of the
+special constables, and the immense
+<em>moral</em> influence of the noble display
+which the aristocracy and middle
+classes of England made on that occasion.
+But moral influence, often all-powerful
+in the end, is not alone
+sufficient at the beginning; physical
+force is then required to withstand the
+<em>first assault</em> of the enemy: and, highly
+as we respect the civic force with
+batons in their hands; and fully as
+we admit the immense importance of
+that citizen-demonstration in its ultimate
+effects, we ascribe our deliverance
+from the instant peril which
+threatened, entirely to the steadiness
+of the British army, and the incomparable
+arrangements of their chief.</p>
+
+<p>In the Continental states, order succeeded
+in regaining the ascendency
+over anarchy entirely in consequence
+of the fidelity of the soldiers. On
+that memorable day, when the Prussian
+army marched into Berlin playing
+the old airs of <em>the monarchy</em>, and
+formed in a circle around, distant
+only twenty-five paces from the insurgent
+host, and there tranquilly loaded
+their pieces, the opposing forces were
+directly brought into collision; it was
+seen that, in a few seconds, law or
+rebellion would be victorious. Law
+prevailed, as it generally does where
+its defenders are steady and resolutely
+led&mdash;and what has been the result?
+Is it that freedom has been extinguished
+in Prussia, that liberty has
+sunk under the pressure of tyrannic
+power, and that a long period of servitude
+and degradation is to close the
+bright meridian of her national splendour?
+Quite the reverse: anarchy
+has been extinguished in Prussia only
+to make room for the fair forms of
+order and liberty, which cannot exist
+but side by side; the revolutionists
+are overawed, but the lovers of real
+freedom are only the better confirmed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
+in their hopes of the ultimate establishment
+of a constitutional monarchy,
+such as Prussia has been sighing for
+for thirty years. It is ever to be
+recollected that the prospects of freedom
+are never so bright as when they
+are in the inverse ratio to those of
+revolution; liberty is never so safe as
+where anarchy is most thoroughly
+repressed; despotism is never so near
+at hand as immediately after the
+greatest triumphs of insurrection.</p>
+
+<p>In <span class="smcap">Austria</span> a different and more
+melancholy prospect has been exhibited.
+That great and noble country
+has been the victim, not merely of the
+passions of revolution, but of those
+of race. It has been torn asunder,
+not only by the ambition of the
+revolutionists, and the ardent zeal
+of a people yet inexperienced in
+social dissensions sighing after freedom,
+but by the force and inextinguishable
+rivalry of different and discordant
+races. The Lombard has
+risen up against the German, the
+Bohemian against the Austrian; the
+Magyars have buckled on their
+armour against both, and, animated
+alike by revolutionary zeal and
+national jealousy, have striven to
+obtain what they deem the first of
+blessings&mdash;national independence&mdash;by
+revolting against the government of
+Austria, in the moment of its utmost
+need. That strange compound of
+races and nations, the Austrian
+monarchy, in which it is hard to say
+whether the Slave, the Magyar, the
+Teuton, the Lombard, or the old Roman
+had the preponderance, and the union
+of which, for so long a period, had
+been a subject of astonishment to all
+observers, at length revealed its inherent
+weakness. Worse than the war
+of opinion, the war of races began.
+Like the Lacedemonian confederacy,
+after the defeat of Leuctra, or the
+Athenian after the catastrophe of
+Aigos Potamos, or the Roman republic
+after the disaster of Cannæ, the Austrian
+aggregate of kingdoms threatened
+to fall to pieces on the dreadful shock
+of opinion which resulted from the success
+of the French revolution. The
+contest of nations did not now intervene,
+to bar the spread of democratic
+ideas; the military passions were not
+arrayed in opposition to the civic.
+Lamartine was perfectly right in his
+prognostic: the pacific French revolution
+of 1848 achieved greater conquests,
+in three months, than the warlike
+republic of 1793 had gained in
+ten years. Prussia was apparently
+revolutionised; Austria was all but
+won to the democratic side; Vienna,
+Prague, and Milan were in the hands
+of the insurgents. Never, in the
+darkest periods of the revolutionary
+war, was Austria in such desperate
+straits, as when Radetsky retreated
+behind the Mincio, and the treacherous
+assault of Charles Albert was
+aided by the whole strength of revolutionary
+Italy, and the tacit support
+or lukewarm indifference of
+France and England.</p>
+
+<p>But in that awful hour, by far the
+most perilous which Austria ever
+knew, and which threatened with immediate
+and irrevocable destruction
+the whole balance of power in Europe,
+she was saved by the fidelity of her
+native soldiers, and the incomparable
+spirit of her German nobility. Then
+appeared in its highest lustre what is
+the principle of life and the tenacity
+of purpose which exist in an aristocratic
+society, not yet wholly debilitated
+by the pleasures and the selfishness of
+a court. Although the Hungarian
+nobles, for the most part, sided with
+the Magyar insurgents; although the
+whole Lombard troops had passed
+over from the standards of Radetsky
+to those of Charles Albert, and all the
+Hungarians in his service sullenly
+wended their way back to their native
+places; although Prague was wrested
+from the crown by the Bohemian insurgents,
+and Vienna by a vehement
+urban tumult in the capital; although
+Hungary was not only lost, but arrayed
+in fierce hostility against the
+monarchy&mdash;the noble Austrian leaders
+never lost heart&mdash;they realised the
+dream of the Roman poet&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Si fractus illabatur orbis,<br /></span>
+<span class="i1">Impavidum ferient ruinæ."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Windischgratz in Bohemia, Radetsky
+in Italy, Jellachich in Austria,
+stood forth as the saviours of the
+monarchy, and, with it, of the cause of
+European freedom. Though deserted
+by their sovereign, who had bent
+before the revolutionary tempest, they
+fronted, sometimes, it is believed, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
+opposition to constrained orders, the
+dangers with which they were assailed&mdash;they
+acted in conformity with
+the maxim of a noble people not yet
+debased by democratic selfishness:
+<span class="smcap">Vive le Roi quand-meme!</span> Slowly,
+but steadily, the forces of order regained
+their ascendant over the assaults
+of anarchy. The Tyrol, ever
+steadfast in its loyalty, first offered an
+asylum to the emperor, when driven
+from his capital; Prague was next
+recovered, and Bohemia coerced by
+the moral courage and skilful dispositions
+of Prince Windischgratz;
+Radetsky, shortly after, reinforced by
+the loyalty of Austria, regained his
+ascendant on the Mincio, routed the
+revolutionary rabble of Italy, and
+restored Milan to the Imperial government;
+Vienna, after a desperate conflict,
+was won by the forces of Order;
+and Jellachich and Windischgratz
+enjoyed the proud triumph of having
+restored his capital to their discrowned
+sovereign. Hungary, inhabited by a
+bolder and more numerous race, actuated
+by stronger passions, held out
+longest, and was only subdued after a
+sanguinary conflict, by the aroused
+vigour and national passions, aided by
+the support of the Colossus of the
+North, which has so often sent forth
+its battalions as the last resource of
+order and religion, when all but vanquished
+by the forces of anarchy and
+infidelity. Yet, though thus constrained,
+in the last extremity, to call
+in the aid of the Czar, and array a
+hundred thousand Muscovites on the
+plains of Hungary, the stand thus
+made by the Austrian monarchy is
+not the less glorious and worthy of
+eternal remembrance. It demonstrates
+what so many other passages
+in the history of that noble people
+indicate, how great is the strength,
+and unbounded the resources, of a
+brave and patriotic nation, even when
+afflicted by the most terrible disasters;
+and how uniformly Providence, in the
+end, lends its protection to a people
+who have shown themselves worthy
+of its blessings, by faithfully discharging
+their duty in a period of
+disaster. The year 1849 will ever
+rank with the glories of Maria Theresa,
+the triumph of Aspern, the devotion
+of Wagram, as the brightest periods in
+the long and glorious Austrian annals.</p>
+
+<p>The people of England, ever ready
+to sympathise with even the name of
+freedom, and prone beyond any other
+nation to delusions springing from
+generous feelings, acting on erroneous
+information, were at one time much
+disposed to sympathise with the Hungarian
+insurgents. They enlisted the
+wishes of a considerable part, especially
+of the citizens of towns, on their
+side. Never were generous and estimable
+feelings more misapplied. The
+contest in Hungary, it is to be feared,
+was not in the slightest degree a
+struggle for public freedom: it was an
+effort only to establish the <em>domination
+of a race</em> in opposition to a lawful
+government. Like the Sikhs or Ameers
+in India at this moment, the Normans
+in England in former times, or the
+"insane plebeian noblesse" of Poland,
+whom John Sobieski denounced as the
+authors of the ruin of his country, the
+Magyars were a proud and haughty
+dominant race, not a fourth part of the
+whole inhabitants of Hungary, but
+brave and ambitious, and animated
+with the strongest desire of establishing
+an independent oligarchy in their wide-spread
+country. They took the opportunity
+for asserting their principles
+when Austria was pierced to the heart,
+and its provinces, apparently all falling
+asunder, had the fairest prospect of
+establishing separate dominions, as in
+the ancient Roman empire, on the
+ruins of the Imperial authority. Had
+they succeeded, they would have established
+the same monstrous tyranny of
+a dominant race, which has so long
+blasted the happiness, and at length
+destroyed the independence of Poland.</p>
+
+<p>That the contest in Hungary was
+one for the domination of a race, not
+the freedom of people, is evident
+from two circumstances which have
+been studiously kept out of view by
+the Liberal party, both on the Continent
+and in England. The first is
+that <em>after</em> the emperor had conceded to
+Hungary the most extreme liberal institutions,
+based on universal suffrage,
+the Magyar leaders sent private orders
+to all the Hungarian regiments in
+Radetsky's army to leave his banners,
+and return to Hungary; thus rendering
+to all appearance the dismemberment
+of the monarchy inevitable, and
+surrendering the Italian provinces,
+the brightest jewel in the Imperial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+crown, to the tender mercies of
+Charles Albert. The second is, that,
+in the contest which ensued, the Hungarians
+were in the end overthrown.
+Possessing, as Hungary does, fourteen
+millions of inhabitants&mdash;nearly a
+moiety of the whole Austrian empire,
+and four times more than Upper and
+Lower Austria, with the Tyrol, which
+alone could be relied on in that crisis&mdash;it
+is evident that, if the <em>whole</em> Hungarian
+people had been united, they must
+have proved victorious, and have decided
+the contest long before the distant
+Muscovite battalions could have
+appeared on the theatre of war. The
+Hungarian insurrection broke out in
+April 1848, and was aided by contemporaneous
+revolts in Prague, Lombardy,
+Venice, and Vienna. To all appearance
+the Austrian monarchy was
+torn in pieces. Muniments of war
+they had in abundance: Comorn,
+with its vast arsenal and impregnable
+walls, opened its arms to receive them.
+When Georgey capitulated, he had one
+hundred and thirty-eight guns, besides
+those in the hands of Kossuth
+and Bem. Fully half the military
+stores of Austria fell into the hands of
+the Hungarians, the moment the insurrection
+broke out. Yet, with all these
+advantages, they were overcome. This
+demonstrates that the war was not a
+national one, in the proper sense of the
+word: that is, it did not interest the
+<em>whole</em> people. It was an effort of a
+gallant and ambitious race, forming a
+small minority of the population, to
+establish a domination over the whole
+remainder of the inhabitants, and
+sever themselves from the Austrian
+empire; and a greater calamity than
+such a separation, both to the Hungarians
+themselves and the general
+balance of power in Europe, cannot be
+imagined.</p>
+
+<p>How was the balance of power to
+be maintained in Europe, especially
+against Russia, if the Austrian monarchy
+had been broken up? Experience
+had long ago proved that no coalitions
+for the preservation of the independence
+of central Europe, either against
+Russia on the one side or France on
+the other, had the least chance of
+success, in which Austria did not take
+a prominent part. Even the disasters
+of the Peninsular campaigns, and the
+awful catastrophe of the Moscow retreat,
+could not enable Europe to combat
+Napoleon, till Metternich, at the
+Congress of Prague, threw the weight
+of Austria into the scale. It was
+by an alliance of Austria, France, and
+England that, at the Congress of
+Vienna, a curb was put on the ambition
+of Russia: by a similar alliance
+that the Turkish empire was saved
+from ruin, when the Muscovite standards
+were advanced to Adrianople,
+and the Pacha of Egypt was encamped
+on Scutari. It was a coalition of
+Austria, England, Russia, and Prussia,
+which in 1834 coerced the ambition
+of France, when M. Thiers had sent
+orders to the French admiral to attack
+and burn the English fleet in the bay
+of Vourlas, at dead of night. But if
+Austria had been broken up into a
+Hungarian, a Lombard, and a Bohemian
+republic, how was such an alliance
+to be formed? What central power
+could, in such an event, have existed
+under such circumstances, to oppose a
+mid impediment to the grasping ambition
+of Russia on the one side, and
+France on the other? Prussia, it is well
+known, is entirely under the influence
+of Russia, and does not, except in the
+first fervour of revolution, venture to
+deviate from the policy which it prescribes.
+Sweden and Denmark are
+mere subsidiary states. Austria alone
+is so strong as to be able, with the aid
+of England, to bid Russia defiance;
+and is situated so near to its southern
+provinces, as to be actuated by a
+ceaseless dread of its encroachments.
+The breaking up of the Austrian empire
+would have been a fatal blow to
+the balance of power, and with it to
+real liberty in Europe. It would have
+left the field open to the Cossacks on
+the one side, and the Red Republicans
+on the other.</p>
+
+<p>It is deeply to be regretted that
+Austria was not able to regain its
+dominion over its rebellious Hungarian
+subjects, without the aid of the
+Muscovite arms. Although the Czar
+has recalled his troops after the vast
+service was rendered, and no projects
+of immediate aggrandisement are
+apparent, yet it is impossible to doubt&mdash;it
+is fruitless to attempt to disguise&mdash;that
+the influence of Russia in the
+east of Europe has been immensely
+extended by this intervention. So
+weighty an obligation as saving an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
+empire from dismemberment is too
+great to be easily forgotten; and
+supposing, what is probably the case,
+that gratitude is a feeling unknown to
+cabinets&mdash;and that the recollection of
+salvation from ruin is likely to produce
+no other sentiment but that of
+dislike&mdash;still the contest, which was
+adjourned, rather than decided, on the
+Hungarian plains, has for a very long
+period, it is to be feared, thrown
+Austria into the arms of Russia.
+They are united by the common bond
+of enduring interest. The Magyars
+in Hungary, the Poles in Sarmatia,
+are the enemies of both; and each
+feels that it is by a close alliance of
+the cabinets, that the evident dangers
+of an insurrection of these powerful
+and warlike races can be provided
+against. It is more than probable
+that a secret treaty, offensive and
+defensive, already unites the two
+powers; that the crushing of the
+Magyars was bought by the condition,
+that the extension of Muscovite
+influence in Turkey was to be connived
+at; and that the Czar will one
+day advance to Constantinople without
+fear, because he knows that his
+right flank is secure on the side of
+Austria. Certain it is, that the <em>joint</em>
+demand made by Austria and Russia,
+for the extradition of the Hungarian
+refugees, and which, as all unwarrantable
+stretch against the independence
+of Turkey, was resisted with so much
+spirit and wisdom by England and
+France, looks very like the first-fruits
+of such an alliance. And observe,
+now, the immediate effects on the
+balance of power of the revolution of
+1848. This invasion of the independence
+of Turkey was made by Russia
+and Austria in concert, and was only
+resisted by France and England!
+Woful, indeed, for the interests of
+real freedom, has been the result of
+those convulsions which have ended
+in transplanting Austria from its natural
+position, and have converted the
+jealous opponent of Muscovite power
+into its obsequious ally. Nothing
+could have effected such a metamorphosis,
+but the terrible convulsion
+which almost tore out the entrails of
+the Austrian empire. But that is
+ever the case with revolutionists.
+Blinded by the passions with which
+they are actuated, they rush headlong
+on their own destruction; and destroy,
+in their insane ambition, the
+very bulwarks by which alone durable
+freedom is to be secured in their own
+or any other country.</p>
+
+<p>It is commonly thought in this
+country that the war in Hungary was
+a contest for national independence,
+and that it bears a close analogy to the
+memorable conflicts by which, in former
+times, the independence of Scotland
+was maintained, or the liberties
+of England purchased. There never
+was a more unfounded opinion. <em>After</em>
+the Hungarian insurrection had taken
+place, indeed, and when the Austrian
+empire had been wellnigh torn to
+pieces in the shock, Hungary was
+formally incorporated with Austria,
+just as the grand-duchy of Warsaw
+was with Russia after the sanguinary
+revolt of 1831, and Ireland with England
+after the rebellion of 1798. But
+<em>anterior</em> to the revolution, what step
+had the cabinet of Vienna taken
+which was hostile to the independence
+of Hungary? Not one. The constitution
+which the Austrian government
+had given to the Hungarians, if it
+erred at all, did so on the liberal side:
+for it conceded to a people, scarcely
+emerged from barbarism, a constitution
+founded on universal suffrage,
+such as England, with its centuries of
+freedom, could not withstand for three
+months. It was the Hungarian insurgents
+who are responsible for the
+loss of their national independence;
+because they first put it in issue by
+joining Lombardy and the revolutionists
+of Prague and Vienna, in their
+assault upon the Imperial government,
+at a time when nothing whatever
+had been done which menaced their
+separate existence. The truth is,
+they thought, as many others did, that
+the Austrian empire was breaking up,
+and that now was the time to become
+a separate power. Having voluntarily,
+and without a cause, committed
+high treason, they cannot complain
+with reason, if in a mitigated form
+they incur its penalties by forfeiting
+their national existence.</p>
+
+<p>The ultimate suppression of the
+revolt in Hungary has been attended
+with a most distressing amount of
+bloodshed on the scaffold, and the
+occurrence of several mournful scenes,
+in which courage and fidelity have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+asserted their wonted superiority, in
+the supreme hour, over all the storms
+of fate. God forbid that we should
+either justify or approve of such severity,
+or deprive the heroic Hungarian
+leaders of the well-earned praise which
+some of them deserve, for their noble
+constancy in misfortune! But while
+fully admitting this on the one hand,
+we must, in justice to the Austrian
+government on the other, recall to recollection
+the circumstances in which
+they were placed at the close of the
+contest, the dangers they had undergone,
+and the dreadful devastation
+which the Hungarian war had brought
+upon their country. When Georgey
+capitulated and Comorn surrendered,
+Austria was wellnigh exhausted by
+the conflict: she had owed her salvation
+in part at least to foreign intervention.
+She had been forced to proclaim
+her weakness in the face of
+Europe, and to bring down the hated
+Muscovite battalions into the heart of
+the empire. In judging of the course
+which her rulers, when victorious, pursued,
+we must in justice recall to mind
+the perils they had escaped, and the
+humiliations to which they had been
+reduced. We must recollect also the
+state of civilisation which Hungary
+has attained, and go back, in imagination,
+to what we ourselves did in a
+similar stage of national progress.
+Hungary is hardly more advanced in
+civilisation than England was during
+the Wars of the Roses, when the prisoners
+on both sides were put to death
+without mercy, and eighty princes of
+the blood or nobles were massacred
+in cold blood; or than Scotland was
+when the Covenanters murdered all
+the Irish in Montrose's army, with
+their wives and children. What did
+the English government do at Carlisle
+after the advance of the Pretender to
+Derby, or in Ireland after the rebellion
+of 1798? What has she recently
+done in the Ionian islands, after the
+insurrection in Cephalonia? Nay,
+would we have been less rigorous than
+the Austrians, even at this time, if we
+had been reduced to similar extremities?
+It is very easy to be lenient
+after an insurrection which has been
+extinguished in a cabbage garden, and
+rendered the insurgents ridiculous in
+the eyes of all the world; but what
+should we have done, and how would
+we have felt, if Smith O'Brien at the
+head of the Irish rebels had invaded
+England, taken London, nourished
+for a year and a half a frightful civil
+war in the heart of the empire, and
+compelled us to call in the legions of
+France into the midland counties to
+save the nation from ruin? We do
+not mean, by these observations, to
+justify the executions of Haynau and
+the other Imperial generals: God
+knows, we deplore them as much as
+any one can do, and yield to none in
+admiration of the heroism of the Hungarian
+leaders, who have shown themselves
+so worthy of the noble nation
+to which they belong. But we extenuate,
+if we cannot justify, the severity
+of the Austrians, by the recollection
+of their sufferings; and reserve
+the weight of our indignation for those
+insane and selfish demagogues who, for
+their own elevation, lighted so terrible
+a conflagration, and caused so much
+noble blood to be shed, alike on the
+part of those who fanned and those
+who sought to extinguish the flames.</p>
+
+<p>The third circumstance which seems
+to have mainly tended to stop the
+progress of revolution in Europe, has
+been the great amount of <em>interests</em> in
+France which could not fail to be injured,
+either by foreign warfare or
+domestic Socialist triumph. This is
+mainly owing to France having already
+undergone fusion in the revolutionary
+crucible. Scarcely anything remains
+to melt, but the dross which had
+flowed out of the first furnace. The
+great estates and church lands were
+divided; two-thirds were cut off from
+the national debt. Nobody remained
+to despoil but the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tiers état</i> and revolutionary
+proprietors. They stood
+shoulder to shoulder in defence of their
+all, which they saw was seriously
+menaced; and thence the stoppage of
+the revolution at Paris, and the rapid
+retrograde movement of opinion on the
+subject, in the majority, over all France.
+Foreign war was not less an object of
+apprehension than internal spoliation.
+The peasants recollected the conscription
+and the Cossacks, and the weighty
+contributions of the Allies; the bourgeois
+dreaded the cessation of foreign
+travelling in their country, and the
+termination of the prolific shower of
+English gold. It was a general terror
+that the best interests of society were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
+in danger which produced the determined
+resistance to the insurgents in
+Paris on the 23d of June, and formed
+the majority of four millions who
+elected Prince Louis Napoleon to the
+president's chair. Beyond all doubt,
+the greater part of the electors, when
+they recorded their suffrages for him,
+understood they were really voting for
+an emperor, and opposing the barrier
+of force to the revolution.</p>
+
+<p>This circumstance suggests a very
+important consideration, on which it
+well becomes the people of this country
+to ponder, in reasoning from the
+example of France to themselves. It
+is not unusual now to hear the opinion
+advanced, that the result of universal
+suffrage in France proves that the
+apprehensions entertained on this subject,
+on this side of the Channel, are
+unfounded; and that, in truth, there is
+no such effectual barrier against revolution
+as universal, or, at least, a very
+low suffrage. America is frequently
+referred to, also, in confirmation of the
+same opinion. But under what circumstances
+has universal suffrage been
+forced to uphold property in these two
+countries? Recollect that both are overspread
+with a host of small proprietors:
+in France no less than 6,000,000
+persons, for the most part in very indigent
+circumstances, being holders of
+land; and in America, the whole soil,
+from its having been so recently reclaimed
+from the forest, and the law
+of equal succession, <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">ab intestato</i>, being
+in the hands of the actual cultivators.
+But can any opinion be formed from
+this as to what would be the effect of a
+change in the electoral law, which
+created 6,000,000 of voters in a country
+where there are not 300,000
+holders of land, and not above an
+equal number of proprietors in the
+funds? It is evident that we can
+never argue from a country which <em>has
+been revolutionised</em>, and where property
+<em>has been divided</em>, to one where
+neither of these events has taken place.
+Doubtless the robber will make a fight
+before he allows his prey to be torn
+from him; and when there are six
+millions of persons, for the most part
+possessed of the fruits of robbery, the
+rendering these back will not be very
+easily effected. But if we would see
+the effect of an extended suffrage, in a
+country which has not been revolutionised,
+and where the strong curb-chain
+of individual interest does not exist
+to restrain the majority, we
+have only to look to what the electors
+of France in 1793 did with the estates
+of the church and the nobility; to
+what the American freeholders did in
+1837, when they destroyed five-sixths
+commercial wealth of the country, by
+raising the cry "Bank, or no Bank:"
+or what the British ten-pounders have
+done with the other classes of society,
+and, eventually, though they did not
+intend it, with themselves, by their
+measures of free trade and a restricted
+currency. Beyond all doubt, <em>these</em>
+measures would at once be repealed
+by an extended constituency; but
+are we sure they would stop there?
+What security have we they would
+not apply the sponge to the National
+Debt, confiscate the church property,
+and openly, or by a graduated assessment
+on land, divide the estates of the
+nobility?</p>
+
+<p>But perhaps the most powerful
+agent, which has been at work, in
+stopping the progress of revolution
+in Europe, has been the public and
+private <span class="smcap">Insolvency</span> which in an abandoned
+state of society inevitably and
+rapidly follows such convulsions. This
+is the great check upon the government
+and the madness of the people.
+That France, ever since the revolution
+of February 1848, has been in a state
+of almost hopeless monetary embarrassment,
+is well known to all the
+world. In fact, nothing but the most
+consummate prudence, and the adoption
+of the wisest measures on the part
+of the Bank of France, has saved them
+from a general public and private bankruptcy.
+What those measures were,
+will immediately be explained. In
+the mean time, to show the magnitude
+of the difficulties against which they
+had to make head, it is sufficient to
+observe, that in twenty-one months
+the Revolutionary Government has incurred
+a floating debt of £22,000,000;
+and that the deficiency for the year
+1849, wholly unprovided for&mdash;and
+which must be made good by Exchequer
+bills, or other temporary expedients&mdash;is
+no less than <em>eleven millions
+and a half sterling</em>. It is not surprising
+it should have swelled to this
+enormous amount; for the very first
+demand of revolutionists, when they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
+have proved victorious, is to diminish
+the public burdens and increase the
+public expenditure. And they did
+this so effectually in France, that in
+one year after the revolution of 1848,
+they had increased the public expenditure
+by 162,000,000 francs, or
+about £6,500,000; while they had
+caused the public revenue to fall
+by 248,000,000 francs, or nearly
+£10,000,000!</p>
+
+<p>The dreadful prostration of industry
+which such a state of the public
+revenue implies, would have proved
+altogether fatal to France, had it not
+been rescued from the abyss by the
+surpassing wisdom with which, in
+that crisis, the measures of the Bank
+of France were conducted. But the
+conduct of that establishment, at
+that trying crisis, proved that they
+had taken a lesson from the archives
+of history. Carefully shunning the
+profuse and exorbitant issue of paper
+which, under the name of assignats,
+effected so dreadful a destruction of
+property in France in the first revolution,
+they imitated the cautious and
+prudent policy by which Mr Pitt surmounted
+the crisis of 1797, and
+brought the nation triumphant through
+the whole dangers of the war. They
+obtained an act from the legislature
+authorising the issue, not of
+£600,000,000 sterling of notes, as in
+1793 and 1794, but of 400,000,000
+francs, or £16,000,000 sterling, not
+convertible into gold and silver. This,
+and this alone, it was that brought
+France through the crisis of the Revolution.
+Specie, before this aid was
+obtained, was fast disappearing from
+circulation; the Bank of France had
+suspended cash payments; three of
+the principal banks in Paris had become
+bankrupt; the payment of all
+bills was suspended by act of government&mdash;for
+this plain reason, that no
+debtor could find cash to discharge his
+engagements. But this wise measure
+gave the French people that most inestimable
+of all blessings in a political
+and monetary crisis&mdash;a currency
+which, without being redundant, is
+sufficient, and, being not convertible
+into the precious metals, neither augments
+the strain on them, nor is liable
+to be swept away by foreign export.
+In consequence of this seasonable
+advance, the crisis was surmounted,
+though not without most acute general
+suffering; and industry, since a government
+comparatively stable was
+established, in the person of Prince
+Louis Napoleon, has revived to a
+surprising degree over the whole
+country. Indeed, it may be doubted
+whether the general misery which
+prevailed in France, desolated by a
+revolution, but sustained by a moderate
+inconvertible paper currency, was
+greater than was felt in the manufacturing
+cities of Great Britain, saved
+by the firmness of government and
+the good sense of the nation from a
+political convulsion, but withering
+under the fetters of a contracted currency,
+and unrestricted admission of
+foreign produce.<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
+
+<p>One thing is perfectly apparent
+from the result of the revolution in
+Italy, that the establishment of either
+civil liberty or political independence
+is hopeless in that beautiful peninsula.
+The total and easy rout of the
+Piedmontese and Tuscan forces by
+Radetsky is a proof of this. Venice
+was defended by its Lagunæ&mdash;Rome
+not by the descendants of the ancient
+masters of the world, but by the revolutionary
+mercenaries of Poland,
+Hungary, and Germany, whom the
+Austrian victories drove back from
+the banks of the Po to those of the
+Tiber. On the other hand, the
+example of Naples, where the firmness
+of the king has preserved in the end
+his dominions entire, though Sicily for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+a time was severed from the kingdom,
+and Naples itself was the theatre of a
+bloody convulsion, proves alike of
+what flimsy materials revolution is
+composed in the south of Europe, and
+through what a perilous crisis a nation
+can be safely conducted, when
+the depositaries of power are not unworthy
+of the elevated duties with
+which they are entrusted.</p>
+
+<p>Still more important is the lesson
+read to the world by the attempted
+revolution in England and Ireland.
+That Great Britain was threatened
+with the convulsions, in the throes of
+which France and Germany were labouring,
+is universally known. The
+Chartists openly declared that monarchy
+could not stand two months in
+England or Scotland; the Repealers
+were counting the hours till the Saxon
+was expelled from the Emerald Isle,
+and a Hibernian republic proclaimed
+in Dublin, in close alliance with the
+great parent democracy in Paris.
+Where are these boasters now? The
+English revolutionists were morally
+slaughtered in London on the 10th
+April: the Irish rebels were blown
+into the air by the fire of the police in
+the cabbage garden. They have been
+more than vanquished; they have
+been rendered ridiculous. In despair,
+they are now leaving in crowds their
+wo-stricken isle; and it is to be hoped
+a better race, more industrious habits,
+and a more tractable people, will gradually
+be introduced into the deserts
+which Celtic improvidence and folly
+has made. It is a glorious spectacle
+to see an attempted revolution which
+broke out in both islands suppressed
+almost without the effusion of blood;
+and England, the first-born of freedom
+in modern times, reasserting, in
+its advanced period of existence, at
+once the order and moderation which
+are the glorious inheritance of genuine
+Liberty.</p>
+
+<p>Would that we could say that our
+foreign policy during the two last
+eventful years has been as worthy of
+praise, as the conduct of our government
+in combating our internal enemies
+has been. But here the meed
+of our approbation must fail. Contrary
+alike to our obvious interests
+and to our real and long-established
+principles, we have apparently been
+guided by no other principle but that
+of fomenting revolution, after the example
+of France, in every country
+which the contagion had reached.
+We all but severed Sicily from Naples,
+and openly assisted the Sicilian insurgents
+with arms and ammunition.
+We once stopped, for "humanity's
+sake," the Neapolitan expedition
+from sailing to combat the rebels: we
+more than once interposed in favour
+of Charles Albert and the Piedmontese
+revolutionists: we have alienated
+Austria, it is to be feared, beyond
+redemption, by our strange and tortuous
+policy in regard to the Hungarian
+insurrection: we, without disguise,
+countenanced the revolutionary
+Germans in their attack upon the
+Danes. What object Ministers had
+in that, or how they thought the interests
+of England, a great commercial
+and exporting nation, were to be
+forwarded by throwing its whole customers
+into confusion and misery, we
+cannot divine. Apparently, their
+sympathy with revolution anywhere
+but at home, was so strong, that they
+could not abstain from supporting it
+all around them, though to the infinite
+detriment of their own people.
+And it is a most curious circumstance,
+that, while the Chancellor of the Exchequer
+constantly told us&mdash;no doubt
+with a certain degree of truth&mdash;that
+the failure of our exports, and the
+general distress of the country, was, in
+a great degree, to be ascribed to the
+European revolutions, the whole policy
+of the Foreign Office, during the same
+period, was directed to countenance
+and support these very revolutions.</p>
+
+<p>But from the painful contemplation
+of the follies and aberrations of man, let
+us turn, with thankfulness, to the contemplation
+of the great moral lessons
+which the events of the two last years
+teach us as to the wisdom and beneficence
+of Nature. It is now clear beyond
+the possibility of doubt, that the
+wisdom of Providence has provided
+barriers against the passions, vices, and
+follies of men; and that if the leaders
+in thought and station fail in their
+duty, an invisible bulwark against the
+progress of anarchy is provided in the
+general misery which is the consequence
+of their excesses. Pre-eminent
+above all others in the history of
+mankind, <small>THE YEAR OF REACTION</small>,
+immediately succeeding <small>THE YEAR OF REVOLUTIONS</small><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>, is fraught with the demonstration
+of these great and consoling
+moral and religious truths.
+From it the patriot will derive consolation
+and hope, amidst the darkest
+periods which may yet be in store for
+the human race: for never was a darker
+period than that through which we
+have passed; and from its checkered
+scenes the virtuous and upright will
+draw the conclusion that there are
+limits to human wickedness even in
+this scene of trial; and that the safest,
+not less than the most honourable
+course, for all classes, from the throne
+to the cottage, in periods of danger,
+is to be found in the fearless discharge
+of <small>DUTY</small>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>MY PENINSULAR MEDAL.</h2>
+
+<h3>BY AN OLD PENINSULAR.</h3>
+
+<h4>PART III.&mdash;CHAPTER VII.</h4>
+
+
+<p>Next morning, shortly after daybreak,
+we were all hurried out of our
+berths by Joey, to come on deck,
+and take a first view of the coast of
+Spain. We made the land to the
+north-east of Cape Villano, and were
+not a little struck with the bare, black,
+scowling aspect of that mountainous
+and iron-bound coast. Off Oporto we
+stood in, with the design of entering the
+river. But a signal from the shore announced
+the bar impassable, and we had
+nothing before us but the delightful
+prospect of standing off and on, till
+the weather permitted us to land the
+bags. Gingham, I observed, stood
+anxiously peering with his telescope
+in the direction of the bar, where the
+sea, for miles, was foam and fury.
+"Well," said I at last, "are you
+looking for a cork in that yeast?"&mdash;"I
+am," replied Gingham, "and there
+it is. See, they have passed the bar.
+We shall soon have them alongside."</p>
+
+<p>I saw nothing, but at length was
+able to discern in the distance a small
+speck, which was executing most extraordinary
+vagaries in the midst of
+the surf. Now it was high, now low;
+now visible, now lost. Its approach
+was indicated, not so much by any
+perceptible change of position, as by
+an increase of apparent magnitude.
+Gingham now handed me the glass,
+and I saw a large boat, full of men,
+pulling towards us like Tritons. At
+length they reached the ship. Smart
+fellows those Oporto boatmen&mdash;know
+how to handle those clumsy-looking,
+enormous boats of theirs. What a
+scene was that alongside! The wind
+high; the sea rough; the boat banging
+against the ship's side; the men in
+her all talking together. Talking?
+Say jabbering, shouting, screaming. I
+was in perfect despair. Where was my
+Portuguese? Hadn't I studied it at
+Trinity College, Cambridge? Couldn't
+I make out a page of my Portuguese
+Gil Blas? Hadn't I got a Portuguese
+grammar and dictionary in my trunk?
+And hadn't I got a nice little volume
+of Portuguese dialogues in my pocket?
+Yet not one word could I understand
+of what those fellows in the boat were
+bawling about. Their idiom was provincial,
+their pronunciation Spanish.
+That I didn't know. It seemed to me,
+at the time, that all my toil had
+been wasted. Never despair, man.
+If you want to learn a language, and
+can't learn it in the country, why,
+learn it at home. You may, you probably
+will, feel at a loss, when you
+first get among the natives. But,
+after two or three days, all will begin
+to come right: your ear, untutored
+hitherto, will begin to do its part;
+then your stores of previously acquired
+knowledge will all come into use, and
+you may jabber away to your heart's
+content. But mind, whatever the
+language you learn&mdash;Portuguese,
+Spanish, French, Italian, or High
+Dutch&mdash;go to work in a scholarlike,
+businesslike manner; learn the verbs,
+study the syntax, master all the technicalities,
+or you are doing no good.
+Doubtless, in your travels abroad,
+you will fall in with lively old English
+residents, who "speak the language
+as fluently as a native," and tell you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
+it's all nonsense, <em>they</em> never looked
+into a grammar, nor into a book
+neither. But never mind that; follow
+your own plan. Speak the language
+whenever you can&mdash;that of
+course; hear it spoken; dine at the
+table d'hôte&mdash;that's worth a five shilling
+lesson at any time, and you get
+your dinner extra; but, all the while,
+read daily, work your grammar, turn
+out the words in your dictionary, and
+mark the result. You, after a space,
+can not only speak the language, but
+<em>write</em> it; whereas those intelligent
+individuals, let alone writing, can't
+<em>read</em> it. Another suggestion, which
+I&mdash;but where are we? What are we
+talking about? While I am boring
+you with suggestions, the despatches
+have been handed into the boat; the
+boat has shoved off, and is making for
+the shore&mdash;plunging, ramping, tearing
+through the surf under a press of sail:
+and, on the deck of the Princess Wilhelmina
+gun-brig, stand three new and
+very rum-looking passengers&mdash;a Spaniard,
+a Portuguese, and a nondescript&mdash;one
+deal box, one old leathern portmanteau,
+one canvass bag, two umbrellas
+(blue,) one ditto (red,) and a
+high-crowned Spanish hat, tied up in
+a faded cotton pocket-handkerchief.</p>
+
+<p>Our new companions were all a
+little "indisposed" the first day; but,
+the weather moderating in the night,
+they grew better the next, and were
+able to take their places at the dinner
+table. The Spaniard had come on
+board, assuming that he was to victual
+himself, or pay extra. Under this
+impression, opening his box in the
+forenoon, he produced with much
+gravity a bundle, consisting of half-a-dozen
+oranges, some very coarse
+brown bread, a flask of wine, and a
+chump of splendid garlick sausage,
+all tied up together, in a second cotton
+pocket-handkerchief. Spreading
+said handkerchief on the cabin table
+as a cloth, he next brought out from
+his pocket a formidable cheese-toaster,
+and was preparing to do battle with
+the prog. The Major, perceiving his
+mistake, addressed him in Spanish,
+politely explaining that the passage-money
+covered everything, and that
+he could call for whatever the ship
+afforded. The Hidalgo, thus advised,
+and courteously thanking the
+Major, contented himself with an
+orange, carefully tied up the remaining
+provender as before, and restored
+it to the sky-blue deal box.</p>
+
+<p>This act of the Major's, benignant
+reader, piqued my curiosity. The
+Major was a very good fellow, as you
+have doubtless discovered ere this;
+but he was not a man to do anything
+without a <em>motive</em>. I couldn't feel
+easy, without getting to the bottom of
+it.</p>
+
+<p>"Very kind of you, Major," said I,
+"to give the Don that information
+respecting his rights <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">in transitu</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Kind?" said the Major indignantly;
+"what do you mean by
+kind? Had he once attacked that
+sausage, we should have smelt garlic
+all the way to Lisbon." I now
+appreciated the Major's urbanity.</p>
+
+<p>"Close fellows, those Spaniards,"
+added the Major. "I knew very
+well he wouldn't give me part of his
+sausage. Didn't go for it."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, if you had shared the feast,"
+said I, "we should have smelt garlic
+twice as bad."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," replied the Major "but
+<em>I</em> shouldn't have smelt it <em>at all</em>."</p>
+
+<p>Said hidalgo was a tall, kiln-dried
+attomy of a man&mdash;hair black and
+lanky&mdash;forehead high and corrugated&mdash;eyebrows
+pencilled and elevated&mdash;eyes
+almost closed by the dropping of
+the eyelids&mdash;nose long, thin, and very
+inexpressive&mdash;mouth diminutive&mdash;chin
+sharp&mdash;cheek-bones high and
+enormously prominent&mdash;cheeks hollow
+and cadaverous, regular excavations;
+half one of his oranges, stuck
+in each, would about have brought
+them to a level with his face. Of
+course he was dubbed Don Quixotte.
+The Portuguese came on board
+with his hair dressed as a wig, enormous
+white choker, no neck (that's why I
+called him Punch,) <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">chapeau de bras</i>,
+short black cock-tail coat, white silk
+waistcoat flowered green and gold,
+black satin unmentionables, black
+silk stockings, and top-boots&mdash;the
+tops a sort of red japan. As to the
+third visitor, no one could assert
+who he was, or what he was. He
+obtained a passage without any document
+from the Oporto authorities, on
+the plea that he was a courier, and
+carried despatches from Oporto to
+Lisbon. This, the Colonel remarked,
+was rather odd, as the bag generally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+went by land. One said he was a
+Spaniard; another said he was a
+Jew. Gingham pronounced him a
+Frenchman:&mdash;but what could a
+Frenchman be doing there? The
+one index of his identity was a nose,
+which forthwith won him the name of
+'Hookey.' Hookey spoke French,
+Spanish, Portuguese, lots besides&mdash;disclaimed
+English&mdash;yet seemed always
+listening while we talked. He
+was constantly smiling, too; the
+habit had given him a deep semicircular
+maxillary furrow&mdash;say trench
+if you will&mdash;on each side of his ugly
+mug. There was something in his
+smile that I didn't like. If he saw
+you looking at him, he put on a
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>At dinner the Colonel, anxious to
+do the honours, took an early opportunity
+of challenging Don Quixotte to
+a glass of wine. The Don filled a
+bumper; the Colonel nodded: the
+Don, with majestic and silent gravity,
+rose slowly from his seat, his glass in
+one hand, the other on his heart;
+bowed profoundly to each of the company
+in succession; tossed off the
+wine; melo-dramatically extended
+the empty glass at arm's length;
+bowed again; sighed; squeezed his
+hand very hard upon his heart, and
+sat down. The Major challenged
+Punch, who half filled his tumbler,
+sipped, filled up with water, sipped
+again, nodded then, not before, as if
+he would say "Now it will do," and
+drank off the whole. Captain Gabion
+challenged Hookey, who, alone of the
+three, performed correctly. "Hookey,
+my boy," thought I, "where did you
+learn that?"</p>
+
+<p>Neither Punch nor Don Quixotte
+manifested the least disposition to
+amalgamate with us. They kept
+themselves apart, replied civilly when
+addressed&mdash;that was all. I must say,
+speaking from my own observations,
+it is a slander which describes the
+English abroad as exclusive. The
+exclusiveness, so far as I have seen,
+lies much more with the Continentals.</p>
+
+<p>But if, on the present occasion, the
+Spaniard and the Portuguese kept
+their distance, it certainly was far
+otherwise with my friend Hookey. I
+take the liberty of calling him my
+friend, because I was particularly
+honoured by his attentions. I have
+already said that he seemed interested
+in our conversation. The interest
+extended to everything about us. He
+inquired respecting each and every
+one; his name, his rank, his department,
+his destination: asked me, in
+an off-hand way, if I could guess how
+many troops the British general had&mdash;what
+was to be the plan of the ensuing
+campaign&mdash;did our Government
+intend to carry on the war with vigour?
+When, by inquiring elsewhere,
+he discovered that I was attached to
+the military chest, he redoubled his
+attentions, and eke his interrogatories.
+Had I bullion on board? How much?
+Should I convey treasure from Lisbon
+to headquarters? On bullock-cars
+or on mules? By what route? Of
+course I should have a guard&mdash;did I
+know? Travelling up the country
+would be dangerous as the army advanced
+into Spain&mdash;wouldn't it advance?&mdash;when?&mdash;he
+knew every part
+of the Peninsula&mdash;was himself bound
+for headquarters after delivering his
+despatches&mdash;would be happy to go
+with me&mdash;wouldn't mind waiting a
+day or two in Lisbon&mdash;would assist
+me in obtaining a servant&mdash;a horse&mdash;a
+mule&mdash;anything. I, communicative
+as he was inquisitive, lavished information
+in floods; advised him as to
+the amount of bullion on board, to go
+down into the hold, and see with his
+own eyes; informed him, as a particular
+secret, that I shouldn't wonder
+if I was sent to headquarters, unless
+it happened otherwise; and hadn't
+the least doubt that I should have the
+conveyance of whatever amount of
+treasure was placed under my charge
+for that purpose; declined saying anything
+then about a servant, horse, or
+mule, as I should probably find "Milord
+Vilinton" had thought of me, and
+had everything of that kind ready
+against my arrival; begged to tell
+him I was a person of great importance,
+but maintaining the strictest
+incognito&mdash;hoped he wouldn't mention
+it. Presently he stole away to the
+forecastle, where I got a sight of him.
+He was jotting down like mad.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of our second day
+from Oporto, we made the Berlings;
+been six weeks at sea, from leaving
+the Tagus. If, instead of coasting it,
+which secured them a foul wind, they
+had struck out at once, from the mouth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+of the river, two or three days' sail
+into the Atlantic, they would probably
+have got the wind they wanted. That
+is what Captain Nil did, when I came
+home, passenger from Lisbon, 1843,
+in his clever little fruit-ship, the King
+Alfred. Didn't we give the go-by to
+the northerly current which blows
+down the coast, and catch a south-wester,
+which was just what we
+needed? Didn't we jockey two other
+orangemen, that started in company,
+and thought to beat us by working up
+along shore? And didn't we bring
+our prime oranges first to market, and
+sell them off-hand at London Bridge,
+with an extra profit of ten shillings a
+chest?</p>
+
+<p>The morning after we passed the
+Berlings, we saw the Rock of Lisbon.
+This, I suppose, is about the most
+striking object the mariner beholds,
+in approaching any coast in the known
+world. Not more than fifteen hundred
+feet above the level of the sea, it stands
+so dark in tint, so grim in aspect, so
+ragged in outline, you fancy some
+fresh earthquake has heaved it up,
+crude and pinnacled, from the volcanic
+bowels of the soil, and there left it to
+frown above the waves that thunder
+at its base, and spout up in unavailing
+froth and fume. "There it stands,"
+said Gingham, "the old Rock! Often
+have I rounded it before; often have I
+viewed it; often have I ranged it:
+worthy the attention of the naturalist;
+still more of the geologist; but, above
+all, of the meteorologist: the Promontory
+of the Moon; yes,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The hill where fond Diana looked and loved,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While chaste Endymion slept and dreamed of heaven:<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p class="noind">the advanced guard of mountain
+ridges, that condense the invisible
+vapours of the ocean; the medium
+and thoroughfare of electric communication
+between Europe and the
+Atlantic! See how the thin air of the
+tropics becomes mist, when it reaches
+those thunder-splintered pinnacles&mdash;hem!
+<em>Lady of the Lake</em>. See how it
+caps them with a perpetual cloud,
+which, though perpetual, is constantly
+diminished by the moisture which it
+discharges, and constantly replenished
+by fresh supplies of vapour from the
+sea. Here, the wind is north: but
+there, in that elevated region, the
+upper current is blowing steadily from
+the south-west. Take my advice,
+Mr Y&mdash;&mdash;. Don't leave Lisbon without
+visiting the Rock. Go to Cintra.
+Inquire for Madam Dacey's hotel;
+and don't allow her to charge you
+more than two dollars a-day, wine
+included, spirits and bottled porter
+extra."</p>
+
+<p>Gingham now drew out his telescope.
+"Ah!" said he, "there's
+Colares; and there's Cintra, just at
+the base of the Penha. There goes
+a donkey party, on a visit to the Cork
+Convent. My respects to the old
+Capuchins. There's Madam Dacey
+herself, fat and rosy as ever, scolding
+Francisco the cook for spoiling that
+omelet. How are you, old lady?&mdash;Villain!
+He's making a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pâté</i> with one
+hand, and taking snuff with the other!
+Don't roast that hare, blockhead; it's
+dry enough already. Make it into
+soup. That's the way to serve a
+Cintra hare. Clap a thin slice of
+bacon on the breast of each of those
+red partridges, before you put them
+down. What, boil that gurnet?
+Bake it, bake it, stupid! Serve it up
+cold for supper: beats lobster, and
+should be dressed the same way&mdash;oil,
+cayenne, vinegar, and a modicum of
+salt. I say, Francisco; mind you
+send up the soup hot. What an extraordinary
+fact, Mr Y&mdash;&mdash;! You
+may get good soups, and all the
+materials for good dinners, go where
+you will; but our own countrymen
+are the only people in the world who
+know how a dinner should be served
+up, and set on table. Why, sir, at
+those hotels at Lisbon and Cintra,
+I've tasted most splendid soups,
+magnificent!&mdash;but, positively, sent to
+table lukewarm&mdash;neither hot nor cold&mdash;tepid,
+sir! what do you think of
+that?"</p>
+
+<p>I was thinking, just at that moment,
+that I should like to hear more
+about Cintra. But Gingham had now
+got on the subject of <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">la cuisine</i>; <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">la
+cuisine</i> was one of his hobbies (he
+kept a <em>stud</em>)&mdash;and, once mounted,
+there was no getting him off. Yet
+Gingham, much as he delighted in
+dinner-giving, was not himself a gourmand.
+In him the passion was disinterested&mdash;a
+matter of taste&mdash;a
+sentiment. And ah! need I add<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
+how it enhanced the value of his
+friendship?</p>
+
+<p>About noon we crossed the bar; by
+two <small>P.M.</small> were off Lisbon, and, while
+I was all agape, admiring the surpassing
+beauties of the scene, had dropped
+our anchor. Captain Gabion
+took me by the elbow, and proposed
+that we should sojourn at the same
+hotel. The motive transpired that
+afternoon. Gingham had his own
+quarters, in the Rua d'Alecrim. We
+all landed together at the Yellow
+House, where our luggage underwent
+an examination&mdash;in those days a very
+off-hand business, the English, in fact,
+being in military occupation of the
+country. My traps were despatched
+among the first; and I sat waiting for
+the Captain, whose turn came later.
+Meanwhile Hookey's bag was opened,
+and the contents turned out. Among
+them I expected to see a letterbox;
+but there was nothing that looked
+like despatches. While Hookey was
+engaged with his bag, he was joined
+by a shabby-genteel personage, who
+had the look of a military man in
+plain clothes&mdash;an Englishman, or, I
+rather thought, an Irishman. They recognised
+each other at once, and seemed
+to meet by appointment&mdash;left the
+office arm in arm, the new-comer carrying
+Hookey's bag. They passed without
+observing me, as I sat in the background
+near the door, among bags
+and boxes. <em>Both</em> were speaking
+<em>English</em>: <em>i. e.</em>, Hookey, English as it
+is spoken by Frenchmen; his companion,
+English as it ought to be
+spoken, the pure vernacular of the
+Sister Isle. "Kim, kim away wid
+ye, now; isn't it aal krikt and wrigler?"&mdash;"Oh,
+yase; now I sal comb
+vid you, presently." "Aha! Mister
+Hookey; so you don't understand
+English," thought I. Not to be an
+eavesdropper, I started up, and put
+out my paw, in tender of a parting
+shake. Hookey, a little taken aback,
+clasped it fervently in both his; and,
+repudiating disguise, laughed, and
+spoke English again, grasping and
+shaking my fist with intense cordiality.
+I suppose it was his surprise,
+that made him substitute greeting for
+leave-taking: "Ah, how you do,
+sare? I hope you varraval."</p>
+
+<p>Gingham took a kind but rather
+distant leave. The Captain and I
+adjourned with our luggage, which
+was first cleverly laid together and
+packed, and then borne, swinging by
+ropes from two bars, which rested on
+the shoulders of four stout Gallegos,
+who walked two and two, hugging
+each other round the neck, and stepping
+together in admirable time. The
+Captain indicated the road; and we
+soon reached our domicile, MacDermot's
+Hotel (as it was then called),
+Rua do Prior, Buenos Ayres,&mdash;for
+air and prospect, the finest situation
+in all Lisbon; and that is not saying
+a little.</p>
+
+<p>I was for ordering dinner forthwith.
+The Captain, for reasons best known
+to himself, wished an hour's delay.
+Reluctantly acceding, I retired to my
+private apartment, and commenced
+operations in the soap and dowlas
+line. Presently the Captain tapped
+at my door, and entered. Wanted
+me just to walk down with him to the
+water's side&mdash;wanted me particularly.
+Away we went. The Captain spoke
+little&mdash;seemed to have some project.
+At length he opened: "I rather think
+the skipper will catch a precious good
+hiding presently; serve him right."
+All this was Greek to me, though I
+had heard something of the skipper's
+bad conduct to the Major.</p>
+
+<p>We now, having descended by a
+side street as steep as a ladder,
+entered the main road, or broadway,
+which runs by the water's side. Who
+should meet us there, but the Major?
+He was evidently on the look-out for
+us, and joined forthwith. "Has the
+boat left the brig yet?" said Captain
+Gabion.</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet, I think," said the
+Major; "I saw her alongside, though.
+Come down to the water's edge.
+That's the place."</p>
+
+<p>We descended, through a passage
+between stone walls. Captain
+Gabion now addressed me a second
+time: "Mr Y&mdash;&mdash;, I have already undertaken
+to officiate as the Major's
+friend. You must pick up the skipper."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, but what's it all about?"
+said I. "Hadn't any idea of your
+intention. You never told me."</p>
+
+<p>"No time for explanation now,"
+said the Captain. "Will you officiate,
+or will you not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Always ready to do the needful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
+when the case requires," said I.
+"But, if the Major feels himself
+aggrieved, is there no other redress?
+Won't it be <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">infra dig.</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"The fact is," said the Major,
+"I don't intend to give him a <em>heavy</em>
+licking&mdash;only just to polish him off a
+bit. As to redress, if I lodged a complaint,
+it must come ultimately before
+our own authorities. Now Englishmen
+abroad, when ill-treated, are
+always ignored or deserted by their
+government. I've seen that often.
+That rascal would get off scot-free;
+and the very fact of my having applied
+would be remembered to my
+disadvantage, and perhaps would injure
+me in my profession. If I was a
+Frenchman or a Yankee travelling
+abroad, and had been oppressed or
+ill-treated, I would apply to my government.
+But as I am an Englishman,
+what would be the use?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said I, "the skipper's conduct
+on board was very bad, I admit;
+to you, I've heard, particularly. But
+it's all over now. Come, let him off
+this time."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," said the Major. "In
+a fortnight he sails for England&mdash;takes
+home a ship-load of British officers,
+sick, wounded, invalided. If he
+ill treats such fine fellows as you and
+me, and goes unpunished, how will he
+treat them, do you think? I'll tell
+you what. All I fear is, after he has
+got a few taps, he'll go down; then
+there'll be no getting him up again,
+and he'll escape with only half his deserts.
+Now that's just what I want
+you to prevent."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said I; "if I am to officiate
+as the skipper's friend, of course I
+must do him justice. I only tell you
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," said the Major, between
+his teeth. "You pick him up;
+that's all."</p>
+
+<p>We reached the high bank by
+the water's edge, just above the
+landing-place. A boat was seen approaching
+from the Princess Wilhelmina:
+four men pulling, skipper steering.
+Captain Gabion addressed the
+Major:</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tell you what; it won't do
+here. First, there isn't room. Secondly&mdash;don't
+you see?&mdash;when he gets
+more than he likes, he has nothing to
+do but to roll down the bank, jump
+into the boat, and shove off. Thirdly,
+the boat's crew might interfere; and
+then we should get the worst of it."</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the boat reached the
+jetty; the skipper landed; ascended
+the bank by a zigzag path with Snowball
+at his heels; passed without
+noticing us, as we stood among other
+lookers on; and walked up the passage.
+The Major followed him.
+Captain Gabion and I followed the
+Major.</p>
+
+<p>Just as the skipper was emerging
+from the passage into the street, the
+Major stepped smartly after him, and
+tapped him on the shoulder, exclaiming,
+"Take that, you ruffian." <em>That</em>
+was a sharp application of the toe.</p>
+
+<p>Like a caged lizard touched in the
+tail, the skipper sprang fiercely round.</p>
+
+<p>"What's that for?" he cried, with
+a furious look.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, what's that for?" replied the
+Major, administering a stinging soufflet.</p>
+
+<p>The skipper, calm in an instant, and
+savage in cold blood, commenced
+peeling. I stepped up to him, received
+his jacket, and handed it to the nigger,
+thereby installing myself in office.
+The Major turned up the cuffs of his
+coat-sleeves.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, coolly, my man," said I, as
+the skipper went in like a mad bull.</p>
+
+<p>The first three rounds, like the
+Three Graces, had a mutual resemblance.
+Superior to the Major in
+weight and strength&mdash;formidable, too,
+as a hitter&mdash;the skipper did not succeed
+in planting a single effective
+blow. Some were stopped, some were
+dodged, some fell short, and one or
+two hit short. Still worse for the
+skipper, he had no idea of guard.
+His antagonist, a first-rate <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">artiste</i>,
+went on gradually painting his portrait.
+At the end of the third round,
+"his mammy wouldn't a' knowed
+him." The Major, in striking, did
+not throw in his weight, merely hit
+from the shoulder and elbow. But
+his punishing told: he hit with a
+snap; he hit fast; he had the faculty
+of rapidly hitting twice with the same
+hand. In short, the skipper was evidently
+getting the worst of it. All
+this time, the Major continued perfectly
+cool and fresh; and, like Shelton,
+the navigator&mdash;whom I remember
+well, though you, perhaps, do not&mdash;as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
+often as he stopped a hit, he politely
+inclined his head, as much as to say,
+"Well intended&mdash;try again." At the
+close of the third round, however, in
+consequence of the skipper's attempting
+a rush, the Major was constrained
+to put in a really hard blow as a stopper.
+It not only answered that purpose,
+but nearly lifted the skipper,
+and sent him reeling some paces backwards.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of coming, as before, to my
+extended arms, and seating himself,
+like a good child, on my knee till time
+was up, the skipper now staggered
+towards Snowball, and began rummaging
+in his jacket. I was too quick
+for him. Just as he extracted an
+enormous clasp-knife, I whipped it
+out of his hand, and passed it to Captain
+Gabion. On this demonstration,
+supposing that "legitimate war" was
+at an end, and my "occupation gone,"
+I was quietly walking away, with my
+hands in my pockets. But the Captain,
+having first communicated with
+the Major, met and stopped me, saying,
+"Come, we overlook that. The
+next round."</p>
+
+<p>The fourth round presented no novelty.
+The painting went on; I may
+say, this time, was pretty well finished.
+Never was an ugly monkey more completely
+"beautified" than the poor skipper.
+He still had his strength and wind,
+and there was as yet no reason why
+he should not ultimately win&mdash;especially
+as he hit out like the kick of a
+horse, and one of his blows, if it told,
+might have turned the day. I began,
+however, to be apprehensive that he
+would soon be put <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">hors de combat</i>, by
+losing the use of his peepers. When,
+therefore, I sent him in the fifth time,
+I whispered, "You must try to close,
+or you'll have the worst of it."</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly rushing in, giving his
+head, and boring on with his right
+arm extended, the skipper, at the
+commencement of the fifth round,
+contrived to get his left about the
+Major's waist. This led to a grapple,
+and a short but fierce struggle. The
+skipper had the advantage in physical
+power; but the Major was his superior
+in wrestling, as well as in the
+nobler science. They fell together,
+the Major uppermost. On the ground,
+strength resuming its advantage, the
+skipper soon rolled the Major over,
+and had the ascendency. Supposing
+the round concluded, I was going to
+pull him off. "Let alone, let alone,"
+said the Major; "leave him to me."
+The Major, I presumed, was waiting
+an opportunity for a "hoist."</p>
+
+<p>The skipper now, with his right arm
+extended, held the Major's extended
+left, pinned down by the wrist. The
+skipper's left arm and shoulder were
+passed under the Major's right, so as
+completely to put it out of commission.
+With his left hand, the skipper
+seemed to be pulling the Major's hair.
+All this was so completely <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">hors des
+règles</i>, that nothing but the Major's
+veto kept us from interposing.</p>
+
+<p>At this juncture of the combat
+there was evidently something out of
+the usual course, which particularly
+interested the nigger. Stooping down
+almost to a squat, his face peering
+close over the heads of the two combatants,
+his big eyes bulging and
+gloating with eager expectation, his
+mouth open, his blubber lips projecting,
+and his two hands uplifted and
+expanded with intense curiosity, he
+watched the result. Just in time, I
+grasped the skipper's thumb! Half a
+second more, and the Major's eye
+would have been out of its socket!</p>
+
+<p>Captain Gabion, breathing the only
+execration I ever heard from his lips,
+choked the skipper off.</p>
+
+<p>The Portuguese bystanders, though
+much interested in the fray, had not
+been thoroughly sensible of its character.
+To them, probably, the fight had
+looked as if a man, in perfect possession
+of his temper, had been merely
+playing with a very savage assailant,
+so clean and easy was the Major's
+style of punishing. But now, when
+they walked up, and looked in the
+miserable sufferer's face, they perceived
+the serious nature of the castigo
+administered. Instead of features
+they beheld&mdash;a mask, I was going to
+say, but that would be incorrect; for
+in most masks, you have eyes, nose,
+and mouth. Here, distinctness was
+obliterated; and as to eyes, why, you
+couldn't see the eyelashes. I handed
+the skipper to Snowball, advising he
+should be taken on board, and seen to.
+Snowball walked of, conducting him
+down the passage. I thought of the
+knife, procured it from the Captain,
+ran, and handed it to the nigger.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+"Tell him," said I, "never to use
+that again, except for cheese-toasting,
+picking his teeth, and so forth." "Yes,
+massa; me tell him you say so." "I
+say, Snowball," added I, "hadn't you
+better put a little oil on his face, to
+keep off the mosquitos? If they get
+at him as he is now, they'll drive him
+mad." "Ah no, massa," said Blackey,
+regretfully; "no muskitto here, dis
+tree, five week; dis place too cold,
+mosh very. Let alone, no muskitto
+on de wottah here, nebber at no
+time."</p>
+
+<p>I hurried back, and found Captain
+Gabion supporting the Major, who
+stood with both hands spread out over
+his right eye, and, to all appearance,
+suffering intense agony. Blood was
+visible between his fingers, and on his
+cheek. The Captain, solicitous to
+ascertain the amount of injury, made
+a gentle attempt to withdraw the
+Major's hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't! don't!" gasped the Major.
+"Has he&mdash;got my eye&mdash;in his
+pocket?"</p>
+
+<p>"All right, all right," replied the
+Captain; "you have still a spare eye
+to wink with. Near thing, though."</p>
+
+<p>"To-night I meant to have slept at
+Villa Franca," said the Major, still
+speaking as if his agony was extreme.
+"My man is waiting just by with the
+horses, at the <em>chafriz</em>."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense, nonsense!" said Captain
+Gabion; "to-night you must
+sleep at our quarters. Pledget is there,
+and will look at your eye. Mr Y&mdash;&mdash;,
+there's the <em>chafriz</em>; that stone fountain,
+where you see the open space."</p>
+
+<p>I stepped in that direction, and
+found an English servant, holding two
+horses. The Major had intended to
+"polish off" the skipper, mount forthwith,
+and away for Sacavem at a
+hand-gallop. So he might; only that
+the skipper, according to his own ideas
+of manly combat, having got his opponent
+undermost, and secured a grip of
+the Major's love-lock with his four
+fingers, had hooked his thumb-nail,
+and eke a portion of his thumb, in the
+&mdash;&mdash;but enough. I brought up the
+man and horses, and with some difficulty
+we got the Major to the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>Pledget was there, examined the eye,
+did not consider the injury serious, but
+deferred giving any decided opinion.
+Ordered the Major to bed, and prescribed
+leeches: wanted to apply a
+poultice, but the patient couldn't bear
+the pressure. For a few days he remained
+a prisoner. After that, I met
+him in the streets with a green shade&mdash;eye
+doing well. Next spring, saw him
+on duty. No damage was then visible,
+save and except a small scar at
+the inner corner of the eye.</p>
+
+<p>How soon, or how slowly, the
+skipper recovered from his polishing
+I never learned. The skipper, it
+appears, a year or two before the
+American war broke out, had put into
+the Tagus in a vessel from New
+Orleans, damaged. She was detained
+for repairs; and he, not liking an idle
+life, had procured employment in a
+Falmouth ship. After the war commenced,
+he chose to continue in the
+packet line. The exact nature of his
+offence, offered to the Major, I never
+ascertained. But it was something
+connected with the pumping of bilge-water,
+when the Major was suffering
+from sea-sickness, prostrate on the
+deck. Some years after, I heard of
+the skipper again. He had left Falmouth,
+and had obtained the command
+of a packet running between
+Southampton and the coast of France.
+He still had a bad name for insulting
+and ill-treating his passengers; and,
+what is curious, he again received a
+polishing from an English officer, at
+Dieppe. On this occasion, if I mistake
+not, the operator was an officer
+of the engineers. Whether said officer
+came out of the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mêlée</i> a Cyclops&mdash;the
+little dog forgot to mention.</p>
+
+
+<h3>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
+
+<p>The morning after our landing from
+the packet, I sought out, and with
+some difficulty discovered, my uncle's
+office; where I was very cordially
+received by both uncles, and very
+politely by the other gentlemen of the
+department. I announced myself
+prepared to start forthwith for headquarters;
+fully expecting to be off that
+night, or next day at latest. Uncle
+No. 1 told me I must go home with
+him to dinner, and see my aunt and
+cousins. Uncle No. 2 advised me to
+look out for a billet.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>All this sounded ominous. The
+sympathising reader is already advised,
+that my progress from Lisbon
+to headquarters was not quite so
+expeditious as I had anticipated. The
+cause of the delay was this.</p>
+
+<p>My dear mother, as I have already
+related, had overruled all objections to
+my joining the Peninsular army; and
+through her influence, my honoured
+father gave his reluctant consent.
+Shortly after, he was ordered to sea:
+his ship left the Downs; and he did
+not return, till after my departure
+from England. As the time of my
+departure drew nigh, my dear mother,
+left to her own cogitations, began to
+view the subject in a very different
+light. In short, she was perfectly
+frightened at her own act; and, when
+it came to the last, wrote off, without
+my knowledge, a letter to my uncle
+No. 2, entreating him by all means to
+detain me at Lisbon, not for the world
+to send me up the country&mdash;in short, to
+keep me far beyond the sound, let
+alone the range, of hostile cannon.
+Her letter, posted at Deal the very
+day I started thence for London, came
+out to Lisbon by the same conveyance
+with myself; and was doubtless in
+my uncle's hands, when I presented
+myself at the office. Many years
+after, in looking over some old correspondence,
+I found a letter of hers to
+my father at sea, revealing the whole
+plot.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning, I again presented
+myself, still expecting to receive my
+orders, and be off slick to headquarters.
+Uncle No. 2 was there; hoped I had
+not been <em>much</em> tormented with bugs
+and fleas; pointed out a desk with a
+high seat; and informed me&mdash;that
+was my place!</p>
+
+<p>The scene, which would have instantly
+appalled the whole department,
+had I given expression to my feelings,
+was happily prevented by one reflection,
+which struck me just in time;
+viz., that I was now an <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">employé</i>, bound
+to obedience by military law, and
+that Nunky was my commanding
+officer.</p>
+
+<p>I sulkily took my seat; and Nunky
+left me for a few minutes, to the
+pleasing process of mental digestion.
+Presently, he stood by my side with
+a huge bundle of papers:&mdash;laid the
+papers on my desk.</p>
+
+<p>"A fortnight," said he, "will probably
+elapse ere you can proceed to
+headquarters. I wish, in the mean
+time, you would just see what you can
+do, in arranging these convalescent
+accounts. We could not spare a hand
+for them, and they have got sadly
+into arrear. Do try what you can
+make of them."</p>
+
+<p>I went to work;&mdash;worked hard for
+a fortnight. At the end of that time,
+with occasional directions from my
+uncle, the confused mass of accounts
+was reduced to something like order.
+Still nothing was said about my
+journey to headquarters. Fresh work
+was given me, which took another
+week. I began to get regularly
+savage&mdash;was rapidly turning misanthrope&mdash;sympathised
+with George
+Barnwell. Nunky requested my
+company in a private room.</p>
+
+<p>"You came out," said he, "expecting
+to go up the country."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; and on that understanding
+I applied for the appointment, as I
+expressed in my letter from England.
+On that understanding too, unless I
+mistook the reply, my services were
+accepted."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, G&mdash;&mdash;," said he, "I put it to
+yourself. The fact is, those plaguy
+convalescent accounts have given us
+more trouble than all the business of
+the office besides. Till you came out,
+we never have had a clerk that could
+do them. You do them excellently.
+Of course, you are well aware the
+public service is the first thing.
+The long and the short of it is, you
+perform this duty so much to our satisfaction,
+your uncle J&mdash;&mdash; and I have
+come to the determination&mdash;we must
+keep you with us at Lisbon."</p>
+
+<p>This, my dear madam, with the
+exception of being crossed in love&mdash;and
+to that, you know, we all are
+liable&mdash;was my first serious disappointment
+in life. Baulked in my
+schemes of military glory&mdash;for already,
+in imagination, I was a gentleman
+volunteer, had mounted a breach, and
+won a commission&mdash;I had now but
+one remedy; to resign my clerkship,
+and return forthwith to England.
+And this, under other circumstances,
+I should doubtless have done. But
+the case, as I then viewed it, stood
+thus. Here were my two dear uncles,
+with enormous responsibility&mdash;that of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+dispensing and accounting for the
+whole ready-money transactions of
+the Peninsular army; here was one
+miserable branch of accounts, which
+gave them more trouble than all the
+rest; and here was I, the only lad
+that could tackle it. Though that, by
+the bye, was just so much soft solder;
+for there were at least a dozen gentlemen,
+in our department, who could
+have made up and kept the convalescent
+books quite as well as myself,
+and probably far better.</p>
+
+<p>Well; bad luck to the shilling.
+There was no remedy; so I settled to
+my work; devoting my leisure hours,
+as a safety-valve, to the furious study
+of Portuguese and Spanish. This
+blew off my wrath, and in after years
+proved of good service.</p>
+
+<p>But I rather suspect, gentle reader,
+you're a bloody-minded fellow, and
+want to get away without further
+bother from Lisbon to the seat of war,
+among shot and shells, grape, canister
+and congreves. So, cutting it
+short, I shall just tell you how, at last,
+I out-generalled my dear uncle, and
+broke from bondage. After that, if
+you've no objection, we'll be off at
+once to join the army.</p>
+
+<p>Please to bear in mind, then, that
+I was utterly unconscious of any wish
+that I should remain at Lisbon, on the
+part of my honoured parents, or either
+of them. Had I been aware, I would
+have acquiesced. My position, according
+to the view which I now took
+of it, was this. My parents had acceded
+to my scheme of joining the
+army: my uncles had brought me
+out upon that understanding, and
+upon no other: and yet, on my arrival,
+instead of forwarding me up the
+country, had, for no earthly reason
+that I could discover, detained me at
+Lisbon, to discharge a duty which, it
+was now perfectly clear, might quite
+as well have been committed to other
+hands. This, I say, being my actual
+view of the case, you will not think it
+strange, that I deemed it perfectly fair
+to employ all lawful means for my
+own enlargement and emancipation.</p>
+
+<p>An opportunity presented itself, in
+the early part of 1814. The Allied
+army was now in the Pyrenees and
+south of France. Convoys of specie
+had been, from time to time, despatched
+to headquarters; and were
+always accompanied by a clerk or
+conductor of our department, who
+went in charge. While headquarters
+remained in Portugal, or were not far
+advanced into Spain, this duty was
+considered an agreeable change, and
+was rather sought than shunned. But,
+as the distance lengthened, the departmental
+view of the subject became
+different. The journey was now
+tedious, and began to be deemed unsafe.
+Reports occasionally reached
+us of British officers ill treated, robbed,
+or murdered on the road, by our
+brave Spanish allies. Our conductors,
+who were for the most part natives,
+began to be very subject to the fever
+of the country. Whenever their turn
+came to take the charge of treasure to
+headquarters, they were sure to have
+it. Well; how could they help that?
+You see, it was an <em>intermittent</em> fever.
+In this condition of affairs, another
+large amount of specie was counted
+out, packed, and all ready for remittance:
+and&mdash;no conductor being forthcoming&mdash;one
+of my fellow-clerks received
+directions to make the usual
+preparations for attending it to headquarters.
+Obeyed, as a matter of
+course; but didn't like it at all. Communicated
+to me his secret sorrows&mdash;was
+really far from strong&mdash;would
+much prefer remaining at Lisbon.
+My determination was taken: I volunteer,
+as his substitute. Proposed my
+plan, to which he assented with
+hilarity.</p>
+
+<p>Still, there, was need of management.
+Had I spoken to Nunky in
+private, I knew full well I should be
+foiled. Combining persuasion with
+authority, he would discourage the
+scheme, and I should have no course
+but acquiescence. So, waiting till
+office-hours, I took my usual place,
+expecting his appearance in the great
+room, where half-a-dozen of us were
+seated together at our desks.</p>
+
+<p>His step was heard in the passage.
+Half-a-dozen tongues ceased to wag,
+and half-a-dozen pens went hard to
+work, while half-a-dozen noses came
+into close contiguity to half-a-dozen
+official documents. Nunky entered,
+took his seat, and commenced the
+perusal of a pile of letters. I stood
+beside him.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, G&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+
+<p>"I believe, sir, Mr N&mdash;&mdash; has received<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
+instructions to prepare for a
+journey to headquarters. Not being
+in very good health, he would be glad,
+with your permission, to remain at
+Lisbon. I therefore beg leave to
+offer myself as his substitute."</p>
+
+<p>Nunky gave me a look:&mdash;saw at
+once that he was beat. In private,
+he might have urged his objections:
+but, before the whole office, he could
+not appear to dissuade me from taking
+my turn at a duty, now considered
+anything but agreeable. No course,
+then, remained for him, but to signify
+his consent. "Oh, very well," said
+he, "if that's the way you've settled
+it between yourselves. Of course, <em>I</em>
+can have no objection. Get the usual
+advance, then; draw your allowance
+for a mule; and have all
+ready for starting the day after to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>Exchanging winks with my fellow-subs,
+right and left, I returned triumphant
+to my seat. Nunky remained
+a few minutes at his desk, evidently
+in a little bit of a fidget. How could
+I tell that, do you think, when I sat
+with my back to him? Oh, I suppose
+you never were a clerk in a public office.
+Else you wouldn't require to be
+informed, that office-clerks have eyes
+in the back of their heads. When the
+governor is present, his actions, each
+and all, are seen and chronicled by
+every subordinate in the room. And
+a great relief it is, let me tell you, to
+the tedium of public business, to recount,
+criticise, and dramatise them,
+the moment he's off. Nunky took up
+a letter, and began to read it&mdash;laid it
+down unread&mdash;took up another&mdash;rose
+from his seat&mdash;sat down again&mdash;put
+on his hat&mdash;and bolted.</p>
+
+<p>Dicky Gossip&mdash;a Portuguese clerk
+commonly so called&mdash;rushed forthwith
+to the front office, and returned with
+equal rapidity. "Ah, Mister Y&mdash;&mdash;,
+you is doane. You no sall go up to
+de coantree deece toim. Your oankle
+I vos see him git into him coashe.
+Ah, him, gallop down de treet, faster
+as four mules can carry him. Ah,
+Mister Y&mdash;&mdash;, I sall tell you vot!"</p>
+
+<p>In the course of the afternoon, I received
+a message to attend my uncle
+in another apartment. He met me
+with a look of triumph, which, I
+feared, boded no good.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, G&mdash;&mdash;," said he, "I wish
+you had mentioned that business this
+morning in private. Then, you know,
+we would have talked it over together.
+As, however, you chose to tender
+your services in the public room,
+of course I was forced to view the
+thing officially, and there's no remedy
+for it. You have volunteered for
+headquarters, and to headquarters
+you must go."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, thank you, sir! thank you.
+That's just what I always wished."</p>
+
+<p>"Just what you always wished?
+Of course I know that, as well as you
+can tell me, Mr G&mdash;&mdash;. Happy to
+say, though, I have effected one arrangement,
+which will make matters
+far safer, and more agreeable too."</p>
+
+<p>"I fear, sir, if you send me off
+without the treasure, you will have
+some difficulty&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, G&mdash;&mdash;; you and the
+treasure will go together; that of
+course. But the fact is, I've been
+thinking those Spanish fellows behave
+so ill, I'm hardly justified in forwarding
+so large an amount of specie by
+land, all the way from Lisbon to the
+Pyrenees. In short, since you spoke
+to me this morning, I have been on
+board the flag-ship&mdash;seen the admiral.
+You and the treasure go to Passages
+in a frigate. Beautiful vessel&mdash;passed
+under her stern in coming
+ashore."</p>
+
+<p>Alas, my object, then, was only half
+effected! I was to join the army, but
+not to travel through Spain. Nunky
+saw my chagrin and chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come, Mr G&mdash;&mdash;," said
+he, "you beat me this morning; now
+I've beat you. So make up your
+mind to a voyage by his Majesty's
+frigate the M&mdash;&mdash;. Be quick with
+your arrangements, for she's prepared
+to sail at a moment's warning.
+We shall ship the treasure instanter.
+So everything is ready, when you
+are."</p>
+
+<p>The next day, at noon, I stood on
+the deck of the M&mdash;&mdash;, a silent and
+admiring spectator of a grand, peristrephic
+panorama, as we glided down
+the Tagus under easy sail.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h3>CHAPTER IX.</h3>
+
+<p>No occurrence worthy of record signalised
+our voyage from Lisbon to
+Passages. As you are a member of
+the Yacht Club, though, and passionately
+fond of romantic scenery, follow
+my advice, and treat yourself, some
+fine week in the summer, to a run
+along the north coast of Spain&mdash;say
+from Cape Finisterre to the mouth of
+the Bidassoa. By the bye, hadn't you
+better reverse it? An awkward thing
+you'd find it, to catch an on-shore
+wind at the head of the Bay of Biscay.
+What would become of you&mdash;ah,
+and what would become of that
+clever little craft of yours, the Water
+Wagtail, with her dandified rig, and
+her enormous breadth of beam, and
+her six pretty little brass popguns as
+bright as candlesticks, should a stiff
+north-wester surprise you on that horrid
+coast? Won't it be better, then,
+to secure some safe roadstead&mdash;the
+Gironde for instance&mdash;make that your
+starting-point; choose your weather;
+and, coasting along the shores of Biscay
+and Asturias, have the pleasure of
+feeling that you are running out of
+the Bay, and not running into it?</p>
+
+<p>That I leave to you. But depend
+upon it, if you visit that coast, you
+will see not merely rocks, not merely
+mountains, not merely wild scenery;
+but scenery so peculiar in character,
+that you will not easily find the like.
+Such was the scenery which, on a fine
+day towards the beginning of March,
+1814, I viewed one morning early,
+standing by the side of the Hon. Mr
+Beckenham, third lieutenant of the
+M&mdash;&mdash;. Mr B., having the morning
+watch, and thinking it dull alone, had
+persuaded me to turn out, long, long
+before breakfast;&mdash;as he said the night
+before, "to view that magnificent
+coast at daybreak;" but, as he obligingly
+informed me when I came on
+deck, "that he might enjoy the pleasure
+of my agreeable society."</p>
+
+<p>The scene, at a first glance, rather
+disappointed my expectations. "Stupendous
+ridge of mountains those Santillanos,
+though," said Mr B.; "equal,
+I should think, to the Pyrenees themselves&mdash;of
+which, in fact, they are a
+continuation, though some maps of
+Spain don't show it."</p>
+
+<p>The view, as I viewed it, had a
+threefold character. <em>First</em>, there was
+the coast itself; a black line, occasionally
+diversified with specks of
+white; this line a ledge of rocks, extending
+along shore as far as the eye
+could reach, both east and west. The
+ocean-swell, incessantly rolling in,
+though the morning was still, thundered
+on this eternal sea-wall: and
+the surf, of which, at our distance, the
+eye distinguished nothing but those
+white specks, visible from time to
+time, presented, when viewed with a
+glass, every conceivable variety and
+vagary of breaking waves: the foam
+now rushing up some sloping shelf,
+like troops storming a breach; now
+arched sublime in a graceful curve,
+that descended in a smoking deluge of
+spray; now shooting vertically to a
+columnar height, as though the breaker
+had first dashed downwards into some
+dark abyss, and then, reverberated,
+flew sky-high in a pillar of froth. Beyond
+this line of rocks, appeared, <em>secondly</em>,
+a ridge of low hills, presenting
+nothing very remarkable, either in
+aspect or in outline. And beyond
+these again, further up the country,
+appeared, <em>thirdly</em>, a very respectable
+and loftier range&mdash;mountains, if
+you're a Lincolnshire man, and choose
+to call them so.</p>
+
+<p>"So, this is your ridge of mountains,"
+said I. "Stupendous? I
+don't call twelve or fourteen hundred
+feet stupendous, anyhow. And I'm
+inclined to think you might look down
+on most of them, at that altitude."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't see them," said he.
+"You are looking at the coast range.
+Do you perceive nothing beyond?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing but a few light clouds,"
+said I, "in the sickly blue of the
+morning sky."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, look at them," replied Mr.
+B. "View those clouds attentively.
+Watch whether they change their
+shape, as clouds usually do, when
+seen near the horizon."</p>
+
+<p>I watched, but there was no visible
+change. The clouds were fixtures!
+Sure enough, those faint, pale streaks
+above the hills, that gleamed like
+aerial patches of silver vapour, were
+no other than the lofty summits of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
+the distant Santillanos, capped with
+snow, and touched by the beam of
+early morning. It was worth a turnout,
+any day.</p>
+
+<p>Well, at length we reached Passages.
+Night had closed in, before we
+dropped our anchor off the harbour's
+mouth. The captain dreaded the very
+disaster to which I have already
+alluded, that of being caught by an on-shore
+wind in that ugly corner. It was
+settled, therefore, that a boat should
+be sent at once to announce our arrival,
+and the treasure landed next morning
+early, in order that the frigate might
+be off with the least delay possible.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning early, then, the treasure&mdash;dollars
+packed in boxes, one
+thousand dollars in a bag, two bags
+in a box&mdash;was brought up from the
+hold, and stowed in three boats alongside.
+Making my best bow to the
+captain, and tendering both to him
+and to his staff, my sincere and grateful
+acknowledgments for all the polite
+attentions, &amp;c., I stepped over the
+side, and seated myself in the boat
+destined for my conveyance. In the
+largest boat, which also contained
+the largest portion of the treasure, sat
+the Hon. Mr Beckenham; in the
+next was a middy; in my own, which
+was the smallest, were only about
+half-a-dozen boxes, and four sailors
+to pull ashore. Mr B. requested me
+to steer. We pulled for the mouth of
+the harbour, which was distinguishable,
+at the distance of a mile, by an
+abrupt and narrow cleft, dividing two
+lofty hills; and by a line of foam,
+which extended right across the
+entrance, without any visible opening.</p>
+
+<p>Three boats leaving the ship in
+company, there was a race of course.
+Mine was astern, having been brought
+close alongside for my accommodation,
+and so getting the last start.
+The race was commenced by middy,
+who, by the rules of the service, ought
+to have kept astern of Mr B., and
+therefore tried to get ahead of him.
+My men, seeing the contest, began
+pulling like mad; and, though outnumbered
+by the crew of the other
+boats, yet ours being light, and the
+weather moderate, soon overtook and
+passed them. We pulled away, maintaining
+the lead, till a dull roar, like
+continued thunder, reminded us that
+we were just upon the bar. There it
+was, right ahead, crossing our course,
+not a hundred yards distant, and no
+passage perceptible; the sea, elsewhere,
+comparatively tranquil, there
+swelling and raging, like a mild-tempered
+man in a passion; the breakers
+curling, flouncing, tumbling one over
+the other, rolling in opposite directions,
+tilting as they crossed, and flying
+up with the force of the shock.
+How were we to pass? or by what
+dodge to give the go-by? My men,
+excited by the race, would have led
+at that moment into Charybdis. Still
+they pulled, onward, onward, to all
+appearance right upon the reef. The
+difficulty was solved, like many other
+difficulties, just when we got into the
+thick of it. The reef, single in appearance,
+was in reality double; that is
+to say, it consisted of two ledges, one
+ledge overlapping the other: so that,
+just at the instant when three strokes
+more of the oars would have taken us
+into the midst of the tumblification, a
+narrow opening, with comparatively
+smooth water, appeared at our left; a
+turn of the rudder brought us cleverly
+round into that friendly channel, and
+the next moment we floated on the
+tranquil surface of the outer harbour.
+The luff-tackle and the reefer, as if
+they had let me go ahead only to see
+how a landsman could turn a corner,
+now seemed disposed to renew the
+race. Raising a shout, which rang
+from hill to hill in the cleft of that
+narrow roadstead, their crews gave
+way again with redoubled ardour.
+But, having gained the precedence
+outside, we easily kept it in smooth
+water, and led in, with a sweep,
+through the larger harbour to the
+town. There, as we coasted along, I
+noticed a little jetty; and on it, in
+the full uniform of our department, a
+little man, who was anxiously watching
+our approach. I laid my boat alongside,
+jumped ashore, and received a
+hearty welcome from Mr Deputy-Paymaster-General
+Q&mdash;&mdash;, whom I had previously
+known at Lisbon, and who was
+now in charge of the military chest at
+Passages. Another individual whom
+I had met at Lisbon, a gentleman
+holding office in a department attached
+to the army&mdash;suppose, for want of a
+better name, we call him "My Friend"&mdash;stepped
+up at the same time, as if he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+had come by accident, was amazingly
+glad to see me, took my hand, and
+greeted me with many smiles&mdash;begged
+I wouldn't think of troubling myself
+about a billet&mdash;his quarters were quite
+roomy enough for two. Had I a mule?
+Shouldn't be able to get one in all
+Passages. Must have something. He
+would sell me a pony cheap.</p>
+
+<p>A working party was at hand, to
+convey the boxes of specie from the
+jetty to the office, which was established
+hard by, for the convenience of
+landing remittances that came by sea.
+A guard was now set, and the sailors
+turned to, handing the boxes smartly
+out of the boats, and ranging them on
+<em>terra firma</em>; the shore party began
+conveying them from the jetty into
+the office. The Hon. Mr Beckenham
+was in a dreadful fuss to get back to
+the frigate. "The skipper wants to
+be off while the wind is fair, and the
+men haven't breakfasted,"&mdash;nor had
+he. Up came my commanding officer
+just at the moment, and hoped Mr B.
+and the middy would favour us with
+their company to breakfast, as soon
+as the boxes were stowed.</p>
+
+<p>Mr B. glanced circularly at the
+horizon, looked at the clouds, looked
+at the flags in the harbour, looked at
+the clouds again. "Don't think
+there's any sign of a change of wind
+at present," said he. "Blows very
+steady from the south, sir," said the
+middy. The boxes were housed; they
+suffered themselves to be persuaded,
+and walked with us into the office.
+"My friend" also received an invite,
+and came in company.</p>
+
+<p>The men in the boats were supplied
+with bread, butter, and cheese; some
+enormous Spanish sausages, by way
+of a relish, delicious Spanish onions,
+as mild as an apple, and a handsome
+allowance of brilliant draught cider.
+By all means ship a barrel, if you
+touch at Passages in the Water Wagtail.
+Mr Q&mdash;&mdash; conducted us to his
+private apartment, where we found a
+substantial breakfast awaiting us. I
+walked into the balcony, which looked
+towards the water; took a view of the
+men in the boats. All had their
+knives out, each sat in an attitude of
+his own, the cider evidently gave
+general satisfaction, the prog was
+rapidly disappearing, and the subject
+of conversation was twofold&mdash;the
+race, already accomplished, from the
+frigate to the jetty; and the race, soon
+to come off, from the jetty to the frigate.
+"My friend" stood at my
+elbow, saw me laughing at Jack,
+laughed himself&mdash;laughed heartily.
+"When will you come and look at
+the pony?" said he. Mr Q&mdash;&mdash; summoned
+us to breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>Breakfast over, the lieutenant and
+his aide-de-camp took their leave. I
+went to look after my baggage, of
+which "my friend" had taken charge
+in the hurry of landing, promising to
+see it stowed with the treasure, where
+it would be under a guard. There
+was the guard, and there was the
+treasure; but there, was not my baggage.
+Found him&mdash;demanded an explanation.
+"Why, to tell the truth,
+the working party being there, he had
+embraced the opportunity, and had
+sent off my things at once to his own
+billet. We might as well go there at
+once. Could look at the pony by the
+way." Just as we started, my commanding
+officer called after me, "Mr
+Y&mdash;&mdash;, I shall want you to give me a
+few particulars respecting the treasure.
+You may as well do so before
+going out. Then you may consider
+yourself at liberty for the rest of the
+day." I accompanied him into a small
+room, on the door of which was
+wafered "Private." "My friend"
+waited outside, in the street.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you send any message to that
+gentleman last night," said Mr Q&mdash;&mdash;,
+"when the boat came ashore from the
+frigate?"</p>
+
+<p>"None whatever, sir. I didn't
+even know he was at Passages."</p>
+
+<p>"Wasn't he aware that you were
+coming from Lisbon?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see how he could be, sir.
+For it wasn't mentioned there till the
+day before I sailed; and of course no
+intelligence could have come in that
+time by land."</p>
+
+<p>"Then he didn't meet you this
+morning by appointment?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not, sir. The meeting
+was quite casual."</p>
+
+<p>"Casual? He was waiting about
+here for an hour before you landed;
+running into the office, out of the
+office, poking his nose into every corner&mdash;couldn't
+think what he wanted.
+Oh, I suppose he must have fallen in
+with the second lieutenant yesterday<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
+evening. That's how he heard of you,
+no doubt. Old cronies, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all, sir. We met twice at
+Lisbon. That's all that I ever saw
+of him, till this morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! Well, he seems very
+attentive. Does he appear to have
+any object? What was he saying to
+you in the balcony?"</p>
+
+<p>"Said something about a pony he
+wants to sell. That was all, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" said Mr Q&mdash;&mdash;. The "oh"
+came out something like a groan a
+yard long, first forte, then minuendo,
+with the forefinger applied laterally
+to the apex of the nose, and one eye
+sapiently half-closed. "Ay, ay; I
+see. That's what he's after, no doubt;
+he wants you to buy Sancho. Well,
+perhaps you can't do better. I know
+the pony well. Doubt whether you'll
+find anything else to suit you in all
+Passages. A mule, indeed, would
+answer your purpose better; but the
+price of mules is enormous. Have
+you drawn your allowance for a horse?"
+"No, sir. As I came by water, and dollars
+are cumbersome, I thought it best
+to defer that till I reached Passages."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, very well; it's all right, then.
+Mr Y&mdash;&mdash;, I feel it my duty to say this
+to you; let me know before you close
+the bargain. Till then, the eighty
+dollars are as well in my hands as in
+yours. Horses will soon be dog-cheap.
+Few to be had in Spain for
+love or money; lots, though, in
+France. Once at headquarters, you
+may mount yourself <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">ad libitum</i>; and
+the pony will do well enough to carry
+you up. Well, Mr Y&mdash;&mdash;, with regard
+to quarters, the town is so full, I was
+thinking we must try and accommodate
+you here. But as Mr what's-his-name
+has made the offer, I feel it
+my duty to say this to you&mdash;you had
+better accept it."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you look at the invoice of
+the treasure, now, sir? Or shall I
+bring it to-morrow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Show it me now. Any gold?"</p>
+
+<p>"All silver, sir; dollars, half-dollars,
+and quarters."</p>
+
+<p>"What's this? Eight bags of a
+thousand, halves; twelve bags, quarters;
+five bags, small mixed. Why,
+it will take us an age to count it all."</p>
+
+<p>"My fingers were sore with counting,
+before I left Lisbon, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; and they must be sore again,
+before you leave Passages. Glad to
+find you have had practice, though.
+Shouldn't mind the dollars: a middling
+hand, you know, can count his
+thirty thousand a-day; but that small
+mixed takes no end of time. Well,
+Mr Y&mdash;&mdash;, I feel it my duty to say this
+to you&mdash;hold yourself in readiness to
+start for headquarters, in charge of
+treasure, this day week at latest. If
+I can get you off a day or two earlier,
+all the better. But the money must
+be counted; the boxes must be looked
+to and repaired. And then the mules&mdash;why,
+you'll want sixty at least. Let
+me see. Nearer eighty, unless I can
+take part of the silver, and give you
+doubloons. Well, I'll see old Capsicum
+in the course of the morning, and
+ascertain what mules he can let me
+have. Be here to-morrow at ten, and
+then I shall be able to tell you more
+about it."</p>
+
+<p>Delighted to hear once more the
+name of Capsicum, and doubting
+whether to call on him, or wait till
+we met, I was leaving the room to
+rejoin "my friend" in the street,
+when Mr Q&mdash;&mdash; called me back.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, you know, Mr Y&mdash;&mdash;,"
+said he, "I have no wish to interfere
+with a fair bargain. Make your own
+agreement for the pony. I have
+nothing to say against the party who
+wishes to sell, and would be the last
+man to disparage a gentleman attached
+to any department of the British army.
+Only I feel it my duty to say this to
+you&mdash;keep your weather-eye open.
+Good morning."</p>
+
+<p>"My friend" and I walked off together
+to the stable. His Portuguese
+servant, Antonio, was in attendance,
+led out the pony, walked him, trotted
+him, led him in again. The pony, I
+thought, was a respectable pony
+enough; not in bad condition, neither;
+rather small, though, for a rider six
+feet high. His legs, supple, well-turned,
+and slender, were decidedly
+Spanish. But the barrel, round,
+bulging, and disproportionably large;
+the hum-drum, steady, <em>business-like</em>
+pace; the tail, long, thick, and coarse
+the drooping neck, the great hairy
+ears, the heavy head, the lifeless eye,
+and the dull, unmeaning cast of
+countenance, betokened rather a Gallic
+origin. I declined giving an immediate
+answer as to purchasing. "My<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
+friend," with a laugh, said I was quite
+right; and we walked off together to
+his billet. "Very dull place, this
+Passages," said he. "Shall be happy
+to go with you across the harbour,
+and show you the market. By the
+bye, of course, before you leave, you'll
+take a view of St Sebastian. There
+stands the poor old town, all knocked
+to smash, just as it remained after the
+siege. If you wish to form a conception
+of the tremendous effect of
+cannon-balls, ride over by all means.
+You may get there in less than half-an-hour,
+upon the pony."</p>
+
+<p>We now reached "my friend's" quarters,
+which consisted of one long,
+narrow room, with a couple of windows
+at the end nearest the street,
+and a couple of alcoves at the other,
+each alcove containing a very humble
+bed. As to the windows, you are
+not to understand by the term window,
+bless your heart, anything in
+the shape of glass, sashes, or window-frame;
+but simply a stone opening in
+the stone wall, with nothing to keep
+out the wind and rain, but a pair of
+old clumsy shutters, which were far
+from shutting hermetically. The
+whole furniture of the apartment consisted
+of a ship's stove, borrowed from
+one of the transports in the harbour;
+a door laid on two trestles, to serve
+as a table; and, on each side of the
+said table, a bench. Yet often, when
+the troops were engaged in active
+service, such accommodations as ours
+would have been deemed a luxury; and
+many a wrangle arose for far worse
+quarters. I noticed that the trestles
+and benches, which consisted of rough
+deal, hastily knocked together, looked
+new. This "my friend" explained, by
+informing me that the captain of the
+transport had lent him his carpenter.
+Having seen to my baggage, which
+was all right, and ascertained that we
+had four hours to dinner, I took the
+first opportunity of cutting my stick,
+having inwardly formed my determination
+to be off at once on foot, and
+take a view of St Sebastian. Six or
+seven months had now elapsed since
+St Sebastian was stormed and taken
+by the British and Portuguese forces.</p>
+
+<p>Less than an hour's walk brought
+me to the scene of that fierce, and,
+for a period, doubtful conflict. The
+road was closed up by hills, which
+afforded no opportunity for a prospect;
+and not a soul did I meet in the
+whole distance. All at once I came
+in sight of the battered and demolished
+fortress. Imagine a town
+knocked to pieces. Imagine this
+town suddenly presenting itself to your
+view. The road unexpectedly opened
+upon a sandy plain, on which rose a
+few eminences, called the Chofres,
+that had afforded a position for some
+of the breaching batteries of the
+besiegers; at the extremity of this
+plain ran the river Urumea, discharging
+itself into the sea; and on
+an isthmus, beyond the river, stood
+St Sebastian. It stood like a city in
+the desert. All was solitude and
+desolation. The town, though it
+had contained many thousand inhabitants,
+at this moment afforded no
+visible indication of human residence.
+It was not forsaken; yet nothing
+could I discover of the tokens which
+usually indicate life and activity as
+we approach the abodes of men&mdash;on
+the road, neither vehicles, nor cattle,
+nor human beings. I was alone, and
+the city was solitary. No; here, at
+my feet, upon the sandy plain, was a
+memorial, at least, of man and of his
+doings. A rise in the level had been
+washed down at its edge by the rains
+of winter; and, projecting from the
+crumbling bank, appeared the bleached
+and ghastly remains of a human
+being; doubtless one out of the multitudes
+who, having fallen in the
+siege, had been consigned to a shallow
+and hasty grave. I will not deny
+that the sight arrested my steps.
+Remember, it was the first victim of
+war I had ever looked upon. Nay,
+more; it invested the whole panorama
+with a new character. I stood, as
+it were, surveying a vast cemetery, the
+soil now concealing in its bosom the
+multitudes who, not long before, had
+drenched its surface with their blood.
+Entering the town, I did indeed see
+before me, as "my friend" had said,
+"the tremendous effect of cannon-balls."
+Yet that was not the whole:
+destruction appeared in a threefold
+aspect. The batteries had knocked
+houses and defences into rubbish and
+dust; the mines had torn up the
+works from their foundations; and a
+general conflagration had ravaged the
+whole town. The scene was sombre<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
+and oppressive. War had now advanced
+his pavilion into other lands;
+but here had left in charge two vast
+and hideous sentinels&mdash;Desolation
+and Silence! I passed through some
+of the principal streets, in which the
+fallen stones had been piled on each
+side, to make a thoroughfare; and
+walked along the ramparts, where
+some of the dead were still visible,
+partially covered by fragments of the
+ruined masonry. No living creature
+did I encounter, save one, a miserable
+object, a soldier in the Spanish uniform,
+apparently an invalid, recovering
+from wounds or sickness. On my
+approaching him, he appeared unwilling
+to speak or be spoken to. Nor
+is it difficult to explain why a Spaniard,
+meeting an Englishman on the
+walls of St Sebastian, should feel little
+disposed for conversation. And so I
+visited the place, inspected the fortifications,
+and returned to Passages, without
+exchanging a word with any one.</p>
+
+<p>"My friend," in honour of my arrival,
+had invited a brace of dinner-guests:
+one, like myself, a clerk of the military
+chest, the other a young hospital
+mate. Our dinner was excellent;
+Irish stew, a Passages hare, and
+an enormous omelet, all cooked by
+Antonio; capital draught cider; with
+the cheese, two bottles of English
+porter as a particular treat; and
+Andalusian wine <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">ad libitum</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I must here say a word on the subject
+of Irish stew. A standing dish
+at headquarters was that Irish stew.
+Amongst the followers of the army
+were a number of youths, Spanish and
+Portuguese, principally the latter, age
+from sixteen to twenty, happy, on the
+small consideration of a few dollars
+per month, to enter the service of any
+Senhor Inglez who would hire them.
+Most of the clerks attached to headquarters
+had a servant of this description;
+and as each clerk was entitled
+to draw double rations, the arrangement
+was convenient. It was the
+chief business of this servant, to
+discharge the two very congenial
+duties of groom and cook; and no
+one was eligible to the office who
+could not make Irish stew. "Well,
+Pedro, what's for dinner to-day?"&mdash;The
+answer was invariable, "Oirish-too."
+The ration beef&mdash;it was
+generally beef&mdash;was popped into a
+saucepan with anything else that
+came to hand&mdash;bread, onions, leeks,
+potatoes if you could get them, and just
+enough water to cover the whole;&mdash;then
+stewed. Whatever the ingredients,
+still it was "Oirish-too."
+Now&mdash;perhaps the idea never struck
+you&mdash;the true difference between
+English and foreign cookery is just
+this: in preparing butcher's meat for
+the table, the aim of foreign cookery
+is to make it tender, of English, to
+make it hard. And both systems
+equally effect their object, in spite of
+difficulties on each side. The butcher's
+meat, which you buy abroad, is tough,
+coarse-grained, and stringy; yet
+foreign cookery sends this meat to
+table tender. The butcher's meat
+which you buy in England is tender
+enough when it comes home; but
+domestic cookery sends it up hard.
+Don't tell me the hardness is in the
+meat itself. Nothing of the kind: it's
+altogether an achievement of the
+English <em>cuisine</em>. I appeal to a leg of
+mutton, I appeal to a beef-steak, as
+they usually come to table; the beef
+half-broiled, the mutton half-roasted.
+Judge for yourself. The underdone
+portion of each is tender; the portion
+that's dressed is hard. Argal, the
+hardness is due to the dressing, not to
+the meat: it is a triumph of domestic
+cookery.&mdash;Q.E.D. Well; if time was
+short&mdash;say, a meal to be prepared on
+coming in from a march, the rations
+not issued till three hours after, and
+Pedro ordered to "make haste, and
+get dinner <i lang="pt" xml:lang="pt">depressa</i>,"&mdash;why, then, to
+appease the wolf in your stomach,
+the Irish stew was ready in no time&mdash;boiled
+like fury&mdash;dished up in half
+an hour. In that case, you got it in
+the genuine English style&mdash;done in a
+hurry: the broth watery and thin, the
+potatoes bullets, and the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bouilli</i> shrunk,
+indurated, screwed up into tough
+elasticity, by the sudden application
+of a strong heat, and the potent effect
+of hard boiling. Engage a "good plain
+cook"&mdash;tell her to boil a neck of
+mutton&mdash;that will show you what I
+mean. All London necks of mutton
+come to table crescents&mdash;regularly
+curled. But if, on the contrary, you
+were in quarters, or the troops halted
+a day, then you got your Irish stew
+after the foreign fashion. Breakfast
+cleared away, your horse is brought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+to the door, that you may ride a few
+miles forwards, and take a view of the
+operations, or ogle Soult through a
+telescope. Pedro then commences his
+culinary operations forthwith. The beef&mdash;and
+what-not besides&mdash;is whipped
+into the saucepan; the saucepan is set
+among the embers upon the hearth: and
+there it stands&mdash;not boiling&mdash;scarcely
+simmering&mdash;suppose we say digesting&mdash;throughout
+the forenoon, and till
+you are ready to eat. Long before
+dinner, savoury steams announce a
+normal process of the <em>cuisine</em>, a process
+both leisurely and effectual. At
+length, crowned with laurels, and, like
+all heroes, hungry after fighting, you
+return from the skirmish in front,
+having barely escaped a stray
+cannon-ball that made your horse&mdash;oh,
+didn't it?&mdash;spin round like a teetotum.
+The rich repast awaits you&mdash;the
+whole is turned out, and smokes
+upon the table&mdash;the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bouilli</i> is tender,
+the "jus" appetising and substantial,
+the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tout-ensemble</i> excellent. And if,
+with an eye to his own interest in the
+concern, Pedro has slipped in a handful
+or so of garlic, why, you live all
+day in the open air&mdash;so it doesn't
+much signify.</p>
+
+<p>Well, so much for Irish stew. We
+wound up the evening with ship-biscuit
+and brandy-and-water&mdash;ration
+brandy&mdash;French&mdash;superb. What an
+exchange for the horrid <i lang="pt" xml:lang="pt">agoardente</i> of
+Lisbon, that excoriated your palate,
+indurated your gizzard, and burnt a
+hole in your liver! I happened to
+mention my morning visit to St Sebastian.
+All my three companions had
+seen St Sebastian during the siege&mdash;were
+present at the storming. "Sorry
+I was not ordered up in time," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll never see anything like
+that," said the doctor.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, can't you tell me something
+about it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," replied he; "rather too
+late for that to-night. I must be
+moving."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, gentlemen; mix another
+tumbler round," said "my friend." "If
+we cannot go into particulars, at least,
+for the satisfaction of Mr Y&mdash;&mdash;, let us
+each relate some one incident, which
+we witnessed when the city was taken
+by storm. Come, doctor; you shall
+begin."</p>
+
+<p>"Really," said the doctor, "it was
+such a scene of slaughter and confusion,
+I can hardly recollect anything
+distinctly enough to tell it. I got into
+the town almost immediately after
+the troops, to look after the wounded;
+just those that required to be operated
+on at once. Found my way into a
+by-street; came among some of our
+fellows, who were carrying on such a
+game, drinking, plundering, firing at
+the inhabitants, and I don't know
+what-all besides, I was glad enough
+to escape with my life, and got out of
+the place as fast as I could. Don't
+really remember any particular occurrence
+to relate. Oh, yes; just as I
+was coming away, I saw one old
+woman&mdash;beg pardon; ought to have
+said elderly gentlewoman&mdash;pinned to
+a post with a bayonet, for defending
+her daughter's virtue."</p>
+
+<p>Well, gentlemen, said "my friend,"
+"I also will relate an incident, connected
+with that dreadful day. But,
+first of all, I must show you something.
+What, would you say, is the
+value of that, doctor?" He produced
+a very handsome diamond ring.
+"Worth fifty dollars at least," said
+the doctor, holding it to the lamp.
+"I say, <em>worth</em> it; that is, in the trade.
+Would sell, in Bond Street, for more
+than double that price, as they'd set it
+in London." The doctor, I should mention,
+was the son of a fashionable watchmaker&mdash;bore
+the sobriquet of Tick.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," continued my friend,
+"how do you think I became possessed
+of that ring? Just after the town
+was carried, I watched a lull in the
+firing from the castle, and went in
+over the breach. Only one or two
+round-shot fell, as I was climbing up.
+Met there an English sailor, a man-of-war's
+man, coming along in high good
+humour, perhaps a little the worse
+for liquor. He was shouting, laughing,
+holding up his two hands, as if he
+wanted me to look at them. The
+fellow had been plundering; plundering
+a jeweller's shop. "Now I'm dressed
+out for a ball," said he, "all for one
+like a Spanish lady." What d'ye
+think he had done? All his fingers,
+both hands, were covered down to the
+tips with splendid rings, rings set
+with precious stones, as thick as
+curtain-rods. Brilliants, rubies,
+emeralds, amethysts, he had stuck
+them on, one after the other, till<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
+there was no room left. Told him
+I'd buy them: offered him a dollar
+for the lot; two dollars; five dollars.
+'Avast,' said he, 'I'm a gentleman.
+Don't want none of your dumps,
+messmate. Shouldn't mind giving you
+one, though, for good luck. Here,
+take this big un.' It was a great
+ugly Brazilian topaz. 'No, no,'
+said I; 'give me this little one.' He
+gave it me; I thanked him; and he
+walked away, laughing and shouting.&mdash;Worth
+fifty dollars, you say. Is it
+though, doctor? For forty-five down,
+you shall have it."</p>
+
+<p>The doctor made no reply; and,
+for a few seconds, there was a dead
+silence. "Come, Mr Pagador senior,"
+said he; "I've got three gunshot
+wounds, an ague, and a dysentery.&mdash;Must
+see them all, before I go to bed.
+Please to proceed."</p>
+
+<p>"I think," said my fellow-clerk,
+"our host had a good chance of being
+shot, when he mounted the breach;
+for the French, I remember, kept up
+a fire on all who passed that way,
+long after it was carried. You're sure
+you got that ring on the breach, are
+you?... I, also, had a narrow
+escape, after I got into the town.
+I was walking up one of the streets,
+and passed a wine-shop, where a lot
+of our fellows were assembled, within
+and without. A few yards beyond
+was a corner; another street crossed.
+Just at the crossing, in the middle of
+the road, lay an English soldier, dead.
+There was nothing particular in that;
+for I had passed several dead before,
+as I came along. Walking on, I
+noticed two soldiers looking at me
+and talking. 'Better tell him, then,'
+said one of them. 'Tell him yourself,'
+said the other; 'I shan't tell
+him. He's only a commissary.' Just
+before I reached the corner, some one
+gently laid hold of my arm. I turned
+round. It was that officer of the
+engineers&mdash;Gabion&mdash;yes, Captain
+Gabion. 'Wouldn't advise you to go
+beyond the corner,' said he.&mdash;'Why
+not?' said I. 'Don't you see that man
+lying on the road?' said he.&mdash;'Any
+danger?' said I. 'I'll soon let you
+see that,' said he: 'have the kindness
+to lend me your hat.' I gave him my
+hat&mdash;staff-hat&mdash;bought it new at Vittoria.
+He stepped forward, held it
+out by one end, just poked about half
+of it beyond the corner. Crack! a
+rifle-bullet came clean through it.
+'The French,' said he, 'still occupy
+that street. I set a sentry here just
+now, to keep people from passing on.
+But he's off; plundering, I suppose, or
+getting drunk. I'm sorry for your
+hat, though.' Rum trick, that of
+Captain Gabion's, I must say. I
+thought it very unkind. Kept me
+from getting shot; much obliged to him
+for that. But spoiled my new staff-hat&mdash;cost
+me ten dollars."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said the doctor, "that's
+just what he is; always up to some
+practical piece of wit, and grave as a
+judge. Grave? I should rather say
+melancholy. Such a fellow for joking,
+too! Why, he'd crack a joke if a shell
+was fizzing at his feet. One of the
+coolest officers in the service."</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Captain Gabion now?"
+said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, somewhere in advance,"
+said the doctor; "you may be sure
+of that; somewhere with the troops
+in the south of France. He and his
+friend, that major of the artillery, had a
+narrow escape, though, in the winter.
+Must needs go paying a morning visit
+to a French family just this side of St
+Jean de Luz, before the enemy were
+driven across the Nivelle. Just escaped
+a party of them by hard riding.
+Don't see, though, that your hat, Mr
+Pagador, is much the worse, merely
+for being pinked."</p>
+
+<p>"It makes people stare so," said
+he, "that's all I care about. Looks
+just exactly as if one had been shot
+through the head."</p>
+
+<p>"Shouldn't mind giving you my
+new foraging cap and a dollar for it,"
+said "my friend." Again there was a
+short silence. It was clear, in fact, that
+"my friend's" disposition to barter and
+bargain was not altogether admired.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, gentlemen," said I, "you
+have all been good enough to tell me
+something about St Sebastian. Now,
+I'll tell you something. Did you ever
+see a dead man swim?"</p>
+
+<p>"I've seen a dead man float," said
+the doctor; "never saw one swim."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that's what I saw this morning.
+And you may see it to-morrow,
+if you choose to go and look. I'll tell
+you how it was. The tide was up,
+and the river Urumea nearly full.
+I was standing on that part of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
+rampart, where, as you know, the
+rubbish dislodged by the springing of
+the mine is shot down into the bed of
+the river. In that vast heap, no
+doubt many of the storming party
+found a grave, where they still lie
+buried, under tons upon tons of shattered
+masonry. In some instances,
+however, the sufferers were not entirely
+overwhelmed by the explosion;
+and their remains are still partly
+visible, bleached by the sun and wind.
+The water was perfectly clear; you
+might see the rocks in the bed of
+the stream. My eye, measuring the
+shattered pile on which I was standing,
+mechanically descended from its summit
+to its base, which juts out far into
+the river. Just under water, I noticed
+something in motion. The appearance
+attracted my attention. Descending
+the mound to the water's edge, what
+do you think I saw? A man half
+emerging from the fragments, and
+swimming, yes, swimming beneath the
+surface, striking out with both hands,
+as if struggling to get free. So visible
+was the object, so distinctly I saw
+every movement, my first impulse
+was to step down into the water, drag
+him out from the rubbish before he
+was drowned, and land him on <em>terra
+firma</em>. I looked again&mdash;he was long
+past drowning. There he had swum,
+at high water, every day since the city
+was stormed, and the mine was
+sprung. His bones, half bared of flesh,
+were still held together by the ligaments;
+the mine, by its explosion,
+had buried him up to the middle; but
+from the loins he was free: the play
+of the waves tossed him to and fro;
+the water, in its flux and reflux, now
+caught his arms and spread them out;
+from his sides to their full extent, now
+brought them back again:&mdash;anybody
+would have said it was a man swimming.
+Well, I shall dream of it to-night.
+I shall again be standing on
+that breach before daylight; fancy I
+see the dead man swimming out beneath
+my feet; and perhaps hear him
+calling for help under water. Only
+hope I mayn't fancy it's myself."</p>
+
+<p>"It's curious," said the doctor,
+"when a fellow first joins, how a thing
+of that kind strikes him as remarkable.
+Well, good night all."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>AMERICAN ADVENTURE.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>There is a class of literature
+peculiarly American, and unlikely to
+be rivalled or imitated to any great
+extent on this side the Atlantic, for
+which we entertain a strong predilection.
+It is the literature of the forest
+and the prairie, of the Indian camp
+and the backwood settlement, of the
+trapper's hunting ground, and, we
+now must add, of the Californian
+gold mine. It comprises the exploits
+and narratives of the pioneer in the
+Far West, and the squatter in Texas;
+of the military volunteer in Mexico,
+and the treasure-seeking adventurer
+on the auriferous shores of the Pacific.
+In common with millions of Europeans,
+we have watched, for years
+past, with wonder, if not always with
+admiration, the expansive propensities
+of that singularly restless people,
+who, few in number, in proportion to
+their immense extent of territory,
+and prosperous at home under the
+government they prefer, yet find
+themselves cramped and uneasy within
+their vast limits, and continually, with
+greater might than right, displace
+their neighbour's boundary-mark and
+encroach upon his land. The mode
+in which this has been done, in a
+southerly direction, by the settlement
+of emigrants, who, gradually accumulating,
+at last dispossess and expel
+the rightful owner, has been often
+described and exemplified; and nowhere<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+more graphically than by
+Charles Sealsfield, in his admirable
+<cite>Cabin Book</cite> and <cite>Squatter Nathan</cite>.
+The Anglo-German-American, deeply
+impressed by the virtues of his
+adopted countrymen, and especially
+by that intelligence and enterprising
+spirit which none can deny them,
+sees merit rather than injustice in
+the forcible expulsion of the Spaniard's
+descendants, and makes out
+the best possible case in defence of
+the Yankee spoliator. Still, when
+stripped of factitious colouring and
+rhetorical adornments, the pith of
+the argument seems to be that the land
+is too good for the lazy "greasers,"
+who must incontinently absquatilate,
+and make way for better men. As
+for Indians, they are of no account
+whatever. "Up rifle and at them!"
+is the word. In utter wantonness
+they are shot and cut down. Let
+us hear an American's account of the
+process.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"When Captain Sutter first settled in
+California he had much trouble with the
+Indians, but he adopted, and has pursued
+steadily from the first, a policy of
+peace, combined with the requisite firmness
+and occasional severity. Thus he
+had obtained all-powerful influence with
+them, and was enabled to avail himself
+of their labour for moderate remuneration.
+Now all was changed: the late
+emigrants across the mountains, and
+especially from Oregon, had commenced
+a war of extermination, shooting them
+down like wolves&mdash;men, women, and
+children&mdash;wherever they could find them.
+Some of the Indians were undoubtedly
+bad, and needed punishment, but generally
+the whites were the aggressors; and,
+as a matter of course, the Indians retaliated
+whenever opportunities occurred;
+and in this way several unarmed or
+careless Oregonians had become, in turn,
+their victims. Thus has been renewed
+in California the war of extermination
+against the aborigines, commenced in
+effect at the landing of Columbus, and
+continued to this day, gradually and
+surely tending to the utter extinction of
+the race. And never has this policy
+proved so injurious to the interests of the
+whites as in California."&mdash;(<cite>Sights in the
+Gold Regions</cite>, p. 152-3.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Mr Johnson illustrates by examples
+the system he thus condemns, and
+shows us war-parties of white men
+issuing forth for <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">razzias</i> upon Indian
+villages, receiving, as they depart,
+the valedictory benediction of the
+patriarch of the settlement, a veteran
+backwoodsman, well known in the
+Rocky Mountains as a guide and
+pioneer, and who, after a long and
+adventurous career, has at last located
+himself, with his active, reckless, half-breed
+sons in the beautiful and romantic
+valley of the Saw Mill. This
+bloody-minded old miscreant, John
+Greenwood by name, boasted of having
+shot upwards of a hundred Indians&mdash;ten
+of them since his arrival in California&mdash;and
+hoped still to add to the
+murder-list, although incapacitated
+by age from distant expeditions. His
+cabin was the alarm-post where the
+foragers assembled, and whither, on
+their return from their errand of blood
+and rapine, they brought their ill-gotten
+spoils, the captive squaws, and
+the still reeking scalps of their victims.
+With male prisoners they rarely troubled
+themselves; although, upon one
+occasion during Mr Johnson's stay in
+their vicinity, they brought in a number,
+and shot seven of them in cold
+blood, because, "being bad-looking
+and strong warriors," it was believed
+they had participated in the murder
+of five English miners, surprised and
+slain a short time previously. Expeditions
+of this kind are called "war-parties;"
+and the propriety of the system
+of which they form a part is as
+fiercely and passionately defended by
+the Americans in California, as is the
+propriety of slave-holding by the free
+and enlightened citizens of the southern
+states of the Union. It were far
+from prudent to preach emancipation
+in Florida or Louisiana; at the "diggins"
+it is decidedly unsafe to call the
+shooting of Indians by the harsh name
+of murder. "We saw a young mountaineer,
+wild with rage, threaten the
+life of an American who had ventured
+to suggest that the murders committed
+by these Indians were provoked by
+many previous murders of the whites,
+and that they should not be avenged
+by <em>indiscriminate</em> slaughter, but by the
+death of the <em>guilty</em>." The horrible
+character of the frequent massacres is
+aggravated by the adoption, on the
+part of the white savages, of the repugnant
+and barbarian usages of the
+unfortunate heathens whom they first
+provoke and then hunt to the death,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+by the tearing off of scalps, and suchlike
+hideous and unchristian abominations.
+Unfortunately, these scenes
+of slaughter and atrocity are of constant
+occurrence, not only in that far-off
+land where gold is to be had for
+the gathering, but wherever the white
+man and the red come in contact.
+The air of the prairie and backwoods
+seems fatal to all humane and merciful
+feelings, and the life of the Indian is
+held no dearer than that of skunk or
+buffalo. Mr Parkman tells us of "a
+young Kentuckian, of the true Kentucky
+blood, generous, impetuous,
+and a gentleman withal, who had
+come out to the mountains with
+Russel's party of California emigrants.
+One of his chief objects, as he gave
+out, was to kill an Indian&mdash;an exploit
+which he afterwards succeeded in
+achieving, much to the jeopardy of
+ourselves and others, who had to pass
+through the country of the dead
+Pawnee's enraged relatives." No
+censure is passed upon this generous
+and gentlemanly young murderer by
+Mr Parkman, whose book would
+nevertheless indicate him to be a man
+of education and humanity, but who
+is apparently unable to discern any
+moral wrong in wantonly drilling a
+hole through the painted hide of a
+Pawnee. The system of extermination
+seems practically inseparable
+from the aggrandisement of American
+territory at Indian expense.
+When Mexicans are to be ejected,
+the process is more humane, or at
+least less cold-blooded and revolting
+in its circumstances. But, although
+the barbarity diminishes, the injustice
+is as great. By American annexators
+and propagandists, respect of property
+may be set down as an Old
+World prejudice; still it is one by
+which we are contented to abide; and
+we cannot see the right of any one to
+turn a man out of his house because
+he does not keep it in repair and
+occupy all the rooms, or to pick a
+quarrel with him as a pretext for
+appropriating a choice slice of his
+garden. A considerable portion of
+the people of the United States are
+evidently convinced that they are the
+instruments of Providence in the
+civilisation and population of the
+New World, and look forward to the
+time as by no means remote when
+their descendants and form of government
+shall spread south and north, to
+the exclusion of British rule and Spanish-American
+republics, from Greenland
+to Panama. As a preparatory
+step, their pioneers are abroad in all
+directions; and some of them, being
+handy with the pen as well as with
+the rifle, jot down their experiences
+for the encouragement of their countrymen
+and edification of the foreigner.
+Before us are three books of the kind
+completely American in tone and
+language, and of at least two of which
+it may safely be affirmed that none
+but Americans could have written
+them. In fact they are written in
+American rather than in English;
+particularly Mr Johnson's "Sights,"
+of which we can truly say that, but
+for our intimate acquaintance with
+the language of the United States,
+acquired by much study of this particular
+sort of literature, we should have
+made our way through it with difficulty
+without reference to the dictionary,
+which we presume to exist, of American
+improvements on the English
+tongue. The book swarms with Yankeeisms,
+vulgarisms, and witticisms;
+the latter of no elevated class, and
+seldom rising above a very bad pun;
+notwithstanding which, <cite>Sights in the
+Gold Regions</cite> is a very amusing, and,
+to all appearance, a very honest account
+of life at the diggings. The other
+two books are the work, the one of a
+philosopher in the woods, and the other
+of a sailor on horseback. Mr Parkman,
+who, as regards literary skill, is superior
+to either of the companions we
+have given him&mdash;although his book has
+less novelty and pungency than either
+of theirs&mdash;left St Louis in the spring
+of 1846, on a tour of curiosity and
+amusement to the Rocky Mountains,
+with the especial object of studying
+the manners and character of Indians
+in their primitive state. He has a
+good eye for scenery and tolerable
+descriptive powers, and some of the
+adventures and anecdotes he relates
+are striking and interesting. But, for
+a fine specimen of rich rough-spun
+Yankee narrative, commend us to
+Lieutenant Wise of the United States
+navy. There is no mistake about the
+gallant author of <cite>Los Gringos</cite>. He
+makes no more pretence to style or
+elegance than a boatswain's mate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+spinning a yarn upon the forecastle.
+Despising the trammels of orthography
+and probability, sprinkling his comical
+English with words from half-a-dozen
+other languages (often ludicrously distorted),
+sometimes shrewd, frequently
+very humorous, invariably good-humoured
+and vivacious, this rollicking
+naval officer hoists the reader on his
+shoulders, and carries him at a canter
+through his great thick closely-printed
+New York volume, with infinitely less
+fatigue to the rider than he himself
+experienced when, perched upon a
+Spanish saddle, and armed with a whip
+"whose lash was like the thongs of a
+knout," he urged the sorry posters
+along the road to Mexico's capital. In
+a few lines of preface, the humorous
+lieutenant discloses his plan and gives
+us a glimpse of his quality. "The
+sketches embodied in this narrative,"
+he says, "were all written on the field
+of their occurrence: the characters
+incidentally mentioned are frequently
+<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">nommes du mer</i>. It is not expected
+by the author that even the most charitable
+reader will wholly overlook the
+careless style and framing of the work,
+or allow it to pass without censure;
+nor has it been his object to deal in
+statistics, or any abstract reflections,
+but merely to compile a pleasant narrative,
+such as may perchance please
+or interest the generality of readers;
+and in launching the volume on its
+natural element&mdash;the sea of public
+opinion&mdash;the author only indulges in
+the aspiration, whether the reader be
+gentle or ungentle, whether the book
+be praised or condemned, that at least
+the philanthropy of the publishers
+may be remunerated, wherein lies all
+the law and the profits." After which
+facetious and characteristic preamble,
+Lieutenant Wise goes on board his
+frigate; is tugged out of Boston harbour,
+and sails for Monterey; is alternately
+buffeted and becalmed; is in
+danger of stranding on the Dahomey
+territory and reviles creation accordingly,
+but ultimately escapes the peril
+and sets foot on shore at Rio Janeiro,
+in which pleasant latitude he frequents
+the coffee-houses, and partakes
+of mint juleps and other cold institutions;
+watches the niggers dancing and
+jabbering their way along the streets,
+with little fingers affectionately interlaced,
+and <em>sistling</em> polkas through their
+closed teeth; and is somewhat scandalised,
+and yet vastly amused, by the
+<i lang="es" xml:lang="es">samacueca</i>, a South American polka of
+much grace but questionable decency,
+on beholding which he, Lieutenant
+Wise, being, "as an individual, fond
+of a taste of cayenne to existence,"
+clapped his hands and vociferously
+applauded. This eccentric dance,
+however, was at Valparaiso, we find&mdash;not
+that the fair Brazilians are behind
+any of their South American sisters in
+the license they accord their supple
+forms and twinkling feet. At last,
+and in the heat of the war between
+Mexico and the States, Lieutenant
+Wise reached Monterey, where his
+ship cast anchor. California had been
+taken possession of by the Americans,
+and fighting was going on in the neighbourhood.
+Before the war, Monterey
+contained about five hundred inhabitants,
+but when Mr Wise, arrived,
+scarcely a native was to be seen. The
+men were away fighting in the southern
+provinces, a few women scowled
+from their dwellings at the <em>gringos</em>
+(the name given to Anglo-Americans
+in Mexico and California). Yankee
+sentinels were posted, knife in girdle,
+and rifle-lock carefully sheltered from
+the rain; and persons moving about
+after dark were greeted at every turn
+with the challenge&mdash;"Look out thar,
+stranger!" quickly followed by a bullet,
+if they delayed to shout their
+name and calling. There was nothing
+to be had to eat, drink, or smoke, and
+the general aspect of affairs was cheerless
+enough. Presently in rode sixty
+horsemen, gaunt bony woodsmen of
+the Far West, dressed in skins, with
+heavy beards and well-appointed
+rifles, fellows "who wouldn't stick at
+scalping an Indian or a dinner of mule-meat,"
+and who belonged to the Volunteer
+Battalion, in which they had
+enrolled themselves "more by way of
+recreation than for glory or patriotism."
+They were not easy to understand,
+having passed most part of their
+lives in the Rocky Mountains, a district
+which has its own peculiar phraseology.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"We soon became quite sociable, and,
+after a hearty supper of fried beef and
+biscuit, by some miraculous dispensation
+a five gallon keg of whisky was uncorked,
+and, after a thirty days' thirst, our new-found
+friends slaked away unremittingly.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
+Many were the marvellous adventures
+narrated of huntings, fightings, freezings,
+snowings, and starvations; and one stalwart,
+bronzed trapper beside me, finding
+an attentive listener, began:&mdash;'The last
+time, captin, I cleared the Oregon trail,
+the Ingens fowt us amazin' hard. Pete,'
+said he, addressing a friend smoking a
+clay pipe by the fire, with a half pint of
+corn-juice in his hand, which served to
+moisten his own clay at intervals between
+every puff&mdash;'Pete, do you notice
+how I dropped the Redskin who put the
+poisoned arrow in my moccasin! Snakes,
+captin! the varmints lay thick as leaves
+behind the rocks; and, bless ye, the minit
+I let fall old Ginger from my jaw, up they
+springs, and lets fly their flint-headed arrers
+in amongst us, and one on 'em wiped
+me right through the leg. I tell yer what
+it is, hoss, I riled, I did, though we'd had
+tolerable luck in the forenoon;&mdash;for I
+dropped two and a squaw, and Pete got
+his good six&mdash;barrin' that the darned villains
+had hamstrung our mule, and we
+were bound to see the thing out. Well,
+captin, as I tell ye, I'm not weak in the
+jints, but it's no joke to hold the heft of
+twenty-three pounds on a sight for above
+ten minits on a stretch; so Pete and me
+scrouched down, made a little smoke with
+some sticks, and then we moved off, a few
+rods, whar we got a clar peep. For better
+than an hour we see'd nothin'; but on a
+suddin I see'd the chap&mdash;I know'd him
+by his paintin'&mdash;that driv the arrer in my
+hide: he was peerin' round quite bold,
+thinkin' we'd vamosed; I jist fetched old
+Ginger up and drawed a bee line on his
+cratch, and, stranger, I giv him sich a
+winch in the stomach that he dropped
+straight into his tracks: he did! In five
+jumps I riz his har, and Pete and me
+warn't troubled again for a week.'"</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>After two months passed at Monterey,
+the American squadron assembled
+and a new commodore arrived,
+whereupon Lieut. Wise's captain was
+not sorry to be allowed to lift his anchors,
+and avoid playing second fiddle
+to the new commander-in-chief by
+transferring his pennant to the waters
+of the San Francisco. On the way
+thither his lieutenant treats us to some
+yarns of extraordinary toughness.
+Speaking of the lasso, in the use of
+which the Californians are particularly
+skilful&mdash;catching a bull by the tail and
+making him fling a somerset over his
+horns, or dragging a grizzly bear for
+miles to the baiting place&mdash;he calls to
+mind having once seen a troop of
+horses "at General Rosas' quinta,
+near Buenos Ayres, trained to run
+like hares, with fore and hind legs
+lashed together by thongs of hide: it
+was undertaken to preserve the animals
+from being thrown by the Indian
+<i lang="es" xml:lang="es">bolas</i>, and the riders, as a consequence,
+lanced to death. But I was
+far more amused one afternoon, when
+passing a fandango, near Monterey,
+to see a drunken cattle-driver, mounted
+on a restive, plunging beast, hold at
+arm's length a tray of glasses, brimming
+with aguardiente, which he politely
+offered to everybody within reach
+of his curvettings, without ever once
+spilling a drop." These marvellous
+feats are nothing, however, compared
+to the cannibal exploits of some unfortunate
+emigrants, who, having loitered
+on their way, were overtaken by
+the snow in the Californian mountains,
+and compelled to encamp for
+the winter. Their provisions and
+cattle consumed, even to the last horse
+hide, famine and insanity ensued.
+Those who starved to death were
+eaten by the survivors, whose appetites,
+if we may believe Mr Wise,
+were quite prodigious. A Dutchman,
+he gravely assures us, actually ate a
+full-grown body in thirty-six hours;
+and another boiled and devoured, in
+a single night, a child, nine years of
+age. We cannot venture to extract
+the revolting details that follow. The
+lieutenant's facetiousness upon this
+horrible subject is rather ghastly; and
+the particulars supplied by a young
+Spaniard, who "ate a baby," are
+abominable in the extreme, although
+possibly true. At least Mr Wise assures
+us he had them from the lad's own
+lips. And, whilst his strength lasted,
+poor Baptiste was drudge to the whole
+party, doing his duty well, fetching
+fuel and water, until at last, as he
+told Mr Wise, "very hungry, sir; eat
+anything."</p>
+
+<p>On the wild and dreary track from
+the States to California, frightful disasters
+occur to caravans of emigrants,
+which, encumbered with women and
+children, and sometimes under incompetent
+leaders, lose precious time by
+the way, and are caught and crushed
+by the terrible winter of those desolate
+regions. Journeying near the
+Sacramento, Mr Johnson came upon
+the house of "old Keysburg the cannibal,
+who revelled in the awful feast<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
+on human flesh and blood, during the
+sufferings of a party of emigrants near
+the pass of the Sierra Nevada, in the
+winter of 1847. It is said that the
+taste which Keysburg then acquired
+has not left him, and that he often
+declares, with evident gusto, 'I would
+like to eat a piece of you;' and several
+have sworn to shoot him, if he
+ventures on such <em>fond</em> declarations to
+them. We therefore looked upon the
+den of this wild beast in human form
+with a good deal of disgusted curiosity,
+and kept our bowie-knives handy
+for a slice of him if necessary."</p>
+
+<p>Sailor though he is, Mr Wise
+troubles his reader very little with
+nautical matters. During a few weeks
+he was a good deal afloat, having
+succeeded to the command of the
+Rosita, a forty ton schooner, with a
+crew of fifteen sailors, a small boy,
+and a mulatto cook, who had once
+been "head bottle-washer of a Liverpool
+liner, with glass nubs on de
+cabin doors;" but otherwise most of
+his time seems to have been spent on
+shore, riding, shooting, dancing, and
+love-making, doing military duty in
+garrison at Mazatlan, throwing up
+fortifications, and surprising parties
+of Mexicans, whose fear of the Gringos
+was most intense and ludicrous.
+In their civil wars, and when contending
+with the Spaniards for their
+independence, the Mexicans have
+occasionally fought doggedly, although
+never skilfully; but when opposed to
+combatants of the Anglo-Saxon race,
+they have invariably shown themselves
+arrant cowards. Although the
+soldiers of the States have even less
+military discipline than those of
+Mexico, the bodily strength, skill
+with the rifle, intrepidity, and self-reliance
+of the former, would render
+them formidable opponents even to
+well-drilled European troops. As to
+the Mexicans, no matter how great
+the numerical odds in their favour,
+they never could or would stand
+against the hardy Yankee volunteers.
+In the summer of 1846, Mr Parkman
+met, upon the wild and lonely banks
+of the Upper Arkansas, Price's Missouri
+regiment, on its way to Santa
+Fé.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"No men ever embarked upon a military
+expedition with a greater love for
+the work before them than the Missourians;
+but if discipline and subordination
+be the criterion of merit, these soldiers
+were worthless indeed. Yet when their
+exploits have rung through all America,
+it would be absurd to deny that they
+were excellent irregular troops. Their
+victories were gained in the teeth of
+every established precedent of warfare;
+they were owing to a singular combination
+of military qualities in the men
+themselves. Without discipline or a
+spirit of subordination, they knew how to
+keep their ranks, and act as one man.
+Doniphan's regiment marched through
+New Mexico more like a band of Free
+Companions than like the paid soldiers of
+a modern government. When General
+Taylor complimented Doniphan on his
+success at Sacramento and elsewhere,
+the colonel's reply very well illustrates
+the relations which subsisted between the
+officers and men of his command. 'I
+don't know anything of the man&oelig;uvres.
+The boys kept coming to me to let them
+charge; and when I saw a good opportunity,
+I told them they might go. They
+were off like a shot, and that's all I
+know about it.'</p>
+
+<p>"The backwoods lawyer was better
+fitted to conciliate the good-will than to
+command the obedience of his men.
+There were many serving under him,
+who both from character and education,
+could better have held command than he.
+At the battle of Sacramento, his frontiersmen
+fought under every possible disadvantage.
+The Mexicans had chosen
+their own position; they were drawn up
+across the valley that led to their native
+city of Chihuahua; their whole front was
+covered by intrenchments, and defended
+by batteries of heavy cannon; they outnumbered
+the invaders five to one. An
+eagle flew over the Americans, and a
+deep murmur rose along their lines. The
+enemy's batteries opened; long they remained
+under fire, but when at length
+the word was given, they shouted and
+ran forward. In one of the divisions,
+when midway to the enemy, a drunken
+officer ordered a halt; the exasperated
+men hesitated to obey. 'Forward, boys!'
+cried a private from the ranks; and the
+Americans, rushing like tigers upon the
+enemy, bounded over the breastwork.
+Four hundred Mexicans were slain upon
+the spot, and the rest fled, scattering
+over the plain like sheep. The standards,
+cannon, and baggage were taken, and
+among the rest a waggon laden with
+cords, which the Mexicans, in the fulness
+of their confidence, had made ready for
+tying the American prisoners."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>A curious picture of military <em>un</em>discipline&mdash;of
+egregious cowardice on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
+the one hand, and fortunate audacity
+on the other. It is evident that the
+Doniphan mode of carrying on the
+war&mdash;consulting the men's pleasure,
+with officers drunk before the enemy,
+and privates giving the word of command&mdash;however
+successful it may
+prove against the wretched Mexicans,
+or in mountain and guerilla warfare,
+would never answer in the open field
+against a regular and skilfully commanded
+army. The question, then,
+follows,&mdash;How far could these staunch
+and gallant American riflemen be
+trained to the strict discipline and
+military exercises and man&oelig;uvres
+essential to the efficiency of large
+bodies of troops, without impairing
+the very qualities, the feelings of
+independent action and self-reliance,
+which render them so valuable as
+irregular warriors? This inquiry,
+however, is not worth pursuing; for
+we suppose there is little chance of
+Uncle Sam meddling in European
+quarrels, and sincerely trust he will
+so curb his annexing mania as to
+avoid all risk of European armaments
+encountering him in his own hemisphere.
+Touching these Missourian
+volunteers, however, Mr Parkman's
+account of their appearance, and of
+his interview with them, is most
+graphic and characteristic. One forenoon
+he and his companion, Mr Shaw,
+turned aside to the river bank, half-a-mile
+from the trail, to get water and
+rest. They put up a kind of awning,
+and whilst seated under it upon their
+buffalo robes, and smoking, they saw
+a dark body of horsemen approaching.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"'We are going to catch it now,'
+said Shaw: 'look at those fellows;
+there'll be no peace for us here.' And,
+in good truth, about half the volunteers
+had straggled away from the line of
+march, and were riding over the meadow
+towards us.</p>
+
+<p>"'How are you?' said the first who
+came up, alighting from his horse, and
+throwing himself upon the ground. The
+rest followed close, and a score of them
+soon gathered about us, some lying at
+full length, and some sitting on horseback.
+They all belonged to a company
+raised in St Louis. There were some
+ruffian faces among them, and some haggard
+with debauchery; but, on the whole,
+they were extremely good-looking men,
+superior beyond measure to the ordinary
+rank and file of an army. Except that
+they were booted to the knees, they wore
+their belts and military trappings over
+the ordinary dress of citizens. Besides
+their swords and holster pistols, they
+carried, slung from their saddles, the
+excellent Springfield carbines, loaded at
+the breech. They inquired the character
+of our party, and were anxious to know
+the prospect of killing buffalo, and the
+chance that their horses would stand the
+journey to Santa Fé. All this was well
+enough, but a moment after a worse
+visitation came upon us.</p>
+
+<p>"'How are you, strangers? Whar
+are you going, and whar are you from?'
+said a fellow, who came trotting up with
+an old straw hat on his head. He was
+dressed in the coarsest brown homespun
+cloth. His face was rather sallow, from
+fever and ague, and his tall figure, although
+strong and sinewy, was quite thin, and
+had, besides, an angular look, which,
+together with his boorish seat on horseback,
+gave him an appearance anything
+but graceful. Plenty more of the same
+stamp were close behind him. Their
+company was raised in one of the frontier
+counties, and we soon had abundant
+evidence of their rustic breeding: dozens
+of them came crowding round, pushing
+between our first visitors, and staring at
+us with unabashed faces.</p>
+
+<p>"'Are you the captain?' asked one
+fellow.</p>
+
+<p>"'What's your business out here?' inquired
+another.</p>
+
+<p>"'Whar do you live when you're at
+home?' said a third.</p>
+
+<p>"'I reckon you're traders,' surmised a
+fourth; and, to crown the whole, one of
+them came confidently to my side, and
+inquired, in a low voice, 'What is your
+partner's name?'</p>
+
+<p>"As each new comer repeated the
+same questions, the nuisance became
+intolerable. Our military visitors were
+soon disgusted at the concise nature of
+our replies, and we could overhear them
+muttering curses against us. Presently,
+to our amazement, we saw a large
+cannon with four horses come lumbering
+up behind the crowd; and the driver,
+who was perched on one of the animals,
+stretching his neck so as to look over the
+rest of the men, called out,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'Whar are you from, and what's
+your business?'</p>
+
+<p>"The captain of one of the companies
+was amongst our visitors, drawn by the
+same curiosity that had attracted his men.</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, men,' said he at last, lazily
+rising from the ground where he had
+been lounging, 'it's getting late; I
+reckon we had better be moving.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'I shan't start yet, anyhow,' said one
+fellow, who lay half asleep, with his head
+resting on his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"'Don't be in a hurry, captain,' added
+the lieutenant.</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, have it your own way, we'll
+wait awhile longer,' replied the obsequious
+commander.</p>
+
+<p>"At length, however, our visitors went
+straggling away as they had come, and
+we, to our great relief, were left alone
+again."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>A most mirth-provoking specimen
+of American character. But we must
+return to our friend and favourite,
+Lieutenant Wise, who is truly a
+Yankee Crichton in a pea-jacket.
+Besides his nautical skill, and the
+lingual accomplishments already adverted
+to, he is a Nimrod in the hunting-field,
+a Centaur on horseback, a
+Vestris in the mazes of the dance.
+Lovers of wild sports in the West
+will luxuriate in his descriptions of
+hunting exploits, of his combats with
+grizzly bears fourteen hundred pounds
+weight, and his chase of an antelope
+whose fore-leg he had nearly severed
+from its shoulder with a rifle bullet,
+but which still managed to run four
+leagues, the wounded member "traversing
+round in its flight like a
+wheel," before receiving its death-wound.
+Unable to extract a tithe of
+the passages that tempt us, we hurry
+on to his departure for the Mexican
+capital, whither he was sent early in
+the month of May, as bearer of a
+despatch, and in company with a
+Mexican officer, with whom the lieutenant
+was at first disposed to be most
+friendly and sociable, but who forfeited
+his esteem by the cool proposal
+of a plan to cheat the government,
+and whom he soon managed to leave
+behind&mdash;no difficult matter, for the
+Mexican was cumbered with portmanteau
+and sumpter mule, whereas
+the Yankee's sole baggage, as he himself
+informs us, consisted of two shirts
+and a toothbrush. Thus lightly
+equipped, his pace was very rapid;
+not so much so, however, as to prevent
+his noting down all that occurred
+by the way. After La Barca and
+Ruxton, it is a difficult task to give
+novelty to an account of Mexican
+travel and peculiarities. Mr
+Wise has surmounted the difficulty;
+and so great is the freshness and
+originality of his narrative, that
+we read it with as much zest and
+enjoyment as if it were the first
+instead of the twentieth book relating
+to Mexico which we have perused
+within the last few years. His anecdotes
+are most racy and piquant;
+his sketches of Mexican women,
+officers, <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">leperos</i>, and of his own countrymen
+in Mexico, are taken from the
+life with a truthful and vivid pencil.
+With the class of leperos he had already
+made acquaintance on the
+threshold of the country. Turning, one
+day, into a bowling alley at Mazatlan,
+with the officers of a British frigate,
+he gave a fine horse to hold to one of
+those Mexican mendicants. The fellow's
+hatred of the <em>gringos</em> was stronger
+than his love of gain; for no sooner
+was he left alone than he drew a
+pistol from the holsters, shot the
+horse, and ran for his life, which certainly
+would not have been worth a
+maravedi had he tarried for the arrival
+of the enraged lieutenant. "Oh, Mr
+Smithers!" exclaims the disconsolate
+mariner thus cruelly dismounted&mdash;"Oh,
+Mr Smithers! you keep a good
+ten-pin alley, sing a good song, and
+your wife prepares good chocolate;
+you are, together, good fellows; but
+you should never, O Smithers! transform
+your establishment into a knacker's
+yard. And you, my cruel <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">lepero</i>!
+had I ever got a sight of you along
+that weapon you handled so well&mdash;ah!
+I wellnigh wept for sorrow that
+night, and did not recover my spirits
+for a fortnight." The leperos, we
+need hardly explain, are the pest of
+Mexico&mdash;ragged, dirty, often disgusting
+with disease or deformity, born
+idlers, beggars, and thieves&mdash;in the
+latter capacity so especially skilful,
+that Mr Wise inclines to the belief
+that a man, standing open-mouthed
+in a crowd of them, could hardly escape
+having the gold picked from his
+molars. They reaped a rich harvest at
+the time of the American invasion.
+It was a case of "<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">nos amis les ennemis</i>."
+The conquerors were preyed
+upon by the conquered. Iron bars
+were unavailing against the cunning
+rogues. "One evening some expert
+practitioner contrived to entice a
+valuable pair of pistols, clothing, and
+other articles, from my table in the
+centre of a large apartment, by introducing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
+a pole and hook through the
+iron <em>grille</em> of the window; and the
+same night, my friend Molinero was
+robbed of his bed-clothes, while sleeping,
+by the same enterprising method."
+By a strange tolerance, these leperos
+are admitted everywhere; and in the
+splendid coffee and gambling houses
+of the large cities, they are found rubbing
+their filthy rags against officers'
+embroideries and the fine broadcloth
+of wealthy burgesses. At Guanaxato,
+Mr Wise gives a lively description of
+a scene of this kind in the handsome
+saloons of the <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">Gran Sociedad</i>, recalling
+to our memory, though at a long
+interval, some striking pages of the
+first volume of Sealsfield's gorgeous
+Mexican romance, <cite>Der Virey and
+die Aristocraten</cite>. The lepero's chief
+pastimes are thieving, sleeping, and
+gambling for copper coins. By way
+of variety, he occasionally gets up a
+mortal combat. We think the following
+the best account of a knife-duel
+we ever read:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"A lepero was purchasing a bit of
+chocolate; it fell in the dirt, when another,
+probably thinking it a lawful prize,
+seized it and took a large bite; whereupon
+the lawful owner swung a mass of heavy
+steel spurs attached to his wrist, jingling,
+with some force, on the offender's head.
+In a second down dropped the spurs, and
+<i lang="es" xml:lang="es">serapas</i> (a kind of blanket) were wound
+round the left arms. With low deep
+curses and flashing eyes, their knives
+gleamed in the light; the spectators
+cleared a ring, and to work they went.
+I sprang upon a stone pillar to be out of
+harm's way, and thus had a clear view of
+the fray. Their blades were very unequally
+matched: one was at least eight
+inches, and the other not half that measurement;
+but both appeared adepts at
+the game, watching each other like wild
+cats, ready for a spring&mdash;moving cautiously
+to and fro, making feints by the
+shielded arm, or stamp of the foot, for a
+minute or two; when, quick as a flash, I
+saw two rapid passes made by both:
+blood spirted from an ugly wound in the
+spur-vender's throat, but at the same
+moment his short weapon sealed the doom
+of his antagonist, and he lay upon the
+ground, lifeless as the bloody steel that
+struck him. I glanced at the wounds
+after the affair had terminated, and found
+the knife had been plunged twice directly
+in the region of the heart. There was no
+effort or attempt made by the beholders
+to arrest the parties; and the survivor
+caught up his spurs&mdash;a bystander quickly
+folded a handsome kerchief to his neck&mdash;and
+threading the crowd he was soon out
+of sight. The corpse was laid upon a
+liquor-stand, with a delf platter upon the
+breast."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The Mexican capital was not a little
+Americanised at the period of Mr
+Wise's visit. The account he gives
+of the state of affairs there, is not very
+creditable to the morals and tastes of
+the victorious volunteers; and he expresses
+a natural doubt whether the
+scenes there enacted will have been
+beneficial to the thousands of young
+men whom the war had called to
+Mexico. The great hotels and coffee-houses
+were all under Yankee dominion,
+with Yankee ice, and drinks,
+signs, manners, customs, and habits,
+"as if the city had been from time
+immemorial Yankeefied all over, instead
+of being only occupied a short
+twelvemonth by the troops." Debauchery
+of every kind was rife, but
+gambling was the vice that took the
+strongest hold. In the large tavern
+or <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">restauration</i>, where Mr Wise usually
+dined, in every nook from hall to attic,
+with the exception of the eating-room,
+in the corridors and on the landing-places,
+gaming-tables were displayed.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"Such a condensed essence of worldly
+hell, in all its glaring, disgusting frightfulness,
+never existed. And there never
+was lack of players either&mdash;no! not a
+table but was closely surrounded by officers
+and soldiers&mdash;blacklegs and villains
+of all sorts&mdash;betting uncommonly high,
+too&mdash;many of the banks having sixty and
+eighty thousand dollars in gold alone on
+the tables&mdash;and once I saw a common
+soldier stake and win two hundred ounces
+at a single bet. Other saloons were filled
+with Mexican girls, with music and dancing,
+attended by every species of vice, all
+going on unceasingly, day and night together."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>This is an American's account. Of
+course most of this lavish expenditure
+and gambled gold had their origin in
+the plunder of Mexico. Indeed, Lieutenant
+Wise does not mince the matter
+at all, but informs us how he himself,
+after a night-excursion in the vicinity
+of Mazatlan, returned laden with
+spoil, and felt such an itching to
+search people's pockets that he made
+no doubt of soon becoming as good a
+freebooter as ever drew sword. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
+was then, however, but a novice in
+the science of pillage, for he afterwards
+learned that a saddle, which he had
+appropriated, contained six golden
+ounces, whereby the saddler, to whom
+he intrusted it for renovation, was
+much benefited. When an officer
+holding the United States commission
+saw nothing derogatory in plunder,
+there can be no doubt of the
+rapacity of the dissipated and reckless
+desperadoes of which the American
+expeditionary force was notoriously
+in part composed. And in an
+army where discipline was lax, and
+a spirit of anti-military equality prevailed
+amongst officers and men, the
+contagion would rapidly spread.
+Doubtless this was an aggravating
+cause of Mexican hatred to the
+<em>Gringos</em>. Nevertheless, when the
+fighting was over, kindness and attention
+were shown to the invaders, and
+some of the Mexican officers appear
+to have been thrashed into a most
+affectionate regard for their conquerors.
+One fine fellow, a colonel of cavalry,
+all gold and glitter, with richly chased
+sabre scabbard, and spurs of a dazzling
+burnish, insisted upon giving a
+breakfast to a large party of American
+officers. There were a number of
+Mexican <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">militaires</i> present, all decorated,
+some with emblems of battles
+in which they had been defeated; and
+as the repast was in some degree
+public, (being held in a large billiard-room,)
+a number of casual observers
+assembled round the table, and helped
+to drink the numerous toasts, pocketing
+their glasses after each, to be
+ready for the next. The banquet
+began with a bumper of brandy, by
+way of whet; a most miscellaneous
+collection of edibles was then placed
+upon the board, and claret and sherry
+circulated rapidly to the health and
+memory of a host of living and dead
+generals, both Mexican and American,
+beginning with Washington and
+Hidalgo, and gradually arriving at
+Santa Anna and "Skote," (Scott,) for
+which last-named pair of warriors
+Mr Wise estimates that at least eighty
+or ninety cheers were given. The
+Mexicans, habitually temperate, got
+exceedingly drunk, and, like most
+southerns when in that state, furiously
+excited; the chief characteristics
+of their intoxication being unbounded
+affection for their guests,
+and admiration of their own prowess.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"Our gallant host, in a few disjointed
+observations, assured us that he was not
+only brave himself, and loved bravery in
+others, but that his horse was brave, and
+had been wounded in divers battles. '<i lang="es" xml:lang="es">Io
+soy valiente!</i>' said the fierce colonel,
+pounding the orders on his capacious
+breast, and forthwith proclaimed to the
+audience his intention to pay for everything
+that anybody could possibly eat or
+drink for a fortnight; and, seizing me by
+the arms, he impressively remarked that
+I was the most intimate friend he ever
+had except his wife, and requested me to
+throw his huge shako up to the ceiling,
+solely for <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">amistad</i>, and for the good-fellowship
+of the thing&mdash;which I instantly
+did, and made the bearskin and golden
+plates ring against the rafters. Thereupon
+he called for more wine, and desired
+all who loved him to break a few glasses,
+commencing himself with a couple of
+decanters."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>At which period of the action the
+landlord cut off the supplies of liquor,
+anticipating, doubtless, the entire
+demolition of his establishment; and
+the revellers got to horse, and went
+for a turn in the Alameda, then
+thronged by all the fashion of Queretaro,
+in which city these jovial proceedings
+occurred. After galloping
+round the promenade, at a pace that
+terrified the natives, Lieutenant Wise
+ran a "jouist," as he calls it, with
+one of his Mexican friends, who was
+still under the influence of his unwonted
+libations.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"In true Californian style, he shook
+his bridle, gave spur, and came leaping
+like a flash towards me. I was no novice
+at the sport, and, touching one of the
+finest horses in the army with my heel,
+the gallant sorrel sprang forward to
+meet him. We met in full career; my
+charger stood like the great pyramid, but
+the shock rolled my antagonist into the
+street. I should in courtesy have got
+down from the saddle to his assistance,
+but, reflecting that without a ladder I
+never should be able to get on my high
+steed again, I remained quiet. Being a
+sailor, I gained great reputation by this
+feat, and gave an entertainment on the
+strength of it."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Surely there never was a jollier
+fellow than Lieutenant Wise of the
+United States navy. A rare good
+companion he must be, a real <em>bonus</em><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">socius</i> across a julep, a very storehouse
+of fun, frolic, and adventure. So well
+do we like his society, that we are
+only sorry we cannot at present accompany
+him further on his rambles,
+or return with him to Mazatlan, where
+he arrived at a flying gallop, after a
+ride of 2500 miles on horseback&mdash;the
+last 112 leagues in fifty-three hours,
+(said to be the quickest trip on record,)
+to be received by a host of friends,
+and by a Yankee band playing, "Hail,
+Columbia!" and sail with him to
+Polynesia, and revisit Valparaiso and
+Lima, and many other places, in all
+of which he manages heartily to amuse
+both himself and his reader, till he
+finally drops anchor in the waters of
+the Chesapeake, arriving, with equal
+satisfaction to both parties, at the end
+of 450 pages, and 55,000 miles. His
+book richly deserves an independent
+notice; but as we started by associating
+it with others, we are compelled
+to lay it aside, whilst we visit the
+glittering coast of California, in company
+with Mr Theodore Johnson, who
+arrived on the 1st of April 1849 in
+Sancelito Bay, and proceeded forthwith
+to look for the city of the same
+name, whose wide and elegant streets
+he had frequently traced upon the
+map. After some search, he found
+the city. "It consisted of one board-shed
+and one tent, holding on to the
+hill-side like a woodpecker against a
+tree." Thus was his first illusion dissipated.
+A few other Californian
+castles were speedily to crumble. "The
+latitude of Richmond, and climate of
+Italy, the gold of Ophir, the silver,
+red wood and cedar of Solomon's
+temple, the lovely valley of the Sacramento,
+the vineyards of France, indigo
+of Hindostan, and wheat of America,
+golden rocks, and rivers flowing over
+the same metal," such were a few of
+the bright promises that had lured
+him, "in company with thousands of
+his go-ahead countrymen," to the Eldorado
+of the Pacific. These were the
+things he expected; let us collect,
+from his first week's experience in
+California, those that he really found.
+Ugly barren hills, a miserable sandy-clay
+soil, producing a weed which a
+starving jackass will scorn, and a fine
+dust, against which the most impenetrable
+eyelids are not proof, a repulsive
+and disagreeable climate in the
+month of April, (growing worse as the
+summer advances,) the extremes of
+heat and cold following each other in
+constant succession, water often extremely
+scarce, and impregnated with
+quicksilver, platina, and other minerals,
+killing the fish, and giving Christians
+the Sacramento fever, "a slow,
+continual fever, which men go about
+with for months; but in its more violent
+forms soon mortal, always affecting
+the brain, and, in case of recovery,
+leaving the mind impaired. The lung
+fever and rheumatism are brought on
+by working in the cold water, and
+stooping continually under the burning
+sun." The scurvy, too, was prevalent,
+from the use of salt provisions,
+for none could find time to procure
+fresh ones, to hunt or tend cattle; and
+if they did leave their eternal digging
+for such pursuits, the prices they expected
+were preposterous. Wild cattle
+and game are plenty in the valley of the
+Sacramento and adjacent mountains,
+but in California the hours are truly
+golden, and not to be wasted on kitchen
+considerations; to say nothing of the
+hardship of driving wild oxen or carrying
+a gun across a rugged country with
+the thermometer at 109° to 112° in
+the shade&mdash;the usual temperature in
+June and July, and one fully justifying
+the derivation of the name California
+from two Spanish words signifying
+a hot oven, <i lang="es" xml:lang="es">caliente horno</i>.
+"The thermometer stood at 90° Fahrenheit,
+at noon, in the shade of
+Culloma valley, on the 16th of April;
+and at night we slept cold in our tent
+with our clothing on, and provided
+with abundant blankets." With such
+a climate, and with no grass in the
+mountains fit to sustain them, it is no
+wonder that the best pack-horses can
+carry but one hundred and fifty to
+two hundred pounds weight across the
+mountains, and frequently fall down
+and die if overladen. At the time
+referred to&mdash;that is to say, in the month
+of April last&mdash;Mr Johnson "continually
+saw old miners departing for the
+cañons<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> of the middle and north
+Forks, with one month's supply of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
+provisions, consisting of seventy-five
+lb. of pork and seventy-five lb. of
+pilot bread, for which they paid respectively
+at the rates of one hundred
+and fifty and one hundred and twenty
+dollars per hundred pounds! Now,
+although the prices of these articles
+were rapidly declining on the sea-board,
+by reason of the immense importation,
+yet the price of fresh beef was twenty-five
+dollars per hundred pounds in
+San Francisco, and must farther enhance
+there, the supply then being
+quite insufficient. Fresh provisions
+will therefore be consumed at the seaport
+and trading towns, and not in
+the mining region. The humbug of
+preserved meats was already exploded,
+great quantities having been spoiled."
+All this was very different from the
+promised vineyards and corn-fields;
+and Mr Johnson, who had not come
+to California to feed on salt junk at six
+shillings a pound, and to drink mercurial
+water, began to wish himself back
+again almost as soon as arrived.</p>
+
+<p>In countries where a large majority
+of the men are content to give,
+year after year, their skill, energy,
+and time, in exchange for a few hundred
+pieces of gold, or even of silver,
+the reports of a land where the most
+precious of these metals turns up under
+the ploughshare, abounds in the
+rivers, mingles with the highway-dust,
+and is picked from the bricks of
+the houses, are naturally at first
+received with doubt and misgiving,
+and suspected of exaggeration, if not
+condemned as fiction. We confess,
+for our part, that we attached little
+weight to the first accounts of Californian
+marvels, and that long after
+the wise men of the East had begun
+to debate, in the shadow of the grasshopper,
+the possible effect upon the
+currency of the anticipated influx of
+the produce of the diggings, we still
+were sceptics as to the magnitude of
+the newly-found treasure. But even
+those who gave readiest credence to
+the tale of wonder, could hardly, we
+should have thought, have expected
+that the ingots were to be gathered
+without trouble or pain beyond that
+of performing a long journey and
+filling a big bag. Evidently this
+was Mr Johnson's notion, and that of
+not a few others of his sanguine countrymen,
+"who left their homes and
+families, and the decencies of civilisation,
+with the expectation of acquiring
+an adequate competency by the efforts
+of a single year." At what figure
+Mr Johnson rates an "adequate competency"
+we know not; but it is evident
+he expected to be placed on
+pretty nearly the same footing as
+those Oriental princes who, after wandering
+through the desert to the enchanted
+gardens, had the free pick of
+trees whose fruits were diamonds and
+rubies. The real state of affairs
+proved very different. A few persons,
+dwellers in California when the
+golden richness of the soil was first
+discovered in 1848,<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> may have made
+large fortunes on easy terms, by being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
+early in the field, and through barter
+with the Indians, who (before they
+were frightened and soured by the
+shooting and scalping practices of the
+Oregonians and others) were willing
+enough to labour and trade, and to
+give gold-dust weight for weight for
+glass beads and other baubles. We
+read of one man, a western farmer,
+owner and occupier of a loghouse,
+known as the Blue Tent, who
+arrived in California before the
+gold discoveries, treated the Indians
+well, learned their language, employed
+them to dig, and realised, it
+is said, two hundred thousand dollars.
+Another old settler, we are
+told, accumulated, in the season of
+1848, also by help of the Indians,
+nearly two bushels of gold-dust. Our
+arithmetic is not equal to the reduction
+of this into pounds sterling, but
+at a rough estimate we should take it
+to represent a very pleasing sum&mdash;possibly
+the competency Mr Johnson
+aspired to. But those palmy days of
+gold-gathering have fled, violently
+driven away; the Indians, welcomed
+with bullets instead of beads, will
+work no more, and every man must dig
+for himself. And so did Mr Johnson&mdash;but
+only for a very short time, and
+with no very prosperous result. The
+gold fever, under whose influence he
+and his companions started for the
+diggings, was still burning in their
+veins when, on the second day after
+leaving San Francisco, they halted for
+the night on the river bank, and one
+of them, "thrusting his bowie-knife
+into the ground, revealed innumerable
+shining yellow particles, immediately
+announced gold discoveries on the
+Sacramento, and claimed the <em>placer</em>."
+But it was mica, not gold. They had
+much further to go, and worse to fare,
+before reaching the right metal. It
+was the interest of the United States'
+government and of certain speculators
+to tempt emigrants to the distant territory
+on the shore of the Pacific; and
+accordingly, says Mr Johnson, "the
+wonders of the gold region were trumpeted
+to the world, with unabating,
+but by no means unforeseeing zeal.
+Glowing accounts were sent to the
+United States of the result of all the
+most successful efforts in the mines.
+To these were added a delicious climate
+and wonderful agricultural fertility.
+The inaccessibility of the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">placeres</i>,
+the diseases, the hardships, &amp;c. &amp;c.,
+were quite forgotten or omitted." And
+thus a certain number of ambitious
+young men, (many of them wholly unfitted,
+by their previous mode of life
+for roughing it in a new country,)
+were lured from their comfortable
+homes in New York and elsewhere, in
+the confident expectation that, on arriving
+in California, they would ascend
+beauteous rivers in commodious ships,
+sleep on board at night, and pleasantly
+pass a few hours of each day in collecting
+the wealth that lay strewn
+upon the shore. Such is the account
+given of the matter by poor Johnson,
+who denounces the journey across the
+mountainous and roadless country as
+most toilsome, and the whole adventure
+as disappointing and unsatisfactory.
+At last he and his companions
+reached the lower bar<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> on the south
+fork of American River, shouldered
+shovels, buckets, and washing-machine,
+and applied themselves to the
+task.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"The scene presented to us was new
+indeed, and not more extraordinary than
+impressive. Some, with long-handled
+shovels, delved among clumps of bushes,
+or by the side of large rocks, never raising
+their eyes for an instant; others, with
+pick and shovel, worked among stone and
+gravel, or with trowels searched under
+banks and roots of trees, where, if rewarded
+with small lumps of gold, the eye
+shone brighter for an instant, when the
+search was immediately and more ardently
+resumed. At the edge of the stream, or
+knee-deep and waist-deep in water, as
+cold as melted ice and snow could make
+it, some were washing gold with tin pans,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
+or the common cradle-rocker, while the
+rays of the sun poured down on their
+heads with an intensity exceeding any
+thing we ever experienced at home,
+though it was but the middle of April.
+The thirst for gold and the labour of
+acquisition overruled all else, and totally
+absorbed every faculty. Complete silence
+reigned among the miners: they addressed
+not a word to each other, and seemed
+averse to all conversation."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>After digging and washing twenty
+bucketfuls of earth, Mr Johnson's
+party had obtained but four dollars'
+worth of gold. At noon, the sun's
+heat being intolerable, they knocked
+off from work; not much encouraged
+by the result. This, however, they
+admit, was a poor digging, the stream
+being yet too high, and the bar not
+sufficiently exposed&mdash;to say nothing
+of their being novices at the work.
+They persisted little, however: another
+trial was made with no better result;
+and, in short, a week's effort and observation
+sickened them of a toil so far
+less lucrative than they had anticipated.
+Two of the party (Mr Johnson
+was one of them) resolved to
+return to San Francisco till the healthier
+season of winter; a third, having
+some goods, took to trading; the
+fourth and last, a hardy little down-easter
+from Maine, stuck to the diggings.</p>
+
+<p>By this time, we are not entirely
+dependent on American books or newspaper
+correspondence for intelligence
+from the Californian mines. Some
+portion of the gold that has come to
+this country has been brought by the
+finders; and only the other day, a
+party of them reached England, having
+left the diggings as lately as the
+beginning of October. The details
+obtained from these men, who are of
+various European countries, confirm,
+in all important particulars, the statements
+of Mr Johnson, with merely the
+difference of tint imparted by failure
+and success. Either easily discouraged
+or physically unequal to encounter
+the hardships inseparable
+from the search for and extraction of
+the gold, Mr Johnson, disappointed in
+his sanguine expectations, makes a
+sombre report of the speculation;
+whereas these more persevering and
+prosperous miners, having safely returned
+to Europe, their pockets full of
+"chunks," scales and dust of the most
+undeniable purity and excellence, naturally
+give a more rose-coloured view
+of the enterprise. They admit, however,
+(to use the words of one of
+them,) that "it takes a smart lad to
+do good in California," and that it is
+useless for any one to go thither unless
+prepared to rough it, in the fullest
+sense of the word. At first, they inform
+us the amount of theft and outrage
+was very great; but summary
+and severe punishment checked this.
+Mr Johnson deplores the existence of
+Lynch-law. It really appears to us
+that California is the very place where
+such a system is not only justifiable,
+but indispensable. One miner stated
+that he belonged to a band or club,
+thirty in number, who threw together
+all the gold they found, and shared
+alike; sharp penalties being denounced
+against any member of the society
+who attempted to divert his findings
+from the common stock. The amount
+obtained by each member of this joint-stock
+company during the season
+of eight or nine months was equivalent
+to thirteen or fourteen hundred
+pounds sterling. Not quite the "adequate
+competency" anticipated by
+Mr Theodore T. Johnson, but still a
+very pretty gain for men, most of
+whom would probably have found it
+impossible, in any other way, and in
+the same time, to earn a tithe of the
+amount. More than one of them
+proposed, after depositing his treasure
+safely in Europe, to augment it
+by a second trip to the gold region;
+and held the time occupied by the
+voyage to and fro as little loss, digging
+being impeded by the winter snows.
+The winter of 1848-9 was very severe,
+the snow lying four feet deep on the
+mountains, and having fallen even on
+the coast; a circumstance unprecedented
+in California, whose Spanish
+and Indian inhabitants attributed
+the disagreeable phenomenon to the
+American intruders. Notwithstanding
+this unwonted rigour, however, we
+learn from Mr Johnson that "large
+numbers of hardy and industrious
+Oregonians spent the last <em>winter</em> in
+the mines of California, generally with
+success commensurate with their perseverance,
+prudence, and sobriety."
+The lumps of gold, according to the
+account of the miners already referred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
+to, (and which tallies exactly in this
+particular with Mr Johnson's statement)
+are found in what are called
+the dry diggings, in the red sandy
+clay of the ravines on the mountain
+sides; whilst the dust and scales are
+obtained by washing the earth and
+sand from the rivers. Lumps of pure
+gold, with a greater or less admixture
+of quartz, are also found in the crevices
+of a white-veined rock.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst denouncing the expense of
+health and labour at which the
+Californian gold is obtained, Mr
+Johnson admits the vast quantity of
+the metal that has been and still is
+being collected. In town, fort, and
+settlement,&mdash;in every place, in short,
+where a score or two of men were
+congregated, he beheld astonishing
+evidence of its abundance. "Quarts
+of the dust or scale gold were to be
+seen on the tables or counters, or in
+the safes of all classes of men; and
+although the form of small scales was
+most common, yet pieces or lumps of
+a quarter to three ounces were to be
+seen everywhere; and among several
+<em>chunks</em> one was shown us by C. L.
+Ross, Esq., weighing <em>eighty-one ounces</em>.
+This was solid pure gold with only
+the appearance of a little quartz in it."
+In one day he saw bushels of gold,
+most of it too pure for jewellery or coin,
+without alloy. Although the price of
+the metal was maintained at sixteen
+dollars per ounce, its depreciation in
+comparison with labour and merchandise
+was enormous; and in the mines,
+during the winter of 1848, "a good
+deal of gold was sold for <em>three or four
+dollars the ounce</em>." Carpenters and
+blacksmiths received an ounce a-day.
+Lumber was at six hundred dollars per
+thousand feet. A lot of land, purchased
+two years previously for a cask of
+brandy, fetched eighteen thousand dollars.
+At a French <em>café</em>, a cup of coffee,
+bit of ham, and two eggs, cost three
+dollars, or 12s. 6d. A host of details
+of this kind are added, most of which
+have already been given in the American
+and English newspapers. Captain
+Sutter's saw-mill was earning a thousand
+dollars a-day. At the Stanislaus
+diggings, in the winter of 1848-9, a box
+of raisins, greatly needed for the cure
+of scurvy, then raging there without
+remedy, sold for its weight in gold dust,
+or four thousand dollars! Reckless
+expenditure is the natural consequence
+of easily-acquired wealth. The diggers,
+after a brief period of severe
+labour, would come into town for
+what they called "a burst," and
+scatter their gold dust and ingots like
+sand and pebbles, keeping "upon the
+ball" for three or four days and nights,
+or even for a week together, drinking
+brandy at eight and champagne at
+sixteen dollars the bottle, often getting
+helplessly drunk and losing the whole
+of their gains. One fellow, during a
+three days' drunken fit, got rid
+of sixteen thousand dollars in gold.
+Two hopeful youths, known as Bill and
+Gus, who took an especial liking to Mr
+Johnson and his party, had come in
+for "a particular, general, and universal
+burst;" and they carried out
+their intentions most completely.
+They were tender in their liquor, and,
+in the excess of their drunken philanthropy,
+they purchased a barrel of
+ale at three dollars a bottle, and a
+parcel of sardinas at eight dollars a
+box, and patrolled the district, forcing
+every one to drink. In paying for
+something, Bill dropped a lump of
+gold, worth two or three dollars,
+which Mr Johnson picked up, and
+handed to him. "Without taking it,
+he looked at us with a comical mixture
+of amazement and ill-humour,
+and at length broke out with&mdash;'Well,
+stranger, you <em>are</em> a curiosity; I guess
+you hain't been in the diggins long,
+and better keep that for a sample.'"
+Even in all sobriety, miners would
+not be troubled with anything less
+than dollars, and often scattered
+small coins by handfuls in the streets,
+rather than count or carry them.
+And as neither exorbitant prices nor
+drunken bursts sufficed to exhaust the
+resources of the gold-laden diggers,
+gambling went on upon all sides.
+"Talk of <em>placers</em>," cried an American,
+who had just cleared his thousand
+dollars in ten minutes, at a
+<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">monte</i>-table in San Francisco; "what
+better <em>placer</em> need a man want than
+this?" At Sutter's Fort, a halting-place
+of the miners, gambling prevailed
+without limit or stint, men
+often losing in a single night the result
+of many months' severe toil. Drunkenness
+and fighting diversified the
+scene. "Hundreds of dollars were
+often spent in a night, and thousands<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+on Sunday, <em>when Pandemonium was
+in full blast</em>." Such iniquities were
+no more than might be expected
+amongst the ragamuffin crew assembled
+in California, and which included
+discharged convicts from New South
+Wales, Mexicans, Kanakas, Peruvians,
+Chilians, representatives of
+every European nation, and thousands
+of the more dissolute and reckless class
+of United States men.</p>
+
+<p>It is not surprising that some
+of the minority of honest and respectable
+men, who found themselves
+mingled with the mob of ruffians
+and outlaws assembled in California,
+thought the prospect of wealth
+dearly purchased by a prolonged residence
+in vile society and a most trying
+climate, and by labour and exposure
+destructive to health. Mr Johnson
+assures us that, among the miners
+who had been long at the diggings,
+he saw very few who were not
+suffering from disease&mdash;emaciated by
+fever till they were mere walking shadows,
+or tormented by frequently recurring attacks
+of scurvy and rheumatism.
+If there was a constant stream of adventurers
+proceeding to the diggings,
+there was also a pretty steady flow of
+weary and sickly men returning thence.
+It would seem, from Mr Johnson's
+account, that no previous habit of
+hard labour qualifies the human
+frame to follow, without injury, the
+trying trade of a gold-grubber. "We
+met a party of six sailors, of the Pacific
+whalers, who were returning to
+go before the mast again, swearing,
+sailor-fashion, that they would rather
+go a whaling at half wages than dig
+gold any more." Mr Johnson was
+somewhat of the same way of thinking.
+He sums up a general review
+of California in the following words:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"So large an emigration of the American
+people, as have gone to that territory,
+must make something of the country.
+They will make it one of the states of
+this Union, at all events, and speedily,
+too: and although the country is only
+adapted by nature for mining and grazing,
+yet a constant trade must result from the
+former, and more or less agriculture be
+added to the latter, from the necessity of
+the case. A few have made, and will
+hereafter make fortunes there, and very
+many of those who remain long enough
+will accumulate something; but the great
+mass, all of whom expected to acquire
+large amounts of gold in a short time,
+must be comparatively disappointed. The
+writer visited California to dig gold, but
+chose to abandon that purpose rather than
+expose his life and health in the mines;
+and as numbers were already seeking
+employment in San Francisco without
+success, and he had neither the means nor
+the inclination to speculate, he concluded
+to return to his family and home industry."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Finally, the disappointed gold-seeker
+addresses to his readers a
+parting hint, apprehensive, seemingly,
+of their supposing that his own ill-success
+has warped his judgment, or
+induced him to calumniate the country.
+"If you think," he says, "we have
+not shown you enough of <em>the elephant</em>,
+but got on the wrong way and slid off
+backwards, please to mount him and
+take a view for yourself." By which
+metaphorical phrase, if the worthy
+Johnson means that we are to go to
+the diggings, and judge for ourselves,
+we can only say we had much rather
+take his word than his advice, and
+read his book by our fireside than
+tread in his footsteps amongst the
+mountains of California.</p>
+
+<p>Without further comment, but with
+a warm recommendation, we close
+these three American volumes. It
+were idle to subject to minute criticism
+books that make no pretensions
+to literary merit, and which, professing
+only to give, in plain language, an
+account of the writers' personal adventures
+and experiences, are written
+in off-hand style, and are wholly free
+from pedantry and affectation. If
+they are occasionally somewhat rude
+in form, like the men and countries
+they portray, they at least are frank
+and honest in substance; and they
+contain more novelty, amusement,
+and information, than are to be found
+in any dozen of those vapid narratives
+of fashionable tourists with which the
+Bentley and Colburn presses annually
+cram the nauseated public. We have
+been much pleased and diverted by
+the unsophisticated pages of Messrs
+Johnson, Wise, and Parkman.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>HOWARD.<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a></h2>
+
+
+<p>To add another to the numerous
+eulogies which have been justly bestowed
+on the memory of Howard the
+philanthropist, is not our object. We
+are far from making the attempt: our
+aim is to contribute something to the
+more accurate and familiar knowledge
+of the man himself&mdash;his life, his character,
+his career, his services.</p>
+
+<p>It not unfrequently happens that the
+great men of history, whom we have
+admired in our youth, sink grievously
+in our estimation, and lose their heroic
+port and proportions, when we survey
+them more nearly, and at a season
+of maturer judgment. They
+shrink into the bounds and limits of
+commonplace mortality. We venture
+even to administer reproof and castigation,
+where, perhaps, we had venerated
+almost to idolatry. Such is not
+the case with Howard. Poets have
+sung his praises, and his name has
+rounded many an eloquent period.
+Howard the philanthropist becomes
+very soon a name as familiar to us as
+those of the kings and queens who
+have sat upon our throne; but the
+vague admiration, thus early instilled
+into us, suffers no diminution when,
+at an after period, we become intimately
+acquainted with the character
+of the man. We may approach the
+idol here without danger to our faith.
+We may analyse the motive&mdash;we
+may "vex, probe, and criticise"&mdash;it
+is all sound. Take your stethoscope
+and listen&mdash;there is no hollow here&mdash;every
+pulse beats true.</p>
+
+<p>The Howard that poets and orators
+had taught us to admire loses none
+of its greatness on a near approach.
+But it undergoes a remarkable <em>transformation</em>.
+The real Howard, who
+devoted his life to the jail and the
+lazaretto, was a very different person
+from that ideal of benevolence which
+the verse of Darwin, or the eloquence
+of Burke, had called up into our minds.
+Instead of this faint and classic ideal,
+we have the intensely and somewhat
+sternly religious man, guided and sustained,
+every step of his way, not
+alone, nor principally, by the amiable
+but vacillating sentiment which passes
+under the name of philanthropy, but
+by an exalted, severe, imperative
+sense of duty. It is Howard the
+Christian, Howard the Puritan, that
+stands revealed before us. The form
+changes, but only to grow more distinct
+and intelligible. The features
+have no longer that classic outline we
+had attributed to them; but they
+bear henceforth the stamp of reality&mdash;of
+a man who, without doubt, had
+lived and moved amongst us.</p>
+
+<p>Those who have rested content
+(and we think there are many such)
+with that impression of Howard which
+is derived from the panegyrics scattered
+through our polite literature,
+and who accordingly attribute to him,
+as the master-motive of his conduct,
+simply a wide benevolence&mdash;a sentiment
+of humanity exalted to a passion&mdash;must
+be conscious of a certain
+uneasy sense of doubt, an involuntary
+scepticism; must feel that there is
+something here unexplained, or singularly
+exaggerated. Their Howard,
+if they should scrutinise their impression,
+is a quite anomalous person.
+No philanthropist they have ever
+heard of&mdash;no mere lover of his kind,
+sustained only by the bland sentiment
+of humanity, not even supported by
+any new enthusiastic faith in the perfectibility
+of the species&mdash;ever lived
+the life of this man, or passed through
+a tithe of his voluntary toils and sufferings.
+Philanthropists are generally
+distinguished for their love of
+speculation; they prefer to think
+rather than to act; and their labours
+are chiefly bestowed on the composition
+of their books. Philanthropists
+have occasionally ruined themselves;
+but their rash schemes are more notorious
+for leading to the ruin of others.
+As a race, they are not distinguished
+for self-sacrifice, or for practical and
+strenuous effort. There must, therefore,
+to the persons we are describing,
+be a certain doubt and obscurity
+hanging over the name of Howard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
+the philanthropist. It must sound
+like a myth or fable; they must half
+suspect that, if some Niebuhr should
+look into the matter, their heroic
+figure would vanish into thin air.</p>
+
+<p>Let them, however, proceed to the
+study of the veritable Howard, and
+all the mystery clears up. The philanthropist
+of the orator gives place
+to one who, in the essential elements
+of his character, may be ranked with
+Christian missionaries and Christian
+martyrs. Instead of the half-pagan
+ideal, or personification of benevolence,
+there rises before them a character
+which a rigorous analysis might
+justly class with those of St Francis
+or Loyola, or whatever the Christian
+church has at any time exhibited of
+exalted piety and complete self-devotion.
+The same spirit which, in past
+times, has driven men into the desert,
+or shut them up in cells with the
+scourge and the crucifix; the same
+spirit which has impelled them to
+brave all the dangers of noxious climates
+and of savage passions, to extend
+the knowledge of religion amongst
+barbarous nations&mdash;was animating
+Howard when he journeyed incessantly
+from prison to prison, tracking
+human misery into all its hidden and
+most loathsome recesses. He who, in
+another century, would have been the
+founder of a new order of barefooted
+monks, became, in Protestant England,
+the great exemplar of philanthropic
+heroism. Perhaps he too, in
+one sense, may be said to have founded
+a new religious order, though it is
+not bound together by common rules,
+and each member of it follows, as he
+best may, the career of charitable enterprise
+that lies open before him.
+The mystery, we say, clears up. Benevolent
+our Howard was, undoubtedly,
+by nature, as by nature also he
+was somewhat imperious; but that
+which converted his benevolence into
+a ceaseless motive of strenuous action,
+of toil, and of sacrifice; that
+which <em>utilised</em> his natural love of authority,
+transforming it into that requisite
+firmness and predominance
+over others without which no man, at
+least no reformer, can be rigidly just,
+and, face to face, admonish, threaten,
+and reprove; that which constituted
+the mainspring and vital force of his
+character, was intense piety, and the
+all-prevailing sense of duty to his God.
+The craving of his soul was some great
+task-work, to be done in the eye of
+Heaven. Not the love of man, nor
+the praise of man, but conscience, and
+to be a servant of the Most High,
+were his constant motive and desire.</p>
+
+<p>Men of ardent piety generally apply
+themselves immediately to the reproduction
+in others of that piety which
+they feel to be of such incomparable
+importance. This becomes the predominant,
+often the sole object of
+their lives. It is natural it should be
+so. In such minds all the concerns of
+the present world sink into insignificance;
+and their fellow-men are
+nothing, except as they are, or are
+not, fellow-Christians. Howard was
+an exception to this rule. Owing to
+certain circumstances in his own life;
+to the manner of his education; to
+his deficiency in some intellectual
+qualifications, and his pre-eminence in
+others, he was led to take the domain
+of physical suffering&mdash;of earthly
+wretchedness&mdash;for the province in
+which to exert his zeal. For the
+preacher, or the writer, he was not
+formed, either by education or by
+natural endowment; but he was a
+man of shrewd observation, of great
+administrative talent, of untiring perseverance,
+and of an insatiable energy.
+The St Francis of Protestant England
+did not, therefore, go forth as a missionary;
+nor did he become the founder
+of a new sect, distinguished by any
+doctrinal peculiarity; but he girded
+himself up to visit, round the world,
+the cell of the prisoner&mdash;to examine
+the food he ate, the air he breathed,
+to rid him of the jail-fever, to drive
+famine out of its secret haunts, and
+from its neglected prey. It was this
+peculiarity which led men to segregate
+Howard from the class to which,
+by the great elements of his character,
+he belongs. To relieve the common
+wants of our humanity was his object&mdash;to
+war against hunger and disease,
+and unjust cruelties inflicted by man
+on man, was his chosen task-work;
+therefore was it vaguely supposed that
+the sentiment of humanity was his
+great predominant motive, and that he
+was driven about the world by compassion
+and benevolence.</p>
+
+<p>His remains lie buried in Russia.
+Dr Clarke, in his travels through that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+country, relates that "Count Vincent
+Potoçki, a Polish nobleman of the
+highest taste and talents, whose magnificent
+library and museum would do
+honour to any country, through a
+mistaken design of testifying his respect
+for the memory of Howard, has
+signified his intention of taking up the
+body that it might be conveyed to his
+country seat, where a sumptuous
+monument has been prepared for its
+reception, upon a small island in the
+midst of a lake. His countess, being
+a romantic lady, wishes to have an
+annual <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fête</i> consecrated to benevolence;
+at this the nymphs of the
+country are to attend, and strew the
+place with flowers." There are many,
+we suspect, of his own countrymen and
+countrywomen, who would be disposed
+to honour the memory of Howard in
+a similar manner. They would hang,
+or carve, their wreaths of flowers upon
+a tomb where the emblems of Christian
+martyrdom would be more appropriate.
+We need hardly add that the design
+of the romantic countess was not put
+into execution.</p>
+
+<p>The vague impression prevalent of
+this remarkable man has been perpetuated
+by another circumstance.
+Howard has been unfortunate in his
+biographers. Dr Aikin, the earliest
+of these, writes like a gentleman and
+a scholar; manifests throughout much
+good sense, a keen intelligence, and a
+high moral feeling; but his account is
+brief, and is both defective and deceptive
+from his incapacity, or unwillingness,
+to portray the religious aspect
+of the character he had undertaken to
+develop. Dr Aikin's little book may
+still be read with advantage for the
+general remarks it contains, but it is
+no biography. Neither was Dr Aikin
+calculated for a biographer. He
+wanted both the highest and the lowest
+qualifications. Details, such as of
+dates and places, he had not the
+patience to examine; and he wanted
+that rarer quality of mind by which
+the writer is enabled to throw himself
+into the character of a quite different
+man from himself, and almost feel by
+force of sympathy the motives which
+have actuated him. This the cultivated,
+tasteful, but, in spite of his verse,
+the quite didactic mind of Aikin, was
+incapable of doing.</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. Samuel Palmer, who had
+known Howard for thirty years,
+appended to a sermon, preached on
+the occasion of his death, some account
+of his life and career. But this,
+as well as several anonymous contributions
+to magazines, and a brief
+anonymous life which appeared at the
+same time, can be considered only in
+the light of materials for the future
+biographer.</p>
+
+<p>The task lay still open, and Mr
+Baldwin Brown, barrister-at-law, undertook
+to accomplish it. He appears
+to have had all the advantages a
+biographer could desire. He had
+conversed with the contemporaries
+and friends of Howard, and with his
+surviving domestics&mdash;an advantage
+which no subsequent writer could
+hope to profit by; he was put in possession
+of the materials which the
+Rev. Mr Smith and his family, intimate
+friends of Howard, had collected
+for the very purpose of such a work
+as he was engaged on; Dr Brown,
+professor of theology at Aberdeen,
+another intimate friend of Howard,
+transcribed for him, from his commonplace
+book, the memoranda of conversations
+held with Howard, and committed
+to writing at the time; and,
+above all, he was furnished with extracts
+and memoranda from diaries
+kept by Howard himself, and which
+fortunately had escaped the general
+conflagration to which the philanthropist,
+anticipating and disliking
+the curiosity of the biographer, had
+devoted his papers. Several influential
+men amongst the Dissenters interested
+themselves in obtaining information
+for him; and the list of those
+to whom he expresses obligations of
+this kind, occupies two or three pages
+of his preface. Mr Brown was himself
+a man of religious zeal&mdash;we presume,
+from his work, a Dissenter: he
+could not fail to appreciate the religious
+aspect of Howard's character. As
+a lawyer, he was prepared to take an
+interest in the subject of his labours&mdash;the
+reformation of our prisons and our
+penal laws. Thus he brought to his
+task many peculiar advantages; and
+the work he produced was laborious,
+conscientious, and very valuable.
+Unfortunately, Mr Baldwin Brown
+was a dull writer, by which we here
+imply that he was also a dull thinker,
+and his book will be pronounced by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
+the generality of readers to be as dull
+as it is useful. Notwithstanding the
+attractive title it bears, and the many
+interesting particulars contained in it,
+his biography never attained any
+popularity. It was probably read
+extensively amongst the Dissenters,
+to whose sympathies it more directly
+appeals than to those of any other class
+of readers; but we think we are right
+in saying that it never had much
+circulation in the world at large.</p>
+
+<p>More parsonic than the parsons,
+our lawyer-divine can resist no opportunity
+for sermonising. The eloquence
+of a Dissenting pulpit, and that when
+it is but indifferently <em>supplied</em>&mdash;the
+tedious repetition, and the monotonous
+unmodulated periods of his legal
+text-books&mdash;these combine, or alternate,
+through the pages of Mr Brown.
+Yet those who persevere in the perusal
+of his book will be rewarded.
+He is judicious in the selection of his
+materials. He presents us with the
+means of forming an accurate conception
+of Howard; though, in so doing,
+he seems to reveal to an attentive
+reader more than he had well understood
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>Tedious or not, this is still the only
+biography of Howard. A Mr Thomas
+Taylor has written what appears to
+be an abridgment of the work. His
+book is more brief, but it is still more
+insipid. What notion Mr T. Taylor
+has of biography may be judged of
+from this, that he thinks it necessary,
+in quoting Howard's own original
+letters, to amend and improve the
+<em>style</em>&mdash;preserving, as he says, the sense,
+but correcting the composition. He
+is apparently shocked at the idea that
+the philanthropist should express himself
+in indifferent English, even though
+in a hasty letter to a friend.</p>
+
+<p>Very lately Mr Hepworth Dixon,
+whose work has recalled us to this
+subject, has presented us with a life
+of Howard. It cannot be said of Mr
+Dixon's book that it is either dull or
+insipid; it has some of the elements
+of popularity; but we cannot better
+describe it in a few words than by
+saying that it is a <em>caricature</em> of a
+popular biography. Its flippancy, its
+conceit, its egregious pretensions, its
+tawdry <em>novelistic</em> style, are past all
+sufferance. It is too bad to criticise.
+But as, in the dearth of any popular
+biography of Howard, it has assumed
+for a time a position it by no means
+merits, we cannot pass it by entirely
+without notice. For, besides that
+Mr Dixon writes throughout with
+execrable taste, he has not dealt
+conscientiously with the materials
+before him. His notion of the duty
+of a biographer is this&mdash;that he is to
+collect every incident of the least
+piquancy, no matter by whom related,
+or on what authority, and colour it
+himself as highly as he can. Evidently
+the most serious preparation
+he has made, for writing the life of
+Howard, has been a course of reading
+in French romances. It is with the
+spirit and manner of a Eugene Sue
+that he sits down to describe the
+grand and simple career of Howard.</p>
+
+<p>Mr Dixon has not added a single
+new fact to the biography of Howard,
+nor any novelty whatever, except such
+as he has drawn from his own imagination.
+Nor does he assist in sifting
+the narrative; on the contrary, whatever
+dust has the least sparkle in it,
+though it has been thrice thrown away,
+he assiduously collects. That he
+should have nothing new to relate is
+no matter of blame; it is probable
+that no future biographer will be able
+to do more than recast and reanimate
+the materials to be found in Brown
+and Aikin. But why this pretence of
+having written a life of Howard from
+"original documents?" We beg pardon:
+he does not absolutely say that
+he has written <em>the Life of Howard</em> from
+original documents&mdash;the original
+document, for there is but one, may
+apply to the "<em>prison-world of
+Europe</em>," of which also he professes
+to write. This "earliest document
+of any value connected with the
+<em>penology of England</em>," which, with
+much parade, he prints for the first
+time, relates to the state of prisons
+before the labours of Howard. Impossible
+to suppose, therefore, that
+Mr Hepworth Dixon meant his readers
+to infer that, by the aid of this document,
+he was about to give them an
+original Life of Howard.</p>
+
+<p>Let us look at Mr Dixon's preface&mdash;it
+is worth while. It thus commences:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"Several reasons combined to induce
+the writer <em>to undertake the work of making
+out for the reading world</em> a new biography<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+of Howard; the chief of them fell under
+two heads:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"<em>It lay in his path.</em> Years ago now,
+circumstances, which do not require to be
+explained in this place, called his attention
+to the vast subject of the <em>prison-world</em>."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>We must stop a moment to admire
+this favourite magniloquence of our
+author. Howard wrote a report on
+the state of prisons; Mr Dixon writes
+on nothing less than the <em>prison-world</em>
+of Europe! He heads his chapters&mdash;"The
+Prison-world of the Continent,"
+"The Prison-world of England." If
+Mr Dixon, in his patriotic labours,
+should turn his attention to the
+nuisance of Smithfield market, he
+would certainly give us a treatise on
+"The <em>Butcher-world</em> of Europe," with
+chapters headed, with due logical gradation,
+"The Butcher-world of England,"
+and "The Butcher-world of
+London."</p>
+
+<p>"It lay in his path," was one reason
+why he wrote his biography.
+"It needed to be done," was the
+other. We agree in the last of these
+reasons, whatever demur we make to
+the first. A more popular biography
+than Mr Brown's would certainly be a
+useful book. But what can Mr Dixon
+mean by saying, that, "although
+Howard was the father of prison-science,
+the story of his life has
+hitherto been made out without reference
+to that fact?" Messrs Brown
+and Aikin were not, then, aware that
+the excitement of the public attention
+to the great subject of prison-discipline
+was the chief result, and the
+direct and ostensible aim of the labours
+of Howard!</p>
+
+<p>But now we arrive at Mr Dixon's
+statement of his own peculiar resources
+for writing the Life of Howard, and
+the valuable contributions he has
+made to our better knowledge of the
+man; in short, his claims upon our
+gratitude and confidence:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"It has been the writer's study to
+render this biographical history of Howard
+as worthy of its subject, and of the confidence
+of the reader, as the nature of the
+materials at his disposal would allow.
+He has carefully collated every document
+already printed&mdash;made, and caused to be
+made, numerous researches&mdash;conversed
+with persons who have preserved traditions
+and other memorials of this subject&mdash;travelled
+in his traces over a great
+number of prisons&mdash;examined parliamentary
+and other records for such new
+facts as they might afford&mdash;and, in conclusion,
+has consulted these several sources
+of information, and interpreted their
+answers by such light as his personal
+experience of the prison-world suggested
+to be needful. The result of this labour
+is, that some new matter of curious interest
+has turned up&mdash;<em>amongst other
+things</em>, a manuscript throwing light on
+the early history of prison reforms in this
+country, found in the archives of the
+Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge,
+and for which he is indebted to
+the courtesy of the secretary, the Rev. T.
+B. Murray; and the writer is assured
+<em>that no other papers</em> exist in any known
+quarter. The material for Howard's life
+is therefore <em>now fully collected</em>; whether
+it is herein finally used, will entirely
+depend upon the verdict of the reader."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>From all this mystification, the
+reader is at least to conclude that
+something very important has been
+done, and contributions very valuable
+have been made, for a final biography
+of Howard. Documents collated&mdash;researches
+made, and caused to be
+made&mdash;then a discovered manuscript,
+which now is, and now is not, appertaining
+to the subject&mdash;assurance
+"that no other papers exist in any
+known quarter!"&mdash;"materials <em>now</em>
+fully collected!" Oh, Admirable
+Crichton! Our author has done all
+this for us! Our author has read the
+memoirs of Baldwin Brown&mdash;and that
+not very attentively: if he has done
+more it is a pity, because there is not
+the least trace of it in his book. Our
+author has read the memoirs of
+Baldwin Brown, and travestied his
+narrative, and then writes this preface,
+as a travesty, we presume, of erudite
+prefaces in general. The book altogether
+does not belong to literature,
+but is a sort of parody upon literature.</p>
+
+<p>We may as well give our readers
+the benefit of the rest of the preface:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"The mental and moral portraiture of
+Howard attempted in this volume is new."
+[Fortunately, and to the recommendation
+of the volume, it is not new, but a transcript
+of that which his predecessor had
+drawn.] "As the writer's method of
+inquiry and of treatment was different to
+that ordinarily adopted, so his result is
+different. His study of the character was
+earnest, and, he believes, faithful. After<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
+making himself master of all the facts of
+the case which have come down to us,
+biographically and traditionally, his plan
+was to <em>saturate himself with Howardian
+ideas</em>, and then strive to reproduce them
+<em>living, acting, and suffering</em> in the real
+world."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>How the Howardian ideas <em>suffered</em>
+from this process, we can somewhat
+guess. The rest of the sentence is not
+so plain:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"The writer lays down his pen, not
+without regret. Long accustomed to
+contemplate one of the most noble and
+beautiful characters in history, he has
+learnt to regard it with a human affection;
+and at parting with his theme&mdash;the
+mental companion of many hours, and the
+object of his constant thoughts&mdash;<em>he feels
+somewhat like a father who gives away his
+favourite daughter in marriage</em>. He does
+not lose his interest in his child; but she
+can be to him no longer what she has
+been. A touch of melancholy mingles
+with his joy. He still regards his offspring
+with a tender solicitude&mdash;<em>but his
+monopoly of love is ended</em>."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Oh, surely no!</p>
+
+<p>We propose, as far as our limits
+will permit, to retrace the chief incidents
+in the biography of Howard.
+A brief sketch of his life and character
+may not be unacceptable to our readers.
+Such strictures as we have passed
+upon his latest biographer, Mr Dixon,
+we shall have abundant opportunities
+to justify as we proceed.</p>
+
+<p>The well-known monument in St
+Paul's Cathedral, which, from the
+circumstance of the key held in the
+hand of the statue, has been sometimes
+taken by foreigners for the representation
+of the apostle St Peter, bears
+inscribed on the pedestal that Howard
+"was born in Hackney, in the county
+of Middlesex, September 2, 1726."
+But both the place and the year of
+his birth have been differently stated
+by his biographers. The Rev. S.
+Palmer, who had known him long,
+writes that he was born at Clapton;
+Dr Aikin, that he was born at Enfield.
+To the authority of the Doctor,
+on such a point as this, we attach no
+weight; it is plain to us that he gave
+himself little trouble to determine
+whether he was born at Clapton or
+Enfield. It was probably at Clapton;
+but Clapton is in the parish of Hackney,
+so that there is really no discrepancy
+between Mr Palmer's statement
+and that on the monument. The
+year 1726 seems also to be generally
+received as the most probable date of
+his birth. After all the discussion, we
+may as well adhere to the inscription
+on the pedestal of the statue.</p>
+
+<p>The father of Howard had acquired
+a considerable fortune in business as
+an upholsterer and carpet warehouseman
+in Long Lane, Smithfield. He
+was a dissenter, of Calvinistic principles;
+and, it is presumed, an Independent.
+The question has been
+raised, whether our Howard was
+descended from any branch of the
+noble family of that name; but his
+biographers generally agree in rejecting
+for him the honours of such a
+pedigree. Nor can any one be in the
+least degree solicitous to advance
+such a claim. The military achievements
+of a Norman ancestry would
+diffuse a very incongruous lustre over
+the name of our Christian philanthropist.
+Thus much, however, is
+evident, that at one time there existed
+some tradition, or belief, or pretence,
+in the family of the citizen Howard,
+that they were remotely connected
+with the noble family whose name
+they share. "The arms of the Duke
+of Norfolk, and of the Earls of Suffolk,
+Effingham, and Carlisle, are placed at
+the head of the tombstone which
+Howard erected to the memory of his
+first wife, on the south side of Whitechapel
+churchyard." Such is the assertion
+of the anonymous biographer in
+the <cite>Universal Magazine</cite>, (vol. lxxxvi.)
+who stands alone, we believe, in maintaining
+the validity of this claim. And
+Mr Brown, after quoting these words,
+adds&mdash;"From actual inspection of
+the mouldering monument, I can assure
+those of my readers who may feel
+any curiosity on the subject, that
+this description of its armorial bearings
+is correct; and am further enabled
+to add, on the authority of his relative,
+Mr Barnardiston, that the distinguished
+individual by whom that
+monument was erected, occasionally
+spoke of Lord Carlisle as his relative;
+thus claiming at least a traditional
+descent from the Howards, Earls of
+Suffolk." That such a man as Howard
+should have used these arms <em>once</em> is
+significant; that he should have used
+them only once, is equally so. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
+was one of the last men, if we have
+read his character correctly, who
+would have assumed what he did not,
+at the time, think himself entitled to;
+and one of the last who would shrink
+from claiming a right where his title
+was clear.</p>
+
+<p>Mr Dixon not only rejects the
+claim, but is highly indignant that
+it should ever have been suggested.
+"Howard sprang from a virgin and
+undistinguished soil;"&mdash;why the upholsterer's
+should be peculiarly <em>a virgin
+soil</em> we do not see. "Attempts,
+however, have not been wanting to
+<em>vulgarise</em> his origin&mdash;to rob its greatness
+of its most natural charm&mdash;by
+circling his brows with the <em>distant
+glitter</em> of a ducal crown; by finding in
+his simple lineaments the trace of
+noble lines, and in his veins the consecrated
+currents of patrician blood."
+Strange waste of eloquent indignation!
+But he does not keep quite
+steady in his passion. "No," he
+exclaims, "let Howard stand alone.
+His reputation rests upon a basis
+already broad enough. <em>Why should
+we pile up Pelion on Olympus?</em>" There
+was, then, a Pelion to pile upon Olympus?
+We had thought not. Our
+author should have kept these red and
+purple patches at a greater distance:
+they do not harmonise.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile the father of Howard had
+so little of what is commonly called
+aristocratic pride, that although he
+had retired from business, and had a
+good property&mdash;and property, too, in
+land&mdash;to leave to his son, he yet
+wished that son to tread in his own
+footsteps. He apprenticed him to a
+wholesale grocer in Watling Street.</p>
+
+<p>The education of young Howard
+was such as is, or was, generally given
+to a lad of respectable parents intended
+for trade. He was at two
+schools. Of the first, Howard himself
+is reported to have said, that,
+having been there seven years, "he
+left it not fully taught in any one
+thing." He left it when a boy, and
+what boy ever left his school "fully
+taught in any one thing?" The remark
+is rather characteristic of the
+speaker than condemnatory of John
+Worsley, the schoolmaster in question.
+His second school was kept by
+a Mr Eames, a man of acknowledged
+ability. But how long he remained
+there is not known. At this school
+he made the friendship of one Price,
+afterwards that Dr Price who remains,
+to all posterity, impaled in Burke's
+<cite>Letter on the French Revolution</cite>. The
+great orator thrust his spear through
+his thin texture, and pinned him to
+the board; and never, but in this rich
+museum, will any one behold or think
+of Dr Price. Perhaps he deserved a
+better fate, but his case is hopeless
+now. Yet, if it can heal his memory
+to connect his name with one who was
+not a <em>revolutionary philanthropist</em>, let
+him have all the benefit of the association.
+Howard had never acquired
+the art of writing his own language
+with ease and correctness, and therefore
+it will be directly understood
+how valuable to him, in the preparation
+of his reports, was the help of a
+literary friend. That literary friend
+he found in Dr Price. In a letter to
+him, Howard writes, "It is from your
+kind aid and assistance, my dear
+friend, that I derive so much of my
+character and influence. I exult in
+declaring it, and shall carry a grateful
+sense of it to the last hour of my
+existence."</p>
+
+<p>After his father's death, Howard
+purchased his freedom from the wholesale
+grocer's in Watling Street, and
+travelled upon the Continent. He
+was not without taste for the arts;
+and it was at this time, Mr Brown
+supposes, that he brought with him
+from Italy those paintings with which
+he afterwards embellished his favourite
+seat at Cardington.</p>
+
+<p>On returning from this tour, he
+took lodgings at Stoke Newington, in
+the house of Mrs Loidore, a widow,
+upwards of fifty, of rather humble
+station in life, and a perpetual invalid.
+She, however, nursed him with so
+much care, through a severe illness, by
+which he was attacked while residing
+under her roof, that, on his recovery,
+he offered her marriage. "Against
+this unexpected proposal," says Mr
+Brown, "the lady made remonstrances,
+principally upon the
+ground of the great disparity in their
+ages; but Mr Howard being firm to
+his purpose, the union took place, it
+is believed, in the year 1752, he being
+then in about the twenty-fifth year
+of his age, and his bride in her
+fifty-second. Upon this occasion, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+behaved with a liberality which seems
+to have been inherent in his nature,
+by settling the whole of his wife's
+little independence upon her sister.
+The marriage, thus singularly contracted,
+was productive of mutual
+satisfaction to the parties who entered
+it. Mrs Howard was a woman of
+excellent character, amiable in her
+disposition, sincere in her piety, endowed
+with a good mental capacity,
+and forward in exercising its powers
+in every good word and work."</p>
+
+<p>Thus runs the sober narrative of Mr
+Brown. Not so does Mr Dixon let
+pass the opportunity for fine descriptive
+writing. Read and admire:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"As he became convalescent, his plan
+ripened into form. When the danger had
+entirely passed away, his health was restored
+to its accustomed state; he offered
+her, as the only fitting reward of her
+services&mdash;a toy? an ornament? a purse?
+a house? an estate? or any of those
+munificent gifts with which wealthy and
+generous convalescents reward their favourite
+attendants? No. He offered
+her his hand, his name, his fortune! Of
+course, the good lady was astonished at
+the portentous shape of her patient's
+gratitude. She started objections, being
+older, and having more worldly prudence
+than her lover. It is even said that she
+seriously refused her consent to the
+match, urging the various arguments
+which might fairly be alleged against it,&mdash;the
+inequality in the years, fortune,
+social position of the parties, and so
+forth&mdash;but all to no purpose. Howard's
+mind was made up. During his slow
+recovery, he had weighed the matter
+carefully&mdash;had come to the conclusion
+that it was his duty to marry her, and
+nothing could now change his determination.
+The struggle between the two
+must have been extremely curious: the
+sense of duty on both sides, founded upon
+honest convictions, no doubt,&mdash;the mutual
+respect without the consuming fire,&mdash;the
+cool and logical weighing of arguments,
+in place of the rapid pleading of triumphant
+passion; the young man without the
+ordinary inspirations of youth, on the
+one hand; the widow, past her prime, yet
+simple, undesigning, unambitious, earnestly
+struggling to reject and put aside
+youth, wealth, protection, honour, social
+rank,&mdash;the very things for which women
+are taught to dress, to pose, to intrigue,
+almost to circumvent heaven, on the
+other;&mdash;form together a picture which
+has its romantic interest, in spite of the
+incongruity of the main idea. Humble
+life is not without its heroic acts. <em>Cæsar
+refusing the Roman crown</em>, even had he
+been really serious, and without after-thought
+in its rejection, <em>is a paltry piece
+of magnanimity, compared with Mrs
+Loidore's refusal of the hand of Howard</em>.
+At length, however, her resistance was
+overcome by the indomitable will of her
+suitor. One of the contemporary biographers
+has thrown an air of romance over
+the scene of this domestic struggle, which,
+if the lady had been young and beautiful&mdash;that
+is, if the element of passion could
+be admitted into the arena&mdash;would have
+been truly charming. As it is, the reader
+may receive it with such modifications as
+he or she may deem necessary. 'On the
+very first opportunity,' says this grave
+but imaginative chronicler, 'Mr Howard
+expressed his sentiments to her in the
+strongest terms of affection, assuring her
+that, if she rejected his proposal, <em>he would
+become an exile for ever to his family
+and friends</em>. The lady was upwards of
+forty [true enough! she was also upwards
+of fifty, good master historian,] and
+therefore urged the disagreement of
+their years, as well as their circumstances;
+but, after <em>allowing her four-and-twenty
+hours for a final reply</em>, his eloquence
+surmounted all her objections,
+and she consented to a union wherein
+gratitude was to supply the deficiencies
+of passion!' Criticism would only spoil
+the pretty picture&mdash;so let it stand."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Criticism had already spoilt the
+picture, such as it is. But this matters
+not to Mr Dixon. The quotation
+he has thought fit to embellish
+his pages with, is taken from an
+anonymous pamphlet published in
+1790, under the title of <cite>The Life of
+the late John Howard, Esquire, with a
+Review of his Travels</cite>. Mr Dixon,
+however, evidently extracts it second-hand
+from the note in Mr Brown,
+where it is quoted, with some other
+passages from the same performance,
+for the express purpose of refutation
+and contradiction. This is what Mr
+Dixon would call <em>artistic</em>&mdash;the picking
+up what had been discarded as worthless,
+and, with a gentle shade of doubt
+thrown over its authenticity, making
+use of it again.</p>
+
+<p>A note of Mr Brown's, in the same
+page of his memoirs, (p. 634,) will
+supply us with another instance of
+this ingenious procedure. That note
+runs thus:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"We are informed in the memoirs of
+Mr Howard, published in the <cite>Gentleman's
+Magazine</cite><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>, that, during the period of his
+residing as a lodger in the house of Mrs
+Loidore, he used to ride out in the morning
+for a few miles with a book in his
+pocket, dismount, turn his horse to graze
+upon a common, and spend several hours
+in reading. 'On a very particular inquiry,
+however,' says the author of the
+<cite>Life of Mr Howard</cite>, inserted in the
+<cite>Universal Magazine</cite>, 'of persons very
+intimate, and who had often rode out
+with him, we are assured that they never
+saw, nor ever <em>heard</em> of such a practice.'"</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Mr Dixon makes use of the first
+part of the note, ignoring the second.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"It is said," he writes, gravely suspending
+his judgment on the authenticity
+of the fact&mdash;"it is said, in a contemporary
+biographical notice, that he would frequently
+ride out a mile or two in the
+country, fasten his nag to a tree, or turn
+him loose to browse upon the way-side;
+and then, throwing himself upon the
+grass, under a friendly shade, would read
+and cogitate for hours. This statement,
+if true, would indicate more of a romantic
+and poetical temperament in Howard,
+than the generally calm and Christian
+stoicism of his manner would have led
+one to expect."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>That Mr Dixon never consulted the
+memoir itself, in the <cite>Gentleman's
+Magazine</cite>, we shall by-and-by have
+an opportunity of showing. That
+memoir, worthless as an authority,
+has become notorious for the calumny
+it originated. But this collator of
+documents, this inquirer after traditions,
+this maker of unimaginable researches,
+has never turned over the
+pages of the <cite>Gentleman's Magazine</cite> for
+that obituary which, owing to its
+slanderous attack, has excited so much
+controversy in all the biographies of
+Howard, his own included.</p>
+
+<p>This wife, so singularly selected,
+died two or three years after her marriage.
+Howard is again free and
+solitary, and again betakes himself to
+travel. We are in the year 1755, and
+the great earthquake of Lisbon has
+laid that city in ruins. He goes to
+see the grand and terrific spectacle.
+Dr Aikin calls it a sublime curiosity.
+We presume that no other motive
+than curiosity impelled him on this
+occasion; it would be certainly very
+difficult to suggest any other. No
+difficulties, however, daunt Mr Dixon.
+According to him,&mdash;"Howard, attracted
+by reports of the unexampled
+sufferings of the survivors, no sooner
+found himself at his own disposal,
+than he determined to haste with all
+possible speed to their assistance!"
+Single-handed, he was to cope with the
+earthquake.</p>
+
+<p>Lisbon, however, he was not fated
+to reach. The vessel he sailed in was
+taken by a French privateer, and he,
+with the rest of the passengers and
+crew, carried into Brest, and there
+retained prisoner of war. The calamities
+of imprisonment he here endured
+himself, and under no mild form:
+afterwards, when other circumstances
+had drawn his attention to the condition
+of the prisoners, the remembrance
+of his own sufferings came in aid of
+his compassion for others. "Perhaps,"
+he says, in the preface to his
+first report, "what I suffered on this
+occasion increased my sympathy with
+the unhappy people, whose case is the
+subject of this book."</p>
+
+<p>Released upon parole, he returned
+to England, obtained his exchange,
+and then sat himself down on his
+estate at Cardington. Here he occupied
+himself in plans to ameliorate the
+condition of his tenantry. Scientific
+studies, and the study of medicine, to
+which, from time to time, he had applied
+himself, also engaged his attention.
+It was at this period he was
+elected a member of the Royal Society,
+not assuredly, as Mr Thomas Taylor
+presumes, from the "value attached"
+to a few communications upon the
+state of the weather, but, as Dr
+Aikin sensibly tells us, "in conformity
+to the laudable practice of that society,
+of attaching gentlemen of fortune
+and leisure to the interests of knowledge,
+by incorporating them into
+that body."</p>
+
+<p>Howard now entered into matrimony
+a second time. On the 25th
+April 1758, he married Henrietta
+Leeds, second daughter of Edward
+Leeds, Esq. of Croxton, in Cambridgeshire.
+This alliance is pronounced by
+all his biographers to be in every respect
+suitable. Parity of age, harmony
+of sentiment, and, on the part of the
+lady, the charms of person and amiability
+of temper, everything contributed
+to a happy union. And it was
+so. Unfortunately, the happiness
+was as brief as it seems to have been
+perfect. His second wife also expired<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
+after a few years,&mdash;"the only years,"
+Howard himself has said, "of true
+enjoyment he had known in life."</p>
+
+<p>On this occasion, Mr Dixon, after
+infusing into Howard "the bland and
+insinuating witchery of a virgin passion,"
+proceeds to describe his Henrietta
+in the most approved language
+of the novelist: "Although her features
+were not cast in the choicest
+mould of Grecian beauty, she was
+very fair&mdash;had large impressive eyes,
+an ample brow, a mouth exquisitely
+<em>cut</em>," &amp;c. Shall we never again get
+the chisel out of the human face?</p>
+
+<p>Connected with this second marriage
+of Howard, his biographers relate
+a trait of character which will be differently
+estimated by different minds&mdash;we
+relate it in the words of Mr
+Dixon:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"We must not omit an incident that
+occurred before the ceremony, which is
+very significant of Howard's frankness
+and firmness at this epoch. Observing
+that many unpleasantnesses arise in families,
+from circumstances trifling in themselves,
+in consequence of each individual
+wishing to have his own way in all things,
+he determined to avoid all these sources
+of domestic discord, by establishing his
+own paramount authority in the first instance.
+It is just conceivable that his
+former experience of the wedded life may
+have led him to insist upon this condition.
+At all events, he stipulated with
+Henrietta, <em>that, in all matters in which
+there should be a difference of opinion between
+them, his voice should rule</em>. This
+may sound very ungallant in terms, but
+it was found exceedingly useful in practice.
+Few men would have the moral
+honesty to suggest such an arrangement
+to their lady-loves at such a season;
+though, at the same time, few would
+hesitate to make the largest mental reservations
+in their own behalf. It may
+also be, that few young belles would be
+disposed to treat such a proposition otherwise
+than with ridicule and anger, however
+conscious <em>they</em> might be, that as soon
+as the hymeneal pageantries were passed,
+their surest means of happiness would lie
+in the prompt adoption of the principle so
+laid down.</p>
+
+<p>"Would that men and women would
+become sincerer with each other! The
+great social vice of this age is its untrustfulness."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>And Mr Dixon thereupon launches
+into we know not what heroics upon
+etiquette, upon English law, morals,
+and the constitution, all <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à propos</i> of
+Henrietta's obedience! For our own
+part, we do not look with much respect
+upon this stipulation which calls forth
+the admiration of Mr Dixon, and apparently
+meets with his cordial sympathy.
+Such a stipulation would probably
+be a mere nullity; with, or
+without it, the stronger will would predominate;
+but if we are to suppose
+it a really binding obligation, forming
+the basis of the conjugal union, it presents
+to us anything but an attractive
+aspect. It was the harsh feature in
+Howard's character, or the mistaken
+principle that he had adopted&mdash;this
+love of an authority&mdash;this claim to a
+domestic absolutism&mdash;which was to
+give no reasons, and admit of no
+questioning.</p>
+
+<p>In justice to the character of Howard,
+we must not leave this matter entirely
+in the hands of Mr Dixon.
+Everything he draws is, more or less,
+a caricature. The authority on which
+his narration is founded is the following
+statement of the Rev. S. Palmer,
+given in Brown, p. 55:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"The truth is," says Mr Palmer, in his
+manuscript memoir of his distinguished
+friend, "he had a high idea (some of his
+friends may think, too high) of the
+authority of the head of a family. And
+he thought it right, because most convenient,
+to maintain it, for the sake of
+avoiding the unhappy consequences of
+domestic disputes. On this principle I
+have more than once heard him <em>pleasantly
+relate</em> the agreement he made with the
+last Mrs Howard, previous to their marriage,
+that, <em>to prevent all altercation about
+those little matters</em> which he had observed
+to be the chief grounds of uneasiness in
+families, he should always decide. To
+this the amiable lady readily consented,
+and ever adhered. Nor did she ever
+regret the agreement, which she found to
+be attended with the happiest effects.
+Such was the opinion she entertained,
+both of his wisdom and his goodness, that
+she perfectly acquiesced in all that he
+did, and no lady ever appeared happier
+in the conjugal bonds."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Here the matter has a much less
+repulsive aspect than in Mr Dixon's
+version, who has, in fact, exaggerated,
+in his zeal, a trait of Howard's character,
+which his best friends seem
+always to have looked upon with more
+or less of regret and disapproval.</p>
+
+<p>As the only other circumstance connected<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
+with Howard's domestic life
+which we shall have space to mention,
+has also a peculiar reference to
+this trait in his character, we will
+depart from the chronological order of
+events, and allude to it here. His
+last wife left him one child, a son.
+This son grew up a dissolute youth;
+his ill-regulated life led to disease, and
+disease terminated in insanity. To
+this last malady, Mr Brown tells us
+he is authorised to say that there was
+a hereditary predisposition&mdash;we presume
+he means upon the mother's
+side.</p>
+
+<p>Immediately on the death of Howard,
+there appeared, amongst the obituaries
+of the <cite>Gentleman's Magazine</cite>, a memoir
+of the deceased, in which the
+miserable fate of the son is directly
+charged upon the severity of the
+father. The whole memoir is full of
+errors. For this, the extreme haste
+in which it was necessarily written
+forms an excuse. But no excuse can
+be given for the perverse and malignant
+spirit it betrays. The very
+next number of the magazine opens
+with four or five letters addressed to
+Mr Urban, all remonstrating against,
+and refuting this baseless calumny;
+and every biographer has felt himself
+compelled to notice and repel the
+slander.</p>
+
+<p>The fact is, that the writer or writers
+of the memoir&mdash;for several were engaged
+in concocting this very hasty
+and wretched performance&mdash;were quite
+ignorant, both of the education the
+son had received, and of the profligate
+course, and the consequent derangement
+of his health into which he had
+fallen. They knew only that the son
+was in a lunatic asylum, and that the
+father was a severe disciplinarian; and
+they most unwarrantably combined
+the two together, in the relation of
+cause and effect. "All prospects,"
+they say, speaking of the youth,
+"were blasted by paternal severity,
+which reduced the young man to such
+an unhappy situation as to require his
+being placed where he now is, or
+lately was."</p>
+
+<p>The vindication of Howard from
+this slander is complete; the origin
+of the son's malady is clearly traced;
+his affection for his child is amply demonstrated,
+and his unceasing anxiety
+to train him to virtue and piety is
+made equally manifest. But his
+most intimate friends entertained the
+opinion that his conduct towards his
+son was not <em>judicious</em>, and that his
+method of training up the youth was
+by no means so wisely, as it was conscientiously
+adopted. This is the sole
+charge, if such it can be called, to
+which the father is obnoxious; nor,
+from this, do we pretend to acquit
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"It is agreed, on all hands," says
+Mr Brown, "that Howard entertained
+the most exalted notions of the
+authority of the head of a family&mdash;notions
+derived rather from the Scriptural
+history of patriarchal times than
+from any of our modern codes of
+ethics, or systems of education." Accordingly,
+we are told that he trained
+up his child from earliest infancy to an
+implicit obedience. Without once
+striking the child, but by manifesting
+a firmness of purpose which it was
+hopeless to think of shaking, he established
+such an authority over him
+that Howard himself, on one occasion,
+said, that "if he told the boy to
+put his finger in the fire, he believed
+he would do it." When he was an
+infant, and cried from passion, the
+father took him, laid him quietly in
+his lap, neither spoke nor moved,
+but let him cry on till he was wearied.
+"This process, a few times repeated,
+had such an effect, that the child, if
+crying ever so violently, was rendered
+quiet the instant his father took him."
+When he grew older, the severest
+punishment his father inflicted was to
+make him sit still in his presence,
+without speaking, for a time proportioned
+to the nature of the offence.
+But this impassive, statue-like firmness
+must have precluded all approach
+to companionship or confidence on the
+part of the son. It was still the obedience
+only of fear. "His friends,"
+we quote from Mr Brown, "and
+amongst the rest the most intimate of
+them, the Rev. Mr Smith, thought
+that in the case of his son he carried
+those patriarchal ideas rather too
+far, and that by a lad of his temper
+(the son is described as of a lively disposition)
+he would have been more
+respected, and would have possessed
+more real authority over him, had he
+attempted to convince him of the reasonableness
+of his commands, instead<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+of always enforcing obedience to them
+on his parental authority." We therefore
+may be permitted to say, that we
+look upon this aspect of Howard's
+character as by no means estimable.
+As a husband he claimed an unjust
+prerogative, and as a parent he
+divorced authority from persuasion,
+nor allowed obedience to mingle and
+ally itself with filial affection.</p>
+
+<p>Mr Dixon does not, of course, omit
+his tribute of indignation against the
+calumny of the <cite>Gentleman's Magazine</cite>.
+We said that he had not given himself
+the trouble to look at the memoir
+itself which he denounces. Here is
+the proof:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"The atrocious slander to which reference
+is made," says Mr Dixon, "was
+promulgated in the <cite>Gentleman's Magazine</cite>,
+in an obituary notice of the philanthropist.
+The charge was made <em>on the strength
+of one asserted fact</em>&mdash;namely, that Howard
+had once locked up his son for several
+hours in a solitary place, put the key
+into his pocket, and gone off to Bedford,
+leaving him there till he returned at
+night. On the appearance of this article,
+the friends of the illustrious dead came
+forth publicly to dispute the fact, and to
+deny the inferences deduced from it.
+Meredith Townsend, one of Howard's
+most intimate friends, sifted the story to
+the bottom, and gave the following
+account of its origin."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The charge was <em>not</em> made on the
+strength of this one asserted fact&mdash;nor
+on any fact whatever&mdash;it was made
+on the mere authority of the writer.
+The story alluded to is <em>not to be found</em>
+in the obituary of the <cite>Gentleman's
+Magazine</cite>. The writers of that obituary
+had never heard of the story, or
+we may be sure they would have made
+use of it. The friends of the illustrious
+dead could not, therefore, have
+come forward, in refutation of this
+article, to "dispute the fact and deny
+the inferences." If Mr Dixon had
+but read Brown's memoirs attentively
+he would not have fallen into this
+blunder, which shows how little else
+he can have read.</p>
+
+<p>The story alluded to had been circulated
+during the life of Howard, and
+when he was absent on one of his
+journeys. The Rev. Mr Townsend,
+"many years Mr Howard's pastor at
+Stoke Newington," took the first
+opportunity <em>he</em> had of mentioning it to
+Howard himself, who contradicted it,
+and related to him the incident which
+he supposed must have given rise to
+the report. On the death of Howard
+the story was again revived, where, or
+by whom, Mr Brown does not tell us.
+The Rev. Mr Palmer thereupon obtained
+from Mr Townsend the explanation
+which he had received from
+Howard himself. The letter which
+the latter gentleman addressed to the
+Rev. Mr Palmer is given at length in
+Brown, (note, p. 645.) This letter
+the Rev. Mr Palmer communicates
+to the <cite>Editor of the Universal Magazine</cite>,
+and mentions that extracts from
+it, unauthorised by him, had found
+their way into the <cite>Gentleman's Magazine</cite>.</p>
+
+<p>The explanation of the story there
+given, is briefly this. Howard was
+engaged one day with his child in the
+root-house, which served also as a
+summer-house, when the servant came
+in great haste, to say that a gentleman
+on horseback wished to speak to him
+immediately. Not to lose time, he
+told the little fellow to sit quiet, and
+he would soon come to him again. To
+keep him out of mischief he locked the
+door. The gentleman kept him in
+conversation longer than he expected,
+and caused his forgetting the child.
+Upon the departure of the guest, recollecting
+where the child had been
+left, he flew to set him at liberty, and
+found him quietly sleeping on the matting
+of the floor.</p>
+
+<p>It was on the 31st March 1765 that
+Howard lost his second wife. After
+spending some time in the now melancholy
+retirement of Cardington, he
+again quits England for the Continent.
+Travel is still with him, as with so
+many others, the mere relief for unavailing
+sorrow, or for the wasting
+disease of unemployed energies. It is
+during this journey to Italy that we
+are able to trace, more distinctly than
+usual, the workings of Howard's mind.
+Some memoranda, and fragments of a
+diary which he kept, have given us
+this insight.</p>
+
+<p>It was his design to proceed to the
+south of Italy. He stops at Turin.
+He is dissatisfied with himself. This
+life of sight-seeing, this vagrancy of
+the tourist, does not content him. He
+will go no further. But we must give
+the extract itself from his journal.
+We quote from the more faithful text<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+of Mr Brown&mdash;Mr Dixon having the
+habit of omitting, here and there, a
+sentence if it does not please his taste,
+and tricking the whole out with dashes
+and a novel punctuation.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"<em>Turin, 1769, Nov. 30.</em>&mdash;My return
+without seeing the southern part of Italy
+was on much deliberation, as I feared a
+misimprovement of a Talent spent for
+mere curiosity, at the loss of many Sabbaths,
+and as many donations must be
+suspended for my pleasure, which would
+have been as I hope contrary to the general
+conduct of my Life, and which on a
+retrospective view on a death Bed would
+cause Pain as unbecoming a Disciple of
+Christ&mdash;whose mind should be formed in
+my soul.&mdash;These thoughts, with distance
+from my dear boy, determine me to check
+my curiosity and be on the return.&mdash;Oh,
+why should Vanity and Folly, Pictures
+and Baubles, or even the stupendious (<em>sic</em>)
+mountains, beautiful hills, or rich valleys,
+which ere long will all be consumed, engross
+the thoughts of a candidate for an
+eternal everlasting kingdom&mdash;a worm
+ever to crawl on Earth whom God has
+raised to the hope of Glory which ere
+long will be revealed to them which are
+washed and sanctified by Faith in the
+blood of the Divine Redeemer! Look
+forward, oh! my Soul! how low, how
+mean, how little is everything but what
+has a view to that glorious World of
+Light, Life, and Love&mdash;the Preparation
+of the Heart is of God&mdash;Prepare the Heart,
+Oh! God! of thy unworthy Creature, and
+unto Thee be all the glory through the
+boundless ages of Eternity.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">
+Sign'd J. H.
+</p>
+
+<p>"This night my trembling soul almost
+longs to take its flight to see and know
+the wonders of redeeming Love&mdash;join the
+triumphant Choir&mdash;Sin and Sorrow fled
+away&mdash;God my Redeemer all in all&mdash;Oh!
+happy Spirits that are safe in those mansions."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Accordingly he retraces his steps.
+He flies back to Holland. He is now
+at the Hague. It is Sunday evening,
+11th February 1770. Here is a portion
+of his self-communing. Many of
+these quotations we will not give; we
+know they look out of place, and produce
+a strange, and not an agreeable
+impression, when met with in the
+walks of polite literature. But, without
+some extracts, it is impossible to form a
+correct idea of the character of Howard.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"Oh! the wonders of redeeming love!
+Some faint hope, even I! through redeeming
+mercy in the perfect righteousness&mdash;the
+full atoning sacrifice shall, ere
+long, be made the instrument of the rich
+free grace and mercy of God through the
+divine Redeemer. Oh, shout my soul
+grace, grace&mdash;free, sovereign, rich, unbounded
+grace! Not I, not I, an ill deserving,
+hell deserving creature!&mdash;but
+where sin has abounded, I trust grace
+superabounds. * * * *</p>
+
+<p>"Let not, my soul, the interests of a
+moment engross thy thoughts, or be preferred
+to my eternal interests. Look
+forward to that glory which will be revealed
+to those who are faithful to death.
+My soul, walk thou with God; be faithful,
+hold on, hold out, and then&mdash;what
+words can utter!&mdash;J. H."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>But he could not rest in Holland.
+"Continuing in Holland," he writes,
+"or any place, lowers my spirits."
+He returns to Italy. He visits Genoa,
+Pisa, Florence, Rome, and extends
+his tour to Naples.</p>
+
+<p>It was, and may still be, a custom
+with a certain class of religious people,
+to make, in writing, a solemn
+covenant with God, and sign it with
+their own hand. It is at Naples that
+Howard retires into his chamber, indites
+and signs such a covenant. He
+appears, afterwards, to have carried
+it with him. With the same sort of
+formality with which a person republishes
+a will, he "renews the covenant,
+Moscow, September 27, 1789."</p>
+
+<p>Through the remainder of this journey
+we need not follow him. He
+returns to England, and we see what
+sort of man has landed on its shores.</p>
+
+<p>Those who are acquainted with
+the religious world and religious biographies,
+will bear us out when
+we say, that the language we have
+quoted from this journal, and the
+other extracts which may be read in
+Brown, would not, <em>of themselves</em>, manifest
+any extraordinary degree of piety
+or self-devotion. With a certain class
+of persons, such language has become
+<em>habitual</em>; with others, it really expresses
+nothing but a very transitory
+state of excitement. Solemn self-denunciations&mdash;enthusiastic
+raptures&mdash;we
+have heard them both, from the
+lips of the most worldly, selfish,
+money-loving men we have ever
+known. It is the after life of Howard
+which proves that in him such language
+had its first, genuine, full meaning.
+These passages from his diary
+explain his life, and his life no less
+explains them.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>On his return to Cardington, he occupied
+himself, as before, with plans
+to improve the condition of his tenantry;
+building for them better houses,
+and erecting a school. But at length
+an event occurred which supplied his
+self-consuming energy with the noble
+task it craved. Elected High Sheriff
+for the county of Bedford, the duties
+of his office led him to the interior of
+the prison. He witnessed the sufferings,
+the extortion, the injustice, the
+manifold cruelty, which the supineness
+of the legislature allowed to reign and
+riot there.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"The distress of prisoners," he tells
+us, in the preface to his first report,
+"came more immediately under my notice,
+when I was sheriff of the county of
+Bedford; and the circumstance which
+excited me to activity in their behalf was
+the seeing some, who, by the verdict of
+juries, were declared <em>not guilty</em>; some,
+on whom the grand jury did not find such
+an appearance of guilt as subjected them
+to trial; and some, whose prosecutors
+did not appear against them; after having
+been confined for months, dragged
+back to jail, and locked up again, till
+they should pay <em>sundry fees</em> to the jailor,
+the clerk of assize, &amp;c. In order to redress
+this hardship, I applied to the justices
+of the county for a salary to the
+jailor in lieu of his fees. The bench were
+properly affected with the grievance, and
+willing to grant the relief desired; but
+they wanted a precedent for charging the
+county with the expense. I, therefore,
+rode into several neighbouring counties
+in search of a precedent; but I soon
+learned that the same injustice was practised
+in them; and, looking into the prisons,
+I beheld scenes of calamity, which
+I grew daily more and more anxious to
+alleviate."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>These oppressions, these calamities
+he dragged to light. He may be said
+to have <em>discovered</em> them&mdash;so indifferent,
+at this time, was one class of the
+community to the misery of another.
+His official position gave him just that
+elevation requisite to make his voice
+heard. The attention of parliament
+was roused. He was examined before
+a committee of the whole House; he
+received the thanks of parliament;
+and a bill was passed to remunerate
+the jailor by a salary, instead of by
+fees&mdash;thus remedying one of the most
+extraordinary mal-practices that was
+surely ever endured in a civilised
+society.</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, was a task to strain all
+his powers, and absorb all his benevolence.
+Here was misery to be alleviated,
+and injustice to be redressed,
+and a nation to be aroused from its
+culpable negligence. Benevolent,
+liberal, systematically and perseveringly
+charitable, not averse to the
+exercise of authority and censorship,
+of restless and untameable energy,
+and of a singular constancy and firmness
+of purpose, the task employed
+all his virtues, and what in some
+positions of life would have proved
+to be his failings. Even to his love
+of travel, his new occupation suited
+him. What wonder that, with all
+these aptitudes, the <em>religious man</em>,
+devoured by his desire to do some
+good and great work, should have
+devoted to it his life and his fortune,
+his days and his nights, and every
+faculty of his soul. He had now
+found his path. His foot was on it;
+and he trod it to his dying hour.</p>
+
+<p>After inspecting the jails of England,
+Scotland, and Ireland, he, in
+1775, took the first of those journeys
+on the Continent, which had, for their
+sole object, the inspection of prisons.
+And henceforward, in all his travels,
+he is so absorbed in this one object,
+that he pays attention to nothing else.
+Not the palace, rich with painting and
+sculpture; not the beautiful hills and
+valleys&mdash;only the prison and the lazaretto
+can retain him for a moment.
+Once he is tempted to hear some fine
+music&mdash;it distracts his attention&mdash;he
+foregoes the music. The language of
+Burke, in his well-known panegyric,
+is true as it is eloquent.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"He has visited all Europe&mdash;not to
+survey the sumptuousness of palaces or
+the stateliness of temples&mdash;not to make
+accurate measurements of the remains of
+ancient grandeur, nor to form a scale of
+the curiosity of modern art&mdash;not to collect
+medals or collate manuscripts&mdash;but to
+dive into the depths of dungeons, to
+plunge into the infection of hospitals, to
+survey the mansions of sorrow and pain,
+to take the gauge and dimensions of
+misery, depression, and contempt, to remember
+the forgotten, to attend to the
+neglected, to visit the forsaken, and compare
+and collate the distresses of all men,
+in all countries. His plan is original, and
+it is full of genius as it is of humanity.
+It was a voyage of discovery, a circumnavigation
+of charity. Already the benefit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
+of his labour is felt more or less in
+every country. I hope he will anticipate
+his final reward, by seeing all its effects
+fully realised in his own."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>But the boon&mdash;for a great task of
+this kind was a veritable boon to such
+a spirit as Howard's&mdash;was nearly
+missed. Before he went abroad on his
+first journey of philanthropy, he ran
+the risk of being imprisoned himself,
+within the walls of the House of
+Commons, as member for the town of
+Bedford. The borough had formerly
+been under the control of the house of
+Russell. Responding to the cry of
+"Wilkes and Liberty!" the corporation
+had risen against their lord. To
+free themselves from his control, they
+had boldly created five hundred honorary
+freemen, coined, in short, five
+hundred votes, which were to be at
+their own disposal. The measure
+seems to have passed undisputed.
+They were, of course, victorious.
+Whom they elected, in the first glow of
+patriotism, we do not know; but, after
+a few years, the corporation rewarded
+their own patriotic efforts by selling
+the borough to the highest bidder.
+Such, at least, was the accusation
+brought against them in the town of
+Bedford itself, where a strong party
+rose which made strenuous efforts to
+wrest the election out of their hands.
+By this party, Whitbread and Howard
+were put in nomination. The candidates
+of the corporation were Sir W.
+Wake and Mr Sparrow. After a severe
+struggle on the hustings, and in
+the committee of the House of Commons,
+the election was decided in
+favour of Whitbread and Wake.
+Howard lost his election&mdash;happily, we
+think&mdash;by a majority only of four votes.</p>
+
+<p>On his return from the Continent,
+he published his first report on the
+state of prisons. We had designed to
+give some account of this, and the
+subsequent publications of Howard,
+but our space absolutely forbids.
+Perhaps some other opportunity will
+occur, when we can review the history
+of our prisons, to which the volumes
+of Howard form the most valuable
+contribution. We must content ourselves
+with a few general remarks on
+his labours, and with the briefest
+possible account of this the great and
+eventful period of his life.</p>
+
+<p>To lead our readers over the numerous,
+toilsome, and often perilous
+journeys which Howard now undertook,
+for this national and philanthropic
+object of improving our prisons and
+houses of correction, would be utterly
+impracticable. But, to give them at
+once some adequate idea of his incessant
+activity, we have thrown into a
+note a summary, taken from Dr
+Aikin, of what may be considered as
+his public labours.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
+
+<p>These long, incessant, and often<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+repeated journeys&mdash;were they necessary,
+some will be tempted to ask, for
+the object he had in view? Surely a
+few instances, well reasoned on, would
+have been sufficient to put us on the
+right track for the reformation of our
+prisons. But it should be considered,
+in the first place, that Howard was
+teaching a people pre-eminently practical
+in their intellectual character, a
+people who require to be taught by
+example and precedent. The most
+philosophical reasoning, the most eloquent
+diatribe, would not have availed
+half so much to stir the public mind,
+as, on the one hand, these details
+which Howard threw before it, fact
+upon fact, unsparingly, repeatedly&mdash;details
+of cruelty and injustice perpetrated
+or permitted by our own laws;
+and, on the other hand, this plain
+statement, brought from abroad, that
+in Ghent, that in Amsterdam, that
+even in Paris, many of the evils which
+we suffered to remain as incurable,
+<em>were</em> cured, or had never been allowed
+to exist. It was much to tell the
+citizen of London that in Flanders,
+and in Holland, there were prisons
+and bridewells that ought to put him
+to the blush.</p>
+
+<p>And, in the second place, let it be
+considered, that Howard himself was
+pre-eminently a practical man. He
+neither wrote books of speculation,
+nor thought in a speculative manner.
+It was from detail to detail that his
+mind slowly advanced to principles
+and generalisations. These prisons,
+they were his books; these repeated
+circuits he made through the jails of
+Europe, they were his course of reading.
+He reperused each blotted page of
+human misery till he was satisfied
+that he had comprehended all it could
+teach. He was no Beccaria to enunciate
+a principle from the recesses of
+his library, (though it should be mentioned,
+in passing, that he had read
+Beccaria&mdash;that the man of speculative
+talent had stimulated the man of
+administrative talent, and the two
+were co-operating, all over Europe,
+on the same great subject of penal
+legislation;) his eye was ever upon
+practices, he got wisdom in the concrete,
+principle and instance indissolubly
+combined: he so learnt, and
+he so taught.</p>
+
+<p>Again, in England itself, there was
+no system that equally regulated all
+the jails of the country; or, to speak
+more correctly, there was no uniformity
+in the abuses which existed
+amongst them. Arrangements were
+found in one, no trace of which might
+be discovered in another. All were
+bad, but the evils in each were different,
+or assumed different proportions.
+In some, there was no separation between
+the debtor and the criminal;
+in others, these were properly classified,
+but the criminal side might be
+more shamefully mismanaged than
+usual. In some, there was no attention
+paid to the sick; in others, the
+infirmary might be the only part of
+the jail that was not utterly neglected.
+There might be a good supply of
+medicine, and no food. In some,
+the separation of the two sexes was
+decently maintained; in others not.
+It was impossible to make any general
+statement that would not have
+called forth numerous contradictions.
+An accusation strictly just with regard
+to York, might be repelled with indignation
+by Bristol; whilst, on some
+other charge, Bristol might be the
+culprit, and York put on the show of
+injured innocence.</p>
+
+<p>Some prisons were private property;
+they were rented to the jailor,
+and he was to extract the rent and
+his profit, by what extortion he could
+practise on his miserable captives.
+These were prisons belonging to liberties,
+manors, and petty courts, of the
+existence of which few people were
+aware. In some of these the prisoner
+lay forgotten by his creditor&mdash;lay there
+to starve, or live on the scanty and
+precarious charity of those who gave
+a few pence to "the starving debtor."
+In many cases the jailor&mdash;for all remuneration
+and perquisite&mdash;was allowed
+<em>to keep a tap</em>. Of course, whatever
+was doled out to the prisoner by
+charity, was spent in drunkenness.
+The abuses were of all kinds, strange,
+and numberless. Howard tracked
+them out, one by one&mdash;recorded them&mdash;put
+them in his book&mdash;published
+them to the world.</p>
+
+<p>Add to all this, that, after some
+time, he became invested with the
+character of <em>censor</em> of the prisons.
+He looked through them to see that,
+when a good law <em>had</em> been made, it
+was obeyed. There was never a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+commissioner so universally respected.
+Men are not so bad but they all admired
+his great benevolence, and his
+justice equally great. No bribery, no
+compliments, and no threats, could
+avail anything. In vain the turnkey
+suggested to <em>him</em>, that the jail-fever
+was raging in the lower wards:
+the crafty official had so deterred
+many a visiting magistrate, who had
+thanked him politely for his warning,
+and retired. Howard entered, and
+found <em>no</em> jail-fever; but he found filth
+and famine, that had been shut up
+there for years from the eyes of all
+men. No danger deterred him. The
+infected cell, where the surgeon himself
+would not enter&mdash;from which he
+called out the sick man to examine
+him&mdash;was the very last he would
+have omitted to visit. This character
+of public censor he carried with
+him abroad, as well as at home. Foreign
+potentates courted his good
+opinion of their institutions&mdash;consulted
+him&mdash;shrank from his reproof&mdash;a
+reproof all Europe might hear. The
+Grand-duke of Tuscany, the Emperor
+of Germany, the Empress of Russia,
+were all anxious to see and hear him.
+He had no flattery for them; the report
+he gave was as faithful as a page
+out of his note-book.</p>
+
+<p>As a popular misconception has
+prevailed upon the character of Howard,
+attributing benevolence to him
+as almost a sole motive, so a like popular
+misconception has prevailed, as
+to the nature and objects of that benevolence.
+He is sometimes spoken of
+as if to visit the sick and the captive,
+and relieve <em>them</em> individually, was the
+main object of his charitable journeys,
+and his unremitting inquisitions. If,
+indeed, he had done nothing more
+than seek out those unhappy men,
+who, at the bottom of their infected
+dens, lay abandoned by all the world,
+he would have been entitled to our
+admiration, and to all the merits of a
+heroic charity. But he did more than
+this. He aimed at a permanent improvement
+of the condition of the
+prisoner. He aimed farther still. His
+object was the same which excites so
+much attention at the present moment:
+by a good system of imprisonment,
+both to punish and reform the
+criminal. "To make them better
+men," is a phrase often in his mouth,
+when speaking of prisoners; and he
+thought this might be effected by
+combining imprisonment with labour,
+with perfect abstinence from intoxicating
+drinks, and other good regulations.
+Those who will read his reports
+with attention, will be surprised to
+find how often he has anticipated the
+conclusions to which a wider experience
+has led the reflective men of our
+own age. There is a note of his upon
+Solitary Confinement which might be
+adopted as a summary of those views
+which enlightened men, after many
+trials of various systems, have rested
+in. No false sensibility accompanied
+the benevolence of Howard. In some
+respects he was a sterner disciplinarian
+than would be generally approved
+of.</p>
+
+<p>Upon this aspect of his character
+there remains only one remark to add:
+his mind was never absorbed in the
+great objects of a public philanthropy
+to an oblivion of his <em>near duties</em> and
+his private charities: he was to the
+last the just, considerate, benevolent
+landlord, quite as much as he was
+Howard the philanthropist.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"During his absence in one of his
+tours," says Dr Aikin, "a very respectable-looking
+elderly gentleman on horseback,
+with a servant, stopt at the inn nearest
+Mr Howard's house at Cardington, and
+entered into conversation with the landlord
+concerning him. He observed that
+characters often appeared very well at a distance,
+which could not bear close inspection;
+he had therefore come to Mr Howard's residence
+in order to satisfy himself concerning
+him. The gentleman then, accompanied
+by the innkeeper, went to the
+house, and looked through it, with the
+offices and gardens, which he found in perfect
+order. He next inquired into Mr
+Howard's character as a landlord, which
+was justly represented; and several neat
+houses which he had built for his tenants
+were shown him. The gentleman returned
+to his inn, declaring himself now
+satisfied with the truth of all he had
+heard about Howard. This respectable
+stranger was no other than Lord Monboddo;
+and Mr Howard was much
+flattered with the visit, and praised his
+lordship's good sense in taking such a
+method of coming at the truth, since he
+thought it worth his trouble."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The traveller who undertook all
+these philanthropic journeys was a
+man of slight form, thin, and rather
+beneath the average height. Every<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
+feature, and every movement, proclaimed
+energy and determination.
+"An eye," says Dr Aikin, "lively and
+penetrating, strong and prominent features,
+quick gait and animated gestures,
+gave promise of ardour in forming,
+and vivacity in executing his designs."
+"Withal there was a bland smile,"
+says another of his biographers, "always
+ready to play upon his lips." "I
+have," continues Aikin, "equally seen
+the tear of sensibility start into his
+eyes, on recalling some of the distressful
+scenes to which he had been witness;
+and the spirit of indignation
+flash from them, on relating instances
+of harshness and oppression." In his
+dress and person he was remarkably
+neat, and in his ablutions, we are told,
+punctilious as a Mussulman;&mdash;far
+more so, we suspect. For the rest, he
+had reduced his wants to the lowest
+possible scale. Water and the simplest
+vegetables sufficed. Animal food,
+and all vinous and spirituous liquors,
+he had utterly discarded. Milk, tea,
+butter, and fruit were his luxuries;
+and he was equally sparing in the
+quantity of food, and indifferent as
+to the stated times of taking it.</p>
+
+<p>From the prisoner, and the subject
+of prison-discipline, it is well known
+that the attention of Howard was
+directed to measures for arresting the
+plague. It was a grand idea this&mdash;that
+he would lead the way to some general
+scheme to be adopted throughout
+Europe, and the contiguous parts of
+Asia, for checking the incursions of,
+and perhaps finally exterminating,
+the plague. For no object did he
+suffer so much, or expose himself to
+so great dangers; embarking purposely
+in a vessel with a foul bill
+of health, and undergoing the perilous
+confinement of the lazaretto,
+that every practice of the quarantine
+might be thoroughly known to him. Nowhere
+was his conduct more heroic. It
+cannot be said here, however, that his
+object was equally well chosen, or that
+his labours were attended with any good
+result. Whilst it would be difficult to
+over-estimate the value of his service
+as inspector-general of the prisons of
+Europe, we can detect nothing in this
+latter scheme but an unfortunate waste
+of heroic benevolence. In dealing
+with jails and houses of correction, he
+was dealing with evils, the nature of
+which he, and all men, could well understand;
+but, in dealing with the
+pestilence, he was utterly in the dark
+as to the very nature of the calamity he
+was encountering. It is very probable
+that, had he realised his utmost
+wishes, and built a lazaretto on the
+most improved plan, combining every
+valuable regulation he had observed
+in every lazaretto of Europe, it would
+only have proved an additional
+nuisance.</p>
+
+<p>This period of his life is more full
+of striking incidents than any other,
+but we must hurry rapidly over it.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"The point," says Mr Brown, "at
+which he wished to commence his new
+investigations was Marseilles; but the extreme
+jealousy of the French government
+respecting their Levant trade, had long
+kept the lazaretto of that port carefully
+concealed from the eye of every foreigner;
+but, as Mr Howard's object was such as
+ought to have awakened neither political
+nor commercial jealousy in any one, Lord
+Caermarthen, then secretary of state for
+foreign affairs, made an application to the
+French minister for permission for him to
+view this celebrated building. After
+waiting some time at the Hague, in expectation
+of its arrival, he went to Utrecht
+to visit his friend Dr Brown, at whose
+house he received a letter from his lordship,
+informing him, not only that the request
+he preferred had been peremptorily
+refused, but that he must not think of
+entering France at all, as, if he did, he
+would run a risk of being committed to the
+Bastille. Howard, however, was not to
+be deterred. He started immediately for
+Paris. At Paris, "having gone to bed,
+according to his usual custom, about ten
+o'clock, he was awaked between twelve
+and one, by a tremendous knocking at
+his room door, which, starting up, in
+somewhat of an alarm, he immediately
+opened; and, having returned to bed, he
+saw the chambermaid enter with a candle
+in each hand, followed by a man in a black
+coat, with a sword by his side, and his
+hands enveloped in an enormous muff.
+This singular personage immediately
+asked him if his name was not Howard.
+Vexed at this interruption, he hastily
+answered, 'Yes&mdash;and what of that?' He
+was again asked if he had not come to
+Paris in the Brussels diligence, in company
+with a man in a black wig? To
+this question he returned some such
+peevish answer, as that he paid no attention
+to such trifles; and his visitor immediately
+withdrew in silence. Not a
+little alarmed at this adventure, though<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
+losing none of his self-possession, and
+being unable to compose himself to sleep,
+Mr Howard got up; and, having discharged
+his bill the night before, took his small
+trunk, and, removing from this house, at
+the regular hour of starting took his seat
+in the diligence, and set off for Lyons."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Such is the narrative of Mr Brown.
+It has been supposed that this midnight
+visitor was an officer of the police, and
+that, had Howard remained a few
+hours longer at his hotel, he would
+have been arrested. But some mystery
+still hangs over this adventure.
+Howard, in one of his letters, alluding
+to it, says that he had since learnt
+who his strange visitor was, and adds
+that "he had had a narrow escape;"
+and his biographer Mr Brown tells
+us that&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"He learned that the man in a black wig
+was a spy, sent with him to Paris, <em>by the
+French Ambassador at the Hague</em>, and
+that he himself would have been arrested
+then, (at Paris,) if Mr Le Noir had not
+been at Versailles on the day of his arrival;
+and, several persons having recently been
+arrested on very false or frivolous grounds,
+he had left orders for no arrests being
+made before his return, which was not
+until late in the evening of the next day,
+when he was pursued, but not overtaken."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>If it was this that Howard learnt,
+we think his informant must have deceived
+him. An air of great improbability
+hangs over this story. The
+French government is represented as
+being so anxious to arrest Howard, if
+he should enter France, that it sends a
+spy to travel with him from the Hague;
+if so, the identity of Howard was
+sufficiently known to the police on his
+arrival at Paris. Yet we are next
+told that an officer visits Howard at
+midnight, only to assure himself that
+it <em>is</em> Howard;&mdash;pays a visit, in short,
+that can have no other effect than to give
+the alarm to his intended captive. In
+addition to this, we are to suppose that
+this person, whom the French government
+is so anxious to arrest, pursues
+his journey unmolested, and spends
+five days at Marseilles, visiting the
+very lazaretto to which it was known
+he was bound, and the inspection of
+which that government was so solicitous
+to prevent.</p>
+
+<p>As to the other motives by which
+Mr Brown accounts for these hostile
+proceedings of the French government,
+we can attach no weight to
+them whatever. On a previous visit
+to Paris, Howard had been extremely
+desirous to survey the interior of the
+Bastille. Not being able to obtain
+permission, he had boldly knocked at
+the outer door, and, assuming an air
+of official authority, walked in. He
+had penetrated to some of the inner
+courts before this little <em>ruse</em> was detected.
+He was then, of course, conducted
+out. He was obliged to
+content himself with an account of
+the Bastille written in French, and
+the publication of which had been
+forbidden by the government. He
+obtained a copy, and translated it
+into English. For this, and for another
+cause of offence of a far slighter
+character, it is difficult to suppose
+that Howard had excited the peculiar
+animosity of the French government.</p>
+
+<p>Howard visited the lazaretto of
+Marseilles, however, under the full
+impression that the police were on the
+search for him. From Marseilles he
+went to Toulon, and inspected the
+arsenal and the condition of the galley-slaves.
+To obtain admission into
+the arsenal, he dressed himself, says
+Mr Brown, "in the height of the
+French fashion," Englishmen being
+strictly prohibited from viewing it at
+all. We are told that this disguise
+was easy to him, "as he always had
+much the air and appearance of a
+foreigner, and spoke the French language
+with fluency and correctness."
+Mr Dixon, faithful to his system of
+caricaturing all things, describes him
+as "dressed as an exquisite of the
+Faubourg St Honoré!" We presume
+that it was the French gentleman of
+the period, and not the French dandy,
+that Howard imitated.</p>
+
+<p>He next visited the several lazarettos
+of Italy&mdash;went to Malta&mdash;to
+Smyrna&mdash;to Constantinople, everywhere
+making perilous inquisitions
+into the plague. At Smyrna he is
+"fortunate enough" to meet with a
+vessel bound to Venice with a foul bill
+of health, and he embarks in it. On
+its way, the vessel is attacked by pirates.
+"The men," says Mr Brown,
+"defended themselves for a considerable
+time with much bravery, but were
+at length reduced to the alternative of
+striking, or being butchered by the
+Moors, when, having one very large
+cannon on board, they loaded it with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
+whatever missiles they could lay their
+hands upon, <em>and, pointed by Mr Howard
+himself</em>, it was discharged amongst
+the corsair crew with such effect that
+a great number of them were killed,
+and the others thought it prudent to
+sheer off." Pointed by Mr Howard
+himself! We can well understand it.
+The intrepid, energetic man, Fellow
+too of the Royal Society, would look at
+the elevation of the gun, and lend a
+helping hand to adjust it.</p>
+
+<p>We throw into a note a parting
+specimen of the manner of Mr Dixon.
+Not satisfied with the simple and probable
+picture which Mr Brown presents
+to us, he makes Howard load
+the gun as well as point it&mdash;makes
+him sole gunner on board; and in
+order to improve his <em>tableau</em>, after
+having fought half the battle through,
+recommences it, that he may discharge
+his gun with the more effect.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>
+Mr Dixon advertises, as his next
+forthcoming work, a history of our
+prisons. We are sorry that so good a
+subject has fallen into such bad hands.
+Unless he should greatly improve,
+we shall have a book necessarily replete
+with much popular and interesting
+matter, in not one page of which
+will the narrative be strictly trustworthy.</p>
+
+<p>At Venice he is conducted to the
+lazaretto, to undergo the quarantine.
+He is shut up in a close loathsome
+room, the very walls of which are
+reeking with foul and pestilential
+odours. Surely never was a valuable
+life so heroically ventured, for so futile
+a purpose. Whilst lying here, smitten
+with a low fever, he received&mdash;we
+quote from Mr Brown&mdash;"intelligence
+from England of two circumstances
+which had transpired there,
+each of them an occasion of the deepest
+affliction to his mind. The first
+was the formation of a fund for the
+erection of a statue to his honour;
+the second the misconduct of his only
+son."</p>
+
+<p>We can well believe they were <em>both</em>
+afflictions. Those who have entered
+into the character of Howard, will feel
+at once that the project of doing him
+any public honour would be, in his
+own language, "a punishment, and
+not a reward." It was mingling with
+his conduct and motives that very
+alloy of vanity, and consideration for
+men's opinion, which he was so anxious
+to keep them clear from. If a generous
+man has done a kind action for
+kindness' sake, how it spoils all if
+you <em>pay</em> him for it! You lower him
+at once. He refuses your payment;
+he would deny, if he could, his previous
+action; he begs, at all events,
+it may be utterly forgotten. To pay
+Howard in praise was, to his mind,
+as great an incongruity. He shrank
+from the debasing coin. He would
+have denied his philanthropy: "Say
+it is my hobby, if you will," he is
+heard at one time to mutter. Dying,
+he says to his friend&mdash;"Lay me
+quietly in the earth, place a sun-dial
+over my grave, and let me be forgotten."
+Child of Time&mdash;was it not
+enough?</p>
+
+<p>When he had escaped the lazaretto
+and returned to England, he wrote a
+letter to the gentlemen who had undertaken
+to collect subscriptions, requesting
+them to lay aside their project.
+The money collected was in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+part returned, a part was spent in
+liberating a certain number of poor
+debtors, and the residue was applied
+towards erecting, at his death, the
+statue of him in St Paul's Cathedral.</p>
+
+<p>His son he was compelled to consign
+to the care of a lunatic asylum.
+He now published the information he
+had obtained, at so much risk, upon
+lazarettos, and the mode of performing
+quarantine, together with additional
+observations upon prisons and
+hospitals at home and abroad. Connected
+with this publication, an incident
+is related, which shows the
+extraordinary value Howard had put
+on the materials he had collected, and
+also the singular perseverance and determination
+of the man. We give it
+in the words of Mr Brown:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"On his return from his Turkish tour,
+one of his boxes was stolen as he was getting
+into a hackney-coach in Bishopsgate
+Street, from the stage in which he had
+travelled from Dover. It contained a
+duplicate of his travels, twenty-five
+guineas, and a gold watch. The plan of
+the lazaretto of Marseilles, of which he
+possessed no duplicate, was, happily, <em>in
+the other box</em>. Had it not been so, he declared
+to his friend Dr Lettsom, that,
+notwithstanding the risks he had run in
+procuring that document, so important
+did he consider it, that he would a second
+time have exposed himself to the danger
+of a visit to France to supply its place."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>We believe he would.</p>
+
+<p>This publication completed, and his
+son so unhappily disposed of, the
+veteran philanthropist quitted his
+country again, and for the last time.
+It was still against the plague that his
+enterprise was directed. He seems
+to have thought that successful barricades,
+by quarantine and other measures,
+might be erected against it.
+With the plague, as with the cholera,
+it is generally admitted there is some
+occult cause which science has not
+yet penetrated; but the predisposing,
+or rather the co-operating causes, are,
+in both cases, dirt and bad diet; and
+the quarantine which would attack
+<em>these</em> is the only measure which, in
+our present state of knowledge, is
+worthy of serious consideration. It
+was his purpose, this time, to travel
+through Russia into Turkey, and
+thence, perhaps, to extend his journey
+far into the East, to whatever city
+this grim enemy of mankind might
+have taken possession of.</p>
+
+<p>He had reached as far as Cherson,
+on the eastern borders of Russia,
+visiting, according to his wont, prisons
+and hospitals on his way. Here he
+was seized by a fever which proved
+mortal, and which he is supposed
+to have caught in visiting, with his
+usual benevolence, a young lady, to
+whom also it proved fatal. He was
+buried in the grounds belonging to the
+villa of a French gentleman who had
+shown him much attention. A small
+brick pyramid, instead of the sun-dial
+he had suggested, was placed over his
+grave. The little pyramid or obelisk
+still stands, we are told&mdash;stands alone,
+"on a bleak desolate plain." But
+Protestant England has a monument
+in that little pyramid, which will do
+her as much honour as any colony or
+empire she has planted or subdued.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>THE DARK WAGGON.</h2>
+
+<h3>BY DELTA.</h3>
+
+
+<p class="center">I.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The Water-Wraith shrieked over Clyde,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The winds through high Dunbarton sighed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When to the trumpet's call replied<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">The deep drum from the square;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, in the midnight's misty shade,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With helm, and cloak, and glancing blade,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Two hundred horsemen stood arrayed<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Beneath the torches' glare.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">II.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Around a huge sepulchral van<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They took their stations, horse and man&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The outer gateway's bolts withdrawn,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">In haste the drawbridge fell;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And out, with iron clatter, went<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That sullen midnight armament,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Alone the leader knew where bent,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">With what&mdash;he might not tell.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">III.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Into the darkness they are gone:&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The blinded waggon thundered on,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, save of hoof-tramp, sound was none:&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Hurriedly on they scour<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The eastward track&mdash;away&mdash;away&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To none they speak, brook no delay,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till farm-cocks heralded the day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And hour had followed hour.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">IV.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Behind them, mingling with the skies,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Westward the smoke of Glasgow dies&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The pastoral hills of Campsie rise<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Northward in morning's air&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By Kirkintilloc, Cumbernold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And Castlecary, on they hold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Till Lythgo shows, in mirrored gold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Its palaced loch so fair.<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">V.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Brief baiting-time:&mdash;the bugle sounds,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Onwards the ponderous van rebounds<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Mid the grim squadron, which surrounds<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Its path with spur and spear.<br /></span><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+<span class="i0">Thy shrine, Dumanie, fades on sight,<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, seen from Niddreff's hazelly height,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The Forth, amid its islands bright,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Shimmers with lustre clear.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">VI.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The Maiden Castle next surveyed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Across the furzy hills of Braid,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By Craig-Milor,<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> through Wymet's glade<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">To Inneresc they wound;<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a><br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Then o'er the Garlton crags afar,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Where, oft a check to England's war,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Cospatrick's stronghold of Dunbar<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a><br /></span>
+<span class="i6">In proud defiance frowned.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">VII.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Weep through each grove, ye tearful rills!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ye ivied caves, which Echo fills<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With voice, lament! Ye proud, free hills,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Where eagles wheel and soar,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Bid noontide o'er your summits throw<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Storm's murkiest cloud! Ye vales below,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Let all your wild-flowers cease to blow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And with bent heads deplore!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center">VIII.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Ye passions, that, with holy fire,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Illume man's bosom&mdash;that inspire<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To daring deed, or proud desire,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">With indignation burn!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ye household charities, that keep<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Watch over childhood's rosy sleep,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ashes bestrew the hearthstone,&mdash;weep<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">As o'er a funeral urn!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">IX.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">On&mdash;on they speed. Oh dreary day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That, like a vampire, drained away<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The blood from Scotland's heart&mdash;delay,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Thou lingering sun to set!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Rain, twilight! rain down bloody dews<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">O'er all the eye far northward views;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nor do thou, night of nights! refuse<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">A darkness black as jet.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">X.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Heroic spirits of the dead!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That in the body nobly bled,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By whom the battle-field for bed<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Was chosen, look ye down,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And see if hearts are all grown cold,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">If for their just rights none are bold,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">If servile earth one bosom hold,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Worthy of old renown?<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">XI.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">The pass-word given, o'er bridge of Tweed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The cavalcade, with slackened speed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Rolled on, like one from night-mare freed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">That draws an easier breath;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But o'er and round it hung the gloom<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As of some dark, mysterious doom,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Shadows cast forward from the tomb,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And auguries of death.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">XII.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Scotland receded from the view,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, on the far horizon blue,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Faded her last, dear hills&mdash;the mew<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Screamed to its sea-isle near.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As day-beams ceased the west to flout,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Each after each the stars came out,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like camp-fires heaven's high hosts about,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">With lustre calm and clear.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">XIII.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And on, through many a Saxon town<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Northumbrian, and of quaint renown,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Before the morning star went down,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">With thunderous reel they hied;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">While from the lattices aloof,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Of many an angled, gray-stone roof.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Rose sudden heads, as sound of hoof<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And wheel to southward died.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center">XIV.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Like Hope's voice preaching to Despair,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Sweetly the chimes for matin prayer<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Melted upon the dewy air<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">From Hexham's holy pile;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But, like the adder deaf, no sound,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or stern or sweet, an echo found<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">'Mid that dark squadron, as it wound<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Still onwards, mile on mile.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">XV.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Streamers, and booths, and country games,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And brawny churls, with rustic names,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And blooming maids, and buxom dames,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">A boisterous village fair!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">On stage his sleights the jongleur shows,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like strutting cock the jester crows,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And high the morrice-dancer throws<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">His antic heels in air.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">XVI.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Why pause at reel each lad and lass?<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">A solemn awe pervades the mass;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Wondering they see the travellers pass,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">The horsemen journey-worn,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, in the midst, that blinded van<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">So hearse-like; while, from man to man,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Is it of Death"&mdash;in whispers ran&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">"This spectacle forlorn?"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">XVII.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Bright are thy shadowy forest-bowers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Fair Ashby-de-la-Zouche! with flowers;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The wild-deer in its covert cowers,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">And, from its pine-tree old,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The startled cushat, in unrest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Circles around its airy nest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As forward, on its route unblest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Aye on that waggon rolled.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">XVIII.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And many a grove-encircled town,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And many a keep of old renown,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That grimly watched o'er dale and down,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">They passed unheeding by;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Prone from the rocks the waters streamed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, 'mid the yellow harvests, gleamed<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The reapers' sickles, but all seemed,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Mere pictures to the eye.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">XIX.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Behold a tournay on the green!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The tents are pitched&mdash;the tilters keen<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Gambol the listed lines between&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">The motley crowds around<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For jibe, and jest, and wanton play<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Are met&mdash;a merry holiday;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And glide the lightsome hours away<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">In mirth, to music's sound.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center">XX.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">And hark! the exulting shouts that rise,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As, cynosure of circling eyes,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Beauty's fair queen awards the prize<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">To knight that lowly kneels.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Make way&mdash;make way!" is heard aloud&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Like Red Sea waters part the crowd,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And, scornful of that pageant proud,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">On grinding rush the wheels!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">XXI.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Hundreds and hamlets far from sight,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By lonely granges through the night<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">They camped; and, ere the morning light<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Crimsoned the orient, they<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By royal road, or baron's park,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Waking the watchful ban-dog's bark,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Before the first song of the lark,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Were on their southward way.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">XXII.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">By Althorpe, and by Oxendon,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Without a halt they hurried on,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Nor paused by that fair cross of stone,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Now for the first time seen,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">(For death's dark billows overwhelm<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Both jewelled braid, and knightly helm!)<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Raised, by the monarch of the realm,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">To Eleanor his queen.<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">XXIII.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Five times through darkness and through day,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Since crossing Tweed, with fresh relay<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ever in wait, their forward way<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">That cavalcade had held;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Now joy!!! for, on the weary wights,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Loomed London from the Hampstead heights,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">As, by the opal morning, Night's<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Thin vapours were dispell'd.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">XXIV.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">With spur on heel, and spear in rest,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And buckler'd arm, and trellised breast,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Closer around their charge they press'd&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">On whirled, with livelier roll,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The wheels begirt with prancing feet,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And arms,&mdash;a serried mass complete,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Until, by many a stately street,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">They reached their destined goal.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center">XXV.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Grim Westminster! thy pile severe<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Struck to the heart like sudden fear;&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">"Hope flies from all that enter here!"<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Seemed graven on its crest.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The moat o'erpassed, at warn of bell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Down thundering the portcullis fell,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And clang'd the studded gates,&mdash;a knell<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Despairing and unblest.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">XXVI.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Ye guardian angels! that fulfil<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Heaven's high decrees, and work its will&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Ye thunderbolts! launched forth to kill,&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Where was it then ye slept&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">When, foe-bemocked, in prison square,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">To death fore-doomed, with dauntless air,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">From out that van,<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">A shackled man&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i6">Sir William Wallace stept!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+<h2>THE GREEN HAND.</h2>
+
+<h3>A "SHORT" YARN.</h3>
+
+
+<h4>PART VII.</h4>
+
+<p>"Well," continued the commander,
+his voice making use of the breeze as
+he stood aft of the group, "I could
+not have slept more than three or four
+hours on a stretch, when I was woke
+up by a fellow shoving his lantern in
+my face, and saying it wasn't me he
+wanted; for which I gave him a hearty
+objurgation, and turned over with a
+swing of the cot to go to sleep again.
+The sailor grumbled something about
+the parson being wanted for the captain,
+and all at once it flashed on my
+mind where we were, with the whole of
+last night's ticklish work&mdash;seeing that,
+hard rub as it was, it had clean left
+me for the time. "Try the aftermost
+berth, then," said I, slipping out in
+the dark to put on my trousers. The
+fact was, on going below to our state-room,
+I had found my own cot taken
+up by some one in the confusion; and
+as every door stood open at night in
+that latitude, I e'en made free with
+the nearest, which I knew was the
+missionary's. In a minute or two I
+heard Westwood meet the mate, who
+said he thought the captain would
+like to see him, and hoped they hadn't
+"disturbed the other gentleman."
+"Oh no, I daresay not," said Westwood,
+rather nervously, guessing, I
+daresay, what he was wanted for;
+while Finch slipped quietly past to
+listen at the state-room door, where
+both he and I might hear the "other
+gentleman," whoever he was, snoring
+pretty plain. When the first officer
+shut the door to, however, turned the
+key, and put it in his pocket, I nearly
+gave vent to a whistle.&mdash;"I see!"
+thought I; "but, my fine fellow, it
+seemed you never were meant for a
+good jailor, anyhow!" He was no
+sooner gone than I walked forward
+toward the captain's cabin, near the
+after-hatchway, anxious enough to
+see how the poor man was, since I had
+had such a share in bringing him to a
+point, one way or another. Westwood
+was standing against the light
+out of the open door, and I looked in
+along with him, at the cot slung high
+to the beams like a lump of shadow,
+the lamp striking across below it on
+all the captain's little affairs&mdash;his
+glazed hat and his wet coat, the
+names of two or three old books,
+even, hanging in shelves against the
+bulkhead&mdash;and into the little state-room
+off the cabin, where the surgeon
+was stooping to mix a draught.
+The hard-featured Scotch mate stood
+holding the captain's wrist with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
+one clumsy flipper, as if trying
+to feel his pulse, fumbling about
+his own face with the other, and
+looking more concerned than I'd
+thought possible for him. "Well,
+I've slept a&mdash;good deal," said the
+captain, in a weak voice, putting up
+his hand slowly to rub his eyes, but
+seemingly quite composed, and knowing
+nothing of what had happened&mdash;which
+rid me of the horrid notion I
+could scarce help before, that he had
+known what he was about. His head
+was close shaved, and the look of a
+sailor clean gone off his face with the
+bluff, honest oak-colour it commonly
+had, till you'd have wished him decently
+in his bed thousands of miles off, with
+women slipping out and in; only the
+blood from his arm hanging down on
+the sheet, with the sharp point of his
+nose and the shape of his knees coming
+up off the shadow, kept it all in
+one with the wild affair on deck a
+few hours gone. "She's on her course,
+you say?" added he, listlessly. "Must
+be a <em>very</em> light breeze though, Mr
+Macleod." "So it is, sir; so it is,
+no doubt!" replied the second-mate,
+soothing him; "did ye say we'll
+<em>pent</em> the ship, sir?" "Ay, before we
+go into port, Mr Macleod, to be sure,"
+said Captain Williamson, trying to
+put a cheerful tone into his voice;
+"she's had a good deal of buffeting,
+but we musn't let 'em see it, you
+know! Didn't you lose a mizen-topmast
+somehow, though, Mr Macleod?"
+"'Deed ay, sir," said Macleod hastily,
+afraid he was getting upon the
+scent of what had happened; "the
+first officer's watch it was, sir&mdash;will I
+tell Mr Finch ye're wanting to speak
+to him about it, Captain Williamson?"
+and he began to shuffle towards the
+door. "Finch? Finch?" said the
+sick man, passing his finger over his
+eyes again; "what voyage <em>is</em> this,
+Mr Macleod?" "Why&mdash;why," said
+the Scotchman, starting, and rather
+puzzled himself. "Oo, it's just <em>this</em>
+voyage, ye know, sir! Mr Finch, ye
+mind, sir?" "No, no; don't let him
+leave the deck for a moment, Macleod!"
+said the captain anxiously:
+"harkye, James, I'm afraid I've
+trusted overmuch to the young man
+all along! I'll tell ye, Mr Macleod,
+I don't know whether I was asleep or
+not, but I <em>heard</em> him somewhere wishing
+he had the command of this ship!
+I shouldn't like him to take her off
+my hands! Have you seen the Scilly
+lights yet, Mr Macleod?" The mate
+shook his head; he had contrived to
+persuade the poor man we were far
+homeward bound. "If you'd only
+get the pilot aboard, Mr Macleod,"
+the captain went on, "I'd die contented;&mdash;but
+mind the charts&mdash;mind
+the charts&mdash;I've got the charts to
+mind for another sort of voyage myself,
+James!" "Hoot, hoot, captain!"
+said the Scotchman, "what sets ye
+for to talk after that fashion&mdash;you'll
+be up an' about decks directly, sir!
+What were ye saying about topem'sts
+now, sir?" Captain Williamson gave
+the second mate a glance that looked
+into him, and he held down his head,
+for the man evidently believed fully,
+as none of us could help doing, that
+there was death on the captain's face.
+"James, James!" said the captain
+slowly, "you've no notion how some
+things weigh on the mind at a pass of
+this kind! Other things one don't
+remember&mdash;but there's one in particular,
+almost as it were yesterday&mdash;why,
+surely you were with me that
+voyage, Mr Macleod! when I let
+some o' the passengers take a boat in
+a calm, and all&mdash;" Here he stopped,
+seemingly overcome. "There was
+one young creature amongst 'em," he
+went on, "the age of my own girl,
+Macleod&mdash;my own little Nan, you
+know&mdash;and now&mdash;now I miss <em>her</em>&mdash;and,
+and&mdash;" The poor man gave a great
+gulp, clutching the mate's arm, and
+gazing him in the face. "Wasn't it
+a long time ago?" said he, very anxiously;
+"if it wasn't, I would go mad!
+They were all drowned&mdash;drowned&mdash;I
+<em>see</em> that black squall coming down on
+the swell <em>now</em>, man, and the brig, and
+all of us looking out to the wind'ard!"
+"I mind something about it," replied
+Macleod stoutly, though he looked
+away; "'twas none o' your fault,
+though, Captain Williamson&mdash;they
+were just <em>fey</em>, sir; and more than
+that, if ye mind, sir, they took the
+boat again' all orders&mdash;on the sly, I
+may say." Westwood was on the
+point of starting forward to make
+known how the case stood, on the
+strength of our finding the paper in
+the bottle; when I pressed his arm,
+and whispered that it could only make<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
+things worse, and cheat the sick man
+of a notion more likely to do him good
+than otherwise. "It's a heavy charge,
+Mr Macleod, a heavy charge!" said
+he, falling back again; "and one Mr
+Brown needn't envy." "Mr <em>Finch</em>,
+sir, ye mind," put in the second mate,
+setting him right; "but keep up
+your heart, sir, for anysake!" "I
+feel I'll last over the time o' next
+full tide," said the captain solemnly.
+"I don't want to know <em>how</em> far we're
+off, only if there's any chance at all,
+Macleod, you won't spare canvass to
+carry her in." The Scotchman rubbed
+one of his hard cheek-bones after
+the other, and grumbled something or
+other in his throat by way of agreement.
+The whole thing was melancholy
+to see after last night's stir,
+with the dim lamp or two twinkling
+along the gloom of the steerage, the
+dead quietness of the ship, and the
+smothered sort of glare under the
+captain's cot bringing out the mere
+litter on the floor, to the very cockroaches
+putting their ugly feelers out
+of one of his shoes in a corner: he
+shut his eyes, and lay for a minute or
+two seemingly asleep, only murmuring
+something about a breeze, and
+then asking them to shove out the
+port, 'twas so close. The second
+mate looked to the surgeon, who
+signed to him to do it, as if it didn't
+much matter by this time; while he
+gave him the draught of physic he
+was mixing, however.</p>
+
+<p>The Indiaman was beginning to
+swing slowly before the first of the
+flood, stern off at her anchors; and
+whenever the port was opened, 'twas
+so still otherwise, that you heard the
+tide clearly in the cabin, rippling
+along the timbers to the copper upon
+her bows&mdash;plash, plash, and lap, lip,
+lap, like no other earthly sound that
+a man can hear&mdash;and you even began
+to note it on something else a good bit
+off, though it seemed to be all quite dark
+out-board. The captain's eyes opened
+by degrees, till we saw them looking
+at us out of the shadow of the cot,
+and the second mate started as if to
+mend his mistake; only 'twas plain
+enough, by that time, the captain <em>knew</em>
+the sound, half raising himself up and
+listening. A few early musquitoes
+came in, and, after dancing about to
+refresh themselves in the light and
+warmth under the cot, began to bite
+savagely; every one of us had a distant
+horn sounding in his ear, and
+each was rubbing it or his nose, except
+the sick man; but not one of them
+settled on him. As the starboard
+port slued gradually opposite to the
+nearest shore, a low, deep hum was
+carried in over the water, ebbing and
+flowing, and full of dim, creeping
+noises, like things stirring in their
+sleep, as if the little cabin had been an
+ear to the ship. At times the tree-frogs
+broke out in a loud clicking
+chirrup; then, between the fits of it,
+when all seemed still again for a moment
+or two, you heard a low, half-smothered,
+small sound, deeper down,
+as it were, fill up the break with its
+throbbing and trill-trilling, as if just
+<em>one</em> land-cricket or a grasshopper did
+it, till it came out as clear as though
+it were a child's rattle close by, and
+all of a sudden stopped; when back
+floated the huge whispering hum
+again, with a damp smell of leaves
+on a cold breath of the land air, that
+died away as quickly as it reached us.
+The bewilderment on Captain Williamson's
+white face for that minute's
+time was cruel to witness, and Macleod
+would certainly have closed the
+port, but for the captain's seizing his
+arm again, with a wild, questioning
+sort of a look into the second mate's
+eyes. "Oh, good God!" faltered out
+the captain, "it's&mdash;it's <em>land</em>!&mdash;where&mdash;where?&mdash;"
+"For goodsake, sir,"
+said Macleod, "don't ask me the
+now&mdash;take a bit sleep, sir." We
+could hear one another breathing,
+when ting-tang went four bells on
+deck. You heard it going across to
+the shore, as it were; and a few moments
+after, out of the humming far
+and wide along the land, back came
+the sound of another bell, toll upon
+toll, like some clock striking the hour
+a long way off. Then a third one followed
+on it, from a different direction,
+ringing clearer in the air; while the
+murmur and the rush seemed to swell
+up the more all round, and the
+plashing of the tide made the ship
+heave at her anchors. The mate shivered,
+Westwood and I started, but
+some extraordinary notion or other
+gleamed over the captain's face as he
+sat up. He was quite in his senses,
+too, apparently, though it seemed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
+be neither more nor less than sheer
+joy that overcame him, for he let out
+a long breath, and his eyes were glistening
+as if the tears stood in them.
+"James&mdash;James Macleod!" said he
+quickly, with a husky voice, "you
+oughtn't to've deceived one you've
+sailed so long with; but you meant
+me a good surprise, and 'twas kindly
+done of you! I know the very run
+o' the clocks off Greenwich Reach,
+man; d'ye think one could mistake
+the sound of Lon'on town, fidgeting
+when it wakes, either?&mdash;we're&mdash;we're
+<em>home</em> already!" And he fell back in
+the cot, with the drops running down
+his cheeks, smiling happily all the
+time at Macleod in a way that went
+to one's heart; while the Scotchman
+stared helplessly to the surgeon, who
+slipped to the port and closed it. "I
+know by your way, James," continued
+the poor man, "you wanted to send
+up to Virginia Row for 'em <em>all</em>; but
+don't send for an hour yet; better go
+up yourself and break it to 'em&mdash;<em>break</em>
+it to 'em, be sure of that, James; I
+shouldn't wonder but I pulled up,
+after all. Ay&mdash;that first one we heard
+was Greenwich Hospital&mdash;t'other in
+Dickson's brewery or Redriff&mdash;"
+Here his eyelids began to drop, owing
+to the sleeping-draught he had got,
+when suddenly they opened wide
+again. "Ha!" said he, listening,
+and putting up a finger, "but I haven't
+heard St Paul's strike six yet; it's
+seldom so long after; ought to be
+heard from here of a morning; let's&mdash;"
+By little and little, however, the sick
+man's eyes closed, and you heard him
+murmuring, as his finger sank down,
+"Macleod, say&mdash;to her&mdash;say&mdash;luff,
+luff, my lad, keep her her course&mdash;,"
+till his shrunk face was as quiet on
+the pillow as if he'd been really at
+home the first night after a voyage.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh man, doctor!" said the second
+mate, heaving a breath, "isn't terrible!
+Good forgive me for a lee to a
+dying man! Take an old seaman's
+word for it, Doctor Small, yon clock
+ashore was no mortal soond, sir; ye
+may keep your drogues for them
+they'll do good to. 'Twas neither
+more or less than the captain's <em>dregy</em>!"
+"Phoo!" answered the Scotch surgeon,
+who was one of your sceptical
+chaps, as I heard say, "some other
+vessels here, of course, that's all."
+The sailor gave him only a smile of
+pity for not being able to distinguish
+the sound of a ship's bell. "There
+can't be a town hereabout, Collins?"
+whispered Westwood. "A town,&mdash;no!"
+said I, "it's the best wilderness
+sign you can have&mdash;the African
+bell-bird!"<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> "Ah, ah!" said the
+surgeon, laughing, "there now, Macleod,&mdash;of
+course it can be explained
+naturally, like other things." The
+second mate gave me a doubtful
+scowl; but seeing Westwood, whom
+he had always seemed to think rather
+in the way before, his eye softened.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll be wanting to see the captain
+as soon as he wakes up, sir," said
+he. "I'm terrified to face him&mdash;but
+if ye'd juist slip in when he comes to
+himself, sir, I'm thinking, reverend
+sir, ye might wile him off yon terrible
+notion o' his." Westwood shook his
+head seriously, not knowing what to say.
+"Ay, ay, sir," continued Macleod, as
+he half closed the door, "no doubt a
+man ought to be upon better things;
+but it's hard for him, when he's got a
+wife and weans six thousand miles
+away, and wants them alongside in a
+couple of hours&mdash;uncommon hard, sir!
+She's a douce, careful body, too,
+Mistress Williamson, like the captain's
+self; and I heard her fleech sore with
+the captain before we sailed, for to
+bide quietly ashore this time, for good.
+Poor woman! if she didn't e'en go
+the length o' partin' in anger the last
+morning, wae's me! till the very moment
+when (he telt me himself, sir,)
+she out with her arms round his neck,
+crying like to choke! An' all to&mdash;but if
+the captain had a fault, 'twas the love
+o'&mdash;good forgive me, though, when it
+was but studying his faim'ly, Mr
+Thomas! If it was only an auld tarry
+deevil like me, now, with neither kith
+or kin!" "Except cousins, Mr Macleod,"
+said the surgeon, as he wiped
+his lancet on his coat-tail&mdash;"plenty of
+them in the High&mdash;" But he caught
+Westwood's eye, and was ashamed to
+finish his cursed heartless joke, though<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+the rough second mate was too full of
+his feeling to hear it: when Westwood
+said something about our all thinking
+too little of these things before-hand,
+but how the captain was plainly a
+man that had done his duty carefully,
+which no doubt would ease his mind.
+The mate looked up, and eyed him
+sideways for a moment: "Eh? what?"
+said he, bluntly; "it's not so little I
+mind o' what I used to hear at the
+kirk langsyne, as not to know that's
+not the right doctrine. D'ye think, sir,
+<em>that's</em> what'll put him over, when he
+finds out this is not Greenwich Reach?
+There's the Methody minister with
+the glasses, though!" he broke out,
+when again a look of despair came
+over his broad hard-favoured countenance.
+"They're always upon
+works, too, I've heard!" said he,
+turning and murmuring to himself;
+"oh, if I could but hoist out a bit
+screed o' the truth, myself, to comfort
+the poor man with! Lord, how
+didn't I think of the Shorter Carritch&mdash;let's
+see how't went&mdash;'What is
+the chief end of'&mdash;no, it's 'What is
+faith in&mdash;faith in the only rule to direct
+us&mdash;no, no.&mdash;Baptism is a sacrament&mdash;where&mdash;whereby"&mdash;and
+he was still
+overhauling some old catechism in
+this fashion, twisting himself all the
+time as if he were twisting a stiff rope
+the wrong way, with a look of misery
+none of us could have had the heart
+to laugh at, when a middy's voice
+came squeaking down the dark after-hatchway.
+"Mr Macleod, sir, the
+chief officer wants you on deck."
+Westwood slipped quietly off, and the
+young surgeon was beginning to talk
+easily, to rid his mind of something,
+perhaps; till I asked if there wasn't
+any chance. "Oh, the captain, you
+mean?" said he, "don't think there
+is&mdash;he's a bad subject! If we were
+out at sea now, Mr Collins, the <em>calenture</em>
+would make him think the waves
+all grass, or something as green as&mdash;as
+the cawdets used to call&mdash;" I
+looked at the fellow sternly, and he
+changed his key, though with a surprised
+air. "You're blessed early
+up, though, you two!" said he. "I
+suppose that cursed squall kept you
+idlers awake; but how they managed
+without the first mate I can't think.
+Clever fellow, Finch! but wasn't it a
+curious trick of the poor skipper to
+box him up below here? I fancy he'd
+a guess we would all soon be under
+the mate's command! It's a queer
+thing the brain, isn't it, Mr Collins?
+For exaumple, now, there's the captain
+it makes think something or other
+a clock near London, with everything
+accordingly! Macleod fancies it a
+soopernatural knell, and twaddles
+about some Calvinist stuff he learnt
+at school. Then you and me, you
+know, imaugines it's a bird&mdash;now
+whuch is it after all? <em>Nothing</em>&mdash;maybe,
+eh?" The fellow capped all with a
+sneer, as much as to say I was a fool,
+which I had stood from him several
+times before; though now I could have
+kicked him, more for his heartless way
+than aught else. "I'll tell you, Mr
+Small," said I, "what I think <em>you</em>&mdash;you're
+neither more nor less than a&mdash;"
+but I turned on my heel. "I'm off,
+however," said he, "to turn in again."</p>
+
+<p>Through the half-closed door one
+could see the sick man's face sleeping
+so quiet in the shadow from the lamp,
+you heard not a breath. I looked up
+the after-hatchway. It seemed still
+quite dark; and a patch of the deep
+dark-blue sky showed high over the
+square opening, with two or three
+keen sparks of stars, green ones and
+blue ones&mdash;you'd have thought the
+ladder, short as it was, went up to
+somewhere clean above the world.
+But the moment I got on deck, I saw
+it was really lighter&mdash;the heavy fog
+creeping slowly astern of the ship on
+both hands; the white mist rolling
+faster over it before the sea-breeze
+against her bows, which had swung
+seaward by this time from the tide,
+that rushed like a mill-stream upon
+both her tight cables; while the
+muddy river-water, bubbling, eddying,
+and frothing away past, spread
+far up in the middle, into the dusk
+astern. <em>Such</em> a jabbering, croaking,
+hissing, shrieking, and yelling, too, as
+burst into one's ears out of the dark,
+as if whole legions of monkeys, bull-frogs,
+parrots, parroqueets, and what
+not, were coming together full upon
+us from both sides, one band nearer
+than the other; till the heavy boom of
+the surf round the point, and the roar
+of the tide coming in over the shallows
+about the river-mouth, pretty
+well drowned it. The sudden change
+was a good relief, Babel though it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
+seemed, after the closeness below,
+with what had been going on; and I
+looked ahead towards the sea, which
+lay away out off our larboard bow,
+round the headland, and over the opposite
+point; a cold, watery streak of
+light showing it from where the
+breakers rose plunging and scattering
+along the sandy bar, to the steady
+gray line of horizon, clipped by one of
+the two brown chops we had got into.
+It looked dreary enough as yet, the
+mouth of it being wider than I'd fancied
+it from seaward at night; though
+even with full water over the long
+spit of sand in the middle, there was
+no draught at all for the Indiaman
+except by the channel betwixt it and
+the bold point on our right; and
+pretty narrow it appeared from our
+present berth, heaving as it did with
+the green swell that set in, while
+meantime the mist scudding across
+the face of the headland let us see but
+the hard lump of bare black rock underneath.</p>
+
+<p>In less time than I've taken to
+speak, however, the full space of sky
+aloft was turning clear, the sea far
+away suddenly shone out blue, with
+the surges tipped white; you saw a
+sparkling star high over it sink slowly
+in, and the fog spread off the water
+near us, till here and there you caught
+the muffled-up shape of a big tree
+or two looming through, not half-a-mile
+off our starboard quarter; the
+mist creeping over the headland till
+the sharp peak of it stood out against
+its shadow on the shoulder of a hill
+beyond, and old Bob Martin's single
+clump of cocoas on the rise, waving
+in landward from the brisk sea-breeze.
+One passenger after another came
+peeping sleepily out of the companion-hatch,
+at the men clearing away the
+wreck of the spars, and swabbing the
+quarter-deck down; but scarce had
+Smith, one of the young writers,
+reached the poop, when he gave a
+shout that covered both poop-ladders
+in no time, with people scrambling
+over each other to get up. Next
+minute you'd have fancied them a
+knot of flamingoes with their wings out,
+as the bright red daybreak brought
+out the edge of the woods far astern,
+through a hazy lane in the purple mist,
+topped so with stray cocoa-nut trees
+and cabbage-palms, dabbled like
+brushes in the colour, that they scarce
+knew them to be woods at all, and
+not a whole lot of wild savages fresh
+from other business of the kind, coming
+down with all sorts of queer tools
+upon us; more especially when one
+heard such a chorus of unaccountable
+cries, whistling, and screaming, as
+seemed to struggle with the sound of
+the sea ahead of us, and the plash
+alongside. The huge round sun struck
+hot crimson along the far turn of the
+reach, with all manner of twisted
+blots upon him, as it were, and the
+very grass and long reeds seemingly
+rustling into his face, so one didn't for
+the moment know <em>him</em> either; while
+the muddy chocolate-coloured eddies,
+sweeping and closing beyond the ship's
+rudder, glittered and frothed up like
+blood; and every here and there,
+along the streak of light, the head of
+a log or a long branch came dipping
+up terribly plain no wonder the old
+Seringapatam had apparently turned
+tail to it all, ready to bolt if she could.
+Almost as soon as you took your
+hands off your eyes, though, and could
+see without a red ball or two before
+them,&mdash;<em>there</em> was the nearest shore
+growing out toward our starboard
+bulwark all along, crowded with
+wet green woods, up into steaming
+high ground&mdash;all to eastward a dazzle
+of light, with two or three faint
+mountain-peaks shooting up far off in
+it, and a woody blue hill or so between;
+while here and there a broad bright
+hazy spoke off the sun came cutting
+down into the forest, that brought out a
+patch full of long big leaves, ten times
+greener than the rest, and let you look
+off the deck into the heart of it amongst
+the stems over the bank. The jabber
+in the woods had passed off all at once
+with the dusk, the water deepening
+over the bar, and the tide running
+slower, so that every one's confused
+face turned breathless with delight as
+it grew stiller and stiller. The whole
+breadth of the river shone out by this
+time, full and smooth, to the opposite
+shore three times as far away, where
+the wood and bulrushes seemed to
+grow out of the water; a long thick
+range of low, muddy-looking mangroves,
+with a cover of dark-green,
+rounding from the farthest point one
+saw, down to some sandy hummocks
+near the mouth, and a ridge of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
+same, drifted up by the wind off the
+beach. Beyond that side there was
+nothing, apparently, but a rolling
+sweep of long coarse grass, with a few
+straggling cocoa-nut trees and baobabs,
+like big swollen logs on end, and
+taken to sprouting at top: a dun-coloured
+heave of land in the distance,
+too, that came out, as it got hotter,
+in a long desert-like, red brick-dust
+sort of a glare. The sole living things
+to be seen as yet, were some small
+birds rising up out of the long grass,
+and the turkey-buzzards sailing high
+over all across, as if on the look-out.</p>
+
+<p>The air was so cool and clear, however,
+from the tornado overnight&mdash;not
+a cloud in the sky, and the strange
+scent of the land reaching us as the
+dew rose off it&mdash;you could see far and
+wide, with a delicious feeling of it all,
+that kept every one standing fixed on
+the spot where he first gained the
+deck, even the men looking over their
+shoulders with the ropes in their fists,
+and the fresh morning breeze lifting
+one's hair. Surprised as the passengers
+were, nobody spoke a word,
+except the three or four children
+shouting, dancing, and pointing together;
+without being noticed, till all
+at once the whole poopful burst into
+one confusion of questions and exclamations,
+running hither and thither,
+shaking hands and jostling each
+other like distracted people. I had
+a spyglass at my eye, making out the
+other shore, when, turning round in
+the middle of it, the first thing I saw
+was Violet Hyde's face, as she stood
+with one little foot on the stair-head
+behind me, holding the rail with one
+hand, her eyes sparkling and her
+parted lips murmuring like one in a
+dream. "Oh, Mr Collins!" exclaimed
+she, breathless; "what is this? Where
+are we&mdash;is it fairyland? A <em>river</em>!"
+"Yes, in Africa," I said; "but whether
+it's the Bembarooghe or the&mdash;"
+"That fearful, fearful evening!" continued
+she, shuddering: "I saw the
+frightful sky, and heard the storm&mdash;and
+now!&mdash;<em>Were</em> we not in some very
+great danger, sir?" "Yes, ma'am,
+we were," replied I, as stiffly as I
+could; "but, happily, its over now,"
+and I gave my cap a lift to move off,
+uneasy as I was every moment, lest Sir
+Charles should catch me speaking again
+to his daughter. However, Miss Hyde
+was gazing eagerly at the land, and I
+had to wait. "What lovely, lovely
+green!" she half whispered: "oh, if
+one could only tread upon!&mdash;so unEnglish
+those strange tall trees look!
+are they not cocoa-trees and&mdash;and&mdash;"
+Suddenly her voice faltered, and she
+turned round with her bright blue
+eyes swimming in tears&mdash;"How&mdash;how
+thankful we should be that we
+are not&mdash;like our poor, poor friends,
+who were lost!" exclaimed she. I
+thought of the poor captain below in
+his cot, but next moment I was explaining,
+to her sheer amazement,
+how the real truth of the matter
+stood, though, if possible, it seemed
+to horrify her still more. "I can't
+think what they may be," I rapped
+out; "but if I had the command of
+this ship, I'd up anchor this very
+hour, and go out&mdash;at least as soon as
+the tide ebbed; but, at any rate, at
+the Cape I mean to get hold of some
+schooner or other, and if it were to
+China, why, I'll cruise after 'em till
+I&mdash;" "Then you think&mdash;" began she,
+and an arch, inquisitive sort of look
+danced in both her eyes as she turned
+away to watch the shore again, saying slowly,
+"You <em>are</em> a&mdash;a naval gentleman,
+then, Mr West&mdash;Mr Collins?" I
+tried to stammer out something by
+way of an explanation, but it wouldn't
+do, and I said, "At any rate, I'm no
+better, by this time, than an idler
+aboard <em>here</em>, ma'am!"</p>
+
+<p>All at once I caught a side-look
+from her eyes, that wasn't meant for
+me, as she glanced over the poop-netting.
+Half provoking and half
+sweet it was, though, and it made my
+brain somehow or other seem to spin
+round, till a little after, before I well
+knew what I was about, I was holding
+the long spy glass for her to see the
+bank of the river,&mdash;her warm breath
+coming on my ear as I stooped before
+her, near enough to have kissed the
+muslin on her shoulder, while her
+rosy mouth changed with every new
+spot that the glass brought near; and
+she had to hold one taper fore-finger
+on the other eye-lid to keep it shut,
+so that I could dwell on her face as if
+she'd been asleep. "There, there!"
+exclaimed she, "are actually flowers&mdash;with
+such immense leaves! And
+now&mdash;an enormous tree, with roots
+hanging from the branches, and other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+stems growing up into them. Why,
+yes!&mdash;is not that a banian-tree,
+Mr&mdash;," and she looked away at <em>me</em>,
+when of course the tree was vanished,
+and instead of that, the rather undeniable
+expression of a fellow in love,
+two or three inches off, bent fair upon
+her. Violet Hyde coloured a little,
+and looked in again. "And&mdash;I
+think&mdash;" continued she, "I see&mdash;oh,
+two such beautiful creatures&mdash;deer, I
+think&mdash;coming out to drink from the
+river!" All this time, the ecstacies
+of the rest kept up the noise and confusion:
+the young lady's maid was
+gaping open-mouthed at the shore,
+not even noticing her young mistress's
+straw bonnet fall off, and I had just
+picked it up with one hand, to put it
+quietly over that matchless nut-brown
+hair of hers, shining suddenly in the
+sun like silk, when the Judge's voice
+sang out sharp from the other stair,
+"Violet, child, you'll have a sun-stroke.
+Kitmagar, you scoundrel,
+<i lang="jv" xml:lang="jv">beebee sahib punkah lao, sirrah</i>!" I
+held on to the telescope like grim
+death, while that eternal punkah was
+hoisted over us both, the Judge eyeing
+me somewhat coolly for the first moment.
+"Well, well, Mr Westwood,"
+said he, however, "you've got rid of
+that proud freak of yours;&mdash;such behaviour
+as yours yesterday, I assure
+you, I shouldn't have endured from
+any one else, young man! But, my
+dear boy," added he, suddenly, "from
+what I can gather, indeed saw myself
+last night, I am convinced we owe you
+a very great deal&mdash;even, I suspect,
+the safety of the entire vessel!" Miss
+Hyde had left off using the glass, and,
+as I stood up, she gave me a quick
+glance of amazement. "Mere chance,
+sir," I stammered. "Why," said Sir
+Charles, "I saw you at the steerage in
+the middle of the hurricane, when I
+believe the actual officers of the ship
+had left it in dismay. I tell you
+what, Mr Westwood, you're a bold
+fellow; and your uncle and I must see
+in India if we can't reward you in
+some way, my dear boy!" All this
+fondling style of thing, and for little
+more than a piece of luck, would have
+disgusted me, if I hadn't been more
+taken up with watching the side of
+Violet Hyde's face, as she listened for
+sounds in the woods ashore. "Strange
+wasn't it, Violet, my dear," continued
+he to his daughter, that my friend
+the Councillor's nephew should have
+gone out in the same Indiaman, so
+fortunately&mdash;though of course, after
+all, it <em>was</em> the first this season."
+"Ah!" said she, starting, "I beg
+pardon, papa,&mdash;what did you&mdash;weren't
+you talking of the river?" "Don't
+you hear, child," said the Judge, "I
+said it was a curious coincidence, Mr
+Westwood's going in this vessel."
+"Oh yes, indeed!" answered she, and
+couldn't help looking down a little confounded.
+But the lady's-maid was putting
+on her tiny slipper, which had come
+off, while her father mentioned that
+of course I'd had practical reasons for
+not owning my profession hitherto;&mdash;meaning,
+I suppose, that I didn't
+speak for fear of having to work, like
+the monkeys&mdash;though the sharp old
+lawyer must have had a better guess
+by this time, and queer enough it must
+have been to see her face, listening to
+him as he explained it all. I stood
+biting my lips, meanwhile&mdash;two or
+three times on the point of telling him
+it was all nonsense about my being a
+nephew of any hanged old nabob
+whatever; when Sir Charles said carelessly
+he should leave the Seringapatam,
+if possible, at the Cape of Good
+Hope, as he couldn't trust safely to the
+present officers.</p>
+
+<p>Just then up got the merry chant
+of the men running round with the
+capstan-bars, to get up anchor; the
+chief officer wishing, as it was found,
+to carry her farther into the river with
+the breeze&mdash;for the sake of filling our
+water-casks the easier, according to
+him, but more likely out of sheer spite
+at what had been done without him.
+What with eagerness in the cuddy to
+get on shore and see the woods, the
+breakfast below was a rare scene, no
+one minding what he did, even to
+rushing slap into a couple of ladies'
+berth for his boots, or laying a couple
+of loaded Joe Mantons into somebody's
+bed, swallowing biscuit and
+butter on the way.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly we heard the splash of
+paddles in the water, with a hail in
+some foreign tongue or other, and
+hurried on deck in a body; where we
+found the ship tiding it slowly up, under
+jibs and foretopsail, and beginning
+to open a longer reach where the river
+seemed to narrow in. A black-eyed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
+black-bearded fellow, with a tallowy,
+yellow, sweaty sort of complexion, in a
+dirty jacket, drawers, and short boots,
+and an immense grass hat, shouting
+Portuguese louder and louder into the
+first-mate's ear, till he actually put
+both hands together and roared
+through them,&mdash;pointing to himself
+now and then, as if surprised he
+wasn't known. All at once, evidently
+quite disgusted, he turned and looked
+over the side, saying something to
+one of the ugliest and most ill-looking
+mulattoes I ever saw, who sat in the
+stern of a long rough canoe, hollowed
+out of some tree, with two naked
+black rowers, less of the real nigger
+than himself, as they leant grinning
+up at the bulwarks with their sharp
+teeth, that appeared as if they'd been
+filed to a point. The mulatto gloomed,
+but he gave no answer, and as one of
+the cadets and I knew a little Portuguese,
+we managed together to get
+something out of the fellow on deck;
+though at noticing me for the first
+time that morning, I saw Finch turn
+red with surprise. We understood
+the man to ask if we wanted nothing
+particular in the river, the meaning of
+which I saw better on bethinking me
+of the fire along the bush inside the
+headland, that had let me see the marks
+of it&mdash;no doubt a signal to some
+craft they had taken us for. However,
+so soon as he heard we needed no
+more than water and spars, after musing
+a minute, and speaking again to
+Rodriguez, as he called the mulatto,
+he said he would pilot us to a convenient
+berth himself, for two or three
+dollars; notwithstanding his title was,
+as he said, Don José Jeronimo Santa
+somebody, commandant of the Portuguese
+fort something else. The river,
+we found, was the Nouries or the Cuanené,
+where they had a settlement
+called Caconda, a good way up; a
+remarkably bad country, he gave us
+to know, and not worth staying in,
+from the number of flies, and the elephants
+having got into a cursed way
+of burying their tusks,&mdash;except, he
+hinted, for the plenty of blacks, all
+anxious to be sold and to see foreign
+countries; but the trade was nothing
+yet, absolutely nothing, said he,
+blowing his nose without a pocket
+handkerchief, and suiting the act to
+the word, as he mentioned his notion
+of throwing it up and going farther
+north-west. By this time we had
+stood over to the lowest shore, till
+you could see the thick coffee-coloured
+mud in among the roots and suckers
+of the dark-green mangroves, with
+their red pods bursting under their
+rank-looking leaves,&mdash;and over them,
+through the tall coarse guinea-grass,
+to the knots of feathery cocoas behind,
+swarming with insects: when he gave
+the sign to go about, one of his
+blacks heaving a lead, and grunting
+out the depth of water, as the ship
+made a long stretch across towards
+the woody side again, and Don José
+all the time taking it as easy as
+if the quarter-deck were his own,
+while he asked for a cigar and lighted
+it. Joke though he did, yet I couldn't
+like the fellow at all; however, as
+soon as she got pretty near the shore,
+about a quarter of a mile from
+the mouth of what seemed a wide
+creek, glittering up between a high
+fringe of cane and bamboo clumps, he
+had the sails clued up, a single anchor
+let go in four or five fathoms, and our
+Portuguese friend got his money and
+bundled over the side, pulling quietly
+ashore.</p>
+
+<p>The tide by this time was quite
+still, and the breeze sank almost at
+once, as we were shut in from the
+sea; when we were surprised to see
+the striped Portuguese flag rise off a
+tall bamboo stick, among the bushes
+on the open shore, nearly abreast of
+us; where a low, muddy-like wall was
+to be made out, with something of a
+thatched roof or two, and a sort of rude
+wooden jetty running before it into the
+water. Shortly after, Don José came
+paddling out again, and got on board,
+this time with an old cocked hat on,
+excusing himself for not having fired
+a gun&mdash;which was to save us expense,
+he remarked, being particular friends&mdash;seeing
+that he'd got to demand
+twelve dollars of harbour dues and
+duties, whereas, if he saluted, he must
+have charged fourteen. The cool
+impudence of this brought the chief
+officer from the capstan; but the
+steady face of the fellow, and the
+glance he took round the deck when
+the cadet told him he'd better be off
+at once, made me think he had something
+or other to back him. Mr
+Finch, as usual, fumed up into a passion,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+and told the men to fling him
+over into his canoe, which they accordingly
+did, without the least nicety
+about it; the Portuguese next minute
+picking himself up, and standing
+straight, with the look of a perfect
+devil, as he shook his fist at the
+whole ship, while the canoe slid off to
+the shore.</p>
+
+<p>Budge even so much as a single
+fathom, at present, we could not;
+and most of us were too much in the
+spirit of fun and venture to care a fig
+for having made an enemy of Don
+José-So-on, as the cadet called him;
+indeed, it seemed rather to set a finer
+point on people's admiration of the
+green jungly-looking shore next to us,
+with its big aloes and agaves growing
+before the bush, and all sorts of
+cocoas, palms, monkey-bread, and
+tall white-flaked cotton-trees, rising in
+every way out from over the rest.
+For my part, I thought more of the
+Portuguese's <em>interest</em>, after all, than
+his hatred&mdash;which proved correct, by
+his soon sending out a sulky message
+by the mulatto, offering to sell us
+fowls and a bullock, at no ordinary
+price. However, all hands from the
+cabin were mad already to get ashore
+somewhere, and the cadets bristling
+with fowling-pieces and rifles, each
+singing out that he was ready to supply
+the whole ship with fresh meat;
+so the mulatto had to sheer off, with
+a boat nearly lowered over his head.
+From where we lay at the time, what
+with the large creek off one bow, and
+the broad river ahead of us, spreading
+brimful along to the light, the
+water had the look of a huge lake,
+fringed in by a confused hazy bluish
+outline steeping in the heat, where
+the distance clipped behind the lumps
+of keen verdure, showering over a
+dark mangrove-covered point. Before
+the two large quarter-boats could
+be got ready for the ladies and the
+rest of us, in fact, we heard the gig
+full of writers and cadets beginning
+to pop away at everything they saw
+alive, out of sight from the ship; till
+at last we were afloat, too, pulling
+slowly into the middle of the stream,
+and the men eyeing us lazily as they
+turned-to about the rigging, to send
+up new spars in place of those lost.
+The old Indiaman's big bows stood
+looming up broad astern of us on the
+sluggish eddies round her cable, with
+her tall steady fore-spars and furled
+yards rising white against the low
+line of marshy shore in the distance,
+and wavering in her shadow below,
+till the thick green branches of the
+next point shut her out, and the glare
+off the face of the creek shot level
+over all of us in the two cutters, wild
+with every kind of feeling that India
+passengers could have after two
+months' voyage.</p>
+
+<p>For my own part, I should have
+had rather a suspicion how absurd it
+was to go a pleasuring in an African
+river we knew nothing about, especially
+when I saw that a day or two
+so long after the rains might suck it
+up, during ebb, into a pretty narrow
+mid-channel: all I thought of was,
+however, that I was steering the boat
+with Violet Hyde in it, the kitmagar
+holding his gaudy punkah over her
+before me, while the Judge, with his
+gun in his hands, was looking out as
+eagerly, for the time, as the four griffins
+were pulling furiously, in spite of
+the heat that made the sweat run into
+their eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The other party were soon off ahead
+of us up the main river, under care of
+the Scotch surgeon, laughing, talking,
+and holloing in chase of the cadets
+who had first left. However, Sir
+Charles thought there was more
+likelihood of game along the creek,
+and the ladies fancied it something
+new, so I steered right into it; the fat
+midshipman, Simm, watching me critically
+as I handled the yokelines which
+he had given up to me in a patronising
+way, and the sailor in the bow
+regarding the exertions of the griffins
+with a knowingly serious expression,
+while he dabbled his flipper at ease in
+the water. As the tide steadied, this
+said creek proved to be a smaller
+river, apparently from the hilly country
+I had noticed beyond the woods;
+by the clearness of its current, that
+showed the pale yellow reflection of
+the close bamboo-brake on one side,
+deep down into the light&mdash;the huge
+sharp green notched aloe-leaves and
+fern shoving here and there out of it&mdash;the
+close, rank, stifling smell of rotten
+weeds and funguses giving place to
+the strange wild scent of the flowers,
+trailing and twisting in thick snaky
+coils close up the stems on our opposite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
+hand, and across from branch to
+branch, with showers of crimson and
+pink blossoms and white stars; till,
+eager as the ladies were to put foot
+on land, 'twas no use looking as yet
+for a spot of room, let alone going
+farther in. The cadets were not long
+in being blown, either; when the midshipman,
+the bowman, and I had to
+relieve them. However, <em>then</em> I could
+look straight toward Violet Hyde's
+face, the shade of the scarlet punkah
+hanging over it, and her soft little
+straight nose and forehead catching a
+flickering burst from the leaves as we
+sheered at times under cover of the
+bank; while her eyelids, dropping from
+the glare, gave her bright eyes a half-sleepy
+sort of violet look, and it was
+only her lips that let you see how
+excited she felt. The griffin who had
+the tiller steering with the judgment
+of a tailor's 'prentice on a picnic
+to Twickenham, we came two or three
+times crash into the twigs of some
+half-sunk tree; then a blue bird like
+a heron would rise direct ahead of
+us, with its tall wet spindle legs
+and spurs glistening like steel behind
+it into the light, and a young snake
+in its sharp bill; or a gray crane
+rustled out of the cane from overhead,
+its long wings creaking in the air out
+of our sight. Suddenly you heard a
+long chirruping croak from a tree-frog,
+and the ground ones gave full chorus
+from farther in, whining and cackling,
+and peep-peep-peeping in one complete
+rush that died as suddenly away
+again, like thousands of young turkeys&mdash;then
+out in the midst of the quiet
+would come a loud clear wheetle-wheetling
+note from some curious
+fowl in an opening, with another of
+the same to match, dimmer amongst
+the thick of the bush. However
+everything of the kind seemed to sink
+down with the heat at noon, the very
+buzz of flies round every dark feather
+of the cocoas, and the musquito hum
+along the bank, getting fainter; till
+one <em>heard</em> the heat, as it were, creeping
+and thrilling down through the
+woods, with the green light that
+steeped into both edges of the long
+creek; every reed, cane, leaf, and
+twig, seemingly, at last giving it back
+again with a whispering, hushing
+crackle, and the broad fans of the
+palms tingling in it with rays from
+them, as they trembled before you
+in the glare, back into the high bundles
+of knotted and jointed bamboo,
+with their spiky-tufted crowns.</p>
+
+<p>"Can you not almost <em>feel</em> the forest
+grow!" exclaimed Miss Hyde; while
+the boat floated quietly to one side, and
+her charming young face shining out
+from the punkah, before Master Gopaul's
+deucedly ugly one, coolly staring
+past his snub nose, made one think of
+a white English rose and a black puff-ball
+growing together under a toadstool;
+plenty of which, as red as
+soldiers' coats, and as big as targets,
+looked here and there out of the bank.
+It put new spirit into me to see her,
+but still we could do little more than
+shove across from one side to the
+other&mdash;till something all at once
+roused us up in the shape of a long
+scaly-like log, seemingly lying along
+in the sun, which tumbled off the edge
+with a loud splash, and two of the
+young fellows let drive from their
+fowling-pieces, just after the alligator
+had sunk to the bottom. Rather
+uncomfortable it was to come sheering
+right over him next moment, and
+catch a glimpse of his round red eyes
+and his yellow throat, as the mud
+and weeds rose over him. The other
+ladies shrieked, but Violet Hyde only
+caught hold of her father's arm and
+started back; though her blue eye
+and the clear cut of her pretty
+nostril opened out, too, for the moment
+her lips closed. Five minutes
+after, when a couple of large guinea-fowl
+sprang up, Sir Charles proved
+himself a better shot than the cadets,
+by dropping one of them over the
+water ahead of us, which was laid
+hold of by the reefer of the Indiaman,
+and stowed away fluttering into the
+stern-locker&mdash;Simm observing coolly
+that it was a scavengering carrion-sort
+of bird, but perhaps one of his
+messmates might like to take it home
+stuffed to his sister. The Judge merely
+smiled and patted the mid on the
+shoulder, remarking in great good-humour
+that he, Simm, would make a
+good attorney; and on we held,
+soaking to our shirts and panting,
+until the bowman hooked down the
+stem of a young plantain, with a huge
+bunch of full ripe yellow bananas
+under the long flapping leaves at its
+head, right into the midst of us, out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
+of a whole clump of them, where the
+smooth face of the cove showed you
+their scarlet clusters of flowers and
+green round pods hanging over it,
+hidden as they were from above.
+Every man of us made a clutch, and
+the stem almost lifted Simm out of
+the boat with it, as it sprang back
+into the brake, rousing out a shower
+of gaudy-coloured butterflies, and a
+cloud of musquitoes, and making
+the paroquets scream inside; while
+the cadets' mouths were so full they
+couldn't speak, the reefer making a
+gulp with the juice seeming to come
+out at his eyes, the sailor spitting out
+his quid and stuffing in a banana, and
+the ladies hoping they were safe to
+eat; as I peeled the soft yellow rind
+off, and handed one to Violet Hyde,
+which she tasted at once. But if ever
+one enters into the heart of things in
+the tropics, I'd say 'tis when that
+same delicious taste melts through and
+through and all over you, after chewing
+salt junk for a space. I remember
+one foremast-man, who was always so
+drunk ashore he used to remember
+nothing in India but "<em>scoffing</em><a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> one
+bloody benanny," as he called it;
+"but hows'ever, Jack," he'd say,
+"'twas blessed good, ye know, and I'm
+on the look-out for a berth again, jist
+for to go and have another." One of
+us looked to the other, and Miss Hyde
+laughed and coloured a bit when I
+offered her a second, while her father
+said full five minutes after, "'Gad,
+Violet, it almost made me think I saw
+Garden Reach in the Hooghly, and
+the Baboo's Ghaut!"</p>
+
+<p>This whole time we couldn't have
+got more than three-quarters of a mile
+from where the ship lay, when all at
+once the close growth on our left hand
+began to break into low bush, and at
+length a spot offered where we might
+get ashore tolerably, with two or three
+big red ant-hills heaped up out of the
+close prickly-pear plant, and the black
+ants streaming over the bank, as well
+as up the trunk of a large tree. The
+monkies were keeping up a chattering
+stir everywhere about; and two or
+three bright-green little lizards changing
+into purple, and back again, as
+they lay gleaming in the sun on the
+sides of the ant-heaps, and darted
+their long tongues out like silver
+bodkins at the ants coming past. In
+we shoved with a cheer, and had
+scarce moored to the tree ere the
+ladies were being handed out and
+tripping over the ground-leaves to
+the ankles, starting on again at every
+rustle and prick, for fear of snakes;
+till the bowman in charge was left in
+the boat by himself, and, there being
+seven of us with guns over our arms,
+the next notion of the griffins was to
+get a sight of some "natives."</p>
+
+<p>In fact there was a sort of a half
+track leading off near the bank,
+through among the long coarse grass
+and the ferny sprouts of young cocoas,
+and a wide stretch of open country
+seen beyond it, dotted all over with
+low clumps of trees and bush rounded
+off in the gush of light, that gave it
+all a straw-coloured tint up to where
+a bare reddish-looking ridge of hill
+looked over a long swell of wild forest,
+off a hot, pale, cloudless sky. Here
+and there you saw the shadow of one
+bluff lying purple on the side of
+another, and a faint blue peak between,
+letting north'ard into some
+pass through the hills, but no signs
+of life save a few dun big-headed
+buffaloes feeding about a swampy spot
+not very far off, and rather too shaggy,
+by all appearance, to make pleasant
+company. Accordingly, we held for
+a few yards under the shade, where
+the fat mid, thinking to show off his
+knowingness by getting cocoa-nuts
+for the ladies, began to shy balls of
+mud from the creek-side at the monkeys
+in the trees. However, he brought
+us rather more than he bargained for,
+till the whole blessed jungle seemed
+to be gathering between us and the
+boat to pelt us to death with nuts as
+big as eighteen-pound shot, husks and
+all; so off we had to hurry into the
+glare again, Sir Charles half carrying
+his daughter through guinea-grass up
+to the waist&mdash;when somebody felt the
+smell of smoke, and next minute we
+broke out near it, wreathing up white
+from inside a high bamboo fence,
+propped up and tied all along with
+cocoa-nut husk. "What the devil!"
+shouted the foremost cadet, as soon
+as he found the opening, "they're
+cannibals!&mdash;roasting a black child,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
+by heaven!" and in he dashed, being
+no chicken of a fellow <em>ashore</em> at any
+rate, the others after him, while the
+Judge, Simm, and I, kept outside
+with the ladies, who were all of a
+shudder, of course, what with the
+thought, and what with the queer
+scent of roast meat that came to us.
+"Ha, ha!" laughed the cadet next
+moment, "it's only a monkey, after
+all!&mdash;come in, though, Sir Charles, if
+you please, sir,&mdash;nobody here, ladies."
+There, accordingly, was the little
+skinned object twirling slowly between
+two bamboo sticks, over a fire
+beneath two or three immense green
+leaves on a frame, with its knees up
+not to let its legs burn; about a dozen
+half-open sheds and huts, like little
+corn-stacks, thatched close with reeds,
+and hung with wattled mats of split
+bamboo, giving the place more the
+look of a farmyard than a village; as
+there was a big tree spreading in the
+middle, a few plantains, yams, and
+long maize-stalks flowering out of the
+coarse guinea-grass which the niggers
+hadn't taken the trouble to tread
+down all round inside of the fence.
+However, we weren't long of perceiving
+an old gray-headed black sitting
+on his hams against the post of a
+hut, watching us all the time; and a
+villanously ugly old thief he looked,
+with a string of Aggry beads about his
+head, and a greegree charm-bag hung
+round his shrivelled neck, which was
+stuck through a hole in some striped
+piece of stuff that fell over to his
+knees, as he sat mumbling and croaking
+to himself, and leering out of the
+yellows of his eyes, though too helpless
+to stir. Something out of the way attracted
+my notice, glittering in front
+of the hut over his head; but, on stepping
+up to it, I wasn't a little surprised
+to find it the stern-board of
+some small vessel or other, with the
+tarnished gilt ornament all round,
+and the name in large white letters,&mdash;"Martha
+Cobb,"&mdash;the port, Boston,
+still to be made out, smaller, below.
+This I didn't think so much of in
+itself, as the craft might have been
+lost; till, on noticing that the old
+fellow's robe was neither more nor
+less than a torn American ensign, in
+spite of his growls and croaks I walked
+past him into the hut, where there
+was a whole lot of marlinspikes, keys,
+and such like odds and ends, carefully
+stored up in a bag, marked with the
+same name, besides a stewpan with
+some ostrich feathers stuck where the
+handle had been, as if this rascally
+black sinner wore it on his head on
+state occasions, being probably the
+head-man and a justice of the peace!
+What struck me most, though, was a
+pocket-book with a letter inside it, in
+a woman's hand, addressed to the
+master of the brig Martha Cobb;
+dated a dozen years before, yellow
+and fusty, and with tarry finger-marks
+on it, as if the poor skipper, God
+knows, had read it over and over
+in his cabin many a fresh breeze
+betwixt there and Boston. I put it
+in my pocket, with a curse to the old
+black devil, as he croaked out and fell
+on his face trying to bite me with his
+filed teeth when I passed out, to follow
+the rest out of the bamboo pen;
+wondering, of course, where all the
+negroes could be, unless they were
+dodging about the river shore to watch
+the Indiaman,&mdash;little chance as there
+was of their trying the same joke
+with the Seringapatam, as with the
+Martha Cobb.</p>
+
+<p>As for the women, however, I had
+scarce joined our party going out,
+when we met a half-naked black hag
+with a bunch of cocoa-nuts and husk.
+The moment she saw us she gave a
+squeal like an old hen, and fell flat,
+while several younger ones, jogging
+along with their naked black picaninnies
+on their backs, turned tail and
+were off with a scream. Next minute
+we were almost as startled as they
+could be, when three plump young
+jetty damsels dropped down right
+into the bushes alongside of us, off as
+many tall cocoas which they'd been
+climbing by a band round them, for the
+nuts. "Mercy on us!" said the eldest
+of our lady-passengers: and it <em>was</em>
+rather queer, since they had nothing
+earthly upon them save very very
+short pet&mdash;I beg your pardon ma'am,
+but I didn't know any other word&mdash;however
+off they scampered for the
+woods, Simm and one of the cadets
+hard after them, and we turning away
+to smother our laughter, especially as
+the griffin had forgot his mother being
+with us. The middy being first
+started, he was a good way ahead,
+when all at once the sternmost of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
+black girls tripped in the band she
+had over her shoulder, Simm giving
+a cheer as he made prize of his chase;
+but scarce before the whole three of
+the dark beauties had him smothered
+up amongst them, laughing, yelling,
+and squalling as they hauled him about;
+till I saw the dirk Simm sported
+glitter in one of their hands, and I
+made towards the spot in the notion
+of their finishing him in right earnest.
+The black damsels ran off together
+as the unlucky reefer picked himself
+up, coming to us with his hair rubbed
+up like a brush, his cap out of shape
+in his hand and the gold band off it,
+his red face shining, and all the gilt
+anchor-buttons off his jacket, besides
+being minus his dirk. "Simm! Simm!
+my fine fellow!" said his friend the
+cadet, like to die with laughing,
+"what&mdash;what&mdash;did they do to you?
+why, your head looks like a chimney-sweep's
+mop!" Simm knocked his cap
+against a tree to set it right, without
+a word, and we followed the others to
+the boat, where he swore, however,
+that he'd kissed 'em all three; at
+which Mrs Atkins fairly took him a
+slap on the side of the head, saying
+he was a nasty improper boy, and she
+was glad <em>his</em> poor mother couldn't see
+him run after creatures of that kind in
+African woods&mdash;"Natives, indeed!"
+said she, "I have heard so often of
+native modesty, too, in books; but,
+after all, there's nothing like experience,
+I think, Sir Charles?" "Certainly
+not, ma'am," replied the Judge,
+humouring her, as she hadn't often
+had the chance of speaking to him
+before; "'tis almost as bad in India,
+though, you know!" "Oh, <em>there</em>, Sir
+Charles," said the lady, "I never
+happened to go out, of course, except
+in the carriage!" "Ah," said the
+Judge coolly, "you should try an
+elephant sometimes, ma'am."</p>
+
+<p>After this, as Sir Charles was bent
+on getting a shot at something better,
+with a glass or two of Madeira to
+refresh us, we pulled farther still up
+the small river, passing the mouth of
+a deep marshy inlet, where I noticed
+a few long canoes belonging to the
+Congo village we had seen; the close,
+heavy heat of the woods getting if
+possible worse, and the rank green
+growth topping up round us as flat
+as before; when the sound of a loud
+rush of water up-stream broke upon
+us through the bush to northward,
+the surface rippling, and a slight cool
+breath seeming to flutter across it now
+and then, the very noise putting fresh
+soul into you. Suddenly we opened
+out on a broad bend where it was
+hard work to force her round, and next
+moment a low fall was gleaming before
+us, where a hill-stream came washing
+and plashing over one wide rocky
+step above another in the turn, then
+sweeping out of a deep pool to both
+hands, and running away ahead, in between
+the spread of trees, seemingly to
+a sort of a lagoon, where you saw the
+light in the middle glancing bright
+down upon its face. A broad blue
+burst of air and light struck down
+along the hollow the stream rushed
+out of, off the roots of a regular mountain,
+leaning back to the sky, with its
+big tufted knolls and its shady rifts
+thrown out blue beyond one or two
+thick scaly-stemmed date-trees, waving
+their long, feathery, fringe-like
+leaves to the least bit of a breeze, on
+as many rough points near at hand:
+the <em>whole</em> shape of the mountain you
+couldn't see for the huge mahogany
+trees, teak, and African oak, rising up
+over one shoulder into a lump of
+green forest. In five minutes more
+we were through into the lagoon,
+which very possibly took round into
+the main river again, only the opposite
+end, to our surprise, was all afloat
+with logs of big timber choking it up,
+so that there we must stick or go
+back upon our wake.</p>
+
+<p>However, the lagoon itself being
+broad enough and round enough in
+all conscience, with a deep hollow
+opening up out of it on the high
+ground, the Judge and the cadets
+thought a better place couldn't have
+been chosen for landing after a little
+sport, while we left the fair ladies to
+rest in the cool, and look at the lotus-lilies
+spread all over one cove of it,
+floating white on their large leaves.
+The green edge of scum ran about the
+black shadow on the rest of it, gathering
+round where a big branch or two
+had fallen in, with the hot white sky
+looking bluer out through the broad
+leaves coming together aloft, and the
+showers of little sharp ones in the
+tamarind twigs, mangoes, iron-wood,
+sumach, and all sorts; while here and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
+there a knot of crimson blossoms
+looked out from under the boughs in
+the dark, humming with small flies.
+Beautiful spot as it was everyway, especially
+after the heat, yet I didn't
+much like the idea of letting the ladies
+stay by themselves, except the sailor
+and the kitmagar. Nothing particular
+had turned up to trouble us, certainly;
+but I daresay 'twas because there was
+<em>one</em> of them I never looked at without
+her soft fairy-like air making me think
+of something that might happen to her,
+life-like though she seemed. When I
+saw a big branch over her head, I kept
+fancying what it would do if it fell&mdash;
+and now, the thumping slabs and
+stones we scrambled over up into the
+gully toward the mountain, seemed to
+have come tumbling down off it to the
+very water's edge, covered with nets
+of thick creeping plants, and trails of
+flat fingery-leaved flowers, such as
+you see in hot-houses at home. A
+few yards higher, too, where the
+ground broke away into a slanting
+hollow out of the bush, 'twas all
+trampled and crushed, half-withering
+together in the heat of the sun, the
+young trees twisted and broken, and
+two or three good-sized ones lying out
+from the roots, which I set to the
+score of the timberers rolling down
+their logs, for some craft that evidently
+got their cargoes hereaway.
+After all, the thought of a slap at
+some wild game was tempting enough,
+the Judge appearing to consider any
+one but a sportsman nobody at all:
+so up we went behind him out of the
+gully, till we were all blowing like so
+many porpoises on the head of it, Sir
+Charles raising his finger as we peeped
+across a grassy slope right under us,
+where a whole drove of small slender-legged
+antelopes were feeding. We
+had just time to rest, getting a breath
+of air off the heights, when one of the
+foremost lifted its head, listening the
+opposite way from us; next moment
+the entire scatter of them came
+sweeping direct over to leeward in a
+string,&mdash;we could almost catch their
+bright black eyes through the grass,
+when the crack of our seven barrels
+turned them bolt off at a corner, and
+they were gone like wind on water.
+All of us had missed save Sir Charles
+Hyde; but his rifle-bullet had sent one
+of the antelopes springing up in the air
+ten feet or so, rolling over and over
+into the grass again, where we found
+it lying with its tongue out, and its
+large eye glazing amongst the blades
+and dust&mdash;a pair of huge turkey-buzzards
+falling, as it were, out of two
+specks in the sun above us, already,
+and rising with an ugly flap while we
+got round the dead creature.</p>
+
+<p>"Hallo!" said the mid, suddenly,
+looking back over toward the hollow
+we'd come out of; "what's that?"</p>
+
+<p>From where we stood we could just
+see through the wild cane to the mouth
+of the gully, half a mile down or
+more, leading upon the trees by the
+lagoon. I thought I could hear a dull
+heavy sound now and then going
+thump thump down the hollow and
+along it, the stones rumbling from one
+spot to another at the root of the hill;
+but noticing a light smoke rising farther
+into the course of the creek, with
+a faint echo of axes at work somewhere
+in the woods below, I wasn't
+sorry to find the timberers were still
+in the river, showing we weren't the
+only civilised folks that thought it fit
+to visit. Perhaps it might have been
+a quarter of an hour more, however,
+and we were all looking out sharp for
+birds of any kind to pop at, happening
+to turn my head, I saw the long
+reeds were moving about the banks
+below, and the trees twisting about
+furiously; and no sooner had I made a
+few paces than, good heavens!&mdash;right
+in the break of the trees at the landing-place&mdash;<em>there</em>
+was a huge brute of some
+sort coming slowly up out of the
+water; then another, and another,
+glistening wet in the bright light as
+the shadow of the branches slipped
+behind them. A blindness came over
+my eyes, and I had scarce time to
+make out the big block-like heads and
+moving trunks of five or six black
+African elephants, ere the whole case
+flashed upon me, and away I dashed
+full speed down the slope. The big
+beasts were turning quietly off into
+the hollow, and two or three of their
+calves trotted after them out of the
+bushes, munching the young cane-stalks
+as they lifted their pillars of
+legs, and their tufty little tails, when
+I passed a fire of sticks blazing under
+a slab of rock, with the Judge's guinea-fowl
+plucked and roasting before
+it from a string, the bowman's tarpaulin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
+and his pipe lying near by&mdash;a
+sight that doubled the horror in me,
+to know he had left the boat at all;
+and no doubt, as I thought, taken
+fright and run off, man-o'-war's-man
+though he was. I made three springs
+over the stones down to the water,
+terrified to look in, hearing it, as I did,
+splash and wash about the sides, up
+among the leaves of the trees; while a
+couple of monstrous brutes were to be
+seen by the light in the midst of it, still
+wallowing about, and seeming to enjoy
+sending the whole pool in wide
+rings and waves as far as it would go,
+with the noise besides: the one half
+swimming, and the biggest standing
+aground as he poured the water out of
+his long trunk all over his back, then
+broke off a branch and waved it to
+and fro like a fan round his flapping
+leathery ears.</p>
+
+<p>Such a moment I hope never to
+know again&mdash;not the least sign of the
+boat could I see in the green black
+blink of the place, after the glare
+above; and I stood like a madman at
+the thought of what the herd of monsters
+had <em>done</em>, when they came suddenly
+down upon it; then I gave a
+wild cry, and levelled my ship's musket
+at the big elephant's head, as he
+brought his small cunning eye slowly
+to bear upon me, dropped the branch,
+and began to swing his forehead, all
+the time looking at me and wading
+out to the shallow&mdash;by Jove! my
+flesh creeps at it <em>just now</em>&mdash;though I
+couldn't have stirred for worlds till he
+was close enough for me to fire into
+that devilish eye of his. 'Twas no
+more than the matter of half a minute&mdash;till
+you may fancy what I felt to
+catch sight all at once of the cutter
+splashing up and down in the gloom
+below the branches, the ladies and the
+Hindoo crouching down terrified together,
+except Violet Hyde, who stood
+straight, holding the boat firm in by a
+bough, her white face fixed through
+the shadow, and her hair floating out
+of her straw-bonnet each time her
+head went up among the leaves, with
+her glittering eyes on the two elephants.
+Suddenly some heavy black
+figure dropped almost right over her
+into the boat, and she let go with a low
+cry, and sank down with her hands
+over her eyes; when they went sheering
+out towards the creek, the fore-topman
+handling his boat-hook in her
+bow, without his tarpaulin. As for
+the wild elephants, I had just time to
+come to myself before the foremost
+had his feet on the stones below me,
+getting cautiously out of the pool;
+these awkward antics of theirs being
+possibly signs of too much satisfaction
+in a bathe, for them to show aught like
+fury, if you didn't rouse them; so I
+was slipping quietly round the nearest
+tree when I heard the cadets halloing
+up the hill. The old bull-elephant
+seemed a dangerous customer to meet,
+and I was hurrying over the dead
+grass and branches to give warning,
+just as Sir Charles Hyde could be
+seen coming down before the rest, his
+rifle over his shoulder. However he
+brought up, the moment I sang out to
+stop: both the elephants were stalking
+off lower down into the hollow,
+and I dropped behind the slab where
+Tom Wilkes had been roasting his
+bird, when some fool of a cadet let
+drive at the bull-elephant from above,
+hitting him fair on the front. You
+heard the rifle-bullet hit slap against
+it as if on an anvil: the she-elephant
+made off at a fast trot, but the big
+brute himself turned round on the
+moment, lifting his trunk straight
+aloft with a sharp trumpeting scream
+through it, and looked round till his
+small red eye lighted on the Judge,
+who seemed quite out of breath from
+his sport.</p>
+
+<p>"The fire! that fire, for God's sake,
+Mr Westwood, else I am lost!" called
+out Sir Charles, in a calm distinct key
+from where he stood with his eye fixed
+on the elephant, and could see me, too,&mdash;a
+moment or two before the huge
+round-backed lump of a brute came
+running round into the track, stumbling
+heavily up the dead branches of
+the fallen trees and the dry guinea-grass,
+with a savage roar between his
+two white tusks&mdash;and I saw what the
+Judge meant, just in time to throw
+over the whole heap of flaming cocoa-tree
+husk among the withered grass
+and stuff a few yards before the
+monster, as dry as tinder, while the
+light air coming down the gully of
+the mountain, drove it spreading
+across his course up through the
+twigs, and sweeping in one sudden
+gust of fire up to the very end of his
+trunk. I saw it lift over the smoke<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
+like a black serpent, then another
+scream from the brute, and away he
+was charging into the hollow again,
+the flame licking up among the grass
+astern of him, and darting from one
+bough to another towards the cane-brake
+below. I had scarce drawn a
+long breath, and remembered the
+devil's own thought that had come into
+my head when the Judge called to me,
+ere he slapped me on the shoulder.
+"You did nobly there, my dear boy,"
+said Sir Charles; "managed it well!
+'Gad, it was a crisis, though, Mr
+Westwood!" "I'm afraid, however,
+sir," said I, eying the crackling bushes,
+smoking and whitening to a dead
+smoulder in the sunlight, then flashing
+farther down as the hill-breeze
+rustled off, "I'm afraid we shall
+have the woods burning about our
+ears!" Down we hurried accordingly,
+and hailed the cutter, where
+scarce had we leisure to pass a few
+quick words and tumble in, before I
+heard a shout beyond the other turn
+of the creek, through the end of the
+lagoon; then something like the cheep
+of ropes through blocks, with the
+bustle of men's feet on a deck, and
+next minute a perfect hubbub of cries,
+whether Dutch, Portuguese, English,
+or all together, I couldn't say,&mdash;only
+it wasn't likely the <em>last</em> would kick up
+such a bother for nothing. Four or
+five Kroomen came leaping round and
+along the float of logs at the far end,
+their large straw hats shining in the
+light over their jet faces, as they
+peered across into the lagoon. The
+minute after they vanished, we saw
+the white upper spars of a schooner
+slide above the farthest of the wood,
+and her bowsprit shoved past the
+turn just enough to show her sharp
+lead-coloured bow, with the mouth of
+a gun out of a port, and a fellow
+blowing the red end of his match behind
+it. All at once the chorus of
+shouts and cries ceased, and a single
+voice sang out along the water, clear,
+stern, and startling, in bad Portuguese,
+"<i>Queren sieté?</i> who are you?" Still
+we gave no answer, quietly shoving
+off as fast as we could, the flicker of
+the fire in the brake behind the trees
+beginning to show itself through the
+black shade of the lagoon. "<i>Queren
+siete?</i>" sang out the voice, louder
+than before, in a threatening way,
+and the logs were knocking and plashing
+before the schooner as the Kroomen
+hauled at them to make an opening.
+"Amigos! Amigos!" hailed we
+in turn; "Ingleses, gentlemen!" shouted
+the cadet who knew Portuguese,
+calling to them not to fire, for heaven-sake,
+else they would do us some
+harm. With this, the hubbub was
+worse than before; they plainly had
+some design on us, from the confusion
+that got up; but by that time
+we were pulling hard into the narrow
+of the river, and took the fair current
+of it as soon as the boat was past the
+falling stream we had seen before, till
+we were round into the next reach.</p>
+
+<p>In fact the rate we all bent our
+backs at this time, was pretty different
+from coming up: the cadets
+seemed hardly to feel the heat, fierce
+and close though it was, at thought
+of those that might be in our wake,
+and nobody spoke a word at ease till
+at last, after an hour's hard work,
+taking it in turns, we came full in
+sight of the Indiaman at her anchor
+on the broad current. The ladies
+blessed the very ropes hanging from
+her bowsprit, and we got safe aboard,
+where we found the two other boats
+had come back long before; and every
+one of us turned in directly after sundown,
+as tired as dogs.</p>
+
+<p>Well, I didn't suppose I had slept
+an hour, dreaming terribly wild sort
+of dreams about Violet Hyde and
+elephants, then that I'd saved her
+myself, and was stooping to kiss her
+rosy lips, when a sudden noise on
+deck startled me,&mdash;I shoved myself
+into my clothes and rushed on the
+quarterdeck. She had gone aground
+at her stern in swinging, in the water
+the Portuguese rascal gave her, canted
+a little over to starboard, away
+from the shore; and till morning
+flood nothing could be done to haul
+her off. The fog was rolling down
+with the land-breeze, and the jabber
+in the woods, again, thickened the
+confusion; when all at once a dim
+flash off the shore glimmered in the
+white fog, and a round-shot whistled
+just astern, pretty well aimed for her
+bilge, which would have cost us some
+work if it had hit. After that, however,
+there was no more of it, the
+fellow probably having spent either
+all his powder or his balls. As for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
+his fort, I heard the chief officer
+swearing he would knock it about
+his ears next day&mdash;a thing that couldn't
+have done him much harm, certainly,
+unless mud were dear.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner had the men gone below,
+leaving the ordinary anchor-watch,
+than Mr Finch, to my great surprise,
+walked up to me, and gave me a
+strange suspicious look, hinting that
+he began to have a good guess of
+what I really was, but if anything
+new of the kind turned up, said he,
+he should know better what to say to
+me. "Mr Finch," said I, starting,
+"this won't do, sir&mdash;you'll either
+speak your mind before cabin and
+cuddy, or to-morrow morning, by
+Jove! you'll go quietly ashore with
+me, sir&mdash;as I think, now you remind
+me of it, we settled to do, already!"
+The mate's face whitened, and he eyed
+me with a glare of malice, as I turned
+on my heel and began to walk the
+quarterdeck till he went below.</p>
+
+<p>However, the thought of the thing
+stuck to me, and I kept walking in
+the dark to get rid of it: the four or
+five men of the anchor-watch shuffling
+lazily about, and all thick save ahead
+up the river, where the land-breeze
+blew pretty strong, bringing now and
+then a faint gleam out of the mist. I
+was leaning against the fore-chains,
+listening to the ebb-tide, and thinking;
+when I saw one of the men creeping
+in from the bowsprit, which you
+just saw, where it ran up thick into
+the dusk, with scarce a glimpse of the
+jib-boom and flying-jib-boom beyond.
+The sailor came up touching his hat
+to me, and said he thought he saw
+something queer off the boom-end.
+"Well," said I gruffly, "go and tell
+your mate, then." I didn't know the
+fellow's voice, though it had a particular
+twang in it, and he wasn't in
+Jacob's watch, I knew. "Why,
+your honour," he persisted, "I knows
+pretty well what you air&mdash;asking your
+pardon, sir&mdash;but I think you'd make
+more out of it nor any of the mates!&mdash;It's
+some'at rather skeary, sir!"
+added he. Accordingly I took hold
+of the man-ropes and swung myself
+up the bowsprit, and had my feet on
+the foot-rope below the jib-boom,
+when I heard his breath, following
+behind me. "Never you trouble
+yourself, my man," said I; "one at a
+time!" and back he went in board
+again&mdash;for something curious in his
+way struck me, but I wanted to see
+what he meant. I had just got near
+the flying-jib, half-stowed in as it was
+on the boom, and I fancied, with a
+creep of my blood in me, I made out
+a man's head over the sail; but next
+moment a hand like a vice caught me
+by the throat, and some one growled
+out&mdash;"Now ye infarnal man-o'-war
+hound, I have ye&mdash;and down you
+goes for it!" The instant I <em>felt</em> it,
+my coolness came back; as for
+grappling, I couldn't, and the ebb
+current ran below to her bows at a
+rate fit to carry one out to sea in
+half an hour. I saw the whole plot
+in a twinkling, and never moved;
+instead of that I gave a sort of laugh,
+and followed the husky twang of the
+other man to a tee. "He won't come,
+Harry, my lad!" said I, and my ugly
+friend let go before he had time to think
+twice. "He be blowed!" said Harry,
+scornfully; "an' why won't he, mate?"
+He had scarce the words out of his
+mouth, though, ere I took him a
+twist that doubled him over the spar,
+and down he slipped, hanging by a
+clutch of the sail. "I suppose, my
+fine fellow," said I, "you forgot
+Fernando Po, and those nigger adventures
+of yours&mdash;eh?"&mdash;and I
+went in without more ado.</p>
+
+<p>I hadn't been ten minutes on deck,
+however, when I heard both of them
+swearing something or other to the
+first mate. A little after Finch came
+forward to me, with a ship's-lantern,
+and three or four of the men behind.
+"Mr Collins, or whatever's your
+name, sir," said he aloud, "I believe
+you've been seen just now at the
+bowsprit-end, making signals or something
+to the shore! You're in arrest
+at once, sir, and no more about it!"
+"What the deuce!" said I, my blood
+up, and pulling out a pair of pocket-pistols
+I had had in the boat, "let
+me see the man to&mdash;" At the moment
+a blow of a handspike from near the
+mast laid me senseless on the deck,
+and I knew nothing more.&mdash;&mdash;But
+I see 'tis too far gone in the night to
+carry out the yarn, ladies!</p>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>BRITISH AGRICULTURE AND FOREIGN COMPETITION.</h2>
+
+
+<p>"I do say it is for the public advantage
+that I should say to him,
+(the farmer,) continue your improvements:
+I cannot undertake to guarantee
+to you, by legislation, a particular
+price; <span class="smcap">but this I will say,
+that as long as corn is under
+51s., you shall not be exposed
+to the importation of foreign
+corn</span>." So spoke Sir Robert Peel
+in February 1842, as the proposer of
+an excellent law for the improved regulation
+of the corn trade. The pledge
+was a distinct one; and the very
+homeliness of the language saves it
+from equivocal construction. In the
+course of the same debate, Sir Robert,
+with just and prudent caution, expressly
+abstained from committing
+himself to the obviously fallacious
+doctrine of a fixed remunerative price.
+He held, as we hold, that, according
+to varying circumstances, that remunerating
+price must vary. He did
+not, and could not, forget that, under
+war prices and war taxes, wheat
+could not be cultivated with profit in
+this country, unless the quarter sold
+for 80s.; neither was he blind to the
+fact, that we had seen the average price
+so low in 1835 as 39s. 4d., notwithstanding
+the operation of a highly protective
+law. But he also held that, although
+it was impossible, with all the aids
+which agricultural experiment and
+statistical science could bring, to fix
+an immutable price for the quarter of
+wheat&mdash;as he had previously done in
+the instance of the ounce of gold&mdash;still,
+from averages taken throughout
+the country for a series of years, it
+was possible to frame some general
+proximate conclusion, which the legislature
+was bound to keep in mind,
+whilst considering any laws or alterations
+of rates that might hereafter
+affect the interests of the British farmer.
+So that, when Sir Robert Peel
+enunciated the following opinions, we
+maintain that the principle which guided
+him was strictly correct; and we
+accept these as embodying the main
+argument that led to the conclusion,
+which we have placed above as the
+commencement and the text of this
+article. "Now, with reference to the
+probable remunerating price, I should
+say that, for the protection of the
+agricultural interest, as far as I can
+possibly form a judgment, if the price
+of wheat in this country, allowing for
+its natural oscillations, could be limited
+to some such amount as between
+54s. and 58s., I do not believe that it
+is for the interest of the agriculturist
+that it should be higher. Take the
+average of the last ten years, excluding
+from some portion of the average
+the extreme prices of the last three
+years, and 56s. would be found to be
+the average; and so far as I can
+form an idea of what would constitute
+a fair remunerating price, <span class="smcap">I, for one,
+should never wish to see it vary
+more than I have said</span>. I cannot
+say, on the other hand, that I am
+able to see any great or permanent
+advantage to be derived from the
+diminution of the price of corn <em>beyond
+the lowest amount I have named</em>,
+if I look at the subject in connexion
+with the general position of the country,
+the existing relations of landlord
+and tenant, the burdens upon the
+land, and the habits of the country."</p>
+
+<p>These opinions are quite distinct,
+and from them we gather that Sir
+Robert Peel, in 1842, considered that,
+on an average, 54s. was the lowest
+price at which the British farmer could
+raise wheat for the market&mdash;so long,
+at least, as he was liable to the same
+burdens as formerly, occupied the
+same position in the country, and
+paid the same rent to his landlord.
+Following out these views, Sir Robert
+Peel introduced his sliding-scale of
+duties, and the result would seem in
+a great measure to vindicate his sagacity.
+Let us take the averages for
+the six years immediately following:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="years">
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><em>s.</em>&nbsp; <em>d.</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1842,&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td align="right">57</td><td align="right">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1843,</td><td align="right">50</td><td align="right">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1844,</td><td align="right">51</td><td align="right">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1845,</td><td align="right">50</td><td align="right">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1846,</td><td align="right">54</td><td align="right">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1847,</td><td align="right">69</td><td align="right">9</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bt">6)333</td><td align="right" class="bt">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bt">55</td><td align="right" class="bt">7<sup><small>2</small></sup>&frasl;<sub><small>3</small></sub></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It will thus be seen that the average
+price of wheat, during those years,
+<em>was within fivepence</em> of the calculation
+made by Sir Robert as the fair and
+natural average for the preceding ten
+years, and that it almost hit the precise
+medium between the two extremes
+which he assumed.</p>
+
+<p>Now, we are not aware that Sir
+Robert Peel has ever <em>directly</em> retracted
+these opinions, although many passages
+might be quoted from his speeches
+to show that he considered increased
+cheapness&mdash;the necessary result of his
+free-trade measures&mdash;some sort of
+compensation for the probable decline
+in the value of agricultural produce.
+But the income-tax and increased
+public burdens may fairly be set
+against any saving on the ground of
+cheapness, and the question remains
+precisely where it was before. The
+averages of sixteen years, excluding
+extraordinary impulses to an unnatural
+rise or fall, entitle us to assume
+that the British farmer cannot raise
+wheat profitably at lower prices than
+56s. per quarter; and Sir Robert
+Peel, whatever may be the effect of
+his subsequent measures, once gave
+his solemn guarantee that, when prices
+should fall below 51s., there should
+be no foreign competition.</p>
+
+<p>We have no desire to rake up old
+matters of discussion, or to reflect upon
+pledges which may either have lapsed
+or been broken. Our present business
+with Sir Robert is simply to have his
+evidence as to the remunerating prices
+of corn, and that evidence we have
+stated above. We are, therefore, entitled
+to assume that any great and
+permanent decline of prices, following
+upon increased foreign imports, must
+have a most deleterious effect upon
+the agriculture of the country, unless
+some remedy can be found which shall
+lessen the cost of production. As
+usual, there is no lack of volunteers
+to suggest remedies. Dr Buckland,
+of iguanodon and icthyosaurus celebrity,
+discourses learnedly of subsoils
+and manures, and offers to show how
+acres of wheat may be raised upon
+soils hitherto yielding no other crop
+than rushes, ling, or heather. It is
+the misfortune of scientific men that
+they live in a world of their own; for,
+had the learned fossilist been aware
+of what has been passing around for
+the last twenty years, he would have
+known that no sane person ever questioned
+the truth of his assertions.
+With the aid of draining, manure, and
+other artificial appliances, corn may
+be grown almost anywhere within the
+compass of the British islands. No
+man disputes that. The simple question
+is: Will the corn, when grown,
+yield a fair return for the expenses
+attendant upon its growth? Until the
+geologists and chemists have acquired
+so much real practical knowledge as
+to be able to answer this query satisfactorily,
+they will best consult the
+public interest by confining themselves
+to their quarries and their laboratories.
+That agriculturist who should
+deny the advantages which his own
+science has derived from the aid of
+chemistry, would not only be an ungrateful,
+but an exceedingly unreasonable
+man; nevertheless, he cannot
+be charged with either ingratitude or
+folly if, after calculating the cost of
+the productive agent, and the value
+of the produce, he declines to expend
+his capital in forced improvements,
+which at the end of the year, and with
+diminished prices, must leave him a
+considerable loser. If high farming
+could be shown to be productive, high
+farming would be the rule and not the
+exception. In Scotland we have
+farmed so high, that we are quoted at
+all hands as an example to the rest
+of the world. If we mistake not, Dr
+Buckland himself, in some of his stimulating
+addresses, has referred to
+the agricultural system of the Lothians
+as a specimen, or rather <em>the</em> specimen,
+of what may be achieved by science
+combined with energy. We accept
+the compliment; and in the course of
+the following pages we shall endeavour
+to show him, and his friends, how
+the pattern farmer is likely to fare,
+and how he has fared already, under
+the operation of the new code
+which modern liberalism has introduced
+for the encouragement of British
+enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>Next to the chemists, and moving
+closely in their wake, come the free-trading
+landlords who assented to the
+great experiment. If we select Lords
+Ducie and Kinnaird as fair specimens
+of this class in England and in Scotland,
+we shall do no more than give
+that prominence to their names which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
+is challenged by their late assertions.
+Our occupancy of the Scottish field,
+from which we are unwilling to depart,
+precludes us from entering into any
+investigation of the views promulgated
+by the English earl. But we have no
+scruple at all in dealing with the Scottish
+baron, who, in the letter of advice
+addressed to his tenantry of the Carse
+of Gowrie, has taken infinite pains to
+show that the superior husbandry of
+Scotland has been stimulated, if not
+created, by the exaction of high rents;
+and, by an easy corollary, that future
+improvement depends mainly upon the
+maintenance of these rents, irrespective
+altogether of the decline in the
+value of produce! This, we are bound
+to admit, is a comfortable landlord's
+theory; and, if the agricultural tenants
+who frequent the reading-room at
+Inchture are convinced of its practical
+soundness, we should be extremely
+sorry to utter a single word which
+might tend to unsettle their faith.
+But we fear that Lord Kinnaird, like
+many other inconsiderate individuals,
+has committed a serious mistake in
+rushing precipitately into print. We
+agree with him, on the whole, that
+rent is a desirable thing, which ought
+not, under ordinary circumstances, to
+be violently diminished; still we must
+adhere to our deliberate opinion, that,
+if a great organic change, affecting the
+interests of agriculture to a serious
+degree, is consequent upon any measures
+of the legislature, both landlord
+and tenant must be prepared to suffer
+in a certain ratio. It is all very well
+to recommend the aid of chemistry,
+provided, at the same time, that adequate
+capital is forthcoming. Even
+with capital, to be drawn from the
+tenant's, and not the landlord's pocket,
+it will require more than mere assertion
+to persuade the former that,
+by an enormously increased outlay in
+phosphate of lime, sulphuric acid,
+magnesia, manganese, gypsum, guano,
+and what not, he may raise crops the
+abundance of which shall compensate
+him for a direct loss of 16s. or 20s. on
+the quarter of wheat, with a corresponding
+diminution in the value of
+every other kind of agricultural produce.
+Some of those who, according
+to Lord Kinnaird, have shown themselves
+"the best and most successful
+farmers," men who have heretofore
+been engaged in business&mdash;that
+is, commercial business&mdash;may
+be induced to try the experiment;
+but if there be any truth in the
+reply which Mr Thomas Ross of
+Wardheads, a farmer in the Carse of
+Gowrie, has made to his lordship's
+pamphlet, the result of the trials
+hitherto attempted by such enterprising
+persons, upon the Kinnaird estates
+and in the immediate neighbourhood,
+may be best estimated by a perusal
+of the <cite>Gazette</cite>, wherein the names of
+divers unfortunate speculators are
+recorded. But, to speak plainly, the
+time has gone by for any such absurd
+trifling. What we want are facts,
+not theories; least of all, theories so
+palpably preposterous as to carry
+their refutation on their face.</p>
+
+<p>We do not, by any means, intend
+to insinuate that Lord Kinnaird is to
+be taken as a type of the Scottish or
+British landlords. On the contrary,
+we believe that he forms one of a
+minority so infinitesimally small, that
+the number of them would hardly be
+worth the reckoning. The position of
+the landlord and the tenant is, on the
+clearest of all grounds, inseparable;
+and it is in vain to suppose that the
+one class can, by possibility, have a
+distinct interest from the other. No
+doubt, during the currency of existing
+leases, entered into before the rapid
+conversion of the two great political
+rivals to the doctrines of free trade,
+the landlord may insist upon having
+the full penalty of his bond, and may
+wring the last farthing from the hand
+of the despairing farmer. We are
+living in times when vested interests
+have lost their character of sanctity:
+the legislature, while forcing down
+prices, provided no remedy for the
+relief of those who were tied up by
+bargains, reasonable when contracted,
+but ruinous under the altered circumstances;
+and the tenant, though forced
+to struggle against the might of foreign
+importation, has no legal claim on the
+proprietor of the soil for a corresponding
+deduction from his rent. But the
+good feeling which has always existed
+between the landlords and the tenantry
+of this country, if we assume no higher
+motive, will doubtless operate, in the
+majority of instances, to temper the
+rigour of the bargain, should the pressure
+continue to increase; and year<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
+after year, as leases expire, and as
+the results of practical experience become
+more generally understood, competition
+will disappear, and rents fall
+to a point exactly corresponding to
+the expectation of future prices. It
+is a bad sign of the times, though
+certainly an instructive one, when we
+find a wealthy peer, in a letter addressed
+to his tenantry, expressing
+his opinion that retired tradesmen and
+others&mdash;men who have never handled
+a plough in their lives, and who are
+far better versed in the mysteries of
+long-stitch than in those of draining&mdash;make
+much better farmers than those
+who have been reared to agriculture
+from their infancy. According
+to this view, the farmer is a mere
+booby compared to the man whose
+intellects have been sharpened in the
+shop, the counting-house, or the manufactory;
+and the experience which
+he has gained positively unfits him for
+the actual exercise of his profession!
+Such views must be corroborated by the
+testimony of deeper sages than Lord
+Kinnaird, before they pass into general
+acceptation; and we cannot help
+thinking that the noble author would
+have used a wise discretion had he
+been less explicit in his reasons for
+preferring the novice to the practised
+farmer. Besides their habits of accurate
+accounting, and their total freedom
+from prejudice, retired tradesmen
+appear valuable, in the eyes of Lord
+Kinnaird, for two especial reasons:&mdash;"In
+the first place, that they have
+capital; secondly, that they are not
+afraid to expend it, knowing that thus
+alone can their land be made productive."
+To such persons we would
+address a word of warning, cautioning
+them to use their acquired powers of
+accounting rather before than after
+they enter into any agricultural bargain;
+and in particular, we would
+advise them to look narrowly to the
+figures of their noble encourager, detailing
+the results of his own experience
+in the farm of Mill-hill, brought
+down, with great show of accuracy, to
+the close of 1847&mdash;<em>before</em> protection
+ceased, or prices fell&mdash;<em>but no later</em>. In
+the course of such investigations, they
+may light upon an anomaly or so
+which no arithmetician can explain,
+and be rather chary of receiving his
+lordship's dogmas, that remuneration
+from farming is "<em>not dependent
+on high prices</em>," and that "no one
+possessing capital need be afraid of
+investing it in a farm."</p>
+
+<p>The last champion of increased
+production as an antidote against free
+trade, is not the type of a class, but a
+single individual&mdash;whose testimony,
+however, being in some respects practical,
+is worth more than that of all
+the chemical doctors and interested
+landlords put together. We allude to
+Mr James Caird, whose pamphlet,
+entitled "High Farming under Liberal
+Covenants, the best Substitute for
+Protection," has already excited so
+much attention, that, if rumour does
+not err, its author has been deputed
+by government, at the recommendation
+of Sir Robert Peel, to visit Ireland
+with the view of reporting upon
+the agricultural capabilities of that
+country. We shall presently have
+occasion to examine the details of
+that pamphlet, as minutely as their
+importance deserves; at present we
+shall merely note, in passing, that it
+does not profess to set forth the results
+of the author's <em>own</em> practical experience,
+although Mr Caird is well
+known to be a farmer of great intelligence
+and ability; and, further, that
+it directly points to <em>liberal covenants</em>
+on the part of the landlord as an indispensable
+basis of the arrangement.
+In fact, therefore, we find that Lord
+Kinnaird and Mr Caird, though both
+writing on the same side, entertain
+views widely differing from each
+other, as to the future terms of adjustment
+between the two great agricultural
+classes. Lord Kinnaird is for
+"high rents;" Mr Caird for "liberal
+covenants." It is impossible that
+both of them can be right; and were
+we to join issue solely upon the facts
+which each of them has adduced, we
+should have no hesitation in deciding
+in favour of the practical farmer.
+But we apprehend that, even with the
+aid of liberal covenants, Mr Caird
+has failed in making out his case, as
+we shall shortly prove, when we proceed
+to analyse his statements.</p>
+
+<p>We have already made an approximation
+to the price which, in ordinary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
+seasons, and under existing
+burdens and covenants, grain ought
+to bear, in order to yield a fair remuneration
+to the British grower. That
+price, as we have already said, has
+been held to range from 54s. to 58s.
+per quarter. This we hold to be a
+moderate computation; but if a further
+limit be desired, we shall admit&mdash;though
+for argument's sake only&mdash;that
+with great retrenchment and
+economy, curtailing his own comforts,
+but not materially reducing the wages
+of the labourer, the farmer may continue
+to grow wheat at an average of
+50s., and nevertheless pay up his
+annual rent as before. A glance at
+former averages will show that this
+is a remarkably low figure; and, <em>being
+taken as an average</em>, it of course implies
+the supposition that in some
+years the price will be higher, in order
+to compensate for others in which it
+may be lower. Our primary business,
+therefore, is to ascertain whether,
+under the operation of the new system,
+prices can ever rise, supposing
+the present breadth of land to remain
+in tillage, above this average amount;
+or whether they must not permanently
+diminish so much as to destroy the vestige
+of an independent average in this
+country, and substitute foreign growing
+prices for our own. The question is a
+very momentous one, for it involves
+the existence of our national agriculture,
+and not only that, but the existence
+of the larger portion of the home
+market for our manufactures, compared
+with which our exports are comparatively
+as nothing. It is our earnest
+desire to approach it with all candour,
+temper, and moderation; and we shall
+not, if possible, allow ourselves to be
+betrayed into a single angry word, or
+discourteous expression, towards those
+who have differed from us hitherto in
+opinion. Neither shall we advance
+or reiterate opinions upon grounds
+purely theoretical. Ever since this
+contest began, we have taken a decided
+and consistent part, and have
+not scrupled to expose, by argument,
+what we held to be the glaring fallacies
+of free trade. That argument,
+necessarily inferential at first, has
+since been borne out and corroborated
+by every fact which has emerged;
+and, on that account alone, we think
+we are entitled to demand a serious
+consideration of the matter which we
+now lay before the public, as the result
+of an investigation, in the course
+of which no pains or trouble have
+been spared, and which may help to
+guide us all, be our politics what they
+may, to a true sense of the danger
+which must immediately arrive, if we
+remain but a few months longer in a
+state of fancied security. Our warning
+may be derided by some, but the
+day of reckoning is at hand.</p>
+
+<p>The first point, therefore, to which
+we shall entreat attention is, the prospect
+of future prices; regarding which
+we possess some information that
+may possibly take the reader by surprise.</p>
+
+<p>The adoption of free-trade principles,
+as regards the trade in corn,
+proceeded upon a false estimate of
+the precise quantities available for
+the supply of this country. Those
+who, from various motives, combined
+for the purpose of allowing the
+foreigner an unrestrained competition
+in the British market, had no idea of
+the strength of the power which they
+had thus evoked; while the fearful
+and doubting protectionist, who yielded
+too soon to the clamour, was little
+aware of the extent of the evils which
+his supineness was to bring upon him.
+The statistics of the question were
+altogether overlooked&mdash;at least no
+proper means were taken to obtain
+them in a faithful manner. The
+returns made by the foreign consuls,
+and the evidence collected as to the
+ordinary available supplies at foreign
+ports, were, in nearly every instance,
+the mere reflex of the views of interested
+parties, furnished to men unable,
+from their habits or education,
+to judge of their approach to accuracy.
+The voluminous report of Mr
+Jacob, which might have been of use
+as a warning, at any rate, that cheap
+food does not always make a happy
+and comfortable people, seems to have
+been forgotten in these latter days.
+Hence the theories of those who had
+some experience in trade, and whose
+published opinions on mercantile matters
+had obtained credit and celebrity,
+came to be mainly relied upon.
+Among these, the ideas of Mr Tooke,
+whose authority stands pre-eminently
+high in such matters, as to prices,
+and the quantity of foreign grain which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
+might, in the event of free trade, find
+its way to our shores, were much
+insisted on. But how far these are
+erroneous and delusive has been sadly
+proved by our experience of the effects
+of free trade in corn since 1846.</p>
+
+<p>Mr Tooke says, in the third volume
+of his work on the <cite>History of Prices</cite>,
+in the section entitled, "Conjectures
+as to the Prices at which Wheat would
+range, in the event of Free Trade"&mdash;which,
+under ordinary circumstances,
+he assumes to be 45s. per
+quarter,&mdash;"The quantity which we
+might look to import, at an average
+of the price I have named, might approach
+to from 1,500,000 to 2,000,000
+of quarters." He goes on to say, "If
+there were to be a fixed duty of
+8s. the quarter, I very much doubt
+whether the annual importation would
+reach that quantity;" and afterwards
+adds, "Before quitting this point,
+however, I must observe that my
+estimate of the price at which a
+foreign supply might be expected, of
+the extent supposed, may be considered
+by some of the opponents of
+the corn laws as strengthening the
+ground for the supporters of them,
+inasmuch as such statements may be
+made to work upon the minds of the
+farmers, in frightening them with the
+prospect of cheap foreign corn."</p>
+
+<p>What wonder, then, if the panic
+has materially increased, since the
+history of free trade, for the last three
+years, has revealed such a fearful
+addition to this estimate: for how
+stands the fact? In place of 2,000,000
+quarters of wheat annually, from the
+passing of the Corn-Law Repeal Act
+(26th June 1846) until the 5th November
+1847, a period of little more than
+sixteen months, we imported 7,229,916
+quarters of wheat&mdash;while the total of
+all kinds of grain entered for
+consumption amounted to 16,331,282
+quarters! Some idea may be formed
+of the effects of such an augmented
+importation, if we bear in mind that,
+from 5th July 1828 to 1st Jan. 1841,
+a period of nearly thirteen years, the
+whole quantity of foreign wheat and
+flour entered for home consumption
+was 13,475,000 quarters.</p>
+
+<p>But lest it should be argued that
+this was a supply produced by
+extraordinary circumstances, and which
+could only be furnished from accumulations
+of former seasons&mdash;as was,
+indeed, said at the time&mdash;the further
+history of the trade has shown us
+that our foreign supplies continue to
+pour in at precisely the same rate.
+The total of all kinds of grain and
+flour entered for consumption in the
+last nine months, ending 5th September
+1849, as exhibited by the Board
+of Trade returns, shows an amount of
+9,870,823 quarters, the quantity of
+wheat being for this period 3,821,292
+quarters; and of wheaten flour&mdash;besides
+frightening the farmers, bearing
+ruin to our own millers&mdash;3,236,993
+cwt.&mdash;together equivalent to quarters
+of wheat, 4,746,147. And all this, be
+it observed, has been imported while
+the average price per quarter has been
+<em>one sixpence only</em> above that named as
+likely to exclude the approach of more
+than 1,500,000 or 2,000,000 quarters
+from our shores! Formerly&mdash;in the
+first years of the century, up to 1842&mdash;the
+farmer had to contend against a
+foreign supply of grain amounting to
+little more than 1,000,000 quarters
+<em>per annum</em>&mdash;now, in some cases, under
+obligations contracted on the faith of
+protection to native industry, he is
+called upon to make the vain struggle
+against an inundation of foreign corn
+amounting to upwards of 1,000,000
+quarters <em>per month</em>! He cannot, it
+is evident, maintain the contest long.</p>
+
+<p>Such were the facts assumed as the
+basis of our legislation, and already
+they stand forth to the public eye as
+gross and palpable blunders. The
+British agriculturist has, beyond all
+question, been injured to an extent
+infinitely greater than was anticipated
+by any one&mdash;an extent so vast, that,
+could it have been predicted as a certainty,
+the rashest theorist would
+have recoiled from the danger of such
+an experiment.</p>
+
+<p>But we have by no means, as yet,
+attained the lowest point of depression.
+At the close of the year 1849,
+we take the general average price of
+wheat as at 40s. per quarter, and we
+shall probably have a breathing time
+of two or three months, until the
+Continental ports are again available
+for navigation. We shall hereafter
+consider whether, under any circumstances,
+the price which we have just
+quoted can remunerate the farmer: in
+the mean time, let us see whether it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
+likely that, in future, even this price
+can be maintained.</p>
+
+<p>It is no easy matter to ascertain
+the rates at which corn may be grown
+on the Continent. The current prices
+at foreign ports, such as Hamburg,
+have, in reality, little bearing upon
+this most vital point, though they
+have been eagerly assumed by the
+free-traders as a sure index of future
+prices. Very little consideration will
+show every one that the true way towards
+forming a fair conclusion on
+the subject, is to ascertain, as nearly
+as may be, the cost of grain, <em>not at the
+ports from whence it issues</em>, but in the
+inland countries where the greater
+proportion of it is grown. The reason
+for this is obvious. Under the
+old system, when protective duties
+were the rule, the demand for foreign
+corn was exceedingly fluctuating and
+uncertain. We never dealt directly
+with the foreign grower; but, between
+him and the British consumer, at least
+three profits intervened. There were
+middlemen, principally Jews, who
+made it their regular business to purchase
+up the superfluity of the Polish
+crops on speculation, and to sell it
+to the Dantzic dealers. Then came
+the profit of the latter, and also that
+of the British corn-merchant; and,
+as the trade was notoriously a precarious
+one, these profits were of
+considerable amount. The demand,
+however, may now be considered as
+fixed and steady. Henceforward,
+under the operation of free trade, the
+two considerations of quality and
+cheapness must alone regulate the
+market. Not only the superfluity of
+Continental harvests will be available,
+but new land, of which there are immense
+tracts of the finest description,
+hitherto untilled, will be put under
+cultivation, and the produce regularly
+transmitted to this country, where a
+ready market can at all times be found.
+The first symptom of this new regular
+trade will be the disappearance of one
+of the intermediate profits. This is
+not subject of prophecy; it has already
+taken place. The foreigners have now
+taken the whole of the foreign grain
+trade exclusively into their own hands.
+We are informed by the first corn-merchants
+of Leith, that there is not
+a single order sent for grain from this
+country. "The finest Dantzic wheat,
+free on board," writes one of our
+correspondents, "will not be sold to a
+British merchant for less than 38s.
+the quarter; and as no more than 40s.
+or 41s. could be got for it here, there
+is no margin for a profit, and the risk
+is not run. But the foreigner will
+send it on his own account, and sell
+it <em>here</em> at 38s. and realise a profit.
+You thus see that the entire trade is
+out of British hands, for the prices of
+our own grain must entirely be ruled
+by those of the foreigner; and the consequence
+is, that every bushel sent to
+this country is on consignment and
+not to order."</p>
+
+<p>There still remains another profit,
+that of the middleman, to be reduced.
+The creation of a constant and steady
+demand from the foreign ports&mdash;which
+demand cannot be otherwise unless a
+protective law is reimposed&mdash;will
+naturally excite the dealers to purchase
+directly from the Polish grower.
+In this way they will have double
+profits, without enhancing materially,
+if at all, the original cost of the grain;
+for, in other Continental corn-growing
+countries, untilled land may be had to
+any extent for next to nothing, and
+no farming capital, as we understand
+the word, is required. Here a
+remark or two, founded upon past history,
+may be useful. About a century
+and a half ago, or rather about the
+time of the Revolution of 1688, the
+average price of wheat, as stated by
+Adam Smith, amounted to 28s. in
+England. Public burdens were at
+that time moderate, and so were poor-rates;
+still they were of such an
+amount as to be felt by the farmer.
+The wages of the agricultural labourer
+were at least seven shillings per week,
+equal to about 10s. 6d. of our present
+money, and the rent of arable
+land might be estimated over-head at
+5s. 6d. per acre. All these items are
+enormously above the rates at present
+known in the Continental corn-growing
+countries, and some of them have no
+existence there. It is difficult to get
+at Polish charges, especially since the
+late change in our policy, for we
+have invariably found that foreign
+proprietors are most jealous of disclosing
+their true domestic position.
+Nor can we wonder at this, for the
+truth, were it broadly told, might
+tend materially to check that liberal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
+sympathy, which of late years has
+been so abundantly shown to the
+insurgents of central Europe. We
+are, however, fortunately enabled
+to throw some useful light upon
+this matter. Our informant is a
+Scottish agriculturist, who, some years
+ago, was engaged as land-steward on
+the estates of a Polish nobleman in
+Gallicia, and who, therefore, had
+ample opportunity of witnessing the
+foreign system. If the reader glances
+at the map of Europe, tracing the
+course of the Vistula from Dantzic,
+and then following the upward line of
+its tributary, the Bug, he will find laid
+down in close proximity the extensive
+districts of Volhynia, Podolia, Kiow,
+Gallicia, and others, formerly Palatinates,
+which together constitute the
+largest, richest, and most productive
+corn-field of Europe. Here there are
+no farmers, and&mdash;what is more
+strange to us&mdash;no free labourers who
+receive a weekly wage. The land is
+tilled for the profit of the owner; a
+superintendant presides over it as
+taskmaster; and the workers of the
+soil are serfs in the actual position of
+slaves, who toil late and early without
+other remuneration than the coarse
+rye bread, and similar fare, which is
+necessary to support existence. The
+manufactures of Manchester and Sheffield
+have not found their way into
+this region, and never will; because
+the population, being utterly without
+means, could not purchase them, and
+probably would not were the means
+within their power. Their dress is of
+the most primitive kind, and differs
+in no respect from that of tribes
+utterly barbarous&mdash;being chiefly
+constructed of the skins of animals.
+They are hardy, docile, and exceedingly
+sensitive to kindness, but as far
+removed from civilisation as the tribes
+of Tartary; and their owners&mdash;for
+that is the proper term&mdash;take especial
+care that no doctrine shall reach them
+which in any way may interfere with
+the exercise of despotic rule. In
+short, they are like so many cattle
+cultivating the land for their masters
+at the bare expense of their keep. To
+demonstrate more clearly the difference
+of the value of labour, we may
+here state, on the best authority, that
+in that district where the finest wheat,
+distinctively known as "high-mixed
+Dantzic," is grown, the ordinary price
+of a quarter of wheat will defray the
+expense of from forty to forty-five
+days' work, whilst here it can procure
+only from twenty to twenty-five days.
+The climate is excellent, and the yield
+of the soil considerable. Wheat may be
+grown for several years successively
+without manure, and always with
+comparatively little work. The produce is
+floated down the numerous rivers
+which intersect the district, to Dantzic
+and other coast towns on the Baltic,
+where it is stored; and these will in
+future form the great depots of the
+grain furnished by central Europe for
+British consumption. Contrast this
+state of matters in modern Poland
+with that of England in 1688, when
+land yielded a considerable rent, when
+poor-rates and public burdens were
+levied, and when the labouring man
+received a reasonable wage; and we
+must arrive at the conclusion that the
+remunerating price of wheat in the
+former country must be something
+greatly lower than 28s. per quarter.
+We are almost afraid to state our
+conviction, lest it should appear exaggerated;
+but we do not doubt that
+Polish wheat could be delivered at
+Dantzic at 16s., and yet leave a
+considerable profit to the grower.
+We must also note that the variableness
+of our climate, and the comparative
+poorness of our soil, places us at
+a vast disadvantage in point of quality,
+as compared with the southern grower.
+It can be established, by consulting
+the prices-current of Mark Lane for a
+series of years, that it would require a
+differential duty of 6s. per quarter on
+wheat, on this account alone, to put
+the British farmer on a fair footing
+with the great bulk of his foreign
+competitors. Last season, the difference
+between the best foreign and
+English wheat throughout the year,
+as proved by the same authority, was
+upwards of 10s. per quarter.</p>
+
+<p>We beg it will be distinctly understood,
+that, in estimating the remunerative
+prices of foreign grain, we do
+not profess to arrive at more than
+general conclusions. It matters nothing
+for or against our argument
+whether wheat can be delivered at
+Dantzic a little cheaper, or a little
+dearer, than the above sum. We leave
+room on either side for a considerable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
+margin. This much, however, we
+know for a fact, that an eminent corn-merchant
+in Leith has, in former years,
+purchased fine wheat, free on board, at
+Dantzic for 18s., with the offer of a constant
+supply, and that no circumstances
+have since then emerged to enhance
+the cost of production. Besides this,
+as Mr Sandars well remarks in one
+of his published letters, we have had
+plain and evident experience of foreign
+production under the working
+of the corn law of 1842. We had
+a fixed duty of 20s. per quarter in actual
+operation for four years; and in
+1844 and 1845, such duty was paid,
+week after week, and in the latter
+year for six months consecutively, at
+a time when our general averages
+were only 46s. to 47s. a quarter. Was
+the foreigner at that time selling at a
+loss? His price, then, adapting itself
+to ours, was 26s. and 27s., deducting
+the duty, and at that time, be it remembered,
+<em>he was unprepared for
+competition</em>. So that, from experience
+not five years old, we may gather
+what kind of future competition awaits
+us, and also what we are annually
+sacrificing in revenue, by madly abandoning
+protection. Does any one believe
+that, in 1845, had there been
+no duty on foreign corn, wheat would
+have fallen to 26s., or the foreigner
+have sold his crop at that price? The
+remitted duty goes into the pocket of
+the foreigner, who is selling in the
+dearest market, and underselling our
+farmers, as he will be able to do&mdash;for
+he has tested that ability already&mdash;down
+to a point which must extinguish
+British agriculture. We know
+also from Mr Meek's report, quoted by
+Sir Robert Peel in 1842, that "the
+prices of corn in Denmark have, during
+the last twenty-five years, averaged,
+for wheat, 28s. 10d., rye, 19s.
+9d., barley, 14s., and oats, 10s. 6d.
+per quarter," and it is obviously ridiculous
+to suppose that the cost of production
+in Poland is nearly so high as
+in Denmark and Schleswig-Holstein.
+Last year Denmark sent us upwards of
+a million quarters of grain. These are
+facts which have distinctly emerged,
+and they are all-important at the
+present time, when the tenantry are
+urged to expend further capital on the
+chance of future rise of prices. It is
+now perfectly clear that the returns,
+which were assumed as the basis for
+the great experiment, are worthy of
+no confidence. On the other hand,
+we do not wish that our opinions,
+which point to a totally different result,
+should influence any one in his
+future line of conduct; but, beyond
+our opinions, there are certain facts,
+which we have just stated, and the
+import of which cannot be misunderstood,
+and these may serve as warnings
+for the future. Of the capability of
+the foreigner to supply us with any
+given amount of grain, we think no
+reasonable man can doubt. There is
+a breadth of soil open sufficient to supply
+more than twenty times the most
+exorbitant demand. It is his power
+to undersell us, and the extent of
+that power, which have been questioned;
+and on the solution of that question
+depends the utility of high farming,
+in this country, on a grand and
+comprehensive scale. We shall show
+that, at present prices, high farming
+is so far from remunerative, that those
+who practise it are actually incurring
+an immense loss; and that, unless
+rents come down to zero, or at least
+to a point which would utterly ruin
+the landlords, high farming cannot be
+proceeded with. We have shown
+that, within the last five years, we
+have been supplied, and that regularly,
+from abroad, when wheat was
+at 46s. per quarter, and a duty of
+20s. existed; and, at such rates,
+it is quite evident that all attempt
+at competition would be hopeless.
+Wheat could not be grown remuneratively
+at 26s. or 27s. in England
+before a single shilling of the national
+debt was incurred; and no man is
+mad enough to insist upon its possibility
+now. When, therefore, the
+Free-traders tell us that the present is
+a mere temporary depreciation, we
+ask them&mdash;and we demand a distinct
+reply&mdash;for an explanation of the imports
+in 1845. How was it that, for
+a long period, foreign corn came in
+plentifully, paying the duty of 20s.,
+when our home averages were at
+46s. and 47s.? Can they assign any
+special reason for it? If not, the conclusion
+is plain, that the foreign
+growers can and will undersell us
+down to that point, if we possibly
+could compete with them so far, and
+all the while add to their profit,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
+while they also abstract from our
+revenue.</p>
+
+<p>Our belief, as we have said already,
+is, that the foreigner could afford to
+go much lower, and that he could furnish
+us with wheat at little more than
+18s. We have stated above an instance
+of this kind, and, if necessary,
+we could furnish more. Nor will the
+statement appear exaggerated to
+those who will take the trouble of
+comparing English prices and English
+burdens, as they existed before
+the Revolution of 1688, with the
+prices and rates of the great corn-growing
+countries of central Europe
+at the present moment, making due
+allowance for climate and the difference
+of social institutions. At the
+same time, let it be understood that we
+do not aver, that all the foreign grain
+which way find its way here can be
+grown at such low prices. Pomeranian
+and Bohemian wheat is more
+expensive in culture than that of
+Poland; and we know that there is
+some difference between Hamburg
+and Dantzic prices. Still our conviction
+is most decided, that henceforward
+the foreigner has the game
+entirely in his hands; that he may
+prescribe what price he pleases to this
+country; and that every year, in spite
+of all efforts, all home harvests, all
+variety of seasons, prices must inevitably
+decline. If it were possible that,
+by high farming, or any other means,
+we could produce wheat remuneratively
+at 30s., or 25s., the foreigner
+would be ready to sell in competition
+at 25s. or 18s., even supposing he
+received hardly any profit. His business
+is <em>to get hold of the British
+market</em>, and that once accomplished,
+he may elevate or depress prices as he
+pleases. The declension will be gradual,
+but it will be perfectly steady.
+This year wheat has been brought
+down to 40s., not in consequence of an
+exuberant harvest, as in 1835, but
+through competition. A million of
+quarters per month have been poured
+in to sink prices, and we are now debating
+at home whether British agriculture
+can go on under such circumstances.
+Tenants are mourning over
+their losses; labourers are feeling the
+pinch of lowered wages; some landlords,
+in apprehension of diminished rents, are
+exhorting to further outlay of capital;
+statesmen are consulting with chemists;
+and agitators, who have made all the
+ruin, are shouting for financial reductions.
+In the mean time, the winter is
+crawling on apace. The price of grain
+in Britain has been beat down by competition
+<em>with a poor foreign crop</em>, for
+such unquestionably was the yield
+of 1848. That of 1849 was a splendid
+one, and, the moment the ports are
+opened in spring, its influence will be
+felt. The question will not then be
+of 40s, but of a price still lower; and
+we apprehend that, in that event, the
+argument will be nearly closed. We
+do not, however, anticipate that the
+reduction will be rapid. The dealers
+at the different foreign ports will best
+consult their own interest by keeping,
+as nearly as possible, just below
+the quotations current in the British
+market. In this way large profits will
+be secured during the whole
+maintenance of the struggle, which
+must end by the British farmer,
+overloaded with rent, taxes, and
+public burdens, giving way to his competitors,
+who, with no such impediments,
+and with a better climate and
+richer soil, will monopolise his proper
+function. We shall then experience
+in corn, what our West Indian colonists,
+under the same kind of legislation, have
+experienced in sugar. The greater part
+of the soil of Britain will be diverted
+from cereal growth; and, as the earth
+does not yield her produce without
+long wooing, we shall be at the mercy
+of the foreigner for our supplies of
+food, at any rates which he may
+choose to impose.</p>
+
+<p>As to the matter of freights, about
+which so much was at one time said
+and written, we need not complicate
+the question by entering into minute
+details. From information upon which
+we can rely, we learn that, at this
+moment, steamers are constructing for
+the sole purpose of effecting rapid and
+continual transit between foreign and
+British ports, for the conveyance of
+grain&mdash;a circumstance which speaks
+volumes as to the anticipations of the
+Continental traders. We may also
+observe that ordinary freights form no
+bar to importation, since they are
+now hardly greater from the Baltic to
+this country than from Ross-shire to
+Leith, or from many parts of England
+to London. One fact, communicated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
+by a correspondent connected with the
+shipping trade, has peculiarly impressed
+us. We give it in his own
+words: "I enclose you a price-current,
+which will give you the prices of all
+grain. Grain from America has lately
+come home, both in American and
+British ships, at 4d. per bushel freight,
+and flour at 6d. per barrel&mdash;but
+much more frequently shipped on the
+condition <em>that, if it leaves a profit, the
+one half goes to the shipper, and the
+other half to the owner of the ship for
+freight</em>." He adds, "The freights from
+Quebec and Montreal are higher&mdash;say
+2s. 6d. or 3s. for flour; but as
+British shipping ceases being protected
+after 1st January, they will be equally
+low there." So much for pulling down
+one interest by way of compensation
+to another!</p>
+
+<p>The reader&mdash;or rather the critical
+economist&mdash;may treat the foregoing
+remarks as speculative or not, according
+to the colour of his opinions. All
+the discussion upon free-trade has
+been speculative, and so was the
+legislation also. We take credit for
+having anticipated what we now see
+realised; but beyond that, and beyond
+the facts which the experience of former
+years has given us, and which we
+have just laid before our readers, we are,
+as a matter of course, open to objection,
+and also liable to error. We have
+not been arguing, however, without
+sound data&mdash;such as, we suspect, never
+were brought fully under the eye of
+our statesmen&mdash;and they all tend
+manifestly and clearly to the same
+conclusion. That conclusion is, that,
+without the reimposition of a protective
+duty, prices cannot rise above
+the present level. Our argument
+goes further; for we hold it to be clear
+that, without some extraordinary
+combination of circumstances which
+we cannot conceive, prices must decline,
+and decline greatly. We look
+for nothing else; but having had our
+say as to the future, and pointed out the
+prospect before us, we shall now confine
+ourselves to present circumstances,
+and endeavour to ascertain whether,
+with a continuance of <em>present prices</em>,
+and under existing burdens, agriculture
+can be carried on in Britain at a
+reasonable profit to the farmer.</p>
+
+<p>Mr Caird's pamphlet, though it has
+attracted a good deal of attention,
+contains no hints or information which
+are new to the practical farmer. Its
+high-sounding title would lead us to
+suppose that he had discovered some
+improved system of agriculture, which
+might be applicable throughout the
+kingdom. We read the pamphlet;
+and we find that it contains nothing
+beyond the description of a very low-rented
+and peculiarly-situated farm,
+the occupant of which appears to have
+realised considerable profits from an
+extensive cultivation of the potato.
+It is not necessary that we should do
+more than allude to the general tone of
+the pamphlet, which seems to us rather
+more arrogant than the occasion demanded.
+Mr Caird, we doubt not, is
+a good practical farmer; but we should
+very much have preferred a distinct
+and detailed statement of his own
+experiences at Baldoon, to an incomplete
+and unattested account of his
+neighbour's doings at Auchness. A
+man is fairly entitled to lecture to his
+class when he can show that, in his
+own person, he is a thorough master
+of his subject. A farmer who has
+devised improvements, tested them,
+and found them to answer his expectations,
+and to repay him, has a right
+to take high ground, and to twit his
+brother tenants with their want of
+skill or energy. But Mr Caird is not
+in this position. He is occupier of a
+farm of considerable extent, but he
+does not venture to give us the results
+of his own experience. It is possible
+that he may himself pursue the system
+which he advocates, but he does not
+tell us so; he points to Mr M'Culloch
+as the model. This is at best
+but secondary evidence; howbeit we
+shall take it as it comes; and as this
+is strictly a farmer's question, it may
+be best to allow one practical agriculturist
+to reply to the views of another.
+We might, indeed, have abstained
+altogether from doing so, for Mr
+Monro of Allan, in a very able pamphlet,
+entitled <cite>Landlords' Rents and
+Tenants' Profits</cite>, has distinctly and
+unanswerably exposed the fallacies of
+Mr Caird. Still, lest it should be
+said that we are disposed to reject,
+too lightly, any evidence which has
+been adduced on the opposite side,
+we have requested Mr Stephens,
+author of <cite>The Book of the Farm</cite>, to
+favour us with his views as to Auchness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
+cultivation. We subjoin them,
+for the benefit of all concerned.</p>
+
+<p>"On perusing Mr Caird's pamphlet,
+every practical man must be struck
+with astonishment at the inordinate
+quantity of potatoes cultivated at
+Auchness.</p>
+
+<p>"The entire thirty acres of dried
+moss, (p. 7,) and twenty-five acres of
+lea, (p. 15,) were in potatoes in 1848;
+and the county Down farmer, whose
+statement is reprinted at the close of
+Lord Kinnaird's pamphlet, reports
+that the number of acres occupied by
+potatoes in 1849 was ninety. This is
+more than one-third of the whole area
+of the land. I have considered attentively
+the calculation made by the
+farmer; and I think that, in order to
+meet present prices, it should be
+modified as below. You will also
+observe that, in my opinion, the outlay
+on the farm has been too highly
+estimated.<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="outlay">
+<tr><td align="left">"</td><td align="left">90 acres potatoes, at 7<sup><small>1</small></sup>&frasl;<sub><small>2</small></sub> tons each, £2 per ton,</td><td align="right">£1350</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">60 acres wheat, at 36 bushels each, £2 per quarter,</td><td align="right">540</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Profit on 130 cattle, at £6 each,</td><td align="right">780</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Profit on 150 sheep, at 10s. each,</td><td align="right">75</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Profit of 5 milk cows, at £12 each,</td><td align="right" class="bb">60</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£2805</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left" colspan="2"><em>Deduct</em>&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Rent,</td><td align="right">£262</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Labour, 40s. per acre,</td><td align="right">520</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Manure purchased, (p. 23, Caird,)</td><td align="right">256</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Food for cattle purchased, (do.,)</td><td align="right">270</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Seed potatoes, 108 tons, at £2, for 90 acres,</td><td align="right">216</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Seed wheat, 120 bushels, at 5s.,</td><td align="right">30</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Tradesmen's bills, at £7 per pair horses each half-year,</td><td align="right">70</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Incidental expenses,</td><td align="right">50</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Interest on £2000 capital, at 10 per cent,</td><td align="right" class="bb">200</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">1874</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£931</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p>"This balance sheet shows a profit of
+£931; but as the potatoes are worth
+£1350, which is no less than £419 more
+than all the profit, it is evident that it
+is the potato <em>alone</em> that affords any
+profit under this instance of high
+farming. Indeed Mr Caird admits
+as much when he says, 'The <em>great</em> value
+of a sound potato crop induces
+the tenant to adopt such means as
+will not interfere with the <em>continued</em>
+cultivation of this root.' The admission
+is, that the profit rests entirely
+on the precarious potato. The potato
+has hitherto been safe in the moss of
+Auchness, and it is safe there in no
+other class of soil. In Ireland, even
+the moss does not save it. There is no
+high farming in the matter, in so far
+as manures are concerned, for as much
+and richer manure is used in the
+neighbourhood of large towns; and as
+on the moss at Auchness too much
+manure may be applied, at least after
+a certain time, so there may be on
+other soils; and thus high farming,
+in reference to soils, just means
+heavy manuring. Mr Caird says,
+'The potato has been grown on the
+moss land successively, year after
+year; but the entire reclaimed portions,
+<em>from being so frequently manured</em>,
+are becoming too rich, and the
+crop beginning to show signs of disease,
+and a tendency to grow to tops
+rather than roots, which makes it necessary
+to adopt some plan of reducing
+its fertility.' It is known to every
+farmer, that it is quite possible to
+overmanure any crop, and the effects
+of overmanuring are, the breaking
+down of the straw of the grain crops,
+and the hollowing of the core of the
+tubers and bulbs of the green crops.
+The inference then is, that a profit
+which depends entirely on potatoes is
+uncertain in any year; and the particular
+case of Auchness, in which
+that profit is derived from moss, is
+not generally applicable to the country,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
+and cannot, therefore, be held up
+as an example to farmers.</p>
+
+<p>"The farm of Auchness contains
+nothing remarkable: for although the
+peculiar culture of the potato in moss
+is generally inapplicable, there are
+many farms in Scotland which have
+moss attached to them. The sea-ware
+may also be got on most farms on the
+coast, and where this is the case, it is
+commonly used. The soil is not good,
+and is certainly below the average
+quality; but I cannot understand
+what is meant by Mr Caird, when he
+asserts, on p. 7, that the '125 acres
+of light sandy soil is better adapted
+for <em>wheat</em> than for barley or oats when
+in a high state of cultivation,' for, in
+other parts of the country, such a soil
+would be eminently suited for barley.
+The steading is large for the size of
+the farm, but every steading ought to
+be made conformable to the farm by
+the landlord. The system of farming
+followed by Mr M'Culloch, of having
+'no fixed rotation of crops,' is highly
+objectionable, and Mr Caird, with
+great propriety, does not commend it;
+since the farmer who manages so, has
+no dependence on the amount of crop
+he may receive any year, and must
+work according to circumstances, and
+not on principle, as the unhappy Irish
+hitherto have done. In this respect,
+also, Auchness is no example for the
+country; and, were a regular rotation
+followed on it, so many potatoes could
+not be grown, and the profits would
+be proportionally reduced.</p>
+
+<p>"On the whole, then, I would say
+that Auchness farming is not generally
+applicable; and therefore it is useless
+to proclaim it as an antidote to free
+competition. For although it is probably
+true, as Mr Caird says, 'that
+<em>green</em> crops are likely henceforth to be
+the main stay of the agriculturists of
+this country,' yet he must be conscious
+that he is wrong in recommending, as
+an example, and as a substitute for
+protection, the <em>enlarged</em> cultivation of
+<em>potatoes</em> as a green crop, seeing that
+their growth has, of late years, been
+attended with great uncertainty. Is
+it not a mockery, then, to tell us that
+our main stay against foreign competition
+should depend upon a peculiarly
+uncertain crop? Will his pointing
+to a moss of 30 acres in Wigtonshire,
+convince the farmers of this
+great kingdom, that their future safety,
+as a class, must entirely depend upon
+their cultivating such a root on such
+a soil, in preference to wheat on the
+fertile loams of glorious old England?
+I apprehend that such a result is
+beyond the power of argument."</p>
+
+<p>The non-agricultural reader must
+pardon us for the insertion of these
+details. They are necessary for our
+case, because, if high farming can be
+made an efficient substitute for protection,
+we are bound to adopt it, and we
+should owe a deep debt of gratitude to
+any one who could point out the way.
+We are fully alive to the necessity of
+agricultural enterprise; and, if we
+thought that our farmers were standing
+beside their mired waggon, clamorously
+invoking the assistance of Jupiter,
+when they should be clapping their
+own shoulders to the wheel, we would
+be the first to remonstrate on the
+heinous folly of their conduct. It is
+because <em>no amount</em> of personal exertion
+has been spared, that we seek to
+enforce their claim according to the
+utmost of our ability; and, in doing
+so, we are bound to prove, that no
+ordinary means which have been suggested
+for their extrication can be of
+the smallest avail. Mr Caird has
+come forward in the character of
+adviser, and we have stated the
+opinion of practical men as to the
+feasibility of his scheme. We have
+yet more to state, for nature has
+already denounced his plan far more
+effectually than opinion. When the
+county Down farmer visited Auchness
+in July last, he found more than
+one-third of the whole farm under
+potato culture. Upon that crop depended
+not only the whole profits,
+but a great deal more. Without the
+potatoes, there would have been a
+loss, at a more favourable calculation
+than his, of £419, on a farm paying
+only £262 of rent. <em>Since then</em>, we
+are informed on the best authority,
+<em>that disease has attacked the potatoes</em>.
+The highly-manured moss could not
+preserve from decay, if it did not accelerate
+it, the uncertain and precarious
+root. Mr Caird must not quarrel
+with the penalty he has incurred for
+having totally misunderstood the
+nature of the question which is now
+agitating the public mind. Whilst
+all others were directing their attention<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
+to cereal produce, he kept his
+eyes obstinately fixed on a little
+patch of ground which seemed to
+give unusual facilities for the growth
+of the doubtful potato. He never
+attempted to show that, without
+potatoes, and an exorbitant growth
+of that vegetable, high farming could
+pay at Auchness, even with the important
+elements of very low rent,
+and singular liberality on the part of
+an enthusiastic landlord. He perilled
+his whole case upon the probable returns
+of a root which every farmer
+views with suspicion; and&mdash;more than
+that&mdash;his statistics, which he wished
+to be inferred were of universal application,
+were only applicable to a few
+remote and isolated spots in Scotland.
+The result is, that, with all
+these advantages, the experiment
+has failed; and that all the liquid
+manures, economy of dung, guano
+stimulants, and so forth, as practised
+at Auchness, cannot, at present prices
+of produce, force up so much grain,
+or feed so much stock, as will nearly
+pay for the required and inevitable
+expenses. We pass over all possible
+mistakes. It may have been matter
+of delicacy for Mr Caird to have
+exposed the balance-sheet of his
+neighbour, or he may have assumed,
+rather hastily, statistics for which he
+had meagre warrant. We can allow
+him a large margin. <em>Without</em>
+potatoes, and such an extent of
+potato as would be plainly ludicrous if
+adopted as a general rule, Auchness
+never could have paid. <em>With</em> potatoes,
+it has failed in the very year wherein
+Mr Caird has chosen to exhibit it as
+a universal model.</p>
+
+<p>So much for the only instance of
+high farming which has been adduced,
+as an example of its efficacy in
+superseding the protective system.
+In justice to Mr M'Culloch, whom
+we believe to be a most intelligent
+farmer, let it not be thought that we
+presume to call it empirical. On the
+contrary, we are convinced that that
+gentleman has acted with great judgment,
+suiting his management to the
+nature of the ground with which he
+had to deal; and that he has made
+as much of it as any man could do
+under similar circumstances. He was
+compelled to deal with a precarious
+crop, and few men could have dealt
+with it better: still, his method is no
+example to others differently situated,
+nor are his results to be taken by
+them either as matter of warning or
+of triumph. It is sufficient for us that
+Auchness farming, successful or not,
+is peculiar, and cannot be dragged in
+as a rule or example for the English
+or the Scottish farmer. We have
+enough of high farming statistics to
+lay before our readers, and, therefore,
+without any further apology, we dismiss
+the matter of Auchness, as
+totally inapplicable to the great question
+at issue.</p>
+
+<p>In order to arrive as nearly as possible
+at the true state of the case, in
+so far as Scottish farming is concerned,
+we put ourselves into communication
+with two gentlemen, of the highest
+eminence in their profession. We
+need scarcely tell our countrymen on
+this side of the Border, that it would
+be difficult to find better testimony on
+such a subject than that of Messrs
+Watson of Keillor, and Dudgeon of
+Spylaw; and we apprehend, moreover,
+that many English agriculturists
+are fully acquainted with their character
+and high reputation. Through
+their kindness we have been furnished
+with the statistics of farms situated in
+the fertile grain-growing districts of
+Forfar and Roxburgh; and the calculations
+as to the yield, prices, and
+expenses, were made from their own
+books. The rent set down is that
+which is usual in the district for land
+of the best description, and the tenant's
+capital is named at an amount which
+might enable him to develop the full
+capabilities of the soil. The estimates
+have been most carefully framed, with
+the view of avoiding every kind of
+exaggeration; and they have been
+gone over by Mr Stephens, who attests
+their general accuracy. They are as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<p class="center">No. I.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Returns</span> of <span class="smcap">Produce</span> from a 500 acre farm in Strathmore, county of Forfar,
+on a five-shift rotation of crops, with an improved stock of cattle and sheep,
+on an average of years previous to free trade in corn, cattle, &amp;c.; and</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Comparative Statement</span> of what may be calculated upon as the returns<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
+from the same farm under the present legislative measures affecting British
+agriculture.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="one">
+<tr><td align="left"><p class="hanging">Rent of the farm, as fixed for 19 years, assuming former average price of corn and cattle, &amp;c.,</p></td><td align="right">£800</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><p class="hanging">Invested capital of £6 per acre at entry, £3000. Interest upon this sum, at rate of 10 per cent,</p></td><td align="right">300</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><p class="hanging">Floating capital of £4 per acre, £2000. Interest thereon, 5 per cent,</p></td><td align="right">100</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><p class="hanging">Expenses of management, wages, tradesmen's accounts, insurances, grass seeds, &amp;c., at the rate of 20s. per acre per annum,</p></td><td align="right">500</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><p class="hanging">Annual loss by casualties on live stock by disease and accidents,</p></td><td align="right">100</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><p class="hanging">Public burdens leviable upon the farmer, including poor-rates,</p></td><td align="right" class="bb">50</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><p class="center">Sum chargeable against the farm annually,</p></td><td align="right">£1850</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p class="hanging">To meet this sum there is the produce of 200 acres of corn crop,
+and the profits on live stock, (the whole grass and green
+crop being consumed on the farm.)</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Bushels.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">100 acres of oats, producing 48 bushels per acre,</td><td align="right">4800</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Off for servants, horses, seed, &amp;c.</td><td align="right" class="bb">2400</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Leaves disposable oats,</td><td align="right" class="bb">2400</td><td align="right">at 3s.</td><td align="right">£360</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">40 acres of spring wheat, producing 32 bushels per acre,</td><td align="right">1280</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Off for seed,</td><td align="right" class="bb">160</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Disposable wheat,</td><td align="right" class="bb">1120</td><td align="right">at 7s.</td><td align="right">392</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">60 acres of barley, producing 42 bush. per acre,</td><td align="right">2520</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Off for seed and horses, &amp;c.,</td><td align="right" class="bb">500</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Disposable barley,</td><td align="right">2020</td><td align="left">at 4s.</td><td align="right" class="bb">404</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£1156</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Profits from live stock, fed upon 200 acres grass, and 100 acres green crop,</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">800</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Total returns,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">£1956</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">1956</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Leaving annually to the farmer, for his skill and industry, over interest of capital employed, a sum of</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£106</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p class="hanging">Convert the above disposable produce into money, at the present prices,
+or rather at what may be fairly calculated upon for future seasons,
+under a system of free trade, and the following is the result:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="money">
+<tr><td align="left">2400 bushels of oats, at 2s. per bushel,</td><td align="right">£240</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1120 bushels of wheat, at 5s. per ditto,</td><td align="right">280</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">2020 bushels of barley, at 2s. 9d. per ditto,</td><td align="right" class="bb">277</td><td align="right" class="bb">15</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£797</td><td align="right">15</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Live stock, (as above, £800,) less 20 per cent on former prices, leaves</td><td align="right" class="bb">640</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Net return,</td><td align="right">£1437</td><td align="right">15</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sum chargeable as above against the farm,</td><td align="right" class="bb">1850</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Leaving the farmer <em>minus</em>, for rent, capital, and expenses of management,</td><td align="right">£412</td><td align="right">5</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">412</td><td align="right" class="bb">5</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Total loss annually incurred by difference in price occasioned by free trade,</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb2">£518</td><td align="right" class="bb2">5</td><td align="right" class="bb2">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p class="sig space-above">
+HUGH WATSON,<br />
+<span class="smcap">Keillor</span>, <em>1st December 1849</em>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+
+<p class="center">No. II.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">
+<span class="smcap">Statement</span> of the average <span class="smcap">Produce</span> of a farm in a full state of productiveness,<br />
+managed agreeably to the five-shift course, as usually<br />
+adopted in the south-eastern Borders of Scotland, where the returns<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>of stock form a very considerable means of remuneration, and the<br />
+price of which, of course, is a material element in the calculation<br />
+as to the rent to be given.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="produce">
+<tr><td align="left"><p class="hanging">Thus, then, assuming the rent of 500 acres of useful land for this purpose&mdash;upon the estimate of the price of grain and stock, as warranted by their value previous to the introduction of the new corn law and tariff&mdash;to be,</p></td><td align="right">£800</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">This farm has been put into good productive condition by means of the tenant's capital, at a cost in draining and lime, (sunk,) £2500. It is well known that nearly twice this amount has in many instances been thus expended; but we assume this as a fair average on a farm so rented.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><p class="hanging">Interest upon which sum, to enable him to recover the same during an ordinary lease of from nineteen to twenty-one years, at 10 per cent,</p></td><td align="right">£250</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><p class="hanging">Interest on capital invested in stock, &amp;c., yielding an annual return of £1500, at 5 per cent,</p></td><td align="right">75</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><p class="hanging">Expenses of management&mdash;wages, tradesmen's accounts, extra manures, &amp;c.,</p></td><td align="right">550</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><p class="hanging">Casualties, loss on stock, &amp;c.,</p></td><td align="right">50</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><p class="hanging">Public and Parish Burdens,</p></td><td align="right" class="bb">45</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">£970</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">£1770</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>To meet this sum, there is the produce of 200 acres of grain, in each<br />
+year, distributed as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="bushels">
+<tr><td align="center">Acres.</td><td align="right">Bushels.</td><td align="right">Bushels.</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">Bushels.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">100 Oats,</td><td align="left">at 48 per acre&mdash;</td><td align="right">4800.</td><td align="left">Off seed, horses, and servants,</td><td align="right">2420</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">60 Wheat,</td><td align="left">at 33 per acre&mdash;</td><td align="right">1980.</td><td align="left">Off seed,</td><td align="right">180</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">40 Barley,</td><td align="left">at 40 per acre&mdash;</td><td align="right">1600.</td><td align="left">Off seed, servants</td><td align="right">210</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p>Remain disposable, at the prices on which his calculations were founded and warranted by the rates, as is proved, under protection:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="remain">
+<tr><td align="left">Bushels.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">2380 Oats, at 3s.,</td><td align="right">£357</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1800 Wheat, at 7s.,</td><td align="right">630</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1390 Barley, at 4s.,</td><td align="right" class="bb">278</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£1265</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Returns upon stock estimated, at prices then current, to yield,</td><td align="right" class="bb">750</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">£2015</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Profit&mdash;remuneration for tenant's industry and skill,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£245</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p>
+The above grain produce yields, at the highest average I feel warranted<br />
+in assuming, under free trade&mdash;</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="highest">
+<tr><td align="left">Bushels.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">2380 Oats, at 2s.,</td><td align="right">£238</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1800 Wheat, at 5s.,</td><td align="right">450</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1390 Barley, at 2s. 9d.,</td><td align="right" class="bb">191</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£879</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In place of, as above,</td><td align="right" class="bb">1265</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">£386</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Thus the difference of proceeds of <em>grain crop alone</em>, more than absorbs all the tenant's remuneration, by</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb2">£141</td><td align="right" class="bb2">0</td><td align="right" class="bb2">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p class="sig space-above">JOHN DUDGEON, <span class="smcap">Spylaw</span>, <em>3d December 1849</em>.<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a><br />
+</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
+<p class="space-above">We addressed the following circular
+letter to some of the most eminent
+agriculturists in Scotland, enclosing
+copies of the above statements:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p class="sig">
+
+"<span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>, <em>8th December 1849</em>.
+</p>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;Wishing to publish in our Magazine as accurate a statement as we could
+obtain of the real condition and prospects of agriculture in Scotland at present, we
+have for some time been engaged in correspondence on the subject with various
+gentlemen connected with agricultural pursuits.</p>
+
+<p>"The enclosed statements of the working of a farm, and the quantity and value at
+present prices of the produce, have been drawn out by Mr Watson, Keillor, Forfarshire,
+and Mr Dudgeon, Spylaw, near Kelso, assisted by Mr Stephens, author of the
+"Book of the Farm."</p>
+
+<p>"At the suggestion of Mr &mdash;&mdash; we write to ask whether you will consent
+to allow us to affix your name to these statements, as attesting their accuracy, to the
+best of your experience, in farming. If it strikes you that in any of these statements
+the profits are either over or under estimated, we shall feel greatly obliged by your
+pointing out where you think the error lies. Any correction you may make we shall
+submit to the consideration of one or all of the above-mentioned gentlemen, with
+whose names, as competent judges of the working of a farm, you are probably
+acquainted.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall feel further obliged by your making any remarks that may occur to you,
+and stating any facts that have come within your own observation, our only wish
+being to get as near the truth as may be. The article in the Magazine, into which this
+attested statement will be introduced, is founded upon the facts that we have been able
+to gather in the course of somewhat extended inquiries by ourselves, or rather by
+friends on whose knowledge of agriculture we could safely rely.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you be so good as to send any answer you may think proper to this application,
+within a week from this date, or sooner if you can, as we have very little time to
+get everything into order for publication in the January number of our Magazine.&mdash;We
+are," &amp;c.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The following gentlemen have given
+us permission to use their names, as
+attesting the accuracy of these statements,
+to the best of their experience,
+in farming:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>
+<em>Mid-Lothian</em>&mdash;<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a><br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">Thomas Sadler</span>, Norton Mains, Ratho.<br />
+<br />
+<em>East-Lothian</em>&mdash;<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">John Brodie</span>, Abbey Mains, Haddington.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Andrew Howden</span>, Lawhead, Prestonkirk.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Peter Ronaldson</span>, Moreham Mains, Haddington.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Wm. Tod</span>, Elphinstone Tower, Prestonkirk.<br />
+<br />
+<em>Berwickshire</em>&mdash;<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">Robt. Hunter</span>, Swinton Quarter, Coldstream.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Wm. Dove</span>, Wark, Coldstream, attests Mr Dudgeon's only.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Robt. Nisbet</span>, Lambden, Greenlaw.<br />
+<br />
+<em>Roxburghshire</em>&mdash;<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">R. B. Boyd</span>, of Cherrytrees, Yetholm.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Nicol Milne</span>, Faldonside.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Wm. Broad</span>, Clifton Hill, Kelso.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Fred. L. Roy</span>, of Nenthorn, Kelso.<br />
+<span class="smcap">James Roberton</span>, Ladyrig, Kelso.<br />
+<br />
+<em>Fifeshire</em>&mdash;<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">James B. Fernie</span>, of Kilmux.<br />
+<span class="smcap">John Thomson</span>, Craigie, Leuchars.<br />
+<br />
+<em>Forfarshire</em>&mdash;<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">Alexander Geekie</span>, Baldowrie, Coupar-Angus.<br />
+<span class="smcap">David Hood</span>, Hatton, Glammis.<br />
+<span class="smcap">James Adamson</span>, Middle Drums, Brechin.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Wm. Ruxton</span>, Farnell, Brechin.<br />
+<br />
+<em>Aberdeenshire</em>&mdash;<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">Robert Walker</span>, Portleithen Mains, Aberdeen.<br />
+<span class="smcap">John Hutchison</span>, Monyruy, Peterhead.<br />
+<span class="smcap">Robt. Simpson</span>, Cobairdy, Huntly.<br />
+<span class="smcap">William Hay</span>, Tillydesk, Ellon.<br />
+<span class="smcap">William M'Combie</span>, Tillyfour, Aberdeen.<br />
+<br />
+<em>Elginshire</em>&mdash;<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">Peter Brown</span>, Linkwood, Elgin.<br />
+<br />
+<em>Kincardineshire</em>&mdash;<br />
+<br />
+<span class="smcap">J. Garland</span>, Cairnton.<br />
+<span class="smcap">R. Barclay Allardyce</span>, of Ury, Stonehaven.<br />
+<span class="smcap">James Falconer</span>, Balnakettle, Fettercairn.<br />
+</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
+<p>We further subjoin extracts from
+the letters of several of these gentlemen,
+containing remarks or suggestions
+about the statements:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"I was favoured with your letter and enclosure of the 8th inst. I have gone
+carefully over the statements of the working of a farm, and the quantity and value,
+at present prices, of the produce&mdash;all of which appear to me to be fairly stated. I
+have drawn up a statement of the returns of produce of a 400 acre farm in Mid-Lothian,
+which, if it meets your approval, you are at liberty to publish along with
+the others. The prices of the grain which I have assumed are in some instances
+higher than those of Messrs Dudgeon and Watson; but I think this can be explained,
+by the farm being situated in the neighbourhood of the best market."&mdash;(<small>THOMAS SADLER</small>,
+Norton Mains, Ratho.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"I am in receipt of your letter of the 8th current, inclosing statements by various
+eminent agriculturists, showing the difference between times past and to come for
+farmers. I perfectly coincide with these gentlemen; and consider their valuation of
+produce and price to be average and just: although we are not at present realising
+the prices quoted, yet it is fair that an allowance should be made this year for the full
+crop wheat."&mdash;(<small>ANDREW HOWDEN</small>, Lawhead, Prestonkirk.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"On looking over the statements you handed me of the comparative value of farm
+produce, under protection and free-trade prices, as drawn up by Messrs Watson and
+Dudgeon, my first impression was, that they had fixed the protection price of grain
+too high; but on taking the average prices of my own sales of the different kinds of
+grain, as entered in my corn-book, from crop 1827 to that of 1845, I find they are not
+beyond what I have actually received during that period. The only points in which
+I differ from these gentlemen's statements are in the rents fixed by them for land
+yielding the crops they mention, which in my opinion should not be less than 35s. per
+acre, and £1000 might be taken from the sum put down as necessary for floating
+capital by Mr Watson; and I think, upon an average of years, that £50 should cover
+the loss of live stock. These alterations I have suggested would make no material
+change in the calculations, which, in the main particulars, I hold to be perfectly correct."&mdash;(<small>ROBERT
+NISBET</small>, Lambden, Greenlaw.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"I have to acknowledge the receipt of your agricultural statements, and have carefully
+examined them, especially Mr Dudgeon's, as being the one with which I am
+best acquainted. I have tested its various items, and have found them generally correct,
+and in agreement with my own practical experience. There is one, however,
+which I consider too low&mdash;viz., the allowance of barley for seed and servants. Mr
+Dudgeon, I believe, uses a drill-sowing machine, and, by that means, will save about
+one bushel of seed per acre; but as this mode of sowing has not come into general
+use, the following is what is commonly found necessary&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="seed">
+<tr><td align="left">Bushels.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">40 acres, at 3 bushels,</td><td align="right">120</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">7 servants, at 18 bushels,</td><td align="right" class="bb">126</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">246</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>From the general accuracy of the statement, I have no hesitation in consenting to
+the use of my name in connexion with it."&mdash;(<small>WILLIAM BROAD</small>, Clifton Hill, Kelso.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"Having for several years farmed land in the vicinity of Kelso, and of a description
+somewhat similar to that described by Mr Dudgeon, Spylaw, I beg to say that I agree
+essentially with the statement subscribed by him. It exhibits, in my opinion, a fair
+estimate of the returns of such a farm when in good condition, and of the necessary
+expenses attending the working and keeping it in good order. In many cases, a
+much larger sum has been expended in improvements, but that would probably make
+no great difference in the result; for while the occupier would have a larger sunk
+capital to draw out of the land, he would probably have a smaller rent to pay. I
+may remark, that even where land has been thoroughly drained, or does not require
+it, there is usually a large sum sunk at the commencement of a lease in liming, for I
+consider that almost all land in this district would require to be limed during the
+currency of a lease, in order to yield full crops."&mdash;(<small>FRED. L. ROY</small>, Nenthorn, Kelso.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"I think Mr Dudgeon makes too little allowance for stock and insurance, (£50.)
+Mr Watson's allows double, (£100,) which is low enough. Some of my neighbours
+here have lost from £200 to £300 by pleuro-pneumonia upon cattle alone, independent
+of other stock. I also think they are both wrong in the average quantity of grain
+grown. It may be done upon a farm of good land, in high condition, but&mdash;I mean
+taking a whole county&mdash;it is, I think, above the mark. For example, 1836, 1837,
+1838, 1839, 1840, 1841, being six years running, with as fine appearance of wheat as I
+ever grew, I did not average twenty-six bushels per acre, weighing 64 lb. to 65 lb.
+per imperial bushel, in these six years. I considered my loss equal to 2000 bolls wheat
+below a fair crop, all in consequence of the fly."&mdash;(<small>JOHN THOMPSON</small>, Craigie, Leuchars.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"I have carefully looked over Mr Watson's statement, and I think that his calculations
+are very correct, and agree entirely with my experience, except in regard
+to the profits upon stock, which I think he has rather overrated, as the price of stock
+is falling every week. I do not think it necessary, however, to make out a separate
+statement."&mdash;(<span class="smcap">David Hood</span>, Hatton, Glammis.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"In reply to yours of the 8th instant, requesting my opinion as to the accuracy of
+the statements in your enclosed proof-sheet, I have to state that, after mature consideration,
+I generally concur with the statement drawn by Mr Watson as to the
+results; though, I think, that as a deduction of £20 per cent on the profits of livestock
+has been made in the free-trade account, a like percentage should be deducted
+from the amount stated for casualties in the charge, thus making the loss under free
+trade £20 less. It also appears to me, that both the capital invested, and the amount
+received for crop and stock, are considerably beyond the average of farming capital
+and proceeds in Strathmore and the eastern district of Forfarshire; but as the statement
+is headed as "under the improved system of agriculture," of course the amounts
+must be different, and therefore are acceded to.</p>
+
+<p>"It may be remarked, that the depreciation of £20 per cent on the value of livestock,
+which has taken place this year, ought only to be deducted from the average
+of the last ten or twelve years, as the present prices might be considered equal to what
+we had been receiving previously to the opening up the southern markets.</p>
+
+<p>"In my own case, the rent is considerably lower than that assumed, as I occupy
+a large proportion of unequal, inferior soil, which I have drained at my own expense;
+and, in order to raise the same quantity of grain per acre as mentioned in the statement,
+I have hitherto had to pay at least £100 more for manure than what seems to
+be allowed for under the title 'expenses of management.'"&mdash;(<span class="smcap">William Ruxton</span>,
+Farnell, Brechin.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"I received yours of the 8th, with the enclosed statements regarding the prospects
+of agriculture, and as this was a ploughing-match day, (the Buchan district,) I deferred
+writing you until I should also show it to several experienced farmers for their
+opinions, and we all consider the statements as near as may be correct."&mdash;(<span class="smcap">John
+Hutchison</span>, Monyruy, Peterhead.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"I have examined minutely the statements drawn up by Messrs Watson and
+Dudgeon, and have compared them with some calculations that I had previously made
+myself, and have no hesitation in allowing my name to be affixed to them as attesting
+their accuracy, in so far as my knowledge of the localities in which they are drawn up
+leads me to be a judge. Had I had time, I should have liked to have furnished you
+with a similar comparative statement of the difference likely to be made by free trade
+in our more northern climate, where we cannot raise the same quality of grain, and
+where little or no wheat is grown, <em>and I am much afraid it would not have been so
+favourable to farmers</em> as Messrs Watson and Dudgeon's are. The average price of
+what has been sold of this year's crop, in the counties of Aberdeen and Banff, is not
+more, I am sure, than 1s. 8d. per bushel for oats, and 2s. 6d. for bear or barley."&mdash;(<span class="smcap">Robert
+Simpson</span>, Cobairdy, Huntly.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"As to the statements of Messrs Watson and Dudgeon, the items appear to me, on
+the whole, to be fairly put. My only difficulty is in regard to the £3000 put down
+in Mr Watson's statement as invested capital. I presume, however, he includes in
+this draining and lime sunk, machinery, implements, horses, &amp;c.; and, considering the
+valuable breed of cattle and sheep on the Keillor Farm, I would not regard £5000
+as at all too large an estimate for capital of both kinds. As to the considerable
+difference in profits shown in Nos. I. and II., that might be accounted for in many
+ways. In 500-acre farms, with equal management and a like rent, greater differences
+will be induced by variations in the soil and climate alone.</p>
+
+<p>"On the presumption above stated, as to what Mr Watson means by invested capital,
+I have no difficulty in allowing you to affix my name, as attesting, to the best of my
+knowledge, the substantial accuracy of statements Nos. I. and II."&mdash;(<span class="smcap">William
+M'Combie</span>, Tillyfour, Aberdeen.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"I have gone over the respective statements with much care and anxiety, and have
+compared the different items entered to the debit and credit of the farm by both gentlemen
+with my own experience in such matters, and, on the whole, I have no hesitation
+in pronouncing them as nearly correct as, under the circumstances, they could be
+framed. Were I to draw up a statement of a farm of the like extent in this county,
+I believe the result would be still <em>less favourable</em> for the farmer, because if we have
+such returns as are stated by Messrs Watson and Dudgeon, we obtain them by the
+application to our land of a larger quantity of foreign manure than those gentlemen
+seem to use."&mdash;(<span class="smcap">Peter Brown</span>, Linkwood, Elgin.)</p></blockquote>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Some of the gentlemen to whom we
+wrote, whilst entirely concurring in
+the estimates of Messrs Watson and
+Dudgeon, have not authorised us to
+affix their names. Only three gentlemen,
+out of nearly fifty, have refused
+their assent on the ground of difference
+of opinion. The most important objection
+specified by any of them was,
+that the prices of grain assumed in
+No. II., as having been received
+before protection was withdrawn,
+were <em>higher</em> than those warranted by
+the fiars' prices of the county. Such
+were, however, the actual prices received
+in those years by Mr Dudgeon;
+and the reader is requested to refer to
+the extract from Mr Nisbet of Lambden's
+letter for a corroboration as to
+that point. That there should be
+some difference of opinion is only
+natural, when the variations of soil,
+climate, and locality are considered;
+but we think it will generally be admitted,
+that the ordeal to which these
+estimates have been exposed, without
+exciting more challenge than we have
+just noticed, is a tolerably convincing
+proof of their general accuracy.</p>
+
+<p>The receipt of these statements has
+induced several gentlemen, in different
+parts of the country, to draw
+up further estimates of the working
+of farms in their own districts,
+and these documents we now proceed
+to lay before our readers&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+No. III.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Statement</span> of <span class="smcap">Income</span> and <span class="smcap">Expenditure</span> on an Aberdeenshire farm of the<br />
+ordinary description, taking the value of produce at an average of a<br />
+series of years&mdash;say 19&mdash;previously to the late alteration of the law in<br />
+relation to the importation of corn and cattle.&mdash;Extent, 250 acres.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Annual Expenditure.</span></p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="rent">
+<tr><td align="left">Rent of a farm of 250 acres imperial, at £1, 1s. per acre,</td><td align="right">£262</td><td align="right">10</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Invested capital, £1000&mdash;interest at 10 per cent,</td><td align="right">100</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Floating capital, in stock, &amp;c., £1800&mdash;interest at 5 per cent,</td><td align="right">90</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Servants' wages, per annum,</td><td align="right">129</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Day-labourers' wages, &amp;c.,</td><td align="right">15</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Rye-grass and clover seeds,</td><td align="right">20</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Tradesmen's accounts,</td><td align="right">50</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Public burdens,</td><td align="right">15</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Casual losses of stock, and partial insurance,</td><td align="right">40</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Expenses in driving grain and extraneous manures, in the shape of tolls, &amp;c., with necessary expenses at markets,</td><td align="right" class="bb">20</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Total expenditure,</td><td align="right">£741</td><td align="right">10</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">Annual Income.</span></p>
+
+<p>
+250 acres, on the five-course rotation:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="annual">
+<tr><td align="left">In oats&mdash;80 acres, at 6 qrs. per acre,</td><td align="left">480 qrs.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Deduct for seed, 60 qrs.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Do. for horses, meal, &amp;c.,&nbsp;120 qrs.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">180 qrs.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Oats to be disposed of,</td><td align="left">300 qrs.</td><td align="left">at 21s.</td><td align="right">= £315&nbsp;</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">In barley&mdash;20 acres, at 5<sup><small>1</small></sup>&frasl;<sub><small>2</small></sub> qrs. per acre,</td><td align="left">110 qrs.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Deduct for seed, malt,</td><td align="left">15 qrs.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Barley to be disposed of,</td><td align="left">95 qrs.</td><td align="left">at 29s.</td><td align="right">=137</td><td align="right">15</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Realised from cattle fed on 100 acres of grass and 50 acres of turnips,</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">400</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Total income,</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right">852</td><td align="right">15</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Profit&mdash;or return for labour, skill, and risk of capital,</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb2">£111</td><td align="right" class="bb2">5</td><td align="right" class="bb2">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p class="center space-above"><span class="smcap">Income under Free-trade Prices.</span></p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="freetrade">
+<tr><td align="left">Oats, 300 quarters, at 14s. per quarter,</td><td align="left">£210</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Barley, 95 quarters, at 20s. per quarter,</td><td align="left">95</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><p class="hanging">And&mdash;on the supposition that no reduction of the price of fat cattle is to take place on account of the free importation of foreign animals&mdash;let us take the receipts from cattle fed on the grass and turnips as above, viz.,</p></td><td align="right" class="bb">400</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Total income under free-trade prices of grain,</td><td align="left">£705</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Brought forward,</td><td align="left">£705</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Expenditure as above, viz.,</td><td align="right" class="bb">741</td><td align="right" class="bb">10</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Loss per annum,</td><td align="left">£36</td><td align="left">10</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Or, adding former profit, viz. as above,</td><td align="right" class="bb">111</td><td align="right" class="bb">5</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Total loss, on <em>grain alone</em>, by free trade,</td><td align="right" class="bb2">£147</td><td align="right" class="bb2">15</td><td align="right" class="bb2">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+
+<p>I consider the above a fair statement of the expenditure and income on a
+farm in the lower district of Aberdeenshire, under former and under present
+circumstances. It will be observed that no wheat is grown; but the soil is
+well adapted for the rearing and feeding of cattle, and from this source the
+Aberdeenshire farmer expects to derive a large proportion of his returns. In
+the comparison, reference is had solely to the fall in the price of the kinds
+of grain cultivated. Whatever decline in the price of fat cattle may arise
+from free trade, will fall heavily on the farmers of this district; and the reduction
+of income thus occasioned will, of course, add to the amount of loss
+shown above.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">
+JAMES HAY,<br />
+<span class="smcap">Little Ythsie</span>, <em>13th December 1849.</em>
+</p>
+
+<p>Having lately had an opportunity of examining a number of <em>actual</em> accounts
+of income and expenditure on various farms, I can confirm the substantial
+accuracy and fairness of the above statements, Nos. I. and II. Mr Hay's
+statement above, referring to the system of agriculture with which, in this part
+of the country, we are most conversant, may, in my humble opinion, be
+regarded as fair and just, and as near the average that a comparison of a
+number of individual cases would indicate, as it can be made.</p>
+
+<p>I am sensible that, in many cases of calculations&mdash;more especially in those
+in which certain assumptions have to be made&mdash;it is quite possible, even with
+a show of fairness, to bring out by means of figures almost any result that
+may be desired; but it is to be observed that, in the above statements, the
+<em>same</em> assumptions (if they can be regarded as such) are made on both sides of
+the comparison, with the exception of the prices at which agricultural produce
+is taken; and it is submitted with confidence that these are neither made
+higher in the one case, nor lower in the other, than experience warrants.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">
+W. HAY,<br />
+<span class="smcap">Tillydesk</span>, <em>14th December 1849</em>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+No. IV.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap">Estimated Value</span>, of the produce upon a farm in Roxburghshire of 500 acres,<br />
+managed according to the five-shift rotation, thus:&mdash;<br />
+<br />
+200 acres of corn crop.<br />
+200&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of grass.<br />
+100&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of turnips.<br />
+&mdash;&mdash;<br />
+500<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>It is here assumed that there are no local advantages, the whole green crops
+being consumed upon the farm by sheep and cattle.</p>
+
+<p class="center space-above">
+I. <span class="smcap">Produce of Corn Crops.</span></p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="corn">
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Bush.</td><td align="left">Bush.</td><td align="left">Bush.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Oats,</td><td align="left">100 acres,</td><td align="left">at 48, =</td><td align="left">4800, off 2400,</td><td align="left">leaves for sale,</td><td align="right">2400</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Wheat,</td><td align="left">60 "</td><td align="left">at 38, =</td><td align="left">1980, off 180,</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">1800</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Barley,</td><td align="left">40 "</td><td align="left">at 42, =</td><td align="left">1680, off 340,</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">1340</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p class="center space-above"><em>Average Value during the ten years preceding Crop 1848.</em></p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="ten">
+<tr><td align="left">2400 bushels of oats, at 3s.,</td><td align="right">£360</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1800 bushels of wheat, at 7s.,</td><td align="right">630</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1340 bushels of barley, at 4s.,</td><td align="right" class="bb">268</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">1258</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Value of grass and turnips,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">800</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Total amount of produce sold,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£2058</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="left"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>Brought forward,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£2058</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p class="center"><em>Expenses and Rent&mdash;</em>
+</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="both">
+<tr><td align="left">Annual charges for wages and tradesmen's bills, &amp;c.,</td><td align="right">£400</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Public and parish burdens,</td><td align="right">45</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Annual outlay for extra manures,</td><td align="right" class="bb">150</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£595</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Capital sunk upon improvements, £2500, at 10 per cent,</td><td align="right">250</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Value of stock and crop, forming a floating capital of £2000, at 5 per cent per annum,</td><td align="right">100</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Insurance of stock against deaths and other casualties,</td><td align="right" class="bb">50</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">995</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£1063</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Rent,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">800</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Tenant's profit,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb2">£263</td><td align="right" class="bb2">0</td><td align="right" class="bb2">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="smcap">Estimated Value</span> of the same amount of produce at the present rate of<br />
+prices:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="present">
+<tr><td align="left">2400 bushels of oats, at 2s.,</td><td align="right">£240</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1800&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of wheat, at 5s.,</td><td align="right">450</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1340&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;of barley, at 2s. 9d.,</td><td align="right" class="bb">214</td><td align="right" class="bb">5</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£904</td><td align="right">5</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Value of grass and turnips,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">700</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Total amount of produce,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">£1604</td><td align="left">5</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Amount of expenses, as above,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">995</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">£609</td><td align="left">5</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Rent,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">300</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Tenant's loss</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb2">£191</td><td align="right" class="bb2">15</td><td align="right" class="bb2">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Value of produce by 1st estimate,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£2118</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Do. by 2d do,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">1615</td><td align="right" class="bb">10</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Difference,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb2">£502</td><td align="right" class="bb2">10</td><td align="right" class="bb2">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p>The total amount of capital invested is £4500, of which £2500 is sunk upon
+improvements. According to the first estimate, the annual return, exclusive
+of 5 per cent per annum for repayment of the sum sunk, would be £548, or
+at the rate of about 12<sup><small>1</small></sup>&frasl;<sub><small>5</small></sub> per cent. According to the second estimate, the
+annual return would be £45, 10s., or at the rate of about 1 per cent per
+annum upon the same sum.</p>
+
+<p>I shall be glad to allow my name to be affixed to Mr Dudgeon's statement,
+as attesting, in so far as my experience goes, the accuracy of it.</p>
+
+<p>My estimates and his very nearly correspond; but as every one has his own
+method of making up such statements, I take the liberty of handing along with
+it this detail of my own.</p>
+
+<p>In all, excepting in regard to the value of live stock, or produce of grass
+and turnips, we nearly agree; and this difference may be accounted for, because
+no part of farm produce varies so much in its return as that of the live
+stock. Upon such a farm as that which is taken as an example, sheep and
+cattle are not wholly reared upon the farm, but part are bought in to fatten;
+hence the returns depend upon three circumstances,&mdash;1st, upon the crops of
+turnips and grass being less or more abundant; 2d, upon the price of lean stock;
+and, 3d, upon the price of fat. While, therefore, the butcher market may be
+very high, the feeder may not necessarily be well paid,&mdash;and hence, in making
+up returns under this head, a correct average is not easily ascertained; and as
+there must always be a difference of opinion among practical men upon this
+part of the subject, I think, for publication, Mr Dudgeon's method of stating
+the returns <em>in one sum</em> is preferable to giving them in detail.</p>
+
+<p class="sig">
+JAS. ROBERTON,<br />
+<span class="smcap">Ladyrig</span>, <em>13th Dec. 1849</em>.
+</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center">
+No. V.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">
+<span class="smcap">Statement</span> of the <span class="smcap">Annual Charge</span> against, and <span class="smcap">Returns</span> from, a 400 imperial
+acre Farm in Mid-Lothian&mdash;on an average of ten years previous to free
+trade in corn and cattle;&mdash;with a comparative statement of the Returns of
+Produce from the same farm under the present free-trade measures affecting
+agriculture. The farm alluded to is managed on the four-course shift&mdash;the
+whole straw, turnips, and clover being consumed on it, and an average
+number of stock fattened.</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="lothian">
+<tr><td align="left">Rent of farm, 400 acres at 45s. per acre,</td><td align="right">£900</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Interest on sunk and floating capital,</td><td align="right">240</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Expenses of management, wages, tradesmen's accounts, extra manures, grass and clover seeds, and miscellaneous expenses,</td><td align="right">817</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Casualties in stock, and fire insurance,</td><td align="right">40</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Public and parish burdens,</td><td align="right" class="bb">40</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Total yearly charge,</td><td align="right">£2037</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>To meet this sum there is the produce of 230 acres corn crop,
+10 acres potatoes, and the profits from live stock as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="corn">
+<tr><td align="left">100 acres oats, at 48 bushels per imperial acre,</td><td align="right">4800</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Less for seed, servants' meal, and horses,</td><td align="right">2004</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Leaving for sale,</td><td align="right">2796</td><td align="left">at 3s. 3d.,</td><td align="right">£454</td><td align="right">7</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">70 acres wheat, at 32 bushels per acre,</td><td align="right">2240</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Less for seed,</td><td align="right">220</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Leaving for sale,</td><td align="right">2020</td><td align="left">at 7s.,</td><td align="right">707</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">30 acres barley, at 48 bushels per acre,</td><td align="right">1440</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Less for seed,</td><td align="right">100</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Leaving for sale,</td><td align="right">1340</td><td align="left">at 4s.,</td><td align="right">268</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">30 acres beans, at 40 bushels per acre,</td><td align="right">1200</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Less for seed,</td><td align="right">110</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Leaving for sale,</td><td align="right">1090</td><td align="left">at 4s. 6d.,</td><td align="right">245</td><td align="right">5</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Produce of 10 acres potatoes, after deducting seed,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">100</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Profits from live stock fed upon 60 acres turnips and 100 acres grass,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">550</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Total return,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">£2324</td><td align="right" class="bb">12</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">2324</td><td align="right" class="bb">12</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Profit,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">£287</td><td align="right">12</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>The like quantities of disposable grain, taken at the present prices,<br />
+fetch as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="disposable">
+<tr><td align="left">2796 bushels oats, @ 2s. 4d.,</td><td align="right">£326</td><td align="right">4</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">2020 bushels wheat, @ 4s. 9d.,</td><td align="right">479</td><td align="right">15</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1340 bushels barley, @ 3s. 0d.,</td><td align="right">201</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1090 bushels beans, @ 3s. 3d,</td><td align="right">177</td><td align="right">12</td><td align="right">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">10 acres potatoes,</td><td align="right">100</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Add profits from live stock,</td><td align="right" class="bb">550</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Total returns</td><td align="right">£1834</td><td align="right">11</td><td align="right">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Sum chargeable as above against the farm,</td><td align="right" class="bb">£2037</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">202</td><td align="right">8</td><td align="right">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Leaving the farmer short, for rent, capital, and expenses of management,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb">202</td><td align="right" class="bb">8</td><td align="right" class="bb">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">Total loss annually incurred,</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right" class="bb2">£490</td><td align="right" class="bb2">0</td><td align="right" class="bb2">6</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p class="sig">THOs. SADLER,<br />
+<span class="smcap">Notron Mains</span>, <em>14th December 1849.</em>
+</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center">
+No. VI.
+</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Valuation</span> of <span class="smcap">Produce</span>, and <span class="smcap">Expense</span> of <span class="smcap">Management</span> of a Farm of 320
+Scots acres, situated within five miles of Edinburgh, on an average of
+seven years previous to potato failure in 1846, and farmed according to
+the four-shift rotation, the straw being sold in Edinburgh, and dung
+bought. The produce is a fair average of the best-managed farms within
+five miles of Edinburgh, during the period from which the average is taken.
+The prices noted are what were realised, being about 3s. 6d. per qr.
+above the average prices of the county, and the expense of management
+charged is what was actually paid.</p>
+
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="valuation">
+<tr><td align="left" colspan="2">Acres.</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="center">£</td><td align="center"><em>s.</em></td><td align="center"><em>d.</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">50</td><td align="left">Potatoes, at £17 per acre,</td><td align="right">850</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">30</td><td align="left">Turnip, at £16 per do.,</td><td align="right">480</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">50</td><td align="left">Wheat, 5 qrs. per acre, at 58s. per qr.,</td><td align="right">725&nbsp;</td><td align="right">0&nbsp;</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">30</td><td align="left">Barley, 7 do. do., at 34s. do.,</td><td align="right">357</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">50</td><td align="left">Pasture, let at £4 per Scots acre,</td><td align="right">200</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">30</td><td align="left">Hay, at £7 per do.,</td><td align="right">210</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right" class="bb">80</td><td align="left">Oats, 7<sup><small>1</small></sup>&frasl;<sub><small>2</small></sub> qrs. per acre, at 26s. per qr.,</td><td align="left">780</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">320</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Produce of straw sold,</td><td align="right">450</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Manure made on the farm from horses, &amp;c.,</td><td align="right" class="bb">80</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Value of produce,</td><td align="right">4132</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Expense of management,</td><td align="right" class="bb">4025</td><td align="right" class="bb">17</td><td align="right" class="bb">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Profit,</td><td align="right" class="bb">£106</td><td align="right" class="bb">2</td><td align="right" class="bb">6</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p>[We ought, perhaps, to explain that
+this case is peculiar. It is that of a
+first-class farm in the neighbourhood
+of Edinburgh, attested by men of the
+same standing as its tenant, and similarly
+situated; the average of the
+produce is very high, and the rent
+corresponding. Mr Gibson, the tenant
+farmer, has taken the details of the
+following statement from his books; so
+that it becomes of much value, as
+showing the statistics of farming in
+the immediate vicinity of the metropolis
+of Scotland. In estimating the
+productiveness of this farm by the
+extent of the yield, our English
+readers must bear in mind, that it is
+divided by the Scots and not the imperial
+acre as in the other estimates, the
+former being one-fifth larger. It will
+be allowed, on all hands, that the
+yield of this farm is extraordinary.]</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="large">
+<tr><td align="left" colspan="2">Acres.</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="center">£</td><td align="center"><em>s.</em></td><td align="center"><em>d.</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">S</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">e</td><td align="right">50</td><td align="left">Potatoes, at £2 per Scots acre,</td><td align="right">100</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">e</td><td align="right">30</td><td align="left">Turnip, at 4s. per do,</td><td align="right">6</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">d</td><td align="right">50</td><td align="left">Wheat, 23 qrs. at 60s.,</td><td align="right">69</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">30</td><td align="left">Barley, 14 qrs. at 35s.,&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;</td><td align="right">24</td><td align="right">10</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">f</td><td align="right">50</td><td align="left">Pasture, at 17s. per acre,</td><td align="right">42</td><td align="right">10</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">o</td><td align="right">30</td><td align="left">Hay, at 15s. per do.,</td><td align="right">22</td><td align="right">10</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">r</td><td align="right" class="bb">80</td><td align="left">Oats, at 40 qrs. at 28s.,</td><td align="right">56</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">320</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">50 acres potatoes, 34 tons per acre, horse and cow manure driven from Edinburgh, at 6s. per ton,</td><td align="right">510</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">30 acres turnip, 30 tons do., at 4s. per ton,</td><td align="right">180</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Keep of 15 horses, at £28 per annum,</td><td align="right">420</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Do. of 1 riding horse, do.,</td><td align="right">28</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Wages of farm overseer, per annum,</td><td align="right">32</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Do. 8 ploughmen, at £27 per do.,</td><td align="right">216</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Do. 2 labourers at 10s., and 1 boy at 5s. per week,</td><td align="right">65</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Outdoor women-workers per annum,</td><td align="right">165</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Reaping 160 acres corn crop, at 12s. per acre,</td><td align="right">96</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Wages of extra men securing crop,</td><td align="right">13</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Cutting 30 acres hay, at 3s. 9d.,</td><td align="right">5</td><td align="right">12</td><td align="right">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Cutting hedges, and keeping fences, gates, and houses in repair,</td><td align="right">10</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Smith work, per annum,</td><td align="right">35</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Carpenter work, do.,</td><td align="right">22</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Veterinary surgeon, do.,</td><td align="right">7</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Saddler work, do.,</td><td align="right">17</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Millwright, engineer, mason, and slater's accounts,</td><td align="right">10</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Coals for steam-engine, and steaming and bruising horse food,</td><td align="right">12</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Annual loss on live and dead stock, from death and tear and wear,</td><td align="right">90</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Tolls, custom, and marketing expenses,</td><td align="right">25</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Insurance,</td><td align="right">6</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Poor-rates and statute-labour, previous to passing of New Poor Law,</td><td align="right">30</td><td align="right">17</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Assessed taxes and income tax,</td><td align="right">19</td><td align="right">18</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Interest on £1500 capital, sunk in permanent improvements, at 10 per cent,</td><td align="right">150</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Interest on floating capital of £2000, at 5 per cent,</td><td align="right">100</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Rent of 320 Scots acres, at £4 10s. per acre,</td><td align="right" class="bb">1440</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Expense of management,</td><td align="right">£4025</td><td align="right">17</td><td align="right">6</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging space-above"><span class="smcap">Valuation</span> of <span class="smcap">Produce</span> and <span class="smcap">Expenses</span> of <span class="smcap">Management</span> of the same Farm, for Crop
+1849: as the Wheat crop is considered to be the best we have had in the
+district since 1835, every allowance is made for this in estimating the produce.
+The Oat, Barley, and Bean crops are under an average, but are charged at
+average quantities; the prices noted are what are being realised. In the expense
+of management full allowance is made in every item affected by present prices,
+except the seed, which is charged as paid for at seed time: had it been charged
+at present prices, there would fall to be deducted from expense of management
+a sum of £28.</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="bumper">
+<tr><td align="left" colspan="2">Acres.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">25</td><td align="left">Potatoes, supposing them to be sound, at £20,</td><td align="left">500</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">35</td><td align="left">Turnips, at £14,</td><td align="left">490</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">20</td><td align="left">Beans, 5 qrs. per acre, at 26s. per qr.,</td><td align="left">130</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">45</td><td align="left">Wheat, 6 qrs. per acre, at 38s. per qr.</td><td align="left">513</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">35</td><td align="left">Barley, 7 qrs. per acre, at 23s. per qr.,</td><td align="left">281</td><td align="left">15</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">50</td><td align="left">Pasture, let at £4 per acre,</td><td align="left">200</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">30</td><td align="left">Hay, at £5, 10s. per acre,</td><td align="left">165</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right" class="bb">80</td><td align="left">Oats, 7<sup><small>1</small></sup>&frasl;<sub><small>2</small></sub> qrs. per acre, at 18s. per qr.,</td><td align="left">540</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="right">320</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Produce of straw, sold, at present prices,</td><td align="left">400</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Manure made on the Farm,</td><td align="right" class="bb">70</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Value of Produce,</td><td align="left">£3,289</td><td align="left">15</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Expense of Management,</td><td align="right" class="bb">3,786</td><td align="right" class="bb">14</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Loss,</td><td align="right">£496</td><td align="right">19</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Annual Profit previous to 1846,</td><td align="right" class="bb">£106</td><td align="right" class="bb">2</td><td align="right" class="bb">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Loss incurred by difference of price under free-trade,</td><td align="right" class="bb">£603</td><td align="right" class="bb">1</td><td align="right" class="bb">6</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="bumper">
+<tr><td align="left" colspan="2">Acres.</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td align="left">S</td><td align="right">25</td><td align="left">Potatoes, at £4 per Scots acre,</td><td align="left">100</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">E</td><td align="right">35</td><td align="left">Turnips, at 5s. per acre,</td><td align="left">8</td><td align="left">15</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">E</td><td align="right">20</td><td align="left">Beans, 12<sup><small>1</small></sup>&frasl;<sub><small>2</small></sub> qrs., at 34s., per qr., price, at seed time,</td><td align="left">21</td><td align="left">5</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">D</td><td align="right">45</td><td align="left">Wheat, 20 qrs., at 62s., do.,</td><td align="left">62</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">35</td><td align="left">Barley, 17<sup><small>1</small></sup>&frasl;<sub><small>2</small></sub> qrs., at 33s., do.,</td><td align="left">28</td><td align="left">17</td><td align="left">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">F</td><td align="right">50</td><td align="left">Pasture, at 14s. per acre, do.,</td><td align="left">35</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">O</td><td align="right">30</td><td align="left">Hay, at 12s. do., do.,</td><td align="left">18</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">R</td><td align="right" class="bb">80</td><td align="left">Oats, 40 qrs., at 22s. per qr., do.,</td><td align="left">44</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">320</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">25 acres potatoes, 30 tons per acre, horse and cow manure, driven from Edinburgh, at 5s. per ton,</td><td align="left">187</td><td align="left">10</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">20 acres beans, 20 tons manure per acre, at 5s. per ton,</td><td align="left">100</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">35 acres turnips, 25 tons do., at 3s. 6d. per ton,</td><td align="left">153</td><td align="left">2</td><td align="left">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Guano and other extra manures applied to turnip, potato, and other crops,</td><td align="left">125</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Keep of 15 horses, at £22 per annum,</td><td align="left">330</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Keep of 1 riding horse, do.,</td><td align="left">22</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Wages of farm overseer, per annum,</td><td align="left">30</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Do. 8 ploughmen, at £25 per do.,</td><td align="left">200</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Do. 2 labourers, at 9s. each, and 1 boy 5s. per week,</td><td align="left">59</td><td align="left">16</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Outdoor women workers, per annum,</td><td align="left">165</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Reaping 160 acres corn crop, at 10s. 6d. per acre,</td><td align="left">84</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Wages of extra men securing crop,</td><td align="left">12</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Cutting 30 acres hay, at 3s. per acre,</td><td align="left">4</td><td align="left">10</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Cutting hedges, and keeping fences, gates, and houses in repair,</td><td align="left">10</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Smith work, per annum,</td><td align="left">35</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Carpenter's work, do.,</td><td align="left">22</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Veterinary surgeon, do.,</td><td align="left">7</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Saddler work, do.,</td><td align="left">17</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Millwright, engineer, mason, and slater's accounts,</td><td align="left">10</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Coals for steam engine, and steaming and bruising horses' food,</td><td align="left">10</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Annual loss on live and dead stock, from death and tear and wear,</td><td align="left">90</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Tolls, custom, and marketing expenses,</td><td align="left">25</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Insurance,</td><td align="left">6</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Poor rates and statute labour under New Poor Law,</td><td align="left">54</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Assessed taxes and income tax,</td><td align="left">19 18</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Interest on £1500 capital, sunk in permanent improvements, at 10 per cent,</td><td align="left">150</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Interest on floating capital of £2000, at 5 per cent,</td><td align="left">100</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Rent of 320 acres, at £4, 10s. per acre,</td><td align="right" class="bb">1,440</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Expenses of Management,</td><td align="right" class="bb2">£3,786</td><td align="right" class="bb2">14</td><td align="right" class="bb2">0</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p class="sig">JOHN GIBSON,<br />
+<span class="smcap">Woolmet</span>, <em>18th December 1849.</em><br />
+
+{<span class="smcap">John Finnie</span>, Swanston.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br />
+Attested by {<span class="smcap">George Watson</span>, Libberton Mains.<br />
+{<span class="smcap">Alexander Scott</span>, Craiglockhart.&nbsp;
+</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Let those who believe that, by high
+farming, the soil can be stimulated so
+as to produce enormously augmented
+crops, at a large additional profit,
+consider the above statistics well.
+<span class="smcap">They are the statistics of the
+very highest farming in Scotland.</span>
+The English agriculturist has
+been taunted for his backwardness
+in not adopting the improvements of
+his northern neighbour, who, with a
+worse climate, has made the most of
+the soil. Such has been the language
+used by some of the advocates and
+apologists of free trade, who are now
+urging the farmer to lay out more
+capital in draining and manures&mdash;assuring
+him that, by doing so, the returns
+will far exceed the interest of
+the outlay. With a fine disregard for
+the elements of arithmetic, they insist
+that low prices can in no way interfere
+with his success, and that only
+exertion and enterprise are wanting
+to raise him above the reach of foreign
+competition. The above tables exhibit
+the experiment, worked out to its
+highest point. In these cases capital
+has been liberally expended, energy
+tasked to the utmost, and every means,
+which science can devise or experience
+suggest, called into active operation.
+The farmers of Mid-Lothian,
+Berwickshire and Forfarshire may
+fairly challenge the world in point of
+professional attainments. They have
+done all that man can do, and here is
+the reward of their toil.</p>
+
+<p>Supposing, then, that hereafter the
+permanent price of wheat were to be
+40s. a quarter; that other cereal produce
+remained at corresponding rates;
+and that the value of live stock did
+not diminish&mdash;points, upon all of
+which we are truly more than sceptical&mdash;it
+will follow that high farming,
+such as is at present practised in the
+best agricultural districts of Scotland,
+cannot by possibility be carried on.
+No possible reduction of rent would
+suffice to enable the farmer to continue
+his competition. Such a fall must
+necessarily have the effect of annihilating
+one of the two classes; for the
+landlord, burdened as he is, would
+cease to draw the means of maintenance
+from his estate, and it is
+questionable whether the residue
+would suffice to pay the interest of
+the mortgages and preferable burdens.
+To the people of Scotland this is the
+most vital question that has engaged
+their attention since the Union. Our
+national prosperity does not depend
+upon manufactures to the same degree
+as that of England. By far the
+greater portion of our wealth arises
+directly from the soil: by far the
+larger number of our population depend
+upon that for their subsistence.
+Even if Manchester statistics were
+applicable to England, the case is
+different here. If the prices of agricultural
+produce should continue as
+low as at present&mdash;and we cannot see
+what chance exists of their rising, in
+the face of such a tremendous import&mdash;the
+effect upon this country must be
+disastrous. Such prices would reduce
+Scotland, at one fell swoop, to the
+condition of Ireland: paralyse the
+home market for manufactures; throw
+hundreds of thousands out of employment;
+lower the revenue; augment
+the poor-rates; and utterly disorganise
+society. And yet what help for
+it? The farmer cannot be expected to
+pay for the privilege of losing several
+hundreds per annum by cultivation.
+Let Mr Watson's statement be examined,
+and it will appear that the enterprising
+and skilful tenant of a farm
+of five hundred acres, in the best corn
+district of Forfar, cannot clear his expenses
+unless the rent of the land is
+reduced by one-half, and, even if that
+were done, he could only realise a
+profit of sixpence per acre! Such a
+result, we fairly allow, would appear,
+at first sight, to be incredible; yet there
+it is&mdash;vouched for by men of name,
+character, and high reputation. This
+is the extreme case; but, if we pass to
+Berwickshire, we shall find that a
+reduction of half the rent would barely
+place the tenant in the same position
+which he occupied previous to the
+withdrawal of protection. Look at
+No. IV., and the result will appear
+worse. Even were one half of the
+rent remitted, the profits of the tenants,
+at present prices, would be less
+by £100 than they were at the former
+rates of corn. Very nearly the same
+results will be brought out, if we calculate
+the necessary reductions on the
+rents of the Mid-Lothian farms. Lord
+Kinnaird may see in those tables the
+fate which is in store for him; and he
+cannot hope to escape it long, even by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
+inserting, in his new leases, the most
+stringent stipulations as to money
+payments which legal ingenuity can
+devise. It is just possible that "men of
+business habits," retired shopkeepers,
+and others of that class, may be
+coaxed and persuaded into trying their
+hands at a trade of which they know
+literally nothing. They may be incautious
+enough to put their names to
+covenants, not conceived according to
+Mr Caird's liberal principle, and so
+pledge their capital for the fulfilment
+of a bargain which common sense declares,
+and experience proves, to be
+preposterous. The necessary consequence
+will be, that the rent must be
+paid out of capital, a process which
+cannot last long; and the unhappy
+speculator, as he finds his earnings
+disappearing, will curse the hour when
+he yielded to the delusion, that high
+farming must be profitable in spite
+of the variations of price. The poor
+seamstress, who weekly turns out of
+hand her augmented number of improved
+shirts&mdash;and who lately, though
+on exceedingly erroneous principles,
+has found a warm advocate in the
+kind-hearted Mr Sydney Herbert&mdash;has,
+in her own way, tested the value
+of the experiment. There is more cotton
+to be shaped, and more work to be
+done, but the prices continue to fall.
+She makes two additional shirts, but
+she receives nothing for the additional
+labour, because the remuneration for
+each is beaten down. The free-trade
+tariffs are the cause of her distress, but
+the unfortunate creature is not learned
+in statistics, and therefore does not
+understand the source of her present
+misery. No more, probably, do the
+female population of the Orkney
+islands, whom Sir Robert Peel reduced
+to penury some years ago, by a single
+stroke of his pen, through the article
+of straw-plait. From Lerwick to the
+Scilly Isles, the poor industrious
+classes were made the earliest victims.
+The tiller of the land is
+liable to the operation of the same
+rules. By the outlay of capital, he
+forces an additional crop, but, the
+value of produce having fallen, his
+returns, estimated in money, are just
+the same as before. If the maintenance
+of rents throughout the United
+Kingdom depends simply upon the
+supply of dupes, we are afraid that
+the Whig landlords will speedily find
+themselves in a sorry case.</p>
+
+<p>We by no means wish to treat this
+question as if Scotland alone were
+concerned. The English agriculturist,
+who knows that strict economy is the
+rule in northern farming, will readily
+acknowledge that our observations
+have even greater force when applied
+to his own case. It would have been
+presumption in us, had we passed
+beyond the limits of our own field of
+illustration, which, however, will bear
+comparison with any other. On the
+whole, we think it will hardly be questioned,
+that, if high farming in the Lothians
+or on the Border is a losing trade,
+it cannot be made profitable elsewhere
+within the boundaries of Britain.</p>
+
+<p>We are told that this is a landlord's
+question; and we find Messrs
+Bright and Cobden, with more than
+their usual malignity, chuckling over
+the prospects of the downfall of a class
+which they honour with their rancorous
+hatred. They do not affect to
+disguise the pleasure which they derive
+from knowing that, at this moment,
+the rents are being paid from
+the farmer's capital; and, so far, they
+bear important testimony to the truth
+of the calculations we have submitted.
+It is not our business at present to
+diverge into ethics, else we might be
+tempted to hazard a few observations
+on the brutal and un-British spirit
+which pervades the whole of their late
+harangues. All that we shall do now
+is to remark that they are trying, by
+every means in their power, to persuade
+the tenantry of Britain that this
+is a mere landlords' question; and we
+are bound to confess, that such writers
+as Lord Kinnaird have materially
+contributed towards fostering this
+delusion. A very little consideration,
+however, will show the utter fallacy
+of such an opinion; and we feel convinced
+that the good sense of the tenantry
+of Scotland will interfere to
+prevent them from being led astray
+by the devices of their inveterate
+enemies.</p>
+
+<p>So far as we can gather from the
+opinions enunciated by the leaders of
+the Manchester school, at their late gatherings,
+their view resolves itself into
+this. Abolish the rents, and agriculture
+will go on as before. Little argument
+is necessary to show, that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
+proposition, even were it admitted, is
+by no means in favour of the farmer.</p>
+
+<p>Our excellent contemporary, <cite>The
+Standard</cite>, has already disposed of it
+in a single sentence:&mdash;<em>Wipe off the
+rents, and you wipe away the class
+which heretofore has paid the rents.</em>
+Mr Bright would fain attempt to persuade
+the farmers that they are altogether
+independent of the landlords,
+and that no suffering can reach them.
+Have then the landlords, in most
+instances, expended nothing on the
+soil? Their outlay does not appear
+in balance sheets, however large may
+be its amount; but, were that outlay
+added to the farmer's expenditure of
+capital, there can be no doubt that,
+even without rent, at present prices,
+farming would be otherwise than profitable.
+But did it never strike Mr
+Bright that, failing rents, the landlords
+must necessarily take their
+farms into their own hands, as indeed
+has occurred already in several districts
+of the country? We presume
+he does not contemplate a quiet confiscation
+of estates&mdash;if he does, confiscation
+will not stop there. We
+suppose the owner must still have the
+option of keeping his property; and
+if so, as he will derive no profit from
+it in the shape of rent, he must either
+farm it himself, or act as labourer on
+wages under a farmer. We apprehend
+there can be little doubt as to
+the course he will take, when driven
+to such an extremity. As a body,
+tenant-farmers will cease to exist.
+They may go to Poland if they please,
+and employ their practical skill, and
+such remnant of capital as they can
+save from the wreck of their fortunes,
+in the patriotic task of growing wheat
+cheaper than before, for the British
+manufacturing market; but in this
+country there will be no longer any
+room for them. We shall be thankful
+to know if any course more feasible
+can be suggested; but indeed ingenuity
+seems to be at fault, and the
+Free-traders hardly affect to conceal
+their conviction that such must be the
+result. The following extract from a
+leading article in the <cite>Times</cite> of 6th December,
+will show the views entertained
+by that very influential journal.</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"If any landowners or tenants are
+thoroughly persuaded that, under the
+operation of free trade, land will yield no
+rent to the owner, or no profit to the
+farmer, let them dispose of their land or
+their farms. The whole world lies before
+them. The funds, the share-market,
+trades and manufactures innumerable and
+new ones every day, the colonies, the
+United States, the Antipodes, Europe,
+and literally the whole surface of the
+globe, is open to the enterprise of wealthy
+or ingenious men. Those who regard an
+English landlord or yeoman as an animal
+to be kept in a hothouse will think this
+very cruel advice, but it is advice which
+nine-tenths of our fellow-subjects have
+to follow, at least once in their lives.
+The law of change is impressed on the
+whole face of society. Man improves by
+being transplanted to new soils, and
+grafted on new stocks. Why should not
+the heroic qualities of our gentry be employed
+in the improvement of the world,
+and in the spread of civilisation, religion,
+and manners? Why should not the skill
+of our farmers be turned to account in
+making the whole earth bring forth its
+full produce? As it happens, there are no
+classes actually concerned in the material
+and operations of industry who can change
+their place with so little difficulty or cost
+as the owners and cultivators of the soil.
+The landowner can sell his estate, and
+buy another, or invest the money in the
+funds, any day he pleases. The tenant
+can dispose of his lease and his stock
+without much sacrifice. Can an attorney,
+a physician or surgeon, a beneficed clergyman,
+a merchant, a retail shopkeeper, or,
+indeed, any commercial or professional
+person, change his locality ten miles without
+sacrificing at least 30 or 50 per cent
+of his present income? Yet many such
+are obliged to migrate, and resign present
+income, besides all the other losses
+involved in a move, in the mere hope of
+ultimately improving their condition. As
+for our agricultural labourers, who, we
+are often told, are the staple of our population,
+for many years the whole force
+and pressure of our social institutions has
+been applied to compel their migration.
+Landlord, tenant, parson, overseer, and
+even a man's own fellow-labourers, are
+all in a conspiracy to elbow him out of
+the crowd, and the sooner he yields to
+that pressure the better. Why, then,
+should it be thought a hard thing to give
+the same advice to the landowner and the
+farmer?"</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>So write the Free-traders, and we
+wish them joy of their argument.
+Henceforth, then, we ought to abandon
+all foolish scruples connected
+with home, and kindred, and country&mdash;all
+national considerations, all
+the ties and common feelings that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
+hitherto have held Englishmen together!
+Truly, the cause which
+requires such advocacy as this must
+be in a desperate condition. Such
+language however, extravagant and
+puerile as it is, has some extrinsic
+value; for it shows us the utter selfishness
+and entire disregard of the
+Free-traders for every other interest
+in Britain except their own.</p>
+
+<p>We shall probably be told that we
+are alarmists. It is no new charge
+against us. The same thing was
+said when we denounced the policy of
+government towards the West Indian
+interest, and also when we foreshadowed
+the commercial crisis which
+overtook us in 1847. One exception
+may be taken to our agricultural
+views, on the ground that farms have
+been let in Scotland without any
+diminution of rent. We allow that
+such is the case. We admit that, even
+during the bygone year, there has been
+considerable competition for farms;
+and we know very well that this circumstance
+has tended to allay the fears of
+many. But, after all, what does it
+prove? Nothing more, we apprehend,
+than that the farmer is most reluctant
+to abandon the profession to which he
+has been bred, and in which his capital
+is invested; and that, in times of
+notoriously unsettled and vacillating
+legislation, he may be, perhaps, too
+sanguine as to the possibility of another
+change. The fact that some farms, in
+various parts of the country, have, of
+late, brought full and even higher
+rents, is not enough to warrant the
+idea that present engagements can be
+met. It does not follow that these
+will continue to be paid; nor do the
+parties themselves, we presume, expect
+to be able to fulfil their engagements,
+if future prices are such as we
+have felt constrained to reckon them.
+We have seen of late, in other matters,
+how easily people are deceived
+by sanguine anticipations; and it has
+recently been lamentably proved, that
+it is often long before disastrous events
+produce their due effect in indicating
+true value. If, in the less intricate
+matter of railway speculations, we
+have seen men who boasted of their
+superior information, involving themselves
+in the downward course of these
+unfortunate concerns, under the idea
+that the turning-point of depression
+had been attained, and that golden
+profits might be realised, is it marvellous
+if the farmer should be deceived
+in a matter which has been so much
+mystified, and which his predilections
+and peculiar position, in most instances,
+will not admit of his viewing
+calmly and dispassionately, even if he
+possessed the means of correct information?
+His education and habits
+compel him to endeavour to continue
+his occupation at all hazards. If
+once he abandon his calling, he is out
+of a situation as well as a home. It
+often happens, besides, and now it
+is peculiarly the case, that, to dispose
+of his stocking&mdash;a necessity incumbent
+upon the loss of his farm&mdash;is to make a
+sacrifice of his property. At present,
+live stock is from 15 to 20 per cent
+under what he has been in the habit
+of receiving for the last few years.
+Hence, upon such a vexed question
+as the effects of the corn laws, modified
+and free, have become, it is only
+natural that, in his doubt, and darkness,
+and perplexity, he should stretch
+a point to keep possession of his occupation;
+trusting that, if matters continue
+to be adverse, his landlord will
+have the like commiseration for him
+which it is his duty to testify for his
+neighbour, who, under other circumstances,
+is also writhing beneath the
+pressure. In such a case, rent becomes
+altogether a question of chance, left to
+be modified and controlled by after
+circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>In this view it is not difficult to
+understand why farms falling out of
+lease have been taken at rates absurdly
+disproportioned to the present prices
+of agricultural produce. Ask any
+intelligent farmer, who has placed
+himself in this position, and he will
+frankly confess that he does not expect
+to be able to pay his rent, unless
+some very material change in the
+value of produce shall take place.
+How should he think otherwise? In
+the better districts of Scotland, farming
+has been carried so high that
+there is hardly any margin left for
+improvement. Up to a certain point,
+the soil may be artificially stimulated;
+but, that point once reached, any
+further appliances become positively
+hurtful, and defeat the intentions of
+the grower. The flower of our tenantry&mdash;the
+men whose exertions have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
+made the land what it is&mdash;can go but
+a little way further. Nor can the
+severest moralist tax them with a
+breach of probity if they should enter
+into bargains which, under the operation
+of the present laws, they cannot
+possibly fulfil. The legislature took no
+account of them when it abolished
+protection. Parliament dealt with
+them more tyrannically than any
+irresponsible monarch would have
+dared to deal with a people far less
+intelligent and far less cognisant of
+their rights. The laws have ceased
+to be, in the estimation of the multitude,
+final. We now consider them,
+and most justly, as mere make-shifts
+which cannot stand against the pressure
+of a well-organised agitation;
+and men speculate on the probability
+of their changes, just as gamblers
+make adventures on the probable
+fluctuations of the funds. No man
+can deny that such is the case. Free
+trade is in the ascendant to-day:
+to-morrow, protection may be uppermost.
+A sad state of things truly;
+but such as must necessarily occur,
+when statesmen, whose heads have
+grown hoary in office, desert principle
+to adopt expediency, and repudiate
+the professions of a whole lifetime, for
+the sake of outwitting their political
+opponents. Our steadfast conviction
+is, that unsettled legislation has tended
+more than anything else to prevent
+an immediate depreciation in the rents.
+Foster gambling, and you create
+gamblers. Farms are now taken on
+speculation, with the view, not to
+increased production of the land, but
+to further changes in the experimental
+policy of the nation.</p>
+
+<p>But in reality we apprehend that
+such cases are the exception, and not
+the rule. We have heard it trumpeted
+abroad that certain farms in East
+Lothian were let during the course of
+last year at an advance. We have
+taken pains to investigate this matter;
+and we find on inquiry that, in
+some cases, such farms have been
+taken by new men of little agricultural
+experience. Lord Kinnaird
+may be glad to hear this, but we cannot
+view it in the light of an encouraging
+symptom. Others, no
+doubt, have been retaken, probably
+under the influence of such considerations
+as we have just stated. Again,
+we find that some farms in the south
+of Scotland are very differently situated
+now, than they were before.
+The extension of the railway system
+has given to such of them as are near
+stations, advantages which were enjoyed
+heretofore by such farms only
+as were in the immediate vicinity of
+large towns; and in this way their
+value has been increased. But it is
+quite evident, that, unless some extraordinary
+fallacy lurks in the tables
+which we have given above&mdash;unless
+the leading practical agriculturists of
+Scotland are either possessed by some
+monstrous arithmetical delusion, or
+banded in some organised conspiracy
+to mislead the public mind&mdash;no exceptional
+case can be admitted as of
+any weight whatever in determining
+the general question. On the part of
+ourselves, and of our correspondents,
+we not only invite, but we broadly
+challenge investigation. We desire
+that the truth may be made known,
+because any delusion on either side
+must tend to the public detriment.</p>
+
+<p>If our statistics should be admitted
+as correct, we think it must be clear
+to demonstration that British agriculture
+cannot maintain itself longer
+against the competition of the foreign
+grower. We believe it impossible for
+any man who has attended to the
+minute statements given above, to
+arrive at an opposite conclusion. No
+appliances, no energy, no high farming,
+can avail in this ruinous struggle.
+To expect that more capital will be
+embarked in so losing a trade, is perfectly
+idle. Even if tenants had the
+wish to do so, they would fail for the
+want of means. It will be seen from
+the preceding tables what amount of
+capital is usually perilled on Scottish
+farms, and what amount of loss, at
+present prices, the farmer must necessarily
+sustain. Even in better times,
+few men could afford to do as much as
+has already been done by the agriculturists
+of the Lothians and Berwickshire;
+and, under existing circumstances,
+the great body of the tenantry
+cannot find the means to continue
+their ordinary operations. With capital
+exhausted and credit denied to
+him, what is the farmer to do? The
+question is one which we would fain
+see answered, and that immediately,
+by those who have brought us to the
+present pass. It cannot remain long
+unanswered, without such an augmentation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
+of distress as must render
+all remedy ineffectual.</p>
+
+<p>So far we have spoken for the
+tenant, who, as an old contracting
+party, has been utterly sacrificed by
+free-trade legislation. As a new
+contractor, we have shown that he
+is placed under circumstances of
+peculiar disadvantage, arising from
+ignorance as to his real position, his
+past exertions, and his future prospects.
+Had we spoken rashly on
+this matter, we should have been
+liable to the utmost blame; but we
+have not put forward any one position
+which is not based upon facts,
+laboriously ascertained, and closely
+scrutinised; and all these are open to
+challenge, if any assailant has the
+mind, or the power, to refute us.
+We state nothing which is not
+founded on evidence of the clearest
+kind, and we shall be glad if our
+statements can be met in a precisely
+similar manner.</p>
+
+<p>We observe that Mr William
+Ewart Gladstone, in an address delivered
+at the late meeting of the
+Fettercairn Farmers' Club, has taken
+a different line of argument; and if
+his views should prove to be correct,
+we must necessarily admit that the
+British agriculturist has no ground
+for complaint at all. We are, it
+seems, making a vast deal of noise
+without anything to justify it. We
+are clamouring about an imaginary
+evil, when we ought to be deeply
+grateful for natural benefits vouchsafed
+to us. So thinks Mr Gladstone,
+or at least so he speaks; and
+as his undeniable talents, and the
+high official position which he formerly
+occupied, entitle him to an
+attentive hearing, we shall briefly
+recapitulate his views. These are
+not new, for, if we recollect right,
+they were enunciated so early as
+last spring by the Hon. Sydney
+Herbert, a gentleman belonging to
+the same political section as Mr
+Gladstone, and they were then triumphantly
+refuted by Mr John Ellman, in
+his letter addressed to the Duke of
+Bedford. Since that time, however,
+another harvest has intervened, and
+Mr Gladstone now takes up the
+argument of his friend under better
+auspices, and with a greater show of
+plausibility.</p>
+
+<p>Foreign competition, according to
+Mr Gladstone, is not the cause of low
+prices. "This is not," says he, "the
+first time that we have had difficulties.
+We have had many periods
+when low prices prevailed. Certainly,
+at present, prices are extremely low;
+but, in many parts of the country,
+there is a sort of compensation for
+these low prices arising from great
+abundance&mdash;the result of improved
+processes of growing the crop, and, of
+consequence, an improved yield. With
+regard to the cause of declining prices,
+I cannot adopt the line of argument
+of those who look only to importations
+as the chief cause. I do not pretend
+to speak so accurately of Scotland,
+but, as to England, <em>the wheat crop
+this year was the largest ever known</em>.
+Upon one single acre of land, of
+average quality, no less than sixty-eight
+bushels of wheat have been
+taken from the crop of this year. I
+must also point out the fact to
+you, that, although the crop is the
+largest, the prices are by no means
+the lowest we have seen&mdash;for instance,
+in the year 1835, when the sliding-scale
+was in full operation, we had
+wheat at 35s. per quarter, <em>and this not
+only for a short time, but for the whole
+year</em>. If it be true, therefore, that, at
+the present time, we have prices 5s.
+per quarter higher than they were in
+1835, with a corn-law prohibitory till
+wheat rose to 70s. per quarter, then I
+cannot see that we have any such
+great cause for alarm as many imagine."</p>
+
+<p>The first remark that we shall make
+with reference to this statement, is,
+that it is <em>utterly incorrect</em>. We do not
+know from what source Mr Gladstone
+ordinarily draws his figures, but if any
+one will consult the official tables of
+returns for the year 1835, he will find
+that the average of wheat was 39s. 4d.,
+and not 35s., as Mr Gladstone has
+unwarrantably asserted. We have
+gone over the weekly averages for the
+whole of that year, and we find that
+wheat was <em>never once quoted</em> so low as
+35s. In a matter of this kind, accuracy
+is a cardinal virtue, and we cannot
+allow such a statement as this to
+pass unnoticed. The following are
+<em>the lowest</em> weekly and aggregate
+averages for the whole year, taken
+from the official tables, and we have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
+purposely selected these in order that
+Mr Gladstone may have the full benefit
+of the nearest approximation to his
+figures.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+LOWEST WEEKLY AND AGGREGATE AVERAGES<br />
+THROUGHOUT THE YEAR 1835.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="aggregate">
+<tr><td align="center">1835.</td><td align="center" colspan="2">Weekly</td><td align="center" colspan="2">Aggregate</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="center" colspan="2">average.</td><td align="center" colspan="2">average.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="center"><em>s.</em></td><td align="center"><em>d.</em></td><td align="center"><em>s.</em></td><td align="center"><em>d.</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">January,</td><td align="right">40</td><td align="right">1</td><td align="right">40</td><td align="right">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">February,</td><td align="right">40</td><td align="right">4</td><td align="right">40</td><td align="right">10</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">March,</td><td align="right">39</td><td align="right">8</td><td align="right">40</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">April,</td><td align="right">39</td><td align="right">3</td><td align="right">39</td><td align="right">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">May,</td><td align="right">38</td><td align="right">6</td><td align="right">38</td><td align="right">11</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">June,</td><td align="right">39</td><td align="right">8</td><td align="right">39</td><td align="right">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">July,</td><td align="right">40</td><td align="right">5</td><td align="right">40</td><td align="right">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">August,</td><td align="right">40</td><td align="right">4</td><td align="right">42</td><td align="right">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">September,</td><td align="right">37</td><td align="right">7</td><td align="right">39</td><td align="right">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">October,</td><td align="right">36</td><td align="right">11</td><td align="right">37</td><td align="right">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">November,</td><td align="right">36</td><td align="right">7</td><td align="right">36</td><td align="right">9</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">December,</td><td align="right">36</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">36</td><td align="right">8</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>What, then, are we to think of Mr
+Gladstone's averment, that, in 1835,
+we had wheat at 35s., "and this not
+only for a short time, but for the
+whole year?" Not even for the
+week have we a vestige of any such
+quotation! This is blunder the first,
+and it is so serious a one, that, on
+his own showing, it is enough to
+invalidate the whole of his argument.
+<span class="smcap">It is not a fact</span> "that, at
+the present time, we have prices 5s.
+per quarter higher than they were in
+1835." The difference is a fractional
+part of a shilling; and if Mr. Gladstone
+wishes to find a time when the prices
+were five shillings lower than at present,
+he must go back to the year
+1779; and, in travelling towards that
+period, he will meet with some startling
+facts in the financial history of
+the country, which are well worthy of
+observation. In 1779, he will find
+wheat at 33s. 8d., the produce of such
+a harvest that the export of grain
+exceeded the import by 217,222
+quarters. But he will also find that
+the national debt, at that period, was
+just one-fourth of what it now is;
+and that the poor-rates of England,
+instead of touching eight millions,
+were considerably short of two.</p>
+
+<p>Secondly, it is not true that the last
+wheat crop was the largest ever known
+in England. This is a wild and utterly
+extravagant assertion. The bygone
+crop was a good one, less on account
+of quality than of gift; but every
+agriculturist knows that, within the
+experience of the present generation,
+we have had far finer crops. That of
+1815 was enormous in its yield&mdash;so
+great that we did not import a single
+quarter of grain, and the average price
+of wheat for that year was 63s. 8d.
+The crop of 1822 was not very much
+inferior. These are notorious instances;
+but in order to ascertain,
+with as much precision as possible,
+the relative quality of the bygone
+crop, we submitted the statement of
+Mr. Gladstone to one of the most extensive
+corn-dealers in Leith, and the
+following is his reply. "Mr. Gladstone's
+statement is certainly very unlike
+that of a person of his high
+authority; though I conceive it as
+calculated to do much mischief in the
+present depressed state of the corn-trade,
+as many people will judge of it
+from Mr. Gladstone's high standing.
+In my opinion, however, nothing can
+be more absurd than estimating a
+crop by a <em>yard</em> in any field, or by a
+single acre. We hear now a great
+deal of the land being more productive,
+by draining and other improvements;
+and it was to be expected that, when
+a good wheat season occurred, we
+should have more wheat than in previous
+years; but, from all the confirmation
+we have yet obtained, I am
+by no means disposed to believe that
+the last crop is a great one, far less
+that it is greater than ever known. The
+present generation, I have no doubt,
+have seen larger crops of wheat than
+our forefathers; but I think 1814,
+1815, 1822, 1825, 1831, 1832, 1833,
+1834, 1835, 1841, and 1842, were
+better seasons than the last. Essex,
+and several other English counties
+which had bad crops in 1848, have
+much greater crops in 1849; but Lincolnshire,
+and several other very important
+counties, have very deficient
+crops on certain varieties of soil. All
+that can be said of the present crop
+is, that it is a full one, generally
+speaking. More of it, I am sure,
+will yield under 40 bushels an acre
+than over 40; and very little, indeed,
+60 or 68, as Mr. Gladstone says a
+<em>single</em> acre has produced." So much
+for the general yield; let us now revert
+to the seasons which Mr. Gladstone
+has selected for comparison.</p>
+
+<p>The crop of 1835 was not only
+larger than that of 1849, but it came
+to us under circumstances which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
+entirely preclude a comparison of the
+years, if prices are to be taken as a
+criterion. <span class="smcap">The crop of 1835 was
+the last of a series of fine ones.</span>
+We subjoin the statistics from 1830,
+which was a bad season, to 1836,
+when the harvest was again unfavourable:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="unfavourable">
+<tr><td align="left">Year.</td><td align="left">Quarters imported.</td><td align="center" colspan="2">Average price.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><em>s.</em></td><td align="right"><em>d.</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1830,</td><td align="right">1,701,889,</td><td align="right">64</td><td align="right">3</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1831,</td><td align="right">1,491,631,</td><td align="right">66</td><td align="right">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1832,</td><td align="right">325,435,</td><td align="right">58</td><td align="right">8</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1833,</td><td align="right">82,346,</td><td align="right">52</td><td align="right">11</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1834,</td><td align="right">64,653,</td><td align="right">46</td><td align="right">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1835,</td><td align="right">28,483,</td><td align="right">39</td><td align="right">4</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1836,</td><td align="right">24,826,</td><td align="right">48</td><td align="right">6</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>It will thus be seen that it was a
+succession of good harvests which
+brought down the prices gradually
+from 66s. 4d. in 1831, to 39s. 4d. in
+1835. Last year we had one good
+harvest following a remarkably bad
+one, and yet Mr Gladstone would attempt
+to persuade us that the present
+reduction of price arises solely
+from excessive plenty, as in 1835!
+If it were so, where would be the
+room for that importation, which,
+during the first eight months of the
+bygone year, has more than doubled
+that of 1848, for the corresponding
+period? For his own sake, we are
+sorry to find Mr Gladstone resorting
+to fallacies so exceedingly flimsy and
+transparent. Surely he must be
+aware that the extreme depreciation
+of price, which is the cause of agricultural
+distress, could not by any possibility
+be the result of the late harvest&mdash;for
+this unanswerable reason, that, in
+the earlier parts of the year, before
+the corn had shot in the fields, prices
+were rapidly dwindling. The deficient
+crop of 1848 could not have put prices
+down&mdash;we presume that even Mr
+Gladstone will not maintain <em>that</em>&mdash;and
+yet, for the week ending April 7, 1849
+we find the averages of England as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+AVERAGE PRICES OF GRAIN FOR WEEK ENDING APRIL 7, 1849.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="grain">
+<tr><td align="center">Wheat.</td><td align="center">Barley.</td><td align="center">Oats.</td><td align="center">Rye.</td><td align="center">Beans.</td><td align="center">Pease</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center">44s. 5d.</td><td align="center">28s. 9d.</td><td align="center">16s. 9d.</td><td align="center">26s. 5d.</td><td align="center">28s. 1d.</td><td align="center">29s. 6d.</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>So then, after a poor crop in 1848, we
+find prices lower than they were in
+1834, after a series of fine crops, and
+we are calmly asked to adopt the conclusion
+that a single good crop in
+1849 has done all the mischief! Mr
+Gladstone might just as well tell us
+that our present prices are affected by
+the crop of 1850, which is now lying
+in embryo in the seed.</p>
+
+<p>But we have not yet done with Mr
+Gladstone, who goes on to assert that
+low prices have nothing to do with
+importations from abroad. This position
+he tries to fortify by rather an ingenious
+process, as will be seen from the
+following extract from his speech:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"Let me point out also that I had the
+curiosity to obtain an account of the last
+month's importations into this country,
+and, on comparing the same with those of
+1848, the decrease this year is very remarkable;
+and, besides, with diminished
+importations this year, must be taken into
+account the fact, that from the condition
+of the crop this year, as compared with
+the last, the value of our grain is at least
+5s. superior to the mere nominal price.
+In October, last year, you had good prices
+for wheat; in this year, bad. I ask, was
+this owing to importations from abroad,
+or was it not? I give you the result in
+figures, which I think will convince you
+what is the reason of the low prices. In
+October 1848, the importation of wheat to
+this country was no less than 506,000
+quarters; in 1849, it is only 154,000 quarters.
+How are we to account for this,
+but simply from the great abundance of
+wheat at home this year, while in 1848
+the supply was somewhat short; and, so
+far as regards the English farmer, I consider
+he is better off this year, with his
+large crop and low prices, than he was
+last, with his small crop and high prices."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>If anything could make us lose our
+patience, while dealing with so momentous
+a subject, it would be the sight
+of such statements as these. Observe
+how the matter stands. Mr Gladstone
+is arguing that importations from
+abroad do not affect prices here, and,
+by way of proof, he gives us the statistics
+of a single month. He says&mdash;Last
+October you had good prices and
+large importations: this October you
+have bad prices and diminished importation.
+<em>Ergo</em>, importations have
+nothing to do with prices! Is Mr
+Gladstone ignorant of the fact,
+that, for the first eight months of
+the year 1849, the quantity of grain
+imported was more than double
+that of the preceding season, and
+that almost every warehouse in our
+ports is filled almost to bursting with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
+foreign grain? Is he aware that this
+diminished import for October, if
+extended over the year, would give
+an amount greater than was brought
+in during any famine year previous to
+1839? Let us see how this matter
+stands, adopting his very favourable
+calculations.</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+IMPORTS OF WHEAT AND WHEAT FLOUR<br />
+IN BAD SEASONS.</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="imports">
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="center">Quarters.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1810,</td><td align="right">1,491,341</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1817,</td><td align="right">1,020,949</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1818,</td><td align="right">1,593,518</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1829,</td><td align="right">1,364,200</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1830,</td><td align="right">1,701,889</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">1838,</td><td align="right">1,834,452</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>The October imports, which Mr
+Gladstone considers as being reduced
+in consequence of the good harvest at
+home, would, if spread over the year,
+amount to 1,848,000 quarters&mdash;being
+very little less than the average
+amount imported from 1836 to 1840,
+when we had five bad or indifferent
+seasons in succession. Mr Gladstone,
+however, we apprehend, leaps too
+rapidly at his conclusions. He should
+have waited until the frost set in, and
+then, perhaps, he might have been
+able to point to a materially diminished
+importation. We should like to know
+how he will dispose of the ascertained
+statistics for November. They are as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+IMPORTS OF FOREIGN GRAIN INTO UNITED<br />
+KINGDOM, FOR NOVEMBER 1849.</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="UK">
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="center">Quarters.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Wheat and wheat flour,</td><td align="right">215,134</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Barley and barley meal,</td><td align="right">90,304</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Oats and oat meal,</td><td align="right">114,311</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Rye and rye meal,</td><td align="right">6,201</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Beans,</td><td align="right">19,061</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Pease,</td><td align="right">22,269</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Indian corn,</td><td align="right">46,306</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Buckwheat,</td><td align="right">30</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>being equal to 513,615 quarters of
+all kinds of grain for the month!
+These are the diminished importations!
+But we shall come down even
+later, and inquire what sort of proportion
+the arrivals of foreign grain bear
+to those of British growth in the
+London market, according to the last
+accounts. We copy from the <cite>Times</cite>
+of December 11:&mdash;</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+
+<p>"<span class="smcap">Corn Exchange</span>, Monday, <em>Dec. 10.</em>&mdash;Throughout
+the past week, there have
+been good arrivals of wheat, barley, and
+oats into this market from abroad, although
+of wheat the quantity reported
+has been less than of other grain. Of
+English corn of any kind, (if we except
+barley,) the total reports are insignificant,
+and but a few cargoes of oats from Ireland.
+The state of the trade, on the
+several market days, was languid, and
+even at lower prices for barley and oats,
+buyers were indisposed to get into
+stock."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>The following is a statement of the
+arrivals of grain at London from the
+3d to the 8th of December, which
+may serve to indicate the sources
+from which the population of our vast
+metropolis is fed; and we leave Mr
+Gladstone to reconcile it, as he best
+can, with his new theory of importations:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="pease">
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">British</td><td align="left">Foreign</td></tr>
+<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td align="center">Qrs.</td><td align="left">Qrs.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Wheat,</td><td align="right">4601</td><td align="right">19,617</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Barley,</td><td align="right">6144</td><td align="right">19,842</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Oats,</td><td align="right">7370</td><td align="right">21,718</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Rye,</td><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">514</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Beans,</td><td align="right">962</td><td align="right">337</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Pease,</td><td align="right">1077</td><td align="right">6,713</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">blah</td><td align="right">20,154</td><td align="right">68,741</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>So then, after the harvesting of
+"the largest wheat crop ever known
+in England," and at the dead season
+of the year, when the navigation of
+the Elbe is closed, the importation of
+foreign wheat into the London market
+exceeds the arrival of English wheat
+by a ratio of nearly five to one! And,
+with such facts before us, we are forbidden
+to believe that imports affect
+prices! We hope, when we next meet
+Mr Gladstone, to find him in a more
+logical humour, and better prepared
+with his facts.</p>
+
+<p>It is not surprising if, in a controversy
+of this kind, we should find the
+Free-traders openly contradicting each
+other, and very often themselves, in
+the advice which they gratuitously
+offer to the agriculturist. One section
+recommends further outlay on
+the land, more extended and elaborate
+tillage, and prophesies in return
+an augmented cereal crop. Another
+totally repudiates this view, but
+advises that the loss should be made
+good by green crops, wider pastures,
+and an infinite multiplication of cattle.
+The former philanthropists want
+more grain; the latter insist upon an
+extended consumption of butcher
+meat. The tendency of late legislation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
+has been in favour of the latter
+view, and the consequence has been a
+depreciation in the value of cattle
+throughout the kingdom, of at least
+from 15 to 20 per cent. The consumer
+has not yet got the full benefit
+of it, but the farmer has incurred the
+loss; and we know instances of pasturings
+on which, for the last two
+years, not a single shilling of profit
+has been realised. The cattle when
+sent to market, after being fattened,
+have brought the same price which
+was given for them in their lean and
+hungry condition. The Free-traders
+are very bold about cattle, alleging
+that, in this respect, there is nothing
+to fear from the effects of foreign
+competition. And undoubtedly, to a
+casual observer, this would appear to
+be one of the least objectionable
+parts of their scheme. Still there is
+something mysterious in the fact of
+the great depreciation. The prices of
+cattle have fallen, until profit has
+been nearly extinguished; and if we
+exclude altogether the idea of foreign
+competition, the necessary conclusion
+will be, that the supply has vastly
+exceeded the demand. This is but
+poor comfort to those who are told to
+look to green crops for their remuneration.
+But we think that the subject
+requires a closer examination than it
+has yet received. We are convinced
+that the depreciation of live stock is
+intimately connected with importation,
+and the result of our inquiries
+will show whether we are right or
+wrong. But first let us glance at the
+ascertained effects of importation under
+the relaxed tariff.</p>
+
+<p>The first fruit of the unrestricted
+trade in live stock&mdash;which exhibited
+a number that mounted up, for the
+first five years, at a rate increasing
+annually fourfold, until the number
+of "oxen and bulls" reached from
+1385 in 1843, to 27,831 in 1848&mdash;was
+no doubt sufficiently alarming.
+But, judging from the trade of the
+year ending 1848, and of the present
+season, this influx would appear to
+have reached its full. Assuming this
+to be the case&mdash;as the entire number
+would not, on a rough calculation,
+furnish more than a week or ten days'
+supply of beef to the whole country&mdash;perhaps
+there is not much reason to
+apprehend any great depression in
+home prices from the influence of
+the importation of foreign <em>live</em> stock.
+Besides, from the tendency of recent
+improvements in agriculture&mdash;should
+these fortunately continue in operation&mdash;to
+increase materially the supplies
+of beef and mutton, it is possible
+that these necessaries could, in
+future, be afforded at such a price as
+to exclude the probability of any
+great accession to our importations
+for many years.</p>
+
+<p>We believe that the only considerable
+harm which has resulted from
+the importation of live stock, has
+been the importation of two very
+fatal diseases, which have, since then,
+carried off numbers of cattle and
+sheep, and which, like most epidemics,
+will in all human probability become
+permanent. The mortality was so
+serious, that Parliament has already
+passed an act establishing a sort of
+conditional quarantine; and it has
+been calculated by those who are
+skilled in such matters, that the number
+of animals that have died in consequence,
+is considerably greater than
+the whole amount of the importation.
+In this way it is easy to reckon the
+amount of our losses and our gains.</p>
+
+<p>But there is a farther importation
+of butchers' meat in another shape,
+which is far more difficult to contend
+against&mdash;namely, that of "cured beef,
+bacon, and pork." The importation
+of these articles has increased so
+rapidly and enormously, since the introduction
+of free trade&mdash;the two
+latter to upwards of sixfold since
+1847&mdash;that the whole together, it
+may be reckoned, now afford a quantity
+of food exceeding in weight four
+times that of the "oxen and bulls"
+imported during the last year. This
+is a mere beginning, but already the
+effects of it have been widely and
+calamitously felt. It is not only
+affecting the graziers, but it is displacing
+a large and hitherto flourishing
+trade, both in Britain and in Ireland;
+and, if carried out further, as it clearly
+will be, not one single rallying point
+or chance of escape will be left to the
+British agriculturist.</p>
+
+<p>The following is the statement of a
+Liverpool correspondent, dated 6th
+December last:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I enclose you a price-current,
+with the latest quotations of American<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
+provisions, which are the prices
+to the wholesale dealers. In the
+best qualities of beef and pork, the
+trade generally get 5s. to 10s. a package
+profit, and on an <em>ordinary</em> article
+a much larger margin is allowed.</p>
+
+<p>"American beef is far superior to
+Irish, and brings more money. The
+import of the latter is about 1000
+tierces&mdash;of the former, 20,000 tierces.
+Irish pork stands higher than American,
+and the finest quality eastern
+will sell within 5s. per barrel of Irish.
+The import of Irish is about 3000
+barrels&mdash;of American, 35,000 barrels."</p>
+
+<p>The following table will show the
+comparative prices of Irish and American
+produce:&mdash;</p>
+
+
+<p class="hanging"><em>Comparative Table of Prices of Irish and
+American Provisions at Liverpool, in December
+1849.</em></p>
+
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="meat">
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="center">Irish.</td><td align="center">American.</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="center"><em>s.s.</em></td><td align="center"><em>s. d. s.</em></td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Prime mess beef, per tierce, 304 lbs.,&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td align="left">80 to 85</td><td align="left">67&nbsp; 6 to 81</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Prime mess pork, per barrel, 200 lbs.,</td><td align="left">62&nbsp;to 66</td><td align="left">34&nbsp;0 to 60</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Mess do., per do.,</td><td align="left">54 to 60</td><td align="left">45 0 to 50</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Bacon, per cwt.,</td><td align="left">45 to 48</td><td align="left">30 0 to 32</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Lard, per do.,</td><td align="left">38 to &mdash;</td><td align="left">33 6 to 34</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>These are figures which may well
+astound the boldest Free-trader; for
+they show that the provision trade is
+altogether passing from our hands.
+To those who regard the welfare of
+Great Britain, they furnish additional
+proof of the headlong rate of our
+decline. But we have yet other
+statements to make, for which, we
+are certain, no one was prepared,
+though the facts they disclose are the
+necessary consequence of such comparative
+prices as we have just given.
+<em>We believe that the British navy, which
+is victualled by contract, is at this
+moment supplied from foreign, and not
+British produce!</em></p>
+
+<p>We crave the special attention of
+the reader to the following letter
+from a gentleman residing in Dundee,
+who stands nearly at the head of the
+meat-curing business in Scotland.
+We have authority to give his name,
+if that should be considered necessary.
+His letter bears date 12th November
+1849:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"In reply to the queries put to me
+by you, as to the value, &amp;c. of foreign
+provisions, I beg leave to hand you a
+statement of the difference of price
+of Scotch and American beef, calculating
+the Scotch beef at the present
+low price of 40s. per cwt., and the
+present price of my American prime
+mess beef at 87s. 6d. per tierce of
+304 lbs., the quality of which is not
+inferior to the best Scotch beef.</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="beef">
+<tr><td align="left">Present price of Scotch beef, from butcher, 40s. per cwt., or for 304 lbs.,</td><td align="right">£5</td><td align="right">8</td><td align="right">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Price of tierce, 5s. 6d.&mdash;expense of curing, 4s.,</td><td align="right">0</td><td align="right">9</td><td align="right">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">In leakage of weight.</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="right">7</td><td align="right">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Allowance of value between necks, shanks, and prime beef,</td><td align="right" class="bb">0</td><td align="right" class="bb">2</td><td align="right" class="bb">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Present price of one tierce Scotch beef,</td><td align="right">£6</td><td align="right">8</td><td align="right">0</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Present price of my prime mess American beef,</td><td align="right" class="bb">4</td><td align="right" class="bb">7</td><td align="right" class="bb">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Difference,</td><td align="left">£2</td><td align="left">0</td><td align="left">6</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>"By this statement you will see that
+there is a difference of £2, Os. 6d. per
+tierce, or 14s. 9d. per cwt., in favour
+of the American; besides, I allow 2<sup><small>1</small></sup>&frasl;<sub><small>2</small></sub>
+per cent off for cash, which I hardly
+think the butcher does at the above
+price. Neither am I the importer of
+this beef, but purchase at the sales in
+Liverpool, though a broker; neither
+am I an underseller, 87s. 6d., (2<sup><small>1</small></sup>&frasl;<sub><small>2</small></sub> per
+cent off,) being about the general price
+for such an article in various markets.
+Owing to the low price and excellent
+quality of American beef, almost every
+ship from this port, going to the south,
+takes it in preference to our home
+beef; and when in England, last
+month, we found there was nothing
+else used by the English vessels, with
+the exception of a little fresh beef,
+which they take with them when they
+go out; and one house in London informed
+me that they had supplied the
+navy with 3080 tierces of American
+beef.</p>
+
+<p>"American pork can be purchased
+at a very low price, but as yet I have
+seen none fine, and there are but few
+of our shipowners that would take it.
+There is, however, hardly anything
+else than American hams and flitch
+bacons sold in this and other manufacturing
+towns; and although the
+quality is not fine, still the price is
+low, and purchasers are to be found
+on that account.</p>
+
+<p>"Hamburg beef and pork are both
+of a good quality, and sell generally
+about 10s. per cwt. below the price of
+Scotch. I had, however, an offer of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
+500 barrels from one of the largest
+houses in Hamburg fully 15 per
+cent below what I can afford to cure
+Scotch; it, however, being last year's
+cure, I did not accept of the offer.</p>
+
+<p>"There are several houses opened
+lately in Hamburg, who are curing a
+first-rate article in a first-rate style
+for the London market; and one of
+my London correspondents, writing
+lately, informs me of a house in London
+(to which I have sent a great
+quantity of pickled pork for the last
+twenty years,) having opened a curing
+establishment in Hamburg for
+the cure of pickled pork on the Scotch
+system. It was doing up nicely, and
+affecting the market for Scotch greatly;
+he adds that, from the price and
+quality of the article, it would be a
+death-blow to the Scotch curers. I
+may also say that it looks very like it.
+Some years ago I was curing about
+seven tons a-week for the London
+market alone, and found plenty of
+demand; now, at the present day, I
+can hardly get clear of two tons
+a-week, and that at very low prices&mdash;so
+low, indeed, that we are compelled
+to look for other markets in
+other places; and I am confining myself
+principally to prime mess pork
+among the shipping of this and other
+ports. These are facts which I can
+authenticate, as I have had many
+years' experience in the curing both
+of beef and pork for home and foreign
+markets; and you are at perfect
+liberty to make any use of this information
+which you may think proper."</p>
+
+<p>From this, and other statements of
+a similar nature which have reached
+us, and which we refrain from inserting,
+solely on account of the unusual
+space which our remarks must otherwise
+occupy, we entertain no doubt
+whatever that in the article of meat
+the competition is as formidable as in
+that of grain; and that there is no
+limit to the extent of competition,
+save the ultimate inability of the
+burdened British agriculturist to hold
+his ground against the untaxed and
+unreciprocating foreigner. In a very
+short time, if the system is not perfected
+at present, we may expect
+to see the rations of the army, the
+stores of the navy, and the contracts
+for all large establishments, supplied
+from foreign produce. The displacement
+of home industry, and the
+extinguishment of important trades
+indicated in the foregoing letter, are
+perhaps matters of minor importance
+in such a revolution as this: nevertheless,
+they are too serious to be contemplated
+without the greatest alarm.</p>
+
+<p>So stands the agricultural interest
+at this moment&mdash;an interest, be it observed,
+in which the prosperity of wellnigh
+three-fourths of the population of
+this mighty empire is concerned. We
+might say, with perfect truth, the interest
+of the whole population; but as
+those of the Manchester school deny
+their identity with the rest of us, we
+must exclude them; and they cannot
+think us ungracious or illiberal if we
+assign to them a number of adherents
+far greater than we believe they actually
+possess. These are the effects of
+what they call free trade; <small>BUT FREE
+TRADE IT IS NOT</small>, being simply the
+most shameful species of one-sided
+and partial legislation. The Manchester
+men dare not, for their souls, carry
+out the principle to its full extent.
+The agriculturist has a right to demand
+that this shall be done; that,
+exposed as he is to the competition of
+the world, and burdened, as he must
+remain, with debts contracted ages
+ago to the profit of the capitalist, and
+burdens swollen to their present
+amount by manufacturing pauperism,
+no other class shall be protected from
+a similar free competition. No plea
+for revenue duties to be raised upon
+customs can be held valid in equity
+now. Why should there still exist a
+protective duty of from ten to fifteen per
+cent against foreign manufactures?
+Why is any one portion of our consumption
+to be taxed, whilst another is allowed
+to go free? Are we not entitled
+to demand that the same measure
+which has been dealt to us, shall be
+meted out to every man in Great Britain
+and Ireland, let his trade or occupation
+be what it may? Are we not entitled
+to say this much to the manufacturers,
+who were foremost in the
+late movement&mdash;You have compelled
+us to compete with Poland for grain
+on equal terms: you therefore must
+in future compete with the foreign
+manufacturer on a similar condition
+of equality? Why are we to pay
+fifteen per cent duty for foreign silk
+manufactures; for velvets, gauzes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
+satins, and suchlike? Why ten per
+cent for more than a hundred articles
+of consumption, including cotton,
+woollen, and hair manufactures, lace,
+gauze, brass, brocade, stoneware, steel,
+&amp;c.? Why should we be prohibited
+from growing, if we can do it,
+our own tobacco? Why are Messrs
+Cobden and Bright, and their confederates,
+to nestle under the wing of
+protection, whilst the agriculturalist is
+left utterly bare? Apart from policy,
+and simply on the ground of justice,
+we denounce such infamous partiality.
+If, without even the shadow of a coming
+reciprocity on the part of foreign
+nations, we are desired to face competition,
+let there be no exceptions
+whatever. There can be, and there
+is, no just medium between entire free
+trade and equitable protection for all.
+The voice of the whole nation will ere
+long declare that no such medium shall
+exist. What enormous amount of
+benefit have Manchester manufacturers
+conferred upon the community at
+large, that they are to be bolstered up
+by customs' duties, whilst the agriculturist
+is trodden under foot? What
+fractional portion of the greatness of
+this country has been achieved by the
+professors of the spinning-jenny and
+the billy-roller, who now, in defiance
+of history and of fact, would fain persuade
+us that <small>THEY</small>, forsooth, are the
+flower of Britain, the oracles of its
+wisdom, the regulators of its policy,
+the masters of the destiny of mankind?</p>
+
+<p>It has been the fashion of late, for
+those gentlemen, to talk as if the British
+farmers were infinitely behind the
+rest of the world in activity and intelligence.
+It has been insinuated, that
+they are unworthy occupants of an
+exceedingly fertile soil, the capabilities
+of which they have not tested, through
+indolence and prejudice. Some such
+accusation is implied, in all the
+late stimulating exhortations to increased
+exertion; and Lord Kinnaird
+does not hesitate to tell us so, almost
+in as many words. These are, no
+doubt, recent discoveries, for it is not
+long since we were told, by the very
+same parties, that the superior agricultural
+skill of our farmers was such
+as to set foreign competition at defiance!
+That was one of the principal
+arguments employed for effecting
+the repeal of the corn laws; but now,
+when the results have proved totally
+contrary to anticipation, it is convenient
+to turn round, and accuse the
+farmer of a total want of those very
+qualities which were assigned as reasons
+for the change. The obvious
+fallacy in the first proposition, does
+not make the inconsistency of the
+second a whit less monstrous. No
+wonder if the insult should be bitterly
+felt by the agriculturist.</p>
+
+<p>We are perhaps too apt, at the present
+moment, to allow the former promises
+of the Free-traders to slip out of
+memory. If we were to search through
+the abandoned rubbish of the League,
+we should find ample evidence of the
+gross fraud which was passed upon the
+country by the leaders of that nefarious
+faction. On the 19th December
+last, we find Mr Cobden, at Leeds,
+speaking as follows:&mdash;"I have always
+contemplated a transition state in this
+country, when there would be pinching
+and suffering in the agricultural class
+in passing from a vicious system to a
+sound one; for you cannot be restored
+from bad health to good without going
+through a process of languor and suffering.
+I have always looked forward
+to that time." If this statement be
+true&mdash;if Mr Cobden did "always contemplate"
+such a state of matters&mdash;it
+would not be difficult to convict him
+of something worse than hypocrisy.
+Three days later, at the memorable
+meeting held at Huntingdon, Mr G.
+Day, one of the speakers, made the
+following pithy remarks:&mdash;"He
+would refer, however, to the magnificent
+promises which had been
+held out by Mr Cobden as certain to
+be realised by free trade, and to do so
+he was free to refer to his letters.
+'First, with regard to the landlord, I
+do not mean to say that the landlords
+will not get as good rents with free
+trade as they have now with monopoly:
+No doubt they will get on a
+great deal better with free trade. The
+landlord has nothing to fear.' Again,
+he said, 'The landlords will have the
+same rents with free trade as they
+have at present.' In speaking of the
+tenant-farmers he said, 'The tenant-farmer
+will under free trade be an
+independent man. I say that the
+farmer has nothing to fear from competition.'
+With regard to the poor,
+what did this gentleman say? 'There<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
+would be no complaining poor in our
+streets, no income-tax, no property-tax,
+no poor-rates, but all classes
+would be benefited by the adoption of
+free trade.' These were the promises
+made to them by a free-trader&mdash;the
+leader of them; and in the <cite>Bread-Tax
+Circular</cite>, No. 146, page 255, they
+would find what he had read to them&mdash;Mr
+Cobden's own words."</p>
+
+<p>Does Mr Cobden admit that he
+wrote this circular? If he does, perhaps
+he will be good enough to
+explain how he reconciles the views
+contained in it with his new assertion
+that he always contemplated a transition
+state of suffering for the agricultural
+class? We recommend him,
+for his own sake, to clear this matter
+up. Rash averments may be pardoned;
+but deliberate double-dealing,
+never.</p>
+
+<p>"It is cruel," writes one of our
+correspondents, a practical farmer of
+great experience, "that the advocates
+of the measure, in their exultation,
+should pretend not to see that the
+facts of the case have revealed a much
+more alarming aspect to their opponents
+than they anticipated; and that
+even the danger to themselves, from
+this cause, does not bring conviction
+of the falsity of their views. They
+affect to blame the farmer for ignorance,
+want of skill and enterprise&mdash;forgetting
+that, not long since, he was
+wont to be held up as a pattern of all
+that was superior in agricultural advancement,
+and that our island stands
+conspicuous among foreigners for its
+garden cultivation. Still, we are told,
+it is want of energy, and of a free
+application of capital, which prevents
+the British farmers from successfully
+competing with the Continent: as if
+overwhelming supplies of foreign corn,
+and, consequently, a greatly reduced
+price, were not sufficient reasons to
+oblige the agriculturist to modify the
+enterprise, and curtail the expenditure
+for which he had hitherto been so distinguished.
+Such unjust reflections
+may serve to raise up and maintain a
+feeling of prejudice against the farmer,
+and to bring him into obnoxious comparison
+with other arts, where science
+has fortunately been more successfully
+applied; but it is not to be expected,
+that a hopeless rivalry, and a low price,
+are to have the effect of stimulating to
+efforts and outlay, beyond what was
+induced by protection and a remunerating
+return.</p>
+
+<p>"It has been customary to bring
+the farmer's position into contrast
+with that of the manufacturer, who is
+said to fear no foreign competition.
+But is the comparison a just one?
+The British manufacturer possesses
+every advantage and appliance to
+render his productions superior, and,
+consequently, also cheaper. Britain
+is the great mart of all the chief staples
+of new produce. Her machinery is
+the best&mdash;her fuel is the cheapest. On
+the other hand, the farmer here is
+deficient in <em>raw material</em>. He labours
+an obstinate soil, for the use of which
+he pays high; while his climate&mdash;the
+main element to give security and
+save expense&mdash;is far inferior to that of
+his rival."</p>
+
+<p>Our friend might have gone further;
+for, if we enter into the comparison,
+we shall find that the British farmer
+has taken more advantage of his natural
+position than the British manufacturer.
+The true way of arriving at
+a just conclusion upon this point is,
+by contrasting, in the first instance,
+the natural advantages enjoyed by
+either class.</p>
+
+<p>The motive power of the British
+manufacturer is derived from coal, of
+which he has an unlimited supply:
+the motive power of the British farmer
+is, except to a very small extent,
+dependent upon animals, which is infinitely
+more expensive and tedious;
+requiring more work with less command
+of power. The manufacturer
+can try any experiment he pleases,
+either in the construction of his machinery
+or in the texture of his fabric,
+in the course of a few days or weeks,
+and adopt or reject it as best suits his
+purpose: the farmer cannot attempt
+any experiment upon his crops without
+waiting a whole year for the result;
+nor any upon his live stock in less than
+two or three years. In the mean time,
+his expenses and rent go on as usual.
+The British manufacturer is not dependent
+on the climate: the British
+farmer is altogether so dependent;
+the climate of this country being proverbially
+uncertain and changeable, and
+very often ungenial. We apprehend,
+therefore, that, as to natural advantages,
+the home manufacturer stands<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
+on a far more advantageous footing
+than the home agriculturist.</p>
+
+<p>Let us next contrast the state of
+the two classes abroad. The foreign
+manufacturer has few natural advantages.
+He does not possess the command
+of coal for his motive power,
+but is compelled to erect his factory
+on the bank of some stream, without
+regard, otherwise, to the convenience
+of the locality. Iron for machinery is
+far more expensive abroad than here;
+in fact, most of the Continental machinery
+is directly exported from Britain.
+On the other hand, the foreign
+farmer has all the advantages of an
+equable, rich soil, and of a good and
+steady climate.</p>
+
+<p>Now, then, let us see how far the
+British manufacturer, with all his natural
+advantages, has surpassed his
+foreign rival. Does he make a <em>better</em>
+article than the foreigner? Can he
+beat the German linen, the Russian
+duck, the Swiss calico, the Saxon or
+Austrian broad-cloth, the porcelains
+of Dresden and Sèvres, or the silks,
+stained papers, and prints of France?
+If not, where is his superiority? As
+to <em>designs</em>, it is notorious that he is
+infinitely behind the Continent. No
+doubt he sends ship-loads of flimsy
+textures, with flaring colours and
+incongruous patterns, to semi-barbarous
+countries; and he can deluge
+the markets of the world with
+cheap goods, so furbished and tricked
+out that they sell from appearance
+only. But what hold has he of the
+Continent? He cannot compete with
+the manufacturers there in point of
+<em>quality</em>: if he could make a better
+article, no Zollvereins or combinations
+would be able to keep him out. These
+remarks apply to the bulk of our
+manufactures, which are made for
+foreign export; and these, in point of
+quality, are precisely what we have
+described them. There are undoubtedly
+high class manufacturers here, especially
+in the woollen and linen trades,
+who supply the home market with high
+class goods. But how do they stand?
+<em>They are protected from foreign competition.</em>
+It is in their favour that the
+highest import duties remain; and, were
+those restrictions removed to-morrow,
+they would be undersold in the
+British market. If any one thinks
+we are wrong in this matter, we shall
+be glad to hear him explain why the
+duties remain? It cannot be for
+<em>revenue</em>, since, if the British manufacturer
+can beat his foreign rival, without
+reciprocity, in the foreign market, it
+would be an absurdity to suppose the
+tables turned, and the foreign manufacturer
+paying duty solely for the
+sake of offering us a worse article
+in Britain. If not for revenue, why
+are the duties continued by statesmen
+who have declared for free trade?
+The answer is clear. <em>These are protective
+duties</em>; and they are continued
+for this reason, that, with all his
+natural advantages, the British manufacturer
+is not able to set Continental
+competition at defiance.</p>
+
+<p>Lastly, let us look to the British
+farmer, in so far as energy and enterprise
+are concerned, in contrast with
+<em>his</em> rival. Here no detailed statement
+is necessary. In spite of all natural
+disadvantages, the soil of Britain is
+better tilled than that of any other
+country. We ask with a natural
+pride, greater perhaps on account of
+adverse circumstances, whether the
+husbandry of the Lothians or of the
+Border counties can be matched anywhere
+out of Britain? Where, on the
+surface of the globe, are the agriculturists
+who have approached our tenantry
+in the free outlay of capital,
+ready intelligence, persevering enterprise,
+and high professional skill? And
+yet these men, admittedly at the head
+of their craft, are to be told, forsooth,
+that they have been indolent and ignorant;
+and that retired tradesmen and
+shopkeepers would make far better
+farmers than they!</p>
+
+<p>Judging from results, then, which
+of the two classes has best done its
+duty to the state? Which of the
+two has availed itself most of the
+advantages which lay within its reach,
+and done most to overcome the power
+of natural disadvantages? We apprehend
+that, in all respects, the efforts of
+the agriculturist have been greater
+than those of the manufacturer. If the
+former is to fall a sacrifice, let it not
+at least be said that his indolence provoked
+his fate. Out of agriculture
+manufactures arose; and it is now,
+we presume, the intention of our
+rulers, that the one shall decay, and
+the other survive: that the former
+shall fall unprotected, and the latter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
+struggle on with the whole monopoly
+of protection. If so, the results
+are clear enough. The manufacturer
+who the other day accosted
+Mr Muntz in the following terms:&mdash;"We
+have eaten up the West Indian
+planters, we have eaten the Irish landlords,
+we have finished the colonies,
+and now we are at the farmers; and
+I don't know that we won't be eaten
+ourselves,"&mdash;saw plainly the effect of
+our legislation. Mr Cobden sees its
+effect as well; but now, at the eleventh
+hour, when the tide is turning against
+him, he is straining every nerve to
+maintain his false position. It is
+the misfortune of demagogues, but
+a great blessing to the rest of mankind,
+that they invariably become
+intoxicated with the first draught of
+success, and seldom recover their reason.
+So is it with Cobden now. His
+late rabid harangue at Leeds, in
+which he ransacked the vocabulary
+for terms of abuse to heap upon the
+landed gentry, was perhaps the most
+insolent speech ever uttered in a free
+nation. Surrounded by his fetid chimneys,
+and his squalid dupes, he assumes
+the tone of a dictator, holds out
+threats of annihilation to all who dare
+to question his policy, and actually
+throws the gauntlet of defiance to the
+constituencies of the United Kingdom!
+There is no mistake at all about the
+force and significance of his <small>SHALL</small>.
+Right or wrong, every man in this empire
+must walk as Cobden directs him,
+else some nondescript vial of unutterable
+wrath and retribution is to be
+poured on his devoted head. These
+are not the arguments of a reasonable
+man, but the ravings of a positive maniac.
+They will delude no one, whilst
+they serve to show the base nature of
+the man who utters them. The gladiator
+of old, blowing sulphur flames
+through a hollow nut, and passing himself
+off for a god, was not a more rank
+impostor than this seven times baffled
+prophet. Is it not something unparalleled
+in the annals of assurance to
+find this person, himself protected, declaiming
+against all protection, save
+that of his immediate class, and avowing
+his deliberate determination to
+overthrow every institution of the
+country, if we shall cease from enriching
+the Polish magnates at the expense
+of the British labourer? Let us
+see what this man is doing. He,
+whose fortunes were notoriously redeemed
+by the questionable wages of
+agitation, is now publicly announcing
+his intention, if thwarted, of pursuing
+a line of conduct which would necessarily
+result in the abolition of the monarchy,
+and the establishment of a
+republic in Britain. There is no mistaking
+the tendency of the hints which
+are thrown out by him and his fellows.
+They abstain, indeed, and certainly
+wisely for themselves, from broadly
+proclaiming their ends in such language
+as would bring them within the
+immediate grasp of the law. They
+say nothing about the Crown, for that
+would be dangerous; but they resolutely
+avow their determination, if possible,
+to pull down the aristocracy;
+and they point to the abolition of the
+House of Peers as a measure which,
+at some future period, may engage
+their serious attention. Add
+to this their perpetual laudation of
+American institutions, as preferable
+to our own&mdash;their open and avowed
+sympathy with the insurgents of democratic
+Europe&mdash;their bitter and
+malignant abuse of every one who
+has been instrumental in putting down
+insurrection&mdash;their scheme for abandoning
+the colonies as worthless appendages,
+and so breaking up the integrity
+of the empire&mdash;their proposals,
+so violently urged and reiterated, of
+such a reduction in the army and
+navy, as would render both arms of
+the service utterly inefficient&mdash;add all
+these, and we shall be at no loss to
+discover the real aim of this foul and
+scandalous confederacy. We are
+aware that it is somewhat difficult to
+define the limits of sedition; still Mr
+Cobden had better have a care of his
+language whilst indulging in such
+revelations as he has of late chosen to
+set forth. It will be no child's-play
+if he actually should attempt to put the
+smallest of his threats into practice.</p>
+
+<p>Setting Mr Cobden aside, we have
+still an observation to make. It is
+not a little edifying to contrast the
+tone assumed at present by the disciples
+of the Manchester school with
+that which they adopted after the
+passing of the disastrous measures
+of 1846. We were then entreated,
+in Parliament and out of it, to give
+the experiment a fair trial. It was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
+admitted that divers extraordinary
+occurrences had intervened to postpone
+the great advantages to the
+nation which must flow from the
+opening of the ports, yet still we
+were asked to believe that the calculations
+of Mr M'Gregor were perfectly
+sound, and that in a little time all
+would be well. We have waited,
+patiently enough, until the last fragment
+of agricultural protection has
+been removed&mdash;until it is obvious to
+every one, save an exporting and
+protected manufacturer, that nothing
+short of protection can save the landed
+interest of Great Britain from total
+ruin&mdash;and until ruin, in its worst
+shape, has already overtaken Ireland.
+And what was it that we waited for?
+<span class="smcap">Reciprocity</span>; the sole thing which,
+by the acknowledgment of the Peel
+party, could justify the experiment.
+<span class="smcap">Reciprocity</span>, which Mr Cobden promised
+us if we would only show the
+example. Now that reciprocity is
+out of the question, our antagonists
+turn round, revile us as fools for adhering
+to our original opinions&mdash;though
+the experience of each succeeding
+year has attested their accuracy
+and soundness&mdash;and, in the contemptible
+cant of the day, denominate
+their free-trade policy "an accomplished
+fact."</p>
+
+<p>They are right in one sense. It is
+a fact that this great nation has suffered
+itself to be misled by the
+machinations of a selfish and unscrupulous
+faction. It is also a fact,
+that for a time these machinations
+have been successful. But the great
+fact which now concerns us is, that
+the British nation is fully alive to the
+imposture; and that being the case,
+we entertain not the slightest doubt
+as to the ultimate issue.</p>
+
+<p>One word in conclusion to our
+friends. It is the policy of those who
+are against us&mdash;and indeed their last
+desperate chance&mdash;to promote disunion
+among the ranks of those who
+draw their subsistence from the land,
+and whose welfare depends upon the
+agricultural prosperity of Britain.
+They are trying to set the tenant
+against the landlord, the labourer
+against the farmer; and their efforts
+have been assisted, to no inconsiderable
+extent, by the folly of weak men,
+who, in their terror, are attempting,
+by all the means in their power, to
+shelter themselves from the consequences
+which they thoroughly
+foresee. Our policy, as well as our
+duty, is to maintain a firm and
+united front. It would be madness
+to suppose that among the three
+great agricultural classes, there can
+be any disunion of interest. Landlord
+and farmer depend upon each
+other; the one class cannot be prostrated
+without the other falling a
+victim. And both of them have a
+duty to perform to the labourer, which
+must not be disregarded. He, as the
+lowest in the scale, is often the first
+to suffer; but woe to our land if the
+labourer should be trodden under
+foot!</p>
+
+<p>We repeat that we have no fear for
+the future. We see on all hands the
+unmistakeable signs of a mighty reaction,
+which cannot but defeat the
+designs of that grasping faction for
+whose benefit alone this ominous experiment
+has been made. Deeply as
+we deplore the misery which has
+overtaken us, we must regard it as
+the penalty incurred for having
+swerved from the old path by which
+Britain attained her greatness&mdash;for
+having listened too readily to the
+suggestions of selfish and incompetent
+men. The experience of each succeeding
+month shows the error of the
+course we have been pursuing, and
+demonstrates the necessity of a return.
+Why should we fear? England&mdash;that
+noble country which stands pre-eminent
+among the nations of the
+world for its loyalty, enterprise, and
+independence&mdash;for its regard to sterling
+worth in the lowest, as well as the
+highest sphere&mdash;has awakened from
+its momentary trance. The voice of
+the people, before which that of faction
+must be silenced, is proclaiming,
+in clear and articulate language, that
+the virtual possession of its free and
+unviolated soil shall not be yielded,
+through fraud, to the foreigner, who
+never could have taken possession of
+it by force of arms; and that the
+English yeomanry will not submit to
+be sacrificed or annihilated for the
+wretched interest of a handful of
+manufacturers, whose gains are dependent
+upon the extension of a foreign
+market. We rejoice to see that the
+men of England are up and doing.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
+Their energy, if rightly directed,
+nothing can withstand. Cobden may
+bluster, as demagogues always do;
+and Bright may insinuate revolutions
+which he has neither the courage nor
+the power to attempt; but the day for
+such trashy vapouring has gone by,
+and England will no longer allow her
+greatness to be perilled at the bidding
+of such miserable upstarts. The issue
+of the late elections, and the triumphant
+meetings which are everywhere
+held in England, for the maintenance
+of her national and agricultural prosperity,
+should excite us to similar
+efforts. If our statements of what is
+occurring here can strengthen the
+hands of our brethren in the south, we
+shall be more than amply repaid for
+the pains we have expended in a close
+and laborious investigation. England
+may not require support; but support
+is ready for her. Ireland, from the
+depths of present misery, sees the
+hand which is striving to keep her
+down, and prepares herself for another
+struggle. Scotland will not remain
+inactive. Her interest is so clear,
+that it would be almost wasting words
+to attempt to explain it further.
+Let but this experiment go on for a
+few years longer, and all that we have
+gained, by more than a century of unremitting
+toil, will be lost to us: our
+improvements will be annihilated,
+and our people pauperised. Deprived of
+her yeomanry, as noble a body of men
+as exists upon the face of the earth, the
+nationality of Scotland is gone. We
+trust, then, that in every part of the
+country the appeal will be energetically
+answered. Scotsmen are slow
+to move; but being moved, they have
+a will and resolution that can bear
+down any obstacle whatever. There
+never was a time when the old national
+spirit was more imperatively
+required to show itself than now.
+Let us then speak out boldly in defence
+of our country, and tell those
+Manchester conspirators, in answer
+to their insolent challenge, that&mdash;beyond
+that circle of smoking factories,
+which they falsely imagine to be the
+heart of Britain&mdash;there exists a majority
+of loyal British subjects, who
+despise their dictation, detest their
+hypocrisy, and utterly defy their
+power.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><em>Printed by William Blackwood and Sons, Edinburgh.</em></p>
+
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+
+<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> <cite>Æneid</cite>, i. 56.</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> See "The Fall of the Throne of the Barricades," April 1, 1848.</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> <span class="smcap">Alison.</span></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> In Paris, after the Revolution in April and May, it was stated there were 300,000
+persons out of employment, including the dependants of those without work. This
+number was, doubtless, fearfully great out of a population of 1,200,000 souls. But
+it was exceeded in some parts of Great Britain. In April 1848, the number of unemployed
+persons in and around Glasgow was so excessive, that an examination of
+them was made, by order of the magistrates of that city, with a view to an application
+to government for assistance. The men out of work were found, in that city and
+its vicinity, to be 31,000, which, allowing two and a half dependants to each male,
+implies 93,000 persons destitute of employment, out of a population at that time
+estimated at 360,000; being somewhat more than 300,000 out of 1,200,000 in Paris.</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> <cite>Sights in the Gold Regions, and Scenes by the Way.</cite> By <span class="smcap">Theodore T. Johnson</span>.
+New York: 1849.
+</p>
+<p>
+<cite>The California and Oregon Trail: being Sketches of Prairie and Rocky Mountain
+Life.</cite> By <span class="smcap">Francis Parkman</span>, Jun. New York and London: 1849.
+</p>
+<p>
+<cite>Los Gringos; or an Inside View of Mexico and California: with Wanderings
+in Peru, Chili, and Polynesia.</cite> By <span class="smcap">Lieutenant Wise</span>, U.S.N. New York and London:
+1850.</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> "A cañon is the narrow opening between two mountains, several hundred and
+sometimes a thousand feet in depth; rising, some of them, like perpendicular cliffs on
+either hand, as if torn asunder by a violent convulsion of nature. Through these
+pour the rushing mountain torrents of the <em>wet diggins</em> of the gold regions of California."&mdash;<cite>Sights
+in the Gold Regions</cite>, p. 180.</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> At Sutter's saw-mill, from which the Culloma valley takes its second name, Mr
+Johnson saw and conversed with Mr Marshall, a proprietor of the mill, and one of
+the first discoverers of the gold. The discovery was made when cutting out the
+mill-race, across a portion of the former bed of a stream. "He pointed out to us the
+particular location of the first discoveries. This is some fifty yards below the mill,
+where a large fir-tree extends across the race. He stated that they threw up a good
+deal of gold, mixed with the sand and clay, before they seriously examined it, or
+ascertained its character." It must have struck many as singular, that gold mines
+so near the surface should so long have been unobserved. California was explored as
+far back as the year 1700 by the Jesuit Eusebio Kino, who first ascertained it to be
+part of the great American continent, and not an island, as was previously believed:
+Soon afterwards, missionary stations were established there, paving the way for the
+Spanish conquest of the country. Some of the <em>padres</em> still remain, but their mission-houses
+are dilapidated, and their influence is gone. To them Mr Johnson attributes
+the long concealment of the metallic wealth of California. "That these priests were
+cognisant of the abundance of the precious metal at that period, (a century ago,) is
+now well known; but they were members of the extraordinary society of the Jesuits,
+which, jealous of its all-pervading influence, and dreading the effect of a large Protestant
+emigration to the western, as well as to the eastern shores of America,
+applied its powerful injunctions of secrecy to the members of the order; and their
+faithful obedience, during so long a period, is another proof both of the strength and
+the danger of their organisation."&mdash;<cite>Sights in the Gold Regions</cite>, p. 111.</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> "This '<em>placer</em>,' or <em>bar</em>, is simply the higher portion of the sandy and rocky bed of
+the stream which, during the seasons of high water, is covered with the rushing torrent,
+but was now partially or entirely exposed. This is covered with large stones
+and rocks, or, on the smooth sand, with clumps of stunted bushes or trees."&mdash;<cite>Sights
+in the Gold Regions</cite>, 177.</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> <cite>John Howard and the Prison-World of Europe.</cite> From original and authentic
+Documents. By <span class="smcap">Hepworth Dixon</span>.</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> 1773. High Sheriff of Bedfordshire&mdash;visited many county and town jails.
+</p>
+<p class="hanging">
+1774. Completed his survey of English jails. Stood candidate to represent the
+town of Bedford.
+</p>
+<p class="hanging">
+1775. Travelled to Scotland, Ireland, France, Holland, Flanders, and Germany.
+</p>
+<p class="hanging">
+1776. Repeated his visit to the above countries, and to Switzerland. During these
+two years revisited all the English jails.
+</p>
+<p class="hanging">
+1777. Printed his State of prisons.
+</p>
+<p class="hanging">
+1778. Travelled through Holland, Flanders, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, and
+part of France.
+</p>
+<p class="hanging">
+1779. Revisited all the counties of England and Wales, and travelled into Scotland
+and Ireland. Acted as supervisor of the Penitentiary Houses.
+</p>
+<p class="hanging">
+1780. Printed his first Appendix.
+</p>
+<p class="hanging">
+1781. Travelled into Denmark, Sweden, Russia, Poland, Germany, and Holland.
+</p>
+<p class="hanging">
+1782. Again surveyed all the English prisons, and went into Scotland and Ireland.
+</p>
+<p class="hanging">
+1783. Visited Portugal, Spain, France, Flanders, and Holland; also Scotland and
+Ireland, and viewed several English prisons.
+</p>
+<p class="hanging">
+1784. Printed the second Appendix, and a new edition of the whole works.
+</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">
+1785.{ From the close of the first of these years to the beginning of the last, on</p>
+<p class="hanging">1786.{ his tour through Holland, France, Italy, Malta, Turkey, and Germany.</p>
+<p class="hanging">1787.{ Afterwards went to Scotland and Ireland.
+</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">
+1788. Revisited Ireland; and, during this and the former year, travelled over all
+England.
+</p>
+<p class="hanging">
+1789. Printed his work on Lazarettos, &amp;c. Travelled through Holland, Germany,
+Prussia, and Livonia, to Russia, and Lesser Tartary.
+</p>
+<p class="hanging">
+1790. January 20. Died at Cherson.</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> "For a while the Venetian sailors defended themselves with desperate courage,
+for it was a question of victory or perpetual slavery with them; but their numbers
+were limited, their arms indifferent, and altogether the contest seemed too unequal to
+last long. It was the first actual fighting in which Howard had been present; but
+the imminency of the danger and the sight of conflict appealing to the strong combative
+instincts of his race, he fought on deck with the coolness of a Saxon and the
+courage of a knight-templar. Indeed, it was his self-possession which proved the
+salvation of the crew. There was only one gun of large calibre on board, and of this
+he assumed the direction, though he had probably never fired even a rifle in his life;
+but, in the hour of peril, fighting seemed to come to him, as to most of his countrymen,
+by inspiration. <em>This gun he rammed almost to the muzzle with nails, spikes, and
+similar charge, and then, steadily waiting his opportunity, as the privateer bore down
+upon them with all her crew on deck, apparently expecting to see the Venetians strike
+their flag, he sent the contents in amongst them with such murderous effect</em>, that, after a
+moment or two of consternation, the corsairs hoisted sail, and made off at their best
+speed."&mdash;(P. 356.)</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> It is mentioned by both the chroniclers, Hemingford, (i. 196) and Trivet, (332,) that
+Edward the First built "a strength" or fort "at Linlitcu" in 1301, and there enjoyed
+the festivities of Christmas. Lord Hailes inaccurately states that he wintered there;
+for, by dates since collected from writs, Chalmers has proved that, although Edward
+was still at Linlithgow on the 12th January, he was, on his way home, at Roxburgh
+on 12th February, and had reached Morpeth by the 24th.
+</p>
+<p>
+This fort, or castle, was probably the same that was, a few years afterwards, taken
+by the stratagem of the patriotic yeoman, Binnock, in concealing some of his followers
+in a waggon of hay; and who was rewarded by King Robert with an estate, which
+his posterity long afterwards enjoyed.</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> Dalmeny Church is unquestionably of very great antiquity. From the style of
+its architecture, which a most competent authority, Mr Billings, ("Baronial and Ecclesiastical
+Antiquities," vol. i.) has pronounced to be of the purest Norman, it is referred,
+at least, to the tenth or eleventh centuries. There is extant a charter of
+Waldeve, Earl of Dunbar, from 1166 to 1182, witnessed by the parson of Dumanie.</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> On these banks a castle was afterwards erected by the Earls of Wintoun, the
+picturesque ruins of which are yet a prominent object, by the edge of the Edinburgh
+and Glasgow Railway, to the west of Kirkliston. Queen Mary is said to have slept
+there, on her flight from Lochleven to Hamilton, 2d May 1568.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> The name has for centuries been vulgarised into Craigmillar. Adam de Cardonnel,
+in his "Picturesque Antiquities," adheres to the spelling in the text; although
+it is generally now admitted that the appellation is Gaelic&mdash;<i lang="ga" xml:lang="ga">Craig-moil-ard</i>, or the
+high bare rock running out into a plain. The original structure is of unknown antiquity.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote">
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Woolmet, or Wymet, and Inneresc, were granted by charter of David the First
+to the Abbey of Dunfermline; the latter in confirmation of a previous grant by Malcolm
+Canmore and Queen Margaret, ("Registrum de Dunfermlyn," Imp. Edin. 1842,
+p. 5, 6.) A small mausoleum of the Wauchope family now occupies the site of the
+chapel of Wymet; and the venerable pile of St Michael the Archangel, at Inneresc,
+was ruthlessly demolished in 1804. The house in which the great Randolph died,
+which was about half a mile distant, was also hewn down, about ten years afterwards,
+to make way for a shabby masonic lodge.</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> The family of Cospatrick, a powerful Northumbrian nobleman, took refuge in
+Scotland after the death of Harold at Hastings, and in 1072 had extensive lands in
+the Merse and Lothian gifted them by Malcolm Canmore. They continued to be one
+of the most opulent and powerful houses in the east of Scotland for a considerable
+period, as evidenced by their donations, noted in the chartularies of Coldingham,
+Newbottle, Dryburgh, Kelso, Melrose, and Soltra. Founded on a steep rugged rock,
+within sea-mark, and communicating with the land through a covered passage, the
+castle of Dunbar might well, before the invention of gunpowder, have been deemed
+impregnable. It was often the theatre of warlike contention, and two great battles
+were fought in its immediate neighbourhood,&mdash;the first in 1296, when Earl Warenne
+defeated the army of Scotland sent for its relief; and the second in 1650, when
+Leslie was overthrown by Cromwell. It was often besieged, and as often bravely
+defended; but perhaps never so brilliantly as by Black Agnes against the Earl of
+Salisbury in 1337.</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> This venerable memorial, which gives the name of "Queen's Cross" to the neighbouring
+locality in Northamptonshire, is a beautiful specimen of architecture, although
+much defaced by time, and the efforts of renovators.
+</p>
+<p>
+The "trellised" vest, mentioned in stanza <small>XXIV.</small>, was a species of armour, so
+called by contemporary Norman writers; and consisted of a cloth coat, reaching only
+to the haunches. This was intersected by broad straps of leather, so laid on as to
+cross each other, and leave small intervening squares of cloth, in the middle of which
+was a knob of steel. (<cite>Vide</cite> <span class="smcap">Meyrick's</span> <cite>Ancient Armour</cite>, vol. i. p. 11.)</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> <em>Sc.</em>&mdash;The South African and South American <em>Campanero</em>, or bell-bird, whose
+peculiar note may be heard two or three miles off, chiefly in the loneliest parts of the
+Brazilian or Benguela forests.</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> <i>Anglicè</i>, eating.</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> It will be seen, by referring to the statement in question, that Mr Stephens'
+calculation is more favourable to the tenant than the other. According to him, the
+excess of produce over expenditure would be £931. The county Down farmer estimates
+it at £888.</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> Since the above statement was drawn up and submitted by us to the consideration of
+various farmers throughout the country, Mr Dudgeon has requested us to state, that after
+consultation with several of these gentlemen in his own neighbourhood, (who, he was gratified
+to find, entirely concurred in the essential particulars of the statement,) he is of opinion
+that he had deducted rather too small a quantity of oats and barley for seed, according to the
+average usual in the district. Any alteration which this involves would be a deduction from
+the tenant's original profit, and an addition to the amount of loss already brought out.
+</p>
+<p>
+Mr Dudgeon also says&mdash;"I omit at present adding to this deficit the depreciation which
+it may be further estimated will result permanently from the open trade in live stock and
+cured provisions. But it may be stated that the recent depression in the value of stock from
+that of late seasons, amounting to <em>at least</em> 15 per cent, shows a farther present loss on the
+calculated profits of this farm to the extent of £112, 10s."</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> The statistics of Mid-Lothian appear in another page. They are attested by
+several of the first farmers in the county.</p></div></div>
+
+<hr class="chap" />
+
+<div class="tn"><h3>Transcriber's note:</h3>
+<p>The transcriber has inserted missing anchors for the following:</p>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>Footnote 5: AMERICAN ADVENTURE.[5]</p>
+
+<p>Footnote 9: HOWARD.[9]</p>
+
+<p>Footnote 17: Cospatrick's stronghold of Dunbar[17]</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Minor typographical errors have been corrected without note.
+Irregularities and inconsistencies in the text have been retained as
+printed.</p>
+
+<p>Mismatched quotes are not fixed if it's not sufficiently clear where
+the missing quote should be placed.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44332 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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